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The latest run-up in gold's secular bull market has reaches 7-month highs
of $947/oz, triggered by an initial decline in the US dollar following a disappointing
Tuesday market reception of the US Financial Stability Plan. Remarkably, however,
gold shifted to the next gear despite a rebound in the US currency or the decline
in oil prices, underscoring the metals improving allure as a yield replacement
during interest rate-eroding policies in the industrialized world.
The high profile divergence between gold and oil is a stark reminder
that inflation is not the only pre-condition for a surge in the metal. The
gold-oil ratio reached a 10-year high of 25 as the global recession erodes
demand for energy commodities and investors abandon monetary assets in favour
of the safe haven metal. Before assessing the market implications of the surge
in the gold-oil ratio, lets recall
the September 18 piece warning that the recovery in the ratio from its
July record low augured negatively for U.S growth in particular and the world
economy in general. The rationale was based on the notion that multi-year lows
in the G.O. ratio reflected soaring energy prices, which were instrumental
in bringing the world economy to a standstill. The rebound in the G.O. ratio
ensued as financial markets unwound gold longs and central banks reverted to
interest rate cuts.

Now that global central banks are flirting with zero interest rates and the
world economy in contraction mode, the ratio faces no prospects of a pullback
any time soon. Only a decline of at least 20-25% in the G.O. ratio would signal
the markets pricing of a recovery (pace of oil rebound outpaces that of gold).
The above chart serves as a helpful historical guide indicating pullbacks in
the G.O. ratio (white graph) generally coincided with stabilization in the
US economy, while rebounds in the ratio preceded a broadening slowdown. Particularly
positive for gold is that a pullback in the G.O. ratio may not necessarily
occur at the expense of the metal, but rather, a recovery in oil relative to
gold. This was seen in 2002 and 2004, when the decline in the ratio emerged
mainly on a faster increase in oil than in gold, and not on a decline in oil.
Thus, any economic recovery strong enough to support energy demand is likely
to boost gold on industrial demand for metals and investor interest in gold
funds.

The speculative element to golds surge is reflected in the 138% increase
attained by speculative net longs in gold futures to a 9-month high of 155,306
contracts (see above chart). Speculative longs as a percentage of total open
interest reached 52%, the highest since July, suggesting further upside remains
ahead. Interestingly, the record high in golds net speculative longs
was reached in December 2007, three months before the metal hit its all time
highs. The 3-month lag between golds net longs and multi-year highs also took
place in 2006. Thus, even if speculative net longs regain record territory
above 200K contracts, prices may have at least 2-3 months of upward momentum. The
prospects for $1,200-1,300 gold by end of Q3 remain underpinned by a set of
cogent fundamental variables involving currencies, interest rates and the global
economy. Meanwhile, even as the divergence between gold and oil begins to fade,
any oil-friendly dynamics are seen positive for gold's luster.
For more detailed analysis on the market and economic implications of the
gold-oil ratio, go to Chapter 6
of my book Currency Trading & Intermarket Analysis.
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Ashraf Laidi
CMC Markets
AshrafLaidi.com
Ashraf
Laidi is Chief FX Strategist at CMC Markets and author of "Currency Trading
and Intermarket Analysis: How to Profit from the Shifting Currents in Global
Markets" Wiley Trading.
This publication is intended to be used for information
purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. CMC Markets (US) LLC
is registered as a Futures Commission Merchant with the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission and is a member of the National Futures Association.
Copyright © 2006-2010 Ashraf Laidi
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