|
The short and intermediate-term future for Gold and any investment for that
matter are tricky to navigate. I have guessed right and wrong many times on
shorter-term moves. It seems that the best most investors can hope to do is
identify the long-term secular bull market (i.e. the major bull market of the
current 10-20 year period) that is in progress, buy into it, and hold on.
Since it is easier, safer and more comfortable for most investors to go long
rather than go short (due to risk management issues, availability of different
types of trading in retirement accounts, margin, etc.), most would like to
invest in a bull market rather than a bear market. To each his own, and I like
a little of both, but the majority of people with money to invest are looking
for a buy and hold bull market.
I can tell those investors that, without a doubt, that bull market is no longer
in general stocks. Period. Buy and hold for stocks and corporate bonds (individual
specific stocks or bonds aside) is dead for the next decade. I can also tell
those investors to avoid real estate (same caveat related to unique individual
opportunities). Commodities are more of a question mark as the inflation-deflation
debate rages on and are certainly not a slam dunk in a weak global economic
environment.
Government bonds are very high risk at the local / state level and are again
a little more uncertain at the federal level. This is related to currency risk
(again, the inflation-deflation debate) and the paltry yields paid to take
on this risk. The likelihood of significant appreciation is also very close
to zero, as yields will not go below zero percent for any length of time.
Which leaves us with Gold. Yes, that shiny piece of metal that you can't eat,
has no growth prospects and that pays no dividend. Yes, the Gold that crazy
people seem to like - the ones who are always talking about guns and the end
of the world. Yes, the Gold that mainstream financial "advisers" always say
is a bad or risky investment. Yes, the Gold that is up 300% for the decade
while the S&P 500 is down 20% over the same period. Yes, the Gold that
just had it highest weekly closing price in United States history on Friday
(in nominal/non-inflation adjusted terms).
Gold is in a beautiful, long-term secular bull market with a technically perfect
uptrend that shows no sign of having started the "blow-off" top that ends nearly
all major bull markets (think oil last year or the NASDAQ in 2000). Here's
a look at a monthly Gold price chart in log scale over the past 10 years:

A bull market chart doesn't get any clearer than this. Yes, you can try to
guess when the bull market will end based on fundamental data you see on the
news or in cyberspace, but the trend is unmistakably up and very strong. And
this trend will continue for a long time after the fundamental reasons for
the Gold price to go higher are there (remember dot-com mania in 2000 or how
the world was going to run out of oil any second last summer?).
I have certainly tried and will continue to try to time this bull market when
considering buying more physical Gold (I like to buy on weakness rather than
strength and view every significant pull-back in the Gold price as a buying
opportunity) and when trying to trade Gold miners with my speculative capital.
But my core Gold position is not for sale and won't be until I see concrete
signs we are near the top of this Gold price bull market. I hear many people
think they are seeing these signs (e.g., Gold television commercials), but
let me ask you a question: if you were to poll 100 random U.S. investors right
now, what percentage of them do you think have a significant portion of their
investment portfolio in Gold or Gold miners? Even more importantly, what percentage
of them have purchased actual physical Gold? We are not even close to full
participation in this bull market and we will be before it's over.
Stepping back from the short and intermediate-term moves in the Gold price,
I want to show you in a "big picture" sense where I think we are in this Gold
bull market. Below is a chart stolen from Approximity's
Gold Charts page (love your site, man, thank you!):

Once we broke above and held the $850/ounce level in Gold we set the stage
for MUCH higher prices. There are NO long-term overhead price resistance points
that currently exist. The "sky is the limit" in a sense. I believe we are closer
to the beginning than the end of the current Gold bull market, at least in
price. A 7-fold rise in the Gold price would lift us to $1785/oz., which I
think is the absolute minimum long-term secular high in the Gold price. I personally
don't think it is reasonable for Gold to top out before we reach the $2000/oz.
level. And these are the worst case scenarios for the Gold price!
Depending on what happens to the U.S. currency in the future, prices could
certainly go much, much higher. In fact, here's what I see as a move comparable
to Gold's break-out above $850 in terms of where we are in this secular Gold
bull market (chart stolen from sharelynx -
also love your site!):

The Dow Jones went up 10 fold once it was finally able to break above the
1000 level for good. For those who follow oil, it went from a $10 low around
the turn of the century to $147 per barrel at its peak last year (a 1370% gain
- a similar-sized gain would put the coming peak Gold price at $3500/oz.).
These numbers are meant to show what a secular bull market is capable of doing
over years. It is Gold's turn to shine and its bull market is not over!
The fundamental underpinnings of this bull market have to do not only with
unprecedented money/debt creation (this fiat paper money/debt backed only by
hot air/promises rather than real assets), but also with the nature of money
and our monetary system itself. The Chinese government is now openly telling
its citizens to buy precious metals for investment and making them widely available.
Many countries are now starting to clamor for a new global reserve currency
to replace the Dollar. Trust in the government and its promises is starting
to break down significantly in the United States as more and more people no
longer believe our government has their best interests at heart or has the
money to pay for all its promises.
A powder keg is also waiting to be ignited in the paper metal ETFs, which
cannot possibly have even a fraction of true access to the physical Gold or
silver they claim to be in custodial (or sub-custodial) possession. These metal
ETFs are diverting investment money away from the actual physical metal and
are slowing its bull market progress (this was one of the intentions of these
instruments, by the way). Once people realize they cannot trust bankstas at
all and need to obtain a little actual physical Gold to be held outside the
system, look out!
I am not sure what's going to happen to the Gold price over the next few weeks
or even months. I am actually in the deflation camp for now and think the U.S.
Dollar will soon have a strong rally. This may or may not affect the Gold price
on an intermediate-term basis. Gold is true money and cash is king during deflation,
yet the Gold price is denominated in U.S. Dollars. Gold has risen in the past
right along side the U.S. Dollar and I believe this can and will happen again.
However, even if Gold is due to take another rest here on a short or intermediate-term
basis, I do know that the Dow
to Gold ratio will get back to 2 and may even get below one before this
secular Gold price bull market is over. And until that time, Gold will vastly
outperform stocks, real estate and corporate bonds. Any surprises in a strong
bull market are almost always to the upside and Gold will be no exception.
|