Gold & Precious Metals

The best time to buy gold is when the market hates it, especially when it comes to junior explorers with market caps under $1 billion, asserts Ralph Aldis, senior mining analyst with U.S. Global Investors. In this interview with The Gold Report, Aldis shares his main modeling themes. He also explains the win-win-win advantages of flow-through stock issuance, a technique allowed by some noteworthy Canadian provinces.

The best time to buy gold is when the market hates it, especially when it comes to junior explorers with market caps under $1 billion, asserts Ralph Aldis, senior mining analyst with U.S. Global Investors. In this interview with The Gold Report, Aldis shares his main modeling themes. He also explains the win-win-win advantages of flow-through stock issuance, a technique allowed by some noteworthy Canadian provinces.

The Gold Report: At the New Orleans investment conference, U.S. Global Investors CEO Frank Holmes reminded investors that gold is not a means to get rich quick, but should act as a diversifier in a portfolio, a form of insurance. Do you have to remind investors of that?

Ralph Aldis: We do. We always stress that no more than 10% of a portfolio should be exposed to precious metals. Given gold’s poor performance in the last two or more years, the trend has been to chase the market and the S&P 500. This is exactly when investors should be using gold plays to diversify and provide a bit of insurance. If they made good money in the market, they could take 5% or 10% off the table and deploy it in gold plays.

Right now, gold is one of the most hated sectors in the market. That’s when investors should buy it—when nobody loves it.

TGR: You and some of your colleagues at U.S. Global Investors pay a lot of attention to the economic data published by the U.S. government. Recent data suggest that the American economy is gathering strength. What’s your view?

RA: I think the economy overall is gaining strength. That’s what the Federal Reserve has wanted: low interest rates and for the long end of the Treasury curve to go down. The 10-year Treasury note was free money on the table even though it did reflect economic risk; it was crazy not to buy it.

The same thing is true of the S&P 500 these days. The Fed wants inflation, and that starts with inflation of asset prices. Again, it’s almost like getting free money.

If we look at Shadow Stats’ indexes—which calculate inflation the way the Fed and the government used to—inflation is running close to 8% or 9%.

I would also point out the friction in the economy regarding wages. Wages will likely be the next step on the road to inflation. Worldwide, corporate balance sheets are flush with cash. Organized labor is gaining traction on the idea of a living wage. Not every industry will see wage growth all at once, but we will see a series of wage increases across the board.

Another interesting factoid: A recent report from the Harvard Joint Commission on Housing showed rents are up significantly because of the number of houses that have been bought by investors. In some cases, more than 50% of peoples’ income is going toward rent. With rents rising and incomes remaining static, wage inflation will become a real driver.

TGR: Over the last five years, gold has outperformed the bond index, but not the S&P 500 Index. Will that pattern hold over the next five years?

RA: No. In the current economic picture, there is a potential for gold to outperform the S&P 500. If we look at a chart of the last 10 years, it’s only in the last 18 months that the S&P 500 started to outperform gold.

TGR: We’ve seen some dramatic volatility in the gold price over the last few weeks. Should investors expect more volatility in the resource sector as the U.S. moves to exit quantitative easing in 2014?

RA: To the contrary, I think the volatility will subside somewhat. We’ve been in a period of uncertainty about when the Fed is going to act. There have been lots of big trades taking place at unusual hours of the night, when a billion dollars worth of gold futures hit the market and knock it down. I think the people who are bearish on gold have been hitting the markets at unusual hours when there’s actually no liquidity out there.

Players on both sides have been trying to knock the price down. When that happens, China or India comes in and buys to keep the price up. There certainly seems to be a floor under gold right now.

Once we’ve had sufficient tapering to get people to start reassessing the future, there will be more price direction. Volatility tends to go down during a trending market.

TGR: Janet Yellen is in line to become the next Federal Reserve chair. Will she be better or worse for gold than Ben Bernanke?

RA: From what I’ve read, Yellen tends to believe that markets are very inefficient and that the Fed needs to have a hand in it. To some people, that means more stimulus is coming.

In my opinion, the more the Fed gets involved, the greater the chances for policy mistakes. That is probably a positive for gold. When the Fed decides to intercede it just causes more dislocations and puts the markets out of whack.

With the Fed wanting interest rates to remain low, Treasury bills are riskless right now, but that has to correct itself. The market has gone up strongly because the Fed wants asset price inflation to create a wealth effect. However, if corporate profit margins don’t expand as rapidly because of wage growth, that could be a surprise.

TGR: If there is less volatility in 2014, how will that affect how you manage the World Precious Minerals Fund (UNWPX) and the Gold and Precious Metals Fund (USERX)?

RA: It won’t change anything to any major degree. We try to stick with the main themes of our models: growth in resources per share, growth in production per share, growth in the cash flow.

Regarding the volatility of cash flow, we’re looking at whether the market will pay a higher multiple for a cash flow that’s less volatile. This can be a case of contrarian thinking; some people would advise buying the company that’s the most out of the money because it will have the biggest move. That may work in the short term, but it’s not sustainable.

We look at management’s track record in managing the volatility of cash flow and the margins. Companies with more stable margins tend to outperform for longer; you can sleep at night with those types of stocks in your portfolio.

Another factor we look at is the relative performance of each stock to its peers to see what the market is saying about the stock. We also look at the stock price of each company and judge it against its resource statement. When we look at the resource statement, we monetize it into equivalence, treating all companies the same. We look at the company’s actual market capitalization against our proprietary resource statement valuation. That is one way to really understand where there are financing needs. Obviously, if a company needs external money, we have to immediately dilute its current share price down to account for the monetization of the assets.

We’re looking for what is catalyst driven. That’s where we’re trying to get our knowledge about processes and events to actually have that additional value for our stock picking.

TGR: That leads me to think that U.S. Global would buy on the dips in the volatility. And if volatility decreases, you would adjust your strategy. Is that the case?

RA: Well, 18 to 24 months ago, when the markets seemed to be losing momentum, we started thinking about which names we did not want to be in. We weeded out a lot that didn’t have the right people, the right project or that would be exceptionally challenged in some way. Now, we have a portfolio of names that we want to own.

We always take advantage of volatility and do a little trading on the margin, but we want a core portfolio of names that we believe will not give us any big surprises.

TGR: How would a hypothetical $10,000 investment in the World Precious Metals Fund have performed versus the New York Stock Exchange’s Arca Gold Miners Index over the last 10 years?

RA: On a total price change percentage basis, from November 2003 through November 2013, we would be down 11.91% and our benchmark would be down 21.05%.

We started at the bottom and ran up as high as 175% in 2007–2008. Then both the fund and our benchmark fell. We accelerated again in 2011, outpacing the benchmark, and are now back to just below where we started 10 years ago.

TGR: According to the most recent data, 80% of the World Precious Metals Fund is mining equities with market caps under $1 billion ($1B). Why do you lean so heavily on that space?

RA: Looking at what the companies do over time, you get the best price returns—the tenbaggers—among the micro caps in the less than $100–500 million ($100–500M) range.

It’s much easier to grow a production profile or resource statement substantially at that lower peer level. That also is where there are more takeovers by majors.

You won’t get the growth in the large-cap space. What you do get is volatility, in the sense that when the gold price moves, money tends to go in and out of the most liquid names the fastest.

TGR: How do you manage the lack of liquidity in the sub-$1B space?

RA: We try to spread our investments out. There are 2,000-odd mining companies listed in Canada. We spread investments across the 100 that are good projects run by good people.

As we do more research and get more comfortable with one company, we may raise its percentage or back off another that’s not working out. We don’t do a lot of rocket trading, blowing in and out of positions. That kind of trading affects the liquidity cost. When we find something isn’t working, the weighting is small enough that we can work our way out of it over time. When we find something that’s really good, we’ll start to raise our weighting as we increase our certainty as to what’s developing with that company.

TGR: You mentioned that the sub-$1B space is where the tenbaggers are. How do you balance that get-rich-quick potential with advising investors to take a long view?

RA: Diversification. In a portfolio of 100 companies, I can’t diversify away the gold risk, but I can diversify away some of the company risk by holding a variety of names. Individual investors are often overweight in a single name, thereby increasing company risk. If the risk profiles are structured correctly, the portfolio volatility should be less volatile than our benchmark.

TGR: Could you explain what you mean by flow-through for our readers?

RA: Certain Canadian provinces let companies raise money for exploration by issuing shares at a premium to their share price. For the initial buyers of the shares, who don’t hold onto the shares, it’s an opportunity to lower their taxes.

It’s a win-win-win. The company gets money. The initial investors get tax relief. The company working in that province gets money to explore for new mines. It’s a great way for the province to encourage development of its resource base.

TGR: What are you thinking about as we close out 2013 and head into 2014?

RA: I think pessimism has reached a maximum, particularly in the gold space. Historically, when pessimistic consensus is this strong and gold stocks are hated this much, these are turning points.

The opportunity is here; don’t get discouraged. I think we are going to see inflation, driven by wages, housing, rents—things that the Fed can’t substitute away in its calculations.

I see profit in the pipeline. The S&P 500 will probably do okay, but investors need to remember that in the 1970s, when adjusted for inflation, gold stocks did much better than the overall market.

TGR: Ralph, thank you for your time and insights.

Ralph Aldis, CFA, rejoined U.S. Global Investors as senior mining analyst in November 2001. He is responsible for analyzing gold and precious metals stocks for the World Precious Minerals Fund (UNWPX) and the Gold and Precious Metals Fund (USERX). Aldis also works with the portfolio management team of the Global Resources Fund (PSPFX) to provide tactical analyses of base metal, paper, chemical, steel and non-ferrous industries. Previously, Aldis worked for Eisner Securities, where he was an investment analyst for its high net worth group and oversaw its mutual fund operations. Before joining Eisner Securities, Aldis worked for 10 years as director of research for U.S. Global Investors, where he applied quantitative skills toward stocks, portfolio tilting, cash optimization and performance attribution analysis. Aldis received a master’s degree in energy and mineral resources from the University of Texas at Austin in 1988 and a Bachelor of Science in geology, cum laude, in 1981, from Stephen F. Austin University. Aldis is a member of the CFA Society of San Antonio.

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Record Shorts Rocket Fuel For Gold Rally

Gold To Rally Year End As Traders Close Some Of Record Short Positions

Short positions are at multi year highs and if the Fed does not taper when  it announces today (Ed Note: Wednesday at  2 p.m. EST),  we will likely see a large short covering rally going into the New Year as shorts close out positions and balance books at year end.

goldcore bloomberg chart3 17-12-13

Bearish bets by hedge funds and money managers in U.S. gold futures and options are close to a 7-1/2 year high, according to data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
   
SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold ETF, said its holdings fell 8.70 tonnes to 818.90 tonnes on Monday – its biggest outflow since Oct 21.
 
Holdings are at their lowest since January 2009 after more than 450 tonnes of outflows this year caused by traders and more speculative investors channelling money towards riskier assets such as equities and bonds which are at record highs in many countries.

Importantly, and little reported on is the fact that the ETF flows have been matched and greatly surpassed by physical gold in China and imports from Hong Kong into China alone.   

goldcore bloomberg chart1 16-12-13

Ed Note: White Bars are China Gold Imports From Hong Kong – Orange Bars are Monthly Change in Gold ETF Holdings

Gold has lost 25% of its value this year after 12 years of gains. There are credible allegations that the market was subject to price manipulation with banks manipulating prices lower through massive concentrated selling at times of low liquidity. Allegations that Chinese entities may be manipulating paper gold prices lower in order to buy physical gold on the cheap are gaining credence.

Whatever, the reasons for gold’s price fall it is a healthy development as it has led to the speculative hot money and weak hands being washed out of the market. Gold is on a much more sustainable footing now and is very much in strong hands now, which bodes well for gold in 2014 and 2015.

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    1. I may have shocked a lot of gold bulls with my recent prediction that the Fed will “taper to zero” over the next 12 – 18 months.  
    2. I’ve likely shocked the bears even more, with my view that the taper is extremely gold-bullish.
    3. Does the amount of OTC derivative debt that has imploded, vastly exceed all the money that has been printed with QE1, QE2, and QE3?  I think the answer is yes.  For QE to be inflationary, more money must be created than destroyed.   
    4. Since the financial system almost shut down in 2008, most OTC derivatives have been valued with “mark to model” accounting.  When the Fed buys them, they get marked to market.  In that transaction, if more money is destroyed than is created, it’s deflationary.
    5. Inflation is not simply a product of an increase in the money supply.  It is created by an increase in the number of times that money changes hands.  Central banks call that “money velocity”.
    6. Please click here now.  That’s a chart of M1 money supply, courtesy of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.  It’s clear that since the Fed’s money printing programs began in 2008, M1 has skyrocketed. 
    7. As QE began, gold rose strongly.  That’s partly because investors anticipated inflation would occur.  It’s also because the rise of the Chindian (China and India) middle class created substantial demand for gold jewellery, unrelated to the QE programs.  When inflation didn’t materialize, Western institutions sold gold, and bought the stock market. 
    8. Please click here now.  This M1V chart (M1 velocity) is interesting.  While the supply of money grew aggressively during the 2008 -2013 period, the velocity of money collapsed.
    9. That situation now appears to be changing.  M1V has suddenly stopped declining and there’s a significant breakout from a bullish wedge pattern.
    10. Many top economists believe the economy tends to lag the stock market by about six months.  I agree.  In the first two quarters of 2014, the economy could show impressive growth in GDP and employment numbers.
    11. Such growth would meet the Fed’s requirements for a steady and gentle taper.  All that begins well, unfortunately, does not always end well.  
    12. Across the waters, inflation is becoming a significant concern in India, while economic growth has weakened.  Most of the inflation is supply-side, so it is difficult to reverse.  Importantly, that inflation can be exported.  
    13. While the US central bank issues policy guidance tomorrow, so does the Indian central bank (RBI).  They are widely expected to raise some interest rates.
    14. Also, Shinzo Abe and Haruhiko Kuroda in Japan are engaged in an extremely aggressive QE money printing program.  The printed money does not seem to be directed at OTC derivatives, as much of it is in America.  Thus, the inflationary ramifications are serious.
    15. By the summer of 2014, US economic growth should cause a serious rise in M1V.  Banks loan aggressively when growth is strong, and I expect a major rise in bank loans in the first half of 2014.  
    16. If heightened M1V is combined with exported inflation from Asia to create powerful inflationary pressures in America, the Fed should begin to taper much more aggressively.  When push comes to shove, the Fed will likely choose to fight inflation, rather than promote growth.  
    17. Professional fund managers watch money velocity very carefully.  Please click here now.  That’s a daily GDX chart, covering about two years of time.  Many gold managers have been forced to sell large amounts of gold stock in recent months, due to redemptions from demoralized investors. 
    18. The enormous volume that I’ve highlighted in green probably signifies an exit from gold stocks by the money supply crowd, and an entry by power players focused on M1V, Japanese QE, and relentless Chindian demand for gold jewellery.  
    19. What would happen to the American stock market in mid-2014, if the Fed began to express serious concerns about inflation, and announced a huge increase in QE tapering?  What would happen if they did it repeatedly?  The Dow would probably crash, and a stampede into gold stocks would likely follow very quickly.  
    20. The Indian elections may coincide with a startling rise in US M1V and cost push inflation in Japan.  The main opposition party is the BJP, and they just announced they are considering a platform to end all forms of taxation in India. “Toeing the view of his predecessor, BJP President Rajnath Singh said the party will take a view on a demand for removal of all taxes and replacing them with a single transaction levy.  Former BJP chief Nitin Gadkari earlier this month favoured complete abolition of Income, Sales and Excise tax.  Addressing a conclave of realtors’ body CREDAI, Singh said 7-8 taxes are imposed on even an unemployed person.” – India Economic Times, Dec 14, 2013.
    21. Horrifically, the Western world political leaders are being turned into entities that resemble rotary phones.  Gold jewellery demand in Chindia is surging far beyond the estimates of the best bank analysts.  China has announced a reform revolution to increase freedom.  They have also authorized more agents to act as official gold importers, to handle the surging demand of citizens for gold jewellery.
    22. If India abolishes taxation and replaces it with a simple bureaucracy-free transaction levy, which analysts now say could double government revenues, companies in the West would pour funds into India.  FII (foreign institutional investment) could look like Niagara Falls pouring into India. That would produce a parabolic spike in money velocity in the West.  While most analysts think inflation is a thing of the past, I think it’s likely to stun most investors in 2014, and create a violent tapering event.  In order to prevent a stock market crash, or at least reduce its size, the Fed is likely to cut interest rates while tapering.  That’s pouring gasoline on an inflationary fire.  It will simply accelerate the rise of inflation, and create the need for even more aggressive tapering.  
    23. Please click here now.  That’s the daily gold chart.  The stokeillator is sluggish, but rising.  In the short term, the actions of the Fed on December 18 are likely to determine whether gold charges towards $1300 or declines towards $1195.  
    24. Gold, silver, and precious metal stocks probably stand to benefit most from a violent taper to zero, but how many investors are really poised to profit, if it happens? 

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Risks, Disclaimers, Legal
Stewart Thomson is no longer an investment advisor. The information provided by Stewart and Graceland Updates is for general information purposes only. Before taking any action on any investment, it is imperative that you consult with multiple properly licensed, experienced and qualifed investment advisors and get numerous opinions before taking any action. Your minimum risk on any investment in the world is: 100% loss of all your money. You may be taking or preparing to take leveraged positions in investments and not know it, exposing yourself to unlimited risks. This is highly concerning if you are an investor in any derivatives products. There is an approx $700 trillion OTC Derivatives Iceberg with a tiny portion written off officially. The bottom line:

Are You Prepared?

Get Ready For Some Gold Volatility

While the “big three” global central banks all have meetings next week, all eyes will be glued on the Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke on December 18 for the release of the meeting statement and his press conference. The big question, of course, is will the Fed taper its monthly asset bond purchases at this meeting, or will it wait until 2014? Either way, gold prices are likely to see volatile trade.

This week, Nomura conducted a client survey and concluded that  “The market is relatively evenly split on expectations on the start of tapering among December, January and March meetings. Very few expect the FOMC to start tapering after the March meeting. The most popular response was 37.0% for a December start, which was higher than we were expecting,” Nomura analysts wrote.

How much tapering could be seen? “On the size of taper, the expected values of the first cuts to monthly UST and MBS purchases are ~$9bn and ~$4bn, respectively,” according to the Nomura client survey.

What are the big picture macro factors gold traders need to remember here?

1. Tapering is not tightening. 
2. Tapering is coming, either in December or early 2014. 
3. Expansive monetary policy is not the only reason investors purchase gold. 
4. There are a bevy of risks lying ahead for the Fed with its “exit” strategy from these historically significant monetary policy actions. 
5. The gold market is close to major multi-month chart support.

Drilling down to the December meeting, gold could be set up for a short-covering type of rally move if no tapering announcement is seen. From late August until early December, Feb gold has slipped from $1,433.70 to $1,201.10, or just over 16%. The start of tapering is already priced in. A statement of no tapering now would likely unleash short-covering higher in gold prices.

On the flip side, if the Fed does begin tapering its asset purchases, it won’t be any surprise to anyone. If a knee jerk sell-off reaction in gold does appear, the market is sitting just above major long-term multi-month support at the $1,187.90 zone, from late June. A brief test of that floor could  be seen, but buying would likely emerge on a dip to that low from bargain hunters, physical buyers and speculative short-term trades looking for a volatility play.

The daily Bollinger bands have narrowed slightly in recent days as volatility has been contracting in gold prices. Get ready, a big explosion in volatility could be seen next week—with both tapering and no tapering offering good movement for short-term traders, and possibly a buying spot for longer-term physical gold investors.

Dec13Kitco2013

Kira Brecht is managing editor at TraderPlanet.

By Kira Brecht, Kitco.com
Follow her on Twitter @KiraBrecht

More from Kitco:

Where are the Stops?

Why The Big Moves?

Gold sees bear cycle coming to a close in December: Elliott Wave

Our Last major Elliott Wave Analysis of gold came in early September when gold (COMEX:GCG14) touched the $1,434 area, and in that analysis we called for a re-test of $1,271-$1,285 levels. This was based on our Elliott Wave Analysis of the patterns involved since the $1,923 spot highs in the fall of 2011.

Most recently, we noted that we are seeing patterns commiserate with whatElliott Wave Theory calls a “truncated 5th wave” pattern. All bear cycles have 5 full waves to the downside from the highs, and we have been in wave 5 since the $1,434 highs.  The key then is determining how low that wave 5 will take you in Gold, and planning your investments and timing around that forecast.

To qualify for a truncated 5th wave, you have to have a very strong preceding 3rd wave to the downside. In this case, we had that as gold dropped from just over $1,800 per ounce to $1,181 into late June 2013.  Recently, gold hit a bottom at $1,211 spot pricing last week and that is when we began to consider a truncated 5th wave pattern.

We sent our clients about a week ago regarding this possible Elliott wave theory bottom:

D1

D2

If we fast forward a week later, we had gold running up to $1,261, which was the pivot resistance line. We hit it on the nose and backed off to $1,224 yesterday.  We now expect that if gold holds the $1,211 area, then we will again rally back up and over $1,261 and then head to the $1,313 resistance zone. We would like to see gold get over $1,313 and if so our targets are in the $1,560 ranges in the first half of 2014. 

Aggressive investors should be accumulating quality small-cap gold producing and exploration, or gold itself depending on your preference during these last few weeks of December as our Elliott Wave Analysis is signaling a bottom is near. We would again watch $1,211 as a key level to hold for this possible truncated wave 5 to work out. 

More from Resource Investor:

Producers that can pump at $60/bbl oil

3 signs of gold’s upcoming decline

Gold funds see unprecedented 31% slump with world losing faith

Will Bernanke’s swan song include tapering?