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Showing posts with label secular trends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label secular trends. Show all posts

Monday, August 8, 2011

The $100 Day in Gold I've Been Waiting For... Almost!

9 August 2011



I've been saying for years that we were going to start seeing $100 days in the gold market.



I'm old enough to remember when this started occurring in the Dow. It is routine now, but it was a big deal at the time.



Well, here's what's happened so far: On Sunday night, we started the week with gold just over $1660 per ounce. As you've heard me say before, "That's a high price." Well, so is $1500, $1400, $1300, etc.



Except that in only slightly over 24 hours, gold had run as high as $1772.30. Granted, it took 31 hours to achieve this gain of approximately $110. However, gold appreciated at the rate of $3.55 per hour during this 31-hour period.



Jim Sinclair had been telling us to look for a $1764 gold price ($100 up from Sunday evening's start). So, hey, where we are now is pretty close. He'd been writing about $1650 gold for years. But $1764 - we had only five days to digest the transition.



The times they are a changing.



Will we see volatility from here?



For sure. We're going to need more than 5 days to adjust to this surge. Movements of this kind are always associated with increased volatility.



Will Mr. Bernanke announce QE3 today?



I'd be surprised - among other things, each infusion of newly-printed money produces less effect - and we've already witnessed diminishing returns with QE1 and QE2. The bankers get the money, but they're fearful of loaning it, so they increase their reserves, and deposit it with the Fed for a hefty 0.25% annual return - better than loaning it in this dangerous environment!



So Mr. Bernanke may announce an end to the 0.25% rate - to discourage the banks from socking away their Monopoly money....



But watch Jackson Hole later this month!



Will we have more $100 days in gold this decade?



My guess is - several per year - for the next decade. And a few years down the road - get ready for $100, $200 and $300 leaps. It's a process. But that is where we are headed.



This is the gold tsunami.

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Sunday, August 7, 2011

Gold, the Obvious Investment

8 August 2011

It is now early morning, the first trading day after the S&P downgrade of US debt from AAA to AA+.

Gold has spiked higher, most recently, from prices in the $1660 range to prices in the $1710 range.

I wrote last week about the correlation of the gold price and the national debt.

Many now feel that gold has become an "obvious" investment.

I see it differently.

I think that gold was already the evident (not yet obvious) way to go in 2001, following the crash of the internet bubble - which even at that time was fuelled by Federal Reserve money printing and US government debt (Remember? It seemed like a big bubble at the time....).

If gold was the evident go-to investment in 2001, then by 2003, it had reached the stage of obviousness that the metal of kings would preserve its value better than any currency that was backed by a central bank whose members (and later chairmen) used helicopter analogies when talking about how to stimulate a slowing economy!

It just took some folks a little longer to catch on (for example, by buying at $1710 today, rather than at $330 in 2003!)....

I'm still waiting for gold stocks to trade at "bubble valuations," as the NASDAQ did in the 1990s - oh yes, and still does!

In fact, the better gold miners are trading at roughly a 60% discount (or more) to the value of their gold in the ground (after production costs). John Doody has calculated that his top ten gold stocks can easily double as a group, just to reach their inherent value at $1500 gold (Wait, isn't gold now $1700? Oh yes, he was writing last month!).

Gold has been "obvious" for the past 8 years and for the past $1400 in appreciation.

My advice?

Stick with the obvious.

This is the gold tsunami.
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Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Debt Ceiling Up... Gold Price Up... What's Next?

2 August 2011

I think this chart, posted on Zero Hedge, requires no explanation.

Now that the debt ceiling has been lifted $2.5 trillion, what do you think will happen to the gold price?

(Hint: simple correlational analysis suggests $1950 gold.)

Of course, the two charts could decouple at some point.

However, if this occurs, it presently seems that gold may break higher before the debt ceiling because:

(1) investors are catching on that we are past the point of no return,


(2) the gold universe is much smaller than the debt universe, and

(3) Asians understand the gold market better than Western investors, due to the long-term view that characterizes Asian culture.

This is the gold tsunami.
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Sunday, July 31, 2011

China Will Not Unload Its US Government Bonds Because of the Debt Ceiling Crisis

31 July 2011

I thought I should write this while the debt ceiling debate is still raging. I want to make these statements before the matter is settled.

To begin, the debate over the ceiling is for real - it's not a charade. The Tea Party folks were elected to reign in US government spending. They aren't faking.

Further, let's say a deal is not reached by August 2. This would not necessarily mean that US government bonds would collapse in value. Continuing revenues could still be channelled to meet interest payments on US debt (which are presently only about 10% of US government expenditures - though solely because interest rates remain low).

Since the US prints its own money, it is well-known that the country cannot run out of cash (it can only run out of cash that has lasting value). This is unlike Greece, which shares the Euro as a currency along with the other members of the European Monetary Union. Greece cannot “print money,” but the US can.

However, there has been talk that the Chinese, who now hold something like $1.2 trillion in US debt instruments, could “foreclose” on the US, basically tanking the US currency and with it the US economy.

This argument misapprehends why the Chinese have accumulated $1.2 trillion US dollars in the first place.

If you want to understand this better, I recommend that you read an excellent article by a professor at Tsinghua University's School of Economics and Management in Beijing. In a very concise piece, Professor Patrick Chovanec makes clear why the current Chinese economic strategy not only requires China to keep its existing US government bonds, but in fact to continue buying more (though they are certainly diversifying).

Professor Chovanec states, "China’s growth model for the past 30 years relies, in large part, on running a trade surplus (selling more than it buys from abroad) in order to maximize capital accumulation and therefore investment at home. At the same it, it encourages inflows of foreign investment into China in order to speed up that process even further, while restricting Chinese money from flowing abroad, in all but a few controlled circumstances.

"The result is that foreign currency flows into China and piles up, with no outlet to flow back out again. Normally, all those excess dollars that were piling up in China would fall in value relative to the RMB, until the imbalances corrected themselves. However, in order to keep those imbalances in place, the Chinese government intervenes to buy up all those excess dollars (and euros, and yen) itself, to keep its currency from appreciating, and accumulates them as official reserves. It has to invest those reserves somewhere until it decides to use them to buy U.S. goods or make more direct investments with them abroad.

"Since the U.S. is China’s largest customer, and since many smaller customers also settle their international trade in U.S. dollars, roughly 70% of China’s $3 trillion reserves are in dollars. In theory, it could sell some of those dollars for other currencies or for commodities, like gold or oil, but in practice, given the huge sums they are already holding, its hard for China to sell off even some of its dollars without undermining the value of what it has left. Even if it could do that, there just aren’t any markets that are as large or liquid as the market for U.S. Treasuries, to accommodate the amounts of money we’re talking about. The fact is, as long as China wants to sell goods for dollars, and decides to accumulate those dollars as reserves rather than spending them on imports or investments, it has little choice not only to hold the Treasuries it already owns, but keep buying more and more."

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I'm not saying the US is not headed down the road to disaster. It is. Things have already gone too far. But the Chinese are not going to upset the applecart next week, whether the debt ceiling is raised, eliminated by presidential decree or maintained.

Click here for Prof. Chovanec’s article.

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Oh, just in case you thought that the Tea Party folks are really here to fix the problem, have a look at which party ran up the biggest tally of new Federal expenditures in US history:

I'm not calling Mr. Obama innocent. He has certainly been a big spender - but he has been no match for the George W. Bush Republicans! As they say, politics makes for strange bedfellows.

_

Thursday, May 5, 2011

This Is a High Gold Price

5 May & 25 June 2011

Gold is now down almost $100 from its recent peak of $1575.10 (which occurred earlier this week).

This is still a VERY HIGH gold price.

Gold is doing fine. The miners will do exceedingly well anywhere within a couple hundred dollars of here - either way - and make no assumptions about which way!

Take Goldcorp, for example, who just released first quarter earnings - what a quarter!

Anything is possible.

Half hour before market close. Still falling.
Down about $115 from the recent top.

This is OK too. There is nothing wrong with the gold price.

In a year or two, brief $100 moves will not be unusual, as gold will be much higher than it is today. I guess we'd better get used to it now!

25 June 2011: Just checking in to remind readers that the gold price is still high. $1558... $1500... $1400... $1600... does it matter? It's just high - and going higher!

The gold miners are doing wonderfully. Their stocks are selling at incongruously low prices. Though anything can go lower on a short-term basis, long-term, they can only go MUCH higher.


Nothing has changed.

Gold mining is the best business on the planet.

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Monday, April 25, 2011

Gold Mining Investors Hate Record Highs in the Gold Price - Huh?

25, 26 & 27 April 2011

Gold mining investors absolutely hate new record highs in the gold price. Every time gold moves to a new high, the gold mining shares plummet.

I understand why. It's because the investors who accumulate gold stocks think gold is too high and has to go back down again.

Huh?

If that's the explanation, though, what (the heck...) are they doing investing in this sector???

Case in point. Gold soared to a new record high in the $1518 range overnight. As is so often the case, it was sold off in New York (that is a recurring pattern too).

But as I write, the gold price is doing just fine, acting quite comfortable in the $1500 range. And last week, people seemed to think $1500 was a pretty high price for gold. (In 2008 and 2009, they though $1000 was pretty high, and so on and so on, back to $300 in 2002, which seemed like quite a lot at the time also!)


So what did gold stocks do today, as indicated by the HUI Gold Bugs Index?

They sold off hard. Every time this happens, a text box pops up above my head with one word in it:

How, then, are gold stocks looking relative to the gold price? Here is the ratio chart, using the GLD ETF to create an intraday chart.

Hmm. This looks really bad - trending sideways, and actually falling when the gold price climbs!

Well, perhaps it's not as bad as it appears. It does seem that investors are willing to dip their toes back into the market when gold holds at new prices for a few days. It's just a very skittish crowd, for reasons I don't totally understand.

Of course, this broad behavioural pattern has actually caused gold mining shares to underperform the gold price since 2006.

So, yes, you can still buy gold shares very cheaply, relative to the cost of gold, which, surprisingly enough, is what they happen to produce and sell - the better ones in increasing quantities and with rapidly rising profit margins... making gold mining more or less the most profitable business on the planet at this particular juncture in history.

However, at some point this pattern will change, and cheap gold stocks will no longer be readily available.

For the holdouts in the crowd, I'm warning you now.

You are getting gold stocks at a steal. Enjoy it while it lasts, because, hey, it's not gonna last forever!

And think about this: When the gold price sets new record highs - for example - for the last ten years in a row, that might be a reason to hold gold miners, not sell them!


So, why not buy and hold gold mining stocks now? It's just a thought on my part....

Looks like it's been a good idea for the past ten years.

Have you ever noticed how, when a trend sets in motion, it just tends to keep going that way?

Seems to me we might have some kind of trend going on here! So... why not stick with it?

26 April 2011:

Here's an update for you.

Gold, in my opinion, had an uneventful though somewhat lower day (after all, it's a bit hard to trade higher every time an all-time record high has been achieved...):

Gold stocks of course, were smacked down for the second day:

And HUI:GOLD, the ratio chart, is back to valuing gold miners - relative to the gold price - about where they were in late January, when gold was trading $200 lower, in the low $1300s.

Duh.

Let me do the math for you. When the gold price is $200 higher, gold miners make more or less $200 more in profits per ounce of gold sold.

That is, if math is tough for you - as it obviously is for most gold mining investors, then at this level, the miners' margins might be up by, say, 25%.

Let me explain.... Suppose their production costs are $500 per ounce - it can vary considerably, from $0 to $800 or so. Then from late January to late April this year, the miners' profit per ounce of gold sold has increased from something like $800 per ounce to something like $1000 per ounce.

So, independently of the gold price, the miners should trade on the order of 25% higher now than they did in January. In this case, that would constitute a rise in the HUI index from the bottom-feeding 492 in January 2011 to a still undervalued 615 today (the HUI actually closed today at an absurdly low 574).

Let me tell you now - this logical increase in the market value of the gold miners is systematically not happening! The gold miners have lost traction as the gold price has risen for the past 5 years, just as has occurred over the past 3 months, with an additional 33% underperformance from already undervalued levels!

So long as mining company investors go running for cover - like cockroaches under an upturned rock - every time the gold price drops from a new high, that pattern is not going to change!

I guess a smart speculator could play this game for profit, just by going short the miners every time gold sets a record high.

In fact, I'm going to guess that some do, as many commentators on Eric King's program have been maintaining (Dan Norcini and others, for example)!

Shorting the investment sector I believe in more than any other is contrary to my ethics, but what an easy way to make money for the past 5 years!

27 April 2011:

OK. Anywhere around $1500 is a perfectly fine gold price for now. Watch out, as we're setting yet another new record high in gold.

It would be nice to see gold stocks respond positively to a record high in the gold price for once. They are still below last week's levels.....

If that occurred, it would be a watershed event!

Oh, Ben Bernanke is speaking now. The first news conference ever for a Fed Chairman. I disagree with every Fed policy and every statement he makes. However, I admire his courage in attempting to make the Federal Reserve and its policies more open and understandable to the public. That single decision on his part is entirely admirable, and increases my underlying sense of hope for the future.

That is, I believe Mr. Bernanke is wrong about literally everything, but I have total respect for his openness and directness.

You can't help but notice Mr. Bernanke's voice shaking from time to time. He is a courageous and well-intentioned man who is really trying to do a good job! Oh, by the way, his job is probably impossible. He can't fix everything by himself. For example, you'd need a few committed politicians. And how can they do it if the citizens themselves are not willing to take the road less travelled?

You need an entire people working together to respond to a crisis of the present proportions. I hope that will happen one day. But, unfortunately, today is not that day. Almost everyone still wants the easy but short-term solution with higher long-term costs!

Post-News Conference comment:

Hmmm. Mr. Bernanke and I agree on one important point. He stated that the US Federal budget deficit is "unsustainable," and that US Federal debt is "our most serious problem." Wow! That is exactly correct.

Obviously we have different ideas about how to respond to that problem, but yes, we are all looking at the same problem.

Mr. Bernanke was somewhat happy about the S&P downgrade of US debt (S&P warned that its rating of US debt may fall below an "AAA" credit rating, which would drive interest rates powerfully upward!). Obviously Mr. Bernanke hopes that something will get the politicians (and public) moving, so he won't have to do the whole job by himself - which, as we have discussed - he can't possibly do in any case!

As to the gold price, it is soaring on an intraday basis, higher still post-news conference. Somebody somewhere believes that inflation is going to continue....

Are you surprised?

Jim Sinclair's $1521 gold price target was met (and surpassed) today. It hovered at that level following the Fed announcement (due to a promise of continued dovishness in a situation where something entirely different is obviously needed), and the gold price moved over the $1521 level following the conference with Mr. Bernanke. Note that $1600 seems to be the next stop....

Mr. Bernanke still believes that he can act effectively when long-term inflation expectations get out of hand.

Just a small caveat on that one.... We are long past that point, and Mr. Bernanke has obviously missed this critical historic juncture! Pandora's box was actually opened back in 1987, when Alan Greenspan took over the chairmanship of the Fed. That is an event that has been unacknowledged for the past 24 years!

Oh, the question I would have asked... "Mr. Chairman, given that you have announced your intention to cease purchasing US Treasuries in June of this year, what will be the result if no one steps in to take your place?"

Not sure why no one asked that question. It would have been my first!

And... are gold stocks still underperforming the gold price?

Radically so. It is a shocking disconnect! However, the long tail and the trend reversal in today's chart looks optimistic for gold mining shares in the short-term....

If we had a new high in gold and gold stocks climbed... that would be a BIG DEAL! Let's wait and watch for that one....

That would change everything.
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