Timing & trends

Time to Move Capital into Next Bull Market – Part I

If you remember the dot com bubble as clearly as I do and are a technical analyst then you will recall the month which the NASDAQ broke down and confirmed a new bear market has started. The date was November of 2000.
 
You may be wondering why I bring this up. What do tech stocks have to do with commodities?
Good question because they have nothing in common. But the key here is that when a bull market ends in one asset class that money is shifted into another. That money moved into commodities and resource stocks and in a big way.
 
Precious metals and miners exploded, surging an average of 1000% return (10 times ROI) over the next six years, topping out in 2008. In fact, these resource stocks bottom the exact month which the NASDAQ confirmed it was in a bear market on Nov 2000.
 
Compare Dot-Com Bubble & Burst to Precious Metals Stocks
Over the next couple of weeks, I will be sharing some of my top stock picks in the metals sector (gold, silver, nickel, and copper). If you missed the 2001 and 2008 metals bull market then you best pay attention and be sure you don’t miss what is about to happen.
 
bullmarket2

Compare Bull Market in Stocks with the Energy Sector

The financial markets and asset classes move in cycles, and there are times when specific sectors outperform others. Resources stocks specifically the energy sector is about to enter its strongest phase within the US equities bull market which started in early 2009.
 
Oil stocks have a lot of positive things in their favor in my opinion, though many will disagree. But it’s all in how you look at the data and your investment horizon.
 
During the previous market tops which are the same for NASDAQ, DOW, S&P 500, energy stocks have outperformed most sectors. Why? In short, we will always need energy, many of the companies pay dividends and when money starts to roll out of equities the underlying commodities typically hold their value for an extended period of time.
 
These past stock market tops generated 36%-40% returns during a time when most traders and investors were losing their shirts, or should I say lost 50% of their life savings… Which train would you rather be on?
 
oilbull2

Now take a quick look at the price of crude oil

Oil has formed what is called a (double bottom, or “W” formation and also appears to be completing a cup & handle pattern). Whatever you want to call it, they are all very bullish patterns, meaning a much higher price for oil is expected.
oil2
 
In short, higher oil prices, means more profits for energy companies, it’s that simple.

An Oil Junior Resource Stock

There are times during market cycles when I like to own shares of some junior companies. When a major shift looks imminent within a market or sector just like we saw in 2000 and again in 2008 I like to hold shares in companies which have the potential to rally several hundred percent.
 
A couple of weeks ago I talked about a speculative oil stock Cardiff Energy Corp. which I own shares. The story behind this stock is real and the horizontal well which they will start drilling mid-June 2015 has the potential to generate 5-7 times of a vertical well. Below is the chart with my short term targets.
 
The low priced crude oil is wreaking havoc with oil companies and share prices. The best plays are those who have the lowest cost of production per barrel and I heard this well could produce profits even if oil was trading at $25 per barrel and sold at WTI pricing with no discount.
 
The energy behind this share price is very impressive and shows that investors are confident in the horizontal well. If they strike oil who knows where the share price could rally to.
 
crs2
 
 
Side note: I met with Jack Bal the President, CFO, and Direction of Cardiff Energy Corp. in Toronto recently to learn more about the company and projects. Cardiff is currently doing a private placement to raise capital and if I’m correct investors can get shares at 25% discount from the current market value. And from what I understand they have room for a few more small investors. If this is of interested to you give Jack Bal a call directly at Cardiff Energy 1-604-306-5285, and you can mention this report if you want.

Next Bull Market Conclusion:

In short, every good investment will eventually become a bad one and vice versa. Knowing when to shift our capital from one sector to another is vital for steady long-term growth of our portfolio.
 
Over the next couple weeks through this multi-part series I will be sharing some very lucrative stock picks which I am investing in and the second one will likely be a nickel resource company that looks poised to rocket higher.

www.TheGoldAndOilGuy.com

 
Chris Vermeulen
 
 
 
Disclaimer: Nothing in this report should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell any securities mentioned. Technical Traders Ltd., its owners and the author of this report are not registered broker-dealers or financial advisors. Before investing in any securities, you should consult with your financial advisor and a registered broker-dealer. Never make an investment based solely on what you read in an online or printed report, including this report, especially if the investment involves a small, thinly-traded company that isn’t well known. Technical Traders Ltd. and the author of this report has been paid by Cardiff Energy Corp. In addition, the author owns shares of Cardiff Energy Corp. and would also benefit from volume and price appreciation of its stock. The information provided here within should not be construed as a financial analysis but rather as an advertisement. The author’s views and opinions regarding the companies featured in reports are his own views and are based on information that he has researched independently and has received, which the author assumes to be reliable. Technical Traders Ltd. and the author of this report do not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any content of this report, nor its fitness for any particular purpose. Lastly, the author does not guarantee that any of the companies mentioned in the reports will perform as expected, and any comparisons made to other companies may not be valid or come into effect.

Uranium: Better Days Are Ahead

nuclearplantdaisies580 1Uranium’s price has been low and stagnant for years, but that’s going to change, says Rob Chang of Cantor Fitzgerald Canada. Chang foresees volatility as the 2020 uranium deficit draws closer and demand for the limited stockpile drives the price up. In this interview with The Energy Report,the analyst points out that investors can find bargains throughout the space, and describes a handful of companies he considers particularly interesting.

The Energy Report: The uranium spot price balloon has lost air again and is back down in the mid-$30/pound (mid-$30/lb) range. It was stalled there for months last year. What pushed the spot price up in the first place? Why is it falling now?

Rob Chang: The uranium spot market is generally pretty thin, and any number of transactions on either the buy or sell side could push it in any direction. What’s moved it higher recently could be the news of Japanese reactor restarts happening this summer. A couple of reactors are set to restart in the next few months or so, and we believe that helped push the price along a little bit.

But the spot price really depends on near-term utility demand. I think that’s the key point here. In terms of utility demand, according to the numbers that we’ve seen, globally about 15–20% of uranium requirements for 2016 onward are still uncovered. Between now and the end of 2016, there needs to be some buying, either in the spot market or through some other means, to cover those requirements. We saw a bit of a lift because of that need, but certainly there hasn’t been a big rush back toward buying uranium ex-spot yet.

TER: I’ve heard repeatedly that the deficit is going to occur in 2019 or 2020. Why aren’t the mining companies moving ahead to address the deficit they know is coming? 

RC: Right now, there is no incentive. For them to spend the money to do the exploration or to develop a uranium project, they need to have a price that justifies the capital that’s required to get that going. Based on what I’ve seen, that magic number is probably in the $80/lb range for a meaningful amount of supply to come online. Currently, we’re sitting in the mid-$30s/lb. To justify any project, a company would need a return of, let’s say, at least 20%, but likely much, much higher. At a $35/lb, why would anyone spend the money to develop a project? That’s where we’re stuck.

Fission Uranium Corp. has a world-class project; the R600W is looking quite solid and has the benefit of being on land.

Everyone knows that prices need to move higher for additional supply to come, but utilities, seeing excess inventory in the market, have been sitting back and only buying what they need when they need it. At some point this will come to a head, and prices will need to move simply because utilities will need to buy and the spot market is thin. At that point there will be a big scramble to see who can put on production quickly enough to satisfy the demand. It will be very interesting, and it’s the primary reason why I believe there’s going to be a violent price increase. 

TER: Is the long-term price following the same trajectory?

RC: We believe it will. Currently, it has not. It’s been pretty static. However, as activity in the spot market picks up, we expect to see term prices move higher as well.

TER: Japan Atomic Power Co. (JAPCO; private) and Tokyo Electric Power Co. [9501:OSE; TKECF:OTCPK]; TEPCO) both have reported selling some of their uranium stockpiles. Is that going to further deflate the price? 

RC: I think that might be the reason we saw a step back in uranium prices recently. JAPCO’s sale was earlier, and TEPCO’s was more recent. However, I think the latter’s news is a bit overblown. 

TEPCO stated that it was going to reduce its inventories from current levels (17,570 tonnes of uranium/tU) to pre-Fukushima levels (16,805 tU). The 765 tU difference translates into just under 2 million pounds of uranium (2 Mlb). This figure is the potential amount of new material that may be available in the spot market, and while it is a decent amount, I would argue that it will not notably weigh on the market. A larger, 19,317 tU figure that was mentioned likely includes uranium deliveries scheduled for this year under long-term contracts. TEPCO has likely been returning this contracted material to producers for a while post-Fukushima, as evidenced by the fact that TEPCO’s inventories only marginally increased from pre-Fukushima levels, yet the company has not canceled any contracts and has not consumed any uranium via operating reactors in years.

“The time is right for uranium investing because we see the volatility on the upside rather than on the downside.”

So TEPCO likely is not doing anything new, but instead a news agency happened to find a report within TEPCO that described this process and made it public. My belief is that TEPCO was always planning on reselling the material, as it usually does. If you look at it, a 2 Mlb increase in inventory doesn’t quite make sense for a company that was getting deliveries each year for several reactors that require more than that amount to operate annually, if they are running.

TER: This sale might suggest that Japanese utilities are cutting back on their purchases. How would that affect the uranium space? 

RC: Japanese utilities generally have throttled back on taking deliveries of their purchases. There have been very few, if any, outright cancellations, as far as I’ve heard, over the past few years since Fukushima. The companies know they don’t need to take it all in, so some have been returning uranium to the producers and having the producers resell it in the market. That’s why we’ve seen price weakness for the last three years; the producers have material that was earmarked for Japan that has come back, and they sell it through other means. 

TER: The Nuclear Regulation Authority just approved restart for Japan’s reactors. What will that do to the uranium price?

RC: The approval wasn’t for the entire fleet. It would be great if it were. It’s actually on a case-by-case basis. The recent restart approval news was for two Sendai reactors, but the agency has also given partial approval to the Takahama reactors, and to Ikata 3 as well. So restarts are moving along. 

The key will be seeing some reactors actually turn on. That’s going to be the first domino to fall, and we expect many dominoes to follow. But the first one is the hardest to get over the line. Once we see that, we think restarts would occur on a much more frequent basis.

TER: What effect do you expect on the uranium price from that?

RC: It’s funny. On a supply-and-demand basis, it really wouldn’t move the price too much because, as I said, Japan has a lot of inventory already. It’s not as if the restart of just two reactors—or four or even six—is going to significantly impact the overall market. 

“Given the way the whole sector has been beaten up, I think the entire space is a bargain.”

What it does do, however, is bring back a lot more investor attention. There are some out there who still are skeptical that Japan will turn on any reactors. I believe they’re wrong, but we need to see the reactors turned on before that can be proved. Seeing that Japan is actually going to start consuming uranium, rather than just deferring it or stockpiling it, is certainly a positive in that the global inventory won’t just keep on growing and we’ll start to see some usage out of Japan. 

As we know, the spot market is really just between producers, utilities and a few market players. There isn’t much investor speculation, so it’s not as if a restart will cause more buying unless we start seeing investors step into the market and buy, like we saw in uranium’s heyday during the mid-2000s.

TER: How will the price slump affect the companies you cover?

RC: What we’re seeing now is a slight step back in some of the uranium equities that moved higher earlier this year because of the expectation of restarts and an improving supply-and-demand picture. What I do think, though, is that the downside is limited. Uranium prices really don’t have much downside from here, in my opinion, simply because there isn’t a large amount of supply coming out of nowhere, which was the catalyst for prices to move down before. Now, when I speak to producers and utilities alike, many expect prices to stay the same and, long term, to move a lot higher. I think the volatility is going to be on the upside. 

TER: Would you consider any of the companies that you cover bargains or deadwood?

RC: Actually, given the way the whole sector has been beaten up, I think the entire space is a bargain. Some companies, depending on an investor’s appetite, are more appealing. But across the board, the uranium companies that I cover are still excellent values at the price points that they’re currently trading at. 

TER: What companies are you particularly interested in right now?

RC: Cameco Corp. (CCO:TSX; CCJ:NYSE) is our No. 1 conversation piece, primarily because of its status in the space. It is the only uranium company that’s publicly traded with a market cap over $1 billion. It dominates the Athabasca Basin, is low cost, and is ramping up its Cigar Lake mine. It recently declared commercial production, which is certainly positive. Cameco does have its tax issue, but I think we’ll be a few years down the road before that issue starts to crystallize either positively or negatively. Either way, uranium prices would be higher by then and would justify an increase in the Cameco stock price.

TER: Cameco Corp. scored a coup with its long-term sale to India. Is China another possible market?

RC: China could certainly be a possible market. I’m not sure if Cameco currently has any agreements with the Chinese, because it doesn’t specifically itemize whom it has deals with. But it certainly is potentially a great area to sell to, given that China is the No. 1 growth country with respect to nuclear. 

But the deal with India certainly is a feather in Cameco’s cap because India is the second-fastest-growing nuclear builder in the world.

“There will be increasing uranium demand from countries such as India and China.”

I think the key takeaway here is the fact that countries such as India have identified Canada as the preferred place to source their uranium from. That speaks to definitely Cameco, because Cameco is the only producer in the area, but it also speaks to the quality of the projects in Canada, and to the excellent operational ability of companies—Cameco, in particular, but potentially other companies in the area. Of course, there’s also the good jurisdiction in Canada, which means that the supply agreement will be safe. If I were to expand on this, China has recently noted that it is looking to still acquire more assets, and it has identified Canada, along with Kazakhstan and Australia, as key countries for its acquisitions.

TER: Interesting. Are any other of your companies selling to India and China?

RC: Not that I’m aware of. There are very few producers to begin with. Cameco is the primary one that I deal with that would sell outside of North America. 

TER: Is there another Canadian company that you like? 

RC: NexGen Energy Ltd. (NXE:TSX.V) is currently our top pick in the space due to its tremendous upside. The company’s Arrow discovery, located northeast and along trend of Fission Uranium’s Patterson Lake South deposit, has produced several world-class intercepts—some among the best ever reported by anyone. It is still relatively early in the company’s exploration progress, and it does not have a NI-43-101-compliant resource estimate yet. However, based on what has been reported to date, we estimate that Arrow has 91 Mlb already in its A2 and A3 shears combined, with significant upside potential. The mineralization starts about 100 meters below surface, is not located beneath water, and is basement-hosted, which is different from the sandstone-hosted Cigar Lake and, as such, is not likely to have the same issues. Based on our resource estimate, NexGen is trading at a significant discount to its peers.

Other companies of interest in Canada include Fission Uranium Corp. (FCU:TSX). Fission has a world-class project, Patterson Lake South, which has 105 Mlb of resource already and clear visibility on much more. It has a Western zone, the R600W, which is looking quite solid and has the benefit of being on land, whereas most of Fission’s deposit is located under water. That’s important because it’s going to be easier to permit. It’s going to be cheaper to develop. It makes things a lot easier from the standpoint of, for example, a development scenario that includes starting from the R600W and moving east to the high-grade Triple R deposits. Fission is an excellent story that people should certainly take a look at. 

TER: Aside from some of the best real estate in the Athabasca Basin, what does Fission Uranium have going for it? 

RC: Fission’s management has done quite well, with Chairman and CEO Dev Randhawa and President and COO Ross McElroy at the helm. They have done it once before, in terms of defining a deposit, growing, and then selling it. They’ve done even better with what they have now with Patterson Lake South, and what is clearly a world-class deposit. Fission has a strong team; they’ve done a good job.

“At a $35/lb, why would anyone spend the money to develop a project?”

One of the key things I’ve noticed is that Fission drills on water at an angle, which is a pretty difficult thing to do. Angle drilling, as many people know, is an important aspect of drilling a deposit because it provides much better information on the geometry of the deposit. Being able to drill at an angle is certainly positive, and it’s much more difficult to do so on water with barges than it is on stable land. 

TER: Is there another story in the Athabasca Basin you’d like to discuss?

RC: Denison Mines Corp. (DML:TSX; DNN:NYSE.MKT) is a very interesting story, given that the company holds a very sizable and notable position in the Athabasca Basin for nonproducing assets. Along with Fission and NexGen, you could argue that Denison probably has the best assets in the Athabasca Basin. The key with Denison is, its assets are on the eastern side of the basin, in close proximity to the infrastructure that’s been built up on that side because that’s where all the producing mines are currently located.

Denison also owns a part of the McClean Lake mill and is getting cash flow from the Cigar Lake feed that’s going through the mill now. That’s certainly positive. But it also has some excellent projects. The Wheeler River property and its Phoenix and Gryphon deposits are world-class on their own—among the highest grades of any deposit on the planet. The news flow coming from that particular property has been very exciting. We expect to see more good news from Denison as well. 

TER: Denison Mines was going to report on its winter drilling program. Was that report satisfactory?

RC: It did excellent work. The world-class Wheeler River property had some excellent results. The company doesn’t tend to release many drill results, but the results that it did come out with for this batch were certainly positive, world-class intercepts, long and high-grade, so certainly moving things in the right direction. 

TER: What’s the goal of its summer program? 

RC: Denison’s summer drilling program will focus on Wheeler River, Bell Lake, Murphy Lake, Jasper Lake, Stevenson River, Crawford Lake and Bachman Lake. Of course Wheeler River will be the focus, and the big item of interest for us will be the work done on the Gryphon zone, which should support the preparation of an initial resource estimate.

TER: Are there other companies you’d like to mention?

RC: Another company that makes a lot of sense is Uranium Participation Corp. (U:TSX). We like that name primarily because it’s undervalued. It currently trades at a 5–9% discount to its net asset value (NAV). The fact that the company is currently trading below its NAV makes it a good value for anyone who expects or believes uranium prices will move higher. 

You also have the benefit of not being exposed to company-specific risks or even country-specific risks, and that’s certainly positive. For anyone who is worried about a potential mine issue, they won’t have that problem with Uranium Participation. In fact, whenever there is any issue with anyone’s mine, Uranium Participation would move higher simply because there’s potentially less supply coming out. The value of uranium should move higher in those situations. 

“We’ve seen price weakness for the last three years because producers have material that was earmarked for Japan that has come back.”

Uranium Energy Corp. (UEC:NYSE.MKT) is another interesting story. It’s an in-situ recovery producer located in Texas, and it has an excellent management team, with company president and CEO Amir Adnani appearing quite prevalently in the media talking about the uranium secctor. He is a very good champion for the space. He gets good visibility. 

On top of that, Uranium Energy has the benefit of being the only entirely unhedged producer. With the expectation of uranium prices moving higher, Uranium Energy will be arguably the best positioned to fully capitalize on and realize the increases in uranium prices, because companies such as Cameco—and pretty much everyone else—have contracts. These contracts are helping companies out right now because they are higher than current spot pricing. But when prices do go up, they will eventually rise above these contract prices. Companies like Uranium Energy, which are entirely unhedged, will really stand to benefit then.

Ur-Energy Inc. (URG:NYSE.MKT; URE:TSX) is also one of our top picks in the space. We like Ur-Energy because its Lost Creek deposit has been outperforming for some time now. Since it started about a year and a half ago, the deposit has produced at a higher flow rate, so it produces uranium at a lower cost than expected. The company generally produces on the low end of the cost curve—among the lowest of any producer. Ur-Energy is among the top companies on our list due to its low cost profile.

TER: What was the conclusion of the preliminary economic assessment (PEA) published in January for Ur-Energy on the Shirley Basin uranium project?

RC: It’s positive. The PEA produced an internal rate of return of 117%, and a before-tax NPV of US$215.9M. The PEA estimates production costs of US$14.54/lb., which is incredibly low. Even if we adjust for conservatism, the numbers remain pretty compelling. Shirley Basin is one of the strong growth aspects of Ur-Energy, and we expect it to be the next project that gets developed, alongside the current Lost Creek project. We’re excited to see the company move forward on that one.

TER: How should investors approach the uranium space going forward? 

RC: The way I look at it generally is in terms of upside versus downside. From what I see in the uranium market, there is limited downside. I do not see a catalyst that would push prices significantly downward, say into the $20/lb range. But I see many opportunities for uranium to move higher. Uranium moved significantly down before because Japanese utilities were sending material back into the market, and that material had to be resold. On top of that, some uranium companies were in slightly distressed situations and were selling uranium because they needed to raise capital to maintain operations. Right now, we’re not seeing that as much. 

On the flip side, we’re seeing 15–20% uncovered requirements beginning in 2016, and we’re seeing uncovered requirements continuing to grow as the years go out from 2017 and onward. We need to see some uranium buying to shore those requirements up at the very least. 

On top of that, based on our forecasts for uranium production and global reactor growth, including reactor shutdowns, there is an unavoidable supply deficit in 2020, no matter what happens. Layer on the fact that, because of the low uranium price environment, there has been very little exploration and there are only a handful of identified large-scale projects in the world. You have the Fissions, the Denisons, the upcoming NexGen Energy, and those are pretty much the only companies with potential development at a meaningful scale in the next eight to 10 years.

And there will be increasing demand from countries such as India and China. Even if all the uranium projects around the world were put on a path to production as quickly as possible, you’re looking at 2023–2025 before those projects get online. But the deficit kicks into gear in 2020.

These are pretty compelling reasons for uranium prices to move higher sometime within the next year or two. On top of that, for more event-driven investors, there is the fact that the Japanese Sendai reactors are expected to turn on in the next couple of months—the operator is hoping for July, we’re thinking it’s probably August/September. It’ll be a front-page news item when those reactors turn on. There will be a big rush into the space on that news. We think the time is right for uranium investing because we see the volatility on the upside rather than on the downside. We expect a violent increase in the price of uranium in the near future.

TER: Rob, thank you very much for your comments.

Cantor Fitzgerald Canada’s Senior Analyst and Head of Metals and Mining Rob Chang has covered the metals and mining space for over eight years for the sellside and the buyside. Prior to Cantor, Chang served on the equity research teams at Versant Partners, Octagon Capital and BMO Capital Markets. His buyside experience includes managing $3 billion in assets as a director of research/portfolio manager at Middlefield Capital, where his primary resource portfolio outperformed its direct peer and benchmark by over 28% and 18%, respectively. He was also on a five-person multistrategy hedge fund team, where he specialized in equity and derivative investments. He completed his master’s degree in business administration at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management.

1) Tom Armistead conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, and The Life Sciences Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an independent contractor. He owns, or his family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: Fission Uranium Corp. The companies mentioned in this interview were not involved in any aspect of the interview preparation or post-interview editing so the expert could speak independently about the sector. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services. 
3) Rob Chang: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Fission Uranium Corp, Denison Mines Corp. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: Fission Uranium Corp., NexGen Energy Ltd. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I determined and had final say over which companies would be included in the interview based on my research, understanding of the sector and interview theme. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview. 
4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent.
5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer.
6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned. Directors, officers, employees or members of their families are prohibited from making purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise during the up-to-four-week interval from the time of the interview until after it publishes.

 

Are We On The Verge Of A Global Panic?

King-World-News-We-Witnessed-Something-The-World-Has-Never-Seen-Before-1728x800 c“Monday marked the 10th time during this bull market that the S&P 500 fell from a recent high to below its 100-day moving average. All 10 times, stocks rebounded over the next 1-2 days. Seven of those times, it marked the low for months. When the market’s rebound was meek, it led to some further losses.

This is worth paying attention to as a potential change in character, and a less inviting market environment for long positions on a longer time frame.”

….continue reading HERE

The European Bond Crash

BUNDFG-W-6-6-2015

The turmoil in the European bond market demonstrates that the theory that interest rates will not rise and are in control of central banks is dead wrong. Despite the ECB’s policy to buy in government debt to inject cash into the markets, one would think that the bonds would have a firm floor of support. The price action is starting to show that the Emperor has no clothes.

BUNDFG-M-6-6-2015

Our energy models clearly peaked in February, both on the Weekly and Monthly levels. February was the highest monthly closing while intraday the high formed in April, but not on a sustainable level.

The heavy losses in the bunds are most significant, for this was the market the European money focused on, assuming the euro would break the holder would get Deutsche marks. The euro is not going away easily because if it fails, tens of thousands of bureaucrats in Brussels will be out of work. Merkel mistakenly thinks Germany needs the euro and is prepared to sacrifice her own country for a failed idea, which should have remained as a simple trade/economic union rather than a political one.

While the price of government bonds dropped sharply sending yields upwards, the interest rate on German government bonds rose to just below the level of one percent. At the April high, the German 10-year government bonds traded with a yield of almost zero percent. This was insane. Clearly, the peak in a bubble suggested that selling the bunds and buying 10-year U.S. Treasuries would be a great trade.

Some observers view the price fall as a result of the ECB’s controversial monetary policy. In the fight against an assessment by the ECB to lower inflation, the central bank had launched a number of measures. Most recently, the ECB in March bought a total of billion in government bonds. They made the April high. The ECB proudly thought they conquered the market achieving the desired objective of an inflation rate of just under two percent.

Many assumed that they should rally with the ECB buying bonds and that produced the April high. While many investors followed the ECB buying bonds, there was no one left to take the market higher. With everyone long, the only path was down.

What is happening everywhere is that liquidity is drying up. This “lack of liquidity” makes such extraordinary price movement possible. On Wednesday, Mario Draghi told investors after the last interest rate decision: “One lesson is that we must get used to periods of greater price fluctuations.” That was a clear statement, in which he actually admitted his policy has failed.

This is how Big Bang starts to unfold. This is the bubble in government; what we are seeing is the market place (free markets) will take interest rates higher, even against the policies of the central banks. Government debt is uncontrollable from the central bank level. They do not create the debt, governments do that and there is no rational management concern within the political mechanism. Consequently, we have seen the peak in government in both markets and confidence.

We may yet see the rush to the short-end in the classic flight to quality, driving the short-term interest rates very negative as we move into October, but that should then be the final rally. What comes after will be interesting patterns that require the majority to be wrong, for that is the fuel that propels the economy and markets. For many people, this may be the most difficult period to trade. 

So, no worries. The majority of people will never follow this site. The majority will read what they want to believe, and will never to try to challenge accepted beliefs, such as not understanding how bonds can decline despite the ECB buying them. They will read the popular news sites, and listen to the talking heads of TV mainstream. Traditionally, they will lose their shirts, and that will contribute to the rising civil unrest. It is like when they introduced Prohibition. They said outlawing booze would eliminate crime and make jails obsolete. That was up there with the sales pitch to sell the euro – eliminating foreign exchange fees will make Europe boom.

Gold Buy Signal & Dow Transports Meltdown

2015jun9tran1

Jun 9, 2015

  1. Please  click here now. That’s a seasonal chart for gold. I’ve highlighted my key buying and profit booking areas.
  2. June is the most important time of the year to buy gold.
  3. Unfortunately, by the time this vital month gets underway, most gold analysts and investors are too afraid to take any action. 
  4. They are forced to buy at much higher prices. Religion-oriented buying in India pushes gold relentlessly higher into August and September, in what is typically the year’s most powerful rally.
  5. This has happened for decades. Clearly, the more things supposedly change, the more they stay the same.
  6. Timid investors tend to fail, and brave ones tend to prosper. That’s a key part of “financial life”, and I don’t see any event on the horizon that will change it.
  7. Technically, gold’s daily chart is in “textbook” sync” with seasonality. Please  click here now. Note the fabulous position of my 14,7,7 series Stochastics oscillator, at the bottom of the chart.
  8. Gold also tends to sell off going into the US jobs report, and then rally nicely in the days following the report. 
  9. On that note, please  click here now. That’s the hourly bars chart for gold, with Friday’s “jobs report low” highlighted.
  10. Contrary opinion is a key indicator I use to suggest whether the next trending move is up, down, or sideways. I would estimate that about 70% of gold analysts are too afraid to buy any gold right now. That’s the kind of number that typically fuels solid gold price rallies!
  11. Amateur investors need to think carefully about how to apply contrary opinion to their own investing. Most investors are usually wrong about market direction. Thus, it’s important for the amateur investor to bet against their own analysis. That’s a hard thing to do, but it’s a critical part of successful investing.
  12. Please  click here now. That’s the daily chart of the US dollar versus the Japanese yen. The price action of this currency cross has historically been a key indicator of future gold price action.
  13. My Stochastics sell signal in play on that chart should provide comfort for the professional investor who buys gold in June. As China and India play an ever-bigger role in daily gold price discovery, the importance of this dollar/yen chart is waning. 
  14. For now, it’s still a decent gold price forecasting tool, and it suggests a nice gold rally is beginning!
  15. Please  click here now. That’s the Dow Transports monthly chart. Horrifically, when I look at it, the story of Icarus comes to mind.
  16. Rules aren’t made to be broken, and Dow Theory has certain rules that are time-tested. When the Dow Transports disintegrate, it’s a dire warning for global stock market investors.
  17. Note the emerging sell signal on the TRIX indicator on that Transports chart. The key 5,15 moving average series is also verging on a massive sell signal.
  18. Please  click here now. It’s imperative that Janet Yellen hikes rates soon. The “real” economy has been disintegrating since the late 1990s, because money velocity has been tumbling since then.
  19. QE only added to the deflationary fire. The money supply has been dramatically enlarged because of QE, but the banks need higher rates as an incentive to make aggressive loans to businesses. Until Janet hikes rates, M2V will continue to languish, and so will the economy. 
  20. Also, America’s population is aging. Savers have been destroyed by the low interest rates. Only the US government has really benefited from these rates, as it has been able to expand exponentially in size, like a bully expanding his reach on a school playground.
  21. The technical deterioration of the Dow Transports suggests that Janet’s patience with government over-spending and size is wearing thin. The market appears to be anticipating rate hikes. The US government is becoming the single largest component of the US economy. Horrifically, the main product of the American empire is now red tape. Janet makes her next FOMC announcement on June 17. I doubt she hikes rates then, but I hope she does.
  22. Borrowing costs will rise for the US government as Janet hikes rates, and I’ll clap enthusiastically as she makes that move. Global stock markets could crash, but the only way to raise the employment participation rate and the inflation rate is to increase the velocity of money.
  23. All roads lead to gold, silver, and gold mining/jewellery stocks, in the coming reflationary era. Please  click here now. That’s the daily chart for silver. Look at the position of my Stochastics oscillator, with lead line at nine! Silver is my favoured metal in the “reflationary era”.
  24. Please  click here now. That’s the GDXJ chart. It’s no secret that junior gold and silver stocks are the darling of the Western gold community. Arguably, America was built by men and women in overalls, and destroyed by bankers wearing suits. Junior gold mining companies give investors a chance to relive what made America an empire, and bet against what is probably going to burn it down. From a short term technical perspective, GDXJ looks spectacular. Note the bullish hook appearing on my Stochastics oscillator. Gold stocks swoon going into June, much like America swooned going into the year 1776. Was America a buy in 1776? Are gold stocks a buy in June? The answer to both questions is obviously… yes!

Jun 9, 2015
Stewart Thomson
Graceland Updates
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Risks, Disclaimers, Legal
Stewart Thomson is no longer an investment advisor. The information provided by Stewart and Graceland Updates is for general information purposes only. Before taking any action on any investment, it is imperative that you consult with multiple properly licensed, experienced and qualifed investment advisors and get numerous opinions before taking any action. Your minimum risk on any investment in the world is 100% loss of all your money. You may be taking or preparing to take leveraged positions in investments and not know it, exposing yourself to unlimited risks. This is highly concerning if you are an invetor in any derivatives products. There is an approx $700 trillion OTC Derivatives Iceberg with a tiny portion written off officially. The bottom line:

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