June 6, 2006
Be Careful What You Ask For...
In retrospect, our strategy of
taking outsized profits off the table when we could, over the past
few months, seems to have been a good one. Still, if you’re
like me, you wish you could have sold even more, and perhaps bought
less, during that period.
Hopefully, you followed my advice
better than I did myself, and find yourself with a hoard of cash
in search of some irresistible bargains. At this point, some are
beginning to materialize, although I would prefer to give this corrective
phase a little more time to assert itself before jumping in.
As I look back at my recent advice,
I notice that I was also correct in pointing out how investors were
refocusing on the dollar story, and losing their fascination with
the geopolitical headlines that had been driving gold to a large
extent.
My mistake was in presupposing
that the focus on the dollar would be bullish for gold. In fact,
and unfortunately, the hot-money speculators that push the gold
market to and fro over the short term naturally think only of the
short term. In other words, they tend to view inflationary signals
as being bearish of gold (and bullish of the greenback), because
such data will lead to Fed rate hikes.
That these players have returned
to the gold market has been illustrated by recent sell-offs, as
the hot money sloshed to and fro based on each day’s headlines
or rumors. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke’s hawkish, anti-inflationary
comments on June 5, for example, sent gold, as well as the U.S.
stock market, on a tumble.
So what does this mean for the
future? In the near term, volatility...as bargain-hunting physical
buyers battle it out with hot-money speculators looking for a quick
hit, and margin-call victims trying to stay above water.
Over the longer term, this corrective
phase will pass us by (perhaps sooner than most suspect), as the
dollar continues its slide.
On that note, there have been
reports that the Bush administration is quietly accepting that a
dollar decline is necessary to restore some semblance of balance
to the U.S.-China trade equation.
Moreover, despite Bernanke’s
protestations to the contrary, the Fed will find it difficult to
continue its campaign of rate hikes in the face of a weakening housing
market. With home prices still high and mortgage rates rising, more
consumers are forced to rent in a very tight rental market. This
is driving rents higher, which is the primary housing component
of the CPI.
You see, over the years, the CPI
has been cleverly constructed to avoid some of the more worrisome
price signals, the better to mask rising inflationary pressures
and cover politicians’ backsides. One of the more odious schemes
concocted by the government bureaucrats was to hide rising home
values by choosing rents as their measure of housing costs.
Over the decades, as housing values
soared, their little machinations worked wonders, helping to significantly
understate the rate of inflation. But now, with rents rising more
quickly than housing prices, the bureaucrats are being, to paraphrase
Shakespeare, “hoist by their own petard.”
In other words, by raising interest
rates to stem inflation, the Fed is now, ironically, putting intense
upward pressure on its own index of inflation. It seems likely that
the Fed governors will recognize this, and thereby resist the temptation
to raise rates much higher.
So, to sum up, the roller coaster
ride will continue, and on any given day I would not be surprised
to see either an impressive rebound in metals and mining stocks...or
an acceleration to the downside as margin-related selling builds
steam.
If you can avoid selling in this
environment, you should do so. Better yet, if you can afford to
pick away at some bargains, you should consider it.
Brien Lundin is the editor and publisher of
Gold Newsletter, a publication that has ranked among the world’s
leading precious metals and resource stock advisories since 1971.
To learn more about Gold Newsletter, visit www.goldnewsletter.com.
Mr. Lundin is also the host of the famed
New Orleans Investment Conference, the world’s oldest and
most respected gold investment event. This year’s New Orleans
Conference will feature Steve Forbes, Jim Rogers, Dr. Marc Faber
and Dennis Gartman...plus dozens of today’s top gold and resource
stock analysts...and a blockbuster debate between Doug Casey and
Newt Gingrich. To learn more, visit www.neworleansconference.com.
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