For weeks we've been saying the prevailing economic environment would not
allow a dramatic selloff in metals. Of course, that didn't keep mainstream
media from discussing a so-called "metals meltdown" and a "commodities collapse",
or from making premature judgments about inflation. Spikes in corn, wheat and
orange juice should put an end to these comments for a while, not to mention
the small rally in oil. While Friday's bounce could be short lived if it's
based primarily on potential OPEC meetings and cuts, there were technical indications
that a reversal was due.
But, even if oil markets are still crashing and burning, the smoke is clearing
around what was supposedly a breakdown in commodities only to reveal the spot
price of gold still above $600 and silver still above $12. In fact, last week
this was one of the few, if not the only, weekly update suggesting that the
bounce off these levels was a buy signal. In fact, we've been sticking our
neck out for more than a month saying that the environment simply has not existed
for a huge precious metals selloff to the September lows.


With the recent dollar rally showing its limited upside, as anticipated here
in previous updates, gold and silver stayed resistant to selling most of the
week and finally put in impressive moves on Friday to close back above recent
support/resistance levels. The big question now, though, is how much upside,
if any, we should expect to see from here.
The daily charts below reveal that GLD is now very close to resistance at
its 50-day moving average. A convincing move to $63 in the ETF would echo the
signal that the spot market has cleared a path to $640 gold, but it will take
more than technical impetus alone. Silver has even more room to run if it can
retake $13, where it will likely see significant resistance. Both metals probably
still have players who recently bought at higher levels, as well as some who
will have just seen decent gains, and if the metals turn back south on their
exit, $600 and $12 will again be the key psychological support levels to test.


The first update of this year included multi-year trend lines to which a conservative
estimate predicts the precious metals will likely revert, either through selloff,
a worse-case scenario, or sideways action. These charts are still operative
and serve as reminders that overly fast gains in the metals will most likely
evaporate just as quickly, even while the upward trend remains intact.
In the short term, if next week's data continue to nourish the sentiment that
the economy has rounded the bottom, a veritable soft landing, then metals have
a realistic shot at overtaking resistance. The hotter the economy appears to
become, the more willingness investors should have to get back into mining
stocks and the greater the inflation concerns will become. Oil is probably
set for more upside next week if the weather is cold and this should help metals
given that traders are too complacent towards inflation at the moment if their
judgment is based on oil prices alone. A upside CPI surprise could send dollars
after gold. Recent reports indicate the rate of increase in the money supply
as measured by M2 rose somewhat dramatically over the last quarter of 2006
and there generally appears to be an abundance of liquidity. However, with
the week kicking off with earnings reports from several financials, there could
be renewed worry over the effects of the still inverted yield curve.
We should note that the yield curve, which is said to predict events 12 months
into the future, just quietly celebrated the one-year anniversary of its late-December
2005 inversion without much, if any, mainstream attention. True, the yield
on the 2-year note is now approaching 5%, and the quarter point difference
from the Fed Funds rate has some still hoping for a single cut from Ben Bernanke,
but none seems likely with GDP estimates being revised upward and housing fallout
contained. Ironically, the economy's new perkiness is mildly re-inverting the
curve as rate cut expectations plummet and investors seek outsized returns
from record-breaking stock markets. Particularly if oil makes a big move, the
securities may be due for a bit of a rally in the near term.
Over the past two months, we've articulated a firm position that expectations
of a Fed rate cut were overdone. Since then, Fed Funds futures have priced
out any possibility of a cut, bond yields have moved closer to the target rate,
the dollar has rallied, commodities have come in, and equities have moved towards
the hands of investors betting on strong earnings rather than simply depending
on handouts from the Fed. The liquidity coaxed out of the bond market over
the last quarter has helped fuel record-breaking private equity buyouts and
a nice little bull market in the precious metals.
Now that we've been validated, perhaps it's time to reemphasize our position
all along, which was that we don't actually anticipate any change in the fed
funds rate in the foreseeable future. In fact, we've commented before that,
because of its tenuous situation between the health of the economy and the
value of the dollar, the Fed would probably rather make behind the scenes,
open market adjustments rather than create international headlines by changing
interest rates. And interest rates are a crude tool, anyway.
But, since the rise in bond yields coincided with rapid expansion of the money
supply by the Federal Reserve, the Fed may soon be forced to look at easing
the economy and removing some liquidity. It's purely speculation, and maybe
even outrageous to even wonder, but could the plan offered by George W. Bush
in his address to the nation last week regarding Iraq present the solution
to liquidity by way of higher oil prices, runaway inflation, and possibly even
a normalization of the yield curve, while sparking the next leg of the metals
bull? Now that the president has widened the scope of the war in Iraq in words
and action and is promising a "bloody" year ahead, will violence in Baghdad
and aggression towards Iran finally deliver the recession no one any longer
expects?
Stranger things have happened. In fact, without dwelling on or regurgitating
our own political sentiments, we can admit that comparisons have already been
made between the conflicts in Iraq and Vietnam, politically and militarily
and economically. The undisputed fact is that issuance of massive government
debt in the 1970s, along with a swelling in the monetary base, created huge
inflation, drove up interest rates, swung the economy into recession, and,
of course, brought on the biggest gold spike ever.
The situation today appears similar, though juxtaposed at lower nominal interest
rates, so, maybe it's almost time for those comparisons to the 70's bull market
that sprang up everywhere a few years ago to stage a comeback of their own.
The growing cost of the Iraq war continues to produce huge budget deficits
and the Fed's own data indicate that money supply has increased at a rate of
5% for the last year and 10% over the last four months. The fact that the current
deficits are a smaller part of GDP may prevent the economy from spinning out
of control, but with demand for metals keeping steady pace or even exceeding
supply over the past several decades, it wouldn't take the same double-digit
interest and inflation rates to have a situation in gold similar to what was
seen in the 70s. And that, folks, was what you could call a bull market!