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Only One Thing Matters For Gold Prices: There is No More QE

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Publié le 04 juin 2013
930 mots - Temps de lecture : 2 - 3 minutes
( 5 votes, 1,2/5 ) , 3 commentaires
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Rubrique : Or et Argent

One can make numerous arguments for the future direction of gold prices, citing a myriad of facts and statistics to justify one’s position, but the reality is there is only one factor that matters right now; the Fed is not delivering any more QE. This means gold prices will continue to head lower, a view we have held since the start of this year.

All other arguments are overridden by the simple reality that Bernanke is currently in discussion as to a potential “tapering” of QE, so additional easing is not even close to being on the table. The reasoning behind this is also simple; employment in the US is getting better, and has been for some time, therefore there is no need for further easing.

Provided that payrolls can keep coming in at around +200k on average each month, the Fed has no need to inject more stimulus into the economy. Gold bulls can question the accuracy of the data, or claim that in real life the employment situation is much worse that the statistics suggest, but the reality in the Fed follows these stats and therefore their action will be based on this data. We are not stating a view on the reliability of any data series, we are simply pointing out the Fed only looks at this one, and therefore as traders we have to look at what the Fed looks at in order to determine the future course of monetary policy.

Since the easing of monetary policy is the most bullish factor for gold, the lack of future easing is very bearish.  On a longer term view gold has broken down significantly and done serious technical damage to the uptrend of recent years. This coupled with no more QE from the Fed means gold will trade at $1200 by the end of the year.

In the shorter term we could still see a rally back to $1450, which would be a welcome opportunity to gain short exposure to gold at better levels. $1350 is the next support level which will be broken in the next month or two, and then we will be heading down to $1200.

Silver prices will likely tumble much further, in percentage terms, than gold itself, due to the volatile nature of the market and the lack of liquidity. We believe that silver will be trading in the teens by year end, as a lack of demand for silver as a hedge against USD monetary easing overwhelms any increase in demand from the industrial side of an expanding global economy.

This scenario of significantly lower gold and silver prices for a sustained period of time will play havoc on the mining stocks, which have already been brutalized, having more than halved in less than a year.

We do not believe than this decline is over for miners. Much of the recent decline can be put down to investors coming to the realization that the super-profits they were expecting the miners to produce as gold and silver soared, simply were not going eventuate. However, we think the sector remains unprepared for a scenario where prices stay so low, for so long, and that many companies will actually struggle to remain viable, let alone reap massive profits.

Sometime over the next year, some mining stocks will start reporting negative earnings, as gold and silver fall lower than their costs of production. It is then that we will see the next leg down in the mining sector. However, this decline should be different to the recent drop, where miners were sold regardless of fundamentals. In the next leg down the selling will be concentrated in the weak miners that are not viable with lower prices, whilst the stronger miners will be spared somewhat. It is the weaker miners that we are currently shorting, please subscribe at www.skoptionstrading.com for further details.

Much of successful trading and investing depends on solely recognising and reacting to what is happening right now, rather than striving to predict how the world may look many years from now. Right now the Fed is not easing monetary policy, gold prices have broken down technically, and many miners have high costs of production that will choke them as gold heads lower. Therefore the best trading strategy in this environment is to short gold on any rallies and be short a select group of vulnerable mining stocks. If one must having a core holding in gold or mining stocks, then a hedge of being short the most vulnerable mining stocks, and potentially using options, to buy some insurance against the portfolio is worth looking into.

In conclusion our message is simple; forget everything else, there is no more QE so gold prices are not going higher. This time last year the Fed was moving towards QE3, now they are talking about tapering off purchases, and yet gold is only 15% lower! This presents an outstanding opportunity for those who can recognise that money can be made in gold when prices fall as well as when they are a rising.

Sam Kirtley

 Our portfolio is up 612% since inception, and that has been made with gold prices going higher, lower and sideways! All of our trading signals this year have been winners, yielding an average return of 63.04% in 24.36 days, including a 175% profit using GDX puts and 135% using GDXJ puts. Our full trading record is available on our website along with information on how one can sign up.

SK Options Trading

www.skoptionstrading.com

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1. In order to appear somewhat credible and scientific one does need to entertain the options once in a while. Otherwise you can appear fixated. It doesn't surprise me in the least that after trillions in QE over 4 years, the Fed has said this. They get to see the market's reaction and at the same time get some credibility.

2. Lets say for a minute that the Fed does what it says and *tapers* QE. Lets say they drop it down $5b per month starting now. That's still another $680 billion of QE - around the size of QE1 I think. Tapering QE is not stopping QE - it is reducing it over a period.

3. Again, lets say Sam is right, QE is "stopped" and the economy improves. Does gold keep dropping in value? Well we have about 2 trillion of QE that is mostly "waiting in the pipeline" so to say. Banks holding onto a lot of liquidity to remain "solvent" in the face of their assets that have been de-valued since 2007. When the Fed succeeds in inflating stocks and real estate once again the banks will be more solvent and thus keen to flood *ahem* lend all this liquidity into the marketplace. Sure a lot of this has been "priced in" to the value of gold already but when the average consumer sees some *real* price inflation across the board (not just in isolated sectors like energy and medical) then I think this may keep hard assets like gold in some favour.

4. "Only One Thing Matters For Gold Prices: There is No More QE".... riiiiight. So from 2001 with gold at $260 rose about 400% to over $1000 before any financial crisis and before a single dollar of QE was put on the table.

Look, I've lost quite a bit of faith in the metals myself, and have sold some physical too (with nice premiums due to demand, luckily). However I'm not buying into thin arguments like this one. "Get out of the X while it's low so you can but into Y when its high" - sounds like a recipe for disaster for me.
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In the second last para you state: "Much of successful trading and investing depends on solely recognising and reacting to what is happening right now, rather than striving to predict how the world may look many years from now. Right now the Fed is not easing monetary policy...". In the following para you state: "In conclusion our message is simple; forget everything else, there is no more QE so gold prices are not going higher". Anyone else spot a gaping inconsistency there?

So your argument is based entirely on what Bernanke SAYS he is going to do but hasn't actually done yet. Well that seems sound thinking. After all. Why would he lie?
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Am I really going to take trading advice from some yahoo that cant even straighten his tie before having his picture taken? Not likely. It doesn't really matter, I stay out of the fake paper game anyway.
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1. In order to appear somewhat credible and scientific one does need to entertain the options once in a while. Otherwise you can appear fixated. It doesn't surprise me in the least that after trillions in QE over 4 years, the Fed has said this. They get  Lire la suite
dom1971 - 06/06/2013 à 18:24 GMT
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