I know this is probably radical to most of you, but I would start watching corn, and the CRB index in general:
http://stockcharts.com/charts/gallery.html?$CRB
Ethanol went ballistic when Bush announced plans to have government subsidized alternative energy sources. The price of corn went much higher on that news, and every farmer and his cousin tried to get into the act.
The short term effect was that so much supply hit the markets, that corn finally changed trend and reversed to the mean. However, I believe that price spike is not a one time deal. The higher the price of oil goes, the more viable ethanol becomes.
This will drive up the price of corn and as a side effect, it will raise the prices of food, things like tortillas and livestock. So while that is inflationary on one end of it, it is deflationary on the oil side.
Solar panels and other technologies will become more cost effective as the price of oil goes higher. The pain has to be long enough so as to chance the perception on the consumption of oil. That will determine the trend, or not. So far > $80 oil has not hit the consumer, as gasoline prices are holding steady. But don't hold your breath...
How does this affect SIFs traders? Well, it is the long end of the curve that is most sensitive to inflation. If bond yields go higher, investors shift out of equities into bonds. Capiche?
It is impossible imo to trade directional SIFs at this point without having the 10 year bond , TIPs and the 30 on your screen (and of course YEN and EURO). It is not enough to see a steepening YC and say that is bullish. You have to understand the dynamics, and the levels.
Next week will be very interesting, and potentially very volatile. I would be a buyer of gamma here.
nitro