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As the unofficial end of summer storms in over this long weekend in the States,
I find myself pondering the changing demand profiles over the lifespan of a
typical secular bull market in gold.
The word secular, which has a dictionary definition of "going on from age
to age", is used to describe any major market trend that runs for a long period
of time. For a general mental yardstick, I think that a bull or bear market
running for a decade or so lands right smack in the middle of the annals of
seculardom.
The Great Gold Bull of the 1970s, for example, ran from 1970 to early 1980,
exactly one decade. While gold did not rise in every single year, when you
look at a long-term chart (see below) this secular bull market is utterly unmistakable.
Secular bulls in general stocks tend to last even longer, usually two
decades each, like the Great Stock Bull of the 1980s and 1990s.
Since the average investor really only has four decades in which to build
his or her fortune, from the ages of 25 to 65, any trend that runs for a decade
or more sure does feel like it is going on from age to age! A secular
bull or bear can easily run from a quarter to a half of an entire average
investing lifespan. Thus it is unbelievably important to run with these
primary trends since getting even one wrong could cost an investor half their
investing life. The price for fighting these secular trends is staggeringly
high.
On the short end of the measuring stick, I think the absolute minimum amount
of time necessary for a trend to attain secular status is three years. If any
trend runs for less than three years, then it should be considered cyclical instead
of secular. Thus it is pointless to even think in secular terms until a trend
has been fire-tested and battle-proven for at least three years. Which brings
us to our current gold bull.
On April 2nd, 2001, gold was battered down to a devastating 22-year
secular low just under $257. This formed a massive double-bottom with
similar gold lows on central-bank
gold sales in late summer 1999. Prior to 1999, even in nominal terms
gold had not witnessed such dismal prices since 1979, ages and ages ago.
At the time in 2001 gold sentiment was understandably horrendous, with high-profile
predictions of sub-$200 gold abounding. Yet, as markets are wont to do, gold's
secular trend stealthily changed during its darkest hour.
As I hammer out this essay exactly 41 months to the day later, gold's glorious
new bull market is finally readily apparent to all. From April 2001 to April
2004, the requisite three-year minimum necessary to catapult gold's current
bull market into the elite ranks of seculardom, gold has soared over 66% higher.
Since we are already three-and-a-half years into gold's present bull, we have
to start thinking in secular terms. Only then can we begin to understand
what wonders might lay ahead for gold investors.
Now naturally the tools used to analyze a strategic secular bull are far different
from those used to speculate on short-term tactical trends oscillating within
the primary secular trends. While various
technicals tools are crucial for short-term tactical speculation, long-term
analysis is exclusively dependent on fundamentals.
The most foundational of all the fundamentals is supply and demand. As long
as demand exceeds supply, prices will be forced to rise over the long
term. This elegant mechanism is the ultimate way that free markets allocate
scarce supplies to those most willing to pay for them. Eventually some new
equilibrium price is found where supply equals demand and the gold market perfectly
clears, with no long-term surplus or deficit.
As the invisible hand of the free markets, really the collective buying and
selling decisions of every gold player on the planet, guides prices, signals
are sent to gold producers, consumers, and investors. The higher the gold price
goes, the more gold producers want to sell. Higher gold prices lead to higher
supplies of gold as miners around the world rush to capitalize on the increased
profit margins on their product.
Of course mining more gold is nowhere near as easy as producing an additional
copy of Microsoft Windows! Finding new gold deposits that are large enough
to mine is exceedingly difficult, and even once they are discovered it takes years to
dig shafts and spin a new mine up to operational speed. For this reason, historically
the total global gold supply only grows by an average of a couple percent or
so each year. Faster growth is impossible at almost any gold price due to the
extreme difficulty and huge capital costs necessary to bring new gold deposits
to market.
Thus, on the gold production end supplies are very inelastic to price. Regardless
of how high the gold price goes there will not be a flood of newly mined gold
as ramping up global gold production fast is simply not viable. But there is
another potential supply of gold beyond mining, which comes from investors
choosing to sell gold that they have previously purchased.
Since gold is rarely destroyed, virtually all the gold ever mined still exists
in various forms today, from bars sitting in secure vaults to jewelry adorning
beautiful women around the world. Investors who own this gold can generally
be divided into two distinct groups with vastly different motivations, official
central banks and private investors. As these investors choose to sell their
gold, it can cause additional supply to come onto the markets at various times.
Central banks rightfully see gold, the ultimate money over six millennia of
human history, as a threat to their fragile fiat-paper currencies, so they
tend to act irrationally. Rather than buying low and selling high like a private
investor, central banks buy and sell at the wrong times. Central banks tend
to exacerbate secular trends.
At the end of long
gold bears central banks wrongly assume that gold is finally becoming
worthless so they sell and drive the bear lower. At the end of long gold bulls they
worry that their particular fiat paper does not have enough gold backing
so they buy and force the bull higher. If the goofy bureaucrats who ran central
banks had to trade for a living, they would soon go broke by selling low
and buying high!
While private gold investors tend to fear central banks due to their ominous
urban-legend status, I don't believe central banks have any hope of controlling
gold action over longer periods of time. It is believed that about 150,000
metric tonnes of gold have been painstakingly chiseled out of the bowels of
the Earth during all of world history, and only about 20%, or 30,000 tonnes,
is controlled by various central banks today. While 20% is certainly not trivial,
it is the private investors that control the other 80% that really hold gold's
destiny in their hands.
Since newly mined gold can only grow total world supplies by a couple percent
a year at best, and central banks only control 20% of the above-ground gold
and tend to buy and sell at exactly the wrong times lengthening secular trends,
the real force to be reckoned with in the gold world is private investors.
It is to these private investors, people around the world like you and I, that
we must look to understand secular gold bulls.
The key to a secular gold bull is the demand or supply that private investors
generate worldwide as they buy or sell gold. It isn't mining supplies,
it's not central banks, but it is the collective gold transactions of hundreds
of millions or even billions of individual investors worldwide buying and
selling gold that ultimately sets its price and determines its fortunes.
I believe that the collective demand trends of private gold investors worldwide
effectively divide secular gold bulls into three distinct demand-driven stages.
In order to understand these stages and their implications, we first have to
understand the peculiar nature of gold investment demand.
Normally in economics, the lower the price of something the higher the general
demand for it. This is evident everywhere in society today, but perhaps especially
so in technology. Twenty years ago when a computer cost $3000+, there weren't
a lot of families with computers. Prices were high and demand was low. Yet
as prices gradually fell over the years demand increased far beyond the small
enthusiast market.
Today with a decent computer for surfing the Web, e-mailing friends, and doing
office work only running $600 or so, computers are ubiquitous. While the statistics
say they are out there, I have yet to meet a family without at least one computer
in their home today. Whether we are talking about computers, pizza, cars, whatever,
the lower the price the higher the demand grows for a particular product. This
is a normal downward-sloping demand curve.
But with gold, and indeed most other investments, the demand curve is far from
normal. As all contrarians know, in the investment world the higher the price
of an investment climbs the greater demand becomes! It is all backwards.
While virtually no one wanted anything to do with gold near $250 a few years
ago, once gold soars to $2500 everyone will want a piece of it. In the
financial world higher prices don't retard demand, instead they actually breed demand!
The higher the price of gold climbs, the more potential investors will become
aware of its impressive returns. As they buy in over time, their marginal investment
demand will drive gold even higher, putting it on the radar of even more investors
worldwide. This investor demand creates a wonderful virtuous circle, with higher
gold prices leading to more interest and higher demand which in turn leads
back to higher gold prices and feeds the cycle. There is no better advertisement
for a particular investment than rising prices, as most investors are not contrarians
so they will only chase existing well-established trends.
And remember that private investors collectively control 80% of the world's
gold, so if demand is growing in this realm it is almost irrelevant what the
mines can pull or what nefarious machinations the central banks happen to be
up to! The whole secular gold game unfolds in terms of private investor demand
for gold, as we are collectively the dominating force in the gold market.
Thus it is not only important to realize that it is not mines or central banks
that ultimately drive gold prices, but private investor demand, it is also
crucial to understand that global gold investment demand only grows with
higher gold prices. Using this high-level model of gold supply-and-demand fundamentals,
we can divide secular gold bulls into three distinct stages based on pure global
investment demand.
Our lone chart this week compares the Great Gold Bull of the 1970s with today's
young secular gold bull. It is divided into the three distinct stages of a
secular gold bull, each of which is driven by evolving demand profiles among
private gold investors around the world. And, lighting up my own long weekend,
I am thrilled that we were able to incorporate our old bull image which has
been largely missing in action in recent years. In my book any graph capable
of sporting a cartoon bull is a darned good one!
The first important thing to note on this secular gold bull graph is the typical
parabolic shape of a secular gold bull. All secular bulls that ultimately culminate
in bubbles exhibit this distinctive pattern of price increases continuously
accelerating over time. As this yellow parabola shows, this acceleration is
almost imperceptible in the early years, picks up dramatically in the middle
years, and is breathtaking in the final years. This pattern was also witnessed
in both the NASDAQ
and S&P 500 as well during their own recent secular bulls.
The left axis of this graph corresponds to the blue line of the Great Gold
Bull of the 1970s. Interestingly, since we used monthly data, this 1970s gold
bull is even a bit understated. While the all-time monthly high close for gold
is under $700 as this graph shows, gold actually soared to $850 per ounce briefly
in January 1980 at the top of its last mania!
The right axis defines the red line, which is our current gold bull to date
from January 2001 to today in monthly terms. As you can see, the early slopes
of this gold bull and the early years of the 1970s Great Gold Bull match remarkably
well. Today, just as gold did from 1970 to 1973, it is once again stealthily
climbing the initial modest upslope of the yellow parabola. If our current
specimen continues to hold the course plotted before it in the 1970s, gold
will ultimately trade over thousands of dollars per ounce before this decade
ends!
I believe the key to understanding this parabolic shape that all secular bulls
ending in bubbles assume is to understand the changing investment demand profiles
throughout a secular bull. The constantly accelerating parabolic profile is
driven by shifting investment demand over the life of a secular bull. The higher
an investment price gets, the higher demand grows and a positive feedback loop
is created.
Stages One, Two, and Three of a secular gold bull are defined by the two major
slope changes in this standard secular-bull parabolic ascent. Each stage, considered
in turn, makes perfect sense when described in terms of global investor demand.
Gold is ultimately money, and during Stage One bulls it trades like another
currency. One of the primary reasons why the Stage One upslope is so moderate
is that the main reason gold rises initially is due to a devaluation of the
dominant currency in which it is priced, obviously the US dollar today. As
the US dollar bear has
festered in recent years, and as the dollar eroded in the early 1970s, gold
is a direct beneficiary of the dollar's losses. As the dollar grinds lower,
the gold/dollar exchange rate rises.
Since Stage One is currency-devaluation driven, the young gold bull is most
noticeable in terms of the dominant eroding currency. Since April 2001 gold's
gains have been greatest in the US since it is the US dollar that is devaluing.
But from foreign-currency perspectives, such as the
Europeans', gold has traded largely sideways in recent years. Stage One
gold bulls witness gains that are roughly one-to-one with currency losses,
so they are most evident in local-currency terms.
Now since these early Stage One bulls are only apparent to contrarian investors
in the country with the dominant devaluing currency, overall investment demand
is low. Not only is gold coming off a multi-decade secular bear so not many
folks believe in it, but it has no established momentum so only hardcore contrarians
will even consider it. Even in the States the total capital the contrarians
command is very small relative to the markets as a whole, so initial gold buying
on the local-currency devaluation is rather anemic and makes for a tepid initial
upslope.
Now after three or four years of Stage One, Stage Two arrives. Stage Two marks
a momentous event when gold decouples from the local-currency devaluation.
In the case of our gold bull today, Stage Two will be here when gold starts
consistently rising faster than the dollar is able to fall. This key decoupling
works on multiple fronts to really kindle investment demand around the world
and marks the first significant steepening of the parabola's upslope.
Locally, the gold and dollar decoupling in Stage Two leads to accelerating
US dollar gold prices. This draws in more American investors, who see the 66%
gold gains in the past few years compared to stock-market losses over the same
period of time. You can already see the great gold marketing machine spinning
up, with even CNBC and Fox News having advertisements today heralding the new
bull market in gold. The slowly rising prices of Stage One that drew in the
contrarians start accelerating and gradually gold becomes known and sought
after outside of the small contrarian community.
Even more importantly in Stage Two though, since gold's gains start outpacing
the dollar's losses gold starts rising in virtually all currencies worldwide!
Rather than appearing flatlined, a mere product of the dollar's misfortune,
gold starts showing up on foreign investors' radars as it consistently carves
new local-currency gold highs around the world. And not surprisingly foreign
investors, who generally know how fragile governments and fiat currencies truly
are, are far more receptive to gold investing and don't need convincing like
Americans.
Gradually these foreign investors out of Asia and Europe start buying gold
and global investment demand accelerates. The more global capital that is poured
into gold, the faster its price rises tracking the accelerating parabolic upslope.
And of course the faster gold's price rises the more new capital it attracts.
This virtuous circle on a global scale is what fuels the strong gains of Stage
Two, which provocatively utterly dwarf Stage One. While gold went from $257
to $427, or 66% higher in Stage One so far, it should trade considerably above
$1000 before Stage Two ends, or another 134% higher from here!
After five or so years of Stage Two gains, gold has a chance at going
ballistic in Stage Three. Stage Three is only ignited if the general public
around the world starts growing enamored with gold investing. If you thought
the dot-com mania was crazy, wait until you see a global gold rush. All of
us humans have an innate lust for gold burning somewhere in our hearts and
there is no rush like a gold rush! Gold rushes define speculative manias!
When the gold bull spreads beyond the usual investment class to the general
public, so much capital deluges into gold so rapidly that it is blasted parabolic.
Naturally a vertical upslope is totally unsustainable and cannot last for much
longer than a year at best. Stage Three is a captivating time for the early
contrarians who rode the entire gold bull from its early Stage One days to
its mania days. Vast gains rapidly multiply, yet a sustained vertical ascent
on a long-term chart is a dire warning sign that the party will soon be ending.
Contrarians are torn between riding gold "just a little longer" and immediately
selling it all.
Not surprisingly the greatest gains of all are found in Stage Three. Extrapolating
today's bull-market data on a 1970s-style gold parabola, gold could easily
shoot from $1000 to over $3500 if the public enters and ignites a popular
speculative mania. This massive 250% gain in Stage Three alone is roughly twice
as great as Stage Two's 134% and four times as great as Stage One's 66%! As
the parabola model suggests, secular bull gains multiply exponentially until
the bubble pops and the mania comes crashing down.
It is crucial to realize that this unfolding secular parabola is totally dependent
on only one force, global investment demand for gold. Mines just can't
wrest enough gold free from Earth fast enough to stop this parabola once it
is in motion and central banks' relatively small 20% control of global gold
supplies isn't enough to stop the other 80% when goldlust spreads from contrarians
to mainstream investors to ultimately the general public.
And, unlike normal demand profiles, gold investment demand only increases as
gold prices march higher in currencies around the world. The higher the gold
price goes, the more demand it spawns, at least until the public jumps in,
foments a bubble, and all the capital available to chase gold is already in
leading to the bubble bursting and the end of the secular bull market.
If you note the transition in the graph above from Stage One to Stage Two,
it looks like our current gold bull is almost there. For a variety of reasons
I agree and believe that Stage Two is probably right around the corner today.
I am even finding increasing empirical evidence in my research suggesting that
gold is now preparing to lift into Stage Two leading to a vast surge in global
investment demand in the coming years.
If you are interested in this key Stage One to Stage Two transition, please
consider subscribing to
our acclaimed monthly Zeal
Intelligence newsletter.
In the hot-off-the-presses September issue just published this week, I detailed
the actual evidence suggesting that Stage Two is near. In addition I discussed the key
market development, which you can watch for yourself, that I believe has the
highest probability of signaling that Stage Two is upon us. And, as always,
our letter is full of actual stock and options trading recommendations to help
you ride this secular gold bull to legendary gains. If today's bull proves
true to the parabolic historical form, then the vast majority of profits still
lie ahead!
The bottom line is that today's gold bull, over three years old now, is definitely
a secular specimen. Past secular gold bulls unfold in a massive parabolic
shape over a decade or so, driven by accelerating global investment demand.
This investment demand growth can be divided into three distinct stages driven
first by contrarians, then global investors, and ultimately the general public.
So far our current gold bull is tracking this model perfectly. Even better,
increasing empirical evidence suggests Stage Two is near so the upslope of
this secular gold bull is due to accelerate significantly in the years ahead.
Is your capital positioned and ready to ride this accelerating secular gold
bull?
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