I keep hearing this, but if it's true, then WHY is the DBA powershares agricultural fund (which is comprised of wheat, corn, oats, soy, coffee, oj, cattle, and hog futures) up 20% since Jan 1st?
Commodity futures aren't the same thing as consumer prices.
Right now inflation is very low, you can't deny it.

)Commodity futures aren't the same thing as consumer prices.
Right now inflation is very low, you can't deny it.

Who's sock puppet are you?Commodity futures aren't the same thing as consumer prices.
Right now inflation is very low, you can't deny it.
I keep hearing this, but if it's true, then WHY is the DBA powershares agricultural fund (which is comprised of wheat, corn, oats, soy, coffee, oj, cattle, and hog futures) up 20% since Jan 1st?
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Since the average person spends about eleven percent of their income on food, food prices count as eleven percent of the CPI. Let's show how this works. The CPI index is 100 in our example. The prices of food doubles but all other prices stay the same. What is the overall inflation rate? 100%? No. The index will go from 100 to 111 (an increase of eleven in the food costs) or an overall price inflation rate of eleven percent. Food prices can move more than the overall price inflation rate unless all other prices are also going up by that same amount.
To measure the cost of living for consumers and come up with the Consumer Price Index, the Bureau of Labor Statistics prices everything consumers spend money on. Then all of the expenditures are categorized and weighted based on the amount that the average consumer spends on those categories. The percentage change from month to month is the rate of inflation, and it's usually expressed as an annualized number.
The all-items inflation rate represents everything people spend money on: haircuts, plane tickets, medical care, clothes -- you name it. But, that number is puffed up by the pesky necessities -- food and energy. So those two categories are discarded when calculating the core inflation rate.

Which CPI are you referring to? Certainly not the governments, because it excludes food and energy costs.
http://moneymorning.com/2011/03/17/hidden-inflation-why-prices-are-rising-faster-than-you-think/#
Which index is the "Official CPI" reported in the media?
Our broadest and most comprehensive CPI is called the All Items Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) for the U.S. City Average, 1982-84 = 100.
In addition to the All Items CPI, BLS publishes thousands of other consumer price indexes. One such index is called "All items less food and energy". Some users of CPI data use this index because food and energy prices are relatively volatile, and these users want to focus on what they perceive to be the "core" or "underlying" rate of inflation.
Again, while we publish many indexes, our broadest measure of inflation includes all items consumers purchase, including food and energy. In addition, when CPI data are reported, these data can be reported on a not seasonally adjusted basis as well as a seasonally adjusted basis. Often, the media will report some, or all, of the following:
1.Index level, not seasonally adjusted. (for example, May 2008 = 216.632).
2.12-month percent change, not seasonally adjusted. (for example, May 2007 to May 2008 = 4.2 percent).
3.1-month percent change on a seasonally adjusted basis. (for example, from April 2008 to May 2008 = 0.6 percent).
4.Annual rate of percent change so far this year (for example, from December 2007 to May 2008 if the rate of increase over the first 5 months of the year continued for the full year, after the removal of seasonal influences, the rise would be 4.0 percent).
5.annual rate based on the latest seasonally adjusted 1-month change. For example, if the rate from April 2008 to May 2008 continued for a full 12 months, then the rise, compounded, would be 8.1 percent.
(Reuters) - U.S. inflation was muted in February and housing starts fell for a third straight month, giving the Federal Reserve plenty of room to keep interest rates low even as it scales back the amount of money it is pumping into the economy.
The data, which came as the Fed opened a two-day policy meeting, painted a picture of sluggish economic growth in the first quarter as unseasonably cold weather disrupted activity. A jump in building permits last month, however, also offered cautious optimism for an acceleration once the weather warms up.
"The economy is not too hot and not too cold. Winter was a difficult season for housing and there are no signs that inflation is about to pick up in a meaningful way," said Thomas Costerg, an economist at Standard Chartered Bank in New York.
The Labor Department said its Consumer Price Index nudged up 0.1 percent for the second month in a row as a drop in gasoline prices offset the largest rise in the cost of food in nearly 2-1/2 years.
In the 12 months through February, consumer prices were up only 1.1 percent, slowing from a 1.6 percent rise in January. The February increase was the smallest in four months.
Stripping out the volatile energy and food components, the so-called core CPI rose 0.1 percent for a third straight month. Its 12-month gain held steady at 1.6 percent.
The Fed targets 2 percent inflation and it tracks an index that is running even lower than the CPI. With inflation falling short of their target, Fed officials are likely to bide their time before raising benchmark overnight rates from zero.
Nevertheless, they have indicated they will press forward with plans to wind down a separate bond-buying stimulus program.