HUI and Stock Bears
The turbulent financial markets of the
past few weeks have certainly been exciting, a welcome respite from the usual
lackluster summer doldrums.
But whenever volatility increases, especially after a long period of
time lacking it, long-latent fears of investors and speculators flare brightly.
The small subset of investors and speculators trading
precious-metals stocks has certainly not been immune from this growing
unease. On some of the more intense
selling days lately in the general stock markets, the HUI gold-stock index fell
far more than the flagship S&P 500.
This suggests PM-stock traders’ fears are spiraling higher even
faster than those of the mainstream traders.
While there are a variety of factors driving these PM-stock
fears, most relate to the core thesis of the threat of a major bear market in
the general stock markets. Indeed,
very strong fundamental and
technical cases can be made arguing that a major bear market is long
overdue. The stock markets remain
richly valued for this stage in their Long Valuation Wave and
they haven’t had any meaningful correction since early 2003.
If a bear is approaching or already upon
us, PM-stock traders fear that their sector will not escape from this hungry
bear’s wrath. They
suspect that during such a traumatic event, everything
will be sold with no distinctions made between fundamentally-promising and
fundamentally-weak sectors. And if
the baby will be thrown out with the bathwater, then it makes little sense to
hold PM stocks through such an event.
There have already been a couple mini-scares in 2007 that
buttress these fears. In late
February when the SPX swooned in sympathy with a sharp selloff in the Chinese
stock markets, the HUI plunged about 2.5x as far as
the general stocks. And more
recently in late July, the HUI mirrored and exceeded the SPX selloff by 1.5x or so.
During these two episodes the HUI not only paralleled SPX selloffs, but
it amplified them.
Based on these events, traders and analysts alike fear the HUI will be crushed in the next general-stock
bear. And if their sample of data is
limited to 2007 alone, then you can’t blame them for reaching such
conclusions. Ever the contrarian
agitator though, I believe this thesis quickly falls apart in the light of a
little historical perspective. The
tyranny of the present has blinded this notion’s adherents to the precedent
of the past.
We humans have a natural tendency to extrapolate the present
out into infinity, to dwell so intensely on the events of today that we forget
yesterday. This is a fatal flaw for
investors and speculators as it leads them to buy tops and sell bottoms, the
exact opposite of what success demands.
So students of the markets overcome this deadly bias by studying the
past and using this knowledge to frame the present.
This PM-stock bull is not new by any means. It started stealthily in late 2000 when
only the most hardened and incorrigible contrarians dared to deploy capital in
a sector that had been ripped to shreds for decades. About seven years and 1000% HUI gains
later, this bull has made them rich.
I was blessed to be among this early black-sheep crowd and have been reaping
the rewards ever since.
When your capital is heavily deployed in a sector, you pay
darned close attention to what is going on. So continuously over the last seven
years I have watched the PM-stock sector.
In addition to being a student of the markets, I also wrote many
hundreds of essays, newsletters, and alerts in this span of time to
help our subscribers thrive and grow wealthy. And since this PM-stock bull climbed a
wall of worries like all bulls, I had to address each worry as it arose and
decide if it was indeed a threat.
So I remember the fears of the last seven years very well.
It is funny as the greatest fear during the early years of
PM-stock investing was not their
valuations at the time, which were ludicrously high even by NASDAQ-2000
standards. Instead it was what would
happen to PM stocks if things got really ugly in the general stock
markets. As King Solomon wisely
said thirty centuries ago in Ecclesiastes, there is nothing new under the
sun. So please realize that fears
for PM stocks’ fortunes in a general-stock bear have existed more or less
continuously since 2000.
Thus it is with great amusement I watch many traders and
analysts today, who are obviously pretty new to the PM-stock scene, wail and
gnash their teeth over their latest theories on PM stocks in a stock bear. Based on a sample size of 2007 alone,
less than 1/14th of this entire PM-stock bull, they are utterly convinced a
general-stock bear is going to obliterate the PM stocks. So they are selling aggressively and
urging others to do the same before it is too late.
But with 13/14ths of this bull market occurring before 2007,
perhaps it would be wise to look to history to
see how the PM stocks behaved in an actual stock bear rather than wildly
guessing. Conveniently enough, the
HUI bull market started early on in the wicked general-stock bear that ran from
early 2000 to early 2003. So rather
than look to a couple of mini-panic weeks in 2007 alone, a trivial sample size,
we can consider a couple of years during a real bear in the early 2000s, a
meaningful sample size.
The charts in this essay compare the HUI with the SPX during
those bear years. This allows the
actual PM-stock performance during the very worst that a bear can throw at us
to be analyzed. And provocatively,
actual historical precedent offers a radically different perspective of what
the HUI can be capable of during a bear than the apocalyptic PM-stock
fearmongers pounding their tables today.
There is a popular notion today that the stock markets are
faring exceptionally poorly. Nonsense. At worst on a closing basis, the SPX is down
just 7.7% since its latest July highs.
This chart shows a truly poor-performing market, a real bear. From March 2000 to October 2002, this
flagship US stock index containing the biggest and best US companies fell a
horrific 49.1%! There were many stretches
during this bear that make the last few weeks look like playschool. How soon traders forget what real pain feels like!
During this bear, there were three particularly wicked
downlegs which are labeled above.
The fears that bloomed during these very sharp plunges were overwhelming
and suffocating. Such sharp
bear-market downlegs represent the very worst that a bear can throw at us. If you want to imagine the ugliest-possible
general-stock environment that the PM-stock sector is likely to face, these
downlegs are it.
Although there were certainly days and even weeks when the
HUI swooned in parallel with the SPX decline, on balance the HUI weathered the
latest stock bear rather well. In
order to empirically quantify just how well, I measured SPX and HUI performance
from certain key points. The red
and blue arrowheads mark these spans of time. And this is the key, to consider the
HUI’s overall bear-market
performance over meaningful spans and not just dwell on a few isolated bad days
here and there.
At the end of each span, three numbers are given. The blue one shows the actual HUI
performance, on a closing basis, over the span. The red one shows the SPX’s
performance on a closing basis. It
is crucial to realize that these numbers for any given span were calculated
from the exact same starting and
ending days. So they are not
optimized to show the HUI in a better light or the SPX in a worse light.
The third white number is the correlation r-square, which
shows how closely the HUI and SPX happened to be correlated over a particular
span of time. Now to get an
r-square, you multiply a correlation coefficient by itself. Of course this means all r-squares are
positive, as two negative numbers or two positive numbers multiplied together
yield a positive product. In order
to highlight the underlying correlation here, I put minus signs in front of the
r-squares if their underlying correlation
was negative. So these are not
negative r-squares, just normal r-squares derived from negative correlations.
Using these tools, we can really empirically understand how
the HUI performed during the last stock bear. Technically the bear ran from March 2000
to October 2002. Over this really
nasty period, the SPX lost 49.1%, nearly half of its value! Now if today’s PM-stock fears are
to be believed, the HUI should have performed in line or worse. In reality it actually rose 65.5% to the very day during the
SPX’s bear! So did PM stocks
suffer in the last stock bear? Not
so you’d notice!
While this bear technically ended in October 2002,
sentimentally it really ended at its secondary low of March 2003 the week
Washington invaded Iraq. Using this
yardstick, the SPX bear shed 47.6%.
How did the HUI fare? To the
very day it was up 77.6%. Not only
did it not follow the SPX down, but
it had a 70% r-square based on a negative correlation. In other words, 70% of the HUI’s positive daily behavior could be
directly statistically explained by the SPX’s negative daily behavior!
Take a second to really ponder this. Today the popular belief among PM-stock
traders and analysts is the HUI is highly positively
correlated with the general stock markets.
So if the SPX sells off big, the HUI will have to fall with it. But the crystal-clear lesson of history
is the HUI is actually very negatively
correlated with the SPX during stock bears. Although heretical based on
today’s dogma, really weak stock markets are actually good for the
alternative-investment PM stocks over the long run!
These non-optimized HUI results are outstanding, and
I’d take them any day. But if
we actually look at the most favorable span of time for the HUI within the SPX bear, it blows the
earlier numbers out of the water.
From November 2000 to January 2003, the HUI soared a breathtaking
322.1%! Meanwhile the SPX fell 37.7% over this exact period of
time to the day. Traders who
succumbed to the same stock-bear fears back then that are now making a
resurgence today lost out on winning these massive gains.
While it is pretty clear that the HUI did fantastic over the
entire span of the last stock bear we’ve witnessed, this analysis is
still incomplete. Today traders
fear fear itself. They are worried about sentiment getting
so bad in the general markets that everything is sold without discretion,
including PM stocks. So perhaps it
is myopic to consider an entire bear when it is instead short-term-but-brutal
explosions of fear that threaten the HUI.
To find the most intense maelstroms of fear within any bear,
look to its sharpest downlegs. They
quickly ramp fear to unbearable and unsustainable extremes. The next three charts show how the HUI
fared in each of the three major downlegs marked above. If you weren’t actively trading
during these times or in similar terminal-downleg episodes in the more distant
past, then you probably have no idea of what real fear looks like in the stock
markets. The wimpy little slides of
the last few weeks don’t even come close.
From late January 2001, less than a month after Alan
Greenspan tried and failed to bail out the US stock markets, to early April,
the SPX plunged 19.7%! A similar
episode today would blast the SPX below 1250 by mid-September! Now that would be some real pain. This was the first real downleg of the
bear and a major wake-up call for investors. And it starting just a month after an emergency mid-meeting rate cut
by the Fed really highlighted the total futility of governments attempting to
short-circuit bear markets.
Over this same period of time to the day, where stress and
fears were staggeringly high, the HUI managed to eke out an 8.5% gain. Now 8.5% isn’t massive, but it
does annualize to 50%+. If you
asked average PM-stock traders what would happen to the HUI today if the SPX plunged
20% in two months, I bet they’d say the HUI would be down 30% or more. But in real history, it managed a nice
gain during just such a traumatic event.
Now while the final results were very favorable for PM
stocks, it wasn’t all fun and games.
If you carefully examine the HUI and SPX lines during this wicked
downleg, it is apparent the HUI did indeed parallel the SPX lower at times. The Ps on these charts mark key episodes
of this parallel highly-positively-correlated behavior. But there were also major divergences,
marked by the Ds. Such contrasts
are apparent in all major downlegs.
While the HUI tends to be strong overall and follow its
fundamentals, namely the price of gold, there are always periods of days or
weeks when it seems to move in lockstep with the general markets. Back in early 2001, like today, there
was a huge temptation to cherry-pick these samples and build HUI-bearish
doctrine from them. But it was and
is far more profitable to consider the HUI’s performance over entire
downlegs, more meaningful samples, than just a few particularly bad days within
one.
Interestingly cherry-picking can work in the HUI’s
favor too. At best within this downleg, the HUI was up
25.5% in a matter of weeks while the SPX shed 4.7%. But just as it would have been
impossible in real-time to exactly catch this extreme in our trades, it is
impossible today to exactly time the days the HUI is going to temporarily fall
with the SPX. We are far better off
riding it out, accepting the bad days when they come, and waiting for the HUI
bull’s secular trend to reassert itself and pull PM stocks higher.
The second major downleg happened later in 2001 and it was
even more severe. The SPX started
really accelerating lower in early July after a higher bounce following the
first downleg. From then until late
September, the SPX shed 21.9%. As
you can see above, the last week of this downleg was particularly scary as it
was a rare freefall. A similar
decline today would batter the SPX down near 1200 by early October.
Now if you want a scary general-market time, the last weeks
of this downleg were it. Yet
incredibly in this crucible of fear the HUI diverged from the SPX and soared
higher! Gold and silver stocks ultimately
follow the prices of gold and silver, not the SPX. They are alternative investments that
tend to thrive when general stocks are not. Overall during the exact span of time of
this wicked stock downleg, the HUI rallied strongly to an 18.7% gain!
Once again though, riding this downleg in the HUI was not
for the faint of heart. From
mid-August until early September, the HUI paralleled the SPX perfectly. Today’s small-sample-size
commentators would have a field day writing about this and proclaiming the end
of the HUI bull. But jumping out in
early September just when things were looking hopeless for the SPX and HUI
would have been the worst-possible decision. Instead the prudent PM-stock traders who
knew the HUI should do fine on balance,
so they stayed deployed, won all the profits.
There is another key point to realize here. The September shown above was when the
9/11 attacks happened. While the
SPX continued lower after the
stunning terrorist attacks, PM stocks soared with the metals. I highlight this because many traders
and analysts believe today that a major new terrorist attack will crush the
stock markets and the HUI as well.
Maybe not. If the HUI can
soar in the aftermath of 9/11, then perhaps alternative investments will be
highly sought after following the next big terror attack too.
The final downleg of the last stock bear unfolded throughout
the summer of 2002. June and July
of that year were incredibly intense and frightening, light years beyond
anything we’ve seen in the past several weeks of this summer of 2007. From mid-March to late July, the SPX
fell a gut-wrenching 31.8%. Yes,
over a single summer the biggest and best US stocks lost nearly a third of their value!
If this happened today, the SPX would be down near 1050 by Thanksgiving
and stock brokers would be leaping to their deaths from skyscraper windows.
Like in all the other downlegs, there were times when the
HUI diverged from the increasingly distressed SPX and times when it ran
parallel with it. The most
disturbing of the latter is the sharp slide of the HUI when the stock markets
were plummeting in July. Although
this was sure a trying time as you remember if you were trading it, despite the
HUI’s late-downleg affinity to the SPX the PM stocks still gained 24.0% over the exact span of time
that the SPX plummeted 31.8%.
By now the general HUI pattern during the very worst
episodes that the last bear could conjure up should be clear. While there were difficult episodes within downlegs when the HUI would parallel
the SPX for days or even weeks, these were always temporary. Overall the HUI shook off the worst of
the SPX downlegs as if they didn’t even exist. On average through all three, the HUI
gained 17.1% while the SPX lost 24.5%.
Even if you believe a general stock bear is approaching
sooner or later as I do, you’d be hard-pressed to spin a scenario where
the fear it generates will be worse than the extreme fears the great SPX
downlegs of 2001 and 2002 spawned.
20% to 30% declines in the general stock markets over a matter of months
are about as bad as the markets ever get in history. Even the early-1930s episode took years to unfold.
And if the HUI performed well during the last stock bear,
why not give it the benefit of the doubt this time around? Sympathetic HUI selling on SPX weakness
periodically happened within that bear and within each of its downlegs, just as
we’ve seen in 2007, yet on balance the HUI still managed outstanding
positive performance. The precious
metals, and their miners, are never highly positively correlated with the stock
markets over long periods of time.
They are classic alternative investments that traders flock to during
times of general-stock weakness.
There is an old market axiom that states the five most
dangerous words in investing are “This Time It Is Different”. Yet this is exactly what the adherents of
the popular the-HUI-is-doomed-in-a-bear-market theory are asserting today. Rather than believe that it is
fundamentals that drive the HUI today just like they have for the last seven
years, these traders have somehow come to believe that the SPX drives the
HUI. This whole concept just
boggles my mind as it seems so silly in the light of stock-market history.
A popular offshoot of this theory that is also amusing is
the margin-call thesis. Many PM-stock
traders think that general-stock selling is going to lead to margin calls. In order to meet these margin calls,
investors will sell everything they can including PM stocks. This will drag down the PM stocks along
with the general stocks. This
thesis is tenuous at best though.
Mainstream investors loathe PM stocks. It is still only the contrarians who own
them, and contrarians have generally already learned their lessons about the
dangers of speculating with borrowed money. If mainstreamers don’t own PM
stocks, they aren’t going to be able to sell them to meet margin
calls. But even if they did own
them, the PM-stock sector is vanishingly small. At the end of July, the SPX had a market
cap of $13,646b. The entire
HUI’s was only $110b, or 0.8% of the SPX’s. So in relative terms selling PM stocks
wouldn’t even put a dent in margin debt during a serious downleg-type SPX
decline.
In the HUI’s favor, it is vastly easier to buy today
for fundamental reasons than it was during the last SPX bear. Back then, most PM stocks were losing
money and the ones that were making it traded at ridiculous multiples that
would make a tech stock blush. As
of the end of July, the HUI’s 28.6x P/E ratio was actually lower than the NASDAQ 100’s 30.9x,
so it is not a fundamental challenge to buy the HUI today. And back then, gold’s rally was
too young to be decisive. Today it
is clear without question gold is in a secular bull.
In light of all this, the PM stocks really ought to thrive
on balance even if a new SPX bear is upon us. Historical precedent weighs heavily in
their favor. During times of
general-market turmoil, sooner or later even mainstream investors get interested
in gold and silver and the companies mining these metals. It is really a baseless stretch to
declare that PMs and PM stocks are suddenly not alternative investments
anymore.
At Zeal we study market history extensively to ensure we
have proper perspective and aren’t swayed by the vagaries of short-term
sentiment swings. Thus we have been
fighting the crowd, as usual, and aggressively buying elite PM stocks. Not only are they technically weak and
relatively cheap, but pessimism in this sector is overwhelming and irrational. The biggest gains arise from buying when
consensus is the most scared.
If you want to understand how to practically apply our
cutting-edge research and mirror our trades in elite commodities stocks at
technically-opportune times, then please
subscribe to our acclaimed
monthly newsletter today.
The bottom line is this HUI bull performed awesomely well
during the last major bear in the US stock markets. Yes, there were certainly days or weeks
when the HUI seemed to sell off in sympathy with the general stocks. But on balance throughout the entire
bear and even throughout the most brutally wicked downlegs the bear could
offer, the PM stocks rallied to excellent gains without exception.
Although many traders and analysts believe today is somehow
different, I’ve seen no evidence to support such a radical departure from
historical precedent. Gold and
silver, still alternative investments, remain in strong secular bulls. And it is their strength that will drive
the PM stocks higher, regardless of what happens in the general stock markets.
Adam Hamilton, CPA
August 10, 2007
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