Gold & Precious Metals

Managing director for the World Gold Council says yellow metal headed for 12thstraight bull year on back of centrals banks, eurozone woes and monetary easing.

Marcus Grubb is the managing director of investment for the London-based World Gold Council, where he leads both investment research and product innovation, as well as marketing efforts surrounding gold’s role as an asset class. Grubb has more than 20 years’ experience in global banking, including expertise in stocks, swaps and derivatives. After the WGC released its Gold Demand Trends Survey this month, HAI Managing Editor Drew Voros spoke to Grubb about the current state of the gold market and what is behind the yellow metal’s recent run-up.

HardAssetsInvestor: Gold and silver are peaking at three-month highs. What’s behind this? There hasn’t been a lot of news going on in the last couple of months and gold has been pretty stagnant. Why the sudden move?

Marcus Grubb: A number of factors are crystallizing to create a path of least resistance that now is upwards rather than downwards. One of them is the fact that looking into the second half of the year, talking to investors around the world, there’s still a lot of concern about the health of the financial system and the eurozone in particular. And also some challenges in the U.S. around the fiscal cliff and the sustainability of the economic recovery. However, it is clear that the U.S. is recovering better than many other Western countries around the world.

This has led investors to continue to weight towards more cautious asset allocation, increase their exposure to gold. And I think to some degree they may be diversifying from overweight positions in Treasurys and U.S. dollars.

HAI: Are you expecting gold to appreciate for the 12th straight year?

Grubb: Yes, we are expecting this to be a 12th year of the bull market for gold. And we also expect a better second half in terms of the supply-demand dynamics of the market. The first half of the year was quite challenging. We saw a small decline in gold demand. A lot of that was driven out of India. The Indian market has had some specific challenges this year—import tax, strikes in the jewelry sector—and then most importantly, a weak currency against the U.S. dollar, and one of the weakest in Asia against dollars. Gold has been very expensive in India as it’s been consolidating in dollars for about a year. It’s actually been near an all-time high in terms of rupees, which has had a dampening effect on gold demand for the first half.

In the second half of the year, you usually see stronger demand in India. We have the stocking period ahead of the Diwali Festival in October and November. And then we have the end of the monsoon rains before that, and usually you see incomes increase in rural areas and gold purchasing picks up in September, October as well. The rupee will probably still be weak, but we do think you should see a seasonable pickup and demand in India. And that will, among other things, help demand in the second half.

…..read more HERE

 

CBANK
 
Peter Grandich: A technical look at gold for a moment is worthy at this time:
 
daily-gold1
 
Gold’s incredible rally after breaking out from a nearly one-year corrective/consolidation phase brought us to a quite overbought state on the daily charts noting by point A. MACD (Point C) has also turned over and the space between price and the 200-Day M.A also suggests consolidation.
 
weekly-gold
 
I depend far more on the weekly charts since I don’t usually trade gold in and out. Here, we see a much more constructive picture with RS (Point A) not even reaching overbought in this move up. The $1,800 area is key resistance (Point B) and spending some time under it shall only benefit us bulls over the longer term. MACD (Point C) has only begun to move up in earnest.
 
While some more backing and filling is actually good for those of us who see $2,000+ gold in our future, the “mother” of all bull markets should continue to limit most of its surprises to the upside.
 
dol
 
Back in the early part of 2011, I suggested the U.S. Dollar could rally and cause the U.S. Dollar Index to reach the 83-84 area (Point A) but would consider such a move a mere “dead-cat-bounce” in a secular bear market that should eventually lead to new lows below 70 (Point B). With the Euro the single biggest component of the Index and it continues to have its own turmoil, it would come as no surprise to me that the Index stay fairly close to its key moving averages (Point B) for the near-term. Longer-term, there’s only one song to sing for the dollar.
 
Ed Note: If you want to read about a mining stock that has become Peter Grandich’s “single largest holding ever (by far now) go HERE and scroll down to the chart of Oromin Explorations
 

$15,000 GOLD

by Value investor Jean-Marie Eveillard
 
Jean-Marie Eveillard who overseas $60 billion was quoted in King World News yesterday saying:
 
There are people who have figured out that in view of the enormous amount of money printing, which has taken place over the past three or four years, a price of $15,000 an ounce for gold would not be absurd.” “I’m not sure they are right, because I have not studied how they came to that conclusion, but I think what is true is there has been gigantic money printing, which will of course help the price of gold.”
 

“It’s been a fairly quick move over a shortspace of time”

by Citi technical analyst Tom Fitzpatrick

Tom Fitzpatrick has long argued that gold prices could surge. Indeed, he sees prices rallying to $2,500 within the next few months.

However, he cautions that prices are unlikely to see a straight line up, especially considering how quickly prices have surged lately.

It’s been a fairly quick move over a short space of time,” Fitzpatrick says. “We also get a bit of a push on the backs of the announcements of additional QE, but we do look to be losing a little bit of momentum short-term.”.

“Given where we’ve come from, gold has risen from almost the $1,500 level to the $1,800 area, could gold retrace back down to $1,675? It’s not at all impossible (see chart below). In the overall scheme of things it would just be a decent backfill.”

citi-gold

 
 

The Simple Case for Gold

by Charles Goyette

 

Charles Goyette is the author of the New York Times bestselling book, The Dollar Meltdown and the recent blockbuster release, Red and Blue and Broke All Over.

Charles case for Gold is this: Unlimited money printing means only one thing: Unlimited gold prices! 

As Charles says, just connect the dots:

As the U.S. Fed prints dollars in unlimited amounts, it devalues the dollar.

As the European Central Bank prints unlimited amounts of euros, it devalues the euro.

As the Bank of Japan jumps in to print unlimited quantities of yen, it also devalues the yen.

And as these three major currencies go down, so do virtually all other paper currencies in the world. “There’s only ONE kind of money they cannot devalue: GOLD.  As paper currencies fall, gold surges. No two ways about it.”

 

 

 

 

Intermarket Explanation for Coming Gold Bubble

As we travel to Toronto for the Cambridge House conference, we thought we’d share a few points from our upcoming presentation titled “The Setup for a Gold Bubble.” There are many different ways we can analyze this. By that we mean fundamental triggers, historical ratios, valuations and potential money flows, etcetera can explain the setup for and why this bull market will become a bubble. Today, we focus on intermarket analysis, which is one of our favorite subsets of technical analysis.

For a bull market to become a bubble, it needs to attract excess money flows from other asset classes. In other words, during a bubble, money flows from various asset classes into a single one. Prior to the bubble the market must be an under-owned asset class with room to absorb the massive flows. This chart, from Pierre Lassonde’s recent presentation shows Gold’s share of global asset allocations. It currently is below 3%, which is extremely low in comparison to the 1980 figure of 14% and considering that the bull market is in its 13th year.

sep26goldglobalassets2

Moreover, and this a point others have made, Gold’s increasing share as part of the global financial pie is more a result of an increase in Gold’s value than an increase in actual ownership. Back in 1999-2001, Gold’s share was less than 0.5%. Now it is six or seven times higher. Yet, Gold’s value is roughly six times higher!

While some of the newly created money and debt will find its way into Gold, the biggest inflows into Gold will come from other markets and particularly bonds. The bond market, which dwarfs the equity and commodities markets, is by far the biggest market in the world. In recent years and in response to the global economic malaise the average investor and average institution has shifted funds out of equities and into bonds. Inflows into bond funds have been gargantuan while inflows into equity funds have been negative. Thus, in an intermarket sense, the trigger for the coming bubble in Gold will be the shift of funds out of bonds and into Gold and the like.

One way to monitor this is to graph Gold against bonds. Below we show Gold against bonds (bottom) and Silver against bonds (top). Both charts are at an interesting juncture. The next breakout in both charts would surpass the 1980 peak and result in all time highs. Gold and Silver have outperformed bonds for a number of years but the outperformance would accelerate upon breakout in these charts.

sep26gsvsusb

n the meantime, Gold and Silver and the shares have begun to correct and digest the strong gains from the recent rebound. October is the only bearish part of the seasonally bullish period. Interim bottoms typically occur in the middle of or near the end of October. Thus, the coming days and weeks could be an opportunity to shed some bonds in favor of bullion and to pickup some stocks, which you may have missed at the last bottom. If you’d be interested in professional guidance in uncovering the producers and explorers poised to outperform then we invite you to learn more about our service.

Good Luck!

Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT
Jordan@TheDailyGold.com

About Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT (Trendsman). Jordan is a Chartered Market Technician, a member of the Market Technicians Association and from 2010-2011 an official contributor to the CME Group, the largest futures exchange in the world. He is the publisher and editor of TheDailyGold Premiuma publication which emphaszies market timing and stock selection for the sophisiticated investor.

Since January 2010, The Daily Gold Premium Model Portfolio is up 82% compared to GDX (-6%) and GDXJ (-14%).  Jordan’s work has been featured in CNBC, Barrons, Financial Times Alphaville, BusinessInsider, 321gold, Gold-Eagle, FinancialSense, GoldSeek, Kitco and Yahoo Finance. He is quoted regularly in Barrons. Jordan was a speaker at PDAC 2012, the largest mining conference in the world. Jordan earned a degree in General Studies with a concentration in International Economic Development. Jordan 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 Mrs. Trendsman.

Contact: Jordan @ TheDailyGold.com

Disclaimer

 
 
 

 

Bernanke Put: Beware of Easy Money

Central bankers around the world may be providing a backstop to the financial markets in much the same way Greenspan did during the “Goldilocks” years, but when the short-term euphoria wears off, will the negative repercussions be even more severe? Bernanke’s Federal Reserve (Fed) appears to specifically target equity market appreciation as part of its offensive in bringing down the unemployment rate; expectations are high: every time the market sells off, the Fed might simply print more money. We fear central bankers have overstepped their reach, and the implications of their actions may be much worse than the anticipated benefits.

To an extent, the effects of today’s monetary policies resemble the “Greenspan Put” (named after former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan) in the years leading up to the crisis. Today’s central bankers have been quite straight forward in communicating their stance: they appear willing to step in with evermore liquidity should the global economy show any signs of further weakness. Bernanke’s Fed has gone even further: the Fed has stated it’s accommodative policies will “remain appropriate for a considerable time after the economic recovery strengthens”. In other words, financial markets will be awash with liquidity for an extended period, even if we see signs of a sustainable economic recovery.

BPut

At first glance, this may appear a positive development for investors holding stocks and other risky assets. After all, Bernanke appears willing to underwrite your investments over the foreseeable future. Indeed, Bernanke appears to specifically target equity market appreciation, on many occasions noting one of the key benefits of quantitative easing (QE) has been to increase stock prices. Notably, while he believes the Fed’s QE policies have had a positive impact on stock prices, he considers it has not caused increases to inflation expectations or commodity prices. We disagree, which we elaborate below. Ultimately, the Fed may have reached too far, bringing risks to economic stability and elevated levels of volatility; the full implications of its actions may be somewhat dire down the road.

From the Bank of Japan and the People’s Bank of China to the European Central Bank (ECB), the Bank of England (BoE) and the Fed, central bankers are either putting their money where their mouth is (quite literally) or strongly insinuating that continued, ongoing easing policies are needed to prevent another significant downturn in global economic activity. While all the excess printed money may or may not have the desired effect of stimulating the global economy, the money does find its way somewhere; unfortunately, most central bankers appear to fail to realize that they simply cannot control where that money ends up.

Fed Chair Bernanke’s Achilles’ heel since the onset of the financial crisis has been the housing sector. It’s no surprise why the Fed bought over a trillion dollars worth of mortgage backed securities (MBS) since 2009: to re-inflate home prices and in so doing, bail out all those underwater with their mortgages. The problem was, it didn’t work – house prices continued to weaken across the nation, and have stagnated to this day. Now, the Fed has announced another MBS purchase program, this time open-ended, under the auspices of “QE3”. Do they believe the time is now ripe for MBS purchases to positively impact the housing market and thus the economy? Unfortunately, the first MBS purchase program failed to have its desired effect; we do not foresee how QE3 will be any better at stimulating house price appreciation.

One of the things we believe such actions do stimulate are inflation expectations. Indeed, the jump in market-implied future inflationary expectations in reaction to the Fed’s QE3 decision was quite remarkable:

BPut2

In contrast to Bernanke’s views that QE does not cause commodity price appreciation, in our assessment, much of the freshly printed money only serves to inflate the value of assets that exhibit the greatest level of monetary sensitivity: commodities and natural resources. These are essential in the manufacture and production of goods and services purchased by U.S. consumers on a daily basis. As such, inflated commodity and resources prices ultimately pressure consumer price inflation, as the consumer’s “everyday basket of goods” becomes evermore expensive. The ongoing weakness in the U.S. dollar only serves to compound these inflationary pressures. A weak dollar, we believe, is part of Bernanke’s strategy to stimulate the U.S. economy through stimulating exports. While we fundamentally disagree that this is sound monetary policy for the U.S. to pursue, the inflationary ramifications are clear: the U.S. imports a great deal from abroad; every time the dollar depreciates against a currency of a country from which the U.S. imports, the price of those imports rises.

Not only have the Fed’s actions heightened inflationary risks, but we also believe it implicitly heightens the risk that the Fed gets monetary policy wrong. For instance, Fed Chair Bernanke believes that the Fed’s non-standard policies since 2008 may have helped lower 10-year Treasury yields by over 1.5%1. In so doing, the Fed has taken away a key metric used to gauge the economy and thus set appropriate monetary policy: free market interest rates. The Fed has historically relied on long-term yields, such as the 10-year and 30-year Treasury yield, as part of its assessment of the overall health of the economy. In manipulating those same yields, the Fed can no longer rely upon them to provide valuable information on the health and trajectory of the economy. In other words, the more the Fed meddles in the market through non-standard measures, the more the Fed is in the dark regarding the appropriateness of monetary policy. Such a situation inherently creates an additional level of uncertainty over the U.S. economy, U.S. monetary policy, and may continue to underpin weakness in the U.S. dollar.

The vast amounts of liquidity provided via the Fed’s quantitative easing programs will, at some point, have to be reined in. Whether due to inflationary pressures or a sustainable recovery, only time will tell, but the need to rein in liquidity may create massive headaches down the road. Given the ongoing high level of leverage employed in the economy, such monetary tightening runs the risk of undermining any economic recovery and potentially causing it to crash back down, as the likelihood of it negatively affecting consumer spending is high. With a still-leveraged consumer, rising rates may be overly painful, dramatically slowing consumer spending and, in turn, the economy. Such dynamics may have an outsized impact on the U.S. economy, given consumer spending makes up approximately 70% of U.S. GDP.

All of which underpins our view that there is a significant risk that the Fed has gotten monetary policy wrong. We consider the Fed’s actions have not only heightened inflationary risks, but have also inherently created risks to appropriate monetary policy going forward. Both of which will likely contribute to ongoing high levels of market volatility over the foreseeable future.

With so many dynamics yet to be played out globally, and with central bankers becoming evermore active in meddling with economic dynamics around the world, investors may want to consider preparing for the potential ramifications of such policies. While we may disagree with the policies being pursued, central bankers appear to be at least predictable in their decisions. We believe the currency market provides the most effective way to position oneself to protect and profit from the implications of such monetary policies.

In the current environment, the general equity market seems to be moving on the back of the next anticipated move of policy makers, and less so on fundamentals, but company-specific risks remain. With the outlook for the economy still on tenterhooks, many companies have been missing earnings forecasts. Currencies don’t have this additional layer of risk. As a result, currencies may be the “cleanest” way of positioning oneself for the next policy move. Historically, currencies have also exhibited much lower levels of volatility relative to equities, when no leverage is employed. As such, investors may want to consider adding a professionally managed basket of currencies to their existing portfolios.

Please sign up to our newsletter to be informed as we discuss global dynamics and their impact on gold and currencies. Engage with me directly at Twitter.com/AxelMerk to comment on Merk Insights and to receive provide real-time updates on the economy, currencies, and global dynamics.

Axel Merk & Kieran Osborne, CFA

Axel Merk is President and Chief Investment Officer, Merk Investments
Merk Investments, Manager of the Merk Funds. 
Kieran Osborne is Senior Analyst at Merk.

 

 

Rick Rule on Gold, Silver & Why Junior Mining Stocks Have Languished

Rick Rule is certainly one of the savviest gold and silver investors around and thus it is quite interesting to get such a deeply informed take on the markets.

Rule

Daily Bell: Junior mining stocks have been lacerated. What’s going on?

Rick Rule: They are getting what they had coming to them. These junior miners acted like small governments for many years. They spent way more than they took in and they over-promised and under-delivered. If you merged every public junior mining company in the world into one company –Junior ExploreCo – that company would lose in a very good year $2 billion. And when I say lose I mean it would spend more on G&A and exploration than it generated by way of property sales, product sales or takeovers. In a bad year it would lose $8 billion. So if you look at the industry as a whole, an industry which year after year loses between $2 billion and $8 billion, you’re stuck with how to value it. Do you value it at 5x losses, 10x losses? What’s the correct price loss ratio? You get my point.

All of the performance in the secondaries is contained in the top 5 percent of the companies and the trick really is stock selection. If you buy the sector from your broker, he or she will live up to that name and you will get broker and broker and broker.

It is my belief right now that the market is beginning to bifurcate, which is an extremely important thing. The bottom 60, 70 or 80 percent of the companies on the TXSV are lurching inevitably toward intrinsic value, which is zero. The top of the exchange, however, is going to be driven by three things: reasonable valuations (notice I didn’t say cheap because I don’t think the market is cheap in the first instance), secondly M&A because of the insatiable need for high quality projects by intermediate and large producers, and third – and this is the most important and also the least well understood thing – discovery.

I think that after ten years of capitalizing the junior exploration sector extravagantly and enabling their better people who spend more and more money in stranger and stranger countries we are on the cusp of a real discovery cycle. You will note, as an example, that it was the funding cycle of the 1970s that lead to the Nevada gold discovery cycle of the 1980s. It takes ten years. Make no mistake, this market, as dismal as some people think this market has been, is still a market that rewards discoveries extravagantly. Witness Gold Quest, 6 cents to $1.16. What is Vor Minerals, .30 cents to $3.80. Africa Oil, .80 cents to $10. These are not dismal market moves.

Part of the reason that the market has been so dismal is because it deserves to be dismal, given the performance of the sector. But when you give this market an excuse to respond it responds in spades and I believe that we are on the cusp of a real discovery cycle as a consequence of having fed cash into the discovery industry for ten years.

….read a deeper explanation and areas to be invested in HERE (take care to read the After Thoughts section at the end of the interview)