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I've heard more than a few pundits question an investment in gold or gold
stocks in the current environment. They point to deflation and the lack of
inflation in the foreseeable future as reasons why precious metals should be
avoided. Sounds intelligent on the surface but it reveals to this analyst,
a lack of any thought and analysis.
We must remember that success in trading and investing often requires a counterintuitive
approach. The markets often go the opposite way they should. Here are a few
examples. Gold was in a bear market for 20 years despite what can be called
a credit hyperinflation in the United States. Gold has performed spectacularly
this decade in the absence of the kind of price inflation we saw in the 1970s.
Treasuries have risen this decade along with Gold, Oil and Commodities. When
has that happened in history?
Now back to precious metals. The main idea for investing in this sector is
to protect your purchasing power or protect against inflation. So it makes
sense to buy the sector during an inflationary period. Right? A look at history
combined with some common sense analysis reveals that precious metals and the
producing companies outperform during deflationary periods and in advance of
an inflation cycle.
Let's look at the 1930s and 1940s. The Great Depression initially was a deflationary
event but it concluded in inflation. Using the calculator from inflationdata.com,
I calculated the change in prices in the 1930s and 1940s. In the 1930s, prices
fell 18%, while they rose 70% in the 1940s. But what happened in the markets?

Which gold bug hasn't seen this chart of Homestake Mining, from http://www.gold-eagle.com.
If I remember correctly, its bull market lasted from 1921 to 1937. The stock
made a lower low in the early 1940s and wouldn't surpass its Great Depression
peak until the 1960s. The stock performed especially well from 1931 to 1934,
during the later stages of deflation and initial stages of inflation.

This is a chart of the Barrons Gold Mining Index, dating back to 1939. Thanks
to http://www.bgmi.us. The rectangle shows
1940 to 1950. There was deflation in the 1930s and huge inflation in the 1940s.
Yet the gold stocks performed far worse in the 1940s.

It was the commodity sector that prospered most during the inflation of the
1940s. The rectangle shows 1933 to 1951. Chart from TopLine Investment Graphics: http://www.topline-charts.com/.
The reality is that the precious metals complex outperforms AHEAD of reinflation,
while the rest of the commodity sector outperforms DURING the ensuing inflation.
Gold stocks perform best when their margins are expanding. That can happen
when the price of Gold stays flat and cost inputs (oil, steel, labor) fall.
It can happen when gold rises and rises faster than cost inputs. When inflation
begins to take hold, the precious metals complex has already anticipated it.
Inflation raises the cost of everything. As the cost of steel, oil and labor
rise, it hurts the profit margins of gold producers. Hence, gold companies
outperformed during the deflation and early reinflation of the 1930s, but underperformed
during the inflation of the 1940s.
How did the gold stocks do in the 1970s? The aforementioned BGMI index, rose
from a bottom of less than 100 to a peak of about 1300. Let's call it a 14-bagger.
Outstanding right? Well, consider that the price of Gold rose from $35/oz to
as high as $888/oz. That is a 25-bagger! Gold stocks unperformed Gold despite
a rising gold price. Why? Because of rising commodity prices and rising inflation,
gold companies didn't benefit as much as you'd expect. In relative terms, gold
stocks were better performers in the 1960s. The BGMI rose very nicely, while
the price of gold remained fixed.
In the early 2000s, there was a fear of deflation. As you can see from the
chart below, from 2001-2003 gold stocks strongly outperformed gold as well
as commodity stocks. Gold bottomed before the rest of the commodity sector
and advanced before inflation began to take hold. As inflation began to take
hold, the gold stocks underperformed both gold and commodity stocks and even
while the price of gold rose from $600 to over $1,000.

Conclusion
It appears the consensus is wrong on both counts. One side says there is no
inflation on the horizon, so the precious metals sector isn't an appropriate
investment. The other side says that there will be hyperinflation, so buy gold.
Hyperinflation may be good for physical gold but it is deleterious to everything
else including society and the political structure. The reality is that the
current macroeconomic environment is most advantageous for gold stocks and
then gold. However, if and when inflation begins to take root the precious
metals complex will underperform and your funds will best be utilized elsewhere.
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Good Luck!
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