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As mentioned recently, I have not been writing about gold personally and presenting
articles about gold in the News & Analysis section
of the website because I am a gold bug. I am doing so because this is an asset
class and sector that has been presenting ongoing buying opportunities. As
you know, I have been taking advantage of those opportunities on down days,
buying the sector from uncertain, uncommitted or downright scared holders.
In today's emotional and turbulent markets, it seems many frown upon an old
fashioned concept like "buy low and sell high", but I plan to stick to that
crazy notion.
First and foremost in our value analysis is the Dow-Gold Ratio chart (see 10/4/06
entry below). This is self-explanatory; stocks simply became over-sold
in their secular bear trend vs. gold. That condition is being corrected.
When we look past the hyperbole of the Dow headlines and talk of the end
of the bull market in the barbarous relic (now that the Fed has inflation
under control - wink wink) we simply see a re-setting of the ratio, nothing
more and nothing less. It pays to use technical analysis to help moderate
emotion when trying to make sense of market trends and cycles.
Without further delay, I would like to present some relevant charts of gold,
silver and copper, which benefit from different economic climates: Gold- Economic
contraction, inflation (inflation is not only possible, but probable in
a contraction since inflation is the increase of money supply) and by
extension, the outright questioning of paper money backed by nothing but debt. Silver- More
levered toward global economic growth, inflation, sometimes thought of as money
- with historical record to back it up. Copper- A base metal critical
to the global economic growth story.




In these charts we see conflicting signs for the liquidity-driven growth economy
and by extension, the stock market. Gold and silver appear set up in similar
fashion although gold has resistance that corresponds with a symmetrical triangle
breakout whereas silver's comes well below such a breakout. Both metals sport
some nice short-term bullish divergence, but gold's picture overall looks more
bullish. A look at copper shows an ongoing consolidation with a nice spike
up yesterday, although no breakout. If FrankenMarket's advance
is real, expect confirmation by copper, a global growth lynchpin. Finally we
have the Gold-Copper Ratio. Here we see gold has broken down below the double
bottom, which if it holds would imply that global growth is to continue beyond
the near-term. However, note the bullish divergence in gold vs. copper. It
is common for breakdowns in an index or ratio chart to be reversed within a
few days (head fake), so this will need confirmation in terms of time.
Summary: To these eyes (and I try to remain impartial) the metals offer
conflicting signals as to the direction of economic growth (or lack thereof).
Taking into account the stock market's over-extended status (not to mention
the bearish VIX & VXN), gold's proximity to a significant breakout and
copper's trend line way down near 280, one might at least strongly consider
the possibility of some bearish surprises ahead for markets and commodities
dependant on economic growth. Yes, I did buy the US Oil Fund (USO) per the 10/13/06
Letter entry, but the energies have already been hit hard as though there
is going to be an economic slowdown issue and that purchase may only be for
a swing trade. Gold miners may be a different story if confirmation of the
above charts' signals proves bullish for gold. That is my favored scenario.
If copper and to a lesser extent silver dominate in the near term, then the
opposite is likely to occur; continued economic expansion, where gold and its
miners are likely to underperform. ETF's and stocks relevant to the above include
GLD, SLV, CEF, GG, SSRI, USO and PD, which interestingly has failed to attain
new highs with the stock market.
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