Gold & Precious Metals

Gold & silver slump then jump

BULLIONVAULT users added more gold to their holdings last month than any time in a year.

Indeed, the people choosing to buy gold in February outnumbered sellers by the greatest margin since April 2013.

That’s clearly shown on our new Gold Investor Index, now detailed in full on GoldNews here. 

Check the charts to see the dramatic turnaround from New Year’s poor sentiment…the weakest in a half-decade. 

Same story in silver. Our new Silver Investor Index…again tracking the balance of buyers over sellers on BullionVault, and thus judging sentiment amongst the world’s largest single pool of private bullion owners…jumped near a 2-year high last month after drifting towards record lows in January. 

Just more straws in the wind? Perhaps. But carry on like this, and precious metals investors will soon have enough to carpet a small rabbit hutch. 

Because it isn’t only private investors using BullionVault who are changing behaviour. 

Hot-money positioning in gold futures and options, says Australia’s ANZ Bank, “currently suggests that gold is not all that unloved.” Because while the latest data show bullish traders cutting their bets last week, there was “very little addition” of new bearish bets that prices might fall. 

That makes a big switch from the way hedge funds bet against gold in 2013 and 2014. 

Meantime in exchange-traded trust funds… a handy route for US money managers to buy gold-price exposure without owning metal…January saw the fastest growth since mid-2010 as prices rose. 

But on February’s price drop, “investors held onto positions,” notes Jonathan Butler at Japanese conglomerate Mitsubishi, “rather than liquidating holdings in line with price declines, the more usual behaviour.” 

Yes, the giant GLD trust saw a big outflow Monday, the first trading day of March. But the big silver trust…the iShares SLV…saw more money come in. And extremes in market sentiment take time to reverse.

Gold dropped 40% from 2011…and silver prices fell 70%…to the lows seen late last year. The turnaround has to start somewhere.

And starting from the New Year’s very weak levels, precious metals have found more solid ETF support, less bearish hedge funds, and more bullish private investors

Adrian Ash
Head of Research, BullionVault

Key data and market events, times in GMT (CET-1, EST+5):

 

  • Monday US manufacturing expanding quickly, but construction slumped, personal spending fell, inflationbadly below US Fed’s target in Jan…
  • Overnight Japan’s monetary-base growing less quickly, swells a mere 37% per year in Feb…
  • 03.30 Reserve Bank of Australia holds rates at 2.25%…
  • 07.00 Germany retail sales for Jan. revised sharply higher…
  • 08.00 Spain added jobs in Feb, defies analyst forecasts…
  • 09.30 UK construction activity jumps back to pre-Crash levels (Markit/CIPS PMI)…
  • 10.00 Eurozone factory-gate prices revised sharply lower for Jan, fell 3.4% annually…
  • 13.30 Canada’s GDP revision for end-2014…
  • 15.00 US economic optimism (IBD/TIPP)…
  • Tonight Australia’s 2014 GDP; China services-sector growth for Feb…

 

 

Precious Metals: Slow Stocks Oscillator Breakout!

Screen Shot 2015-02-27 at 9.10.50 AM

Here are today’s videos:

Silver Slow Stokes Breakout Charts Analysis

GDX Slow Stokes Breakout Charts Analysis

US Dollar Bull Flag In Play Charts Analysis

Crude Oil Dead Cat Charts Analysis

Gold Doji At Support Charts Analysis

GDXJ Breakout With Some Volume Charts Analysis

Thanks,

Morris

 

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Canada

Richard Russell Just Exposed A Coming Event That Is Going To Shock The World!

King-World-News-Richard-Russell-1728x800 cAs people continue to digest breaking news out of Greece and Ukraine, today the Godfather of newsletter writers, 90-year-old Richard Russell, just exposed a coming event that is going to shock the world.  Russell also warned the world is completely unprepared for this and told investors how to position themselves….continue reading HERE

Gold News Monitor originally sent to subscribers on February 26, 2015, 7:49 AM.

As we have already reported, Janet Yellen testified two days ago to the Senate Banking Committee. Yesterday the Fed’s chair submitted identical remarks to the Committee on Financial Services, U.S. House of Representatives. What we want to analyze today are, thus, her question-and-answer sessions from these two days and their implications for the gold market.

Following her testimonies, Yellen was asked many times about the inflation in different contexts. On wages and inflation, two days ago she answered:

“I don’t see any evidence of that (inflation heading above 2 percent) … we need to be forward looking… We do see that the labor market is improving and we are getting closer to our goal of maximum employment. It’s important to remember that monetary policy is highly accommodative.”

It is an important hint: the Fed does not see inflation heading above the target. All that remains is the belief that disinflation will be transitory. Just forget about the harsh present reality, we have to be forward looking. It is a bit ironic that a Keynesian economist, who should be repeating all the time that in the long-run we are all dead, says that the future is bright. It seems that the philosophical position depends on whether the Fed should introduce or give up a highly accommodative policy.

The next answer, from today’ session, is even more bullish for the gold prices.

“We think that inflation is going to move lower before it moves higher for exactly the reasons you cited: import prices have been falling in part because of the dollar, and declining oil prices have had a very major influence … We do think that the effects of these factors will be transitory and, especially with an improving labor market, that we expect inflation over the medium-term, the next two or three years, to move up to our 2 percent target.

It seems that Fed adopted a rather uncommon definition of ‘transitory’. Usually it means short-lived, however for Yellen inflation may move up just over the next two or three years, after the ‘transitory’ factors have ceased to influence the economy. So, how does this affect the timing of the Fed’s hike? Well, Yellen gives an answer:

“Before beginning to raise rates the committee needs to be reasonably confident that over the medium-term inflation will move up toward its 2-percent objective. I don’t want to set down any single criterion that is necessary for that to occur. The committee does look at wage growth. We have not yet seen – there are perhaps hints – but we have not yet seen any significant pick-up in wage growth.

When will the Fed be reasonably confident about the future dynamics of inflation (if it is possible at all)? Just imagine Yellen’s answer. Uhm. Good question. Fed does not have any single criterion to measure an inflation, but we can look at wage growth. Yes, I said a moment ago that “wages tend to be a lagging indicator of improvement in the labor market”, but we can use it to assess future inflation. It does have perfect sense, we have to be forward-looking.

Let’s move joking aside. The Fed makes an interest rate hike dependent on the level of inflation, while inflation depends on wage growth. So, what is Yellen’s opinion about the labor market and future wage growth?

“(The U-6 measure of unemployment) is a much broader indicator of underemployment or unemployment in the U.S. economy … It definitely shows a less rosy picture than U-3 or the 5.7 percent number and I did mention that we don’t at this point, in spite of the fact that the unemployment rate has come down, don’t feel that we’ve achieved so-called maximum employment in part for these very reasons … Labor force participation has come down … I don’t expect it to move up over time, but I do think a portion of the depressed labor force participation does reflect cyclical weakness in that in a stronger job market more people would enter.”

It does not sound too optimistic. As we have pointed out, looking from the broader perspective, like the U-6 measure of unemployment does, the labor market is far from full recovery.

To sum up, the Fed makes an interest rate hike dependent on the level of inflation, while inflation depends on wage growth, which has not recorded any significant pick-up in wage growth. It means that the Fed signals no rush to raise rates. Therefore, we interpret Yellen’s spontaneous answer sessions as bit more bullish for the gold prices than the carefully prepared testimony. Taking under account gold prices after Yellen’s testimony, the market could think similarly and the long-term outlook for gold remains favorable. Based on the technical developments in the gold charts, though, the short-term outlook does not have to be as bright.

Thank you.

Arkadiusz Sieron
Sunshine Profits‘ Gold News Monitor and Market Overview Editor

The Bull Case For Gold This Year, and the Bear

k 0000093.gifThere are many opposing views as to what will drive the price of gold this year and in which direction. We will discuss these views and the major factors that have contributed to their formation. Gold is a function of monetary policy just as currencies are, so we will cover on the actions and current stance of major central banks with a heavy focus on the Fed and the US economy. We currently hold the view that the Fed will hike this year and that this will drive gold to new lows before the end of 2015.

US Economy

Since the global financial crisis in 2008 the US economy has appeared to be on the road to recovery, only for its health to decline further. These false starts show that the current growth and apparent economic health in the US may not be the beginning of another boom. If this is the case the Fed will have to delay the first rate hike, which will be extremely bullish for gold.

However, the signs are particularly strong at present. The employment sector has shown consistent growth with considerable gains in nonfarm payrolls. The average gain of 268,000 jobs a month over the last twelve prints has led to unemployment declining towards the Fed’s target, and has thus resulted in many holding the view that 2015 will see the beginning of a new tightening cycle

BullBearGold1

From a trading perspective we believe the current situation is one of “the trend is your friend”. This means that we would rather react to a change in data or waning of economic momentum than to call that the economy is heading south prematurely. Moving against the tide of the US economy has been a losing battle for gold bulls in recent years.

The Fed

Gold bears and the majority of investors in the markets both believe that the Fed will hike this year. We are among these, with the June meeting being the most likely candidate for a hike being our view. Just as massive quantitative easing and accommodative monetary policy was highly bullish for gold, a rate hike and an overall tightening of policy will drive gold lower. This means that if data continues to show improvement in the economy, then the Fed will hike this year and gold will be driven to new lows.

Although if recent strength is simply another false start and the data takes a turn for the worse, then the Fed will delay the start of a new tightening cycle. In fact, if the situation becomes severe there is the possibility that the Fed may introduce new easing measures. A dovish change in stance from the Fed, by way of at least a delay in tightening, would be highly bullish for gold.

The Fed has been building towards a rate hike ever since tapering was first discussed, which means that they have now been on this course for years. The situation in the economy also appears strong enough to support higher interest rates and is likely to continue to show improvement. We therefore believe it is near certain that the Fed will hike rates before the year is out.

Monetary Policy Globally

Gold is a function of monetary policy, which is why we cover actions of central banks closely in our research. However, the Fed is not the only central bank, even if it is the most influential to the gold price. This means that we must also consider the actions of central banks globally.

Outside of the US monetary policy is still highly accommodative. The BOJ and ECB have both embarked upon new, major quantitative easing programs in the last six months while other countries are cutting rates or at least holding back in increasing them. This provides a positive back drop for the gold as an alternative monetary asset that cannot be simply “printed” to ease economic conditions.

Yet in spite of this accommodative policy, the fact of the matter is that gold still remains very close to the lows made last November.

The argument that we as gold bears hold as to why ECB QE has failed to drive gold higher is based on the nature of the QE, which targets credit rather than simply being broad based. This means that it will stimulate growth in a similar way to QE3 in the US, which history shows was highly bearish for gold.

The action from the BOJ has not sparked any major movement higher either, but for a different reason. This is that markets and come to expect accommodative policy from Japan after years of deflation and the efforts to combat it. This has lessened the impact on the gold price to effectively nil, which means that future action is unlikely to spark a rally either.

This means that although the actions of central banks globally may provide a positive back drop for gold, it does not make sense to be holding the metal. There are other strategies, such as selling downside equity protection and being long stocks, that are much better suited to taking advantage of accommodative monetary policy.

Currency

Monetary easing across most of the world means that the currencies of these economies, such as the Euro and the Yen, are likely to weaken. This is bullish for gold since the metal makes a good investment as an alternate currency for those in the Eurozone and countries with an accommodative stance.

However, there are also bearish currency implications that arise from the Fed moving towards a tightening cycle while policy is still dovish across the rest of the world. The US dollar has strengthened significantly with a rate hike has been priced in while other currencies are being weakened.

BullBearGold2

This strength has slowed upward movement in the gold price and is likely to continue to do so. A strengthening US dollar also means that even if gold stays at its current level in other currencies, it has the potential to decline in US dollars.

We believe that the currency implications are on the whole bearish for gold. It is unlikely that increased demand for gold as an alternative monetary asset will counteract the strengthening of the US dollar and the bearish effects of the Fed moving towards a tightening cycle.

Oil

Oil has more than halved since June last year and has lost a third of its value in the last three months alone. This decline and the resultant low energy costs are arguably yet to flow through to effect inflation in full. This means that disinflationary risks are still present with the potential to delay a rate hike and push gold higher.

There is also the risk that oil breaks lower again and declines significantly form here. This leads to the possibility of disinflation and new QE programs in the US to combat it. The effect of which would be massively bullish for gold.

Oil prices have stabilised somewhat around the $50 level, which means that there is the potential for an increase from here. Given that this is the case, we believe the Fed will look through the drop in energy costs as “transitory”, just as they did when oil prices rose post GFC. Policy is about much more than the price of oil and as such linking Fed policy with such high leverage to energy costs is a misconception.

Inflation

The key risk to a bearish stance on gold is a change in the trend of economic data in the US. At present this data is showing improvement in the US economy, particularly in the employment sector as we have covered, but there should be at least some concern around prices. There has been a lack of wage push inflation and the overall inflation rate has slowed since reaching 2.1% in June last year, with the last print showing only a 0.8% rise in prices. If this continues, then the Fed will be under less pressure to increase rates and therefore may delay the first rate hike and lead to a rally in gold.

Although lower inflation does pose a risk to gold shorts, it is unlikely that this risk will become a reality. We are beginning to see wage inflation that is likely to increase as the unemployment rate declines further. Oil prices have also begun to stabilise and have the potential to rebound from here. This means that the current situation in inflation is likely to be transitory and not indicative of the overall economic health in the US. Therefore, it is likely that inflation will provide sufficient pressure for the Fed to hike this year.

Conclusion

Considering the factors and dynamics discussed we are bearish on gold. We respect the risks in play and believe that the extent of the Fed’s hiking cycle will be less than the market currently anticipates, but that ultimately the effect will be bearish. We hold the view that the Fed will hike in June and that ahead of this gold will suffer significantly. Specifically, we believe that gold will make a new low and trade beneath the $1130.40 level seen last November and are offering a money back special to new subscribers until March if we are wrong. To find out how exactly we will take advantage of the decline in gold, please subscribe below.

Go gently.

Bob Kirtley

Email:bob@gold-prices.biz

URL: www.silver-prices.net

URL: www.skoptionstrading.com

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