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The Gold Oil Ratio (GOR) had been in a bottoming stance since May (see Gold-Oil
Ratio: Bottoming) and that bottoming stance - after a final capitulation
plunge that never broke the bullish divergence - has now yielded the expected
upturn in gold vs. crude.
Meanwhile, as the inflation/deflation debate rages on commodity bulls and
oil bubble participants cannot unwind their positions fast enough. Last month
we looked at Gold vs. the stock market (Dow & Gold:
Very Different 'Bull' Markets) and today we will have a look at another
gold ratio, the GOR.
The script is playing out roughly as anticipated with gold, a monetary asset
beginning to outperform commodities with positive economic correlations, some
of which represent cost inputs to gold miners' operations - a key to our battered
but not broken gold stock investment stance - with the most high profile holdout,
oil, now experiencing a swing from manic upside to manic depressive downside.
The first chart is a daily of nominal oil. I have green-lined visual lateral
support, the first level of which is being approached by a falling wedge which
has already retraced 38% of the mania from February.

The next daily chart is of the monetary 'commodity', which as expected has
gotten caught up in the flight of the commodity bulls. While there has been
some pain in gold, and especially gold stocks, a rational view of both gold
and the major gold stock indexes begs the question 'is it really that bad?'
The answer is yes if you are an 'all one commodity complex type of bull and
you are being frightened into deflation hysterics. The answer is no if you
realize that general commodities go up in economic booms created by inflation
policy and tank in economic busts. It requires a lot of patience as many sell
gold for the wrong reasons, but despite all the sound and fury, the bullish
setup has not been broken. The chart is the chart and it is bullish. The preferred
downside would be a hold of the neck line but recall the blog
post showing potential for a pull back to the area of the 1980 highs as
well, which would roughly correspond with a tap of the thicker blue breakout
line below.

Not only has gold refused to break down in the face of the flight of the commodity
bulls, but what do you suppose might happen to the yellow metal if oil should
experience a sharp counter-bear trend rally, which is very possible if not
likely? At a minimum gold would be expected to finish the cup pattern with
a slightly higher high than the March top. I am bearish on oil beyond a near
term bounce so I might expect another barfing of the commodity bulls to manifest
itself in the formation of a consolidation handle on the golden cup. This is
the process of weeding out those who hold gold for reasons like "high oil is
causing inflation" or "the cost of living is so high". As the deflation impulse
continues I expect the cost of living to come more in line with hopeful expectations.
The problem will be that the economy will have come in by a country mile as
well.
Here is the GOR daily chart showing the confirmed daily bottom in gold vs.
oil. Next, we begin looking for weekly trend changes and we go back to monitoring
the gold-silver ratio (which has been going sideways) as well.

Conclusion
Stock markets are enjoying a respite from the pain, as are the banks. Soon
oil may follow. It says here that the true places to be have not changed through
all the emotional short term drama; short term treasury instruments (or equivalent
global government debt) for short term liquidity and gold for intrinsic value.
A bonus would be a rebound in gold stocks due to the leverage that would fuel
their bottom lines in the 'gold outperforms commodities' scenario. With oil
having likely topped, the setup is in place to watch gold and cash begin to
outperform all assets as the deflation impulse sends people running for safe
liquidity. As stated many times, gold may decline in this atmosphere (although
I am bullish on the nominal as well as asset-relative price, it is certainly
possible), but it should outperform by a wide margin most other asset classes
and unlike cash, it will retain enduring value far into the future. Jewelry
is not what is important here. Nor is industrial usage or rising commodity
prices. What is important, given the pressure on nations to burn their currencies,
is investment value.
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