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Watch for them in Gold (Bad News = Good News)
Below is an extract from a commentary available to subscribers
at www.goldenbar.com on 20th September
2005.
One cannot perceive the "Greenspan Put" and predict deflation (in the quantity
of money relative to the demand for it) without contradicting himself logically.
Either the Fed can control money supply or it can't; and if it can, it does
not have to mean that it has full control - only that it has enough influence
to sustain/induce an expansion.
Perhaps my point will be clearer in light of a paradigm that became well known
in the nineties: 'bad news for the economy (or profits) was good news for
stocks and good news for the economy was bad news for stocks.'
In other words, the market eventually realized that bad news meant an easier
Fed, so it went to work bidding up stock as well as bond prices on bad news;
and vice-versa. Well, in those days there was a bull market in paper.
Today, we're in year four or five of a bull market in commodities.
In other words, in terms of asset classes, the primary benefactor of the post
2000 inflation policy has been the real assets - commodities and real estate.
So why wouldn't this paradigm apply to the commodity bull?
That is, why wouldn't bad news on the economy translate into stronger gold
prices (specifically, since it is the metal with the most pronounced monetary
qualities) in the same way and for the same reason: because it means that the
Fed would loosen the purse strings? Except instead of going into stocks it
goes into gold...
Sooner or later in this gold bull market that paradigm will catch on; why
not here and now?
Or do you think markets are still hung up about this deflation bogeyman?
Well, certainty is not a characteristic feature of this business anyhow.
Fortunately though, we can be certain that the Fed will inflate again sooner
than later.
But I'm confident that this is the beginning of the final thrust of the primary
leg that began in 2001; my minimum target is US$500, based solely on the existent
technical parameters; but I have a hunch this move - if it is the final thrust
as per the model I've been relying on recently - will surprise all of us on
the upside. I wouldn't be surprised to see gold US$600 occur as quickly as
oil prices shot up from U$50 to US$70 per bbl... 4 months.
As a piece of evidence supporting our contention that gold prices are likely
to be resilient in the face of declines in stock or bond prices, or other commodities
like copper or oil, or strength in the foreign exchange rate of the US dollar,
note that it has been resilient to the pull backs in copper, oil, and the CRB
recently; to the strength of the FX value of the US dollar since May; and that
it has even outperformed the Dow for almost two months now.
Note also that on Monday's slide in the Dow, USd gold prices leaped to a new
17-yr high.
Small consolations so far, but I believe that this most spectacular final
inning has just begun.
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