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2005 –
I would like to review my past year’s observations
and remind myself and my readers of the good, the bad and
the ugly comments. Overall, 2005 was a pretty good year.
I began it by being staunchly bullish on precious metals,
base metals and uranium, but suggested overweighting to
precious metals and uranium after spring arrived. Gold,
silver and uranium’s continuous climb outshined my
stumble on copper.
My “controversial” change from
bull to bear on oil just two days before Katrina struck
(which prompted lots of negative emails-even hate mail)
wasn’t popular but so far has proven to be the top
in oil. Finally, my belief that the U.S. Dollar Index was
only in a “counter-trend” rally and would stay
in a 85-92 trading range, held even though the top of that
range came close to breaking.
Because of my compensated working relationships
with junior resource companies, the expectations by some
are that I will always favored this group. I know the record
shows that on several occasions I expressed some hefty factors
that needed overcoming before one could be very bullish
on junior resource companies. (See http://www.grandich.com/docs/res_world_09-05.pdf.)
I also constantly emphasized the fact that success is the
exception in the junior resource game and most juniors won’t
become producers- including those I work with. In early
2005, I began speaking aggressively about my expectation
that we will see a marked increase in mergers and acquisitions
in the mining industry.
On a personal note, a car accident that I
was involved in led to a most pleasant surprise -- an overwhelming
and gracious response from literally hundreds of readers.
This awesome group overwhelmed the sparse few who drag me
through the mud in cyberspace. It made taking these unfair
and erroneous peanut gallery remarks much easier. Thanks
to the vast majority who appreciate my sincere effort to
be totally upfront and objective while recognizing my potential
biases.
2006 – The year the “Don’t
Worry, Be Happy” crowd on Wall Street begin to pay
the piper.
While I discuss my overall economic, social
and political outlook in the Blue Chip & Income Report
which will be released in the next day or so, let me just
say here that I believe the vast majority of Americans have
been robbing Peter to pay Paul and Peter is tapped out.
America has been living well beyond its means and like anyone
who has put on too much weight (like me), they eventually
have to diet or face serious health issues. And while an
energy and terrorism crisis is real, the crisis that dwarfs
both of these combined is the coming aging crisis. Furthermore,
a debt and deficit crisis, unlike anything the United States
has ever experienced, is continuing to grow out of control
despite how much the “Don’t Worry, Be Happy”
crowd and TOUT-TV (CNBC-TV) pushes it under the rug.
Gold –
As noted earlier, I remained staunchly bullish throughout
2005 and kept saying $500 gold was not a question of “if”,
but “when.” I issued a special alert on December
9th noting that my technical work gave its strongest short-term
sell signal in several years. Within a couple of trading
days, gold fell $60. It has been my contention that gold
is in a secular bull market and it has been rising in a
two steps up, one step down mode. While the corrections
are sharp and swift, it’s the best of all worlds for
the long term. Besides, we all know that it won’t
be near a top until TOUT-TV covers gold extensively for
months and the two leaders of the “Don’t Worry,
Be Happy” crowd, Larry Kudlow and Jim Kramer, tell
us gold is a buy – not good-bye.
The factors that drove gold in 2005 all appear
to be set to lead gold higher into 2006.
• Physical and
investment demand – According to the World
Gold Council (WGC), demand for gold coins, bars and bullion-backed
shares rose 56 percent in the third quarter of 2005. Investors
and jewelers bought $12.5 billion worth in gold, or 838
metric tons in the third quarter, up 7.6 percent from a
year earlier. (Jewelry demand accounts for 73 percent of
gold consumption). The rapidly growing economies in China
and India have been key and while soft patches are likely
going forward, the enormous wealth creation on-going there
appears to assure strong demand for gold for the foreseeable
future.
• ETFs – While
gold pundits will argue if these investment vehicles are
truly direct ownership of physical bullion, there’s
no argument that the introduction of them has added to overall
investment demand. For every one person who may have bought
physical bullion in a different manner before and now has
instead invested in an ETF, I suspect 99 other ETF buyers
are either first time buyers of bullion or used to buy mining
shares as a proxy for gold (more on mining shares later).
The bottmline is that gold ETFs are a net positive to the
demand equation. And when TOUT-TV moves the oil babe over
to the Comex, you can bet the “Talking Heads”
will be preaching ETFs as a way to invest.
• Geopolitical concerns
– Since gold has proven to be a reliable asset to
own going all the way back to Biblical times, the marked
increase of geopolitical concerns here and abroad can only
help serve to underpin the gold price for the foreseeable
future. While Iraq is the main centerpiece at the moment,
another country that begins with an I is going to move center-stage
– Iran (see comment below). While America continues
to lose the love and affection of many in the world, I believe
we’re going to see some of the ugliest political mudslinging
right here in the good ole USA. The wheels in Washington,
already slowed in making progress on several critical issues
facing America, are all but likely to come grinding to a
halt as Democrats and Republicans act more and more like
the Hatfields and the McCoys.
• Debt, deficits and the #1
crisis in America – While I love my country
and am tired of having to defend it each and every time
I travel outside the country, I do believe it continues
down a slippery slope that has no simple happy ending. In
fact, if all of America woke up today and stopped robbing
Peter to pay Paul and lived only within our means, it would
be years before the pain would ease and many would never
truly recover. That’s why seeing we remain full throttle
downhill, I remain so bearish and trying desperately to
educate people through both of my businesses.
I believe the debt and deficit crisis has
been one of the least talked about, but one of the major
reasons why gold has performed so well. I’ve spoken
to many sophisticated foreign investors and one of their
core concerns is the out-of-control fiscal house of our
government and many of our citizens. By 1980, U.S. public
debt reached one trillion dollars--191 years after we first
started keeping records (note that 1980 witnessed the last
great run-up in gold prices). Now, just 25 years later,
it’s on the threshold of $8 trillion. In 1980, each
American’s share of the debt was $4,405. It’s
now $26,700.
When we add the Current Account and trade
deficits, we get a very gloomy future. But the number one
problem that will tower over these already gigantic headaches
is the aging crisis unfolding here, and to a lesser extent,
in many other areas of the world (it will become acute in
Japan and parts of Europe in just a few years). The social,
political, economic and religious upheaval it can cause
will have an indirect positive impact on gold because the
U.S. dollar is going much lower over the next 3-5 years
and interest rates will eventually (not in 2006) have to
be much higher to continue attracting foreign capital to
sustain us.
Manipulation
– I find it ridiculous when any and all comments about
gold being manipulated are immediately dismissed as pure
nonsense. Anyone who has been involved in the financial
markets and in particular commodities can attest to several
known past manipulations. So, why then is it so hard to
give even a reasonable moment to the claim that gold has
been manipulated and/or capped? For starters, it may have
been the style of the person or persons that led this cry
but like it or not, there’s ample circumstantial evidence
to support these claims. And, I would find it hysterical
if it wasn’t so sad to see so-called experts who have
been so wrong for so long on gold ceremonially throw such
claims under the bus yet the media doesn’t question
why these folks were wrong for so long. Yet, those who lead
the manipulation bandwagon (www.gata.org)
have been far more right on gold for several years now.
Bottomline – taking in all the above
and throw in the belief the U.S. dollar can renew its long-term
downtrend and eventually break below 80 on the U.S. Dollar
Index (more below), I believe gold has all the underpinnings
to make former multi-decade resistance around $500 the new
floor and a test of at least $600 in 2006 is quite possible.
Silver –
Called the “poor man’s gold” by some,
it too, has some strong underpinnings as we enter 2006 and
should at least match gold’s performance. I will likely
heighten my enthusiasm if and when the first silver ETF
begins trading.
PGMs –
While watching paint dry was more exciting than watching
platinum and palladium for most of 2005, the PGMs began
to garnish some attention thanks to two key factors:
o The forecast that platinum supplies were
going to overtake demand once again failed to materialize.
Growing demand for diesel auto catalysts is expected to
push the platinum market into deficit for a seventh-consecutive
year, according to Johnson Matthey, the precious metals
group. However, I suspect that automakers are going to look
at palladium more as a cheaper alternative, especially if
and when platinum rises above $1,000.
o After skyrocketing and then plummeting, palladium finally
became so oversold at a time when fundamentals began to
look bullish again. It’s important to note that demand
for palladium jewelry has risen at the expense of platinum
jewelry demand.
I like palladium (its role as poor cousin
to platinum is ending) over platinum and think the spread
between both will narrow in 2006 and eventually we can see
less than $500 between them.
Base Metals
– I believe the United States and some other key economies
worldwide are entering a period of economic slowdown or
even recession. While many base metals have good supply
versus demand scenarios, I do think base metals can be more
affected by this perceived slowdown than precious metals.
I’m especially concerned about a big meltdown in copper
as we get into 2006. This doesn’t mean you sell anything
base metals-related, but if you find yourself over-weighted
you may want to lessen your exposure. This also doesn’t
mean that a copper producer isn’t a worthy purchase
because we’re likely to see $1.75 or even $1.50 again.
Again, it just means the current one-way street in copper
has two-way traffic straight ahead.
Uranium –
Up until recently, it appeared that “Pet Rocks”
had more of a chance of coming back than nuclear plants.
Now, Finland is planning the first nuclear plant in Europe
since 1991. France, which already has 58 plants, plans on
building another 30 more. China says it plans on spending
$50 billion on atomic energy construction by 2020. Even
the good ‘ole USA has seen over a dozen companies
speak again of building new plants. And despite these facts
and an energy crisis clearly in our future, you hardly hear
anyone outside of those involved with a junior resource
uranium stock speaking of one of the most bullish fundamental
plays in all areas of the financial world- uranium. I said
back in 2003 and again in 2004 and 2005 it was, in my opinion,
the most likely metal to rise. That’s no different
for 2006.
Mining and Exploration
Shares – Going back to my days as a broker
in the 80s and 90s, I cringe when I hear people state owning
gold stocks was like owning gold. I respond to this falsehood
by noting how on Black Monday, 1987, gold rose $11.80 and
6 or so of the 10 or so only stocks up on the New York Stock
Exchange that day were gold stocks. The next day, gold lost
about $10 and was still up for the two days, yet mining
shares lost about half their value. Why? Because people
cared little that they mined gold and needed to raise liquidity.
2005 was a year when most mining shares underperformed
the underlying metal or metals they mine while junior exploration
shares performed even worse. Why? I believe my comments
from http://www.grandich.com/docs/res_world_09-05.pdf
are still relevant today. The difference now is that we
broke above $500 and I stated throughout 2003 through 2005,
we would need to get comfortably above that price before
enough sustained media and investor interest would finally
make most boats rise. We’re at that threshold now.
Oil –
I continue to believe my head for the exits called in August
during the spike to $70 should prove to be the cyclical
top. We’re correcting a very oversold condition and
support around $57 held as expected the first time around.
I believe we’re now in a broad trading range of $55-$65,
but if I’m right about an economic slowdown unfolding,
the danger is a sub-$50 price versus breaking above $70.
Hurricane season and war rattling are always potential spike
factors.
U.S. Dollar Index
- While an argument can be made that the U.S. Dollar Index
has made a bottom technically, my interpretation is it must
get above 95 in order to reverse its downtrend from the
120 area. This time last year, people were tripping over
themselves to declare the dollar dead. In addition, the
U.S. government for 2005 only, allowed U.S. corporations
to repatriate dollars that were overseas and this combined
with the Fed’s raising of interest rates allowed IMHO
a counter-trend rally to occur. I’m looking for the
neckline above 92 to hold and a resumption of the downtrend
in the second half of 2006 to take place.
Iraq, Iran and the
Middle East – I try to do my best to leave
out my personal views when trying to form objective observations
for my readers. I will admit I had an internal battle before
my country entered Iraq. While very much a Christian conservative
who believes the blueprint for life is Jesus’ Sermon
on the Mount (message: love our enemies), I also appreciated
the belief by those who felt Saddam Hussein must be removed
from power. The fear was whether he had weapons of mass
destruction (I wish the NY Jets had them instead of weapons
of self-destruction) at the time, which I suspect he did
but they’re in Syria now and/or destroyed. Even if
he didn’t, I believed, like many, that he would eventually
acquire them and we all would face a very serious problem.
We can debate this through hindsight until
we’re all blue in the face, but I can tell you that
Iraq, IMHO, is going to be just the opening act to a showdown
likely to come to a head in 2006. The bigger issue will
likely be Iran and its drive for nuclear weapons. In fact,
I believe Iran can become one of the big news stories in
2006 and the foreseeable future.
Iran’s new President, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, is purging government institutions up and down
the ladder in what “The Guardian” U.K. newspaper
called “a coup d’etat.” Throw in his call
for wiping Israel off the map, reports that members of Al
Qaeda are roaming freely in Tehran and living in homes belonging
to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (according to a German
monthly magazine) and a small matter regarding a nuclear
bomb, and I believe both Iran and Iraq will become flash
points and underpin gold. Israel has become very vocal and
has vowed not to allow Iran to have a nuclear bomb. Former
Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu openly called for
a pre-emptive strike against Iran’s nuclear program.
London’s Sunday Times reported that Israel’s
prime Minster Ariel Sharon has given orders to be ready
by the end of March for possible strikes on secret uranium
enrichment sites in Iran. The German newspaper Der Tagesspiegel
said on December 31st that the United States government
has begun coordinating plans with NATO for a possible military
attack against Iran. And to top it all off, The London-based
Jane’s Defence Weekly has reported that Iran and Syria
signed a strategic accord that pledges Syria will store
Iranian nuclear weapons and missiles.
*****
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