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Gold crash on Fed tightening and euro salvation looks premature

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  • Gold crash on Fed tightening and euro salvation looks premature

    Gold crash on Fed tightening and euro salvation looks premature
    Until the rising reserve powers of Asia, Russia and the Gulf regain trust in the shattered credibility of the world’s two great fiat currencies - if they ever do - gold is unlikely to crash far or remain in the doldrums for long. `Peak gold’ cements the price floor in any case.
    Gold bars - China's demand for gold 'will double'
    Gold has risen sevenfold from its nadir below $260 in 2001. Photo: EPA
    Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

    By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

    9:00PM BST 08 Apr 2012

    CommentsComments

    It has been an unsettling experience for late-comers who joined the gold rush near all-time highs of $1923 an ounce last September. The slide has become deeply threatening since the US Federal Reserve took quantitative easing (QE3) off the table six weeks ago - or appeared to do so - and signalled the start of a new tightening cycle. Spot gold ended the pre-Easter week at $1636.

    “The game has changed,” says Dennis Gartman, apostle of the long rally who now scornfully tells gold bugs that he is just a “mercenary”, not a member of their cult. “They genuflect in gold’s direction; we merely acknowledge that it exists as a trading vehicle and nothing more. There are times to be bullish, and times to be bearish … to every season, as Ecclesiastes tells us.”

    Gold has risen sevenfold from its nadir below $260 in 2001, that Indian summer of American hegemony, when the 10-year US Treasury bond was the ultimate “risk-free” asset , and Gordon Brown ordered the Bank of England to auction half its metal.

    The stock markets of Europe, America, and Japan churned sideways over the same decade, and that precisely is the clinching argument against gold for contrarian traders. You avoid yesterday’s stars like the plague. “Gold is far too popular,” said James Paulsen from Wells Capital. It has reached a half-century high against a basket of indicators: equities, treasuries, homes, and workers’ pay.

    Each interim low in price has been lower, and chartists tell us that gold’s 100-day moving average has fallen through its 200-day average for the first time since March 2009. It is a variant of the `death’s cross’. Ugly indeed, though Ashraf Laidi from City Index said the more powerful monthly trend-line remains unbroken.

    Whether or not the global economy has really put the nightmare or 2008-2009 behind it and embarked on a durable cycle of growth is of course the elemental question. The answer depends on what you think caused the crisis in the first place.

    If you think, as I do, that the root cause was the deformed structure of globalization over the last twenty years - a $10 trillion reserve accumulation by China and the emerging powers, with an investment bubble in manufacturing to flood saturated markets in the West, disguised for a while by debt bubbles in the Anglo-sphere and Club Med -- then little has changed.

    In some respects it is now worse. China’s personal consumption has fallen to 37pc of GDP from 48pc a decade ago. The mercantilist powers (chiefly China and Germany) are still holding on to their trade surpluses through rigged currencies, the dirty dollar-peg and the dirty D-Mark peg (euro), exerting a contractionary bias on output in the deficit states - though China at least recognizes that this must change.

    There is still too much world supply, and too little demand, the curse of the inter-War years. That at least is the Weltanschauung of the pessimists. If correct, we face a globalized “Lost Decade”, a string of false dawns as each recovery runs into the headwinds of scarce demand, and debt leveraging grinds on.

    There are two implications to this: central banks will have to keep printing money for a long time, and the Asian surplus powers - as well as Russia and the Gulf states - will have to find somewhere to park their growing foreign reserves.

    “These countries don’t want other peoples’ paper promises any longer,” said Peter Hambro, chair of the Anglo-Russian miner Petrovalovsk. “There is no sign yet that we are returning to a well-balanced and normal financial system. The ECB is accepting bus tickets as collateral and the only way out of this debt and banking crisis will be inflation in the end.”

    Russia is raising the gold share of its reserves to 10pc, buying the dips with panache. China is coy, but Wikileaks cables reveal that Beijing is eyeing “large gold reserves” to back the internationalization of the renminbi.

    China’s declared gold reserves of 1,054 tonnes are tiny, though it may be accumulating on the sly. Sascha Opel from Orsus Consult expects Beijing to boost its holdings by “several thousand tonnes” over the next five years to match the US stash of 8,000 and the Euro zone’s 11,000.

    We do not know whether China’s central bank or wealth funds suffered a 75pc haircut on Greek bonds -- as Norway’s petroleum fund did -- but they are undoubtedly nursing large paper losses in other Club Med bonds, and the precedent for EMU sovereign default is now established. The Euro zone has become a danger zone. Rules are not upheld. Some bondholders are spared, while others are not.

    Last week’s jump in Spanish bond yields to 5.61pc - from 4.9pc a month ago - should puncture the illusions of those such as France’s Nicolas Sarkozy who think the EMU crisis has been solved. The stock line in Berlin, Brussels, and Paris is that premier Mariano Rajoy has needlessly stirred up trouble by refusing to abide by Spain’s original fiscal targets, but the contraction of the Spanish economy had made the targets meaningless. To adhere to such demands would have been criminal.

    As it is, Madrid is embarking on a further fiscal squeeze of 2.5pc of GDP this year, in the midst of deep recession, with unemployment already at 23.6pc and rising fast, and without offsetting monetary and exchange rate stimulus.

    Yes, markets are punishing Spain, not Europe’s politicians, but that is because bond vigilantes know that the European Central Bank will be very slow to rescue an EMU “rebel” with fresh bond purchases. Agile funds do not want to be left holding Spanish debt while the country is hung out to teach it a lesson.

    In the meantime, the real M1 deposits have contracted at a 10.9 annual rate over the last six months in the peripheral bloc of Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Ireland, a leading indicator of trouble later this year. “The rate of contraction has accelerated, not slowed,” said Simon Ward from Henderson Global Investors.

    As for the US, its economy in uncomfortably close to stall speed, and real M1 money has levelled out over the last four months. The underlying pace may not be much more than 1.5pc. The US Economic Cycle Research Institute (ECRI) is sticking to its recession call, describing the warning signals as “pronounced, persistent, and pervasive.”

    We will see what happens as markets prepare for the “massive fiscal cliff” at the end of the year - as Ben Bernanke called it - when stimulus wears off and a tax rises kick in automatically, and as the delayed effect of Brent crude at $125 feeds through.

    Fed hawks are making much noise, as they did in the Spring of 2008, but Goldman Sachs says they will be forced into QE3 whatever they now hope, probably in June. Hence its call that gold will rally to fresh highs of $1940 over the next year.

    Interest rates are falling in real terms as inflation creeps up, and that may be the biggest single driver of gold prices. “Even without QE3, the Fed is still ultra-accommodative and they are about to reverse this,” said James Steel, HSBC’s gold guru.

    Mr Steel said the “marginal cost” for mining gold is around $1450. That is when miners leave low-grade ore in the ground and weaker producers shut down. It creates a natural floor of sorts. Besides, `peak gold’ is a more immediate reality than `peak oil’, he said. There has been no equivalent to the shale revolution seen in oil and gas. World output has been stuck for a decade at around 2700 tonnes a year despite a fourfold increase in investment. There are no great finds, no Wittwatersrand this time.

    There will come a day then the bullion super-cycle finally sputters out. My guess is that it will come once Europe’s monetary system has returned to a viable footing - either by real fiscal union, or by break-up - and once China’s RMB becomes fully convertible and takes it place as the third pillar of the world’s currency system. We are not there yet.

  • #2
    Re: Gold crash on Fed tightening and euro salvation looks premature

    Pritchard is Mi6, i see Goldman also RAMPing Gold...........this worries me..........could a Gold back currancy be WAY off & a new FIAT SDR be almost here?
    Mike

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Gold crash on Fed tightening and euro salvation looks premature

      when GS starts 'ramping' anything its usually some kind of sign - oil in 2008, for instance, rare earths in 2010....
      the chorus from the bullhorn is getting louder? (altho EJ has just offered a worst case of 9% up from here to EOY, with 24% being best case)

      http://www.smartmoney.com/invest/str...1333986537035/

      • APRIL 9, 2012, 12:02 P.M. ET

      Gold Bugs May Get Squashed

      Hoenig: All signs suggest investors should end their love affair with the yellow metal.

      Originally posted by wsj/sm

      TRADECRAFT APRIL 9, 2012, 12:02 P.M. ET

      Gold Bugs May Get Squashed

      Hoenig: All signs suggest investors should end their love affair with the yellow metal.


      By JONATHAN HOENIG


      It's hard to imagine the public's view on precious metals back in the early 2000s, back when companies like Sun Microsystems, and InfoSpace (INSP)
      still dominated investor attention, oil traded at $30 a barrel and gold wasn't only unfollowed by most, but unknown altogether.

      Over the course of the following decade, the entire asset class transformed. Gold (and gold stocks) soared, turning a onetime investment backwater into the market's most sought after asset. Gold has now been up for 11 years in a row.

      With the strong returns came a wide proliferation of gold-following funds. Back in 2001, Central Fund of Canada (CEF)
      was about the only pure-play exchanged-traded means for stock investors to allocate to the yellow metal. Since then, innumerable new products have been launched, including funds like Asian Gold Trust (AGOL),
      which holds physical bars in Singapore and Power Shares DB Gold Double Long ETN (DGP)
      which offers a 2x levered bet.
      What also changed was the public's level of comfort, not to mention portfolio allocation, with commodities and other alternatives. The same investors who in 1999 questioned owning anything besides Cisco (CSCO)
      and Microsoft (MSFT)
      were, by 2010, allocating as much as 25% of their portfolios to gold. The changing political landscape: more regulations, taxes, spending and demands for sacrifice (not to mention a weaker dollar) have also given people more of a fundamental reason to hold.
      Physical gold satiates an emotional need just as much as a financial one, a nuance tapped by companies selling bullion who romance gold as "something you can hold in your hand."
      As we've pointed out over the years, gold's benefit as a portfolio diversification has ebbed. Recently, gold has tended to rise and fall along with stocks, acting like a risk asset itself rather than a hedge to them.
      As investors, we can't afford to play favorites or fall in love with any asset. Facts are facts, the reality of how market prices act always trumps how we think they should or hope they might act. Nothing is sacred.
      And in the past few days, even the metal's most ardent fans noticed that gold stocks have shown considerable weakness, with a slew of influential and widely owned names nipping new yearly lows.

      Take Barrick Gold (ABX),
      Eldorado Gold (EGO),
      Gold Fields Ltd. (GFI),
      AngloGold Ashanti (AU),
      and Newmont Mining (NEM),
      which are all at early to mid 2010 levels. IAMGOLD (IAG)
      trades where it did back in the summer of 2009.



      As represented by the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (ETF),
      gold stocks appear to be among the market's weakest, with the fund trading far below its 200-day-moving average, even amid a strong Q1 for risk. More telling is that the smaller, more speculative gold stocks are doing even worse. Market Vector Junior Gold Miners ETF (GDXJ),
      which follows, is down by nearly 50% in just the past year. Trading is, first and foremost observation. Look for gold stocks doing well right now and you'll find they're nearly impossible to find. Of course, companies are influenced by management and labor issues not impacting the metal itself.


      The longer-term correlation however is self-evident. For most of the past three years, gold stocks led the metal higher, a relationship that began to deteriorate last fall as stocks slipped.
      Now gold stocks at yearly lows, and even longtime fans of the metal should heed the objectively worrisome signs.
      dunno about that, some might say its time to buy, altho the rest of the stats these daze seem to be suggesting that the call for more QE is just ahead - even EJ has mentioned april perhaps being the month to call for a stocks short

      but one thing does stick out: nearly all the commodities are lower now than a year ago, EXCEPT for gold:

      http://online.wsj.com/mdc/public/pag...od=mdc_h_cmdhl
      Last edited by lektrode; April 09, 2012, 04:59 PM.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Gold crash on Fed tightening and euro salvation looks premature

        Originally posted by lektrode View Post
        when GS starts 'ramping' anything its usually some kind of sign - oil in 2008, for instance, rare earths in 2010....
        the chorus from the bullhorn is getting louder? (altho EJ has just offered a worst case of 9% up from here to EOY, with 24% being best case)

        http://www.smartmoney.com/invest/str...1333986537035/
        • APRIL 9, 2012, 12:02 P.M. ET
        Gold Bugs May Get Squashed

        Hoenig: All signs suggest investors should end their love affair with the yellow metal.

        dunno about that, some might say its time to buy, altho the rest of the stats these daze seem to be suggesting that the call for more QE is just ahead - even EJ has mentioned april perhaps being the month to call for a stocks short

        but one thing does stick out: nearly all the commodities are lower now than a year ago, EXCEPT for gold:

        http://online.wsj.com/mdc/public/pag...od=mdc_h_cmdhl
        hoenig's track record?

        jan 2011...
        JONATHAN HOENIG:
        Gold is fading a little bit this year but the rare earth phenomena is heating up. Mitsui (MITSY) I mentioned last October, it's up a little since then. The stock is starting to shine here. Not a $2 stock. It's $300 stock but it's going higher.


        Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/on-air/cost-o...#ixzz1raKnricn

        MITSY $340 jan 8... now $314... hoenig the stock pickin wizard!



        hoenig likes gold for the wrong reasons... says 'sell' for the wrong reasons...

        all signs are hoenig's 1 in 9000 gold nitwits.

        every friggin year... every friggin dip... for 11 yrs... 'gold bugs to get squashed...'

        vs itulip sep 2001...



        itulip oct 2006...



        itulip apr 2009...



        itulip feb 2012...



        wake me up when a fox talker with 2 brain cells starts talking about gold.... zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Gold crash on Fed tightening and euro salvation looks premature

          Originally posted by metalman View Post
          hoenig's track record?
          ....
          wake me up when a fox talker with 2 brain cells starts talking about gold.... zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.
          just makin sure you was payin attention, mr MM
          always like to run this sort of item past the braintrust when eye finds em.

          Comment

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