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The End Zone

Back in October (see Here), we started contrasting gold and the US dollar index to the 1980 blowoff top in the precious metals markets. Some six months later, both pivots and the downside trajectory in gold have largely held the line.

Gold Versus US Dollar Index Monthly Chart 1975-2013

Gold 1979-81 versus 2011-2013

Over the last decade, as the precious metals bull gained traction and momentum, a tremendous amount of both academic and market driven theses were written and debated about what was motivating the price of gold higher. Was it real interest rates, nominal rates, poor monetary policy - the prospect of deflation, inflation - geopolitical risk?

Although we have typically dumbed-down and distilled causations from the currency markets (see Here) - namely the US dollar index and the euro as guideposts for trading gold and silver, you can't help but notice that the culminating geometries of the Everest yield slope may end up being delineated with the backside declines of gold's last two large secular bull runs.

Should this prove to be the case, we would expect gold to continue wilting through 2014 as yields make a final stab at another secular low.

Gold versus 10-Year Yield 1975-2013

What's interesting here - although consistent, is just as Bill Gross was humbled by the bond market in 2011 (expecting yields to rise, see Here) - he once again chose the wrong side of the market in ignoring the broader historical narrative (namely, the US dollar) in recommending a position in gold at the beginning of February (see Here). While we would never consider ourselves particularly skilled in the granularities of the government bond market, we do understand form - the historical expression of information, and despite our diminutive bond education - it has kept us on the right side of the field more than most of the experts in the asset class.

Back in the beginning of June 2011 as the Bond King was recommending investors significantly cut their bond holdings, we wrote:

"It is hard to deny that there is at the very least asymmetry in the above chart with regards to each respective rate cycle (trough to new lows). The present cycle (approximately 70 years) is actually following the greatest degree of symmetry - likely because of the historic spike in interest rates in the early 1980's drawing out the trend. In both the previous cycles shown (~ 60 and 55 years, respectively), the final leg down is swift. However, once the previous cycle low was broken, rates tended to base for an extended period of time." Man Versus Nature

For those that have followed our work since we began publishing in the spring of 2011, three consistent market postures have been maintained:

1. The US dollar would appreciate,
2. Commodities and precious metals would depreciate; and
3. Interest rates would continue to fall

We expect that over that the next 12 months, our third tenet will reach the end zone when10 year yields eventually tag ~ 1.0% - or the bottom of the historic channel described below. We also believe - as it has in the past, that the yield environment will remain low as the bond market troughs for an extended duration of time.

US Government Bond Yields 1804-2013

 

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