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For months we've been warning that precious metals would continue their price
increases, but not too fast or else they would be brought back in line with
more gradual long term trendlines. The multi-year charts we presented here
last week show how far the metals could still fall and still preserve their
bull market. But, due in part to the market-outperforming gains in both gold
and silver for 2006, we said:
"From here then, we would expect metals to remain within a wide range near
current levels, possibly with more immediate downside than up."
For at least a month now, we've been steadily articulating our bias against
any cut in interest rates by the Federal Reserve and, if anything, toward eventual
higher interest rates. This despite broad expectation of an '07 rate cut or
two in both the stock and bond markets. This week, the markets continued to
vindicate our outlook after stocks tumbled on Wednesday's FOMC minutes reinforced
the Fed's hawkish stance even in the face of slowing growth and after bonds
rallied back despite Friday's strong jobs numbers, indicating that a near-term
interest rate cut is increasingly unlikely, though not so robust as to signal
an actual rate hike. Last week we had said:
"The adequate, if not excess, liquidity evidenced by the equities markets,
and now the ECB's M3 data, signal that only a dramatic tailspin into recession
could possibly force the Fed to lower interest rates with the dollar under
pressure as its recently seen. Of course this means that bond buyers looking
for a rate cut next year are probably still too optimistic."
Most relevant for precious metals, though, was that stronger economic data
and shrinking odds of an interest rate cut lifted pressure off the dollar and
put it squarely on gold and silver. Combined with weakness in oil and base
metals, dollar strength led to a precious metals selloff through recent support
levels despite a strong opening to the week.
Last week's daily charts showed GLD and SLV closing the year at the top of
nice upward runs and near resistance levels. After this week's decline, the
weekly charts have both ETFs at possible support with closes near their 50-day
moving averages. Both gold and silver, bounced off key psychological support
levels at $600 and $12 before going into the close, at least suggesting a possible
buying opportunity.


Our position continues to be that Wall Street, and indeed the entire globe,
is flush with liquidity despite tougher reserve requirements in China, and
that upside to the dollar is limited in this monetary environment. Inflation
concerns, which tend to buoy metals, did not get the anticipated boost from
the high payrolls data, but will remain a concern for the Fed, since it's more
concerned with increases in wages and unemployment than with the price of gold
or silver.
We also maintain that, glut of copper notwithstanding, the fundamental picture
for precious metals and many base metals remains bullish. Though global growth
may be slowing somewhat, development continues at an impressive rate in China
and other countries. All of these factors will eventually slow the descent
in precious metals and should keep the longterm bull market in tact. However,
unless bulls from here are banking on stronger growth rather than greater liquidity,
earnings and economic data could cause a recurrence of this week's trading
theme and bring further damage to precious metals if they continue to indefinitely
delay interest rate cuts. The increase of reserve requirements in China is
a responsible move that may avoid a spectacular crash in that super-heated,
fledgling capitalist economy, and could put the breaks on the recent dollar
rally for at least the time being.
Tighter lending in China may skim off some of the froth in global manufacturing,
but analysts claiming the decline in commodities could be a signal of a coming
slowdown in the American economy are at best lazy and at worst completely clueless.
First, this week's selloff in precious metals occurred after a significant
bull run and was catalyzed by dollar strength on positive economic data. The
loss of American manufacturing jobs is hardly bearish for metals, which are
subject to global supply and demand, nor the decline in metals necessarily
indicative of further manufacturing weakness. Second, the sharp decline in
copper, at least, comes as global growth rates remain high and supply increased
by new mining activity. If anything, cheaper commodities are a boon to American
housing and auto manufacturing, the two sectors dragging most heavily on the
U.S. economy! Clearly the exact opposite of what these misguided pundits are
saying is true, but, if they persist in their folly, further strengthening
of the U.S. economy may become another catalyst for metals and make them wise.
Perhaps more important though, this selloff reveals the double-edged sword
of investor dollars which can quickly bid up metals or just as quickly fade
them. Commodities are increasingly subject to investing trends as a result
of new ETFs, futures funds, and other commodity-based investment vehicles and
derivatives. For all of the above reasons, the sector is simply not perceived
as the place for hot money at the moment. Commodities are fundamentally driven
by economic conditions, but the exaggerated volatility of recent years is a
function of large, frequently speculative, investment dollars. As earnings
season begins next week, the health of the overall economy will continue to
be the message sought in the data, a message that will dictate the direction
of fast money, the dollar and precious metals.
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