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Trading the Gold-Stock Bull 5
With the flagship HUI unhedged gold-stock index languishing
near 200 for the better part of a quarter now, sentiment among gold-stock
investors and speculators is understandably pessimistic.
After all, it is recent price action that drives current
psychology, and with gold-stock prices meandering sideways from anywhere
between 3 to 18 months depending on your perspective, it is natural for
enthusiasm to wane. And as goes
sentiment, so follows the perpetual debate on the market.
Bull markets tend to climb walls of worry, and nothing
brings out swarms of worries as effectively as stalling prices. In the HUI’s case, its recent lack
of performance is causing all kinds of bearish theories to gain prominence. And if the gold-stock-investing Internet
forums are a valid reflection of general sentiment, there is a growing
firestorm of worries tormenting gold-stock investors.
I started following Internet gold forums back in 1998, well
before gold’s secular bottom in early 2001, and to this day I still find
them very valuable for getting a read on prevailing sentiment. As I pondered the state of the HUI this
week and monitored the forums, a virtual cornucopia of bearish predictions
burst forth.
The hardcore deflationists think gold stocks are doomed
because they believe the gold bull is over. Per this thesis, as soon as the massive
debt bubbles plaguing the US
implode, prices of everything from
gold to groceries are going to be sucked into a giant deflationary black hole. Why buy the HUI if the debt implosion
looms?
Meanwhile the perpetually victimized feel convinced that shady
big-money syndicates are actively shorting the gold stocks into oblivion,
trying to break the back of the growing pro-gold outlook among small
investors. Since these nameless
forces allegedly have unlimited money and the gold-stock sector remains so
small, why even bother fighting them?
Still others are mesmerized by the growing chorus of
predictions for a mega bear-market
rally in gold’s arch nemesis, the mighty US dollar. Even some contrarian gurus are calling for a 25% mega-rally from the
dollar’s late December lows, an event which would almost certainly beat
the tar out of gold. Why buy the
HUI if the dollar is about to become the global currency darling again?
I find these bearish theories fascinating in the aggregate,
all considered together as a single trend.
They are each bricks helping build the wall of worry terrorizing
would-be HUI investors and speculators.
But as King Solomon wisely wrote millennia ago, there is nothing new
under the sun. Negative sentiment
is the expected and natural response from prices not rising fast enough to
excite, and it has accompanied every
gold or HUI interim low in this entire bull to date.
In late 1999 when gold ground down to just above $250 on the
eve of the Washington Agreement, the forums were calling for sub-$200 gold and
the Elliott Wave bears were having a field day. In late 2000 when the HUI bottomed under
36 and was just preparing to launch its mighty 614% bull, the forums were
convinced central banks would never “let” the gold price rise again. At gold’s secular bottom in early
2001, once again popular consensus near $260 was that gold was likely to see
$200 before $300.
And each time the HUI has corrected since then, negative
theories have gained prominence buttressing the wall of worries. It is natural for market players to feel
negative when prices aren’t rising rapidly enough, and this psychology
leads to a theory-selection bias that elevates congruent bearish theories and
chokes out contrary bullish ones.
But if we can rise above the tactical melee and regain the
big perspective, when the majority of gold-stock players wax bearish it is a
fantastic omen for contrarians.
True contrarians remain neutral internally, and as Warren Buffett so
eloquently stated they buy when others are afraid and sell when others are
brave. It sure seems like
gold-stock players are generally afraid today, a crucial clue that another
interim bottom is probably being laid.
This week I would like to discuss the current state of the
HUI from a variety of technical perspectives, ignoring the wall of worries and instead
focusing on hard price data. From
my battle-hardened perspective, the gold-stock bull continues to look healthy and indeed on the
verge of its next major upleg. When
prevailing technicals slice through the incessant sentiment noise, a very
bullish picture emerges.
We’ll look at trading the gold-stock bull from a
volume perspective, examine the ongoing effects of the maturing countertrend currency reversals,
and finally look at my favorite gold-stock trading indicator that has proven so
incredibly profitable in this bull to date. Today’s HUI correction is nothing
to fear and it is probably well on its way to fully running its course and embarking
on its next major upleg.
This first chart examining HUI volume is new since the last essay in this series
but was described in depth in last autumn’s “Trading HUI Volume”. This particular indicator is really
interesting since the HUI itself doesn’t
actually have volume! Since HUI
shares don’t exist, it is just a tracking index, we developed a composite
HUI volume by adding up the individual daily trading volumes in all of the
HUI’s individual component companies.
This composite HUI volume yields important technical clues
for investors and speculators wondering what is going on with gold stocks,
whether now is a good time to buy or not.
Contrary to the rotten prevailing sentiment, the 5-day moving average of
composite HUI volume indicates that we are near a high-probability-for-success
opportunity to once again throw long
gold stocks in a big way.
Volume, interestingly, is tied directly to sentiment. When investors get really excited about
the HUI’s prospects near major tops, volume often surges as folks rush to
buy as fast as they can so they don’t miss the boat. Conversely, when investors are terrified
volume also spikes dramatically. Thus high volume typically marks major
interim tops or the sharp plunges
that usually follow unsustainable near-vertical ascents.
Low volume, on the other hand, usually corresponds with
waning interest in a market. When
prices don’t appear to be doing anything notable, like the HUI’s
today, gradually gold-stock investors and speculators lose interest and just
don’t trade much. Prices are
typically lethargic without real volume.
Low volume also corresponds with a grinding low-level fear very
different from the sharp fear driving plunges. This low-level fear is spawned by
prevailing bearish sentiment like today’s scaring people into not trading
gold stocks.
But if you carefully examine this chart, low-volume episodes
also mark some of the best times to throw long the HUI. When the 5dma of composite HUI volume
decays under 16m shares, the green bar above, the HUI is usually just finishing
a major correction or consolidation and is ready to rock and roll again. Every low volume episode of the last
several years is highlighted above in blue and they really do tend to mark
fantastic times to buy.
Low volume also coincides with the HUI correcting back down
to its linear support line. In any
secular bull market, one of the highest-probability-for-success times to buy is
when a price retreats back to support in a normal, healthy bull market
correction. So far in 2005 the HUI
has kissed support twice now, each time accompanied by the telltale low volume. Once again today the HUI composite
volume threatens to fall under $16m shares on a 5dma basis.
In every previous
case the HUI rallied not long after these lethargic low volume periods were
registered. Some of these rallies
sown in the depths of low-volume despair were relatively modest, running for a
couple months. Others were truly
massive primary bull-market uplegs that blasted higher for several quarters
generating enormous profits for gold-stock investors.
Will this time be different and not portend an imminent HUI rally? I really doubt it. Low volume episodes are common at major
interim bottoms in pretty much all secular bulls. It is natural human nature to get the
most fed up with trading near major bottoms when nothing exciting seems to be
happening so volume dries up right as prices are done correcting and once again
ready to thrive.
Our second chart highlights what I believe is the cause of this HUI correction, the ongoing
parallel currency
countertrend reversals in gold and the US dollar. This is a Relativity chart, showing
both currencies as a multiple of their key 200dma baselines over time. If you are not familiar with this
approach it is explained in more depth in December’s “The Relative Dollar and Gold 3”
essay.
The only reason to own a gold stock is because gold is in a
secular bull market, a subset of the Great Commodities Bull of the
00s now underway. The higher gold
prices rise, the greater the profits of the unhedged gold miners multiply and
the higher their stock prices ultimately run. But since gold drives gold-miner profits
and hence gold-stock prices, the HUI is at the mercy of gold corrections as
well.
Gold itself still sojourns in the initial stage of its three stage bull, where it
still remains subject to the whims of the parallel secular bear in the US
Dollar Index. Until global
investment demand grows great enough to lift the gold price independent of
currency machinations, gold will remain weak each time the dollar has one of
its periodic bear-market rallies.
And since December, as expected,
the dollar has been in bear-rally mode.
Both secular bulls and bears alike tend to diverge away from their 200-day moving
averages to extend their primary trend and then periodically retreat back to
their 200dmas to maintain balance in sentiment. When gold is rising and the dollar is
falling both currencies are diverging from their 200dmas. But when the inevitable temporary
countertrend reversals arrive, like today, both currencies converge with their 200dmas.
The chart above outlines this well-established
phenomenon. In December both gold
and the dollar diverged relatively far away from their respective 200dmas and
sentiment was waxing extreme in both cases, bullish for gold and bearish for
the dollar. Since this extreme
sentiment is not sustainable, soon the dollar entered bear-market rally mode
and gold corrected, converging with their 200dmas represented as 1.00 in this
relative chart.
The bold yellow lines above highlight the mirror-image
pattern in gold and the dollar in relative terms. When the dollar is weak gold is strong
and when the dollar is strong gold is weak. And of course since gold ultimately
drives the gains in the HUI, the premier gold-stock index also suffers while
gold is grinding through one of its periodic corrections.
The HUI’s current gold-weakness-driven correction is
no surprise at all for prudent investors and speculators who understand this critical
relationship, indeed we have been expecting and predicting it. All bull markets flow and ebb, taking
two steps forward and one step back.
Corrections are natural and healthy in all bulls as they keep sentiment
in balance and prevent the secular bull from maturing too quickly at too low of
price.
Our Relativity trading bands that will probably signal the
end of the current gold correction and dollar bear rally are marked above. Once gold falls under 0.99x its 200dma, and the US Dollar Index exceeds 1.00x its 200dma, then the
threat of the correction will be largely past and investors can redeploy for
the next major gold and gold-stock upleg.
We are getting very close on both accounts, as a new bear-rally-to-date rDollar
high was just carved this week.
If you would like to follow this rapidly approaching major
long signal in gold and short signal in the dollar, our newsletter subscribers gain access to an
exclusive section of our website with large charts of rGold and the rDollar
updated twice a week or so. Since
these relative signals have been so profitable bull to date I keep a close eye
on them and use them to guide my own gold-stock trades.
Understanding the current relationship between gold and the
dollar is crucial for protecting yourself from getting caught up in the
prevailing bearish sentiment. As
long as gold remains in the initial currency-driven stage of its bull market,
it will correct when the dollar
periodically rallies. And during
these healthy gold corrections the HUI will
be weak, consolidating or correcting, since it is the gold price that
ultimately drives the stocks of the companies that mine gold.
Thus everything we have witnessed so far in 2005 is merely par
for the course. There is nothing
special, scary, or anomalous about the latest HUI weakness compared to its
bull-to-date behavior. With the root
cause of the HUI correction understood, our final chart gets back into trading
the gold-stocks directly. It is also
a Relativity chart,
with the rHUI line showing where the HUI has traded as a multiple of its key
200dma support over time.
Since all bull markets flow above their 200dmas and then ebb
back down to them periodically, the best time to enter any bull market on the
long side is when it has converged with its 200dma. The HUI has already converged with its
200dma twice in 2005, a critical technical event that has proved immensely
profitable in previous uplegs for intrepid contrarian investors and speculators
who bought near the 200dma.
Today the HUI is once again just under its 200dma,
represented by the red rHUI line now trading at less than 1.00x the HUI’s
200dma. Previous sub-200dma periods
where the HUI fell under its key trailing support line are highlighted in
blue. Notice above in every previous case that the HUI started
climbing soon after it fell under its 200dma. Today is not likely to prove any
different.
Prevailing sentiment, as discussed initially above, is a
direct consequence of recent price action.
Investors are generally bearish on the HUI today since it has been weak,
no other reason. Conversely
investors are usually bullish near major interim tops, when the HUI soars more
than 50% above its 200dma. Just as
contrarian theory predicts, the majority of investors are always wrong at the
turning points. They are bullish
when they should be bearish and bearish when they should be bullish.
A key example that shines light on today’s probably
irrationally pessimistic HUI sentiment is March 2003. Look at the chart above and imagine
there is no data after March 2003 and you are trying to game the index in
real-time two years ago.
At that time, the HUI was struggling under 125 and popular
predictions of a sub-100 HUI abounded.
Washington was about to invade Iraq
and most people thought gold had only
rallied due to war fears. So, the
popular reasoning went, once the war was launched and uncertainty evaporated
gold would collapse and drag the HUI down with it. Even most gold bulls considered you
crazy to be bullish then, as I remember well as I was writing bullish essays at that
interim bottom.
Like many of the bearish arguments today, the gold-war-rally
argument of March 2003 seemed logical and sound at the time. Yet, regardless of how appealing it was
intellectually, it overlooked two key factors that are also being ignored today
in the growing hysteria of HUI pessimism.
The secular gold bull is driving the gold-stock bull. As long as gold continues higher for
global supply/demand reasons gold stocks will march higher right along with
it. Yes, gold will correct
periodically and weigh on gold stocks, but all corrections in a secular bull
market are temporary. Was gold in a
secular bull market in
early 2003? Yes. Is it still in a secular bull today? Absolutely.
And if gold is in a secular bull, then its prices will rise over time on average. And unhedged gold stocks will rise as well as their profits multiply due to a
higher gold price. So if gold is
still rising and gold stocks are trading at their linear support, and under
their key 200dma, then there is no better time to aggressively throw long. These very bullish technical conditions
were met in March 2003 before one of the greatest HUI uplegs in history and
they are once again met today.
The bottom line is the recent HUI correction that has
spawned so much consternation is totally normal technically and was expected in
advance. Gold remains hostage to
the dollar’s capricious whims in Stage One and the dollar was simply due
for one of its periodic bear rallies to blow off some steam. And as the dollar rallied since December
gold fell and the HUI was dragged down with it.
In the midst of all this despair though, gold remains in a
secular bull. And if gold continues
to rise in the years ahead, gold stocks will
follow. And if gold stocks will
follow, there is no better time to buy technically than in conditions just like
today’s where HUI volume is anemic, the HUI is hovering at its linear support,
and the HUI is meandering just under its key 200dma.
If you are wondering how we are playing this probable coming
HUI upleg, please consider subscribing to our acclaimed monthly Zeal Intelligence
newsletter.
The latest issue, just published a week ago, outlines ten open
gold and silver stock trades that we have been layering in preparing for the
next upleg. Like the HUI all of
these companies remain technically weak today, but they are likely to thrive or
even soar along with the HUI when its next upleg erupts. We will continue to add more trades as
appropriate in future issues. Please
subscribe today and buy
cheap before the HUI runs and leaves you behind!
Our subscribers also gain exclusive Web access to the same
private charts that we use to make our trading decisions, including larger more
detailed versions of the composite HUI volume chart, rGold, rDollar, and the
rHUI among many others. We update
these charts a couple times a week or so enabling our subscribers to follow all
these exciting technical developments and signals as they transpire.
Today’s widespread pessimism on the HUI is par for the
course for major interim bottoms in gold stocks, nothing new under the
sun. But if you can dig down to the
core issue, gold’s secular bull, and consider the very bullish HUI
technicals, then the long-side opportunities in gold stocks today look vast.
Adam Hamilton, CPA
April 8, 2005
So how can you profit from this information? We publish an acclaimed monthly
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that details exactly what we are doing in terms of actual stock and options
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Thoughts, comments, or flames? Fire away at zelotes@zealllc.com. Due to my staggering and perpetually
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personally. I will read all
messages though and really appreciate your feedback!
Copyright 2000 - 2005 Zeal Research (www.ZealLLC.com)
Adam Hamilton, CPA
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