Gold & Precious Metals

Precious Metals Grind Out a New Trend

Gold is Monetary Value

We preface the post with a statement that has not changed since I began public writing nearly 10 years ago: Gold is not about price; gold is about value. This point was hammered home to me 11 years ago by a person who had much influence upon my viewpoint toward the financial system and its various diseased components at a time when I was ready to listen and understand.

So whether we are talking about 2013′s epic price crash or a new bull trend in 2014, the simple fact is that physical gold itself is a store of monetary value. That applied last year as the value was marked down by greed and confidence and it will apply this year as it is marked up in the face of a likely unwinding of those things. Humans, what funny and hyper kinetic animals.

Precious Metals Speculation

Ah, but this post is about the fun part, the speculative part where we humans can make gains from gaming the simple store of value and its wild little brother, silver. As asset market speculators we care about prices, right? How about the share prices of the completely blown to bits miners that dig the stuff out of the ground?

There is a reason we put so much effort (i.e. risk management) into not letting the declines of the last 2+ years hurt us, and that reason was to be fully intact for when it is time to speculate. Now, a bottoming process has been ongoing since last spring, believe it or not.

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The Inverted Head & Shoulders scenario may or may not be the ultimate outcome of the weekly chart above, but NFTRH has been operating to its potential for months now as the grind in gold stocks has well, ground on. In fact, a grinding bottom would provide a better basis or platform for the rally (or baby cyclical bull) than the vertical thing that failed in 2012 off a ‘W’ bottom attempt.

Weekly MACD triggered up back in the summer and when it was confirmed by the slower TRIX we had our two most important bigger picture bottoming signals. These have kept us in the gold stocks game – whether substantially positioned or ready to be – since the TRIX signal. But again, the bottoming process has been a real grinder for the better part of a year now. Time flies when you’re having fun!

Not… this bottom has been grinding peoples’ nerves every step of the way and as noted to NFTRH subscribers along the way, this is a good thing. A grinding, painful and highly doubted bottom is a better bottom.

But it takes a new daily trend to even begin moving from a potential bull phase to an actual bull phase. Several weeks ago NFTRH was noting that a bull signal (for a rally at least) would be indicated by a rise above the 50 day moving averages in tandem with MACD going green (0+). While I personally positioned during the false breakdown below 200, it was advised in NFTRH that conservative investors and traders might wish to wait for the above noted signals. Check.

As to whether this is a new cyclical bull market or just a rally, the weekly chart above will eventually decide that question. There is no need to define it yet, because a bull phase is a bull phase as far as speculators are concerned. If it is a bull market, there will be plenty of time for late comers to jump in and mark it up later.

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As for staying aboard the rally in the meantime, here is where the fundamentals will come into play, joining the technicals. During much of 2013 we were treated to much railing from within the gold ‘community’ that gold’s fundamentals had never been better. But in reality, gold’s fundamentals as NFTRH views them – which are beyond the scope of this post (ref: Gold Mining is Counter Cyclical), but are definitely not what you read in the mainstream financial media or hear touted by certain gold bug analyses – degraded consistently in 2013.

It can be argued (I for one have argued it) that these fundamentals were jimmied and rigged by all too cynical policy making, but just because something is rigged, you as a speculator, do not stand in front of it. In fact, as a speculator you put your dogma on a leash* and trade what is, not what your inner most convictions tell you should be. In other words, trade your brain not your heart.

Bottom Line

The daily trend in the precious metals and in particular gold and silver stocks, which have led the metals as we would like to see in a real bull phase, has turned up. A new bull market is still a ways from being indicated, but for now we’ll take a rally and realize that with the bearishness of the last 2+ years and the grind that the recent bottoming activity has been, a new cyclical bull market could also be in play.

Do not listen to the hype. The macro fundamentals have begun to improve for the gold sector and this will need to continue. NFTRH will manage these fundamentals every step of the way, as well as keep a running tab on the technicals. There will be hysterical rises and challenging declines going forward, but sector fundamentals and support parameters will successfully guide us.

Our big picture theme for 2014 has been a ‘macro pivot’ away from the trends of the last couple of years. Give the affordable NFTRH (weekly report and detailed ‘in-week’ updates) a try and you will likely not be disappointed (see subscribers’ thoughts). We are as we have been since the service’s launch in 2008, ready to speculate and/or manage risk as the market deems appropriate.

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Fund investors worldwide committed $11.5 billion to stock funds in the week ended Wednesday on reassurance from Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen that the U.S. economy was on a better track, data from a Bank of America Merrill Lynch Global Research report showed on Friday.

The inflows in the week ended February 12 reversed the prior week’s record cash outflows of $28.3 billion, data from the report, which also cited data from fund-tracking firm EPFR Global, showed.

Funds that specialize in U.S. stocks attracted $7 billion in new cash, reversing the prior week’s record cash outflows of $24 billion. Funds that hold European stocks also garnered demand with inflows of $4 billion, marking their 33rd straight week of inflows.

The inflows into stock funds came after Yellen, in her first public comments as Fed chief on February 11, emphasized continuity in the U.S. central bank’s policy strategy of cutting asset purchases by $10 billion a month….full article

Factory production in the U.S. unexpectedly declined in January by the most since May 2009, adding to evidence severe winter weather weighed on the economy.

The 0.8 percent decrease atmanufacturers followed a revised 0.3 percent gain the prior month that was weaker than initially reported, figures from the Federal Reserve showed today in Washington. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a 0.1 percent advance. Total industrial production dropped 0.3 percent even as utility output climbed the most in almost a year.

Assembly lines slowed last month as colder weather tempered production, the Fed said, showing a pause in the momentum of an industry that’s helped bolster the economy. A pickup in capital spending and faster hiring that drives consumer purchases will be needed to spur production gains.

  • Q2 GDP 3.0% vs 2.9% prior
  • Sees Q1 unemployment at 6.7% vs 7.1% prior, Q2 6.6% vs 7.0% prior
  • Q1 Non farm payrolls averaging 177,400 p/month vs 187k prior, Q2 unchanged at 193,500
  • Q1 CPI at 1.8% from 1.9% prior estimate
  • Q1 PCE prices 1.5% from 1.7%

Results of a quarterly survey of economists by the Philly Fed.

They’re pointing to a modest slowdown in job gains which will pick up in the second quarter. Jan and Feb NFP averages at 94k to date.

Consumer confidence in the U.S. was stronger than projected in February as Americans grew more upbeat about the economy.

Consumer confidence in the U.S. was stronger than projected in February as Americans grew more upbeat about the economy.

The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary index of sentiment held at 81.2 this month. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a decline to 80.2. A gauge of the economic outlook improved to the highest level in six months.

The reading indicates consumers may pick up the pace of spending after a winter-related slowdown in January. Higher stock prices and home values are helping bolster household finances, underpinning sentiment at a time when the labor market is struggling to improve.… full article

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