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January 16, 2009 John Lee's Calls on Gold and Various Markets for 2009 |
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In 2008 we saw some of the most dramatic financial events in a century: * $trillions of subprime mortgage implosion, which bankrupted the entire US banking system. * Lehman's fallout with entangling positions in equities, futures, real estate, and derivatives in the $hundreds of billions. The magnitude dwarfed LTCM. * Biggest squeeze on the dollar. Despite worsening fundamentals, dollar rallied 20% in the second half of 2008 as banks refused to loan and assets are sold to pay dollar debts. * Largest de-leveraging process. Margin calls caused severe corrections (-50% or more) in broad equities and commodities. * Unprecedented intervention with multi-$trillion financial bailouts and record-low interest rates of near 0%. What's in store for 2009? We will make our calls with the aid of following charts Gold:
US Dollar:
S&P 500:
Gold Stocks:
Gold stocks provide leverage to the gold price with high fixed cost and low marginal cost. Gold stocks couldn't shake off the equity bloodbath and disappointed investors by losing 30%+ in 2008. The action for 2009 will remain volatile as margin calls will continue to cause weak hands to sell into strong hands. There are also many poorly managed gold companies that won't survive through permitting issues, high operating cost, and geopolitical risk. Gold equity valuation is about earnings and ounces in the ground. I am not wildly bullish on gold stocks yet as speculative spirits could take months to return. However a modest rebound to 150 from current 105 is very reasonable and represents healthy percentage gains. Oil, Copper, Silver:
S&P TSX Ventures Index (Proxy to Junior Mining Stocks):
Global Equities (using Shanghai Stock Exchange Index as Proxy):
Conclusion: Since 2001, we saw world GDP grow at the fastest pace since WWII, doubling to $55 trillion. Fundamentally, industrialization of Asia and Middle-east spurred growth and vast commodity consumption. On the investment side, dollar savers of 20 years came to the epiphany that dollars are no better than Brazil Real (literally based on currency performance) and started the massive flight from dollars. This dollar diversification coupled with low interest rates further fueled commodity, real estate, and equity markets world wide. All this is at the expense of the dollar, which lost some 60% measured by the dollar index. Gold predictably went up 300% from $250/oz to over $800/oz. 2008 is a hiccup to the above trend. Housing implosion bankrupted US banks and caused temporary hard squeeze on the dollar. Helicopter Ben and Mr. Obama have promised to take whatever fiscal and monetary action necessary to revive the economy. And those official don't mince with their words as witnessed by the Fed's purchase of $trillions of bad loans and Obama's massive fiscal stimulus proposals. All this seals the death fate of the US dollar and will likely invoke imminent panic from dollar holders. Growth in Asia and elsewhere in the world will not stop just because no more dollars are coming from the US consumers. Pick China as an example; frankly would China worry about not getting more dollars when it already has $1.5 trillion? Granted the US economy is in emergency distress mode, but can the US population, which account for 5% of the world population, really drag down the rest of the world for years and years to come? I think not. In fact, from a long term worldly perspective, 2008 might be the catalyst that accelerates global wealth distribution and growth going forward. When will we see good times again in Shanghai and Buenos Aires? When will happy patrons return to the empty restaurants and department stores? Processor doubles in speed every 18 months. While growth maybe anemic in 2009, don't count out packed seats in the Vancouver Winter Olympics in 2010!
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John Lee, CFA John Lee is the founder and principal of Mau Capital Management and the portfolio manager of a mining equity hedge fund. He is a CFA charter holder and has degrees in Economics and Engineering from Rice University. Mr. Lee has a keen interest in the history of money and economics, and has previously studied under Mr. James Turk, a renowned authority on the gold market. If you would like to receive subscription of Mr. Lee's Stock Chart of the Week and 4 other famous newsletters for the price of $89.95/3 months, click here to find out more. http://new.goldmau.com/stockchartsubscribe.php Copyright © 2004-2009 MauCapital.com All rights reserved. Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2009 SafeHaven.com ADVERTISEMENTS
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