Is Gold At A Major Turning Point?

 | Oct 07, 2013 02:58AM ET

There is one thing that inarguably I've been right about this year. When the maniacal selling of Gold began in earnest, commensurate with the commencement of the baseball season last April, in the Gold missive dated 30 March 'twas written for: "...my Beloved Bronx Bombers to finish no better than in fourth place...". The New York Yankees concluded their 2013 season last Sunday in fourth place.

There are innumerable things that inarguably I've been wrong about this year. And second worst only to declaring the San Francisco Giants would return to the post-season to defend their 2012 World Series championship: 'tis been my striking out in championing Gold, let alone not having even had a base hit there all season.

A year ago we'd been looking for "twenty-five hundred by twenty-five December twenty-twelve". Now it seems like we're "fighting forever for fifteen hundred". A rough year to be sure in fashioning the course for Gold. A few days ago I actually blew the dust off my high school senior yearbook from better than 40 years ago. Therein the page for yours truly reads: "Ambition: Economist or Business Accountant; End Trend: A lonely street cleaner in front of the New York Stock Exchange."

How convenient that our local hardware store is already having its annual pre-Halloween broom sale. Those of you who've been scoring at home might recall in our Update written at the end of 2012 the notion of buying Gold right at the opening on New Year's Day. The price at that instant was 1676. Then in subsequent Updates we wrote of add-ons to that losing position. More recently we conceded, at least on the behalf of most futures traders, such a trading account by this point would have (to put it in NASCAR motor racing terminology) "done blowed up".

For the record, anyone surviving the course to this juncture, duly adding when noted and rolling over their contracts en route, would today be Long 7 units of Gold at an average price of 1457. Which come to think of it, at Gold's current level of 1311, means one's position is off a mere 10%.

In reality of course for a futures account, percentage gain or loss is not measured by the change in a market's price; 'tis rather measured by the change in leveraged value against the size of the account. So at $100 per contract per point: the current level of 1311 minus the break-even level of 1457 equals 146 points of loss, times $100/point equals $14,600 in turn times 7 contracts equals a marked-to-market loss right now of $102,200. We're that against a $1,000,000 trading account, the loss is 10%. But against the far more typically-sized $100,000 account: Bang! Game Over. Get out the broom.

Fortunately most folks with market exposure to Gold are not futures traders. Unfortunately if their Gold trading/investment vehicles of choice this year have been equities, neither, as with the case in futures, has it been pretty. The exception therein being the exchanged-traded fund (ETF) GLD as it essentially mirrors the price of Gold roughly divided by 10. Similarly in timing to that futures scaling-in strategy, add-ons to GLD would indeed have such position at this writing only off some 10% which, if held, mathematically shall lead to a handsome reward when Gold finally regains its upside momentum through the 1400s, 1500s and onward.

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But lipstick on the pig or otherwise, as we've now passed from September into October, 'tis time once again for our year-over-year view of Gold itself, (the percentage track for GLD not displayed as 'twould show almost identically to that for Gold), along with the Gold Bugs Index (HUI), Philly Exchange Precious Metals Index (XAU), the ETF for the gold miners (GDX), and the royalty company Royal Gold (RGLD):