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The Federal Reserve shocked the markets this week by taking new dramatic actions
to end the recession. They announced they'll be buying more than $1 trillion
in U.S. Treasury bonds and mortgage backed securities guaranteed by Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac. This means the Fed will be creating even more money to
buy this debt, and that immediately affected all of the markets.
The U.S. dollar plunged, falling the most against the euro in nearly nine
years. This was due to concerns that these actions will fuel inflation and
devalue the dollar. As a result, gold rose strongly. Stocks surged too, continuing
the rise that started last week, as interest rates fell.
Overall, this looks like the trigger that'll drive the rebound rises we've
been anticipating in these oversold markets.
HERE'S WHAT WE'RE WATCHING...
If
there was ever a doubt that gold's bull market is forming an
eight year low, it's gone now. The Fed's action guarantees that gold has much
further to rise in the years ahead. So far, gold's four week intermediate decline
we call B has been moderate, but it'll remain underway if June gold again declines
below $953. Gold will stay firm above $880. Keep in mind, gold has been much
stronger than most markets over the last several months, which means the other
markets are poised to outperform gold for the time being.
Gold shares jumped up with the stock market, and if the stock market
continues to rise as we suspect, it will give gold shares an extra boost (see Chart
1). The XAU index is strong above 120, and a renewed rise is underway above
124.
Silver, like gold, has been correcting but it's firm above $12. If
silver can now rise above $14.55, it would be super strong. Keep an eye on
these numbers.
The U.S. dollar finally turned down and the currencies popped up (see Chart
2). The U.S. dollar index dropped nearly 3% on Wednesday and if it now
stays below 87 and 85, a
renewed dollar decline will be underway. That will be confirmed once the
dollar index declines and stays below 82 and 80. The euro soared, leading
the way up for the other currencies. If it stays above 1.3150, it'll strongly
signal that most of the currencies are headed higher and its next upside
target will then be near 1.44.
The stock market looks good and it's poised to rise further in a general
market rise... that is, in the U.S. and the world markets. The Dow Jones Industrials
is now showing its first solid sign of strength by staying above 7200. A strong
rebound rise would be underway above 7900, the 15 week moving average (see Chart
3).
Taken together, all of these factors are very positive for gold. The fundamentals
could not be stronger, but it was bound to happen.
THE CRISIS GOES ON AND ON
Very
quickly, the initial Obama optimism essentially dissipated, primarily due to
the worsening economy. Job losses are intensifying, the stimulus package isn't
what many thought it would be, the debt load is overwhelming and there doesn't
appear to be an end in sight.
The seriousness of this situation also seems to be sinking in more deeply.
Increasingly, people are recognizing that this isn't your typical recession.
It's global and massive, way bigger than anything ever seen before and it potentially
involves the collapse of the banking and financial system.
Obama has been at the forefront repeatedly warning that, "we are facing an
economic crisis of historic proportions... our nation will sink into a crisis
that we may be unable to reverse... we risk falling into a deflationary spiral",
and so on.
FINANCIAL CRISES OF THE PAST
Most of us in this generation have never suffered through a financial crisis,
but they are nothing new. We went back to review financial crises of the past
and here's what we found...
The past 800 years have involved a series of bubbles and busts, debt defaults,
banking collapses, excessive speculation, panics, currency devaluations, recessions,
deflations, inflation and of course normal times. And ever since the first
stocks traded 400 years ago, the markets have had a long consistent history
of booms and crashes.
Internationally, there have actually been 148 crises in the past 140 years.
In more recent times, an interesting analysis looked at the aftermath of 14
severe banking busts, including the Great Depression, and others in various
countries that have followed since then. Most important, the conclusions reinforce
that the effects of this crisis could drag on for quite a long time.
So drastic measures had to be taken as every effort is made to soften the
blow.
GOLD SOARING ON UNCERTAINTY
These same factors have also been driving the gold market. It soared, briefly
rising back above $1000, and within a couple of dollars of its all time, record
high.
Gold is once again showing that it is the safe haven and it thrives in times
of global turmoil, uncertainty, nervousness and fear. That's what we're seeing
now and gold is certainly behaving in traditional fashion.
But this is just the beginning. Once inflation eventually kicks in, in reaction
to all of this massive government spending, gold is going to soar, but this
is going to take time.
It's not going to happen from one day to the next, but that's the underlying
foundation pushing gold's bull market higher, and it's not going away any time
soon. So stay with your gold. It's your best, and probably only solid bet looking
out to the years ahead.
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