Friday, May 27, 2011

Visions Of A Mad Gold Stock Speculator

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A series of long-term charts suggests to me that we are getting ready for a Gold stock explosion higher that should begin before the summer is over. I am biased due to being rabidly bullish on Gold stocks right now, both intellectually and financially. Please take the following technical analysis smorgasbord with a grain of salt given my greedy dreams of speculative riches, which clearly bias my perspective.

Technical analysis should be objective, but the reality is that one person's bullish chart is another's bearish warning chart. This is what makes markets and why it ain't always easy to make money as a trader. In any case, I believe we are on the cusp of a major move higher in Gold stocks as a sector.

I think the bottom in Gold stocks will roughly correspond with a cyclical top in general stock market indices, a la 2001-2003, 2007-early 2008 and 1973-1974. Many Gold stock investors equate general equity bear markets with Gold stocks getting slammed due to the 2008 fall crash fiasco that dragged down everything except the U.S. Dollar. Funny how memories are not only selective but also favor recent history over older history.

One thing is clear: when the stock market drops precipitously over a short period of time, babies get thrown out with the bathwater. But even the October, 2007 thru March, 2009 bear market saw Gold stocks advance significantly during more than half of this bear market period (i.e. October, 2007 thru March 2008 and October, 2008 thru March, 2009). Because bear markets make people nervous and because no one can say if the "wicked" part of the bear market will come up front or not, it takes nerves of steel to be a Gold stock bull when you are anticipating a general stock market cyclical bear.

However, I am suggesting that it is time to do precisely this. I would favor a deflationary-type bear market over an inflationary-type bear market, but I don't claim to know for certain. There is no reason the U.S. Dollar can't rally here against other worthless currencies, as all currencies are sinking relative to Gold (and silver). The paperbug game is to focus on the individual currencies and deliberate about whether a total overall government debt to GDP ratio of 200% versus an annual fiscal deficit of 10% of GDP is more important. I call a deadbeat a deadbeat and keep my savings in physical Gold, the only hard currency that can't be effectively issued by decree. It is for this reason that the GLD ETF is not a "safe" savings vehicle, but rather a short-term speculative vehicle, as it is designed to divert money from the physical Gold market and allow the paper game to continue for longer than it should.

I have been a hard-core bear on general equities over the past 2 years. I have been very, very wrong. But, there is a limit to what a bear market rally within the context of a secular equity bear market can achieve. We are fast approaching that limit. Now, I no longer think I know exactly when that top will occur, but I don't think we make it to the end of the year before the bear market begins. The topping process may take another few weeks or another few months. In the end, I don't really care.

The reason I don't care is because I think Gold stocks are going to rocket higher and more money can be made going long Gold stocks than going short the market, at least for the first 6 months or more of the looming cyclical stock bear market. And, as any seasoned Gold stock investor should know, Gold stocks can move awful fast - a gain of 100% or more in the Gold stock sector in 6 months is not a pie-in-the-sky proposition.

Anyhoo, onto my tea leaf tools. Here are some charts that I think are screaming for bulls to buy on the next dip. The last dip was a great buying opportunity and the next low may or may not be a lower low, but I think we'll get another significant pull-back in general Gold stock indices.

Here's a chart that compares the HUI Gold Bugs' Index ($HUI) to the Dow Jones Industrial Average ($INDU) Index (i.e. an $HUI:$INDU ratio chart) over the past 12 years thru Friday's close:



And I can't seem to do an analysis of the Gold sector without some form of Dow to Gold ratio chart. Here's a 12 year chart of the Gold to Dow Jones ratio chart thru Friday's close (i.e. a $GOLD:$INDU ratio chart):



And why does the Gold to Dow Jones ratio matter when it comes to Gold stocks? Well, let's look at the entire history of the current secular Gold bull market that began at the turn of the century. Here's the same Gold to Dow ratio chart (i.e. $GOLD:$INDU ratio chart, the candlestick plot) plotted along with the $HUI Gold Bugs Index (black straight line) on the same chart over the past 12 years:



And finally, the concept of the "real" price of Gold. I learned this concept from Bob Hoye and I think it is key to understanding Gold miner profitability. Profits eventually should be reflected in stock prices, though many Gold mining companies seem to do whatever is in their power to make sure this isn't the case... (e.g., share dilution, political struggles, Gold price hedging, etc.). When viewing Gold stocks as an overall sector, however, the real price of Gold is important and I use the Gold price divided by the $CCI or $CRB commodity indices. Because energy is an important cost to mining firms, the heavy oil weighting in the $CRB index may actually be a good thing. In any case, here is the $GOLD:$CRB ratio chart over the past 12 years:



I think Gold and Gold stocks could top on a short-term basis in the next week or so, then decline to a potential final low in June. Summer is rarely an exciting time for the Gold sector, but buying when things are quiet is often a way to reap rewards once the fall hits. We could have a summer spike lower like we did in August of 2007 or things could simply drift quietly lower in the Gold sector. In any case, we are getting to the point where the Gold bull market is going to outshine every other market. If it's a deflationary bear market with the US Dollar rallying, which I would favor, the Gold patch will be the only place to be. If it's an inflationary bear market with the US Dollar crashing, then silver will likely outperform Gold again. I don't claim to know for sure, as trying to pick the prettiest paper currency troll is not an interest of mine. Gold will win the Clash of the Titans battle in the currency arena, of this I am certain.

Stay long in physical Gold until the Dow to Gold ratio gets to 2, and we may get below 1 before this secular economic mess is over. Gold stocks are for the speculatively inclined, not the faint of heart. However, I believe this summer is a speculative buying opportunity in the Gold patch that will looked back upon as a "duh, of course I should have bought"-type opportunity. This mad Gold stock speculator couldn't have a more rosy view of the future, but only when the future is priced in Gold.


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Saturday, May 14, 2011

Bullish Thoughts on Precious Metals

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An intermediate-term play in the precious metals may be at hand. I like the chart of the $HUI here quite a bit. Here is a log scale chart of the $HUI mining index since 2001 in a log scale format:





I also like what is going on in terms of the ratio chart between the GDX mining ETF and the Gold price (i.e. GDX:$GOLD ratio chart):





The U.S. Dollar Index chart ($USD) also suggests to me the possibility of a significant bottom in the precious metals sector in June. Here's a chart of the $USD over the past 8 years with my thoughts:





The key in my opinion will be to watch how Gold stocks react. I think they will rally next week because they are so oversold. This would tie-in well with a drop in the US Dollar. Then, if the Dollar rallies again for 1-3 weeks in a second up leg to complete a simple short term A-B-C correction in its bear market, which would help to reset sentiment in the Dollar's favor, Gold and silver should drop again to lower lows. If the major Gold stock indices fail to make a lower low along with the Gold price, this would be a powerful signal in my opinion that we won't have to wait until the fall for further bullish fireworks in the precious metals sector. If Gold stocks instead do make a significantly lower low along with Gold in this proposed scenario, then a longer-term correction is likely in store and the summer may be rather boring/choppy.

Just my 2 cents and it's all a guess of course. In the longer term, this is all just noise on the way to a Dow to Gold ratio of 2 or less.


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Sunday, May 8, 2011

Industrial Metals to Gold Ratio - A Warning?

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I like ratio charts to give a sense of relative value. This is important to me because we live in an anchorless fiat world where price is not meaningful in a vacuum. Gold is the global monetary anchor, whether paperbugs care to understand/believe it or not. I have always liked the copper to Gold ratio but other industrial metals in their ratio to Gold can give similar information. I find the current chart of the $GYX (an industrial metals index) when priced in Gold (i.e. a $GYX:$GOLD ratio chart) rather interesting.

Here is a log scale ratio price chart of $GYX:$GOLD since 2003:



The last major trend line break was a warning signal for the end of the last cyclical general equity bull market. Will history repeat? I believe it will but I have no interest in shorting the stock market at this time. I may after a confirmed major trend line break in general equity indices and a subsequent relief rally higher, but not now.

Pricing things in Gold is an important concept for those who hold physical metal. It is shocking to see how much the Dow Jones and housing prices have declined in Gold terms since their peak. The nominal declines are much less severe. This is why printing is the best way out for governments around the world. It worked in the 1970s and it might just work again. The problem for the U.S. is that its problems are much bigger this time around than in the 1970s, so that the amount of monetary inflation needed to combat the ongoing economic problems is much greater.

If the Dow Jones Industrial Average is at the 10,000 level in 10 years but a loaf of bread costs $15 at that time, many people will be fooled into thinking things aren't that bad. The boiling frog analogy is apropos here. Private debt is being extinguished by putting it on the public books! This is high treason right in front of our eyes, but it will continue. Consider Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac needing $259 billion from taxpayers to bail them out. Now this $259 billion is a current number and it will go higher before the real estate bust is over - count on it since the government now backs 85% or so of all mortgages in the United States.

When you transfer all that bad debt to the government balance sheet, you weaken the currency. U.S. Dollar-centric deflationists assume that the laws will be followed and that what is reasonable and appropriate will be at least a minor consideration. These assumptions are erroneous, as recent policy decisions and policymaker law breaking have shown. What if almost all the bad debt created and/or held by "the friends of Angelo" [i.e. Angelo Mozillo of Countrywide], by which I mean to sarcastically refer to the major financial corporations of America, is placed on the government balance sheet?

Gold is a buy at current levels. The current monetary system will be replaced before this secular equities bear market is over, whether in 5 years or 15. The best way for the average person to protect their financial wealth is to buy and hold physical Gold outside the banking system. Other precious metals should also do well and may do even better, but they carry a higher risk. The longer the chaotic policy response to unavoidable economic outcomes continues, the higher the chance that the Dow to Gold ratio will fall below 1 this cycle and the higher the likelihood that this ratio will bottom with Gold in 5 digit territory.


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Monday, May 2, 2011

Why Do You Need a Non-Leveraged Core Position in Precious Metals?

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The answer to this rhetorical question is found in the market manipulation seen last night in silver. Those in the paper pits using leverage and short-term instruments to play the metals game can get wiped out in a flash. Trust me, I've got first hand experience. Read this post by Dave In Denver at the Golden Truth to get the gist of the most recent blatant "take down" in silver during thin overnight electronic market trading while many overseas markets were closed.

This is not tin foil hat conspiracy, this is how the casino works. The house has to always win, on balance. And when they don't, the government steps in and bails the house out with your purchasing power. It's sick and it's wrong and yet it's how the world works (and has for centuries). And no, it's not limited to the precious metals markets, but these are politically important to the status quo. "Gold is the enemy," at least according to Paul Volker and Alan Greenspan back before he became an integral part of the machine.

The point is that no one can shake that physical metal out of your hands by playing tricks with the paper price. I am not saying don't engage in trading (now THAT would be a case of the pot calling the kettle black!). Many of us are speculators because we live in a fiat world gone mad and there are few options left to protect purchasing power in this environment. Speculation always runs rampant in societies caught in the throes of a dying fiat currency. The decline of the American Empire is not unique or even special in this regard. Excessive debt associated with military imperialism - nothing new in that recipe! Does anyone actually believe that we will now reduce the number of troops in Afghanistan now that we have supposedly killed the Mythical Boogeyman? At least I think Osama bin Laden was the reason we started an undeclared war in Afghanistan (in true Orwellian fashion, it's getting harder and harder to remember exactly why Eurasia went to war with Oceania).

Anyhoo, make sure you have a solid core position in physical metal before you start throwing chips onto the electronic trading casino table. My metal of choice is Gold, but I own a little silver and I respect those who prefer silver, platinum and/or palladium. To me, Gold is the no-brainer, safe investment for the next several years. It has lower risk than other precious metals, but this means it has a lower potential reward. For most mortals, holding physical metal will yield greater gains than speculating on short-term price fluctuations in metals or metal stocks. Much like Las Vegas, the stories of those few who won big keep the moths coming back to the flame (including this not-humble-enough moth).

A series of significant margin hikes in silver coupled with an intentional smack down in its price during thin trading turned lucrative profits into margin calls for several retail traders last night. Wash. Rinse. Repeat. Don't play with dynamite unless you're ready to get blown up.

In the long run, last night's shenanigans will be nothing but a nearly imperceptible blip on a long-term chart of the bull market in silver. Those who got burned will look back and curse themselves for being so aggressive at such an overextended price point. Like the tortoise and the hare, 95% of the speculators (the hares) will be surpassed by physical metal owners (the tortoises) who are happy to just ride the bull at its own pace. And those who own paper metal as their core holding are also playing with a form of fire, as the rules of ETFs and ETNs are subject to change without notice and their counter party risk is increasing exponentially as this secular general equity and real estate bear market for the ages continues to grind onwards.

I still play poker with the sharks using a portion of my savings, but with a jaundiced eye and an itchy trigger finger that has learned to take losses quickly. I now watch the paper shenanigans with a mix of amusement and sadness. As a [temporary?] Goldbug, I know I have to be careful what I wish for in this environment. There are no easy ways out of the mess America and other "advanced" economies have created for themselves. Life will go on and people will survive, thrive and have fun in the mean time. Doomsday scenarios have no place in a serious investor's vision of the future, as investing is a waste of time if the "end" is near. I'm all for survival skills and being prepared for temporary chaos, but this to me is not investing (i.e. not really a financial topic).

Own physical metal if you are interested in the precious metals space. Once you have accumulated a comfortable "nest egg" in physical metal, whatever that means to you, then go ahead and speculate if that's your thing - whether it be via leverage, short-term paper trading and/or dabbling in junior metals stocks. There is plenty of money left to be made in the current secular Gold bull market, which promises to be one for the ages. Don't be the hog that gets slaughtered when it's so risk-free to be the bull that makes money.

Having said all this, I'm buying the freakin' dip tomorrow if silver goes down any further using the AGQ double bull paper silver ETF in my speculative account for a short-term trade...

;]

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Sunday, May 1, 2011

Gold - Jumping the Track Or Reaching a Routine Target?


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When looking at longer time frames using technical analysis/charting, it is often appropriate to use a log scale price chart versus using a linear scale price chart for shorter-term time frames. But at what exact time frame should you switch from a log scale chart to a linear scale chart and what are the exceptions? Well, the answer is that we are dealing with art as much as science when using technical analysis.

But while doing my weekly exercise in charting the Gold universe, I found an interesting discrepancy in the Gold chart between its current price level and its prior speculative price peaks earlier in the secular Gold bull market. As an aside, the secular Gold bull market is far from over, so these are only short-term considerations. However, these charting issues could have quite profitable short-term implications for those riding the Golden bull.

Without further ado, here are the charts that have me intrigued. First, a log scale chart over the last 7 years of this Gold secular bull market ($GOLD) thru Friday's close:



Great news and it means we have plenty of upside potential left for the current Gold run. However, the linear scale chart over the same 7 year period demonstrates an interesting and slightly different trend line situation:



So, which chart is correct? Are we heading to a routine price target or jumping the shark and entering a more aggressive phase of the Gold bull market? The answer, I believe, is the latter. I base this partly on the recent action in silver, which has far outperformed Gold over the past year. Here is the linear scale chart of silver ($SILVER) over the same past seven years:



Obviously, silver is in a new linear trend, but it presumably would stop at it's log scale trend line - or would it? Here's the log scale chart of silver over the past 7 years:



The "hot" money has made a boatload of cash in silver and there's likely still more to be made in this intermediate term run for the white metal. However, rotation of speculative money into Gold has likely begun and things could be just starting to heat up. As Sinclair has been saying, $1650 is in the bag for this run. However, could we also be looking at jumping the log scale trend line on this move like silver has done?

It certainly feels like the right time during this bull market in Gold for the transition to begin. The log scale trend line in Gold is likely to result in short-term profit taking as the linear scale trend line did in silver. However, I think it would be just another buying opportunity if it happened.

When the Dow to Gold ratio gets below 2, then I might consider starting to look around for other investment opportunities and selling some physical Gold. When I do sell some Gold, it will likely be in order to buy Gold stocks with the proceeds, which will likely peak after the Dow to Gold ratio bottoms (as they did in the previous two cycle nadirs in the Dow to Gold ratio). Until then, I'm just going to keep enjoying the ride in Gold.


Buy gold online - quickly, safely and at low prices

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Saturday, April 23, 2011

Japan versus USA: Same Depression with a Lag


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Charts speak more eloquently than I can and they speak a brutal truth. Perhaps it is my scientific background or perhaps I appreciate the art that can be found in price charts. In either case, I prefer the message of charts to CNBC blowhards and other so-called experts.

Anyone who currently has excess savings they want to invest is in the minority of the world's population. They are also likely "rich" and "evil" according to populist sentiment. In any case, these aren't the best of times for advanced/Western economies.

We are currently in the midst of an unmistakable secular bear market for general equities in the United States. Such bear markets don't end with the current obscene valuations and they don't end because government saves the day. If it were only true, writing everyone a check for $700 billion dollars (i.e. treating everyone like a Wall Street bank) would bring endless prosperity and create an endless bull market.

The piper waits patiently, knowing that he will be paid. Currency debasement and allowing survival of the most unfit is not the way to restore a secular bull market. Ask Japan how QE1, QE2, and QE3 helped their stock market for the long haul.

Speaking of Japan, do you realize that we are on a similar course when stock markets are priced in Gold? I am not saying deflation or inflation, I am saying "priced in Gold." Only Gold bulls are used to such pricing strategies, but it is time for reality to intrude on the paperbug world.

Whatever monetary chaos we are in store for, Gold will outperform stocks over the next several years. This is open for debate in my mind as much as the question of whether fiat money will retain its value over the next decade is open for debate. Believe what you will.

But notice the "phase shift" chart message between Japan and the USA shown below. The chart is a monthly log scale chart of the Nikkei stock index ($NIKK, the main Japanese stock index) divided by the price of Gold ($NIKK:$GOLD), shown in a black and red candlestick format, versus the Dow to Gold ratio ($INDU:$GOLD), shown in a black line format:



Same chart with a phase shift, no? The corrections in this ratio lasted longer for Japan because they entered their secular depression when everyone else's economy was booming. We don't have that luxury, so our corrections in the Dow to Gold ratio have been shorter. We are about to begin the biggest leg down in this ratio since the "secular bear market" in this ratio began in 1999. This is not a drill and this is not a call for the end of the world. Be careful out there if you're not in the precious metals sector.

Buy gold online - quickly, safely and at low prices

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Thursday, April 14, 2011

The End of the Road



For kicking the can down the relative road, that is. The Dow to Gold ratio is getting set to expose the insanity and reward those willing and able to fade the "don't worry, be happy" herd. I am not necessarily talking about nominal wealth, although that seems the most likely path, but rather relative wealth. When you live in a world with Monopoly money, nominal gains aren't always what they're cracked up to be. If the Dow hits 20,000 and gasoline is $10/gallon (as it is approaching in Europe), the herd will be poorer and not necessarily understand why. But you, dear sir or madam, are hopefully a precious metals investor and not a paperbug.

What I am speaking of is becoming richer in stock, bond and real estate terms. In other words, the scoreboard proffered by CNBC and generally preferred by "old" money. The best thing about thinking in this manner is that your investments will prosper in spite of (and partially because of) the ridiculous whims of the apparatchiks, who are only following the script laid out for them by previous empires in decline. You also can ignore the inflation versus deflation debate if you think in relative terms, as Gold will thrive in any of the potential chaotic monetary situations that develop. Those expecting the end of the world and total economic collapse are likely to remain frustrated. After all, did Icelanders starve to death once the bankstaz cut them off (or was it the other way around?) and their markets and currency were shunned?

I cannot speak adequately to those in the Gold and silver crowd looking for the end of the world, as I am too optimistic to concern myself with such scenarios. After all, who gives a shit about investing if we are all doomed? In the 1930s and 1970s, did guns and a log cabin work better or did investing in Gold and Gold stocks and staying nimble? To me, it is just the swinging pendulum of history. And forgive me for not mentioning silver enough in the past, as I am one of the ones who misjudged silver's massive intermediate-term potential. Oops...

Anyhoo, the topic currently is the Dow to Gold ratio and the pending disaster in this ratio for the Wall Street crowd. Of course, Soros, Paulson and other smarter sharks are already positioned for the move and waiting patiently for the Western herd to wake up (the Eastern herds have been awake for some time). The average money manager, on the other hand, is not prepared for the storm about to strike in the Dow to Gold ratio, which will soon become a fairly mainstream concept and a self-fulfilling prophecy. The question is not "will we really reach 2 in this ratio?" but rather will we potentially hit 1 or even less than one in this ratio?

I love charts and their messages, as I trust them more than the words of the latest guru (present company excluded, as I love to hear myself talk...). Without further ado, here is the most important secular chart I know of for those who have the capacity for independent thought and who understand the concept of relative wealth. Following is a 41 year monthly chart of the Dow to Gold ratio using a log scale:



Becoming 4 to 8 times wealthier in terms of the amount of common stocks you can buy at a time when common equities are likely to finally be cheap and provide a decent dividend yield is a massive shift in relative wealth for the average person. In other words, it is far from too late to join the precious metals party. Also, please remember that Gold stocks have made some of their largest intermediate term gains AFTER the Dow to Gold ratio has bottomed in the previous two cycles (i.e. the 1930s and 1970s)!

This is not a get rich quick scheme. This is a get rich in relative terms scheme that may take a few years to play out. Secular equity bear markets, which correspond with a falling Dow to Gold ratio, usually take less time than the bull markets that precede them, but Japan's miracle 1980s decade has yielded two decades of bear market so far and their massive equity bear market ain't over yet. I think 5 years is the maximum time it will take to realize the completion of the current secular bull market in Gold and nadir in the Dow to Gold ratio. However, I do not know the future any more than you do (though I must like to think so enough to bore you with my opinions).

Good luck out there. Hold onto your precious metals investments. We will likely see a summer correction after some further bullish spring fireworks in the sector dedicated to things shiny and precious, but these are shorter term considerations and predictions in this time frame are even more unreliable than longer term predictions, as I have discovered the hard way. I remain long via physical Gold (and a little silver) and GDXJ ETF long-term LEAP option calls that expire in January 2013. I think I may start posting again sporadically on my blog. If you have the interest, stop by and let me know you're out there reading.

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Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Scaling In and Signing Off



Scaled into long-term, near-the-money GDXJ calls with an expiration date of 2013 heavily today.

I am signing off on the blog. 600 posts over a little more than 2 years - a lifetime in internet terms. I am lacking inspiration for new ways to say "buy Gold and Gold stocks and avoid general stocks, real estate and fiat currencies." Since my short term timing has been terrible over the past year, there is little point in potentially misleading others out there with an interest in precious metals. Buy the dips in shiny things and buy the dips in the companies that dig shiny things out of the ground.

I wish all speculators and investors good luck in trying to maintain the purchasing power of their savings.

If I feel I have something useful to say, I will attempt to publish it on the "standard" alternative investing sites (e.g., financialsense, safehaven, goldseek).

The Dow to Gold ratio will reach 2 and may well get below 1 this cycle. The mania phase of this current secular precious metals bull market is ahead of us and the naysayers ain't seen nuthin' yet. If the unconstitutional, non-federal, for profit, private federal reserve and our gubbamint insist on inflating their way out of this mess, 5 digit Gold is not at all an unreasonable proposition.

Best of luck!


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Sunday, October 31, 2010

GDXJ Now Offers Long-Term LEAP Options



As if recent price action in the Gold price wasn't enough, there is now a tantalizing play on the Gold miners available for speculators in the junior Gold patch. Long term options (LEAPS) on the GDXJ ETF that expire in January of 2012 and January of 2013 are now available.

I remain a patient watcher of the Gold market and am still largely on the sidelines when it comes to Gold miners. On the next decent spike down in Gold stocks, however, I will be loading the boat with 2013 LEAP option calls on GDXJ. What's holding me back right now is the chart of the ratio of Gold to Gold stocks (using $HUI:$GOLD as a proxy) and what I believe is a short-term bottom forming in the U.S. Dollar. Here's a 10.5 year chart of the $HUI:$GOLD ratio thru Friday's close:



I think we are in correction mode in the Gold patch, just what's needed to cool the sector off a little. I think the next thrust up is going to be big in the Gold patch and I think Gold stocks are going to outperform. I am hoping a good opportunity to buy Gold stocks and more physical Gold presents itself before the year is over. I remain bearish on general stocks/the stock market, but am eagerly anticipating putting every penny of my speculative trading money into 2013 expiration bullish call options on GDXJ. I will be sure to post when I start buying.

Due to some new interests that will keep me busy for a while, posting will remain sporadic. I remain a rabid Gold bull for the long term. The Dow to Gold ratio will reach 2 (and may well go below 1) before the current secular Gold bull market is over.



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Wednesday, October 6, 2010

What Could Possibly Go Wrong?


One chart says it all (chart stolen from Market Harmonics):



There is no need for me to cheerlead in Gold, as everyone thinks this time is different and Gold is going straight to $2,000/oz. here. Perhaps it will. Wouldn't bother me a bit. Perhaps the stock market is going to new highs (that would bother me...). Perhaps hyperinflation has already begun but for the first time in history it is starting with bond yields at record secular lows. Perhaps Wall Street and Ber-spank-me can make stocks go up forever and at will.

Perhaps.

But perhaps this time isn't different. And perhaps the market is about to collapse. And perhaps the Dollar is about to stage a massive counter-trend rally that no one expects, just like in the spring of 2008 when everyone knew the dollar was going straight to zero.

I think we are set up for a 1937-style Dow / stock market collapse (chart stolen from sharelynx):



Everyone who though Ber-spank-me and widdle Timmy Geithner and the government would prop up markets forever in 2007 and 2008 now believes they are going to have better success this time around.

I own Gold because I believe we are in a deflationary depression and Kondratieff Winter. When apparatchiks try to "print" their way out (as they always do throughout history), the money simply makes it way into Gold, as there are no good macro-economic opportunities available to use all the money productively. There is always monetary inflation, but at this stage of the cycle, only Gold and Gold miners are poised to benefit from it. Though the rallies in risk assets have been fast, furious and at times relentless, another crash will make everyone remember where we are in the economic cycle. I'm just another guy with an opinion who isn't try to sell you anything, but I think we're set up for another massive market dislocation. Be careful out there.



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