Gold & Precious Metals

Is This Time Different for the Gold Miners?

Since the April 2013 gold meltdown there have been no less than half a dozen failed rallies in the gold miners – is this time different?

Click to enlarge

GDX Daily 1.20.2014

 

….read more HERE

Major Buy Signal in the Precious Metals Sector in the Next 2 – 3 Weeks

It’s been my opinion for the last several weeks that gold formed an intermediate degree bottom on December 31. That being said I’m still a bit nervous that the sector could suffer another manipulation event (like the flash crash two weeks ago) so I haven’t been willing to enter a firm long position just yet.

However there are definite signs that this bear market is probably over. The large momentum divergences on the weekly charts are one.

1-momentum divergence

….read and view more HERE

Pricing the Taper

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According to the Bank for International Settlements, the total of public and private debt in the G20 Nations is 30 percent higher than it was before the Great Recession of 2008 and 2009. And when you think of a crisis as a period for deleveraging, or starting to reign in and payback debt, that hasn’t been the case across the world’s 20 largest and emerging market economies, and policies like ultralow interest rates and quantitative easing have only acted to encourage and exacerbate the issue. 

The concern stems from the stimulus driven policies of the world’s central banks that have allowed consumers to go out and make big ticket purchases at relatively low financing costs. Buying that new car or managing mortgage payments were made significantly more achievable because of how longer term interest rates were and are being suppressed. But as the Fed enters this period of altering their form of stimulus which they provide to the market by shifting away from an exhausted bond purchase program towards enhanced forward guidance on record low policy rates, the market still conceals a lot of uncertainty that becomes difficult to price in.  

We like to believe in the efficiency of markets and that the price of an asset reflects all the current available information to any level of investor. And that encompasses the fact that expectations of future events are priced into the market as well. Hence the episode back in May of 2013 when Chairman Bernanke hinted at the idea of paring back bond purchases, the  effect on financial markets was significant because easy money policies from the Fed provided fuel for risky assets. But now that the markets have seemed to have digested the idea of  a taper from the US Federal Reserve and the realization that Quantitative Easing (QE) can come to an end, some analysts suggest that this is then realized in the price of financial assets.

But the uncertainty still remains, and unfortunately I think it’s more prevalent than ever. Beyond the fact the G20 Nations are more levered than they were before the crisis, the biggest risk to 2014 is that the market has mispriced the effect of tapering QE. As we know, the monetary efforts employed by the US Fed were experimental policies that have previously never been experienced. It’s very difficult to price something into the markets that we have never seen before.
 
The McKinsey Global Institute published a challenging paper back in November of last year stating the effects of ultra-low interest rates and a stimulus policy on financial markets is inconclusive. That could suggest the withdrawal of stimulus might not impact asset prices, but this paper has been refuted quite logically by many leading thinkers as it assumes that stimulus level rates had no effect on the real economy. It essentially ignores the fact that businesses were able to finance new projects and lock in record low borrowing rates (which they have), or make those investments in an easy-money environment. The markets are forward looking (and given strong annual returns, economic growth numbers are beginning to echo that), but the uncertainty questions whether the natural players in the market can pick up the slack created by the US Fed’s diminished presence.
Whether this market can sustain its momentum once the US Fed no longer plays an as active role in the longer term debt markets is the unknown for 2014. Its without doubt the Fed will remain in its accommodative stance with their forward guidance and projections while maintaining a rock bottom Fed Funds Rate, but the question will be with regards to how the economy will fare one to two years down the road.

 

Robert Levy 

MA (Economics) 

Director 

rlevy@bordergold.com 

(604) 535-3287 

www.bordergold.com

 
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 All investments contain risks and may lose value. This material is the opinion of its author(s) and is not the opinion of Border Gold Corp. This material is shared for informational purposes only. Information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but not guaranteed. No part of this article may be reproduced in any form, or referred to in any other publication, without express written permission. Border Gold Corp. (BGC) is a privately owned company located near Vancouver, BC. ©2014, BGC. 

 

 

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Canada

Gold as a deflation hedge

blackswans

Black Swans, Yellow Gold

by Michael J. Kosares

(The following is the first of a five-part series on how gold performs during periods of deflation, chronic disinflation, runaway stagflation and hyperinflation. The first installment examines gold’s safe-haven role during a deflationary event like the global 1930s economic depression.)

“The inability to predict outliers implies the inability to predict the course of history. . .But we act as though we are able to predict historical events, or, even worse, as if we are able to change the course of history. We produce thirty-year projections of social security deficits and oil prices without realizing that we cannot even predict these for next summer — our cumulative prediction errors for political and economic events are so monstrous that every time I look at the empirical record I have to pinch myself to verify that I am not dreaming. What is surprising is not the magnitude of our forecast errors, but our absence of awareness of it.”

– Nicholas Taleb, The Black Swan — The Impact of the Highly Improbable, 2010

“Having been mugged too often by reality, forecasters now express less confidence about our abilities to look beyond the immediate horizon. We will forever need to reach beyond our equations to apply economic judgment. Forecasters may never approach the fantasy success of the Oracle of Delphi or Nostradamus, but we can surely improve on the discouraging performance of the past.”

– Alan Greenspan, The Map and the Territory, 2013

Introduction

This short study examines gold’s performance under the four most commonly predicted worst-case economic scenarios — a 1930s-style deflation, chronic Japanese-style disinflation, a 1970s-style runaway stagflation, and a Weimar-style hyperinflation. “That men do not learn very much from the lessons of history,” Aldous Huxley once wrote, “is the most important of all the lessons of history.” Though I agree with Huxley’s assessment when applied to contemporary policymakers and central bankers, I do not agree with it when applied to their counterparts in the private sector, i.e., the individual investors. As justification, I offer the ongoing (and long-term) success of the USAGOLD website as well as the soaring statistics of late on private gold ownership both here and abroad, most of which has been accumulated for safe-haven purposes. Individually, we can and do learn the lessons of history even if we do not always do so collectively.

Black Swans, Yellow Gold is dedicated to those who believe, like Nicholas Taleb, that it is just as important to prepare for what we cannot foresee as what we can. Some might put their money on the latest Oracle of Delphi or the contemporary reincarnation of Nostradamus — or even an all-seeing eye plug-in that can be downloaded from the internet — but in the end, such notions are the dreams of government planners and retired central bankers. For the rest of us, a solid hedge in gold coins, as your are about to read, is the more sensible and reliable alternative — a wealth haven for all seasons.

We invite you to return to these pages periodically for the second installment in this series which we plan to publish next week.

FT-Deflation

Gold as a deflation hedge (United States, 1929)

WEBSTER DEFINES DEFLATION AS A “CONTRACTION IN THE VOLUME of available money and credit that results in a general decline in prices.” Typically deflations occur in gold-standard economies when the state is deprived of its ability to conduct bailouts, run deficits and print money. Characterized by high unemployment, bankruptcies, government austerity measures and bank runs, a deflationary economic environment is usually accompanied by a stock and bond market collapse and general financial panic — an altogether unpleasant set of circumstances.

The Great Depression of the 1930s serves as a workable example of the degree to which gold protects its owners under deflationary circumstances. First, because the price of gold was fixed at $20.67 per ounce, it gained purchasing power as the general price level fell. In 1933, when the U.S. government raised the price of gold to $35 per ounce in an effort to reflate the economy through a formal devaluation of the dollar, gold gained even more purchasing power. President Franklin D. Roosevelt also confiscated gold bullion by executive order in concert with the devaluation, but exempted “rare and unusual” gold coins which later were defined by regulation simply as items minted before 1933. As a result, only those citizens who owned gold coins dated before 1933 were able to reap the benefit of the higher fixed prices. The accompanying graph illustrates those gains, as well as the gap between consumer prices and the gold price.

CPI-Gold1929-41

Gold as a deflation hedge

Second, since gold acts as a stand-alone asset that is not another’s liability, it functioned as an effective store of value prior to 1933 for those who either converted a portion of their capital to gold bullion or withdrew their savings from the banking system in the form of gold coins before the crisis struck. Those who did not have gold as part of their savings plan found themselves at the mercy of events when the stock market crashed and the banks closed their doors (many of which had already been bankrupted).

How gold might react in a deflation under today’s fiat money system is a more complicated scenario. Even deflation under a fiat money system, the general price level would be falling by definition. Economists who make the deflationary argument within the context of a fiat money economy usually use the analogy of the central bank “pushing on a string.” It wants to inflate, but no matter how hard it tries the public refuses to borrow and spend. (If this all sounds familiar, it should. This is precisely the situation in which the Federal Reserve finds itself today.) In the end, so goes the deflationist argument, the central bank fails in its efforts and the economy rolls over from recession to a full-blown deflationary depression.

How the government treats gold under a deflationary scenario will play heavily into its performance:

– If gold is subjected to price controls and restricted ownership, as it was in the 1930s deflation, it would likely perform as it did then, i.e., its purchasing power would increase as the price level fell. Under such circumstances, the ownership of “rare and unusual” gold coins might once again come into play.

– If ownership is not restricted, it would turn out to be the best of all possible worlds for gold owners. Its purchasing power would increase as the price level fell, and the price itself could rise as a result of increased demand from investors hedging systemic risks and financial market instability.

Note: That, by the way, is the primary reason governments tend to restrict gold ownership when confronted with widespread bank runs and failing financial markets. Governments seize gold not because they need the money; they seize it to cut off the escape route and force capital flows back into banks and financial markets. As an aside, that is precisely the reason why governments have an interest in controlling the price of gold. Former Fed chairman Paul Volcker, it has been copiously reported, once said, “Gold is my enemy. I’m always watching what it is doing.” Though there is no direct evidence I know of that the Fed or Treasury Department intervened directly in the gold market during Mr. Volcker’s tenure, his statement does reflect the acute interest in gold on the part of monetary policy-makers. Alan Greenspan voiced a similar interest in gold throughout his Fed chairmanship and still does today, though unlike Volcker he has always defended gold and expressed an appreciation for its use as a form of money or final payment or reconciliation. Gold, in the end, is not just competition for the dollar; it is competition for bank deposits, stocks and bonds most particularly during times of economic stress — and that is the source of enduring interest among policy-makers.

– www.USAGold.com