Gold Stocks Still Running

 | Apr 22, 2022 12:24PM ET

The gold miners’ stocks are still running higher in a mounting upleg.

The sector gains accelerated into mid-April, spawning fears of overbuying. While somewhat stretched, gold stocks’ leading benchmark remained near potentially-terminal levels. So there’s still lots of room for this latest gold-stock upleg to keep powering higher. Like usual, its gains won’t be linear but will flow and ebb with gold.

The gold-stock sector’s most-popular index remains the GDX VanEck Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:GDX). Launched way back in May 2006, it parlayed its first-mover advantage into an insurmountable lead. GDX’s $16.2b of net assets this week more than tripled its next-largest competitor’s, the VanEck Junior Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:GDXJ). The much-bigger GDX is dominated by major gold miners, whose stocks have enjoyed a great run.

Gold stocks’ latest upleg is their sixth of this secular gold bull, born back in mid-December 2015. Since GDX’s latest major interim low in late September, this leading sector ETF has rallied 41.4% at best in 6.6 months. That nicely leveraged gold’s parallel 14.6% gain in this span by 2.8x, on the higher end of GDX’s usual gold-price-move amplification range of 2x to 3x. But this upleg is way more compressed than that implies.

Hawkish Fedspeak battered both gold and its miners’ stocks sharply lower in late January, where GDX carved a secondary bottom just 1.3% above late September. So an overwhelming 29/30ths of gold stocks’ upleg-to-date gains have rapidly accrued in just the last 2.7 months! To surge so fast, gold stocks had to blast up dramatically. That raised the specter of extreme overboughtness, which eventually slays uplegs.

Absolute price levels usually don’t matter much in the markets, as traders soon come to accept whatever prevailing prices happen to be. This past Monday GDX hit an upleg-to-date closing high of $40.87. That is much higher than late January’s low but much-lower than this ETF’s bull-to-date peak of $44.48 in early-August 2020. Prices are all relative, so what really matters is how fast they move to current levels.

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Overboughtness quantifies the rapidness and magnitude of rallies.

The major gold stocks powering 41% higher over a half-year are very different from them, skyrocketing that same 41% in a week. The former gains are gradual and sustainable, averaging out to modest 0.3% daily advances.

Yet the latter requires huge consecutive 8.2% up days, which are super-unlikely and certainly not a buying pace that can be kept up.

Overboughtness threatens uplegs when prices surge too far too fast to be sustainable. That generates too much greed too soon, attracting too many traders to chase the exciting upside momentum. Their rush pulls forward too much of their potential near-future buying, leaving their capital firepower exhausted. Then sellers soon overpower those depleted buyers, prematurely killing uplegs well before fully mature.

There are many technical tools to measure overboughtness and opposing oversoldness after selloffs. My favorite is one I developed decades ago called Relativity. It simply looks at prevailing prices as multiples of their own underlying 200-day moving averages. 200dmas are ideal baselines from which to measure the speed and size of price moves. While they are slow to change, they do still gradually trail prices over time.

200dmas evolve with prevailing prices, never becoming obsolete like static baselines.

simply divides daily closing prices by their underlying 200dmas, then charts the resulting multiples over time. These are perfectly-comparable percentages regardless of prevailing price levels. And they tend to form horizontal trading ranges in trending markets, which are ideal for actively gaming bull uplegs and corrections.