Gold Stocks’ Spring Rally 2

 | Mar 05, 2017 02:57AM ET

The gold stocks enjoyed a strong surge early this year, fully reversing their sharp post-election losses. While they spent much of February consolidating before sliding, this sector’s seasonals will soon turn very favorable again in mid-March. The gold miners have long enjoyed strong spring rallies in bull-market years. Early March’s seasonal lull is a great opportunity to deploy aggressively ahead of this big spring buying.

Seasonality is the tendency for prices to exhibit recurring patterns at certain times during the calendar year. While seasonality doesn’t drive price action, it quantifies annually-repeating behavior driven by sentiment, technicals, and fundamentals. We humans are creatures of habit and herd, which naturally colors our trading decisions. The calendar year’s passage affects the timing and intensity of buying and selling.

Gold exhibits high seasonality, which seems counterintuitive. Unlike grown commodities like crops, the mined supply of gold is constant year-round. But supply is only half of the fundamental supply-demand equation that drives pricing. Gold’s investment demand happens to be highly seasonal, and that’s what sets gold prices at the margin. Investors favor gold buying far more during some parts of the year than others.

This gold-demand seasonality is well-known and heavily studied. The seasonal gold year starts in late July as Asian farmers begin reaping their harvests. They plow some of their surplus income into gold. That’s followed by the famous Indian wedding season in autumn, with its heavy gold buying for brides’ dowries. That culture believes festival-season weddings have greater odds of yielding long, successful marriages.

After that comes the Western holiday season, where gold jewelry demand surges for Christmas gifts for wives, girlfriends, daughters, and mothers. Following year-end, Western investment demand balloons after bonuses and tax calculations as investors figure out how much surplus income the prior year generated for investment. Then Chinese New Year gold buying flares up after that heading into February.

These understandable cultural factors drive surges of outsized gold demand between summer and early spring. But interestingly, there is one more gold-demand spike in spring. Over the years I’ve seen a variety of theses explaining this April-and-May seasonal gold rally, but nothing definitive like for the rest of the year’s gold seasonality. As silly as it sounds, I suspect spring itself is the reason for this demand surge.

Sentiment exceedingly influences investing, which requires optimism for the future. Investors won’t risk deploying their scarce capital unless they believe it will grow. And the glorious increased daylight and warming temperatures of spring naturally breed optimism. The vast majority of the world’s investors are far enough into the northern hemisphere that spring has a major impact. This seasonality extends to stocks too.

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Whatever the reason, gold definitely exhibits strong bullish spring seasonality as this chart reveals. As prices behave very differently in bull and bear markets, seasonality differs between them. Gold was in a mighty bull market between April 2001 and August 2011, powering 638% higher. 2012 saw a normal bull-market correction following an incredible upleg, seeing gold down 18.8% at worst from its 2011 peak.

But everything changed in 2013 as the Fed’s wildly-unprecedented open-ended QE3 campaign ramped to full speed. That radically distorted the markets , levitating stocks which crushed demand for alternative investments led by gold. So gold plunged into an artificial bear that year. In Q2’13 alone, it plummeted by 22.8% which was its worst calendar quarter in an astounding 93 years! Gold’s bear continued until late 2015.

Remember the formal threshold for declaring bull and bear markets is a 20% + counter move from the preceding extreme on a closing basis. After slumping to a 6.1-year secular low in mid-December 2015, gold reentered formal bull-market territory with a 20%+ gain by early last March. Gold’s young new bull grew to 29.9% by early July, confirming its status. Despite gold’s sharp post-election plunge, 2016 was a bull year.

This metal still rallied 8.5% last year, better than the bull years of 2012 and 2008 which saw 7.0% and 5.7% gains. 2016 proved gold is officially back in a bull market after those dark Fed-induced bear-market years between 2013 to 2015. Price behavior is naturally very different in bulls and bears, which drives differing bull and bear seasonality. With gold back in a bull, it’s important to understand its bull-market seasonality.

So this first chart distills down gold’s seasonality in the bull-market years from 2001 to 2012, and 2016. The methodology is simple. Gold is individually indexed within each calendar year, with its close on the final day of the preceding year recast at a level of 100. Then all gold’s closes that year are indexed off that prior-year-close baseline. So an indexed level of 110 means gold was up 10% year-to-date at that point.

This indexing is necessary to keep gold price moves comparable in percentage terms across years with differing prevailing gold prices. Gold averaged $604 in 2006 and $1250 in 2016, but a 10% move is the same in either year. Each calendar year’s individually-indexed gold prices are then averaged together to arrive at this gold-bull seasonality. It reveals gold’s tendency to enjoy a major rally in the spring months.