Gold-Stock Benchmark Battle

 | Jul 31, 2016 03:19AM ET

The gold-mining stocks have enjoyed enormous gains in their young bull market this year, trouncing all other sectors. Naturally this radical outperformance has led to surging popular interest in this usually-obscure contrarian sector. New investors are wondering how to best track its performance, about which gold-stock benchmark is the definitive one to use. Something of a battle is brewing over new versus old.

Benchmarks are very important for stock trading. Their performances over any given span really help investors and speculators quickly understand how a sector is faring relative to others. Just one easily-digestible number distills down the collective performances of many stocks. Benchmarks also provide standards by which the performances of both individual stocks and individual traders can be objectively judged.

Good benchmarks are actively managed and appropriately updated on an ongoing basis. Companies that are bought out or fall by the wayside are removed, while newer up-and-coming companies take their places. Well-constructed benchmarks include the best stocks a given sector has to offer, and accurately reflect the underlying performance of that sector’s stocks as a whole. They greatly aid trading decisions.

As a relatively-small and little-known sector, gold stocks have never had one definitive benchmark that has long been universally respected. The first contender was the Philadelphia Stock Exchange Gold and Silver Index, which was traded as XAU. It was created way back in January 1979 heading into a massive secular-gold-bull climax, but didn’t become widely-followed and quoted until December 1983.

While XAU reigned supreme for over a decade, it started falling out of favor in the mid-1990s. That was about a decade-and-a-half into the subsequent secular gold bear. With gold prices falling on balance for years on end, mining companies naturally increasingly hedged their production. With gold expected to keep on grinding lower, they wanted to lock in current selling prices for their future mine production.

You can’t blame the miners for hedging deep in a gold bear when they expected lower gold prices, it’s a rational decision to maximize cash flows. But by the mid-1990s, growing numbers of contrarian investors were expecting the secular gold cycles to turn. They were looking for a new secular gold bull to arise like a phoenix from the ashes of the long secular bear. So they hated miner hedging with a vengeance.

Locking in future selling prices makes sense in gold bears, but proves disastrous during gold bulls. Hedging literally sells away the future upside potential of gold-mining profits driven by rising gold prices! And that happens to be the only reason to own gold stocks. Investors rightfully shun them during gold bears since miners’ stocks follow gold lower. They’re only worth buying if their profits can leverage gold’s gains.

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And that’s only possible if they are unhedged. So with XAU dominated by heavy hedgers that would enjoy little profits leverage from higher gold prices, a new upstart unhedged gold-stock index was launched in March 1996. It was originally called the American Stock Exchange Gold BUGS Index, which stands for Basket of Unhedged Gold Stocks. That clever wordplay always brings a smile to my face.

This new gold-stock index’s symbol was HUI, which has always been horribly unintuitive. After the American Stock Exchange was acquired by the New York Stock Exchange in January 2008, the HUI’s name was changed to the NYSE Arca Gold BUGS Index. It kept that yucky symbol, which had become widely known among gold-stock investors in the previous decade or so as it usurped and replaced XAU.

Provocatively calling the HUI unhedged isn’t technically true, despite its name! To be considered for HUI inclusion, a gold miner only has to not hedge its gold production beyond a year-and-a-half. But relative to the high general hedging levels in the late 1990s, that was essentially unhedged. In the early years of the new gold-stock bull between late 2000 and mid-2002, the HUI’s performance obliterated the XAU’s.

In June 2002 I wrote an essay “Gold Stock Investing 101” where I looked at the bull-to-date gains in the HUI and XAU. The HUI had soared 278% by that point compared to mere 95% gains in the XAU! I called that vast delta a “hedge tax”. Hedging gold production, locking in future selling prices today, is incredibly foolish and bad for shareholders when gold prices are rising on balance. I still despise hedging.

Publicly-traded gold miners’ sole reason for existence is to provide investors with upside profits leverage to gold prices. Hedging robs shareholders of the growing future profits they are rightfully entitled to. So there is no reason to ever own a gold miner that is considerably hedged. With its upside to rising gold prices sold away, investors have no significant profits growth or appreciating share price to look forward to.

The HUI proved a great gold-stock benchmark for a long time. But unfortunately after the NYSE bought AMEX, its obscure sector indexes including the HUI fell into neglect. The necessary updates to the HUI component list and weightings to account for individual gold miners’ production waning and waxing to different levels of importance relative to their peers went from seldom to almost never. This was a real shame.

Gold stocks were the best-performing stock-market sector of the 2000s by far. Between November 2000 and September 2011, the HUI skyrocketed an astonishing 1664.4% higher! Great fortunes were won by smart contrarian investors. Over that same secular 10.8-year span, the benchmark S&P 500 general-stock index actually lost 14.2%. Keeping the HUI updated and current should’ve been a high priority.

But in the midst of that mighty secular bull, investors’ approach to gold stocks was starting to shift. Since the 1970s, the focus had been on picking the best individual gold stocks to own. But the 2000s saw the exchange-traded-fund industry explode in popularity. Rather than buying individual stocks, investors could instead buy diversified portfolios holding an entire sector’s worth of stocks through a single ETF.

This really appealed to investors for obvious reasons. Instead of doing the hard research work that’s necessary to uncover a sector’s superior individual stocks with the best fundamentals, investors could have professional analysts working for ETF companies do that work for them. And with ETFs holding many companies, individual-stock risks were largely diversified away yielding pure sector trading performance.

Playing into this ETFs-rising trend, Van Eck Global launched its Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:GDX) back in May 2006. Trading under the symbol GDX, this early gold-stock ETF gradually grew in popularity to totally dominate the new gold-stock-ETF realm. Known today as the VanEck Vectors Gold Miners ETF, its net assets are running a staggering 33.9x higher than its next-closest normal-1x-gold-stock-ETF competitor’s!

Today when gold stocks are discussed on mainstream financial media including CNBC, the HUI almost never gets mentioned. GDX has become the de-facto gold-stock benchmark of choice for investors that are newer to the gold-stock realm. While both the HUI and GDX were left for dead during the recent dark bear years, gold stocks’ dazzling new bull thrusting them back into the limelight has created a battle of benchmarks.

Investors with long experience in the gold-stock realm generally prefer the HUI they’ve spent decades now getting familiar with. Old-school traders like me simply think of gold stocks in HUI terms since we’ve spent so long viewing this sector through that index’s lens. But many newer investors never had any significant HUI exposure, so they prefer GDX since that’s the gold-stock metric the mainstream now uses.

So how do these battling gold-stock benchmarks stack up? They are paradoxically both surprisingly similar and very different! Benchmarks live or die by the component stocks their managers choose to include. And since the gold-mining sector is pretty small, there really aren’t that many major gold stocks to pick from. So there’s naturally going to be an overwhelming overlap in positions across sector benchmarks.

This table compares the latest component stocks and weightings of GDX and the HUI. Each company’s absolute and relative market capitalizations are included. The latter is based on the entire pool of GDX component stocks, since it is far larger than the HUI’s list. GDX’s weightings are diverging more from the HUI’s since the last time I examined these competing gold-stock benchmarks back in April 2014.