Gold surged sharply this week after the Yellen Fed yet
again chickened out on raising its benchmark interest rate.
Gold-futures speculators’ irrational fear of Fed rate hikes has been a major
drag on gold. And rate-hike risks just plummeted in the coming months,
since the Fed can’t risk acting heading into this year’s critical US
presidential election. So gold’s next major upleg was likely just
unleashed by the Fed.
Oddly, Wall Street’s expectations for a rate hike at this
week’s latest meeting of the US Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market
Committee were surprisingly high. The interest-rate target directly
controlled by the FOMC is the federal-funds rate. Commercial banks are
required to hold reserves at the Fed. They lend these reserves to other
banks overnight in the federal-funds market, at the FOMC’s federal-funds
rate.
This market is so important that federal-funds futures
contracts trade on the CME. No one has more knowledge about federal
funds than the hedgers and speculators trading in this market. Parsing
their collective bets yields the implied odds of Fed rate hikes, which
the CME conveniently calculates and summarizes in real-time with its FedWatch
Tool. It revealed this week’s rate-hike expectations were totally
wrong.
On Tuesday’s close before this latest Wednesday FOMC
meeting, these futures-implied rate-hike odds were running just 18%.
Thus any hike would have been a big surprise for the markets, almost
certainly igniting a major stock-market selloff. Historically the FOMC
hasn’t hiked before these odds are running 70%+. That only
happens after top FOMC officials have spent months warning of an impending
rate hike.
Before the Fed’s first rate hike in 9.5 years last
December, these futures-implied rate-hike odds were way up near 80%! So
it was strange to see many economists and analysts ignore federal-funds
futures in expecting a probable rate hike this week. Given their strong
gold buying after the Fed did nothing for the umpteenth time, futures
speculators obviously also believed this week’s rate-hike risks were higher.
Even more perplexing, these American gold-futures traders
who dominate short-term gold price action have long believed Fed rate hikes
are gold’s nemesis. Gold-futures trading is exceedingly risky, so only
elite and sophisticated traders participate in this market. At $1350
per ounce, each 100-ounce futures contract controls $135,000 worth of
gold. Yet the maintenance margin required to trade it is merely $5400!
So the maximum leverage available in gold futures now is
25.0x, vastly higher than the decades-old legal limit in the stock
markets of 2.0x. At 25x, a mere 4% adverse move in the gold price would
wipe out 100% of the capital risked by a fully-margined trader! So
you’d think that these guys would take the time to seriously study gold’s
historical price action and drivers before taking such outlandish risks
betting on it.
Historically gold actually thrives
during Fed-rate-hike cycles! As I pointed
out in depth last December just days before that first Fed rate hike in 9.5
years, Fed-rate-hike cycles are actually very bullish for gold.
There have been 11 since 1971, and gold’s average gain across the exact spans
of all was way up at +26.9%. Gold rallied in a majority 6 of these 11
Fed-rate-hike cycles, enjoying huge average gains of +61.0%!
And in the other 5 where gold retreated, its average loss
was an asymmetrically-small 13.9% over their exact spans. The lower
gold’s price entering Fed-rate-hike cycles, and the more gradual their hiking
pace, the better gold performs as the Fed forces interest rates higher.
So this newest Fed-rate-hike cycle couldn’t be any more bullish for
gold. Gold entered it at major secular lows, and it is the most gradual
ever.
Even if the goofy gold-futures speculators can’t be
bothered to spend a day digging into gold’s historical price action during
Fed-rate-hike cycles, they should consider the last one. Between June
2004 to June 2006, the FOMC more than quintupled its FFR to 5.25%
through 17 consecutive rate hikes totaling 425 basis points. Surely
that slaughtered gold, right? Nope. Over that exact span, gold
still powered 49.6% higher!
So this popular belief in recent years that Fed rate
hikes are going to crush gold is ridiculous, a totally-false myth. Yet
gold-futures speculators still hang on every word from the FOMC and its top
officials. Whenever the Fed does something hawkish or jawbones about
it, gold-futures speculators flee in terror. Conversely when the Fed is
perceived as more dovish, these traders rush to buy gold just like we saw
this week.
Gold-futures speculators chaining themselves to the Fed
is readily evident in this gold chart of the past couple years or so.
American futures speculators’ total long contracts, upside bets on gold, and
short contracts per the CFTC’s weekly Commitments of Traders reports are also
included. This year’s young new gold bull has been heavily influenced
by how futures traders perceive the Fed’s stance on rate hikes.
On a lazy summer Sunday night in July 2015, gold was
crushed to artificial lows by an extraordinarily-manipulative giant short
sale. Within a single minute around 9:30pm Sunday July 19th, a
gargantuan 24k-contract gold-futures sell order was placed. That was so
extreme that twice within that single minute 20-second trading halts
were triggered! Gold was blasted $48 lower to $1086 in one minute,
shattering support.
As I explained in depth at the time, this was obviously
an extreme
shorting attack. No long-side trader would
dump so many contracts so quickly at such a low-volume time, as it would have
a huge adverse impact on their exit price. Impressively despite the
horrendous gold sentiment back then, this brazen attempt to manipulate gold
lower failed. Soon after that gold entered a major new multi-month
uptrend.
Between early August and mid-October 2015, gold powered
9.6% higher out of that shorting attack. It was carving a nice uptrend,
until a hawkish surprise from the FOMC’s October 28th meeting last year.
In its usual post-meeting statement, the FOMC warned of an imminent rate hike
“at its next meeting” which was coming in mid-December. Consider this
precedent before gold-futures speculators’ kneejerk selling reaction.
In the 10.2 years since its last rate-hike cycle ended in
June 2006, the Fed has only hiked rates a single time last December.
And in the very FOMC statement from the meeting immediately preceding that
one with the rate hike, the FOMC directly warned one was impending.
Since the Yellen Fed didn’t warn again in this week’s FOMC statement, there
is no chance it is planning to hike at its next early-November meeting.
Back to that late-October-2015 FOMC statement’s hawkish
surprise, futures speculators dumped gold with reckless abandon. Their
total long contracts shown above in green cratered, and their shorts in red
skyrocketed. It was American futures speculators’ irrational fear of
rate hikes that drove gold’s major 6.1-year secular low in
mid-December. Gold actually bottomed the day after the Fed’s first rate
hike in nearly a decade.
But rate-hike-cycle fears are not misplaced at all for
the general stock markets. Still back in December, I looked at the
benchmark S&P 500 stock index’s performance
during those same 11 Fed-rate-hike cycles since 1971. Its average gain
in them was merely +2.8%, an order of magnitude less than gold’s. And
considering these overvalued stock markets directly
levitated by extreme Fed easing, rate hikes are
a real threat.
During the first couple trading days after that
mid-December rate hike, the S&P 500 plunged 3.3%. But with a new
tax year approaching in a couple weeks, most sellers waited until 2016 to
exit in response to a tightening Fed. That would push the big taxes due
on their realized gains out another entire year. The moment January
2016 arrived, the Fed-rate-hike-driven stock-market selling resumed with a
vengeance.
During the first 6 weeks of 2016 in the wake of the Fed’s
initial rate hike off that 7.0-year-old zero bound, the S&P 500 plunged
10.5%! That was its biggest selloff in 4.4 years. So as I
predicted on the final day of 2015 when gold
languished at $1060, investors soon started to flock back. Gold
is a unique asset that moves counter to stock markets, so investment
demand soars when stock-market fortunes are deteriorating.
It was this gold
investment demand that fueled 2016’s strong new
bull market! Last week I discussed this in depth if you want to get up
to speed on this essential foundation. Investment capital steadily
returned to gold in the first half of 2016, before stalling out in the third
quarter. While all this investment demand has overwhelmingly been this
gold bull’s primary driver, futures speculators still drive major swings.
Gold suffered a sharp selloff on heavy gold-futures
selling in mid-May. There wasn’t even an FOMC meeting that entire
month, but 3 weeks after each meeting the Fed releases its minutes.
While the FOMC’s statement from its late-April meeting had been considered
dovish with no explicit hints of any potential rate hike at its next meeting
in mid-June, those April minutes were more hawkish than expected.
So gold-futures speculators again rushed to sell, their
total longs plummeting, driving gold’s sharp May pullback. This metal
didn’t start to recover until the first Friday in June, thanks to a colossal
miss in the US-monthly-jobs data. Economists were looking for 164k jobs
created in May, but the actual was just +38k! This was the worst
jobs report in 5.8 years, so the data-dependent Yellen Fed couldn’t risk
hiking in June.
Thus futures speculators flocked back into gold again,
catapulting it higher on plunging odds of the next Fed rate hike.
Indeed at its mid-June meeting, the FOMC held fire. There was do
dissent among the FOMC members, and their future projections for
federal-funds rates in the coming years dropped by about 50 basis
points. Gold’s strong June rally came because futures speculators expected
no rate hike.
Then on the last Friday in June, gold soared after the
British people shocked the world by courageously voting for independence from
their unelected, unaccountable, meddling EU overlords. Speculators and
investors alike rushed to buy gold, so it shot higher. The futures
speculators weren’t buying because of Brexit uncertainty per se, but because
they believed Brexit uncertainty would stay the Fed’s hand on rate hikes!
See the pattern here? Gold surges higher when
futures speculators aggressively add longs and cover shorts in response to
lower perceived odds for near-future Fed rate hikes. I suspect this
week’s latest FOMC meeting will prove a similar major buying catalyst for
gold, igniting its next major upleg. While the
federal-funds-futures traders didn’t expect a rate hike, they did expect the
FOMC to talk a bit hawkish.
But that didn’t happen! There was no explicit hint
for an imminent rate hike at the FOMC’s next meeting like its gold-crushing
warning late last October. This week’s FOMC statement was actually shocking
in that the Fed didn’t even offer up an excuse like usual for not hiking
rates. It said even though the rate-hike case “has strengthened”, it
simply “decided, for the time being, to wait”. Yellen just doesn’t want
to hike.
On top of all this, at every other meeting the FOMC
releases a summary of the FFR projections by each of the FOMC members and
regional Fed presidents. These so-called dots got much more dovish
again, with the FFR levels for the next couple years plunging another 50 and 75
basis points or so! This Fed led by uber-dove Janet Yellen is getting more
and more dovish all the time, unleashing serious gold buying.
There were 3 regional-Fed presidents on the 10-person
FOMC who dissented, the first time this has happened since December 2014.
But due to the rigged nature of the FOMC, that’s no indication that a rate
hike is coming anytime soon. The colorful regional-Fed presidents, God
bless ‘em, have no power at all on the FOMC. They only occupy 4
of its 10 seats on a rotating basis, so Yellen’s cohort always outvotes them.
Yellen and 4 closely-allied Fed Board of Governors’
members always control 5 votes, and the president of the New York Fed has the
only permanent voting seat for any regional Fed as the 6th. Naturally
he is always very dovish too, since rate hikes hurt the financial markets
that are so critical to his Fed district’s economy. Yellen’s dovish
faction dominates the FOMC with iron fists, regional presidents be
damned.
And this is super-bullish for gold in the next few months,
because now the Fed’s hands are tied until after the early-November US
elections. There is zero chance for a rate hike or even much
hawkish talk until after all Americans cast their ballots on November
8th. The FOMC’s next meeting is right before that on November 2nd, so
it can’t even warn in that statement about a hike at its following
mid-December meeting.
So we have at least 3 months now before the Fed
can even start getting hawkish again, a fantastic and long window for gold’s
next major upleg to surge higher on heavy investment and speculation
buying. Contrary to Janet Yellen’s feeble assertions otherwise, the
Fed is highly political. The results of this upcoming presidential
vote have huge implications for the Fed, and Yellen certainly wants Hillary
to win.
Yellen is a hardcore lifelong Democrat appointed by
Obama. One of her governors with a permanent FOMC vote is Lael
Brainard. She served in Obama’s Treasury department, and earlier this
year actually made multiple donations to Hillary Clinton’s presidential
campaign up to the personal limit! Democrats who love easy money
dominate the FOMC, and they know a rate hike or enough talk of one will tank
stock markets.
Almost since the FOMC made the unprecedented move to
force the FFR to zero in December 2008, the Fed has been under heavy if not
withering attack from Republican lawmakers. They hate the fact the Fed
has grossly distorted the economy, and decided to subsidize debtors and Wall
Street by robbing blind hardworking American savers. Congressional
Republicans want to drastically limit the Fed’s power.
Remember soon after last December’s initial rate hike,
the stock markets plunged dramatically. Given how fake today’s lofty
Fed-goosed stock markets are, there’s no doubt another rate hike or
sufficient threat of one will do the same thing. And it turns out that
US stock-market performance in the final two months leading into
early-November elections is exceedingly important for their outcomes.
The Fed knows this.
Since 1900 there have been 29 US presidential
elections. When US stock markets rally in Septembers and Octobers
leading into these early-November elections, the incumbent party has won the
presidency 16 of 17 times! But when stock markets sell off in those
final couple months before the elections, the incumbent party has lost 10 of
12 times. Stock-market fortunes have 90% odds of predicting
election results!
Why is this the case? 40% to 45% of voting
Americans will always vote Republican, while an opposing 40% to 45% will always
vote Democrat. But in the middle are 10% to 20% of swing voters with no
strong party affiliation. They often vote based on how they perceive their
own economic prospects. Higher stock markets have always bred
optimism, making them more likely to vote for keeping the status quo.
Any Fed hawkishness at all risks pushing stock markets
lower heading into the November 8th US elections, including at the FOMC’s
next meeting on November 2nd. As I’ve been telling our newsletter
subscribers for months now, there is absolutely no way the heavily-Democrat
Yellen FOMC will risk doing anything at all that ups the chances of a
hostile-to-Yellen Donald Trump winning the presidency!
So not only just unleashed by the Fed again, gold is
entering a few-month-or-longer period where there is virtually no risk
of anywhere-near-enough Fed hawkishness to spook futures speculators.
Gold just got the green light for a major new upleg driven by investment and
speculation buying. Every major gold selloff in the past year was driven
by Fed hawkishness’s impact on futures trading, and that risk has vanished.
Thus I strongly suspect this week’s FOMC meeting will
soon prove to be the catalyst igniting the next big upleg in gold’s strong
young bull. Investors can certainly play this with physical gold coins
or by buying shares in that flagship GLD SPDR Gold Shares gold ETF.
Provocatively nearly all the capital fueling
gold’s bull market this year has come from
American stock investors aggressively buying GLD shares.
But at best GLD will merely pace gold’s coming
gains. Meanwhile the stocks of the best gold miners will really amplify
gold’s gains due to their great inherent profits
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The bottom line is this week’s dovish FOMC likely just
unleashed gold to start powering higher in its next major upleg. For
years futures speculators’ perceptions of the likelihood of imminent Fed rate
hikes has battered gold around. That’s proved very true in this year’s
young gold bull too. But with the critical US presidential election
rapidly approaching in early November, the Fed can’t risk sending any hawkish
signals.
The heavily-Democrat ruling dovish faction of the FOMC won’t risk
doing anything that could incite a stock-market selloff. US history has
proven abundantly that weak stock markets leading into presidential elections
greatly lower the incumbent party’s chances of winning. With the Fed
bowing out, gold is just starting to enjoy a rare multi-month window devoid
of Fed hawkishness to retard buying or spark selling.
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