Daily Updates
For such a wonderful year for precious metals investors, the final calendar quarter left little to celebrate. Just as people now take for granted that their phones will also take pictures, play music, and surf the internet, many investors have come to expect gold and silver to move up in a straight line.
In fact, in a recent CNBC interview one analyst claimed that gold’s recent correction proves that it is not really a safe haven. In truth, such a statement merely proves how little some analysts know about markets.
However much the fundamentals may be on your side, there are always mitigating factors that affect price movement. In the case of gold and silver, the temporary resurgence of the dollar versus other fiat currencies alternatives has been the dominant factor – but even that isn’t the whole story.
STAMPEDE OUT OF EUROS
The critical factor that has been in play the past few months has been the European debt crisis going critical. I have said all along that the US is in worse shape than the EU overall because the EU has less will and capacity to resolve – or even temporarily paper over – its problems. The flip side is that, absent the massive stimulus the US has received, Europe has been forced to deal with its sovereign debt problems first.
Global investors have been spooked since the credit crunch of 2008. That means they are more likely to follow the herd rather than stick to the fundamentals. It takes a certain firmness of character to watch your investments sell off by double digits and not have a moment of self-doubt.
So, what we’re seeing is big moves into and out of asset classes. But what is important to understand about these circumstances is not the scale of the moves but the direction of the trend.
Right now, the dollar is riding high. But it’s still down over 30% over the last decade as measured by the generous US Dollar Index. Gold, by contrast, is up over 350% in that period. Of course, past performance does not guarantee future results, but the fundamentals have not changed. It’s worth remembering that mainstream analysts chose the dollar over gold in almost every report over the last 10 years, based on a blind faith in the power of the US government to centrally plan the American economy. The market proved them wrong.
Once again, the mainstream narrative is that the real danger is in Europe and therefore the US offers a safe haven. This has caused a stampede out of euros and into dollars. But as we’ve seen over the last few years, the euro and dollar can decline simultaneously – and will continue to do so as more and more investors realize that the real safe haven is gold.
SHOOTING STRAIGHT UP
There is a reason assets don’t move up in a straight line. Besides varying liquidity needs and risk appetites of investors, there are also built-in mechanisms to flush speculators out of a skyrocketing market.
As silver approached $50 this past April, the COMEX raised margin requirements for futures contracts on the metal, thereby pushing many speculators out of the market. While this practice presumably prevents speculators from overusing leverage, it also has the effect of crushing the short-term price of the metal. Both gold and silver have been subject to increased margin requirements this past year.
While we can now rest assured that future price increases are driven more by long-term investment than short-term speculation, it is not without costs. Speculators serve to reduce volatility in a market by buying in anticipation of future scarcity and vice versa. So, pushing out the speculators may increase volatility in the future. However, it’s my feeling that in truth no gains have been lost at all – they have merely been postponed.
IS THIS THE TOP?
In order to determine whether the recent sideways movement of gold and silver is cause for concern, let’s look at what lies ahead for 2012.
It is clear from 2011 that the new Tea Party members of Congress are not strong enough to stop the fiscal bleeding, and with the Occupy Wall Street movement in full swing, President Obama doesn’t have a lot of room to compromise. Washington has been reduced to short-term measures to “pay” its bills, and the bills are mounting faster than ever.
Meanwhile, Ben Bernanke’s Federal Reserve seems intent on pushing all the boundaries of monetary policy. In its most recent ploy, the Fed has engaged in a covert bailout of Europe through the use of currency swaps. From an investment perspective, this goes to show how deluded dollar investors are – they’re buying into a currency that is being printed for any and all comers. This news should have caused the dollar to tank and gold and the euro to rise, but again, the fear trade is overriding all other considerations.
2012 should see more trouble from Europe, and therefore potentially more dollar buying. This might even be the year we see a few members exit the euro. However, there is no way to know how the euro will react in the short-term to such events, as such scenarios may already be priced into the market. In any event, long-term, the eurozone will be stronger without its weaker members. If they cannot mend their profligate ways, better to force them out now than compromise the solvency of the stronger members.
For smart investors, dollar strength caused by euro fears is simply an opportunity to buy contra-dollar assets on the cheap. Yes, I believe sub-$30 silver and sub-$1600 gold are still cheap for what’s ahead. And with 2012 forecasts of $2,200 by Morgan Stanley, $2,050 by UBS, and $2,000 by Barclays, it appears I’m not alone.
“In recent years, the wild swings and volatility of the markets has become greatly magnified, due to the actions of high frequency traders (HFT), who specialize in day trading, – the buying and selling huge blocks of equities, often moving in sync with whatever direction the wind might be blowing on any given day. Two-thirds of the trading volume on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq is now handled by computer programs, that doesn’t require any human input. While equity markets are still the favorite den of speculation for HFT traders, many of these “black box” traders are now setting up shop in the commodities markets.”
If traders in the commodities markets were to check into a Psyche ward, the files would no doubt read “Bi-Polar” or Schizophrenic.” This is so, because commodity traders have a habit of fixating on a set of data one day, and then quickly forgetting about the data the very next day, and re-focusing on something else. Market sentiment often turns on a dime, and without notice. This shifting of sentiment in commodity futures is nothing new, of course. That’s why for decades, dabbling in commodities was considered too risky for most investors, since sentiment, by definition, is unpredictable and impossible to measure.
Bipolar disorder, describes a set of behaviors that causes people to have big swings between severe high and low moods, and switching from feelings of being overly happy and joyful to feelings of sadness and depression. Because of the highs and the lows — the condition is referred to as “bipolar” disorder. In between episodes of mood swings, there are moments of so-called normalcy. Schizophrenia on the other hand is characterized by delusions, hallucinations, and incoherence, and is classified as a “thought” disorder while Bipolar Disorder is a “mood” disorder. In either case, these traits help to explain some of the reasons behind erratic price movements on a daily basis that vexes many retail traders.
In 2011, commodity traders started out with a positive frame of mind. The Federal Reserve’s money printing operation, dubbed “QE-2,” was running at full steam and flooding the world with cheap dollars. However, markets do not travel in straight lines. There are always zig zags along the way. There were numerous minefields that commodity traders had to navigate through, before reaching the finish line for 2011. There was the loss of Libya’s oil output, an earthquake and tsunami in Japan, the Silver bubble, the collapse of the Greek bond market, the Bank of England’s QE-2 scheme, the ECB’s 11th hour rescue of the Euro-zone’s banking system, and finally, signs that China’s factory sector was sagging under the weight of Beijing’s monetary tightening campaign and clampdown on real estate.
In recent years, the wild swings and volatility of the markets has become greatly magnified, due to the actions of high frequency traders (HFT), who specialize in day trading, – the buying and selling huge blocks of equities, often moving in sync with whatever direction the wind might be blowing on any given day. Two-thirds of the trading volume on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq is now handled by computer programs, that doesn’t require any human input. While equity markets are still the favorite den of speculation for HFT traders, many of these “black box” traders are now setting up shop in the commodities markets.
At the peak of the commodities boom in April 2011, about $412-billion was stashed away in managed commodity funds, buoyed by the Fed’s radical QE-1 and QE-2 money printing schemes. The Fed’s experiment with QE was a huge success, that is to say, the Fed was able to conjure-up the illusion an economic recovery by simply printing vast quantities of paper currency that was covertly channeled into the stock market through its agents on Wall Street. Furthermore, the Fed proved that it could prevent the specter of deflation, by cheapening the value of the US-dollar in relation to other currencies. For eight straight months, the Dow Jones Commodity index zig-zagged its way higher, as the Fed fulfilled its pledge to inject $600-billion of freshly printed US$’s into the coffers of the Wall Street Oligarchs.
When the Fed first telegraphed its QE-2 scheme in August 2010, the high octane MZM money supply was languishing at a -2.3% annualized rate. By the time the Fed finished QE on June 30th, 2011, – MZM was expanding briskly at a +9.9% clip. Some traders reckoned the Fed was aiming to artificially inflate the value of the US-stock market, others figured the Fed was trying to spur Beijing into appreciating the value of the Chinese yuan at a faster rate against the US-dollar. Whatever the Fed’s motives for QE-2, rioters soon began taking to the streets in Algeria, Jordan, Libya, Morocco, and Yemen, ostensibly aimed at toppling repressive governments, – but also expressing extreme anxiety and anger over skyrocketing food prices, that was fueled by hallucinogenic effect of QE on traders in London and New York.
Commodities are priced in US-dollars, and with the Fed flooding the world with dollars, traders piled into markets. Copper climbed to a record $10,000 /ton in London, North Sea Brent rose to $125 /barrel, Corn futures in Chicago hit $7.50 /bushel, Silver futures soared to $49.50 /oz, and rubber jumped to all-time peaks in Shanghai and Tokyo. Coffee, cotton, and sugar also soared to all-time highs. Tyson Foods’ (TSN.N) chief operating officer predicted a “new norm” for corn prices at $7 a bushel that was pushing up costs for cattle, chicken and hog feeders. Corn prices had nearly doubled since the middle of 2010, and Tyson said it expected to spend $500-million more on grain in its fiscal 2011, a +13% increase over the roughly $4-billion the company spent on grain in 2010. Regardless, the Fed’s policy remained unchanged; – aiming to inflate the value of the stock market with unlimited injections of liquidity and locking short-term interest rates at near zero-percent, which in turn, fanned wild-eyed speculation.
While the Fed wasn’t scheduled to turn-off QE-2 until the end of June 2011, some commodity traders decided to jump off the QE-2 bandwagon a few months early. They figured that the bullish trade had become too crowded, and that the timing was ripe for a nasty shakeout. On April 12th, Goldman Sachs shocked the markets, by urging its clients to dump positions in crude oil, copper, cotton and platinum. On May 3rd, Societe Generale joined Goldman Sachs in warning of tougher times for commodities prices. “The conclusion of the second round of quantitative easing, (QE-2), will deprive commodities of a key ingredient of their winning streak,” the French bank said. “This suggests that the commodities bull-run support by QE-2 may run out of steam in the third quarter if the global economy shows any signs of weakening. The end of QE-2 on June 30th could well herald the end of the commodities bull market. If emerging market economies slow and abundant liquidity dries up after QE-2, deflation fears may be back on the agenda in the second half of 2011,” SocGen warned.
Two-days later, on May 5th, commodity markets were rocked by a nearly unprecedented onslaught of panic selling as modest early profit-taking snowballed into one of the worst days on record. In a slide reminiscent of the steep sell-off in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, Brent crude oil dived a record $12 /barrel, and natural gas dropped over -7%. Tin was the biggest loser among industrial metals, shedding -7% to $28,500 /ton at one point. Chicago Corn fell -3% to $7.05 /bushel and soybeans fell -2.3% to $13.19 / bushel. Ironically, the May 5th plunge in commodities happened around the 1-year anniversary of the May 6th 2010 “Flash Crash,” on Wall Street, when the Dow Industrials plunged -1,000-points.
Silver was the catalyst for the slide, tumbling by nearly $5 /oz, its biggest one-day dive since 1980. Prior to May 1st, the white metal was zooming higher in a speculative frenzy, touching an all-time high of $49.50 /ounce from around $18 /oz in late August 2010 when the Fed first telegraphed QE-2. Now however, Silver was on course for its steepest fall in almost 30-years, losing -27% in a single week to $35.287 on May 6th. Silver led the rout, undermined by the Chicago Mercantile Exchange’s decisions to increase margins for new speculative positions by +245% in the prior weeks and months. After the May 2010 commodity plunge, fund managers were still divided over what direction prices were headed next.
The tug-of war in the commodity markets tipped in favor of the Bears in August, just as SocGen had predicted. While the Fed’s QE-2 scheme was generally credited for fueling the speculative run-up in commodities, led by the Silver market, working against the bullish tide was the People’s Bank of China (PBoC). While the Fed was launching QE-2 in Nov ‘10, the PBoC was draining 1-trillion yuan of liquidity from the Shanghai money market, by lifting bank reserve requirement ratios (RRR) 150-basis points to 19-perent. The PBoC was using calibrated hikes in banks’ reserve requirement ratios (RRR) as its main tool to tackle the commodity price bubbles inflated by the Fed. The PBoC moved away from using open market operations, a mechanism it has relied on for years, to soak-up excess money. By June 2011, the PBoC had resolutely lifted RRR’s to a record 21.5%, with each half-point increase draining 350-billion yuan out of the Shanghai money markets.
Two-days later, on May 5th, commodity markets were rocked by a nearly unprecedented onslaught of panic selling as modest early profit-taking snowballed into one of the worst days on record. In a slide reminiscent of the steep sell-off in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, Brent crude oil dived a record $12 /barrel, and natural gas dropped over -7%. Tin was the biggest loser among industrial metals, shedding -7% to $28,500 /ton at one point. Chicago Corn fell -3% to $7.05 /bushel and soybeans fell -2.3% to $13.19 / bushel. Ironically, the May 5th plunge in commodities happened around the 1-year anniversary of the May 6th 2010 “Flash Crash,” on Wall Street, when the Dow Industrials plunged -1,000-points.
Silver was the catalyst for the slide, tumbling by nearly $5 /oz, its biggest one-day dive since 1980. Prior to May 1st, the white metal was zooming higher in a speculative frenzy, touching an all-time high of $49.50 /ounce from around $18 /oz in late August 2010 when the Fed first telegraphed QE-2. Now however, Silver was on course for its steepest fall in almost 30-years, losing -27% in a single week to $35.287 on May 6th. Silver led the rout, undermined by the Chicago Mercantile Exchange’s decisions to increase margins for new speculative positions by +245% in the prior weeks and months. After the May 2010 commodity plunge, fund managers were still divided over what direction prices were headed next.
The tug-of war in the commodity markets tipped in favor of the Bears in August, just as SocGen had predicted. While the Fed’s QE-2 scheme was generally credited for fueling the speculative run-up in commodities, led by the Silver market, working against the bullish tide was the People’s Bank of China (PBoC). While the Fed was launching QE-2 in Nov ‘10, the PBoC was draining 1-trillion yuan of liquidity from the Shanghai money market, by lifting bank reserve requirement ratios (RRR) 150-basis points to 19-perent. The PBoC was using calibrated hikes in banks’ reserve requirement ratios (RRR) as its main tool to tackle the commodity price bubbles inflated by the Fed. The PBoC moved away from using open market operations, a mechanism it has relied on for years, to soak-up excess money. By June 2011, the PBoC had resolutely lifted RRR’s to a record 21.5%, with each half-point increase draining 350-billion yuan out of the Shanghai money markets.
…read more HERE
Ed Note: Gold’s fifth day of price rises is the longest rally we’ve seen in two months on Euro, Iran and Asian New Year Buying
“The incoming negativity on gold last week reached epic levels. Friends of mine and gold for more than 40 years were looking for a towel to throw into the gold ring.”
Ed Note: Always worth reading, the highly regarded Bill Gross runs the Massive 1/4 Trillion Dollar Bond Pimco Bond Fund
Bill Gross Warns Of Financial Market Implosion And The End Of Economic Life As We Know It
The Key Point according to the Financial Times:
“Conceptually, when the financial system can no longer find outlets for the credit it creates, then it de-levers.”
As Gross Explains (Emphasis via the Financial Times)
But before ringing in the New Year with a rather grim foreboding, let me at least describe what financial markets came to know as the “old normal.” It actually began with early 20th century fractional reserve banking, but came into its adulthood in 1971 when the U.S. and the world departed from gold to a debt-based credit foundation. Some called it a dollar standard but it was really a credit standard based on dollars and unlike gold with its scarcity and hard money character, the new credit-based standard had no anchor – dollar or otherwise. All developed economies from 1971 and beyond learned to use credit and the expansion of debt to drive growth and prosperity.
Almost all developed and some emerging economies became hooked on credit as a substitution for investment in tangible real things – plant, equipment and an educated labor force. They made paper, not things, so much of it it seems, that they debased it. Interest rates were lowered and assets securitized to the point where they could go no further and in the aftermath of Lehman 2008 markets substituted sovereign for private credit until it appears that that trend can go no further either. Now we are left with zero-bound yields and creditors that trust no one and very few countries. The financial markets are slowly imploding – delevering – because there’s too much paper and too little trust. Goodbye “Old Normal,” standby to redefine “New Normal,” and welcome to 2012’s “paranormal.”
Thus we enter the ‘great deleveraging’ — brought on by preferences focused on real or liquid assets which constrain money supply and eat away at our 40-year global credit expansion like ‘invisible termites’.
At this point capital preservation becomes the investor’s mantra, not the idea of additional return:
Will Rogers once fondly said in the Depression that he was more concerned about the return of his money than the return on his money. But from a system-wide perspective, when the return on money becomes close to zero in nominal terms and substantially negative in real terms, then normal functionality may breakdown. We all start to resemble Will Rogers.
Whether it’s via deflation or inflation, time depreciation of money (or wealth) is now guaranteed.
As Gross sees it, both eventualities are equally possible:
This new duality – credit and zero-bound interest rate risk – is what characterizes our financial markets of 2012. It offers the fat-left-tailed possibility of unforeseen – delevering – or the fat-right-tailed possibility of central bank inflationary expansion.
Only the actions of governments and central banks can determine which way the wealth destruction will happen. Deflation would reward the holders of ‘non-productive’ government debt, while inflation would reward the holders of tangible real assets. QE (or a lack of QE), meanwhile, could help tip the balance either way.
What’s fair to say is that without government intervention continued capital flows into “safe government securities” would lead to an inevitable giant tidal wave of deflation — just as they did during the original Great Depression.