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Gold versus Gold stocks. A topic near and dear to my heart. One that I have studied relentlessly for the past several years. I am no mining expert. I am not the one that can point you to the next "ten bagger" in the junior mining
sector. But I have been right in insisting that my subscribers favor Gold over Gold stocks and I continue to favor Gold (and silver) over
the companies that dig these metals
out of the ground. This is
sector analysis, not an individual firm analysis.
Gold stocks are undervalued say
the Gold stock bulls. The fundamentals are improving thanks to a rising "real" price
of Gold. These things are
true. But a "value trap"
is believing that things that
are cheap can't get cheaper. They can.
Now, I trade Gold stocks,
I don't hold them for the long term. My long term investment for this secular precious metals bull market is physical Gold held outside the banking system, and a little
bit of silver. Why? Because Gold stocks are not Gold, they
are a paper derivative of
Gold. And when the poop
hits the fan, like it did briefly a few short weeks ago, Gold stocks get thrown out with other stocks. Sure, they may hold
up better than base metal stocks or banking stocks,
but a break even proposition when
Gold is rocketing higher seems like a poor trade
to me. I'd rather hold the GLD ETF and make some fiat money rather than be loyal to the Gold stock
cause and not make any
money.
When the Gold sector is healthy and in "proper" alignment, the
juniors should be leading the seniors higher. One
can use a ratio of the GDX
ETF (i.e. the senior miners) to the GDXJ ETF (i.e.
the junior miners) to get
a sense of whether the
seniors or juniors are outperforming. Here's the data during one of
the bigger bull runs of this secular Gold bull market (a GDX:GDXJ ratio chart over the past 6 months):
This is the opposite of what
a strong Gold stock bull market
looks like. Now, the flip
side of this argument is that the senior Gold stocks can lead the move and the juniors follow
later. Perhaps, but we are not exactly at the beginning of this move in Gold are we? Others would argue that Gold stocks were dragged down by the stock market
and thus this is not a fair
period to analyze. I would argue that we are headed for a full-on poop storm after
this dead cat bounce in common equities completes and that Gold stocks better get used to it!
Also, the junior mining sector, as represented by the
GDXJ ETF, is clearly showing a big head and shoulders top here, which could
of course be negated at any time. For now, though, caution is clearly warranted
and hope is not a good strategy. Here's a chart of GDXJ over the past 18 months to show you what I mean:
And what of the micro-cap Gold stocks or the explorers? The GLDX ETF, a representation
of this sector, looks
terrible! Here's a chart
of the daily action of GLDX since
its inception in early November of 2010:
I am very bearish on the stock market
once this bounce in general stock markets completes. I know that this is not 2008, but that is only
because the problems are worse and the outcomes in financial markets should be even
more severe. Gold is the
premier asset class for this
cycle. Gold stocks may be
on sale again after the
carnage is complete and I
plan to have some dry powder
to buy them if things work out as I think they will.
I advise Gold stock bulls to use caution here. If the head and shoulders pattern in the GDXJ ETF reverses, I'll be there
to notice and switch to a bullish
posture. But for now, I still
prefer Gold over Gold stocks.
Few Gold stock bulls realize that
some of the best gains in Gold stocks occurred AFTER the Dow
to Gold ratio bottomed on a secular
basis. It happened in the 1970s and in the 1930s. I
am no permabull on the precious metals other than as a long-term buy and hold for the physical metal. Gold and silver stocks
are a trade to me, not a religion. Gold, on the other hand, is the anchor of the international monetary
system, whether it is officially declared to the sheeple or not.
Cash is king during a bear
market and there is no better form of cash than that which cannot
be conjured up by decree.
If you are crazy enough to try to trade in this market environment, I invite you to try my
low-cost subscription service,
which focuses on Gold, silver and Gold and silver mining stocks, but also trades opportunities that arise in other markets. My long-term investment advice is free and hasn't changed for years: buy and hold physical Gold until the Dow to Gold ratio gets
to 2 (and this ratio may well get below
one this cycle).
Adam Brochert
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