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- 31 March 2015
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Yep 2019 certainly was a good year))I like your charts.
It's true that looking for reasons is very different to just trading the action but as a long-term investor in 4 equities exposed to gold rather than a trader I am looking for reasons that make sense to get out of gold, should they appear compelling.
My sense tells me that while global uncertainty is the underlying driver of what I consider to be a new long-term bull market, how that uncertainty manifests from discrete events is somewhat unimportant. If that "sense" is right then March 2020 might prove for you to be some form of pivot, but unless it lights the fires of global economic growth then it will continue later into 2020 to be subsumed by the lingering uncertainty.
If I can learn anything more over the next few weeks that makes sense I will certainly post it.
Until then we gold bugs enjoyed enjoyed 2019 and look forward to becoming 2020 visionaries.
2020 will not be a good year for stocks IMO and gold bugs should be rewarded initially in the year but I would not be surprised if gold and gold stocks are later caught up in a potential equity market downdraught in some way
POG has a ratcheting effect and nobody here is grasping how it works.Yep 2019 certainly was a good year))
Others will say why gold? Especially since stocks in US markets have risen so much the last some months.
Those who where brave enough to hold through the volatility in 2019 have been well rewarded. Unfortunately I am not one of those as I have a fear of holding stocks that are trading at multiples of 25 times earnings and have risen on a dream.
For me it's a case of staying away from what's popular at this point in time and looking to park $$$ in what is unpopular.
2020 will not be a good year for stocks IMO and gold bugs should be rewarded initially in the year but I would not be surprised if gold and gold stocks are later caught up in a potential equity market downdraught in some way
Here's what gold has been doing in the past month:My view is if POG can push through $1485 in coming weeks then we are in for some sustainable upward momentum into 2020, where I see $1650 becoming the next medium term target.
1. POG has a ratcheting effect and nobody here is grasping how it works.
2. As the bull market consolidates, and it is surely doing this now, producers are locking in forward supply at considerably higher prices than their legacy hedge books had allowed. This in turn will see gold-based equities realise solid profits in the main through to 2021. In that light it is difficult to think that equities could do poorly in the medium term.
3. The psychological effect of equities doing well has a positive effect on traded gold. To counteract this ratcheting effect we will need to see something in global markets that no longer renders gold as a practical store of wealth in the prevailing environment.
You should reflect on your historical ability to get POG analyses right.1. There is a ratcheting effect, but it is not significant enough, in the absence of something additional, to break Gold's current correlations. So: from 2004, when Gold is in its bottom percentile (10%) there is an additional 1.3% of juice in the trade. When at the top (90%) percentile, there is additional juice of another 1.9% (normal expectations would be negative in the 90% percentile). This is why Gold often diverges for a month or two when other correlated markets turn lower.
2. Markets are forward looking. Discounting. Those future earnings are already largely in the price.
3. Gold is already currently trading as a currency, not as a commodity. It has diverged from other commodities already. As already indicated, other currencies, US Dollar, might have put in a top. If they have and now trend lower, continuing into a Dollar bear market, this will have an effect on US Treasury paper and Gold, although Gold may lag by a few months.
So what percentile is Gold currently? Currently Gold sits at 67%. Therefore it has not reached that point where it would run on its own momentum for a further gain. On that basis I would expect to see Gold head lower if the Treasury market falls further.
jog on
duc
You should reflect on your historical ability to get POG analyses right.
But thanks, as if ever there were a contra-indicator of probable outcome, your posts are it.
Given that gold is a hedge against inflation then it is somewhat trivial that you get a correlation.I think that you misread my initial post: I was simply agreeing that in the short timeframes, gold could well have a pullback in response to rising interest rates.
The Evidence:
Gold correlates to interest rates in the shorter timeframes.
View attachment 99304
Self explanatory really.
However, if you are looking for a much longer term analysis, then I can provide that also. I am a long term gold bull, no question.
jog on
duc
The issue is not with the correlations but, instead, that they are always post-fact. Thus, unless you know the direction of the leading indicator with some degree of high plausibility then whatever else comes after that is word salad. That is not meant as an attack on you.1. Given that gold is a hedge against inflation then it is somewhat trivial that you get a correlation.
As your chart notes, one problem is that that direction and quantum can differ substantially, as the below linkage shows for shorter time frames:
2. The real problem for us all is that we do not know what the future holds for either TIPS or GLD, so I revert to what I think is going to be the greater driving force in the long term.
While I am, like you, a gold bull this time around I will look more closely at timing an exit after POG has breached $2500.
1. You seem to have focussed on the unimportant at the expense of the important. The 'quantum' is simply volatility. Yes, gold and gold equities are more volatile. Unimportant. What is important is the strength of the correlation, particularly when there is a lag one t'other. TIPS lag the 20Yr. The 20Yr is currently signalling what?
View attachment 99315
Difficult to say with any certainty:
View attachment 99316
View attachment 99317
Which is why you would also consider the other markets (commodities, etc.) and their inter-relationships. Currently the message is simply pay attention and watch. Nothing much more than that. Oil however might be making a run at $80 +/-.
Also consider the Euro, which correlates to commodity prices:
View attachment 99319
However the Euro is also a Hedge Fund 'short' in a major convergence trade, which, if it is unwinding, will place selling pressure on US rates. Why would it unravel? Well remember the 1 day Repo market event earlier in the year where there was no repo at any price...Hedge Funds (the bigger ones) access the Repo market and if they cannot obtain short term finance, will need to close out positions, thus reversing their positions if volatility picks up (short Euro long Treasury to long Euro short Treasury).
Either way, something (short term) could well be afoot. Hence my earlier post re. short term. Whether it develops into something (or is already something) a bit longer term is the question.
Possibly absolutely nothing comes of it and gold continues to trend higher based on consumer price inflation, which governments the world over simply ignore. A more sinister manifestation would see Producer Price inflation move higher as producer margins would be squeezed.
Oil is the market where this will show up. Already we have falling rig counts, increased bankruptcies in the shale space and falling capital spending in the majors resulting from low prices since 2016. How fast could they bring supply back online in the face of (significantly) higher prices? Would they even want to?
jog on
duc
Again, not attacking your points but the analysis here is rudimentary although I am not sure that writing pages more will make a big difference.My argument is simply that there are early indications that things may not be as rosy as the current analysis suggests. They may amount to nothing.
And a bit later on:What is promising is that the term of POG consolidation has ripened for another pounce on a new high. However, until POG definitively crashes through $1350 methinks it's presently premature.
I have no ability to "predict" anything, and make no claims.So I am tipping POG to breach $1500 this year with my usual certainty (ie. there is no such thing).
Most of the short positions have now unwound so downside movements of magnitude will need some sort of obvious trigger. In that light the only meaningful trajectory for gold is upwards.Assuming for the moment it remains similar/same, do you still think that a new highs are the higher probability outcome?
Nowadays I would only use oil as a consideration if there were a major oil shock, and this clearly would affect economies. As it stands the POO is inconsequential at most levels and anyway gold producers are presently looking at reducing energy costs through renewables and are being successful.So 2 arguments to put forward.
Argument 1.
(a) Inflation (energy) is upticking; and
(b) Interest rates are adjusting to this uptick in inflation; and
(c) Gold has also tracked the rise in inflation since July +/-
(d) Assuming that the Fed does not intervene in the longer dated end of the curve, then rates are set to rise (probably) in proportion to the rate of increase in inflation.
My position is that Gold will track interest rates (with a lag) and if rates are moving higher, Gold either consolidates or weakens.
Argument 2.
From the COT we see (although this is potentially open to change) heavy selling pressure. Why?
(a) The Commercials respond to Producer order flows: thus Producers have been selling heavily. Why?
[Energy which is an input to production seems to have bottomed and is potentially moving higher towards a top end of a range. Thus 'margins' are somewhat (potentially) compressed. Hence when there is a move higher in POG, (increased margin) Producers are quickly locking that margin in as QE/QT/Etc are (supposedly) finished and unwinding, thus the long end of the curve is free to limit inflation to the (supposed) 2%+/- target rate.
There are all sorts of arguments re. what is the real rate, but in the absence of anything concrete, the market numbers are the best we have, as manipulated as they are.
In Summary:
If the Fed re-enters the long end and re-instigates some form of QE, Gold definitely goes higher again assuming POO continues higher (which I think it does for a little while at least, irrespective of Fed action/inaction based on falling supply over the next 24 months from US Shale) and a close watch on the US dollar and rates will be required.
What think you?
Into the new year and gold is still climbing.
This link is an excellent read and its many charts show how much headroom is still free before the next inevitable retrace.
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