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While the Dow may soon briefly take out its old 11,700+ highs, the real story
of late in our opinion is the recent pummeling of all commodity markets. Though
we follow oil, natural gas, copper, and other commodities with great interest,
our continued belief is that the best risk/reward set up in the major commodities
comes in the form of the precious metals - namely gold and silver. You
see, after peaking at $720 an ounce on the yellow metal and $15 an ounce for
the poor man's gold, the two metals have come under a great deal of selling
pressure. We think this correction is due to a number of factors. The
first being that the precious metals likely got a little ahead of themselves
(gold was up 40% less than 5 months into the year and silver was up 75%). The
second reason for the correction has likely been the continued resilience of
the U.S. Dollar. For most of the year this was due in large part
to the fear that "Gentle" Ben Bernanke might actually grow a backbone
and would ratchet rates up a great deal more than originally anticipated to
break the back of inflation. Bernanke is by no means Paul Volcker having
revealed his true stripes long ago. So late this summer, the rest of
the market learned that Bernanke was done and curiously gold and silver have
not been able to rally since. With the intense correction in the commodity
complex, it appears that the black box traders (who can from time to time dominate
gold and silver markets) are selling gold and silver simply because they are
going down. Selling has continued to beget more selling and the fact
that a clearly weakening U.S. economy only supports the case for gold
and silver is overlooked. (Remember, gold and silver should be looked at as "money" rather
than plain commodities)
Despite temporarily lower prices, gold and silver's strong fundamentals
haven't changed one bit. If anything they have only gotten stronger. We
have recently seen that gold mine supply through the first half of the
year amazingly dropped 2% year-over-year on 10% higher cash costs as
the continued supply constraints from the difficulties in finding world class
low cost gold mines remain. Likewise, we have also seen that despite
stepped up September gold sales ahead of the annual September 26th deadline,
the European Central Banks (for the first time in seven years) will likely
fall about 20-25% short of their 500 ton gold sale maximum quota as central
bankers led by the Germans begin to realize the investment value of gold. The
news is also fundamentally strong for silver with the silver ETF continuing
to gobble up ounces at a far greater rate than anyone had ever expected. Despite
silver being 30% off its yearly high, SLV just recently reached a new peak
number of ounces in its vaults. A world record monthly trade
deficit of $68 billion was recorded in August by the U.S., which once again
should be long-term U.S. Dollar negative and gold and silver positive. Yet,
despite all this, panic has set in the metals markets. Most investors
seem quite confident that a commodities bubble is unwinding and gold and
silver will be no different than copper or natural gas for that matter.
Over the last couple of years, we have tried to step up during these steep
and nasty metals corrections and say that these times will turn out in hindsight
to have been great buying opportunities for long term gold and silver bulls
such as ourselves. Now, once again, we sense the level of angst for gold
and silver participants is high and the level of concern about the U.S. Dollar
is low. Those with the courage to hold $600 gold and $11 silver in September
2006 will likely find heady metal gains in their stockings in the years ahead. Picking
the exact bottom is impossible but the precious metals have now lost 15-20%
in a little over a few weeks' time and when one considers the supply/demand
tightness in both markets, we think that such buying opportunities won't
exist for very long.
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Todd Stein & Steven McIntyre
Texas Hedge Report
Todd Stein & Steven McIntyre are internationally known
analysts and editors of The Texas Hedge
Report, a market newsletter that highlights under and overvalued securities
in the equity, bond, currency, and commodity markets. For more information,
go to http://www.texashedge.com
Copyright © 2004-2008 Todd Stein and
Steven McIntyre
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