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The following is an excerpt from a commentary posted at Treasure
Chests on Tuesday, October 18th, 2005.
Dichotomies, divergences, and distrust are three words starting with 'd' that
go a long way in describing what's happening in financial markets these days,
and are especially effective when put together in one sentence. And while we
will not go through all of the specific reasons why the first two 'd's' in
the above sentence characterize financial markets well today, we take a quick
look at why there is so much distrust. As I see it, it all boils down to greed.
Wall Street year-end bonuses are estimated to be $
17.5 billion this time around, and the higher stocks finish by Christmas,
the more trading desks, floor traders, and money managers will receive. That's
a powerful incentive to attempt steering stocks higher into year's end, and
if the Fed will give brokers the capital to do it, which history has proven
to be the case, chances are we will see some sort of Santa Claus rally in December
again. That is unless enough of them think it's a good idea to play it conservative
during some kind of a problem, like the Tequila
Crisis that gripped investor concerns at the turn in 1994.
When do such instances occur? In a nutshell, and as you would learn upon a
review of the attached study above, 'economic crises' are generally developed
as a result of allowing imbalances to run for too long, where for example,
perhaps the largest impending disaster we have building at present is in the US
Dollar (USD). Why would a USD collapse be such a big deal? In short, and
as you likely well know, because the US consumer will be 'shut down', meaning
foreigners will no longer be willing to finance the extravagant lifestyles
North Americans have become accustomed. Such a development would of course
go a long way to fix the dichotomy between US wages and those in China, where
they now finance domestic consumption by supporting artificially lower rates
in the States. (i.e. by buying Treasuries.)
This could happen because US wages and incomes would collapse, virtually wiping
out the 'middle class' in short order, and the consumption that goes along
with having a thriving populous. In this regard, one must realize a 'middle
class' can only survive in a dynamically expanding economic environment, like
that found in China today, but you should know that greedy bankers have already
pushed the process there into a surprisingly mature stage, where based on constraints
produced by their sheer population size, and the world's inability to feed
that machine from a resources perspective (think peak
oil), 'global capitalism', whatever that means today, is staring straight
down the barrel a gun destined to bring an end to it's long-term life-cycle.
(i.e. think Millennium Cycle) Therein, without the ability to grow wages, tap
existing wealth (think the housing bubble), and in the absence of tectonic
innovation growth (think the tech boom), the US is bound to catch the flu,
where it appears some
parts of the world are well ahead in this respect. (i.e. Europe topped
economically long ago when their populations outgrew productive capacity and
the colonization life-cycle fully matured.)
Does this mean economic collapse is dead ahead? Absolutely not, not as long
as society maintains faith in the current system, which it will as long as
'the middle class' is still enjoying three square meals a day. When this becomes
increasingly difficult to do however, as is the case now because inflation
keeps rising, mortgaging the kids to pay bills may become fashionable due to
the 'crisis' that will develop in the States. Implicitly, you will know a 'currency
/ confidence crisis' is in full bloom when the USD plunges through 80 and doesn't
look back. This is why we remain bullish on gold and silver bullion, because
when people want out of fiat currencies, and as alluded to above, all fiat
currencies are depreciating against tangibles, gold will rise across the
full spectrum, but most importantly against the USD as it loses 'reserve
currency' status. We think gold plotted against the USD still looks good as
a 'buy' at present, even though traditional technical indicators are suggesting
a substantial correction could ensue anytime now. (See Figure 1)
Figure 1


How substantial of a correction could gold experience if the record high speculative
long position, held by Large
Speculators against Commercials, is liquidated in historically characteristic
fashion? You may remember a while back we first introduced the possibility
gold may have to vex the $490 area (38% retrace off 1980 intra-day all time
highs) before settling back to $450 to test the breakout above the $50 interval
as per our Progressive Interval System (PI), and in this respect, our view
on the subject remains unchanged. Furthermore, as we expect to see open interest
(OI) in Comex metals continuing to set new highs in coming years, don't expect
to see much of a pullback when prices head for support at $450, because one
should expect to see precious metals investing of all kinds increasingly become
a favored alternative to stocks, bonds, and real estate as the bull market
in tangibles matures, where bullion, and it's surrogates like Comex gold and
silver, will continue to shine for as long as this market remains solvent.
(i.e. able to deliver the physical gold on demand.)
Attached is
a gold plot that clearly shows the importance of the $50 progressions in gold's
advance, where if history were to repeat compared to the jump over $400, one
should expect to see prices fall all the way back to the $430 area potentially,
just as $375 was seen last year after the complex had topped out. Further to
this vein, it looks very much like gold stocks are set to top out again this
year in November some time, suggestive a protracted correction should ensue
afterward if history is any guide. (i.e. the last two years saw precious metals
stocks put in interim tops at the end of November lasting four to six months.)
In fact, it could be precious metals stocks, as measured by the Amex Gold Bugs
Index (HUI) have already put in a top this year, potentially forming a 'triple
top', which as you may know could be quite a sticky measure to get through
in the absence of buoyant liquidity conditions. (See Figure 2)
Figure 2


That is to say, the theory the precious metals sector is so small, stock market
participants will take it up anyway even if general liquidity conditions become
strained, is about to be tested in my opinion. In this respect, one must remember
gold bullion will likely act in stark contrast compared to paper promises during
a liquidity crisis, where this morning for example, market participants are
bidding the USD higher in a flight to safety, just as was the case yesterday
with gold. (i.e. they are both being bid up in the global de-leveraging process
currently underway.) Therein, we could show you several indicators that point
to the probability precious metals stocks are a very risky bet right now, but
the one that really hits home is the Golden Star Resources (GSS: AMEX & GSC:
TSX) / HUI Ratio, which continues to work it's way lower, albeit at a slower
pace of late. (See Figure 3)
Figure 3


The important thing to realize here is that since the inception of the bull
market in metals stocks back in November of 2000, GSS has been the leader in
the 'growth sub-sector' of the precious metals stocks universe, and that even
though it's managements continue to prove themselves incompetent,
if conditions were truly buoyant, this would not matter. In fact, if GSS were
to begin out-performing it's counterparts anytime soon, such an advent would
suggest very good things lie ahead for the sector, where we would have no reservations
recommending other juniors and small cap opportunities because macro-conditions
would be emitting good vibes. Here is a long-term plot of the GSS / HUI Ratio
indicating if we do not get a bounce forthwith, a 100 percent retrace should
be expected. (See Figure 4)
Figure 4


The implications associated with GSS's under-performance should not be taken
lightly, as if there is a liquidity crunch going into Christmas this year,
which much to the surprise of many could happen given the current backdrop
(i.e. the Fed is no longer in control of market rates, something that will
be much to the surprise of many a market maven), a 'Grand' scale crisis could
be in the cards. Furthermore, one should notice that such an outcome would
be more than a one-time hit on year-end bonuses for the brokers, and that more
importantly this would send a lasting message regarding the future such that
the Decennial
Pattern, as measured by the Dow over the past 125 years, would be broken.
There's another one of those considerations you should put in your pipe and
puff on for a bit.
Further thoughts on the subject matter presented above can be obtained at Treasure
Chests, as per below.
Good investing all.
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Captain Hook
TreasureChests.info
Treasure Chests is a market timing service specializing
in value-based position trading in the precious metals and equity markets with
an orientation geared to identifying intermediate-term swing trading opportunities.
Specific opportunities are identified utilizing a combination of fundamental,
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enhances returns when the methodology is applied effectively. Those interested
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