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Let's start with a lesson that every investor eventually learns: Short-term
trends are almost impossible to play consistently. I base this on both common
sense (lots of smart people are trying to do the same thing so unless you have
inside information you shouldn't be playing their game) and painful personal
experience: Every time I try to get cute and time a market, I end up wishing
I'd gone to the beach instead.
And yet...gold and silver look ready for a tradable correction, based on the
following:
The COTs are extremely negative
For most gold bugs, this indicator needs no introduction. For everyone else,
COT stands for Commitment of Traders report and is a measure of what the big
players are doing in the gold and silver markets. There are two main groups
here: The commercial users (mints and jewelry makers) that buy metal and make
things with it, and the leveraged speculators, mostly hedge funds that bet
on precious metals for their clients.
Time and again over the past few years the commercials have accumulated big
short positions in gold/silver futures during rising markets, while the hedge
funds have followed the trend and built up big long positions. The commercials
then engineer a sharp drop in metals prices, buying back their shorts at the
hedge funds' expense. Lately the commercial short positions have hit record
levels. If the pattern holds, gold and silver are due for sharp, fast corrections.
The mainstream media is starting to gush
The New York Times just published a hugely-favorable article titled "Inside
the Global Gold Frenzy" which includes reporting like this:
"It's not that gold has changed, but gold buyers have changed," said Suki
Cooper, a precious-metals strategist for Barclays Capital. "It's a structural
shift we're seeing on the investing side, from Asian central banks right
down to individual investors buying ingots and coins."
In addition to high anxiety about the future, recent political trends may
also be playing a part in the global gold fever. With a crackdown on tax
havens worldwide and Swiss bankers handing over the names of wealthy American
clients to authorities, some experts say rich people now prefer an investment
that can easily be hidden from the prying eyes of tax collectors.
"In Europe, people want physical gold to store themselves, with no documents," said
Bernhard Schnellmann, director for precious-metal services at Argor-Heraeus.
Often, the company doesn't know the ultimate destination of the bars it makes,
only the identity of the bank in Zurich or London that is handling the order.
This isn't a Business Week cover story -- which would be an iron-clad death
knell -- but it is a sign that the mainstream media is noticing and starting
to chase the trend. Not a good omen for any asset class.
The broker on my radio is sick of gold
Out here in Idaho there's a Spokane, WA stockbroker who has a Saturday radio
show which I occasionally catch while driving around. Like most traditional
brokers he hates gold because it's not a "financial asset". But last Saturday
he was forced to discuss it because, he lamented, about half the calls from
listeners were about gold. He finished a rant about why gold isn't a good investment
and in any event is too popular to be undervalued, and then said "let's go
to the phones; Bill, you're on the line."
"Uh, hi," said Bill. "I think gold is headed up because we're destroying the
dollar but I'm not sure how to buy it. Should I get coins or gold mining stocks?"
The broker took a deep breath and in a patient but exasperated voice told
the caller that he wasn't going to go there, because "this show is about making
listeners money."
This is anecdotal, of course, but if 50% of the calls to local investment
shows are about gold it's a safe bet that the metal's recent string of record
closes has gotten the attention of individual investors.
Stocks need a correction
The S&P 500 has rebounded from 676 to 1046. That's a 50% gain with hardly
a downward squiggle on the way, which means a correction is due simply because
markets don't move in straight lines. Elliott
Wave International's Robert Prechter called the March bottom and is
now telling clients to sell and/or start shorting.
Stocks falling wouldn't necessarily cause gold to do the same. But lately
they've both been the beneficiaries of the liquidity that's flooding in from
the world's central banks. So it's not unreasonable for gold to fall if declining
stocks lead to renewed deflation fears. Look for a lot of comparisons between
the current market and that of 1931.
So -- again with the caveat that I'm the world's worst trader -- this seems
like a pretty good time to bet on a temporary drop in the price of gold. But
only for traders. Most people with money in precious metals and long time horizons
should play golf or hang out with the kids for another five years while the
broad, long-term forces of monetary destruction work their magic. But if you're
someone who can't help playing with his money once in a while, the nice pop
that the junior miners, for instance, have seen lately might be a good excuse
to raise some cash.
BUY GOLD
AND SILVER ONLINE WITH GOLDMONEY
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