Key economic indicator plunges 93% since June 2008!
NEW YORK - December 28, 2008 - The Baltic Dry
Index is a daily average of prices to ship raw materials. It represents the cost paid by an end
user to have a shipping company transport raw materials across seas on the
Baltic Exchange. The global marketplace
for brokering shipping contracts has plunged 93% since June of this year.
The BDI is one of the purest leading indicators of economic activity. It
measures the demand to move raw materials and precursors to production.
Consumer spending and other economic indicators are backward looking, meaning
they examine what has already occurred. The BDI offers a real time glimpse at
global raw material and infrastructure demand. This could also be gleaned from looking
at commodity prices, but there are substitution effects and futures contracts
that make it difficult to interpret the impact of commodity price fluctuations.
Unlike stock and commodities markets, the Baltic Dry Index is totally devoid of
speculative players. The trading is limited only to the member companies, and
the only relevant parties securing contracts are those who have actual cargo to
move and those who have the ships to move it.
Ed. Note:
Consider the following: Raw materials are not being
shipped. This means metal, lumber, grain, etc. Without the raw
materials, factories will not be able to make finished goods. This
means no factory jobs and no goods for store shelves. No goods mean
nothing to transport. Nothing to transport means no trucking and rail
shipments. No shipments mean transport companies go bankrupt. This
means there may be no one left to ship vital supplies like food,
medicine,
and gasoline.