Precious metals expert Michael Ballanger has done his research and
believes the long-term and intermediate-term status of the gold market and
its associated gold miners is unequivocally bullish. In this article for The Gold Report,
he lays out his case, explaining that every indicator he has used since the
late 1970s is kicking into gear.
On Dec. 3, 2015, the gold market completed a 51-month bear market by
touching down at $1,045.60; the market for gold miners, as represented by the
NYSE Arca Gold BUGS Index (HUI) Index, completed a 51-month bear market
bottoming on Jan. 19, 2016 at 99.09. The home of a vast majority of junior
exploration companies, the TSX Venture Exchange (TSX.V), recently completed a
58-month bear market finding its trough on Jan. 20, 2016 at 466.43.
These three bear markets will go down in history among the most vicious
bear markets ever. Some were longer (1988-1993) and some were sharper
(2007-2008) but only one bear market compares in terms of misery and that was
the 1975-1976 bear market that saw gold drop from $190/ounce ($190/oz) to
around $110/oz after gold advanced from $35/oz to $190/oz in reaction to
Nixon taking the U.S. off the Gold Standard by abandoning the Bretton Wood
Agreement in 1971. That bear, a precursor to the most dramatic,
wealth-preserving ascent in gold's history, was particularly acute because of
the speculative mania that gripped the junior mining and exploration market
from 1971-1975 during the initial blast to $190.
When the correction began, investors were embarrassingly long a vast
amount of gold-related securities and even more so the penny miners that
didn't need gold (or anything else, for that matter) to be swept up in the
fever. Naturally, when the price of gold began to correct from $190, it
mirrored the September 2011 peak in gold above $1,900/oz and the HUI around
643 such that by the time gold bottomed in 1976, there were body bags at the
side of every road leading to Bay Street. Firms went under, salesmen droves
taxicabs to supplement income, and the losses in customer accounts were
mortally large. However, it did turn up and by the time I entered the
investment industry, in May 1977, the bulls were back in control, wounded and
scarred, but back. I believe that we are today in that same early-stage
period that we saw in 1977 with prices having bottomed but skeptics everywhere
and very little public participation.
Therein lies the wonderment of opportunity for investors as they try to
find a rational place to invest in a completely irrational financial world.
Long-term Outlook: The "Rhyming" of Events"
The long-term bull market for gold began in mid-1999 at around $250/oz
after a near 20-year bear market. This initial advance had a 10-year
consecutive year-on-year advance streak broken in 2011. The great debate in
the world of gold analysts and technicians is whether the 1999-2011 advance
constituted a "bubble" or was it simply the result of 20 years of
credit creation and currency debasement disguised behind the façade of serial
bubbles in real estate and stocks. For this gold prognosticator, the notion
of a gold stock or gold bullion "bubble" is beyond ridiculous; all
one need do is compare money flows into bonds and stocks versus gold and
gold-related investments and the result is that many hundreds of times
greater in "flow" is the dollar amount allocated to bonds
("debt") and stocks than to the precious metals. Ergo, I view the
long-term outlook for gold as unequivocally "bullish" with and even
greater emphasis on the gold miners and explorers.
Just as the 1975-1976 bear market ended after a 50% correction, the
2011-2015 bear ended after a 45.5% correction and if events in history truly
do rhyme, the advance from the 1976 low of $110/oz to the 1980 peak at $857/oz
(intra-day) was 688%. If my theory of this new bull market in gold rhyming
with the 1976-1980 bull, then a 688% advance off the December 3rd bear market
nadir at $1045/oz sets my target at $7,189/oz. If you impute the leverage
contained in the HUI and in the TSX Venture Exchange to this kind of advance
in the underlying commodity, the HUI at 162 could easily see three times the
percentage advance in gold projecting out to 3,302. The TSX Venture Exchange,
being the "Wild, Wild West" of penny mining exchanges, could see
five times the leverage and projects to 16,305 off the 474 January 2016 lows,
a level which is around the current level of the Dow Jones Industrials.
The Intermediate Term: One Day at a Time
The intermediate-term outlook for me is about five to seven years, and
since we just exited a period of Novocaine-less root canal surgery lasting
almost five years, it's important to remember that it takes many, many small
rallies in any market (that is coming out of a major bear) before investor
confidence really settles in. For that reason, I think that the advance to
the major downtrend line at $1,450/oz is going to be arduous and labored and
that for most of the next year gold will be range-bound with $1,140/oz as
support and $1,450/oz as stout resistance. However, I look for the miners as
represented by the HUI and the explorer/developer names to massively
outperform physical gold as valuation compression abates, as new companies
are formed, and as new discoveries are made and rewarded by a new generation
of investors and speculators burnt to a crisp by the Biotech meltdown or the
bursting of the Amazon/Netflix/Valeant bubbles. I further think that the gold
market will actually absorb many losing positions in short order because of
the relatively minuscule market capitalization of the entire sector when
compared to the trillions upon trillions currently held in high-yield
"junk" bonds and NASDAQ companies. By doing so, this golden horse
will throw many riders to the dirt and leave them behind and that is
precisely how bull markets should evolve.
The senior gold miners as represented by the HUI is shown on a monthly
basis below and it is pretty clear that the ugliness of 2011-2015 has now
ended and ended in a blaze of bull market glory. Every single cylinder is
fully engaged from volume to sentiment to momentum with little signs of the
hedge-fund naked-shorting shenanigans that characterized the past four years.
They have tried to knock my beloved miners back more than five times since
the Jan. 19 sovereign wealth fund regurgitation and every single time the
market inhales any selling pressure and moves them all higher. On an
intermediate-term basis, the miners look like they can be accumulated on
weakness over the seasonally weak summer months while they work off
overbought conditions (weekly chart) and settle in.
Short-Term Outlook: "Lookout Below!"
Before I proceed, it must be stated and stated clearly that I have two
main accounts that I use for the precious metals with one dedicated to long-
and intermediate-term positions and the other to short-term trading. I own
large positions in a number of junior TSX.V explorer/developers and some of
these have been held since 2010-which means that I have exposure to gold (and
silver) literally 100% of the time. I never trade my physical, I seldom trade
the high-quality miners, and I often hedge both by using ETF's or options.
So, when I tell the world that I am looking for a "better entry point"
for my trading positions, I don't want to read a post in some chatroom that
"Ballanger's bearish!" because as you have read earlier in this
missive, I am NOT a "bear" but make no mistake-I look for a
bone-jarring correction in March-April that will singe the eyebrows. Here is
why:
- Commercials (the bullion banks that "act" for
the producers in their "hedging" operations) are now within
3,000 contracts of that 166,000 contract short position they sported at
the exact top in mid-October. After momentum died a few weeks later,
they gave the market a nudge to the downside and it unleased a torrent
of selling to the tune of $150/oz. Here is a chart I posted back in
December...
These commercials are probably short more than the 166,000 from last
October because of the rise in open interest late this past week and if
past is indeed prologue, the they are going to carry out another selling
jamboree very shortly that will force all of the momentum-chasing and
technical funds to puke positions overboard exactly as happened with the
culmination of the decline shown above with Commercials lifting a 16,000,000-ounce
synthetic short position into Large Speculator (hedge-fund) losses.
- HUI is massively overbought and soon to be rolling over.
A couple of weeks back, the RSI for the HUI got to over 80 as it moved
up through 160. RSI is now under 65 and has been in decline for a week.
The MACD lines are dangerously close to a negative crossover, which has
been a precursor to declines in the past, some of them quite extreme.
Here is the same chart but with a couple of ideal "set-ups"
for re-entry. I don't want to be chasing the miners after a 70% move in
the HUI with MACD, RSI and Histograms all pointing to a rollover; I DO
want to be accumulating miners under conditions illustrated below.
- The "PDAC Curse": The Prospector and
Developer's Association Convention ("PDAC") held every March
in Toronto has become the perfect "sell" signal over the years
and while it made sense to sell your junior miners going into the
pre-convention hype and market-grooming in advance of a PDAC-inspired
financing, it has actually morphed into a much broader market-timing
event. The chart below shows how accurate it has been for the TSX.V but
it also applies to the HUI as well; how much it is based upon the bear
market versus the PDAC Curse has yet to be determined. However, in light
of the overbought status of the precious metals complex, early March
would be a logical point in time for a correction to unfold.
Silver
is Underperforming: The icing on the proverbial cake for precious metals
bulls is ultimately the point where gold's juvenile delinquent little brother
finally gets to grab the limelight because if you think a charging gold price
can light up the emotional juices, there is nothing quite like a
hysteria-charged, testosterone-filled, gold-bug-on-steroids bull market in
silver to send the crowds into a financial frenzy. That's why I monitor
silver and more importantly, the gold-to-silver ratio ("GTSR") as a
confirmation tool for the health of the advance. If, after a big run-up,
silver starts to lag gold, it shows up in the GTSR and that is usually a sign
that the rally is fading. This week, the GTDR closed at 83.27, a new weekly
high for the move and a midst the highest recorded Commercial shorts since
2008. We can postulate and speculate until the cows come home as to
"why" silver is under so much pressure (and that it a topic for
another day and one I'll soon be covering) but the fact remains that unless
the GTSR is moving lower as a complement to any advance in gold, the health
of the advance is in question.
Overview and Conclusion
As you have read from my earlier remarks, I am
delighted to report that the long-term and intermediate-term status of the
gold market and its associated gold miners is unequivocally BULLISH with
every indicator I have used since the late 1970s kicking into gear. That's
the good news. The bad news is that in the short term, I see an
ever-increasing probability for a seriously sharp correction and one that
will ignite all of the recent memories of what just happened back in the
2011-2015 bear market. This happened in the U.S. equity market in 1983 after
the Dow advanced 40% off the lows of August 1882. The 1983 correction
reminded people of how AWFUL 1981-1982 was and they sold stocks down 30% in a
New York minute. However, that first major correction off of the initial
advance gave investors an unprecedented buying opportunity into the summer of
1983 and stocks then proceeded to advance over 270% until mid-1987 without
blinking an eye. That is exactly what I see playing out in the next two to
four months for gold and gold miners; I see a sharp correction starting in
mid-March the severity of which will give me a clue to when and what and how
much I buy.
To wit, the operative and critical thought to
take away from this missive is this: I WILL be a buyer of gold, silver and
the mining stocks into the next correction and the risk I take is that there
IS a correction. If I am wrong, then this bull market will have policemen
turning in their badges and the bullion banks following the rules, both Black
Swan events of the highest order.
Stay very closely tuned...
Originally trained during the inflationary
1970s, Michael Ballanger is a graduate of Saint Louis University
where he earned a Bachelor of Science in finance and a Bachelor of Art in
marketing before completing post-graduate work at the Wharton School of
Finance. With more than 30 years of experience as a junior mining and
exploration specialist, as well as a solid background in corporate finance,
Ballanger's adherence to the concept of "Hard Assets" allows him to
focus the practice on selecting opportunities in the global resource sector
with emphasis on the precious metals exploration and development sector.
Ballanger takes great pleasure in visiting mineral properties around the
globe in the never-ending hunt for early-stage opportunities.
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