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Gold started the year at $515 per ounce. Gold peaked at $725/oz on May 12th.
The gold ETF (GLD) started the year with 8.5 million ounces in its vaults.
On the day of gold's peak, GLD had 11.4 million ounces. Gold has since tumbled
$145/oz in 6 weeks, but curiously the assets of GLD have been rising as
of late. In fact, GLD yesterday reached a new record high of ounces in the
trust with over 11.7 million ounces.
The same trend of "a declining metal price, but increased ETF assets" can
be seen in the silver ETF (SLV). Silver started the year at $8.85/oz. It subsequently
rose 70% to $15/oz, before correcting by $5.50 to near $9.50 an ounce. The
silver ETF began life on April 28th with silver at $12.55/oz. The silver ETF
reached a peak of 73 million ounces in its vaults around the time physical
prices peaked. With the aforementioned sell-off, silver ETF assets declined
to 67 million ounces, but have since begun heading back upwards to a near
peak level of 72-73 million ounces in the trust.
The continued accumulation of gold and silver ounces in the ETFs likely means
that savvy individual and institutional investors (who are driven by fundamentals)
are eagerly accumulating the metals after their sharp pull back - a bullish
sign. At the same time, the price has been weak in all likelihood because leveraged
black-box technical types at CTAs and hedge funds are liquidating. One could
argue that gold and silver prices declining in spite of the ETFs building up
ounces is a bearish sign; we, however, believe that ETF asset accumulation
is evidence that long-term fundamental investors are flocking back to the metals
in anticipation of a continuation of their multi-year bull market resuming.
When the black-box precious metal selling by funds is over, we should again
see gold and silver moving higher as the U.S. Dollar is shunned by global investors
who realize the Fed has exhausted its ability to raise rates given that the
residential real estate market in the U.S. is rolling over. Our June 2006 issue
goes into detail about the housing market falling apart, so be sure to subscribe
for more insight.
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Todd Stein & Steven McIntyre
Texas Hedge Report
Todd Stein & Steven McIntyre are internationally known
analysts and editors of The Texas Hedge
Report, a market newsletter that highlights under and overvalued securities
in the equity, bond, currency, and commodity markets. For more information,
go to http://www.texashedge.com
Copyright © 2004-2008 Todd Stein and
Steven McIntyre
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