Don't expect a big correction in gold & gold stocks

Kitco Media
By Jordan Roy-Byrne
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Who is not expecting a correction in precious metals right now?

It's always the smart, sensible, but kneejerk posture following a rebound that follows a bear market.

I even wrote about potential downside targets when the sector hit resistance roughly six weeks ago.

But the reality is that Gold and gold stocks do not correct that much until they have already made a big move.

Let me give you some historical examples following some major lows in Gold.

Gold rebounded roughly 50% in the seven months following its August 1976 low. During that period, Gold corrected only 5% and 8%. In fact, Gold did not correct more than 12% until two years after that bottom.

Gold nearly doubled from May 2004 to May 2006 yet did not correct more than 10%.

Following its October 2008 low, Gold rebounded a whopping 80% over the next 13 months. Because this was an accelerated advance, Gold corrected 10%, 11%, and 15% along the way.

From August 2018 to August 2020, Gold gained 80%. Besides the 15% Covid crash decline, Gold never corrected more than 8%. Gold did not decline more than 8% until 19 months into that rebound.

Here is a look at how the current rebound compares to past rebounds.

The current rebound is in line with the dotted line, an average of the four rebounds mentioned above. Note that the chart plots weekly data, making the corrections look smaller.

Judging from history, even if Gold can reach $2000 or $2050, I would not expect more than an 8% to 10% correction from that point.

 

The prognosis for the gold stocks is similar.

Unless gold stocks accelerate higher in a vertical fashion, like after the 2008 bottom and after 2001, corrections will be limited to 15% and 20% at the most.

Below we plot the major rebounds in GDXJ on the same scale. The black, the current rebound, is slightly ahead of 2005 but well below the 2008 cyclical bull market.

From May 2005 to May 2006, GDXJ gained over 150% and endured nothing worse than a 12% correction in closing terms.

GDXJ, following its major low in 2008, did not correct more than 19% in closing terms until it gained 200%.

 

Technically, GDX and GDXJ just broke out two weeks ago. Note the blue arrows.

An immediate pullback would be a retest of the breakout. From its measured upside target of $42, GDXJ would correct only 13% if it retested the previous resistance at $37. Even if the miners zoomed higher to the red lines, I do not think they would correct more than 15%.

 

Presuming this is a real bull market for precious metals, it is too early to worry about a big correction.

Big corrections occur because of negative fundamental changes or because the market is overbought—no need to worry about either.

It is tough to buy stocks after they have already rebounded 30%, 40%, and 50%.

My guidance would be to evaluate the company's fundamental value to ensure the stock has plenty of upside potential, avoid buying stock charts that look like a rhino horn, and buy weakness but do not wait for a 20% or 30% decline.

I continue to focus on finding high-quality juniors with 500% upside potential over the next few years.

Kitco Media

Jordan Roy-Byrne

Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT is a Chartered Market Technician and member of the Market Technicians Association.. He is the publisher and editor of TheDailyGold Premium, a publication which emphasizes market timing and stock selection for the sophisticated investor, as well as TheDailyGold Global, an add-on service for subscribers which covers global capital markets.

Jordan's work has been featured in CNBC, Barrons, Financial Times Alphaville, Kitco and Yahoo Finance. He is quoted regularly in Barrons. Jordan has been a speaker at PDAC, Cambridge House and Hard Assets conferences. TheDailyGold.com was recently named one of the top 50 Investment Blogs byDailyReckoning. Jordan earned a degree in General Studies from the University of Washington with a concentration in International Economic Development. He also lived and worked in Southeast Asia for 3 years in order to study economic development from an emerging market perspective. In his spare time he enjoys spending time with his wife, fitness, football and travel.

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