|

When gold broke 450 last week it made a key
breakout. For the past nine months, 450 has been resistance
on gold. The move up in gold is being helped by fears of
inflation due to several things - the flooding in New Orleans,
high oil prices, signs that the Fed is near the end of its
cycle of raising interest rates, and an increasingly vulnerable
dollar.
The spending approved by Congress and the
President for New Orleans is busting the budget deficit.
According to Republican Congressman Ron Paul:
"Congress reacted to Katrina in the expected
irresponsible manner. It immediately appropriated over $60
billion with little planning or debate. Taxes wont
be raised to pay the bill fortunately. There will
be no offsets or spending reductions to pay the bill. Welfare
and entitlement spending is sacrosanct. Spending for the
war in Iraq and the military-industrial complex is sacrosanct.
There is no guarantee that gracious foreign lenders will
step forward, especially without raising interest rates.
This means the Federal Reserve and Treasury will print the
money needed to pay the bills. The sad truth is that monetary
debasement hurts poor people the most the very people
we saw on TV after Katrina. Inflating our currency hurts
the poor and destroys the middle class, while transferring
wealth to the ruling class. This occurs in spite of good
intentions and misplaced compassion."
"We face a coming financial crisis. Our
current account deficit is more than $600 billion annually.
Our foreign debt is more than $3 trillion. Foreigners now
own over $1.4 trillion of our Treasury and mortgage debt.
We must borrow $3 billion from foreigners every business
day to maintain our extravagant spending. Our national debt
now is increasing $600 billion per year, and guess what,
we print over $600 billion per year to keep the charade
going. But there is a limit and Im fearful were
fast approaching it."
"Runaway inflation is a well-known phenomenon.
It leads to political and economic chaos of the kind we
witnessed in New Orleans. Hopefully well come to our
senses and not allow that to happen. But were vulnerable
and we have only ourselves to blame. The flawed paper money
system in existence since 1971 has allowed for the irresponsible
spending of the past 30 years. Without a linkage to gold,
Washington politicians and the Federal Reserve have no restraints
placed on their power to devalue our money by merely printing
more to pay the bills run up by the welfare-warfare state."
"This system of money is a big contributing
factor in the exporting of American jobs, especially in
the manufacturing industries."
"Since the last link to gold was severed
in 1971, the dollar has lost 92% of its value relative to
gold, with gold going from $35 to $450 per ounce."
"Major adjustment of the dollar and the
current account deficit can come any time, and the longer
the delay the greater the distortions will be in terms of
a correction."
On Friday, the University of Michigan sentiment
survey was released and showed a sharp plunge in consumer
confidence from 89.1 in August to 76.9 this month. Even
more troubling, the survey's expectations component fell
to 63.6 from 76.9.
High oil prices and maxed out credit cards
may finally be taking their toll on consumers. They certainly
have them worried, but consumers have not yet taken action
based on these worries, they have yet to slow down their
spending. It is only a matter of time before they'll have
no choice in the matter. The economy has been slowing all
year. Over the past four quarters, GDP growth has slowed
down. Manufacturing orders have been falling every month.
These facts have economists looking forward
to the end of the Fed's cycle of raising interest rates.
The Fed meets Tuesday to decide whether or not it will raise
rates again this September. Some weekend news stories are
looking for the Fed to raise rates, but to cushion the impact
by dropping its familiar verbiage of doing so at a "measured
pace" to prepare the ground for the end of the cycle.
I don't know if they are going to do that or not, but I'm
sure such speculation has helped fuel gold over the past
few days. I wouldn't be surprised if gold pulls back down
after the Fed meeting. Markets have a tendency to buy the
rumor and sell the news and, in this case for gold, the
rumor is the Fed meeting.
This would make sense technically also. Often
when a stock or a market breaks out of resistance it pulls
back into its base, pauses, and then breaks out again to
begin its real run. I expect this to happen again. What
is more, gold stocks are now overbought:

Just like the metal, the XAU gold stock index
flashed a major long-term buy signal last week when the
XAU/gold ratio broke out of a downtrend resistance line
that goes back for almost two years. Every time in the past
three decades when this type of resistance line has been
broken, gold stocks have rallied for at least six months.
This time is unlikely to be any different.
However, I would expect some sort of pause
before we rally much higher. The XAU has gone straight from
100 to 110 in the past two weeks. And 110 is resistance
that goes back to the Fall of 2003.

The XAU is also overbought. It is above its
bollinger bands and is also now above the resistance line
in its upward trend channel that has been in place since
May. I can see it pulling back to the 102-105 area, then
basing for a few weeks before breaking out again.
I am not selling my gold stocks. I am holding
on and I plan on selling when I get a long-term sell signal
- when the price of gold outperforms the XAU for at least
a week. I am not getting a sell signal now, only a signal
telling me that the XAU is overbought.
But an overbought signal is not a reason to
sell. The big gains aren't even here yet. We've only seen
a preview of what is to come. When the Fed stops raising
interest rates in one or two FOMC meetings after this next
one, the price of gold is going to explode. If gold is going
up now on mere 'speculation' that the Fed may change some
of the language in its statement, what do you think will
happen when they actually stop raising rates?
The dollar hasn't even started to drop yet
and gold is going nuts! I think we're going to see the XAU
and gold pause over the next few weeks to digest its gains
and then breakout again as the US dollar tops out and starts
a move towards its 80 resistance level into the end of 2005.
The move then in gold stocks will be incredible.
You have no idea how good it can be. Gold stocks are going
to end up trading like Internet stocks did in 1999.
What you should do now is go over your portfolio
of mining and exploration stocks. Don't sell all of them.
Go over them and sell those that are lagging or are questionable
companies with the intention of placing the cash you raise
into better companies over the next couple of weeks.
You want to be positioned before the next
breakout in the best gold stocks so you can fully benefit
from this gain. I plan on picking a few more out once we
see gold make a pullback. It could happen right now or in
a few days, but it will eventually happen. If it does pull
back, don't let it scare you! You should be ready to buy
more and build your position up.
To find out what gold stocks Mike Swanson
holds and plans on buying subscribe to his free Weekly Gold
Report at http://wallstreetwindow.com/weeklygold.htm
****
Disclaimer
To find out what gold stocks Mike
Swanson holds and plans on buying subscribe to his free
Weekly Gold Report at http://wallstreetwindow.com/weeklygold.htm
Michael Swanson is the President
of TimingWallStreet, Inc., which owns WallStreetWindow.
WallStreetWindow contains the opinions of Swanson is provided
for informational purposes only. Neither Swanson nor TimingWallstreet,
Inc. provide individual investment advice and will not advise
you personally concerning the nature, potential, value,
or of any particular stock or investment strategy. To the
extent that any of the information contained in this article
may be deemed investment advice, such information is impersonal
and not tailored to the investment needs of any specific
person. Past results of TimingWallStreet, WallStreetWidow,
or Michael Swanson are not necessarily indicative of future
performance. Michael Swanson, entities that he controls.
family, and associates may have positions in securities
mentioned in this article of on WallStreetWindow and may
close them at any time.
TimingWallStreet, Inc. does
not represent the accuracy nor does it warranty the accuracy,
completeness or timeliness of the statements made on its
web site or in its email alerts. The information provided
should therefore be used as a basis for continued, independent
research into a security referenced in this article so that
the Subscriber forms his or her own opinion regarding any
investment in a security mentioned in it. The Subscriber
therefore agrees that he or she alone bears complete responsibility
for their own investment research and decisions. We are
not and do not represent ourselves to be a registered investment
adviser or advisory firm or company. You should consult
a qualified financial advisor or broker before making any
investment decision and to help you evaluate any information
you may receive from this article.
Consequently, the Subscriber
understands and agrees that by using any of TimingWallStreet
services, either directly or indirectly, TimingWallStreet,
Inc. shall not be liable to anyone for any loss, injury
or damage resulting from the use of or information attained
from TimingWallStreet or any of its services.
|