|
Need A Printable Format? Click Here!
Gold Bull Stage Two 2
November 18th, 2005
It has been a heck of an awesome week for gold, certainly
one of the most exciting in recent memory.
Not only is the Ancient Metal of Kings closing in on the fabled $500
level in dollar terms, but the psychologically crucial €400 euro-gold
level was finally overcome. Gold
investors everywhere, including me, are rejoicing.
Contrarian investors and even some mainstreamers are
discussing gold’s sizable daily gains, but I think the most intriguing
aspect of gold’s action this week surrounded its relationship with the US
dollar. On Wednesday gold carved a
new bull-to-date high just under $478 while the US Dollar Index simultaneously hit a rally-to-date high
above 92. Such an event is totally
unprecedented in this gold bull, Twilight Zone stuff.
Born back in April 2001, until June 2005
this gold bull’s behavior was heavily dependent on the dollar’s
fortunes. Like an inverted
mirror image of the mighty US dollar, gold rose when the dollar fell and vice
versa. Gold acted merely as an alternative
currency to the dollar and traded as such.
Global investment demand was insufficient then to drive gold high enough
to decisively decouple from the dollar’s dominance.
But back in June a long-awaited event finally came to pass, euro gold broke above its long and oppressive €350 resistance. This event was so important and pivotal
because it helped convince
investors around the world that this gold bull was more than just a dollar bear. New euro-gold highs helped signal that
gold finally had the fundamental strength to rise in
all the important global
currencies, not just in the rapidly devaluing US dollar.
For years
I’d been waiting for the €350 breakout as it seemed like the most
likely catalyst to ignite Stage Two of this gold bull. Great gold bulls have three stages. The first stage is currency-devaluation
driven, gold typically only gains significantly as the world’s reserve
currency loses value. The second
stage is driven by global gold investment demand, forcing gold to decouple from
the dominant currency and rise on its own fundamental merits.
The dawn of Stage Two has huge implications,
it is when the gold bull really comes into its own and starts galloping. Stage Two is a paradise for investors
since its ultimate gains ought to vastly exceed the excellent gains with which
we were blessed in Stage One. Since
June’s €350 breakout, it looks like this gold bull is increasingly
transitioning from Stage One to Stage Two.
I documented gold’s
dollar decoupling a couple months ago.
This week to witness gold actually close at its highest
levels in this entire bull the very same
day the rallying dollar achieved its highest level this year is
staggering! Gold is being driven to
new highs not by flight capital fleeing a crumbling dollar, but by prudent
investors around the world bidding up its price because they want to own gold.
This is the clearest evidence yet of gold’s dollar decoupling, of
the glorious dawn of Stage Two!
In order to better understand this phenomenally bullish
event, I decided to update our Stage Two charts this week. They use euro gold as a proxy for
documenting gold’s extra-dollar progress, compare rolling-month returns
of gold and the dollar, and analyze both currencies’ behaviors relative to
their respective 200dmas. More
background information on these charts appears in my original “Gold Bull Stage Two”
essay.
The fall of euro gold €400 this week is immensely
bullish and very exciting! The euro
has become the second-most-important currency on earth so it is a great proxy
for gold’s extra-dollar progress in general. Despite the European nations’
traditional love for invading each other, the rise of the unified European
Superstate and its currency appears
unstoppable. Even Asian nations are
now accepting payments in euros for crude oil, other raw materials, and
finished manufactured goods.
The dollar cost per euro is graphed in red on the left axis
and is the best place to start digesting this chart. The currency countertrend moves
that erupted in the initial days of 2005 drove the euro lower as its secular
bull market entered correction mode. From January to May, the euro plunged
from near $1.35 to under $1.25, a big move in the usually glacial-slow currency
world. Yet euro gold barely rose
during this time as it largely languished under €330.
This conundrum presented a problem for contrarian investors
across the globe. The price of gold
should rise when fiat currencies
fall, as gold is the ultimate currency in world history. But since gold refused to rise
materially in euro terms in the first five months of this year, it was obvious
to foreign investors that the US dollar still dominated gold. The dollar was rising and gold was
grinding lower in the States rather than responding to euro weakness.
But heading into June, gold suddenly started rising in euro
terms, apparently growing more responsive to major currencies other than the
dollar. Euro gold broke out of its
modest early 2005 uptrend and blasted towards the €350 graveyard in the
sky that had slaughtered all previous attempts to shatter it for three years
running. By June gold was rising despite the dollar’s parallel
strength driving euro gold well above €350.
Since these €350 levels had acted as such hardened
overhead resistance for so long, a lot of investors assumed gold wouldn’t
be able to hold above €350. Soon it started correcting as expected in
late June. But in July euro gold
bounced at €350, an encouraging action that would happen twice again in
August. The old €350
resistance that had battered gold for years was increasingly becoming support
for an assault on brave new highs.
As expected, this €350 breakout emboldened investors
around the world. For the first
time there was hard data suggesting that this gold bull was not just the puppet
mirror of a dollar bear, but an independent entity that would rise globally on
its own fundamental merits. Gold
surged around the world in September and blasted to new bull-to-date highs in
all the important currencies
including the euro. And the dollar
also had a strong parallel rally that same month.
Gold’s sharp surge opened investors’ eyes around
the world. Instead of promptly
collapsing after such a fast move, which would have been entirely justifiable
technically, gold buying interest persisted. Gold spent last month consolidating near
€390 rather than surrendering its gains. Investors from around the world were
pouring enough capital into gold to keep it relatively high and buoyant despite
the dollar’s strength.
The great thing about investments is their demand curve is
inverted. The higher their prices
go the more desirable they become to
investors. In the past couple weeks
global gold investment demand surged again driving gold above €400 for
the first time in history. And all
this happened, amazingly enough, not when the dollar was weak but when it was
blasting up to major new rally-to-date highs. Gold is decoupling!
While extra-dollar gold charts like euro gold are certainly
evidence enough that we seem to be transitioning into Stage Two, the empiricist
in me always wants to precisely quantify pivotal market events. One chart I’ve been watching for a
few months attempts to do this. It
graphs the absolute 20-day returns of the dollar and gold. Since calendar months generally each
contain about 20 trading days, in effect this is a rolling-month returns chart.
In Stage One the dollar and gold moved in nearly lockstep
opposition, so if the dollar was up 3% in the last 20 days then gold would be
expected to be down 3%. Indeed this
is what we observe from January to May when Stage One dollar-dependent behavior
governed gold. But starting in June
at the €350 breakout an amazing thing happened. The strong negative correlation between
the dollar and gold reversed and shot
positive.
Rather than moving in opposition as expected, in June the
gold 20d returns soared far faster than dollar 20d returns waned. Then in July both returns dropped, in
September both rose, in October both fell, and so far this month both have
risen. The actual calendar-month
correlations and their r-square values are noted above. The white r-square percentages reveal
how statistically likely the behavior in one currency is able to explain and
predict the other’s behavior.
These correlations and r-squares are computed not on the 20d
gains charted above, but on the underlying daily dollar and
gold closes themselves.
Check out the extremely high negative correlations above in February,
March, and May. On average in these
Stage One months, 91% of the behavior of gold could be attributed to the
dollar. From January to May
inclusive the monthly r-square average ran 73%, showing a dollar-dominated
gold.
But in June this correlation actually went positive. Rather than moving in their long-established
lockstep opposition, the dollar and gold suddenly tended to move in the same
direction. While the 0.44 positive correlation is not large in an absolute sense, as it only
represents a 19% r-square value, it is an enormous
departure from what he had been seeing in gold. This is hard statistical evidence that
the Stage Two developments are real.
Since this radical change of course in June, two more months
have run positive correlations. In
September gold and the dollar matched each other so closely that a very strong
0.90 correlation emerged. That
month 81% of the behavior of gold could be statistically matched with dollar strength rather than weakness. These three positively-correlated months
averaged an r-square value of 47%, very impressive early in the transition.
Meanwhile July, August, and October reverted back to the
usual Stage One negative correlations.
Yet these correlations were very weak compared to those witnessed in the
first half of 2005. The average
r-square value for these particular months was just 26%. Obviously this is a far cry from the 73%
average from January to May.
Statistically, verified through correlation analysis, gold is absolutely
decoupling from the dollar.
With gold decoupling, an obvious question is why are we
still seeing any negatively
correlated months at all? Why
doesn’t the metal just get on with it and leave the dollar in the dust
for good? For a variety of reasons,
this Stage One to Stage Two gold bull transition must be gradual, not instant.
Both gold and dollar prices are driven by investors and
speculators buying and selling. For
four years almost
without exception gold prices were slaved to the inverse of the dollar’s
fortunes. Traders
are now used to naturally expecting gold to rally on dollar weakness and slide
on dollar strength. In
trading well-worn habits create a lot of inertia and die hard. Many traders will still be operating on
a Stage One paradigm for some time to come yet until they finally realize that the
gold market has fundamentally changed for the better.
Gradually investors and speculators will begin understanding
the new Stage Two dynamics. Over
time the number of traders with Stage One mindsets will shrink while the Stage
Two crowd will grow. Stage Two will
only be fully here when the vast majority of market participants accepts that gold has decoupled from the dollar to rise or
fall on its own fundamental merits and they
trade accordingly. No one knows
how long this will take.
And measurement problems make divining the length of this
transition even more challenging.
For instance, gold and the dollar, even though they have tended to move in
opposite ways strategically over months, can do anything they want from day to
day. The shorter the period of time
considered for any market analysis, the greater the obscuring influence of
random noise becomes. The calendar-month
correlations used above are very short and highly susceptible to being buffeted
by random daily market noise.
And as this transitional decoupling into Stage Two becomes
more pronounced, gold will eventually be trading totally independently of the
dollar anyway. Thus the correlation
analysis that was so powerful while gold moved in lockstep opposition to the
dollar in Stage One will rapidly become meaningless as the respective
individual fundamentals driving both currencies push them in their own
independent directions. Stage Two
is ultimately not a shift from negative to positive dollar and gold
correlations, but from negative to no
correlations.
Our final chart shows where gold and the dollar have been
trading relative to their respective 200dmas. This Relativity principle is
extremely useful for trading markets in secular trends and has served us well
in recent years. If this Stage Two
transition continues, soon the rDollar trends will
probably be useless for gold trading as the dollar and gold head their separate
ways. Here it really highlights the
early transition though.
The stylized drawing on the lower left of this chart
illustrates the undulating opposing patterns between gold and the dollar as
multiples of their own 200dmas that characterized and defined Stage One. Once the decoupling started in June
though, suddenly this mirror-image pattern vanished. The dollar climbed farther above its
200dma in a bear rally while gold simultaneously soared above its own 200dma in
a new upleg.
If rGold had continued on its Stage One path since June, it
would have generally followed the dotted arrow rendered above. Today gold would probably only be around
95% of its 200dma, which itself would be lower. If gold had continued Stage One behavior
since June, my best guess is we would be seeing $400ish gold levels today. Instead gold decoupled and is now
pushing $500 despite the dollar’s considerable strength.
In light of all this evidence, the thesis that gold is now
transitioning into the second stage of its gold bull is becoming more
compelling with each passing week.
The behavior of gold relative to the dollar has unarguably changed since
June. We can see it in the charts
of gold graphed in other major currencies and we can quantify it precisely by
analyzing the statistical relationship between gold and the dollar.
With Stage Two dawning, the implications for investors are
profound. If you visualize a
secular gold bull as a decade-plus-long parabola, the Stage One
behavior we witnessed until this past summer is basically a gradually rising
line. All of the greatest rallies
and most exciting uplegs of the past four-and-a-half years are contained within
this modest gradually rising line.
The first third of a major bull market is always the least impressive.
Stage Two is when this long-term parabola starts curving
up. It is when gains really start to multiply and mainstream
investors around the world start lusting after gold and driving it relentlessly
higher. In dollar terms the rallies
and uplegs of Stage Two will tower over the Stage One events we’ve grown
used to. This bull will get bigger,
badder, and meaner and the opportunities to profit will grow proportionally. Fortunes will be won.
While ample opportunities to profit in this gold bull should
abound in the coming years, the particular opportunity that really strikes me
today is the growing anomaly between gold and gold stocks. Despite incredibly bullish technicals,
gold stocks continue to lag the awesome surge in gold. Gold ultimately drives gold stocks, but
at the moment gold-stock investors don’t seem to believe that Stage Two
is really coming.
The HUI gold-stock index is struggling under
250 today while gold is within spitting distance of $500, a mega-psychological
level that will work wonders for gold-bull awareness among mainstream investors
in the States. A veritable Biblical
deluge of mainstream capital could
start pouring into gold stocks once gold trades decisively above $500. Yet the HUI was actually higher two years ago when gold was just first
breaking $400!
This anomaly cannot be sustainable. Gold is in a powerful fundamental bull
for global supply and demand reasons, investors worldwide are bidding it up
forcing it to decouple from the dollar, and it’s the price of gold that
drives gold-stock profits and hence ultimately gold-stock prices. The elite gold stocks have lagged so far
behind this glorious early Stage Two gold surge that they ought to rocket like
a bat out of hell once investors comprehend their vast potential.
At Zeal we have been layering in positions in elite unhedged
gold stocks preparing for this event for many months. Our conservative HUI target for this
upleg based on bull-to-date behavior, not even factoring in the Stage Two
impact, is another 33% or so higher from today’s gold-stock prices. It will probably easily exceed our
expectations. It is not too late to
layer in great gold-stock positions for this upleg now, but it may soon be.
All of our current gold-stock and silver-stock trades, which
will thrive if the HUI surges to catch up with gold, are detailed in our
acclaimed monthly Zeal
Intelligence newsletter. Please
subscribe today before this
unsustainable divergence between elite gold stocks and gold closes and ends
this rare opportunity.
The bottom line is gold’s behavior is resembling early
Stage Two patterns more and more with each passing week. To see this metal
reach new bull-to-date highs the
same day the dollar reaches yearly highs is really extraordinary and quite
exciting. Gold is decoupling from
the dollar with increasing zeal and one of these months it is never going to
look back. It is trading on its own
fundamental merits, dollar be damned.
Despite all this gold bullishness, gold-stock investors
generally remain wary and worried, a perfect contrarian sign. Sooner or later gold stocks will have to
acknowledge gold’s unprecedented new strength and streak higher to catch
up.
Adam Hamilton, CPA
November 18, 2005
So how can you profit from this information? We publish an acclaimed monthly
newsletter, Zeal Intelligence,
that details exactly what we are doing in terms of actual stock and options
trading based on all the lessons we have learned in our market research. Please consider joining us each month
for tactical trading details and more in our premium Zeal Intelligence service
at … www.zealllc.com/subscribe.htm
Questions for Adam? I would be more than happy to
address them through my private consulting business. Please visit www.zealllc.com/financial.htm
for more information.
Thoughts, comments, or flames? Fire away at zelotes@zealllc.com. Due to my staggering and perpetually
increasing e-mail load, I regret that I am not able to respond to comments
personally. I will read all
messages though and really appreciate your feedback!
Copyright 2000 - 2005 Zeal Research (www.ZealLLC.com)
Return to top of page!
For more Commentaries go here!
|