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Is the gold price giving us a repeat performance
of October's fake-out in the oil market? My suspicion is that
gold is acting a lot like crude did last month...running up
to fresh highs - and making headlines all the way...
But this isn't the main event. Not yet.
The day of reckoning for America, her deficits and her dollar
is surely on its way. Investors who haven't yet bought gold
as protection could be forgiven for thinking they've missed
their chance. But we may see gold make the inevitable run
up to $450 - as early as next week - and then experience a
serious correction and consolidation.
For that, investors still not holding gold should read "last
chance to buy before the bull is untethered..."
First, note that as gold has screamed up since the summer,
gold mining stocks have failed to confirm the move. Just as
happened with the Oil Sector in October, the underlying commodity
has gotten way ahead of its producers. For instance, gold
put on $5 - one full percent - between its Tuesday close in
London and its Wednesday close in New York this week. Yet
the two biggest gold producers in the world did not follow.
AngloGold eked out a 0.56% gain on the day; Newmont mining,
the world's largest gold producer, managed a 0.71% gain.
Is this quibbling? Well...no. Newmont climbed as high as
$49.96 in intraday trading Wednesday. But when you take a
closer look at the chart, you see that it even though it closed
up for the day, the second half of the session was all downhill...until
it reached $49.55. In short, Newmont made a bid for $50 and
couldn't make it. The largest gold stock in the world is failing
to confirm gold's bullish move. Why?
The answer is "earnings' gravity". If you want
to buy Newmont at p/e of 50, be my guest...and many investors
will. But until the bullion price moves much higher - and
starts making its way onto the income statements of the gold
producers - the dearth of gold shares means you have too many
investors chasing too few gold stocks, and paying too much
for them. The total market capitalisation of the gold and
silver mining sector in the US is less than $136 billion.
By comparison, Microsoft's market cap is $296 billion. The
equity upside of gold is limited until the bullion upside
gets much, much higher.
Of course, there is the chance that the next "psychological
level" for gold is $500 - that being simply such a glorious
number that traders can't resist it. Kevin Kerr at Outstanding
Investments believes the technicals support gold all the way
up to $475 in short order. This move would be aided and abetted
by a huge increase in speculative longs in the futures market
AND a surge in liquidity inspired by the launch of GLD, the
New York listing for the World Gold Council's bullion backed
gold fund. It's due next month, if not in the New Year.
Several hundred million dollars could flood into GLD as soon
as it's launched. The stock will enable US institutions to
take a position in 'paper gold'. Wall Street's appetite for
such financial chimeras is growing at what seems an exponential
rate. Last week, cash inflows into Exchange-Traded Funds exceeded
US equity mutual fund inflows for the first time that I can
recall - and this during a week when over $1.3 billion came
in from the cold of the money market to the stock market sauna!
Moreover, such a flood of funds into GLD would be a vindication
of the idea of 'paper gold', at least in the short term. The
idea behind GLD - and its London-list equivalent GBS, which
has successfully matched the price of gold since its launch
in January 2004 - is that they introduce liquidity to the
gold market and create institutional demand for the metal.
Up until now, US pension funds and institutions - which is
just a fancy way of saying mutual funds, banks, insurance
companies, and brokerages - had no easy way to buy gold through
the stock market. They had to do it through futures contract,
or buy bullion. And legally, US pension funds weren't allowed
to own commodities outright.
Few institutions want to buy bullion anyway, because it never
pays a dividend. It's essentially a savings account with zero
interest, although if the dollar is getting worth less and
less...then things priced in dollars go up...and pure inflation
becomes one way to explain the rising gold price.
It's like a can of Coke that used to cost 25 cents now costing
75c or $1.00. Has the Coke gone up in value? Or has the purchasing
power of your money gone down? Owning bullion when the currency
inflates is one way to profit - in terms of paper dollars,
at least.
The question today is whether there is pent up institutional
demand for 'paper gold' that is bullish for bullion. A lot
of institutions could allocate a small percentage of their
cash to gold, perhaps as much as 5%. And with gold rising
in dollar terms - and also in terms of British pounds now
as well - there would be no 'yield penalty' to pay. The gain
in bullion prices would match, or exceed, the yield on UK
gilts or US Treasuries - plus you'd have the safety of owning
nature's own currency!
With paper gold like GBS and GLD accepted and flourishing,
"earnings' gravity" on gold stocks may no longer
be a check on making money in the yellow metal. With GBS and
GLD, so the theory goes, you get more liquidity in the equity
side of the gold market. And whichever way the gold price
goes in the near-term, the launch of the new Amex Gold Miner's
Index (GDM) should also be great news for options investors
if and when those vehicles become "optionable" -
especially as it's composed of more volatile junior exploration
stocks.
I made the enhanced liquidity argument myself - about a year
and a half ago, when gold was much less popular. Today is
different. Gold is "hot". But is it "hot"
in the way that, say, Britney Spears in a skin-tight red rubber
suit is "hot"? Or is gold warming up because it's
at the centre of a major shift in investor sentiment about
asset allocation and the need for diversification?
With gold making 16-year highs, the dollar making fresh lows
in euro and yen terms, I'm more inclined to take recent developments
as a sign of a near-term top in the gold price. In contrarian
terms, whenever the crowd is all on the same side of the trade,
the trade is nearly over.
In this scenario, GLD launches...goes a-googling its way
up briefly...and then plummets to earth at the rate of 32
feet per second per second when the lustre of the first buy
tarnishes.
That's when we should buy it. And that's when you should
go hunting for gold stocks again - buying them at a much lower
price. Or, you can do what I'm telling my options readers:
sit tight with your long gold positions, and buy put options
on them for a near-term correction in the gold price.
In the long-term - but before we're all dead - I'm still
mega-bullish on gold. Market's rarely move in straight lines,
however. Just ask anyone who bought crude oil futures over
$55 a barrel in October.
And with so much sentiment so universally bullish on gold,
even the staunchest bug should take note.
Regards,
Dan Denning
for the Daily Reckoning
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