The gold miners’ stocks have largely ground sideways this year,
consolidating their massive 2016 gains. That lackluster trading action,
along with vexing underperformance relative to gold, has left gold stocks
deeply out of favor. But these uninspiring technicals and resulting
bearish sentiment should soon shift. The gold stocks are just now
entering their strongest seasonal rally of the year, the super-bullish winter
rally.
Gold-stock performance is highly seasonal, which certainly sounds
odd. The gold miners produce and sell their metal at
relatively-constant rates year-round, so the temporal journey through
calendar months should be irrelevant. Based on these miners’ revenues,
there’s little reason investors should favor them more at certain times of
the year than others. Yet history proves that’s exactly what happens in
this sector.
Seasonality is the tendency for prices to exhibit recurring patterns at
certain times during the calendar year. While seasonality doesn’t drive
price action, it quantifies annually-repeating behavior driven by
sentiment, technicals, and fundamentals. We humans are creatures of
habit and herd, which naturally colors our trading decisions. The
calendar year’s passage affects the timing and intensity of buying and
selling.
Gold stocks exhibit strong seasonality because their price action mirrors
that of their dominant primary driver, gold. Gold’s seasonality
generally isn’t driven by supply fluctuations like grown commodities
experience, as its mined supply remains fairly steady all year long.
Instead gold’s major seasonality is demand-driven, with global
investment demand varying dramatically depending on the time within the
calendar year.
This gold seasonality
is fueled by well-known income-cycle and cultural drivers of outsized
gold demand from around the world. And the biggest seasonal surge of
all is just now getting underway heading into winter. As the
Indian-wedding-season gold-jewelry buying that drives this metal’s big autumn rally winds
down, the Western holiday season is ramping up. The holiday spirit puts
everyone in the mood to spend money.
Men splurge on vast amounts of gold jewelry for Christmas gifts for their
wives, girlfriends, daughters, and mothers. The holidays are also a big
engagement season, with Christmas Eve and New Year’s Eve being two of the
biggest proposal nights of the year. Between a quarter to a third of
the entire annual sales of jewelry stores come in November and
December! And jewelry historically dominates overall gold demand.
According to the World Gold Council, between 2010 to 2016 jewelry
accounted for 49%, 44%, 45%, 60%, 58%, 57%, and 47% of total annual global
gold demand. That averages out to just over half, which is much
larger than investment demand. During those same past 7 years, that ran
39%, 37%, 34%, 18%, 20%, 22%, and 36% for a 29% average. Jewelry demand
remains the single-largest global gold demand category.
That frenzied Western jewelry buying heading into winter shifts to pure
investment demand after year-end. That’s when Western investors figure
out how much surplus income they earned during the prior year after bonuses
and taxes. Some of this is plowed into gold in January, driving it
higher. Finally the big winter gold rally climaxes in late February on
major Chinese New Year gold buying flaring up in Asia.
So during its bull-market years, gold has always tended to enjoy major
winter rallies driven by these sequential episodes of outsized demand.
Naturally the gold stocks follow gold higher, amplifying its gains due to
their great profits leverage to the gold price. Today gold stocks are
once again now heading into their strongest seasonal rally of the year driven
by this robust winter gold demand. That’s super-bullish!
Since it’s gold’s own demand-driven seasonality that fuels the gold
stocks’ seasonality, that’s logically the best place to start to understand
what’s likely coming. Price action is very different between bull and
bear years, and gold is absolutely in a young bull market. After
being crushed to a 6.1-year secular low in mid-December 2015 on the Fed’s first rate hike of this
cycle, gold powered 29.9% higher over the next 6.7 months.
Crossing the +20% threshold in early March 2016 confirmed a new bull
market was underway. Gold corrected after that sharp initial upleg, but
normal healthy selling was greatly exacerbated following Trump’s surprise
election win. Investors
fled gold to chase the Trumphoria stock-market surge. Gold’s
correction cascaded to monstrous proportions, hitting -17.3% in
mid-December. But that was shy of a new bear’s -20%.
Gold’s last mighty bull market ran from April 2001 to August 2011, where
it soared 638.2% higher! And while gold consolidated high in 2012, that
was technically a bull year too since gold just slid 18.8% at worst from its
bull-market peak. Gold didn’t enter formal bear-market territory at
-20% until April 2013, thanks to the crazy stock-market levitation
driven by extreme distortions from the Fed’s QE3 bond monetizations.
So the bull-market years for gold in modern history ran from 2001 to 2012,
skipped the intervening bear-market years of 2013 to 2015, and resumed in
2016 to 2017. Thus these are the years most relevant to understanding
gold’s typical seasonal performance throughout the calendar year. We’re
interested in bull-market seasonality, because gold remains in its
young bull today and bear-market action is quite dissimilar.
This chart averages the individually-indexed full-year gold performances
in those bull-market years from 2001 to 2012 and 2016. 2017 isn’t
included in this analysis yet since it remains a work in progress. This
chart distills out gold’s bull-market seasonal tendencies in like percentage
terms. Quantifying gold’s bull-market seasonal tendencies requires all
relevant years’ price action to be recast to be perfectly comparable.
That’s accomplished by individually indexing each calendar year’s
gold price action to its final close of the preceding year, which is recast
at 100. Then all gold price action of the following year is calculated
off that common indexed baseline, normalizing all years regardless of price
levels. So gold trading at an indexed level of 105 simply means it has
rallied 5% from the prior year’s close, while 95 shows it’s down 5%.
This methodology renders all bull-market-year gold performances in like
percentage terms. That’s critical since gold’s price range has been
so vast, from $257 in April 2001 to $1894 in August 2011. Finally each
calendar year’s individually-indexed gold prices are averaged together to
arrive at this illuminating gold-bull seasonality. Gold has always had
a strong tendency to enjoy major winter rallies, starting right about now.
During its modern bull-market years from 2001 to 2012 and 2016, gold’s
major winter rally started on average in late October.
Technically gold’s key seasonal bottom averaged being carved on that month’s
16th trading day, which was October 23rd this year. From there gold
surges into its strongest seasonal rally of the year. Between late
October and late February in these bull years, gold blasted 9.5% higher on
average!
These big winter-rally seasonal gains are much larger than the 3.8% and
6.9% averages seen in gold’s other major seasonal rallies in spring and
autumn. That makes late October one of the best times of the year to
deploy capital into gold. That Western holiday gold-jewelry buying
fuels such outsized demand that November has long proved one of gold’s
best months of the year with average bull-year gains of 3.1%.
While this bullish gold seasonality really moderates in December with an
average 0.6% bull-year gain, it soon accelerates again in January on that
surplus-income gold investment buying. The 2.9% average gain gold
enjoyed in January during those bull years between 2001 to 2012 and 2016
makes for this metal’s third best month of the calendar year. This
winter-rally span is when gold enjoys peak seasonal tailwinds.
Unfortunately the great majority of speculators and investors remain wary
of deploying into gold to ride its strong seasonal winter rally. Just
like the last couple years, traders are worried about the Fed’s next rate
hike once again very likely in mid-December. Gold-futures speculators
in particular have spent recent years fooling themselves into believing Fed
rates hikes are gold’s mortal nemesis, despite history proving that totally
false.
The record is crystal-clear, gold actually thrives
during Fed-rate-hike cycles! Before today’s there have been 11 since
1971, and gold has averaged impressive 26.9% gains across the exact spans of
all these Fed-rate-hike cycles. In the majority 6 of these where gold
actually rallied, its average gains were a staggering 61.0%! In
the other 5 where gold retreated, its average losses were an
asymmetrically-small 13.9%.
Gold blasted higher during Fed-rate-hike cycles when they started with
gold relatively low, and unfolded at a gradual pace. Gold not only
entered today’s 12th modern rate-hike cycle at major secular lows, but the
Fed has never been slower in raising rates. Gold is still up 20.2%
cycle-to-date since the day before the Fed finally started hiking again in
December 2015. Fed rate hikes are bullish for gold, contrary to
the myths.
During its last rate-hike cycle between June 2004 to June 2006, the FOMC
hiked at 17 consecutive meetings for a total of 425 basis points! That more
than quintupled the federal-funds rate to 5.25%, an inconceivably-high
level today. Even though that was a very-aggressive rate-hike cycle,
gold still managed to power 49.6% higher over that exact span!
Rate hikes are no threat to gold’s strong winter seasonals.
Meanwhile investors remain distracted by this past year’s absurd
Trumphoria rally, which is retarding gold investment demand. When stock
markets melt up to endless record highs drenched in stellar complacency,
investors aren’t interested in prudently diversifying into gold. Since
gold tends to move counter to stock markets, investment demand surges
when stocks weaken. A
stock correction ignited this young gold bull.
As the Fed’s surreal stock-market levitation cracked in early 2016,
American stock investors flocked to gold via shares in the flagship GLD SPDR
Gold Shares gold ETF. When they buy its shares faster than gold itself
is being bought, this ETF’s managers must issue sufficient new shares to
offset all this excess demand and maintain gold tracking. The proceeds
from these GLD-share sales are then used to buy gold bullion.
Thus GLD holdings
builds show stock-market capital migrating into gold. In
2016 massive differential GLD-share buying drove a 28.0% or 179.8 metric-ton
holdings build, helping drive gold 8.5% higher. But year-to-date in
2017, GLD’s holdings are only up 3.3% or 27.4t. Despite that gold is
still impressively up 10.9% YTD, but it will surge dramatically when
investment demand returns as these euphoric stock markets roll over.
That day of reckoning is inevitable. Back in late September the Fed
finally started unwinding its trillions of dollars of quantitative easing
that levitated stock markets for years. Quantitative tightening has
never before been attempted, and it is exceedingly ominous for QE-inflated
stock markets. While QT is starting small, it will ramp up to a
$50b-per-month pace in Q4’18. That accelerating QT juggernaut
will strangle stocks.
When these lofty Trumphoria-fueled stock markets finally mean revert,
investors’ capital will flood back into gold for prudent portfolio
diversification. If that happens in the coming months, it will really
amplify gold’s strong winter seasonals. But gold’s biggest seasonal
rally doesn’t need to be kick started by flight capital from bubble-valued stock
markets. All that’s necessary is November’s usual outsized gold-jewelry
demand.
So neither speculators’ Fed-rate-hike fears nor investors’ current apathy
towards gold thanks to record stock markets are likely to short circuit
gold’s strong winter rally this year. And if gold’s bull-market
seasonals again prevail, that’s super-bullish for gold stocks in the
coming months! They also enjoy strong winter seasonals thanks to
gold’s, because gold miners’ profitability and thus stock prices leverage gold’s price action.
This next chart applies this same bull-market-seasonality methodology to
the leading benchmark HUI NYSE Arca Gold BUGS Index. Naturally
gold-stock seasonals closely mirror gold’s, so the miners too are also just
entering their strongest seasonal rally of the year. On average
in those last bull-market years from 2001 to 2012 and 2016, the HUI powered a
big 15.4% higher between late October and late February!
Gold stocks’ strong 15.4% average winter rally bests their 14.0% and 11.2%
rallies heading into spring and autumn. On average gold stocks’ major
seasonal bottoming heading into their winter rally arrives on October’s 19th
trading day, which translated into October 26th this year. Like their
primary driver gold, gold stocks tend to rally strongly in November, moderate
in December, and then surge again in January and February.
And given the sentimental, technical, and fundamental setups for gold
stocks entering this year’s winter rally, the usual seasonal tailwinds are
likely to help propel them much farther than usual. Just like
gold and because of it, gold stocks entered a mighty new bull market early in
2016 as well. Between mid-January and early August last year, the HUI
soared 182.2% higher in just 6.5 months! It was a wildly-profitable
run.
That left the red-hot gold stocks very overbought last summer, then they
got sucked into gold’s correction. Just like gold, their correction
ballooned to monstrous proportions thanks to that post-election Trumphoria
stock rally’s impact on gold investment demand. At worst the HUI
plunged 42.5% in 4.4 months, a brutal drop. But ever since then gold
stocks consolidated sideways on balance, recently seeing major upside breakouts.
But after surging 8.4% in August, the very next month the gold stocks were
whacked back down 7.5% in sympathy with gold. Gold-futures speculators
fled as futures-implied Fed-rate-hike odds at its upcoming mid-December
meeting skyrocketed from 32% to 83% in less than three weeks! So the
HUI spent late September and much of October languishing under 200, low
technical levels breeding bearish sentiment.
The gold stocks are now entering their seasonally-strongest time of the
year deeply out of favor at weak prices. These are powerful buy signals
within ongoing bull markets, really upping the odds this year’s new winter
rally will prove exceptionally large. Bullish sentiment and
technicals really amplify the usual seasonal tailwinds. Even better,
the gold miners’ fundamentals are all lined up to drive major gains in coming
months.
Every quarter I analyze the operating performances of the top individual
gold miners’ stocks included in the leading gold miners’ ETFs. These of
course are the GDX VanEck Vectors Gold Miners ETF for the larger majors, and
its sister GDXJ VanEck Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF for the smaller juniors.
The gold miners are now in the midst of reporting their Q3’17 earnings
season, which should end up being impressive.
As always I’ll write comprehensive essays analyzing the latest quarterly
results from the top GDX and GDXJ components once they finish reporting in
mid-November. But a few weeks ago I gave a preview of what they are
likely to collectively report based on average gold prices and Q3 seasonals
in production and costs. Crunching the numbers for
GDX yields big potential Q3’17 quarter-on-quarter profits growth around
14%!
Thus as the rest of the gold miners report their Q3’17 results by
mid-November, there will likely be plenty of upside surprises. That
includes higher production, lower costs, and better full-year-2017 guidance
for the gold miners than today’s bearish traders expect. So good
fundamentals could supercharge this first month of gold stocks’ winter
rally this year. Improving fundamentals aligning with seasonals
portends big upside!
If the gold stocks were entering this winter-rally period drenched in
greed after a major upleg, seasonal tailwinds probably couldn’t overcome the
healthy correction tendency. If the gold miners’ fundamentals were
deteriorating, that would likely prove too much heavy lifting for
seasonals. But with the strong winter-rally seasonals synchronizing
with very bullish technicals, sentiment, and fundamentals, gold stocks should
surge.
This last chart breaks down gold-stock seasonality into more-granular
monthly form. Each calendar month between 2001 to 2012 and 2016 is
individually indexed to 100 as of the previous month’s final close, then all
like calendar months’ indexes are averaged together. While this
November-to-February winter-rally period doesn’t encompass most of gold
stocks’ strongest months, it does enjoy the most-consistent gains.
On average in bull-market years, November enjoys the fifth-best
gold-stock gains of the calendar year at 4.6% in HUI terms. That’s not
far off August’s and September’s average bull-market-year rallies of 4.7% and
4.8%, weighing in at fourth and third. May is better yet, ranking
second at 5.3%. But gold stocks’ second-, third-, and fourth-best months
are largely surrounded by flat or lower months offsetting those big gains.
That’s not the case during gold stocks’ winter-rally months, where the
solid-gains streak persists for the whole time. November’s 4.6%
average gains are followed by December’s respectable 2.3%, January’s
accelerating 3.1%, and February’s massive first-place 6.2%! This
unbroken winter-rally streak is what makes this period between late October
and late February the best time of the year to be heavily long gold stocks.
There is no other seasonal streak with such unparalleled consistency of
big gold-stock gains. Since they continue to march higher on balance
throughout their winter-rally span, it yields the best seasonal gains of the
calendar year. The rest of the year’s two-steps-higher-one-step-back
action just doesn’t happen during the winter on average. There are no
significant gold-stock selloffs in this amazing winter-rally span!
Of course the standard seasonality caveat applies that these are mere
tendencies, not primary drivers of gold or gold stocks. Seasonal
tailwinds can be easily drowned out by bearish sentiment, technicals, and
fundamentals. Seasonality doesn’t always work, especially when it
doesn’t align with the primary drivers of sentiment, technicals, or
fundamentals in that order. Thankfully that certainly isn’t the case
this year.
The gold miners’ stocks aren’t heading into November at overbought levels
following a major upleg, thus sentiment is quite bearish. And with the
HUI up just 2.2% YTD compared to gold’s 10.9% gains, the gold stocks are far
underperforming the dominant driver of their earnings. Their big
profits leverage usually translates into upside running 2x to 3x gold’s,
so they are overdue to mean
revert much higher to normalize.
And the gold miners’ fundamentals look excellent heading into this
seasonally-strongest span, with big sector-wide sequential profits growth
likely to come in around 14% in their latest Q3’17 results. That will
probably generate plenty of exciting upside surprises for traders who’ve
largely abandoned gold stocks this year. Add in a major gold upleg fueled
by stock markets rolling over, and this winter rally ought to be huge.
The greatest gains in this coming winter rally won’t be won in the popular
ETFs like GDX and GDXJ, as they are far-overdiversified and burdened with way
too many under-performing gold miners. So it’s much more prudent to
deploy capital in the best individual gold miners with superior
fundamentals. Their gains will handily trounce the ETFs, further
amplifying the already-huge upside potential of this sector as a whole.
The key to riding any gold-stock bull to multiplying your fortune is staying
informed, both about broader markets and individual stocks. That’s
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The bottom line is gold stocks are just entering their
seasonally-strongest period of the year. Their big winter rally is
fueled by gold’s own, which is driven first by outsized demand from holiday
jewelry buying and later new-year investment buying. So both the metal
and its miners’ stocks have strong tendencies to rally between late October
and late February in bull-market years. It’s the best calendar span to
own gold stocks.
And this year’s coming winter rally looks exceptionally bullish because
the seasonal tailwinds won’t be overpowered by bearish sentiment, technicals,
or fundamentals. All of these primary drivers are bullish today and
closely aligned with the strong seasonals, making for a powerful united force
to propel gold stocks dramatically higher. Speculators and investors
alike should be fully deployed for the coming months.
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