Over the past two weeks or so, there has been a surge in interests on the
US Dollar. In particular, the relationship between the Dollar and precious
metals. Since gold and, especially, silver prices had been widely discussed
to be manipulated, the Dollar's price action may have significant impact on
the prices of silver and gold between now and when both metals' prices are
set free.
Before we dive into the fundamentals and technicals of the Dollar, it's important
to recognize that the Dollar may not (or soon will not) trade in a free market
fashion either. There are just too many vested interests at this point around
the world to avoid a Dollar collapse. Brian Bloom's work, "Managed
Markets," provides an elegant argument.
I agree with Bloom that the world's central bankers will do all it can
to prop up the Dollar and suppress gold and silver price. The only thing
I disagree is that the central bankers will manipulate, not manage,
the Dollar. The Webster's Dictionary definition of "manipulate" is "to manage
or influence skillfully, especially in an unfair manner." Therein
lies the difference between manipulation and management. Manipulation contains
an element of deception. Do I need to remind you the widely discussed possible
government deception in inflation and employment statistics?
The practical aspect of distinguishing manipulation and management is to answer
the question: To what extent can analysis, technical and fundamental, still
remain useful in a manipulated market? Remember that the global central
banking establishment will not only do what it can (ability to print an unlimited
amount of any paper currency), they will also do anything, regardless of the
actions' legality or morality. In this line of thinking, I agree with Bloom
and Doug Noland that
this, indeed, is "an exceptionally challenging analytical environment." All
analysis may temporarily be useless.
Nevertheless, there are a few points that speculators and investors in silver
may take to navigate through this storm.
First, eliminate leverage. This means only physical silver. And never
buy silver stocks on margin. I cannot emphasize this enough. If the volatility
is going to be huge and illogical (therefore unpredictable), why increase your
risks?
Second, focus on the long-term. All "managed markets" will come to an end.
So do "manipulated markets." The managed markets will have longer life span,
as in government regulated natural monopolies (e.g. hospitals). But manipulated
markets may end sooner. This is because deception, if revealed, will certainly
accelerate the death of manipulated scheme. Therefore, it's crucial for investors
without precious metals positions to begin building a silver position.
Third, take advantageous of short-term weaknesses. This involves paying attention
to both fundamentals (in the form of news events) and technicals of Dollar
and precious metals market. An example of this is last Tuesday's (July 27)
stronger than expected July Consumer Confidence Index, reported to be 106.1,
a two-year high. From the following US Dollar Index daily chart, July 27th is
also the day the Dollar exhibits tremendous technical strength by closing above two important
moving averages (100 and 200 day moving averages) simultaneously.
But note that the Dollar began strengthening several trading days before the
Tuesday's good number (dotted, upward sloping trend line). The Dollar strength
also roughly corresponds to silver's weakness. Marked by dotted, downward sloping
trend line on the silver daily chart below.
With the guess (and it's only a guess) that the central banking establishment
active manipulating Dollar and precious metals markets, investors may continue
to observe a somewhat asymmetrical price action to news events in the short-term.
Asymmetrical in that news favorable to Dollar will materialize into sharp price
appreciation for Dollar and sharp price depreciation for silver. On the other
hand, news event unfavorable to US economy or Dollar may not necessarily
result in Dollar depreciation/silver appreciation as under normal (i.e. un-manipulated)
case.
In fact, by last Friday, Q2 GDP reported to be annualized 3%, significantly
below analysts' estimate of 3.6-3.7%. Note the side-way price action on the
above daily Dollar Index chart, from Tuesday to Friday, in the face of this
bearish announcement. Silver behaved normally this time, with price strength.
However, it's important to remember that in a manipulated market, silver price
may stay down, or even go down, with Dollar-bearish news. Making such type
of news unsuitable for selling silver but buying silver (or adding to silver
position) in the face of temporary weakness from Dollar-bullish news is recommended.
Note that silver purchasing decision is made on ex post basis. This
is because price action will be underway to reflect the Dollar-positive news before they
were announced. For this example, the purchase can be made at late trading
session of July 27th or early trading session of July 28th.
In short, purchase is made after the silver has discounted the Dollar-bullish
news.
A (possible) Play on Silver
The housing bubble is becoming a popular topic again. My guess is that somewhere
in the near future, there may be a "deflation scare." However, a monetary system
central bank with paper fiat money, which is what we have now all over the
world, deflation can never occur. Only more and more inflation (please
see Ed Bugos' "Inflation
versus Deflation").
Central bank may use this "deflation scare" (from the puncture of housing
and mortgage bubbles) to prop the Dollar and suppress silver and gold price.
For those who don't have a silver position, this down leg is a good opportunity
to build a position. As for those who already own silver and/or silver stocks.
This is also a good opportunity for planned addition.