Gold and HUI Carnage?
This young New Year has not been kind to gold and gold
stocks. In the first six trading
days of 2007, general commodities selling pressure pushed gold down 3.9% which
in turn drove the HUI unhedged gold-stock index 8.6% lower. Such ominous beginnings have led to a
growing crescendo of pessimism chilling the hearts of investors and
speculators.
It is not at all unusual to see the mainstream Wall-Street
types that CNBC interviews bearish on gold. They will always hate gold since the
conditions in which secular gold bulls flourish lead to poor general
stock-market performance. But it is
fairly rare to see the contrarian community on the web, including some
long-time gold bulls, waxing pessimistic.
Over the past week I have received a bunch of e-mails from
Zeal subscribers concerned about the rampantly proliferating bearish technical
analysis on gold. Many of them ask
me what I think of other analysts’ analyses and conclusions. Since the endless challenges the markets
themselves present are enough to keep me busy studying for dozens of lifetimes,
I don’t have time to critique the work of others. But you can do it yourself from the
comfort of your own computer.
If the work of some analyst seems particularly compelling to
you today and is generating concern, I humbly suggest checking his track record
at the last two major turning points in gold. The massive gold upleg that ended last
year started near July 2005 and ended in May 2006. The right calls to make at these pivotal
times, of course, were to be very bullish in late summer 2005 and very bearish
in late spring 2006.
If your analyst was right at both of these key inflection points, the two most important of
the last two years, then he is probably worth listening to today. How can you tell? Google his name along with the word
“index”, like “Adam Hamilton Index”. The top link will probably be that
analyst’s page on the excellent Gold-Eagle.com,
the oldest and most venerable contrarian gold portal on the web. Gold Eagle went live way back in
1997. Over the last decade it has
done a fantastic job building the biggest contrarian commentary archive on the
internet.
If you do this exercise, and read exactly what analysts said
publicly right at gold’s last major interim tops and bottoms, you will
probably be surprised. You will
find out that very few analysts are true contrarians, who were very optimistic
on gold when it was plumbing dismal lows and very pessimistic on it when it was
achieving exciting bull-to-date record highs. Being a contrarian is hard work for an
investor, but probably even harder for an analyst.
Why? Most non-Wall-Street
analysts, including me, sell newsletters to finance their analytical work. There is tremendous pressure to reflect popular sentiment rather than
fight it. You have to be a real
black sheep and glutton for punishment to tell euphoric investors at a top that
a sharp correction is due. Whenever
you do this, tell people what they don’t want to hear, you irritate them
and lose subscribers and revenue.
Thankfully I have never had a high personal need for
acceptance, which means I am not in the business of pleasing others. It is doing the right thing that motivates
me. So taking all the flak and
losing business by being truly contrarian at the inflection points
doesn’t bother me. I was
publicly bullish in late
summer 2005 and publicly bearish
in late spring 2006, and traded accordingly. The hate mail these correct decisions
generated at the time is no big deal, just part of the game.
Speculation is an incredibly demanding endeavor. The markets take all of our own
personality flaws, especially emotional weaknesses, and throw them back in our
faces to try and break us. Trading
contrary to your own emotions and contrary to the consensus sentiment of others
is unbelievably difficult. Yet this
is what must be done in order to ultimately prove successful. There is no other way.
So today, when I survey the gold world, it is really
exciting to see almost everyone bearish and depressed. At turning points the majority is always
wrong because most people extrapolate existing trends out into infinity, a
fatal error in perpetually cyclical markets. So when the financial media and even the
usually bullish web community join forces in trafficking in myriads of bearish
gold theories, odds are a fantastic buying
opportunity is near.
People are bearish today simply because gold has struggled
in early December and early January, five weeks at the most. That this utterly trivial span of time is
apparently enough to spawn widespread fear boggles my mind. Secular commodities bulls tend to run
for 17 years in history, so why fret about adverse price moves over 1/200th of
this time span? And the really
ironic thing is gold’s retreat lately is totally trivial and minor anyway.
In this essay I want to offer an unpopular contrary opinion
on gold, to explain why I remain extremely bullish
today for this bear-dominated sector.
There is absolutely nothing that has happened in the last five weeks,
both fundamentally and technically, that warrants such widespread
pessimism. If you are willing to
throw off the tyranny of being influenced by others’ emotional
weaknesses, I think you’ll agree gold looks like it is in the early
months of a major new upleg.
Truly the fundamental front is the most important, the
global supply and demand dynamics affecting the gold price. If you are concerned about the state of
this gold bull, I strongly urge you to go read an essay I wrote several weeks
ago on gold’s fundamentals. They are dazzlingly bullish today, there
is no doubt about it. Today’s
gold fundamentals are identical to those that existed in summer 2005 before
gold launched its greatest upleg of this bull that earned fortunes for astute
contrarians.
But it is not a fundamental attack on gold that is driving
the incredible bearishness today, but an attack on its technicals. Pure technical analysts who refuse to study
the fundamental side of gold as well as its price action seriously hobble their
own ability to think clearly. The
greatest danger for technicians is to consider too short a period of time, to
lose focus on the crucial big picture and get mired down in trivial short-term
details.
I have seen such short-sighted technical analysts, just in
the past week, use words like “carnage” and “crash” and
“downward spiral” to describe the price action in gold and gold
stocks. Frankly such assertions are
just plain silly. When considered
in proper strategic context, gold’s move lower so far in 2007 is tiny and
immaterial on the charts. Note
below that gold has fallen steeper and faster than it has in this past week
around a half dozen times since its latest interim top in May.
If technicians want a real plunge in gold, all they have to
do is look back to the blistering 21.9% and $158 plunge over one trading month
in May and June. Now that was
something to be concerned about!
Yet in the first six trading days of this year, gold is just down 3.9%
and $25. A $25 plunge in a $600
asset is “carnage”?
Give me a break. Anyone who
has weathered the worst corrections gold has thrown at us since 2001
wouldn’t even raise an eyebrow at a 3.9% selloff.
As near as I can tell, technicians are freaked out about the
real plunges in oil and copper over the past week and they are transferring
these fears to gold. While oil,
copper, and gold are all commodities, neither their bull markets nor all of
their key fundamental drivers are the same. Gold’s secular bull started years after
oil’s and years before copper’s, it is a very different beast. Sometimes gold runs parallel with either
oil or copper, and sometimes it doesn’t. The global investment market for gold is
totally unique and is not dependent on other commodities.
So if you want to analyze gold, don’t get bogged down
in peripheral events like fears of a slowing US housing market hurting copper
demand or fears of scarce oil miraculously flooding the markets. Gold needs to be considered on its own since it has totally unique
investment and monetary merits unequalled in any other commodity or asset on
the planet. If gold’s fundamentals
remain intact, and they do, the only question is whether gold is a good buy or
not right now technically.
My charts in this essay encompass the last two years. Back in early 2005 gold was in a healthy
consolidation after achieving a bull-to-date record high near $455 in late
2004. After major uplegs all bull
markets consolidate, and trade sideways, or correct, and trade lower, in order
to rebalance sentiment. People get
too euphoric near tops so sideways or lower trading is necessary to bleed off this
greed as well as to get traders comfortable with considering the new higher
price levels as normal.
Consolidations and corrections, especially once they mature,
offer fantastic buying opportunities.
Technically they drag bull-market prices back down near their 200-day
moving averages, which are usually the best places in long-term bulls to add
new long positions. At Zeal we use some
moving-average-based indicators to help us decide when corrections are mature
and the time to aggressively buy again is near.
The first is rGold, gold divided by its 200dma. This is the red line above. It expresses gold as a constant multiple
of its 200dma over time. This
creates a horizontal trading band where gold’s 200dma remains at 1.00
while rGold oscillates above and below this in its major uplegs and
corrections. One of the reasons I
was bullish in late summer 2005 when most analysts were reflecting the popular
bearish sentiment of the time was because rGold was under 1.00.
We have a big long-term rGold chart posted on a private area
of our website for our subscribers, and on it you can easily see that without a
doubt the very best times to buy gold in the last five years were when it was under
its 200dma. This Relativity trading theory
is very simple, yet very effective due to the mathematical way in which bull
markets advance. After gold
languished under its 200dma in the summer of 2005, it launched on its mightiest
upleg we’ve seen in decades.
It was awesome!
Well, guess what.
Today as technicians jump on the short bandwagon playing the short-term
downward momentum in gold, it is once again under its 200dma. It was also under its 200dma earlier in
September and October which is when we started layering in new gold-stock
trades at Zeal. So far the early
October $560ish levels look like a major interim bottom, and I really doubt
gold will fall lower as the groupthink bearish hordes are screaming for now.
Today gold is once again under its 200dma which is running
near $620. If this secular gold
bull remains intact in fundamental terms, then this could very well prove to be
the last great buying opportunity of this young upleg. As I have traded every single upleg of
this entire bull, I know full well it is totally normal for the majority of
market participants to be bearish at just the wrong time. True contrarians have always been and
always will be exceptionally rare since it is such an unnatural mindset to
cultivate.
A second indicator we’ve used at Zeal considers the
relationship of gold’s 50-day moving average with its slower-moving
200dma. The really cool thing about
the Gold 50/200 MACD is it doesn’t turn very often. So whenever its slope does turn from
negative to positive or vice versa, it usually means a major new upleg or
correction is in progress. I wrote
about this indicator in
depth a couple months ago.
Back in the late summer of 2005, when most everyone was
bearish, gold’s 50/200 MACD turned higher again. It started climbing in an upslope after
recovering under 1.00 on the chart.
And along with this pivotal technical event gold stealthily entered its mightiest
upleg we’ve seen in this bull market. The sub-1.00 Gold 50/200 MACD slope
recovery offered strong confirmation that a new upleg was almost certainly in
progress despite the naysayers.
Fast-forward to today where gold bears are once again breeding
like rabbits. In November, for the
first time in over a year, the Gold 50/200 MACD once again recovered under 1.00
and started trending higher as you can see above in the light-blue line. In this entire gold bull to date, there
has never been a false positive on this indicator for a new upleg. So since it is turning north again from
under 1.00 after a consolidation, then the odds are very high that a new upleg
is already underway.
I look at technicals like these, and think about the general
negativity surrounding the early days of all of gold’s major uplegs, and
the only logical conclusion I can reach is to be very bullish today.
Gold’s fundamentals look gorgeous, it just ended a correction in
October and remains well above those lows despite recent weakness, and both rGold
and the Gold 50/200 MACD are in super-bullish positions right now. It’s time to be aggressively long!
Investment and speculation are probabilities games because
no mere mortal can see the future.
To win an odds game, you have to bet when the odds are wildly in your
favor. And today they look wildly
in our favor in gold. Only a small
fraction of traders can fight their own emotions and ignore the crushing peer
pressure of the thundering herd at such times, and they ultimately earn huge
profits for their steadfast contrarianism.
Although there is no carnage in gold, it looks great
fundamentally, technically, and sentimentally, the argument for HUI carnage has
a little more validity. As this
next chart shows, the HUI broke farther under its 200dma than gold and has fallen
much more steeply. Gold-stock
investors and speculators are obviously spooked as they have been liquidating
positions since early December. Are
the pure chart guys right in fearing this?
I don’t think so for three reasons. First, it is not the gold stocks that
drive the gold price but the gold price
that drives the gold stocks. If
gold is really in the early months of a major new upleg and is destined to head
higher, then the gold stocks will
follow. Because people are so
skeptical of new uplegs early on, usually the HUI lags gold considerably
early on in major uplegs then rockets higher later to catch up with and ultimately
exceed gold’s gains.
And not only is gold the key to the gold stocks’
fortunes, but gold stocks have wonderful leverage which amplifies the gains and losses of gold. Overall through their respective bulls
to date, the HUI has risen 996% and gold 183%, so gold stocks have leveraged
gold by 5.4x. Traders, of course,
love this leverage to the upside but have to realize it is a double-edged
sword. When gold falls, gold stocks
amplify its downside too.
Considered in this context, the HUI’s 14.1% pullback
since December 4th is fairly typical relative to gold’s almost congruent
6.4% pullback. The HUI’s
recent 2.2x downside leverage is actually moderate, since on average the HUI
has leveraged gold’s downside by 4.1x during its major
corrections in this bull to date.
In fact, the HUI’s low downside leverage in the past month or so
provides more peripheral evidence that we have merely witnessed a minor
pullback within an upleg and not a new correction.
Finally, I don’t think the recent HUI
“carnage” is anything to fear because today’s very negative
gold-stock sentiment is typical of what shows up early on in a new upleg. Since most traders aren’t and
cannot be contrarians by definition, the fact that the majority is bearish
suggests we are in a young new upleg.
Traders tend to have the most doubts, fears, and angst after corrections and consolidations
because they make the common mistake of extrapolating recent short-term trends
out into infinity.
You’ve probably heard the classic market aphorism that
“bull markets climb a wall of worries”. This is so true in gold and gold stocks
too. Literally every step of the
way since April 2001’s $255ish multi-decade lows, there have been
countless bearish theories expounded on about why gold should head lower. Many were even logical and compelling at
the time. Yet they’ve all been dead wrong. Today’s popular bearish fears will
almost certainly meet the same fate.
In reality, the vertical wall of worries facing gold and
gold stocks today is really fantastic news. Why? It means that this gold bull market
remains young in a secular sense.
Remember back in 1999 in the NASDAQ when every single pullback was
widely heralded as a wonderful opportunity to “buy the dips”? In mature bulls near their ends everyone
has bought into their stories to such a great degree that they can’t
imagine them ever ending. Thus the proverbial
wall of worries vanishes near the ends
of secular bulls.
Yet in gold and gold stocks today, most people see pullbacks
not as buying opportunities but as dire harbingers of spirals lower to
come. Technicians, wanting to do
the comfortable thing and reflect sentiment rather than fight it so they
don’t irritate everyone, fan these bearish flames. Pretty soon nearly everyone is whipped
up into a fearful frenzy and they expect gold to crash. This type of thought pattern doesn’t
occur in mature bull markets.
At Zeal we absolutely love times like these when fear
abounds. They are the very best
buying opportunities possible within secular bull markets. We have been aggressively adding
high-potential gold-stock positions in both our monthly newsletter and
separate weekly alert service. If this new upleg indeed accelerates
higher soon as I expect it to, our subscribers are going to earn phenomenal
returns. It is not too late to join us as you
can still exploit these lows.
A few weeks ago we finished a comprehensive fundamental-research
study on junior gold stocks, and wrote up profiles of our 20 favorites in a new
report. This research is fueling
the higher-risk component of our new gold-stock campaign. Since it takes months to research to
this depth, we were really blessed that we finished just as junior gold stocks
are getting beaten to a pulp by the panic fleeing on myopic technical
advice. If you want a shot at buying
these elite juniors today while they are still very beaten down, buy our latest fundamental report
today.
The bottom line is there really hasn’t been any carnage in gold and the HUI. Ultra-short-term
crowd-momentum-following technical analyses are stirring up fears and leading
people to be scared, but the reality is pretty benign. Pure technical bearish groupthink is
always witnessed near major interim lows, this is nothing new.
If you can dig deep down and fight the bearish consensus,
and objectively view gold holistically by integrating its broader fundamental,
technical, and sentimental health today into one coherent strategic picture, then
you’ll probably reach the conclusion that gold’s bull remains alive
and strong. But only true contrarians
will realize this in time to reap the biggest profits, everyone else is forced
to play catch-up later.
Adam Hamilton, CPA
January 12th, 2007
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