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The past few months must be frustrating for gold bugs. After a good year in
2003 that saw the Gold rise 19.5%, the TSX Gold Index up 13.6%, the Philadelphia
Gold & Silver Exchange (XAU) jump 41.8% and the Amex Gold Bugs Index (HUI)
leap 67.4%, the first few months of 2004 have been disappointing with the all
of the exchanges down on the year. Since the topping in November 2003 the gold
indices and the stocks have been generally in a gentle down trend of roughly
10%. When one compares this to the sharp drops seen in the first few months
of 2003 this has, in some respects, been barely discernible.
Gold's fortunes of course are tied to the US Dollar and for the past couple
of months the US Dollar has been trying to bounce after a sharp drop through
2003. Indeed gold stopped rising before the US$ bottomed and therefore it should
be no surprise that gold once again has started to rise even as the US$ tries
to maintain a firmer stance. Indeed gold made its most recent bottom in early
March 2004 and since then is up about $20 and is not far off the highs seen
in early January.
Gold prices could be leading the market. In the latter part of 2003 as the
US$ continued to fall and gold stocks started their period of softness, physical
gold prices continued to rise into early 2004. This divergence was eventually
realized when gold prices fell bottoming just below $400 in early March. At
the same time the gold stocks failed to put in new bottoms a potential positive
divergence.
But since then gold has broken out of a triangle pattern while the stocks
are still struggling to catch up. The breakout has targets of up to $450. Further
gold has, as our chart shows below, broken out against other currencies including
the Euro and the Canadian Dollar. Gold in Yen is in a steady uptrend. This
is a very positive sign as while Gold in US$ has been rising since the lows
in 2001 the gains in other major currencies had been muted. We have long suspected
that in a world of ongoing currency devaluation that gold would eventually
begin to rise against all currencies and not just the US$. That process may
be getting under way.
There are numerous reasons that gold's fortune is going to continue to rise.
Many of them are found in a recent article in Financial Sense (www.financialsense.com) by Jim Puplava
entitled "Super Bull". The reasons are well worth repeating.
- Producer hedge books continue to be reduced. None is more notable
than Barrick Gold (ABX-TSX, NYSE) (www.barrick.com,
416-307-7470).
- Central Bank sales have been declining. While there are still
central bank sales particular from the European Central Banks, there has
also been ongoing buying particularly from the Asian Central Banks (China
and Japan).
- Reflation, led by the Federal Reserve, and Central Banks, not
only in the USA, have been fighting deflation through a program of massive
monetary and fiscal stimulus. This has resulted in huge budget deficits in
the US and a feeling that the Fed will in any economic slowdown or market
meltdown they will come to the rescue. This has resulted in a massive increase
in debt over the past year particularly from the consumer who has reached
record levels of debt to income and has encouraged spending growth, which
continues to outpace income growth. The massive monetary and debt stimulus
has contributed to a new mini bubble in the stock market and a housing market
bubble.
- The falling US Dollar. Despite a sharp drop in the US$ against
major world currencies in the past year the US trade and current account
deficits continue unabated. The trade deficit has reached over 5% of GDP,
levels higher than in 1987 when the growing trade deficit caused a stock
market crash. Charts point to the US$ going considerably lower before it
bottoms. The ongoing fall in the US$ has caused Japan and Europe in particular
to take unproductive measures to protect their rising currencies setting
off a potential round of competitive currency devaluations and trade wars.
- Global gold demand (up 4% in the past year) continues to rise
particularly for de-hedging and for investment purposes even as jewellery
demand falls. At the same time mine supply (up 1% in the past year) is not
keeping up with the increased demand.
- Low negative interest rates (to inflation) have forced investors',
particularly institutional investors, to seek out riskier forms of investment
in junk bonds, stocks, emerging market debt and through derivative instruments.
Derivatives in particular could be an Achilles heal where one-third of global
derivatives lie with one institution J.P. Morgan Chase (JPM-NYSE). Rumours
persist that there is a potential huge derivatives problem at Fannie Mae
(FNM-NYSE) the world's largest mortgage holder.
- The geopolitical scene remains potentially very volatile and
dangerous. Unrest has broken out once again in the volatile Balkans area
particularly in Kosovo where NATO was involved in a war in 1999. Unrest continues
in Iraq where there is little guaranty of security for Iraqis and particularly
for Westerners. The Palestinian/Israeli conflict has potentially been raised
to a dangerous new level with the assassination of Sheikh Ahmed Yassin of
Hamas. Dangerous conflicts continue in Afghanistan and along the Pakistani/Afghanistan
border and as well in the Nepal area. The potential for conflicts out of
Iran or North Korea remains high.
- There is a limited supply of physical bullion. The gold market
remains small compared to paper assets. With global paper assets of some
$50 trillion all the gold in the world has a value of about $1.7 trillion.
All the bullion companies in the world are still worth under $100 billion
with just 4 companies (Barrick Gold, Placer Dome, Anglo Gold, Newmont Mining)
making up a good half of that value. If investment demand not only for physical
bullion were to increase coupled with an increase in demand for the bullion
stocks there is insufficient supply to absorb any large influx of purchasing.
As Puplava points out the current global situation is very reminiscent of
the 1930's where dangerous conflicts and trade wars were a norm. Only this
time the stakes are larger because the amount of outstanding debt is considerably
higher.
Many believe that if there is a market meltdown that the gold stocks could
fall with them. While initially there might be some sell-off history suggests
otherwise. In the 1930's the few gold companies around did fall with the market
in the Crash of '29. By the time the bottom came around in 1932 and the Dow
Jones Industrials fell 89% with the revaluation of gold upward from $20.67
to $35 companies such as Homestake Mining surged 10 fold.
Dr. Richard Appel presented this argument in a recent article entitled "Will
gold shares follow common stocks lower? An historical perspective". Historically
the best argument against this happening is the bear market of 1973/1974 whose
chart is presented below. While the Dow Jones Industrials was losing some 46%
in 1973/1974, Gold soared from the $60 area to over $200. Homestake Mining
rose from about $2 to almost $10.
The chart of the 1970's, a period of the last great gold boom, is quite interesting.
With the markets down in 73/74 and gold and gold stocks up during the same
period they switched places in 1975 when the DJI regained its two years of
losses while both gold and the gold stocks fell. From 1977 to 1979, the period
of the great bull market in gold, both the DJI and Homestake languished in
a general downtrend/flat. Note then the unfolding huge divergence between gold
and Homestake in 1980 when Gold collapsed then tried to rally back while Homestake
and the gold stocks came to life and soared to new highs, a significant major
negative divergence which presaged the 20 year bear market in gold and gold
stocks.
We leave you with a small group of gold mining producers, which are forming
interesting bullish technical patterns for the next leg up in the gold bull
market of the first decade of the new century.
| Company |
Symbol/Exchange |
Internet/Phone |
| Durban Roodepoort Deep Ltd. |
DROOY/NASDAQ |
www.drd.co.za, +27 11 381-7800 |
| Harmony Gold Mining Co. |
HMY/NYSE |
www.harmony.co.za, +27 57 231-9111 |
| High River Gold Mines Ltd. |
HRG/TSX |
www.hrg.ca, 416 947-1440 |
| Kinross Gold Corp. |
K/TSX |
www.kinross.com, 416 365-5198 |
| Queenstake Resources Ltd/ |
QRL/TSX |
www.queenstake.com, 604 516-0566 |
| Rubicon Minerals Corp. |
RMX/TSX |
www.rubiconminerals.com,
604 623-3333 |
| Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd. |
AGE/TSX, AEM/NYSE |
www.agnico-eagle.com, 416
947-1212 |
| Aurizon Mines Ltd. |
ARZ/TSX |
www.aurizon.com, 604 687-6600 |
| Cia de Minas Buenaventura SA |
BVN/NYSE |
www.buenaventura.com, 511
419-2538 |
| Cambior Inc. |
CBJ/TSX |
www.cambior.com, 450 677-0040 |
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