Gold Bull Market In Waiting

 | Mar 15, 2018 02:56AM ET

Rudi Fronk and James Anthony, the cofounders of Seabridge Gold, assess the forces behind the price of gold.

Where is the gold bull market that we predicted would begin about now? Here is our broad-based overview. The financial markets continue to expect an aggressive Fed going forward with four—even five—rate hikes this year and a continuing shrinkage of its balance sheet (Quantitative Tightening). Given this, gold has held up pretty well, essentially range trading, but the gold stocks have suffered because they are leveraged calls on gold that only "work" with expectations of a rising gold price.

For gold to go higher, market psychology has to change. In particular, the stock and credit markets have to change their perceptions of the direction of Fed policy. What brings that about? There are any number of possible catalysts: A serious drop in the stock market; a sudden rise in interest rates as the bond market rebels against too much supply; a sudden widening of credit spreads reflecting an increased perception of risk; a sharp upward acceleration in price inflation which the Fed decides to ignore; credit chaos in the EU as the ECB tries to end QE; a credit crunch in China. There is strong evidence supporting each of these possibilities and it probably only takes one.

We are approaching a fork in the road, in our opinion.

Door #1: What if all the economic bulls are wrong and the economy weakens despite the tax cuts and the fiscal stimulus of a Federal budget gone wild? In that case, the Fed will pause and the massive short position at the front end of the Treasury curve will be seriously offside. Short rates will plummet. Negative real rates of interest will send gold flying.

This may be happening now, before our very eyes. At the start of February, the Atlanta Fed's Q1 GDP expectation was an exuberant 5.4%. As of March 14, their outlook had collapsed to just 1.9% following a string of negative data on the U.S. economy over the past six weeks. We have seen this same pattern of disappointment repeatedly over the last eight quarters. The growth never meets expectations.

Here's the chart: