Gold Miners Fell Instead Of Rising. What Is This Alchemy?

 | Jan 26, 2022 01:28AM ET

Gold rallied by almost $10 Monday, while the S&P 500 reversed and ended the session in the green. Why did miners decline anyway?

Because they’re weak, that’s why. This is because there is a medium-term downtrend in them. In fact, let’s keep in mind that it was only gold that managed to break above the 2011 highs—neither silver nor mining stocks got even close to similar price levels. So, has the real bull market in the precious metals sector begun yet? No, it hasn’t. It was only gold that caught people’s attention, and only temporarily so.

The fact is that despite the open-ended QE, historically low interest rates for years, and a global pandemic that triggered world-wide lockdowns, gold was unable to hold the breakout above its 2011 high. If this doesn’t make you suspicious about the real strength of the gold bull market, then I don’t know what would.

Let’s check the HUI Index—the flagship proxy for gold stocks—and see where the gold miners are.

After all, gold stocks tend to perform exceptionally well at the beginning of massive bull markets. For example, that was the case between 2000 and 2002.