March 2nd update for members.
"Though it seems a stall in the rally may be ahead if the Fed continues
to jawbone the issue of inflation, I am compelled to revise my charts in
a decidedly bullish fashion." ~ Precious Points: The Bubble Inside the
Bubble, February 23, 2008
There was a time, not all that long ago, when being a "gold bug" carried the
stigma of being a bit on the fringe, when accumulating physical metal was deemed
akin to building and stocking an underground bunker complete with canned beans
and tinfoil hats.
When eventually rumors of a crisis in credit-backed derivatives and a pending
devaluation of the dollar began arriving regularly in the mail on glossy pseudo-newsprint
ads that advised the movement of capital overseas, the talking heads of the
corporate news channels were still singing the praises of an unstoppable bull
market and a Goldilocks economy even as they made "liquidity" a household word.
And then, as everything predicted by the lunatic gold bugs started to come
true, the newly named Fed Chairman and Treasury Secretary were busy spinning
tales of a "soft landing", assuring a fawning public the economy was sound
and that "subprime" would not "spill over." Remember that?
Anyone who's read The Mogambo Guru knows the twinge on insanity, if not outright
psychosis, that used to be the unique hallmark of the precious metals bulls,
but which today seems to characterize the economic optimists and anyone else
who believes deficits don't matter or that inflation expectations are well
anchored.
But for all the talk of financial Armageddon, my own record of published articles
to date has been relatively conservative in championing precious metals as
simply a sound investment without recourse to disastrous end-of-the-world scenarios.
If you were fortunate enough to buy gold on the day President Nixon ended the
gold standard, and wise enough to hold it, you've seen your investment rise
2,700%. As Warren Buffet will tell you, that's market outperformance.
Well, it was an unabashedly bullish week for precious metals and, in fact,
commodities of all kinds. And, where last week's update stressed the possibility
of a hawkish Fed in light of hot inflation data, the green light for metals
came on Tuesday when Vice-Chair Kohn explicitly described the downside risks
to financial markets and the economy as "the greater threat to economic welfare
in the United States", over inflation.
By his own admission, the central bank stands ready to prevent "an especially
adverse outcome," he said. But given, recent history, do these officials have
any credibility whatsoever? And even if he is correct, isn't the solution of
re-inflating the housing market only going to accelerate the advance of precious
metals?

Both charts from last week treated $1000 gold as an inevitability, with the
only contention being whether there would a correction or consolidation beforehand.
If, as some suspect, the coming week becomes a continuation of Friday's volatility,
then gold probably will come under some selling pressure as profits are taken
wherever they're had. How this or any situation is handled depends on the timeframes
and investment vehicles being used, but long term accumulators of physical
metal and even swing traders will consider any such liquidation to be a gift.
The same is true for silver, where those waiting around for prices closer
to $10 will be on hold indefinitely as news of hitting $20 is barely mentioned
in mainstream media. Most likely there will be consolidation under $20 if stocks
continue their slide, think 4th wave, but even the best case scenario for the
bears is a pullback to about $14, and that would still be a confirmation of
the larger bull market. After that, the sky's the limit. Unless you believe
the Fed is going to start raising rates by the end of the year and soak up
the excess liquidity. Ummm, who's crazy now?