China
Gold Technicals
Two years ago I suspect American investors would have unanimously
scoffed at the notion that the world would soon look to China’s stock
markets for guidance rather than the USA’s. Yet here we are today. Over these past two years the Shanghai
Stock Exchange Composite Index has soared a breathtaking 328%, capturing the
world’s attention.
At best at the end of May, the SSEC was up 62% this year
alone! Such gains are clearly unsustainably
parabolic which place the Chinese stock markets deep into classic bubble
territory. And the amazing stories
coming out of China these days reflect mania extremes. From an accelerating day-trading craze,
to record numbers of new stock-trading accounts being opened, to even lowly
Chinese laborers giving stock tips, China is caught up in the throes of a
textbook stock mania.
While stock manias are certainly fun as American tech
investors can attest to, they always eventually end badly. Large rates of gain simply cannot be
sustained mathematically because soon all the capital in the world would be
sucked into the mania market’s exponential growth. So sooner or later all stock manias fail,
typically starting with a sharp crash.
From May 29th to June 4th, just four trading days, the SSEC
plunged a brutal 15% on a closing basis.
In some ways this looks like the start of a collapse technically, but
bubble tops are notoriously tricky to navigate as Shanghai’s fleeting late
February swoon showed. Only time
will tell whether this is the beginning of the end of this mania or just
another hiccup on the way higher.
Either way, the end is inevitable at some point here.
While the stock mania in China is fascinating to study,
stocks are not the only market for capital in China. Just like the rest of the world, Chinese
investors have investment alternatives.
One in particular, gold, is exceptionally interesting at this moment in
time. In Western stock-market
history when stock manias collapse, gold tends to soar as stock investors flee
the imploding bubble. Will the East
mimic this behavior?
Believe it or not, buying gold is not a problem in
China. The Chinese have a
millennia-old cultural affinity for gold and have long bought physical gold
from local shops, whether it happened to be legal at the time or not. And the Chinese central bank recently
gave preliminary approval for the Shanghai Gold Exchange to launch gold futures
trading. So Chinese
investors’ conduits for investing in gold are growing.
Stock-market issues aside, gold trading in China is thriving. In January the Shanghai Gold Exchange
reported its gold trading volume soared 73% year-over-year. On February 18th, Chinese New Year, the
Year of the Golden Pig dawned.
While a normal Year of the Pig hits every 12 years on the Chinese
calendar, a Golden Pig is far
rarer. This is the first one in
either 60 years or 600 years, depending on which Chinese calendar expert is
consulted. A Golden Pig year is
believed to offer extreme good fortune and during one the Chinese buy gold to
celebrate.
Thus gold investment demand in China is very healthy and
growing totally independently of the stock-market situation. But when Chinese stocks start
relentlessly grinding lower, will some Chinese stock traders move capital into
gold for protection like we do in the West? I really think they will, given the
ages-old Chinese love for gold.
As I’ve been pondering this in recent weeks, I’ve
been wondering what the gold bull looks like to a Chinese investor. Are the gold technicals looking bullish
in China? Is now a good time for
Chinese investors to plow capital into gold whether or not the stock slide
accelerates? If I was in China
would I buy gold today?
In order to explore these questions, I had to see
today’s secular gold bull charted in Chinese currency. It is formally known as the renminbi (“people’s
currency”) but more commonly in the West as the yuan, its principal
unit. Yuan is a one-syllable
Chinese word that literally means “round”, a reference to the round
coins from China’s history that went by the same name. So renminbi and yuan are interchangeable
in the vernacular today.
Now unfortunately getting historical gold-price data from
China is not easy. For the early
years of our secular gold bull, there was no official gold exchange or national
price quotation available. Gold
prices could vary considerably regionally based on local supply and demand, and
I haven’t seen any historical data series capturing any of them. And not being able to read Chinese like a
typical provincial American, I couldn’t dig deep enough on the Web to
piece together real historical Chinese gold-price data.
Thankfully there is a curious peculiarity of the gold market
that renders this point moot. Since
the US dollar has been the world’s reserve currency for decades now, the
dollar gold price still dominates world gold trading for the time being. Everywhere on the planet, the local gold
price is still a function of the dollar gold price and the exchange rate
between the local currency and the dollar.
With the Fed working overtime to inflate the dollar into oblivion this
situation won’t last forever, but it still works today.
Thus we can use the yuan/dollar exchange rate along with the
benchmark US dollar gold price to infer the Chinese gold price. This forex-implied local gold price is
not perfect, but in my experience it is pretty darned close. Every time I have checked it over the
past six years by periodically digging up a true local-currency quote from a local
exchange, I have found that the implied gold price is well within 1% of the
actual local price.
Using this methodology, the following charts show gold
through the eyes of Chinese investors, yuan gold. The right axes of these charts show yuan
per troy ounce along with the usual
technicals. As in Japan gold prices
are usually quoted in grams in China, but ounces are easier for us Americans to
understand so I used them here.
The left axes show the dollar
price per yuan, the currency exchange rate for China. While this is backwards compared to the
customary way the official yuan exchange rate is quoted, yuan per dollar, I
find it more logical. Priced this
way, a yuan gaining in value relative to the dollar is shown as rising on a chart rather than
falling. This nonconventional presentation
eliminates a lot of forex confusion.
Bull to date at best, yuan gold has powered 172% higher from
April 2001 to May 2006. Although
such gains are nothing compared to a parabolic stock market, gold’s rise
has been slow and methodical. It is
based on global supply and demand and not local euphoria. Chinese investors with capital invested
in gold have done quite well while bearing just a minuscule fraction of the
risk that stock traders have borne.
Interestingly the May 2006 gold highs, Y5764 an ounce, were
actually all-time highs for China.
Back in the early 1980s when the all-time US gold highs were carved, the
Chinese yuan was much more valuable relative to the dollar, lowering that
yuan-gold high. Back then one yuan
cost about $0.57 in dollar terms compared to just $0.13 today. So in one sense the China gold bull is
already breaking new high ground in nominal terms, something that has yet to
happen in the States.
Now you sharp-eyed students of the markets have no-doubt
noted that the China gold bull looks an awful lot like the US gold bull. Indeed. This is largely due to the yuan currency
peg which existed for the decade ending July 2005. As you can see above reflected in the
red yuan price, the Chinese currency was dead flat for the first four years of
this gold bull. It was hard-pegged
at 8.28 yuan to one US dollar, or a little over $0.12.
So up until the People’s Bank of China started the
process of decoupling the yuan from the dollar in July 2005, the China gold
bull paced the dollar gold bull one-for-one. Their charts to that point are indeed
perfectly interchangeable. And
since we American contrarians earned fortunes in the first four years of this
gold bull and were quite satisfied, I have no reason to believe Chinese
investors didn’t feel the same.
At Zeal we have been tracking gold in major world currencies
for years now, so before I started working on this essay I did know that the Chinese gold bull looked just like the US one
before July 2005. But what I
hadn’t realized yet really startled me this week. The greatest upleg of this entire gold
bull started in July 2005, the first Stage Two upleg labeled above. It’s the one that ended in May
2006 and led to enormous realized gains for prudent contrarians.
Well, in US dollar terms gold bottomed about a week before
the strict yuan-dollar peg was loosened.
Then it meandered lazily near lows for a couple weeks, in the midst of
which the yuan news broke. Then
gold really started climbing higher in earnest about a week after the yuan news. It is a strange coincidence that the
most powerful gold upleg of this entire bull market launched virtually
simultaneously with the Chinese effectively severing their longstanding dollar
peg!
I really don’t know what to make of this yet. My gut feeling is I suspect it is indeed
pure coincidence, nothing more.
Gold had consolidated for the better part of a year and was deep under
its 200dma in oversold territory in the weeks surrounding the China
announcement. I was already very
bullish on gold the week
before the announcement for reasons that had absolutely nothing to do with
China. Correlation does not
necessarily imply causation.
This being said, the more years I study the markets the more
I respect their underlying complexities.
Often relationships exist between disparate markets that are not readily
apparent. One key example is today’s
Tortilla Crisis in Mexico.
Corn tortillas are a crucial staple food for at least 50m
poor Mexicans. But due to Americans
burning corn to fuel our cars thanks to the ethanol craze, corn prices have
soared. This is pricing corn
tortillas out of the reach of most poor Mexicans. It is such a big issue the Mexican
government fears widespread civil unrest.
Who would have thought that American ethanol could lead to a potential
Mexican revolution?
My point here is even though it seems improbable that the
severing of the yuan/dollar peg had anything to do with global gold supply and
demand in July 2005, we can’t rule it out emphatically. Perhaps the US dollar sold off on the
quasi-floating yuan and gold caught a bid because of it. Perhaps the newly-rising yuan inspired
enough confidence in the Chinese populace to increase its gold investment
demand. That could have driven
gold’s initial spike off its
lows which then enticed in global investors. All I know for sure is that the
coincidental timing here, within one week, is very intriguing.
Since the peg was loosened, the yuan has been climbing. Indeed this year its climb has
accelerated considerably as the red line above shows. The rising yuan means that gold is
getting relatively less expensive for Chinese investors. In the forex-implied sense, it takes
fewer yuan to buy a dollar and hence fewer yuan to buy enough dollars necessary
to buy an ounce of gold. Of course
the Chinese don’t have to actually buy dollars first to buy gold, but due
to the dollar’s dominance of the world gold market this is how Chinese gold
pricing effectively works.
Hence the Chinese gold bull looks more subdued than the
dollar’s since July 2005. The
higher the yuan climbs, the more it moderates gold’s gains in dollar
terms. This is readily evident
above in the blue yuan-gold line.
This is a double-edged sword for Chinese gold demand. With a rising currency the Chinese can
afford to buy more gold, but with this same yuan rise nullifying some of
gold’s dollar gains the yuan-gold incentives to buy aren’t as compelling
as dollar gold’s. Nothing begets
buying like higher prices, and the strengthening yuan moderates those for yuan
gold.
But overall in a strategic sense, the China gold bull looks
very much like the American gold bull.
Yuan gold is up 172% at best compared to 181% at best for dollar gold. And despite the rising yuan in the last
couple years eroding some of the raw gold gains in dollar terms, the yuan gold
performance since the dollar peg was dropped has still been excellent in an
absolute sense. The secular gold
bull is alive and well in China!
Back to my original impetus for this thread of research, do
Chinese investors fleeing Chinese stock-market weakness have good technical
reasons to buy gold today? The
answer is definitely yes. The China
gold technicals really look quite bullish now and I would not hesitate to throw
long gold if I was in China. This
next chart zooms in on the last couple years, since the peg was loosened.
During secular bull markets, secular support occasionally
shifts to a steeper upslope.
Interestingly yuan gold is now near its second major support line of
this bull market. While yuan gold
has slid a little below it recently, this line has held five times over the
past two years and odds are it will hold again. If you want to buy anything in a secular
bull, one of the best times to do it is when a price is near its secular
support.
Yuan gold is also near its 200-day moving average
today. All bull markets flow and
ebb relative to their
200dmas. They rise above and
outpace their 200dmas in uplegs and then fall back down to their 200dmas in
necessary corrections to rebalance sentiment. Within a fundamentally-driven secular
bull, the highest-probability-for-success time to add long positions is when a
price is near its 200dma.
With yuan gold near both secular support and its 200dma, it
looks like a great time for Chinese investors to buy gold. With these two technical developments
alone, I would be very comfortable buying within a secular bull. But in addition to these two major
technical buy signals, a myriad of minor ones are confirming them. The yuan gold technicals are pretty much
universally slanted towards the bullish slide today.
Note that yuan gold has carved a series of higher lows and
higher highs since early October, a textbook young upleg. At best in May it was up 21% since its
October lows, definitely not a number to scoff at. Other than the recent weakness spawned
by central-bank gold-selling fears out of the West, yuan gold has remained
within a nice uptrend channel for eight months now. Thus gold is already showing consistent strength
and laying the foundation for its next sharp run higher.
Another bullish factor evident in yuan gold is its long
consolidation. For about a year
now, yuan gold has largely oscillated around Y5000 per ounce. In bull markets there is tremendous
fundamental supply-and-demand pressure for a price to rise, so when a price
consolidates sideways for an entire year big forces build behind it. These consolidations reflect poor
sentiment. But eventually some
catalyst emerges that dispels this sentiment and a price soars heavenwards as
fundamentals aggressively reassert themselves. The longer the consolidation, the higher
the odds of a big surge up once this happens.
So totally independent of stock-market considerations, yuan
gold looks very bullish today for a variety of reasons. Chinese investors should have no problem
buying gold if they believe the metal’s global fundamentals remain bullish. And to have gold near technical lows is
a huge boon for China’s stock-market investors. As they start to get scared some will
certainly flock to the stability of gold.
And doing this when gold is technically cheap is far better than doing
it when gold is technically dear.
Provocatively, yuan gold is only about 11% below its
all-time highs today. A surge in
Chinese gold demand, regardless of whether it is driven by gold’s own
fundamental merits or fears of falling stocks, could drive yuan gold above last
May’s Y5764 level in relatively short order. And since there is nothing like new
highs to generate interest, even more Chinese will follow the early investors
in after new highs are hit.
In the stock-market history of the Western world, speculators
tend to flock to gold when panics and collapses set in. Sometimes gold falls initially when people are scared enough
to sell everything indiscriminately, but very soon rationality starts returning
to some and they start buying gold.
This leads to a rising gold price which attracts the interest of even
more buyers. And soon gold is
powering higher despite a
major stock-market downleg.
And with the great Chinese love for gold going back
thousands of years, I suspect the Chinese investors will have an even stronger
urge to buy gold when stocks crumble around them than we do in the West. Gold is the ultimate store of wealth and
safe haven in any financial-market storm, and the Chinese probably
instinctively realize this to a far greater degree than we ever will in the
West. Odds are a major Chinese stock
selloff would lead to a surge in gold demand out of China.
This is interesting, as in the States a fear prevails today
that a China stock-market crash or panic is going to drag down the whole world
with it, including general US stocks and commodities stocks. In order to address these concerns, I
analyzed the probable implications of a major Chinese stock selloff for both
the general US stock markets and commodities stocks in particular in the latest
issue of our acclaimed monthly newsletter. The conclusions will probably surprise
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yuan gold challenges new all-time highs.
The bottom line is China’s gold technicals look
quite impressive today. Gold is
weak technically and weak sentimentally in China,
just like in the US. Yet its global fundamentals remain
super bullish. A technically
beat-up market coupled with strong fundamentals cannot persist for long. The Chinese investors are really blessed
to see technically-opportune gold prices at the same time their stock bubble
might finally be cracking.
And if Western investors tend to flock to gold during stock
panics, how much more will Eastern investors? In the West we were taught to hate gold
since we were kids, that it is a “barbarous relic” that offers no
returns. But in the East gold is
still venerated as the ultimate financial asset. A stock panic coupled
with a strong cultural affinity for gold ought to be pretty exciting to watch
unfold.
Adam Hamilton, CPA
June 8, 2007 (Posted on Secular Bull on June 16th 2007)
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