While recent activity in the gold stock sector has caused many of its battle-hardened
investors to capitulate, the tried and true speculators still holding strong
in the junior-gold-stock realm are feeling beaten and bloodied.
As a speculator in junior gold stocks I have not been immune to the carnage
in this small sector either. And it's not difficult to hear the wailing and
gnashing of teeth. The juniors are in the midst of a fear-driven sentiment
storm that is fierce and unforgiving.
When I wrote about juniors a
month or so ago I extolled their virtues and presented a case for an impending
rally. But even going into a seasonally strong time for gold and gold stocks,
it has felt as though the markets have chewed up and spit out the juniors with
incredulous distaste.
Stepping back and taking a look at this latest gold upleg it is apparent that
gold stocks have been in a state of malaise. Even with gold rocketing higher
through $800 and not taking a breath until it hit $1000, gold stocks have not
been returning the type of positive leverage that their investors have grown
accustomed to.
Based on past uplegs we've been able to rationalize the lagging behavior of
gold stocks to the performance of their underlying metal. After all, leverage
does tend to increase toward the ends of uplegs when greed and euphoria grow
rampant. Until recently fundamentals and technicals lined up for an end-of-upleg
surge that had the potential to bring sweet redemption.
In anticipation of a gold stock rise investors have been able to use a number
of metrics to monitor the greater gold stock environment. The XAU gold-stock
index, the GDX gold miners ETF, and the venerable HUI gold-stock index are
all vehicles that can serve this purpose.
These vehicles can be used mathematically to not only formulate performance
figures but to plot charts allowing technical analysis. For example we can
see that from the August 2007 lows to the March highs the HUI was up 72%. And
we can also draw trend channels and plot moving averages to give us a visual
compilation of past activity.
But no matter how much we slice, dice, and draw the HUI, junior gold stock
speculators don't feel this gauges the performance of their class of
stocks. Instead of trusting the HUI there is an overwhelming feeling that
the juniors are underperforming. And speculators are feeling that their
high-risk plays are the pariahs of the gold stock sector.
Unfortunately measured as a whole all these feelings are precisely this, feelings.
As far as I know there is not a specific junior gold stock index in existence
that measures the aggregate performance of the juniors. And this is of course
understandable as a junior gold stock index would be very complex and difficult
to manage.
While it is easy to look within your individual portfolio and see your handful
of chosen juniors perhaps amplifying the losses of the major measuring sticks,
it is very difficult to quantify this feeling of overall junior hatred. But
even though there is not a specific measure of junior gold stocks, a vehicle
does exist that can give us a pretty good tell on the activity of the
overall junior constituency.
Most stock traders active in the commodities complex are familiar with the
TSX Venture Exchange (TSX.V). Many folks consider the TSX.V to be the wild
west of the stock markets. It is specifically designed to host an environment
for junior companies to raise capital in the equity markets. And since this
exchange resides in Canada, there is a proclivity for resources companies to
populate the majority of the listings.
Like most exchanges around the world, the performance of the TSX.V can be
measured on a real-time basis by an index. The symbol for this index is CDNX,
which was an acronym for the former Canadian Venture Exchange. The full name
of this index is the S&P/CDNX Composite Index and it is comprised of nearly
500 stocks while the exchange as a whole is home to thousands of stocks.
The genesis of the CDNX was a 1999 merger between the Vancouver and Alberta
Stock Exchanges, becoming Canada's sole exchange for the trading of junior
equities. As I'm sure you can infer, the CDNX was subsequently gobbled up by
the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX), hence the name change to TSX.V.
Admittedly I've just passively followed the CDNX index over the years only
to know it as the place where some of my favorite juniors reside. But with
the junior distress of recent I've received some feedback from folks asking
me to take a closer look at the CDNX and scrub it up against the HUI.
Well even though there are more than just gold stocks comprising this exchange
I decided to humor this idea and have a look. And as you can see below, just
a quick visual glance shows stunning similarity between the HUI and CDNX.

With CDNX daily data available through the end of 2001, when it was acquired
by the TSX, we are able to plot a six-year chart to show these two indexes
scrubbed up against each other. And just so this chart is free from distortion
I zeroed all axes so we can compare the precise slopes.
Well with the movements of the CDNX so similar to those of the 15 biggest
and best gold miners that comprise the HUI, I decided to take a closer look
at what it is made of. And not surprisingly this junior equity index indeed
has a mining bias. In fact mining companies heavily weight the CDNX.
According to the Toronto Stock Exchange, in 2007 it held 57% of the listings
of the world's public mining companies. Around 75% of these stocks are listed
on the CDNX with the balance holding senior TSX listings. By my calculations
mining companies comprise nearly 60% of the listings on the CDNX and
hold about the equivalent market capitalization.
So let me now perform a little deductive reasoning here. Since the CDNX is
a junior equity exchange, and since mining is its heaviest-weighted sector,
and since gold is in fact the king of the metals and can be considered the
driver of the mining stocks, is it too farfetched to deduce that the CDNX is
indeed a good, not perfect, proxy for the performance of junior gold stocks?
Perhaps! Let's take a closer look.
Well looking at this first chart you can see that from 2002 to around the
middle of 2007 the HUI and CDNX moved near lockstep with each other. The CDNX
of course didn't experience gains at the same magnitude as the HUI, but this
is simply because its minor weightings in such sectors as technology, real
estate, R&D, and other industries rounded the sharp moves of the mining
stocks.
We then get to August 2007, the beginning of the latest upleg in gold, and
see that there is a disconnect in the harmony that these two indexes shared.
If we take a look at the mathematical correlation between the HUI and CDNX
it tells quite a story.
From the beginning of 2002 up through the very day of the HUI low in August
the HUI and CDNX ran a very tight correlation of 0.958 as indicated in yellow
on the chart. This correlation returns an r-square of 92%, which means that
92% of the daily behavior of the CDNX can be explained by the daily behavior
of the HUI.
But if you then run the correlation from August through today it is a completely
different story. With a correlation of -0.026 and an r-square of 0%, the HUI
and CDNX indexes appear to have ended their marriage. This is definitely alarming
news for the junior camp, being that the CDNX is the one that has fallen off
the tracks.
The startling revelation we get from our initial HUI and CDNX comparison now
warrants us to drill down further. And in order to gain a firmer grasp on what
we are seeing with the unprecedented lack of correlation in this latest upleg,
it would behoove us to segment this thread of analysis down to an individual
upleg level.
In comparing only the massive
uplegs I will start with upleg 4 that ran from March 2003 through December
2003. Unfortunately I can't begin with upleg 2 because the CDNX data doesn't
go far enough back in 2001, but uplegs 4 and 6 will paint enough of a picture.

Here we see excellent upleg 4 that saw the HUI rocket 125% higher with the
CDNX sporting an impressive 64% gain of its own. Again the CDNX does not exhibit
as sharp a gain as the HUI due to the diverse nature of its stocks as a whole.
But within this index there were several individual junior gold stocks that
had gains far greater than the HUI's.
And even more intriguing than the visual similarities between these two indexes
is their correlation. Over this entire upleg the CDNX rode in stride with the
HUI with a correlation of 0.969. This returned an r-square of an impressive
94%. In upleg 4 the juniors were mirroring the directional tendencies of the
senior gold and silver stocks.
Next we take a look at how closely the CDNX followed the HUI over the course
of massive upleg 6. And again at first glance we see near-parallel movements
between these two indexes. In this upleg the HUI greatly rewarded gold stock
traders by rising 137% before it reached its apex in May 2006. And the CDNX
didn't do too shabby itself with a nice double over this same period of time.

As a junior-gold-stock proxy the CDNX performed as expected in upleg 6, it
was highly correlated with the fortunes of the flagship HUI gold-stock index.
The impressive correlation this time around was 0.975 with an r-square of 95%.
The junior gold stocks were flying with the HUI and the elite explorers buried
in the CDNX again greatly amplified the HUI's gains.
So as we came into our latest upleg, the junior gold stock speculators expected
no less. With gold on the rise and the HUI even showing modest gains, CDNX
history suggests that junior gold stocks should come along for the ride. But
one look at this next chart puts fans on the flames of the trepidation that
already haunts the junior-gold-stock sector.

Since the HUI's August low it has marched higher to the beat of what gold
stock traders consider a slow-beating drum. Nevertheless it has trended higher
and until just this week had nestled itself into an upward-sloping trend channel.
So the CDNX should follow suit right? Provocatively this has not been the case
at all!
While the HUI rose 72% trough to peak, the CDNX was only able to muster an
8% gain over this same span of time. In fact outside of its initial surge,
the CDNX has actually been trending down in this latest upleg in both
gold and the HUI. So if the CDNX is indeed a fair proxy for tracking junior
gold stocks, then perhaps the feelings that speculators are having are
righteous. Now that we've zoomed in on the disconnect seen in the first chart,
it is easy to see this lack of correlation.
Another way to view this disconnect is through the CDNX/HUI ratio (CHR). And
the CHR is as simple as it sounds. The daily close of the CDNX is divided by
the daily close of the HUI on a continuing basis. This resulting ratio is charted
over time and shows the relative performance of the CDNX against the HUI.

Since the CDNX is the numerator, a rising CHR means junior gold stocks are
outperforming the HUI. Conversely, a falling CHR means the HUI is outperforming
the juniors. Looking at this chart you can see that since 2003 the CHR has
been slowly rising on balance. But then it decided to break trend. And it broke
trend in August 2007 of all places. Go figure!
The CHR shows us yet again that through the course of this entire upleg, the
junior gold stocks have been underperforming not only gold but the HUI. Now
in past uplegs we know that the juniors don't usually pick up steam until the
latter half of an upleg as they are driven by capital from individual investors.
But as seen by the CHR knifing through its secular support, things are different
this time.
In the last five years the CHR had been bouncing between 7 and 10. But in
August when it hit support just below 8, instead of bouncing it kept going
lower. Now ratios can be driven by a combination of factors. For example both
the HUI and CDNX can trend in the same strategic direction and result
in a falling ratio. If the HUI is rising at a faster rate than the CNDX, or
if the CDNX is falling at a more accelerated rate than the HUI, the CHR will
trend down.
But this chart shows a more extreme scenario for the falling CHR. While the
HUI has risen on balance the CDNX has fallen. And this has caused the
CHR to plummet to levels nearly half what they were a year ago. So what does
all this mean?
Well one common conclusion tossed around is it is no longer worth it to own
the junior stocks. If the juniors can't perform at least at the same levels
as the larger gold miners or even gold, then this argument is certainly logical.
Whereas all gold stocks should have positive
leverage to gold considering their individual company risks, the juniors
should have even greater leverage due to their even higher degrees of riskiness.
So what has happened to cause these junior troubles? And why does sentiment
appear to be worse now than ever before in the junior-gold-stock arena? Well
there is certainly no change in the fundamentals.
In fact junior gold explorers should be in demand now more than ever.
In the gold production lifecycle the exploration, discovery, and development
phases are where the juniors play such a critical role. And with global gold
production continuing to fall, the need for new mines to replace those
with depleting resources is dire. Juniors exploring for gold should be highly
sought after not only as acquisition targets for the senior miners but from
investors looking to leverage their resources.
But odd is it may seem, even in an environment of $800+ gold the juniors are
cast out as the lepers of the gold stocks. And this has been endlessly frustrating
for a lot of folks. So much so that it has created a sentiment storm that continues
to feed on itself and grow bigger. And this sentiment storm is overshadowing
the stellar fundamentals for junior gold stocks. Provocatively I believe the
second question above is a self-fulfilling prophecy for the first.
As an analyst I receive a lot of valuable feedback, both positive and negative.
In recent months I've heard from individual traders running small trading lines
all the way to hedge-fund managers. And sentiment is indeed rotten! A note
from a long-time gold stock investor sums it all up:
"Well here we are with the biggest run up in gold and silver in history. Yet
in the last 8 months the juniors have gone sideways to downwards. This is like
water torture! First it was just losing a penny here and a few cents there,
but now I feel like I've missed out on this historic run up! This is making
me mad and a little nuts!!! I keep thinking it will turn at a point for the
juniors but the trend just never seems to change for them...why haven't things
worked this time around?"
This dialogue is actually tame compared to some of the feedback I've received.
And I've heard from many folks that assure me they never plan on trading gold
stocks again. The fear that is out there today is staggering! And now more
than ever gold stocks are the consummate contrarian play.
Ultimately the pain junior-gold-stock speculators have endured since August
has fed this storm to create a giant sentiment snowball that keeps getting
bigger and bigger as it rolls down the hill. So far most traders are scattering
from the path of this snowball not willing to fall victim to the carnage of
the junior gold stocks.
But eventually this snowball will hit a wall and explode, and those speculators
positioned in the elite juniors should win legendary gains. At Zeal we recently
published a research report that
includes detailed profiles of our favorite 12 junior gold stocks. These stocks
are very fundamentally strong and when the junior fears subside they should
outperform their peers.
To have the profiles of these 12 high-potential-for-success stocks at your
fingertips please purchase this
report today. And if you are looking for ongoing insight and analysis on
these wild commodities markets, I invite you to join Zeal's
monthly newsletter service. Our cutting-edge research and trading strategies
will help guide you through the exciting times we are in today.
The bottom line is the CDNX indeed represents a good proxy for the performance
of the highly speculative junior gold stocks. In past uplegs the CDNX and HUI
have had brilliant correlations, proving very compatible. But in this latest
gold upleg that began in August a glaring disconnect has become apparent.
Without major fundamental flaws in gold and even the mining companies, it
is evident that a fierce sentiment storm fed by fear has dominated the trading
of these small stocks. But this storm will eventually pass, and when this happens
gold stocks will once again shine. They are the ultimate deep contrarian play.