THE VALUE VIEW GOLD REPORT
Moneyization: The global financial phenomenon of individuals
and businesses moving their funds to monies in which they have the highest
confidence, or money in which they have a higher store of faith.
Gold again served investors well in the previous year. As the first chart
show, $Gold has for the second year in a row provided a return superior to
U.S. paper equities. Results for 2006 extend the excellent record of performance
being built by $Gold, and the best is yet to come. For five of the past seven
years and six of the last ten, $Gold has outperformed U.S. paper equities.
Guess that is what they mean by a "real" return. One would think that the paper
asset groupies would soon be embarrassed talking in public and in the media
about paper assets, given their inferior returns.
First Chart

Since the year 2000 investors have generally preferred to move their money
to Gold, an asset in which they have a higher faith. Denominating one's wealth
in Gold rather than national monies has provided a greater protection and a
higher return for wealth. This phenomenon of money moving to Gold as a haven
is the moneyization process, about which we write on a regular basis.
Another interesting piece of information in the first chart relates to the
variability of returns. U.S. paper equities had both the greatest positive
and greatest negative return in the ten-year period shown. The statistical
measure for total risk is the standard deviation of returns. Over this last
ten-year period, the standard deviation of returns for U.S. paper equities
was almost 50% larger than the returns on $Gold. What
this means is that over the past ten years U.S. paper equities have been riskier
than $Gold. Did we miss the gurus on CNBC mentioning that little
matter?
Second Chart

Another interesting fact from that first chart is that three of the exciting
years for U.S. paper equity returns happened 8, 9, and 10 years ago. To track
these disappearing returns, we have created the second chart. In that chart
the returns on $Gold and U.S. paper equities have been indexed to a $1.00 value
at the end of 1996. As those good years are being dropped from the ten-year
history, the lines have been moving together. When these lines switch positions,
with $Gold having the superior return, will CNBC, the WSJ, and other business
media report such a picture? Doubt it.
We now know that $Gold has been providing the superior return for some time.
That noted, the future is what is important to investors. Will $Gold provide
a meaningful return in the years to come? That question is the all important
one. The odds favor a positive answer to this question, with $Gold continuing
to provide a return greater than U.S. paper equities.
Future returns are generally built on valuation and fundamental factors. Valuation
is the starting point. However, a note of caution on valuation. An asset can
be under valued on price for some time. Under valuation in terms of price means
that price has the potential to rise. Over valuation in terms of price means
that price has the potential to fall. Valuation does not make an asset rise
or fall in price, but rather is a precondition for that rise or fall. In other
words, an asset undervalued on the basis of price has the potential to rise
in price more than an asset that is over priced.
The impact of fundamentals is magnified, in a positive or negative manner,
by the valuation in terms of price of an asset. What this means is that we
want to buy an under valued asset where the fundamentals are favorable for
the undervaluation of price to be corrected. Conversely, we would want to sell
an over priced asset where the fundamentals are unfavorable. Generally speaking,
the fundamentals of under valued assets are being ignored, or they would not
be under valued.
Third Chart

The third chart will help us sort out the valuation question as it applies
to Gold. Gold is the contra asset to paper debt and equities. In that chart
is graphed the ratio of the price of $Gold to the S&P 500. When the ratio
is falling, paper equities are performing better than $Gold. When the ratio
is rising, $Gold is performing better than paper equities. When the ratio is
at an extreme high, $Gold is over valued relative to paper equities. When the
ratio is at extreme low, $Gold is under valued relative to paper equities. Note
that $Gold continues near the lows, and is therefore undervalued relative to
U.S. paper equities.
Also plotted in that chart is solid line which is the average value of the
ratio for the sixty-one years shown in the graph. That average can then be
used to assess the relative valuations of $Gold and U.S. paper equities. That
is done in the following table.
IF |
|
THEN |
|
FOR RETURN OF |
Gold = |
605 |
S&P 500 Should = |
511 |
-64% |
S&P 500 = |
1410 |
Gold Should = |
1670 |
176% |
Let us make sure we understand the table. If Gold is equal to $605, then based
on the average ratio of the past 61 years then the S&P 500 should be 511
for a return of negative 64 percent. If the S&P 500 is equal to 1410 then
$Gold should be at $1,670 for a positive return of 176%. Reality will be somewhere
between these values. What the relative valuation
tells us is the $Gold has far more potential to rise than U.S. paper equities.
U.S. paper equities have the potential to fall far more than $Gold.
Where investors should place their money is easy to conclude on the basis
of valuation. Investors have in fact been moving to Gold, as witnessed by the
near ten billion dollars invested in one Gold ETF alone. Valuation has been
the precondition which has allowed $Gold to provide a higher return for the
past few years. Thus, investors begin 2007 with the valuation of $Gold at
an extremely attractive level, both in absolute terms and relative to U.S.
paper equities.
As mentioned above, under valuation is only a necessary precondition. The
fundamentals need to be moving favorably for Gold for that under valuation
to be ultimately translated into over valuation. For the price of $Gold to
reach its ultimate potential what is needed are positive fundamentals. As we
look around again this year the fundamentals remain in place, and have gotten
stronger.
Essentially, the favorable fundamentals continue to be the many discussed
here and in other articles on Gold. They include the following:
-U.S. trade deficit continues at a high level
-U.S. government deficit
-U.S. economy being financed by foreign investors
-U.S. dollar over owned by global investors
-Gold under owned by global investors
-Federal Reserve has failed to acknowledge the potential problems of the
dollar
-U.S. economy has been built on asset appreciation, stocks and homes
-Housing/Mortgage Bubble in U.S. unraveling
-U.S. economy likely to enter a recession early in 2007
-and the list goes on
Investors, therefore, face a really rather easy choice. $Gold continues undervalued
by a considerable margin. U.S. paper equities, and likely most paper equities,
are over valued. That under valuation of $Gold sets the stage for investor
opportunity. The strategic framework, or the fundamental factors, continue
to support the view that the under valuation in $Gold will be corrected. The
remaining consideration is the tactical one. Is the current price of $Gold
at a level that should spur investors to buy it?
In the past week the Gold market again witnessed selling by the funds. That
selling began the correction of the over bought condition that had existed,
as shown in the last chart of $Gold. This lower price will continue to move
the Gold market toward an over sold condition. Pessimism has already started
to build, with analysts now racing to have the lowest forecast for the bottom
of the correction. Regardless of the lowest price in the week ahead investors
should be starting to add to positions in Gold. The potential opportunity cost
from not buying Gold at this week's prices far exceeds any gain from a few
dollars lower on the buy. The Gold Super Cycle to $1,400, or so, is the more
important target, not whether $Gold trades below $600.
$Gold Source: Value View Gold Report
