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Last week when gold started flirting with $1000, the gold stocks caught a
serious bid. On an impressive 3.8% 2-day gold rally, the flagship HUI unhedged
gold-stock index rocketed 15.7% higher! And the volume in this index's elite
gold stocks was staggering those 2 days, 2.8x the 3-month average.
This blisteringly-fast surge easily drove the HUI up to new 2009 highs, eclipsing
the 398 witnessed in early June. To see any stock index blast nearly 16% higher
in a couple days is exceedingly rare, so naturally all this excitement captivated
traders. But it also led to growing fears that this sector is overbought and
richly valued, ripe for an imminent correction.
Ever the contrarian, I disagree with this increasingly popular assessment.
Despite their big run, gold stocks are still cheap. The primary reason
is the massive anomaly in gold-stock pricing driven by last year's brutal stock
panic. Now approaching the first anniversary of that terrible event, gold stocks
still continue to gradually normalize relative to gold. Until this necessary
process is complete, they remain great buys.
The foundation for this bullish case is the indisputable fact that gold ultimately
drives gold-stock prices. In general, a higher gold price translates into higher
profits for companies mining this metal. And in the stock markets higher profits
always eventually lead to higher stock prices. Any company's profits are the
most important driver by far of its long-term stock price. And for gold companies,
the gold price controls profits.
This strategic fundamental truth is certainly proven out technically. In the
5 years prior to the panic, the HUI's r-square with gold ran 94.9%. Thus 95%
of the daily HUI price action over this secular span was statistically explainable
by gold's own. There is no doubt that owning gold stocks is ultimately a leveraged
bet on gold itself.
The HUI's ongoing relationship with gold is easiest to understand when seen
visually. My favorite tool for this is the HUI/Gold Ratio, the daily HUI close
divided by the daily gold close, charted over time. The following HGR analysis
is why I was buying and recommending gold stocks and silver stocks deep in
the bowels of last year's stock panic and why I continue to think they have
excellent near-term potential today.
In these charts, the HGR line is rendered in blue and superimposed over the
HUI itself in red. When the HGR is rising, it means the HUI is outperforming
gold. Gold-stock prices are climbing at a faster rate than gold itself. And
when the HGR is falling, it means gold is outperforming the HUI. Most of the
time this happens when both gold and the HUI are correcting but the metal isn't
falling as fast as its miners' stocks.

Until last year's panics (yes there were two, a bond panic followed
by a stock panic), the HUI's relationship with gold was very well-established
as the HGR reveals. For 5 years, the HGR generally traded in a tight range
between 0.46x to 0.56x. In other words, the HUI usually meandered between 46%
to 56% of the price of gold at any given time. And the actual 5-year pre-panic
HGR average ran 0.511x.
In the financial markets, the longer any relationship between two prices persists
the more important it is. While a trend that lasts 5 minutes is probably meaningless
and driven by random noise, one that lasts 5 years is likely exceedingly important.
Any relationship that is established over such a long secular timeframe has
to be derived from a strong fundamental connection, like gold driving gold-stock
profits.
And interestingly technically, this 5-year HGR trading range was very tight.
Most of the time between mid-2003 and mid-2008, the HGR remained between 0.46x
and 0.56x. While there was an occasional surge above resistance or slump below
support, the HGR quickly returned to trend. So the HGR's secular average of
0.511x was not the product of a few extreme outlying reads, but a statistically-tight
benchmark.
This statistical tightness makes the secular HGR average even more important
for investors and speculators to consider when trading. Averaging 45 and 55,
or 10 and 90, both yield 50. But as a trader I'm much more likely to heed the
tight former than the loose latter. The tighter the original data, the less
the average is skewed by extreme outliers, the more relevant it probably is
to future market behavior.
So based on this long and technically-persuasive pre-panic secular history,
the "normal" level for the HUI is somewhere around half the prevailing gold
price. So if gold is near $400 like it was in late 2003, the HUI will probably
run around 200. And if gold is near $900 like in early 2008, the HUI will probably
be trading around 450. Incidentally, this HGR indicator was quite tradable.
I used to buy precious-metals stocks when the HGR neared support and sell PM
stocks when the HGR approached resistance.
But 2008's panics shattered this idyllic world. First the bond panic, then
the stock panic, led to a mass exodus of flight capital into the US dollar
to buy short-term US Treasuries. This sparked the dollar's biggest and fastest
rally ever over such a short span, which drove futures traders to dump
gold aggressively. If you want more background on this, last month I explored
the panics' impact
on gold.
As gold fell, and as the general stock markets burned all around, gold-stock
investors and speculators panicked. To this day I can't understand why
long-time secular-gold-bull players acted like frightened schoolgirls. There
is nothing to fear in the financial markets. While the exceedingly rare
stock panics are very unpleasant, they present the greatest buying opportunities
ever witnessed. To sell into a panic is utter foolishness, and the weak-willed
traders who succumb to this temptation always get wiped out.
The stock panic's impact on gold stocks was mind-boggling. In less than 4
weeks in October last year, the S&P 500 plummeted 27.1%. Gold got hit hard
in this fear maelstrom too, falling 15.1% over this same span. But the HUI,
man it got obliterated. Over those very same first 19 trading days in
October, the HUI utterly crashed by 51.8%! It looked and felt like gold-stock
Armageddon, it was a selloff of Biblical proportions.
On October 27th when the general stock markets finally carved their primary
panic low, the HUI closed at 152. Just 7 months earlier in March, it had achieved
an all-time high of 515! I doubt any other sector has ever seen a 70.6% decline
in such a short period of time within an ongoing secular bull. Since
gold ultimately drives gold stocks, this would only have been logical if gold's
own decline warranted such unbelievable gold-stock losses. But it certainly
didn't.
Over this same March-to-October span, gold only fell 26.8%. On that fateful
October 27th bottom, the HUI had actually fallen to 0.207x the gold price!
It was the lowest HGR level seen since April 2001, which was incidentally the
very month this secular gold bull was born. The panics had totally broken the
secular HGR relationship. Check out this ratio's blistering plunge in the chart
above.
Now such abysmally-low HGR levels were just plain silly. This impossibly absurd
situation just couldn't last. And lest you suspect this is an insight I conveniently
thought up later with the benefit of hindsight, let me share what I wrote to
our Zeal Speculator subscribers
on October 28th. That was the very next day after the HUI bottomed (when
gold closed at $747 and the HUI at 173)...
"And how about gold? We are witnessing the biggest inflationary event in US
history, and that is saying a lot. All of this bailout capital will eventually
flood into the real economy and drive incredible inflation. I've been long
gold since the $250s (early 2001) continuously and I've never felt more bullish
than I do today after this nasty financial panic and its resulting bailout
mess. Gold's fundamentals are stellar."
"Yet the HUI closed near 152 yesterday, which is end-of-the-world levels as
far as I am concerned. This index hasn't been this low since mid-2003! Where
was gold trading back then? In the $350s! Is this madness or what? We have
a gold price over twice as high yet stock prices are apparently discounting
mid-2003 gold levels. This is clearly not rational and reflects the sentimental
nature of this stock selloff."
Such an epic anomaly presented the greatest gold-stock buying opportunity
of this entire secular gold bull, so we started buying new PM-stock investments
and speculations right in the heart of the panic. After our subscribers had
a chance to get positions deployed, I publicly shared this same HGR reversion
thesis I'm offering today in a mid-December essay.
Thanks to the panic, gold stocks were too cheap relative to gold. But this
anomaly couldn't and wouldn't last, the HGR would revert higher to its pre-panic
secular relationship.
And although less extreme now since the HGR has indeed been recovering as
expected, this same thesis is the reason why gold stocks are still cheap today.
The panic anomaly was so extreme that gold stocks remain nowhere close to reflecting
today's prevailing gold prices. Over the last 3 months, gold averaged $944.
At the 0.511x pre-panic average, the HUI should have been running 483. Yet
its actual 3-month average was just 352, 27% too low. This already-narrowing
disconnect will not persist.
This next chart zooms in to the post-panic HGR recovery period since October.
The same data shown above is rendered here, in addition to a new yellow series.
This yellow line is where the HUI would have been trading since the panic if
its 0.511x 5-year pre-panic average HGR had held. Note that since the panic,
the distance between the actual HUI and this hypothetical HUI has narrowed
tremendously.

In the bowels of the panic, the HUI was trading at just 41% of where gold
suggested was reasonable. By this week, it had recovered to 79% of pre-panic
levels. The HGR is gradually mean-reverting, just as I expected. And
until the HUI is trading at 100% of its historical relationship with gold,
until this index hits about half the prevailing gold price, the gold stocks
are still cheap. This relentless normalization will continue.
And so far, the HGR's mean-reversion normalization trend is beautiful. This
ratio has indeed been rising on balance since the panic, gradually meandering
between support and resistance. Sometimes there are periods of time when the
HGR consolidates, the HUI is merely pacing gold's moves. But sooner or later
buying once again floods into gold stocks which drives differential HUI surges
at rates far exceeding gold's gains. The net result is the HGR climbing inexorably
back towards its pre-panic levels.
You couldn't ask for a better proof of this HGR normalization thesis than
this post-panic HGR chart. Today, just like in last October, I still believe
the worst-case HUI levels we can hope for is their 0.511x long-term
average. As long as gold stocks remain under this benchmark (they are just
0.405x now), they are still cheap. The HUI would still have to rally 26% from
this week's levels to attain that HGR average.
And believe it or not, this is really a conservative scenario. There are two
big wildcards that could make the HUI's near-term prospects far more bullish
than a mere 25%ish rally. The first is the nature of post-extreme oscillations
in the financial markets and the second is gold's own stellar potential over
the coming months.
The perpetually-warring emotions of greed and fear are what drive extremes
in the markets. Popular sentiment swings, like a pendulum, from one extreme
to the other. And also like a pendulum, the more extreme an emotion gets in
one direction the stronger the reaction backswing that will propel it in the
opposite direction. The farther you pull back a playground swing before letting
it go, the longer and higher its opposing arc.
Needless to say, the levels of fear the stock panic generated were so extreme
that none of the usual superlatives (mind-boggling, crazy, epic) come close
to describing them. Stock panics are exceedingly rare events, 2008's was the
first in 101 years!
I am all but certain we'll never see comparable levels of general fear again
(VXO 87!) in our lifetimes. And after such great fear, which spilled into gold
stocks, odds are very high the sentiment pendulum's backswing will overshoot
to the greed side.
In HGR terms, this translates into the HGR swinging well through its 0.511x
average to much higher territory. After being below trend in 2003, the HGR
reversion briefly drove it to 0.636x (you can see this in the first chart).
After falling below in 2005, the HGR temporarily soared to 0.609x. So there
is certainly precedent for big HGR overshoots in the greed direction after
it has been dragged too low by fear.
And since the 2008 panic anomaly was so far beyond extreme, the sentiment
overshoot this time could prove far larger. And although a very high HGR will
only be temporary, driven by an unsustainable greed spike, its prospects are
very bullish today. I have no idea how high the HGR could go in a spike, so
pick a number. At a fairly conservative 0.65x and $1000 gold, this implies
a 650 HUI and a 62% rally from here. Some form of HGR overshoot is highly
probable after such low extremes.
The second wildcard is gold. As you know, gold is flirting with $1000. Almost
every analyst, mainstream and contrarian, thinks this is too high and not sustainable.
But again I disagree with this consensus. In the history of gold's
quest for $1000, today's attempt is totally unique in a couple key ways.
Gold has never taken a run at $1000 before from such a high base nor made the
attempt so early in its seasonally-strongest time.
Between June and August, gold averaged $943. This is the highest base ever by
far for a $1000 attempt. Rather than having to surge too far too fast
and overextend itself to get above $1000 as in all past attempts, gold only
needed a minor 6% rally from this summer's high base. And as I explored in
depth a couple weeks ago, gold is now entering its seasonally-strong
period that runs until February.
On average in this bull market, gold has run 14% higher between September
and February. Off of mid-August's low, this implies $1065 gold by early next
year. And once again this projection is conservative because it merely models
in an average seasonal gain. But $1000+ gold could drive a lot of mainstream
investors to deploy into gold, GLD, and gold stocks for their first time ever.
We could see some serious gold buying this autumn and winter as this critical
psychological milestone is decisively breached.
So odds are the continuing HGR reversion will be extended by needing to run
to a higher prevailing gold price. Once again, I have no idea how high gold
will go. But if you plug in higher gold numbers to an average HGR or a higher
overshooting HGR, the resulting projections for the HUI's near-term bullish
potential grow considerably. Gold stocks are still cheap now even if gold stays
flat, but if gold rises as it ought to in the coming months this sector is
a screaming buy today.
The reason we do all this research at Zeal is to help us and our subscribers
make superior trades. And we have indeed been actively playing this HGR reversion
since its early days in the bowels of the stock panic. In our acclaimed Zeal
Intelligence monthly newsletter, as of this week our 11 open PM-stock positions
added since the panic have average unrealized gains of 63%.
We are certainly going to continue riding this HGR reversion that has already
been so good to us. And with the strong gold season now upon us, I expect our
gains to accelerate considerably. Subscribe
today, get deployed, and learn and profit from our world-class research
before this HGR reversion runs its course!
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The bottom line is gold stocks are still cheap despite their sharp rally in
the past week. Gold ultimately drives the gold stocks, and they remain well
under their historical relationship to this metal they mine. The extreme fear
during last year's stock panic spilled over into this sector, driving an epic
decoupling of gold stocks from the gold price. But ever since the panic's climax,
this relationship has been recovering.
And there is no reason not to expect this now-well-established normalization
to continue. In fact there is a good chance the gold stocks will overshoot
in the opposite direction temporarily, becoming expensive relative to gold,
before the markets fully return to normal. And if this isn't bullish enough,
gold is entering its strongest season of the year which ought to get a bigger
pool of capital interested in buying gold stocks.
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