Timing & trends
My answer: Absolutely not! No way has gold bottomed.
Yes, it’s trying to rally again. But the bounce came as no surprise to me, or to my premium members, who, just last week, I warned another bounce was coming.
But that’s all it is, the recent action is nothing but a bounce. Gold hasn’t even been able to get back above resistance at the $1,221 level.
Consider this monthly chart of gold. As you can clearly see, gold not only remains under pressure, but the sideways trading affair of the last year or so — with gold gyrating between roughly $1,300 and $1,140 — is merely eating up time, yet giving gold enough of a coil of energy to scare the dickens out of long positions on the next move down
Moreover, there is no major support until the $900 level, which is where I expect gold to bottom.
Could gold rally a bit more? Sure it could. My systems tell me it could rally as high as $1,240, possibly even all the way up to $1,300.
But the key point is this: Even if gold rallies as high as $1,300, it would merely be a trap. One that would set the stage for loads of naïve investors and analysts to get their heads and wallets and pocketbooks handed to them.
Personally, I doubt gold can even get as high as $1,240. Instead, I wouldn’t be surprised if gold starts to rollover soon and begin its ultimate descent to new lows.
Why do I say that? Three reasons:
1. Gold’s recent rally already appears to be fizzling out.
2. The dollar’s recent pullback appears to also be ending. If so, and the dollar starts rallying again, then that would put immediate short-term pressure back on gold.
3. And perhaps most importantly are my timing models. I’ve made it nice and big for you below so you can clearly see what it’s projecting. There are a few important observations I want to call out.
First, looking at the green line, notice how accurate the timing model has been catching the swings in the gold market.
Mind you, this model does not back fit the results, then project forward. It analyzes over two billion sine waves in the price data of gold and then creates the projection line with a statistical probability of better than 90 percent.
Second, notice the last low, on March 10, 2015. It too came right on time, and it also helped me get my premium Gold and Silver Trader members into bullish ETFs that helped spin off a 34 percent gain for the month of March!
Third, notice the timing sell signal for April 14, just six days from today. So yes, gold can rally, or at worst, hold its own for about another week, but then, the projected price path for gold points down HARD.
Fourth, notice the first opportunity for the next low, which should be a major low. That timing window comes on May 21.
Fifth, after a short-lived rally, gold should then move back down into a final low on June 24 of this year, which is the main target for a major low this year.
If it doesn’t fall to the $900 level by June 24, then we have one more timing window this year for a major low, in October (not shown).
The bottom line, however, is this: Gold, I repeat, has not bottomed yet. Nor have silver, platinum or palladium, or most commodities, including oil for that matter.
Therefore, please be extra cautious right now and do not fall into the trap that is being set by gold’s price action and by the analysts and newsletter promoters who want nothing more than to tell you gold has bottomed. It hasn’t and if you buy into their nonsense, you will be sorry.
Same goes for mining shares. They have not yet bottomed either!
Instead, stay out of precious metals and mining shares completely, until I give you the all clear sign. If you have metal or mining shares you cannot or do not want to sell, for whatever reason, consider hedging them with inverse ETFs.
Best wishes, as always …
Larry

As people continue to digest breaking news out of Greece and around the world, the Godfather of newsletter writers, 90-year-old Richard Russell, announced that the “bear market in gold is over!” Russell also covered everything from a desperate Fed ushering in QE4, to global hyperinflation, the California drought and coming Great Depression-style work programs.
….read it all HERE

King World News looks at 5 of the most remarkable charts of 2015.
The fourth chart from WSJ shows the skyrocketing use of robots in China. WSJ: “Having devoured many of the world’s factory jobs, China is now handing them over to robots.”
….view all the remarkable charts HERE

I began writing several months ago that the fall in oil prices and subsequently gasoline prices, was not the economic “nirvana” that mainstream economists had hoped. To wit:
“Graphically, we can show this by analyzing real (inflation adjusted) gasoline prices compared to total Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE). I am using “PCE” as it is the broadest measure of consumer spending and comprises almost 70% of the entire GDP calculation.”
The vertical orange line shows peaks in gasoline prices that should correspond(according to mainstream consensus) to a subsequent increase in retail sales.
The reason is that falling oil prices are a bigger drag on economic growth than the incremental ‘savings’ received by the consumer.”
Of course, those same economists, unable to accept the reality demonstrated by the data, now suggest that:
“Oh…the consumer decided to SAVE all those savings from low gas prices instead of spending them.”
No..that would be wrong also.
“Last quarter, when we showed what was ‘The Reason For The ‘Surge’ In Q3 GDP’, some were shocked to learn that in the quarter in which US GDP posted a 5% surge, it was none other than Obamacare – a mandatory tax according to the Supreme Court which has the benefit of flowing through the US income statement – which contributed the bulk of this upside.”
…read more HERE

Recognized as the world’s single biggest attraction for high rollers at the gambling tables, Macau is the only location in the People’s Republic of China where betting on the Roll of the dice is legal. Macau is a just short ferry ride from Hong Kong, through which many mainlanders travel to get to the casinos. As such, the former Portuguese colony saw its annual casino and entertainment revenues soar to a combined $44-billion in 2014; or 7-times that of the Las Vegas Strip. For Macau, the boom times began in 2010 when casino revenues increased +58% and was followed by a +42% gain in 2011.
However, the share prices of the biggest gaming operators in Macau suffered their worst year ever in 2014, as Beijing launched a major crackdown on corruption and money laundering in the colony. Chinese President Xi Jinping’s bid to catch the mobsters scared off many of the high rollers, – the so-called “VIP segment” that accounts for about two-thirds of Macau’s casino receipts. Operators such as Macau Legend Development<1680.hk>, owners of The Landmark, MGM China Holdings <2282.hk>, Galaxy Entertainment <0027.hk>, which is building Galaxy I, Galaxy II and Galaxy III casinos on the Cotai strip, and multi-national casino operators, Wynn China <1128.hk> and Sands China <1928.hk>, lost a combined $73-billion of market value last year.
Macau is dependent on big spenders from the mainland, and in the month of December ’14, the results of the crackdown were starting to show up on the casinos’ top line; revenues had fallen to $2.9-billion, posting a stunning -30% year-on-year decline. It was the seventh consecutive month of decline and the biggest drop since Macau began recording monthly revenues 10-years earlier. Casino operators had plans to expand their operations on the Cotai Strip, and transform it into a mass market of resorts. However, the VIP heyday in Macau appears to be over. Instead, much of the “hot money” that used to flow through Macau began sweeping through Hong Kong and into the Chinese stock markets.
While Beijing was busy cracking down on money laundering in Macau, it was also sanctioning its securities regulators, stock brokerage firms, overseers of the stock exchanges, and hundreds of high-tech engineers, to begin working night and day to launch the world’s third biggest casino, – dubbed “Shanghai – Hong Kong -Stock Connect.” It would allow global investors to trade Chinese Shanghai “A-shares” for the first time, through brokers located in Hong Kong, and mainland Chinese investors could trade Hong Kong’s “H-shares” index via the Shanghai Stock Exchange, subject to quotas both ways. The combined size of the Chinese and Hong Kong markets is roughly $10.5-trillion today, behind only the combined $27-trillion size of New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq.
Since April ’14, when the HK-Shanghai “Connect” was first announced to the public, there’s been an unprecedented level of coordination between multiple parties – including 100 banks and brokers, asset managers, the two exchanges, their clearing and settlement providers, data providers, technology firms and several regulators. The trading link has been hailed as a milestone in the opening up of China’s capital markets, allowing foreign investors to trade in and out of Chinese stocks in real time.
The HK/Shanghai stock-connect has added 855-companies with $1-billion+ (market cap) to the global investable universe, and has created the world’s 3rd largest equity market global by market-cap & turnover, only behind the NYSE and the Nasdaq. The southbound link of “Stock Connect” allows Chinese investors to trade 266 stocks of companies listed in the Hang Seng Composite Large-Cap and Mid-Cap Indexes that includes some “H-share” companies. Foreign investors with brokerage accounts in Hong Kong can now trade 568 Shanghai “A-shares,” through the northbound link.
By chasing the high rollers out of Macau and steering them into the Chinese stock markets, the fortunes of shareholders in Chinese casino and brokerage stocks was turned upside down. The share price of HK- Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HK-Ex) <0388.HK> has soared by +63% compared with a year ago to HK$195 /share. HK-Ex is the sole operator of the stock market and futures market in Hong Kong, and also provide integrated clearing, settlement, and depository services. Its OTC Clear provides interest rate derivatives and non-deliverable forwards clearing and settlement services to its members. HKEx provides market data through its data dissemination entity, and also owns the London Metal Exchange. Stock Connect has boosted the average daily value of trading on the HKEx by +38% to HK$93-billion and its Empire has a total market capitalization of around $30.5-billion today.
On the flip side, the share price of Galaxy Entertainment <0027.hk> has lost more than half of its peak value to $20-billion today. Galaxy owns and operates the Star World Hotel and Casino – a luxury 5-star property on the Macau peninsula, and operates four City Club casinos in Macau. On March 23rd, the Macau government forecasted gaming revenue would fall -32% this year, compared with 2014. Worse yet, Macau’s Chief executive Fernando Chui, warned of a “New Normal” in which government regulation of the gaming sector would only increase. A full smoking ban in 2016 could weigh on VIP revenues.
Retail Investors Stampede into Shanghai Red-chips; According to the Chinese Zodiac, the year 2015 is called the “Year of the Goat.” People born in a Year of the Goat are generally believed to be gentle mild-mannered, shy, stable, sympathetic, amicable, and brimming with a strong sense of kindheartedness and justice. Although they look gentle on the surface, they are tough on the inside, always insisting on their own opinions. They have strong inner resilience and excellent defensive instincts. Though they prefer to be in groups, they do not want to be the center of attention. They are reserved and quiet, most likely because they like spending much time in their thoughts.
However, the share of good fortune for those born in a “Year of the Goat,” is not be very good. Instead, they often get involved in financial difficulties. Therefore, it’s advised that they should adopt conservative strategies when dealing with investments. They should try their best to increase their income, decrease their expenditure, and live within their means. They are advised to restrain themselves from gambling too much in order to avoid big losses.
However, the vast majority of traders that are operating in the Chinese markets these days, have no such inhibitions about gambling. Instead, they are feverishly bidding up red-chip shares on the China-300 Index, which has nearly doubled in value since the start of July ’14. Chinese retail investors are flocking to the stock market, and they’re using margin loans to amplify (ie; leverage) the size of their investments. Buying on margin accounts for a fifth of daily turnover. Retail participation in Shanghai was always high. Over the last five years, retail investors accounted for 80% of A-share market turnover. This ratio hit 90% this year. About 4-million new account were opened in March, bringing the total to 182-million. Two-thirds of new investors have never attended or graduated from high school.
Many Chinese companies have dually listed shares in Shanghai (A-shares) and in Hong Kong (H-shares). Today, the A-shares are trading at a premium of +32%, on average, above their H-share counterparts (and above ETF’s on the US-exchanges). This indicates that arbitrageurs are not yet able to buy the cheaper shares in Hong Kong and sell those shares into the more expensive Shanghai market, thereby driving the premium to zero. One company’s A-shares and H-shares, while representing the same underlying assets and cash flows, are not yet interchangeable. To track this, the Hang Seng China A/H Premium Index measures the price spread between the Top-57 companies domiciled in Mainland China, and with A-shares listed in Shanghai and H-shares in the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index.
The superior performance of A-shares over H-shares since the launch of Stock Connect on Nov 17th, can also be seen by the price differential between the shares of China’s biggest stock broker, Citic Securities, traded in Shanghai under ticker symbol; <600030.ss,> and in Hong Kong, traded under symbol <6030.hk>. When converting Citic Securities H-shares into the yuan, – it’s easy to see the Shanghai price is nearly 10-yuan /share higher (ie about +50% higher). Trying to level the playing field, China’s Securities Regulatory Commission agreed on March 26th to allow mainland-based mutual funds to use “Stock Connect” to invest in the Hong Kong market. The Bullish news spurred risk loving traders to scoop up Hong Kong-listed H-shares, driving the index to its highest level in four years.
On Dec 29th, Citic Securities said it would issue of up to 1.5-billion of Hong Kong-listed H-shares to raise capital and help expand its businesses including margin trading in Shanghai. Haitong Securities, China’s second-biggest listed broker, has also announced a plan to raise HK$30-billion in a private share placement in Hong Kong, also mainly to expand margin loans. Citic says up to 70% of proceeds will be used for margin loans. On the Shanghai Stock Exchange alone, the amount of margin loans reached 684-billion yuan ($110-billion) more than double July’s 284-billion yuan.
No Replay of Shanghai Stock Bubble of 2006-07; It seems like déjà vu all over again, with memories of the Jan-2006– October 2007 Shanghai Bubble, still fresh in many traders’ minds. However, one dynamic that is very different this time around, – the PBoC is not trying to burst the Shanghai rally in 2015 with a tighter monetary policy. In fact, – it’s doing just the opposite, – it’s inflating the 2014-15 bubble with an easier money policy. It’s for this basic reason that many Chinese traders believe the recent doubling of the China-300 Index is sustainable over the longer term. That’s because the PBoC is currently fighting deflation, or steadily declining prices at the producer level, (-4.8% from a year ago), and can afford to inject more liquidity into the markets. The near doubling of the China-300 stock index is also the mirror image of the -50% “Crash in Crude Oil’ prices that began at the start of July ’14. Sharply lower prices for crude oil, petrol, grains, industrial metals, and other commodities are delivering a huge windfall to China’s economy, – the world’s biggest importer of natural resources, and Chinese households are enjoying the benefits of increased purchasing power.
By some estimates, Beijing will save as much as $200-billion this year on imports, even while it steps-up purchases of crude oil, copper, soybeans, rubber, and iron ore, –much of it piling up at the northeastern Dalian port and other trade gateways. China is saving over $600-million per day on its oil import bill, following the -50% plunge in crude oil prices since last summer. The windfall comes on top of China’s steady trade surpluses and $4.2-trillion in foreign currency reserves, that makes it easy for Beijing to spend $25-billion this year building up its reserves of grains, edible oils, and “other materials, ” a +33% rise over 2014 when stockpile-spending rose +22%.
The Commerce Ministry confirmed in a recent briefing that Beijing is boosting commodity imports to take advantage of lower global prices. Ramped-up purchases of oil are helping China reach its goal of a 90-day supply in its strategic petroleum reserve. Imports of iron ore rose +14% last year over 2013 levels, while prices plummeted -50%, for a saving of $30-billion. For copper, China increased its purchases +7% last year, while prices declined -20%. Some 400,000-tons of the copper purchased was stashed in its strategic reserve. Unlike other countries, China’s hasn’t depreciated its currency, so it gets the full benefit from buying less expensive commodities priced in US$’s.
Ironically, one reason for the 4-year Bearish trend in the commodities markets has been the notable slowdown in China’s economy, – from a +10% growth rate, on average, for the past few decades, to less than +7% this year. Officially, Beijing set a +7% growth target for 2015, which would mark the slowest expansion in a quarter of a century, if it came to pass. However, on March 15th, China’s Premier Li Keqiang admitted it would be a big challenge to meet that target. Yet in today’s markets, a sharp slowdown in China’s economy, and shrinking company profits, is no reason to sell Chinese equities.
Beijing Shifts to Easier Credit and Liquidity stance; On March 15th, China’s Premier Li Keqiang issued a rare “hot-tip” of advice, saying the ruling Politburo can do much more to allay fears about a stumbling economy. Li assured traders that policymakers would prop up the Chinese stock market, especially if economic growth is at risk of breaching a “lower limit.” “In recent years, we have not taken any strong, short-term stimulus policies, so we can say our room for policy maneuver is relatively big, the tools in our toolbox comparatively many. If the slowdown in growth approaches the lower-limit of a reasonable range, we will stabilize policies in the market, and at the same time, we will increase the intensity of targeted policy control,” Li said. Traders interpreted these remarks to mean that further cuts in interest rates and bank reserve requirements would be on their way in 2015.
“China needs to be on alert for deflation,” PBoC chief Zhou Xiaochuan warned on March 30th, adding the central bank was also on the watch for deflation around the world, and falling commodity prices. “China’s inflation is declining. We need to be vigilant to see if this trend continues, and if it will lead to deflation.” On Feb 28th, the PBoC lowered its 1-year loan rate -25-basis-points to 5.35%, – its second rate cut in just over three months. The PBoC also made a system-wide -50-bps cut to bank reserve requirements to 19.5%, the first time it has done so in over two years, to unleash a fresh flood of liquidity to fight off economic slowdown and deflation. The reduction of -50-basis points can free up 600-billion yuan ($96-billion) or more held in reserve at Chinese banks – which could then mushroom into 2-to-3-trillion yuan of added liquidity floating in the economy due to the multiplying effect of bank loans.
On March 30th, the PBoC took additional measures to boost the local economy, it lowered the amount of money needed for a down payment to buy a house to 40%. The PBoC said on its website that all banks “are encouraged to offer commercial support to families to buy their own home with the down payment not lower than 40%.” All these measures – unleashed by the PBoC – helped to power Chinese stock indexes to a seven-year high. Real estate stocks included in the Shanghai composite property sub-index closed at all-time highs, even after Chinese property sales in the first two months of 2015 plunged -16% against January-February last year, amid a glut of housing supply. In other words, bad news on the economy is good news for stocks, if its leads to fresh liquidity injections.
Just how high can Chinese Red-chip stocks fly? It’s not wise to stand in front of a raging Bull in a China shop. But if history is any guide to the future, Shanghai A-shares did soar to a +95% premium over H-shares at the peak of the Chinese stock market rally in Oct-2007, before succumbing to the PBoC’s tightening of its monetary policy. This time around, Shanghai red-chips are +32% above H-shares, on average, and have the wind of PBoC easing at its back, so it wouldn’t be surprising to see the China-300 index climb above the 5,000-level in the year ahead, up from around 4,125 today
About Gary Dorsch
Mr Dorsch worked on the trading floor of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange for nine years as the chief Financial Futures Analyst for three clearing firms, Oppenheimer Rouse Futures Inc, GH Miller and Company, and a commodity fund at the LNS Financial Group.
As a transactional broker for Charles Schwab’s Global Investment Services department, Mr Dorsch handled thousands of customer trades in 45 stock exchanges around the world, including Australia, Canada, Japan, Hong Kong, the Euro zone, London, Toronto, South Africa, Mexico, and New Zealand, and Canadian oil trusts, ADR’s and Exchange Traded Funds.
He wrote a weekly newsletter from 2000 thru September 2005 called, “Foreign Currency Trends” for Charles Schwab’s Global Investment department, featuring inter-market technical analysis, to understand the dynamic inter-relationships between the foreign exchange, global bond and stock markets, and key industrial commodities.
