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We don't actually hope to go back to the old ways of using gold coinage;
it's just that the Federal Reserve's monetary policies keep driving us there.
Or put another way; capitalism and private property are to productivity what
inflation policies are to gold demand.
Warning: if you find our point of view objectionable, disagree
entirely, and conclude we're quacks, we're ecstatic. It means the bull market
in gold is young, because, well, we were there. I know from my own life
experiences, just when I had confidence that I understood something, I saw it
in an entirely different light. In fact, I am nobody, as in nobody knew that
gold bottomed in 1999!
The bull market
in gold is, or was, one of the easiest calls we've ever made, but yet, the
most frustrating to communicate to anyone outside of the choir. The writing
has been on the proverbial wall ever since 1999 when the Bank of England
announced it was going to auction off its remaining gold. The reasons to be
bullish on gold were so obvious that only the most bearishly biased or
inexperienced couldn't see them. This continues to be the case today.
I suppose "I told you so" is getting tired. How about,
"Holy cow, you mean, we were right?" (for more details on
our asset model see:http://www.goldenbar.com/GBAssetModel.htm)
Ok, so we're not actually surprised, but I thought the bears would get a
kick out of it. Gold has been in a steady but choppy ascent for two years
now. The leg that began in 2000 is technically a primary leg, and the break
through $340 turns the primary sequence bullish. We're defining the primary
sequence by either one of two possible chart interpretations.
- The breakout from a five year double bottom is the one
most technicians would favor I think. The first bottom was made in 1999;
the second was made in 2001 by this analysis. The neckline is drawn
horizontally through $340, which represents the 1999 high. If this group
is right in its interpretation we should see a sharp move up to about
$455.
- The 1999 bear market (new) low culminated in the
reversal of that four-year primary bear market leg (1996-1999). The
countertrend rally (marked by the Washington Agreement buying spike) was
short in duration, and its effect was to print a lower high in the
primary bearish sequence that bears hoped would lead to lower lows. The
following primary bear leg lasted about 14 months, but the market
stopped at a higher low, and gave way to a
primary bull leg that finally culminated in a higher high in the primary
sequence, such that what we have in the chart now is a primary bullish
sequence of higher lows (Aug 1999 and Feb 2001) and higher highs (Oct
1999 and now) spanning five years.
The prognosis of the latter sequence is less clear than the first. The
technical objective of the current breakout of gold's 6-month congestion
range is about $365, and it's conceivable that this (two year) primary leg
ends there for a while, and turns down into a primary countertrend bear
market leg. But it's not our most likely scenario, at least not if we're right
about the dollar's immediate downside.
Bears are likely to argue that the bear market parameters are intact at
$425, or the 1996 high. They are right that there will be resistance there.
At least there should be. But I think they are going to be wrong that their
bear market is intact. This is the first time in over 20 years that we've
seen a bullish combination of higher lows and higher highs in the primary
sequence. Whatever the immediate market prognosis is now, we are confident
this is the bull market signal we've all been waiting for.
All of our other technical criteria have confirmed gold's primary bullish
sequence. The CRB chart is almost an exact replica of gold's chart in the
primary cycle. There too, last week's new five year highs could represent
either the breakout from a five year double bottom or a primary sequence of
higher lows and higher highs. To confirm a gold bull market and a dollar bear
market we said that gold would need to get through $340, the dollar index
would have to fall through July's low, and either the CRB, oil, or the
Goldman Sachs commodity index would have to reverse their primary bear market
legs. The CRB has satisfied our criteria.
Oil prices are flirting with primary bear market resistance at the moment
($31), but the Goldman Sachs index made a new high in its intermediate
sequence, which technically reversed the bear leg that took the index down
during 2001. The index is already positioned within a primary bullish
sequence. We view it as confirmation of the CRB move, but would like to see
oil over $31 to scream bull.
For its part, the US dollar index fell through July's low (104) on Tuesday
to register a new 33-month low and also satisfy our criteria. The fact that
the breakdown so far is marginal is of little concern to us, because our
confidence is high that gold is a leading indicator of where the dollar's
going.
Dear Richard (Russell),
with due
respect, you're wrong; gold bugs are bullish, unfortunately I presume. I hate
to ruin a perfectly good bullish slant, but gold bulls turned the Amex gold
bugs index around last June when they took out the 1999 high. Only, they
pulled back when gold refused to signal a bull market in kind.
The pullback was volatile, but the bulls were able to keep the unhedged
Amex Gold Bugs Index, the only gold index to break through its 1999 highs in
the first place, from falling back below that point in the subsequent
correction. So even while gold failed to signal a bull market, the bulls
maintained a primary bull market argument in gold shares. They got ahead of
themselves, and are lagging gold today, but it's hard to argue they aren't
still ahead of gold prices.
But maybe you're correct to bring attention to their recent underperformance
nevertheless, as an indication that sentiment is not overly bullish yet.
Thank you.
The Dollar Barometer
The reasons for gold's breakout can't be pinpointed to any one
development. GATA believes the market is exploding because it has bought the
bullion/central bank short story, Blanchard believes it's exploding because
they're suing Morgan and Barrick, the beltway believes it's exploding because
of US-Iraqi tensions, James Sinclair thinks its exploding because he's been
promoting it (good work Jim, forgive the jest), astute market watchers think
it's exploding because of a Wall Street bear market. We think it's exploding
for all these reasons to one extent or another, but by far, the main reason
gold prices are exploding is because they're forecasting a weak dollar,
perhaps a collapsing US dollar. Keep your eye on the ball.
Inflation Is A Virus
Theoretically, strong productivity advances almost always result in
increasing output per unit of labor. In the real world, while that is true,
there are other factors that corrupt both, the calculation and the theory.
The calculation is corrupted by inflation and the theory is corrupted by
gold's opponents, or the groups that are most vested for sustaining the
inflation in currency, money, and credit.
Let me briefly explain. In a given economy, if there were no change in
money supply, any technological improvement should result in more output, and
lower prices. Thus, the calculation output per unit of labor wouldn't capture
the advance the way it does today. In theory, labor prices would come down as
well, though in reality they are known to be sticky in that direction.
Of course, I would attribute it to the fact that inflationism is itself so
deep-rooted in our society, and ancestry. We see it as a virus causing
symptoms such as temporary blindness, ponzi-schemitis, deflation-phobia,
gambling fever, random trading addictions, borrower's insomnia, egomanias,
chronic optimism, looter-phrenia, larcenist obesity, bubble-denial, herding
behaviors, and of course at times, total confusion. In extreme cases,
confidence in government initiatives / plans can grow.
Anyway, when you have an inflationist monetary system like we do, this
calculation essentially measures the effectiveness of the inflation policy in
sustaining profits.
I know it is difficult to imagine an economic system where money and
credit don't expand, and so, as a consequence, we've gradually adjusted our
views of inflation to this moving train. Ok, the train analogy worked for
Einstein; maybe it can work here to explain why most people can't see the
inflation today… because maybe they've jumped on the train, if you will. Most
everyone has a vested interest in the inflation of money and credit today.
Maybe that's why investors think Japan has a deflation problem, because the
train they're on has been moving so fast.
The point is that common interpretations of most of the economic data
completely exclude the effects that monetary variables have on the data. The
Fed says that we have no inflation because we have productivity, and it also
implies that productivity is behind the strength in the dollar. Recall that
theoretically, productivity gains translate into more goods, thus lower
prices. This also means that the value of money rises. Today's economists
might call that deflation, since they only see either inflation or deflation
when it affects the aggregate price level, or the value of money.
Here's the conundrum. What is it when the central bank lowers interest
rates, money supply expands, resulting in an inflation of equity valuations,
and a consequent rise in foreign demand for the financial assets denominated
in that currency? Does a rise in the value of a currency this way mean
deflation? Hah. Look, the dollar has risen for five years for this precise
reason, because it has attracted foreign currency; because nowhere on earth
could investors (think to) get the kind of bang for their bucks as they could
on Wall Street.
We aren't arguing productivity doesn't exist or that there isn't more of
it in the United States than most anywhere else. What we've argued is that it's
been overrun by the enormity of the free banking world's inflation doctrine.
The Fed would argue that the dollar rose for the same reasons we would,
foreign investment demand, but it would argue against our charge that
inflation caused counterfeit stock market gains in the late nineties, or at
any time for that matter. In fact, as you know, the Fed argues inflation
doesn't exist at all (the Fed is the free banking world's spokesperson and
lender of last resort).
If Wall Street's bull was a bubble, it was inflation induced, and to that
extent, whatever valuations it sustained are in the process of being reversed
now.
The Fed has been stepping on the gas pedal since the beginning of 2001 to
fight off that corrective process, and for the first time in at least 70
years, confidence in the dollar remained strong long after Wall Street's bear
market showed up. Both of these facts are unprecedented in their own way, but
the dollar has finally begun to crumble this year under both, economic and
political pressures.
To the extent that the dollar's gains in the nineties were the result of,
or related to, the bullish but fleeting expansion in financial values, it's
overvalued. That's a subjective assessment and it's going to stay that way
until we change our mind, or until gold, stock, and commodity prices begin to
tell another story.
Indeed, gold and commodity prices are rising because they're anticipating
dollar devaluation. That is our main argument. And the reason our confidence
in the dollar's demise is so strong is because we believe the tools the Fed
used to prop up the dollar have been exhausted. Of course, productivity must
be around, but it has little or no bearing on this argument at the moment.
For, if Wall Street is suffering now from the backlash of a bubble
environment today, caused by inflation and marked by overvaluation in the
dollar, what is it going to suffer tomorrow as a result of the effects on the
economy of the profuse inflation since the bear market began?
Let's put it this way. Banks like it when credit and currency supplies
expand because their balance sheets expand in proportion. If such an
expansion in monetary aggregates occurs alongside a stable or rising value of
the currency the assets are denominated in, all the better. What lenders can't
tolerate is when the value of this currency falls, which it tends to do when
there's too much of it, or if it's too easy for too long.
The free banking world has a vested interest in the inflation, but it
can't tolerate dollar devaluation. Inflation is "under control"
when the dollar's value is manageable, but it is out of control when the
dollar devalues.
The banking system is in trouble today, not just because it has a short
position in gold, but also because it's losing control over this wealth
transfer, if you will. In other words, because of the effects a falling
dollar will have on prices, interest rates, and thus, the value of their
assets.
It's no secret that by manipulating gold prices, one could theoretically
control the inflation, or more accurately, sustain it, for as long as they
could manipulate the gold price. The reason is that what they're really doing
is manipulating the value of the currency. Combine that with a printing press
and you own the world. By fixing the gold price, whether by clandestine
manipulation or public declaration, the policy is actually aimed at fixing
the value of the currency that is supposed to be money, but that can come to
life out of thin air. Thus, instead of a gold standard maybe it should be
called the "Thin Air Standard." Alas, our title.
The point is that gold's opponents are the same people that support the
inflation aristocracy. There can be no question of motive. It's as plain as
day. The only people that can't see it are those still on board the train,
who find comfort in theories of elastic money, perverted extremes of
utilitarian ideas, monetarism, government policies, and who remain unaware of
the "relative" (Mises would say subjective) nature of valuation. To
them, anything that is moving slower than the train is deflation; anything
moving faster is inflation; and anything that's moving the same speed is
simply not moving. It's absolute, not relative, and so, when they see that
the gold sector is only a fraction of the size of the financial sector today,
they ask, why on earth would anyone care about an industry so insignificant,
in proportion to the market capitalization of say, Microsoft?
If this is your question, we aren't going to answer it, because we want
you to sweat it out yourself. Go short gold. Believe in your conviction!
You're right, the gold sector is insignificant relative to the
"inflation" in other financial values, and even relative to other
measures of industry, if you accept the Austrian theory of malinvestment as
we do, since it has yet to be proven false.
So in Peter Lynch's style, two sentences or less, here's why gold is
beginning a bull market: Wall Street's bull market was largely phony and the
result of unsustainable easy money dogma; the same monetary factors lending
to the overvaluation of the US dollar have been exhausted, and a decade-worth
of imbalances in the gold market are about to be unleashed on a market
saturated with dollar denominated financial assets or reserves.
We believe there has been manipulation, but we also believe that
manipulation is fruitless, at least directly, and that it couldn't have been
managed without the help of other factors related to dollar and investment
policy (the part where they keep inflation under control). These other
factors, it could be argued, were also market driven in part. In other words,
if there were inflation, we would argue it inflated market developments that
were already under way. Whatever the actuality, what we're trying to say is
that, manipulation or not, gold prices may have still gone down during the
nineties, but the reasons for the decline were unsustainable nonetheless.
The main thing we have to say about Blanchard's lawsuit against JP Morgan
and Barrick at the moment is that they better have money. It's costly to
pursue legal actions as controversial as this. It would be better just to act
on the knowledge, in my view. At least it would be cheaper. But that doesn't
mean we won't root for 'em anyhow.
We don't agree with the claim that gold would have been at $740 if prices
were allowed to respond to the natural forces of supply and demand, as the
lawsuit alleges. At least not to the extent that any coordinated manipulation
could alone have that kind of impact. To the extent that policies were aimed
at maximizing the value of the dollar, we would agree that the forces of
demand and supply weren't natural; the effects of inflation on paper values
distorted them, and we believe would have with or without any manipulation.
However, we do agree the manipulation existed nonetheless, and that it had
some impact. Moreover, this impact is just as bullish now as it was bearish
then. If gold prices were fixed lower than the market would have pinned them
at, the fact would simply add to the imbalances that were already accruing to
the same extent. In other words, the upside has been made larger by the gold
market suppression by whatever extent you think it was manipulated. If we
were simply greedy gold bulls, we'd send Greenspan et al a thank you letter
for all of it. But there are enormous social consequences to the manipulation
of money and credit.
Our view is that Blanchard and co has better standing than Reg Howe, in
that Reg didn't do business with his plaintiffs directly, so they alleged he
couldn't have been hurt, and thus had no real standing. Blanchard is a large
coin dealer that's done business with both Barrick and Morgan I presume. It
also has timing on its side. The rising price of gold is going to make it
increasingly difficult for banks to hide any losses stemming from a short position
in gold, and the growing spotlight on their accounting practices involving
Enron type prepay agreements is making the idea increasingly plausible.
The difficulty is probably going to be the fact that Blanchard's success
would set a precedent that the court would not tolerate - almost anyone could
cash in. This is an objection that was raised in the Howe case as well.
Good luck to them. We believe they're charges are with merit.
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