Gold And Gold Stocks: Conundrum Alert

 | May 21, 2018 12:41AM ET

Last week, the USD gold price was pushed rather unceremoniously off its perch above the $1300 level, where it had been comfortably ensconced all year after its usual seasonal rally around the turn of the year. For a while it seemed as though the $1,300 level may actually hold, but persistent US dollar strength nixed that idea. Previously many observers (too many?) expected gold to finally break out from its lengthy consolidation pattern, but evidently the intense patience training session for gold bugs is set to continue for a while longer.

The above mentioned seasonal rally started from the second higher mid-December low since the beginning of the current Fed rate hike cycle. So far, gold seems to be doing the same thing at every December rate hike anniversary – it declines into a mid December low, and then rallies sharply as soon as the Fed announcement hits the wires (the sequence of lows since the first rate hike was: 2015: $1,045; 2016: $1,124; 2017: $1,238).

The fact that the gold price was almost $200 higher at the start of the seasonal rally than two years earlier was certainly encouraging—but although this year’s rally in gold was just as lively as the 2016-2017 turn-of-the-year advance, silver and precious metals stocks failed to properly mirror it (and obviously, it was a far cry from the early 2016 rocket ride).

This was a bit surprising: as we noted shortly after the December rate hike in Patterns, Cycles and Insider Activity (see part 1 and part 2 for the details), both gold stocks and silver had a lot going for them early this year. The former had seen an unprecedented surge in insider buying, while futures speculators abandoned the latter with, well, abandon.

Given their exceedingly poor record when reaching positioning extremes, it was fair to expect that the strongest seasonal month of the year for silver (namely January) may turn out to be particularly strong this year. It obviously wasn’t—although silver moved higher by slightly more than $2, this move fell well short of the $3 rally (from almost the same starting point) in the same time period a year earlier.

For quite some time, the HUI and XAU indexes have mimicked the silver price rather than the gold price; their performance in the strong seasonal period was therefore disappointing as well. Since then, it has become even more so. The chart below shows the gold price and the HUI Index over the past year – we have penciled in several bearish and bullish divergences.