Gold & Precious Metals

Gold: Get Positioned and Sit Tight

If gold is entering a new bull market then it’s a great time to get in. Technical evidence is mounting, big volume is coming into gold mining ETFs and they are leading the market. Take a look at the monthly volume on the Junior Gold Miners ETF GDXJ. After a huge volume increase in January, the buying pressure hasn’t subsided as February is set to smash the record volume set just last month. GDXJ is also pressing up against downtrend resistance and the monthly MACD is turning higher, setting up a potential breakout.

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As the gold sector is leading the market this year, trading desks around the world are probably scrambling to figure out what to do about it. Wall Street exited gold en masse in 2013 and formed a herd against gold declaring it a short for 2014. Now with GDXJ up over 40% this year and gold stocks reaping big gains they have to decide when and how they want to get back into the gold sector. Look for opinions on gold to start changing from the big banks as they won’t want to stay bearish on gold forever if it’s price continues to rise.

Some people might argue that Wall Street has such a huge information advantage over the individual investor that they can outsmart and out maneuver the individual investor whenever they choose. But this information advantage goes up against two distinct advantages the individual investor has over a big bank: speed and contrarian thinking.

Individual investors don’t have to wait for confirmation from clients or from other members of a firm on investing decisions. They can simply deploy funds however they choose, without the need to consult a hierarchy of decision makers on how to enter and exit the market. This freedom allows individual investors to trade at whatever speed and conviction level they want, which is a huge advantage when it comes to getting onboard new trends as early as possible.

The other advantage the individual investor has is trading outside of the groupthink that tends to invade Wall Street. Even with their armies of analysts and mountains of information, Wall Street still falls prey to what happens to humans whenever they form groups. They start thinking like a herd. And as anyone that has studied markets knows herd thinking is what ultimately ends long term trends and starts new ones. So while Wall Street takes its time to wake up to a possible new uptrend in gold, the individual investor can use their speed and independence to their advantage and get positioned.

Sit Tight

Getting positioned early in a new bull market is hard enough. Taking a contrarian view, and waiting for a market to transition into a new uptrend takes patience and skill. But perhaps a more daunting challenge is what to do after getting positioned in a new uptrend and seeing a profitable trade start to form.

It is definitely tempting to trade, especially for new traders, and try and capture the profits and avoid the pullbacks. But legendary trader Jesse Livermore warned against this in the book Reminisces of a Stock Operator in the following passage:

“And right here let me say one thing: After spending many years in Wall Street and after making and losing millions of dollars I want to tell you this: It never was my thinking that made the big money for me. It always was my sitting. Got that? My sitting tight! It is no trick at all to be right on the market. You always find lots of early bulls in bull markets and early bears in bear markets. I’ve known many men who were right at exactly the right time, and began buying and selling stocks when prices were at the very level which should show the greatest profit. And their experience invariably matched mine – that is, they made no real money out of it. Men who can both be right and sit tight are uncommon. I found it one of the hardest things to learn. But it is only after a stock operator has firmly grasped this that he can make big money. It is literally true that millions come easier to a trader after he knows how to trade than hundreds did in the days of his ignorance.”

Let’s break down what Livermore is saying here and see what we can learn (with emphasis on what is highlighted in bold). He starts by basically saying of all the time he’s spent on Wall Street, with the millions of dollars he’s won and lost, this is one of the most important lessons he learned. He only made the big money by sitting tight and letting a big trade form, and not by trading in and out of the markets all the time. One of my favorite parts of this quote is when he says “Got that?” as if to say “Hey knucklehead! This is important so you better listen up!”. Livermore is trying to pass on knowledge here, and help the reader learn from his mistakes.

Livermore states that not only was sitting tight one of the most important things he learned, but it was also one of the hardest things he learned. It took him years of success and failure to figure out how important this was. But he says once he firmly grasped the idea of sitting tight in big trades, it allowed him to make the big money.

Connect with me on Twitter: @nextbigtrade

The original article and much more can be found at: http://www.nextbigtrade.com

The views and opinions expressed are for informational purposes only, and should not be considered as investment advice. Please see the disclaimer.

3 Reasons I am Still Short the New Zealand Dollar

“When a herd ‘thinks,’ the result is not reason but an emotional interpersonal superorganic dynamic that must be the sourse of waves.  A person’s patterned psyhological dynamics asthey relate to the social environment produce an unconsious impulse to herd, which in compination with like minds produces global patterns of interactive dynamics in a shared social setting.”

Robert Prechter,  The Wave Principle of Human Social Behavior

 

BlackSwanThree Reasons I am Still Short the New Zealand Dollar

 
Greetings!

I recently shared some reasons why I thought the New Zealand dollar represented a good longer term short position.  Since then, Kiwi (as the New Zealand dollar is affectionately known) has rallied a bit.  My longer term bet here is pretty simple.  It’s based on three rationales which are of course are interlinked:

1. China slowing on financial exposure

2. Export dependence & current account

3. NZ real estate

 

….read the whole Currency Currents 19 February 2014

 

Stocks declined on Wednesday in midday trading as the S&P 500 faced a technical resistance level after a recent string of gains and investors turned cautious ahead of the release of the minutes from the Federal Reserve’s latest policy meeting.

At 2:00 p.m. EST, the Fed will release minutes from its January policy meeting, when the U.S. central bank decided to further trim its monthly bond-buying program.

“I don’t think the market is going to be surprised, but there is always caution ahead of these minutes. I think the one thing to look for is the collaboration between Bernanke and Yellen since this was Bernanke’s last meeting,” said Randy Frederick, managing director at Charles Schwab, in Austin, Texas.

What Blows Up First? Part 4: China

china-greatwallTo Westerners, China has always been a mystery. The huge population of very smart, hard-working people. The succession of unfamiliar, authoritarian governments. The sense that they’re playing the long game while we’re obsessed with quarterly reports – and that they’re laughing at our naiveté and lack of historical sense. We don’t get the Chinese, but we’ve always been impressed with them.

Never was this more true than in the past decade. While the developed world flailed around, trying to figure out how to pay its bills now that new debt no longer automatically translates into new paper wealth, China seemed to be the country that got it right. A dictatorship, sure, but a capitalist dictatorship, ordering its citizens around in the cause of economic development. Their numbers might be unverifiable, but one couldn’t deny the reality of all those skyscrapers and roads and power plants.

But now it turns out that China was behaving just like us, albeit more secretively, borrowing like crazy and investing more-or-less randomly. And, like us, they’re discovering that randomly investing other people’s money carries some risks. Two long articles that cover China’s plight in some detail were recently posted by Mike Shedlock and Automatic Earth.

In the meantime, here’s the short version:

…..continue reading HERE

Gartman Bullish on Gold as Miners Cut Production

Dennis Gartman is the man behind The Gartman Letter, a daily newsletter discussing global capital markets. For more than 20 years, The Gartman Letter has tackled the political, economic and social trends shaping the world’s markets, and Gartman himself is a frequent guest on CNBC, Bloomberg and other financial media outlets. HardAssetsInvestor Managing Editor Sumit Roy recently caught up with Gartman to discuss the gold market and the four new gold ETFs he is involved with.

HardAssetsInvestor: I recently read that you turned bullish on gold. What’s the reason for that change?

Dennis Gartman: Yes, I’ve quietly turned bullish on gold for a few reasons. Firstly, beginning five and six weeks ago we started to see a lot of the mining companies— even the largest gold mining companies— begin to curtail production. That’s always a sign of an end of a bear market. 

When senior management at the largest gold mining firms throw their hands up in dismay and begin curtailing production, usually within weeks the lows are going to be found. Decision by committee is always that way. It’s slow; it takes time; and it’s always late. 

Two, I don’t see any major reduction in accommodation that the Fed is pushing into the system. We are far from tightening; we are still aggressively easing, with $65 billion still going into the system between each FOMC meeting. Yes, that’s down from $85 billion, but still, those are massive injections of reserves into the system. The Bank of Japan is doing even more than the Fed. 

Thirdly, supplies are tight. The fact that gold futures moved to a very modest backwardation indicates how tight deliverable supplies of gold are. And finally, when you go and speak at “gold bug” conferences, the populations are down by 40%. That tells you something. Throw all those things into the pot, stir them around a little bit, and it tells me it’s time to be bullish.

Gold prices have gone down, and the market has beaten prices up about as much as they can. Bad news came out several times; you’ve had gold being downgraded by multiple brokerage firms, and it didn’t break.

HAI: Like you said, gold hasn’t reacted to bad news. The Fed is actually tapered two times, which you would think would send gold down, but instead it’s rallied.

Gartman: It’s rallied. I think that’s impressive. 

HAI: I also read a statistic that China’s gold demand was up 41% last year?

Gartman: That’s a big number. Whether one believes it or not, let’s cut it in half. It’s still a big number.

HAI: Right, it’s huge.

world-mine-production-2012Gartman: Let’s say, well, I might not believe the statistics. OK, cut it in half and it’s still a big number. That’s impressive. If you look through and see where the gold is coming from, it’s coming out of Switzerland; it’s coming out of Hong Kong across the border; it’s even coming in surreptitiously. So one has to view that as being reasonably positive.

….read page 2 HERE

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