The usual suspects in the gold bug and perma-bull camps
got their panties all wet last week when the yellow metal briefly set a
four-month high of $1184 per ounce.
Of course when the price backed off a bit, the conspiracy
theorists immediately played their trump card, a bastardized version of the
EMH (acronym for the widely recognized "efficient market
hypothesis"). This gang's "eternal manipulation hyperbole" is
routinely called upon to rationalize a depressed gold price, negate the
metals' inability to punch thru market resistance, or counter solid technical
analysis.
My counter-argument to these gold slipper-wearing lock
steppers was a think-piece showing why gold is likely to be range-bound in
the short term. In a series of charts, I pointed out gold's correlation with
the US dollar index over the past 15 months and commented briefly on its
price seasonality (Mercenary Musing, October 19, 2015).
In today's musing, I once again cool off the gold hotties
and GATA groupies with another series of charts that shows the 4% rise in the
price of gold so far in October is simply its normal seasonality.
But before we go there, let's review a five-year chart of
gold in US$:
Note that since gold closed at an all-time high of $1895
in September 2011, it has continued to make lower lows and lower highs over
the one-, two-, three-, and four-year time frames. Technical analysts regard
that as a significant bear market trend.
Now let's look at a series of gold charts covering a
five-month period from June 1 to October 31 for every year from 2003 to 2014.
Each yearly interval shows the percentage rise or fall from the first trading
day in June:
Here is a table showing high and low prices over the
pertinent time periods:
Gold $ / Oz
Year
|
High June 1-15
|
Low Jun 15-Aug 31
|
High Oct 1-31
|
2003
|
367
|
343
|
388
|
2004
|
397
|
385
|
429
|
2005
|
429
|
418
|
476
|
2006
|
642
|
567
|
609
|
2007
|
672
|
642
|
815
|
2008
|
896
|
787
|
904
|
2009
|
977
|
909
|
1062
|
2010
|
1246
|
1157
|
1373
|
2011
|
1549
|
1483
|
1741
|
2012
|
1635
|
1556
|
1792
|
2013
|
1404
|
1192
|
1361
|
2014
|
1273
|
1268
|
1250
|
These charts and the table show:
·In 11 of the 12 years, gold hit a significant seasonal
low during the summer months. The exception occurred in 2014 when gold rose
from early June to mid-July, was range-bound until Labor Day, and then
dropped drastically in late October (shown in red above).
·For 9 of the 12 years, gold's high from June 1 to 15 was
less than its high from October 1 to 31 (anomalies again shown in red).
·In 2008, gold hit a significant five-month low in
October during the global financial crisis. When stocks and commodities
crashed, speculators were forced to liquidate gold holdings to cover margin
calls.
This is the current gold chart, June 1 thru October 23,
2015:
Gold closed at $1200 on June 1, hit its summertime and a 5½ year low
of $1085 on August 5, and ended today at $1164.
The 2015 chart mimics the status quo for gold price
seasonality in 11 of the last 12 years; i.e., an early to mid-June high, a
significant mid-summer low, and followed by a rally in October.
We still have a week to go before Halloween and end of
our 2015 five-month period. However, given today's close at $1164, it appears
unlikely that gold will close higher at month's end than its June 1-15 high
of $1200, thus marking the third anomalous October in a row.
If so, this will be further evidence of the ongoing bear
market for gold with lower highs being established year over year over year.
Let's review what I briefly mentioned last week and
illustrated in the charts and table today:
The behavior of the gold price since early summer can be
attributed to seasonal supply and demand fundamentals. We are witnessing the
usual June to October price paradigm: A decline from early June highs with
lows established during the summer doldrums followed by a rise during the
Indian festival and wedding seasons.
I can also forecast higher prices thru mid-December then
a drop during the holiday season in the West as year-end approaches. I will
have more on this idea in a subsequent musing.
I reiterate that gold ain't goin' anywhere anytime
soon. It will remain range-bound within year-to-date highs and lows for
the short-term.
This is no trick or treat, folks. As per usual, I will
put my mercenary money where my mouth is:
I stand ready and willing to entertain over/under
bets on gold's end-of-year spot price from any of the aforementioned gold
bugs, perma-bulls, and yellow metal disciples. If you foresee a break-out of
gold to the upside in the next couple of months, contact me for a friendly
wager: $100 bottle of wine, loser buys, and we drink it together.
Any takers?
Ciao for now,
Mickey Fulp
Mercenary Geologist
Acknowledgment: Gwen
Preston is the editor and Steve Sweeney is the research assistant for MercenaryGeologist.com.
The Mercenary Geologist Michael S.
"Mickey" Fulp is a Certified
Professional Geologist with a B.Sc. Earth Sciences
with honor from the University of Tulsa, and M.Sc. Geology from the
University of New Mexico. Mickey has 35 years experience as an exploration
geologist and analyst searching for economic deposits of base and precious
metals, industrial minerals, uranium, coal, oil and gas, and water in North
and South America, Europe, and Asia.
Mickey worked for junior explorers, major mining
companies, private companies, and investors as a consulting economic
geologist for over 20 years, specializing in geological mapping, property
evaluation, and business development.In addition to Mickey's professional
credentials and experience, he is high-altitude proficient, and is bilingual
in English and Spanish. From 2003 to 2006, he made four outcrop ore
discoveries in Peru, Nevada, Chile, and British Columbia.
Mickey is well-known and highly respected throughout the
mining and exploration community due to his ongoing work as an analyst,
writer, and speaker.
Contact: Contact@MercenaryGeologist.com
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