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In the last ten years, the financial world has experienced quite a few bubbles.
Ten years ago there was the tech bubble. Then the housing bubble. And then
the credit bubble. There was an Oil bubble too. With all these bubbles popping
up, so to has an increase in bubble calling and contrarian thinking. As a result,
sentiment analysis has become more popular.
One has to look at three things: fundamentals, technicals and sentiment.
For contrary thinking (in terms of sentiment) to be most powerful, either technicals
or fundamentals need to agree. As an example, I anticipate a reversal when
sentiment is overly bullish and that market is running into technical resistance.
Just because sentiment is bullish, doesn't mean a reversal is coming.
The reality however and this is very important to understand, is that sentiment
follows the trend most of the time. A secular bull market evolves as more and
more people become bullish and invest in that market. Over time, sentiment
is going to be more bullish because there are more participants in that trend.
That is what causes higher prices. It is the very nature of a major bull market
for sentiment to be bullish.
First, let me debunk the bubble callers and those who say Gold is a crowded
trade. I've heard at least three different people say this. Google that and
you'll be amazed at the number of results. Here are some excellent charts.
The first chart I saw in an editorial from Puru Saxena, here: http://www.321gold.com/editorials/saxena/saxena111309.html

The second chart is c/o of Casey Research, which I saw in an editorial by
Chris Puplava here: http://financialsense.com/Market/cpuplava/2009/1118.html (Ed
Note: the original Casey article is here: http://www.safehaven.com/showarticle.cfm?id=14994)

Does it look like the Gold market is anywhere remotely close to a bubble?
Apparently, the bubble callers and crowded trade folks haven't done their research.
Doesn't look crowded to me.
Even if a few more people own gold, my bet is that they don't own enough of
it. Gold is under-owned. John Paulson, the great hedge fund manager is pretty
bullish on Gold, but he doesn't own much more than 10% in his fund. (Perhaps
that is why he's starting a Gold fund). Dennis Gartman, I believe only owns
around 5% (He's said so on television). Months ago, Steve Leuthold was on Bloomberg
and he was bullish on Gold but said he only owned 1-2%. A time ago, most folks
would have 10% of their worth in Gold, whether it was in a bull market or not.
Most people who own gold investments, don't own enough.
Moving along, it is important to understand the technical ramifications of
Gold's move past $1000/oz. A market that breaks free from a multi-decade base
is a market that shoots much much higher. There are numerous examples of this
but we'll discuss only two.
Oil had traded between $10 and $40 for nearly 25 years. It broke past $40
and we all know what happened in 2008. In just a few short years the market
rose nearly 300% following the breakout.
Then there is the Dow Jones breakout in 1983. The market consolidated underneath
1000 from 1966-1982. It brokeout in 1983, retested the breakout and then ran
to 2700. The markets 3-year run from mid 1984 to mid 1987 was probably the
strongest three year run it had dating back to 1933. The market advanced 170%
in four years.
Gold has followed a similar pattern, if you use $700-$730, the monthly resistance.
Gold broke past that in 2007 and then retested it in 2008. The breakout past
the 2008 high confirms that Gold is in new territory. Judging from history
(and there are many examples), Gold is at the start of a major move higher.
Our target for this move is $2,100-$2,300 in the next 12 months.
It is interesting how these major breakouts occur at a time when fundamentals
are their strongest. How can anyone call Gold a bubble when gold production
continues to decrease? How can anyone call Gold a bubble when monetization
is rampant? How can anyone call Gold a bubble when the FHA and FDIC will need
to be bailed out? How can anyone call Gold a bubble when the US deficit is
in the trillions of dollars? The deflationary forces plaguing us are bullish
for Gold. That is what the market is saying and that is how traders and investors
are reacting.
There is a reason the recognition phase in a bull market comes after that
major breakout. Humans are reactive and when it comes to the markets, they
follow the herd. It is only after price breaks out do the fundamentals become
so obvious. The views of the bubble callers and wanna be contrarians are baseless,
misguided and ironically, coming at the worst possible time.
Good Luck and Good Trading!
For more information on our Gold/Silver stock newsletter and examples of accurate
real time sentiment analysis, please visit: http://www.trendsman.com/Newsletter/GSletter.htm
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