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There was lots of second-guessing going on this past week as gold shares dove
faster than Al Gore's latest popularity polls. The volatility is likely to
continue. But the bears' vindication isn't.
The louder the gold bubble crowd is, the more confident we grow that this
bull market is still young. I won't waste your time with arguing whether there
is or is not a gold bubble, since we dismissed it as fodder for the developing
bull market just last week.
Don't Hold That Punch!
However, we would contend that analysts calling it so fall into one of either
two categories, assuming they've been around long enough for at least one:
1. Those who missed calling the tech bubble for what it was, and/or
2. Those that missed buying the bottom in gold
Of course it's important to know their record, particularly if they claim
to be some sort of authority on the subject of bubbles, a theory we can apply
to only paper by the way if we want to avoid sounding, well, ironic. We don't
define a bubble by how fast stocks go up or down, but by how far they are from
reality, if you will. And it is important to think outside the box if the goal
is to determine reality.
At any rate, sharp wild corrections will naturally follow sharp wild rallies.
How far could a stock, which has tripled, correct and then continue on in a
bull market rendering an otherwise scary correction in the moment irrelevant,
with hindsight?
I don't know. Some would say up to two thirds of a move might be retraced
in cases such as this, applying some variation of Fibonacci analysis. Some
would say that the correction should at least tap the 200-day moving average.
We don't forecast corrections, though we do assess them and try to warn our
clients if their likelihood increases. We try to predict bull and bear markets,
or trends. As far as our outlook is concerned, moreover, we're not so sure
this correction will be all that long, particularly since it has been so fast,
and since our near term outlook for the dollar and gold prices is still as
bearish as our long term outlook.
I think this kind of volatility is only going to grow. The action in Tuesday's
session was bullish for gold shares, and could portend the end of the swoon
that began last week. All of the major gold indexes registered a familiar one
day reversal; one of the kinds of behaviors that has been extremely reliable
in signaling the end to many corrections as well as the end to many rallies,
particularly in the short term. Tuesday's behavior was classic. Most of the
shares whose charts we read all saw a spike in volume after a gap down on the
open; share prices tapped support just under the last highest low in the intermediate
sequence and, if experience serves correct in my interpretation, suggests this
move just defined the low end of a trendline. Almost every gold share we monitor
carved the same signature on the chart. Follow through will be important, more
so to short term traders, but the conviction of Tuesday's rally even as the
Dow continued to unravel is already a good sign, from the bullish viewpoint.
On May 31st we wrote to our clients (in Subjective Values) that gold
shares were fully valued in the short term, specifically at $330 gold, yet
undervalued in the long term relative to our outlook for gold prices. We used
Newmont as our case study and calculated that at $300 gold, the shares are
worth $28 if priced at their average multiple of cashflow over the past five
years, but at a conservative 8 times (operating) cashflow they are worth only
half of today's market price, or about $15 per share. At $400 that range grows
from $25 to $46; at $500 gold we calculate Newmont's shares could be worth
from $38 based on eight times cash to $71 per share based on 14.6 times cash
- its five year mean.
(The report is available to GoldenBar subscribers. See the GoldenBar Subscription
Page for details).
Thus, if you're bullish on gold, and can't decide if it is better to sell
or hold your gold stocks, the questions to ask are: how long will it take
for the price of gold to get to the $400 - $500 range to reflect better value
for my shares? And, in such circumstances, what is the more valuable currency
to hoard: a gold share or the dollar?
Should gold prices break through $339 they'll have completed a near perfect
five year double bottom. Our confidence is high that 1999 was the bottom in
this market for some time, perhaps ever. I know that sounds bold, but
it's not really.
During late 2000, after a one-year decline in price from a post Washington
Agreement buying spike, the same analysts calling this market a bubble today
saw gold going to $180. The reason we argued, at the time, they were going
to be wrong was that the conduits that helped sustain the monetary boom had
been impaired. Whether the Fed targets asset prices or not, the fact remains
while asset prices go up, the dollar carries an investment premium that enables
a check on the prices of goods and services, and in turn buffers value of the
currency. To the extent they try and influence this premium we could say they
control, export, hide, or sustain the inflation.
Inflation is not prices. It isn't a change in prices. It is a "process" that
results in too much money first, and debasement second. The way in which
it accomplishes this is more varied than Marx's imagination. But it always
is a process that affects (usually dislocates) individual valuation judgments
within an economy. Interfering with the mechanism of prices, which Adam Smith
called the invisible hand, is only part of the story, and only the beginning
of it at that.
The rest of the story lies in what happens to the economy's capital structure,
and then to its currency once the investors propping up its value realize
how long it will take to heel the resultant dislocated structure. In other
words, how long before real profits come back (Ed Bugos).
Flash From The Past
When the tech bubble first popped, we realized right away that the US current
account deficit was in danger of halting the dollar's ascent. The gruesome
fate of the stock market suddenly made the current account deficit seem unsustainable.
But many analysts at the time still largely questioned our objection to a
deficit that had been sustained for as long as their careers probably spanned.
By late 2001 it was apparent to most of Wall Street that interest rates were
going to stay sticky despite the fall in commodity & asset values, and
the government's deteriorating books weren't going to help matters there. Even
if rates could lower, and they did in the short end, this we argued would only
further dislocate the economy's structure. We argued that stock prices would
not benefit, and that profits weren't likely to come back until the economy
was allowed to heal itself laissez faire like.
In the meantime, the bear market on Wall Street meant that analysts had to
start thinking differently about where earnings would come from now that stock
prices weren't going up every day, and companies couldn't report windfall investment
gains as well as other shams without getting caught.
A few months ago we wrote about the crumbling pillars of dollar policy, another
conduit that has enabled a check on prices (or control of the inflation), though
this one is deliberated to certain ends. In this case we've sensed a division
in the team that has traditionally run economic policy, specifically, the US
President, Chairman of the Fed, and Secretary Treasury. Clinton's complicity
in this union was an important element supporting the US strong dollar policy.
But equally, Bush's apparent disloyalty to this team in mismanaging the nation's
fiscal ledger, and proposing his new not so free trade doctrine, are factors
that undermined it, and consequently may have impaired the Fed's ability to
manage interest rates.
America's former "freer" trade position was a bullish factor for the dollar
(or dollar denominated assets to be precise) to the rest of the world, and
helped its standing as an international reserve currency. That's because Greenspan
knows there is a market that determines what is money, and I believe this is
why the EU understands the importance of freer trade itself today?
The point of the brief historical recap is that we've argued for an inflation
breakdown (breakout to most people) ever since 2000, and nothing has happened
in the past week to change that outlook, so we won't be getting bearish on
gold anytime soon.
In fact, the markets have moved closer to this inevitability, even as we write.
The dollar is three points from reversing a primary bull market, and gold prices
are $18 from beginning a new one. Wall Street's bear market is still decisively
on. Since most investors continue to remain bearish on gold's longer term prospects,
and bullish on the broad market, of course the noise from that camp will be
louder during each correction in gold shares, and rally on Wall Street.
And although gold shares did trade a little ahead of themselves, who are we
to say if they will stay ahead of themselves or not. I know I'm not smart enough
to guess how smart everyone else is. But we do think that if gold prices complete
the five year double bottom we see developing on the chart, technically they
are likely to aim for $425.
I'm a technician because it works when my brain doesn't. But if you're not,
it ought not to matter because the fundamentals seem even more bullish than
that tepid target.
Valuation Is A Process
...just like inflation is. It takes a market to determine value and the market
may change its mind tomorrow about the value of something. In our kind of
monetary system, most any determination of value will depend on how the inflation
alters our valuation judgments tomorrow, relative to the recent past.
If for instance, the major stock market averages recover into the summer,
one could say that the inflation is working to help bulls revalue the dollar.
If the foreign owners of wealth in the US decide to invest their liquid proceeds
in either real estate or directly into long term fixed projects, as opposed
to repatriating them, one might be able to say that the inflation has been
worked to underpin the dollar.
Any number of scenarios could evolve to save the dollar before it cracks 108,
which is the level that would confirm our analysis. But the conduits, or tools,
which have made life so easy for policymakers in sustaining the inflation & purchasing
power of the dollar over the past decade, are now working against them.
When I meet with old mining gray hairs at the soup kitchen they tell me that
it's not over; that the government can sustain the value of the dollar relative
to gold in particular. In my opinion they've underestimated the market. Their
eyes may be on the "crisis" ball that bounces around unpredictably,
save to the privileged few puppet masters.
I believe the bull market in gold is part of a healing process that will end
once the vast majority of investors understand why gold is money. I
see the market rejecting the government's models for the economy throughout
that process.
The Sky is Falling... It's a Bubble
The process of revaluing gold is still young. We haven't even seen the point
of recognition.
Instead we hear warnings from the professional investment community about
the danger of gold bubbles who sound like Chicken Littles running around telling
us the sky is falling just when the sun is rising.
Their timing is impeccable, though it is the same thing they've been saying
all along. It's just more perceptible this week because gold shares are down
nearly 20% by the average index (before Tuesday's close).
The technical resistance points that controlled the 5 year bear market in
gold shares were blown away last month, particularly those pertaining to the
shares of producers that aren't hedged.
Obviously, if gold prices are still in a primary bear market and the dollar
is still defined by a primary bull market sequence, gold equities probably
got ahead of themselves by jumping into a new bull market with both feet. In
our view that was just the first punch. The question in determining the value
of a gold share is not what will happen with India, or Iraq, or North
Korea, it is what will happen to the dollar, and thus gold prices?
For in the end, a gold company's profits are determined largely by the price
of gold.
Consumer demand for Jewelry can fall all it wants. Bearish analysts say that
India is an important consumer of gold and that the higher gold prices go,
the less gold will be bought in India. I would argue that while Jewelry demand
has been an important component underlying gold demand in the nineties, investment
demand is likely to replace it in the new decade, even within India at some
point, but especially around the globe.
If we weren't counting on investment demand to make a secular recovery in
the gold business, there is no way on earth we'd be so bullish on gold prices.
However, to the extent that new enthusiastic shareholders of gold mining companies
haven't factored the rising risk premium that all stocks are increasingly having
to contend with, into gold shares, this sector can fall along with a major
stock market collapse at first, depending on its nature (severity), and depending
also on how gold prices and the dollar react to it. Tuesday's bullish foot
prints in gold shares on a reeling Dow is reason for optimism.
If the market factored in a $330 gold price a few weeks ago for most gold
shares, it is factoring less today. But at that point where Wall Street's demise
cracks the dollar's primary support at 108 (for the dollar index), and gold
prices bust through $339, it is likely that gold shares will be undervalued,
even in the short term.
The case for $180 gold will appear as it does in every correction we've had
so far but it is going to require new highs in the value of the dollar against
other currencies, as well as relative to the commodities that have been made
scarce by the policies supporting the dollar over the past several years. But
there is little indication, technically, that the plausibility of a recovery
in the dollar's primary bull trend is anything other than... maybe we get a
bounce off support before it hurls towards 100.
Deflation is a pipe dream. I mean that scientifically. Some prices will fall.
But anything worth more than the currency it is denominated in is likely to
rise in value relative to it, as a result of the atypical protracted bust side
of the prior 20 year long monetary boom, and the nature of our monetary system.
This is particularly true to the extent that a market still determines what
is money.
And it is true so long as the Fed exists. In fact, it has been true as long
as the Fed has existed. And it is why the gold business is a growth story.
So why would we sell our modest 30% allocation in gold shares because of a
little bit of volatility?
We would if they became overvalued relative to our outlook. But since we expect
gold prices to make it through $339 and head towards $425, sooner than most
think, we feel they aren't.
If we are wrong about our targets for gold prices and the deflationists get
their $180 gold then gold equities are indeed overvalued today. Being wrong
about that obviously means we disagree with that outlook. Still, while this
correction could grow deeper for gold shares, it would require either a crash
in the Dow, or a significant recovery in the dollar's value... an outcome that
recent action on Wall Street appears increasingly likely to prevent.
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