Potential Catalyst For Precious Metals

 | May 16, 2014 10:24AM ET

Precious Metals continue to be in a long bottoming process that began last summer. Though many quality juniors have already bottomed and while Market Vectors Gold Miners (ARCA:GDX), Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners (ARCA:GDXJ) and Global X Silver Miners (NYSE:SIL) probably won’t see new lows, the broad sector as a whole is struggling to push out of this long bottoming process. Traders always say price is all that matters and who cares about fundamentals or the why. However, the most astute traders and investors look beyond a simple tool or single sphere of analysis. With respect to precious metals, negative real rates and the direction of inflation are the driving forces. Deflation is a catalyst for precious metals because policy makers react by suppressing real rates. Rising inflation is a catalyst and especially when it causes real rates to go negative or more negative. I will explain why this could be the catalyst for the revival of precious metals sector.

Some Lead, Some Lag

Commodities generally move together but some lead and some lag. In a deflationary catalyst situation, precious metals and gold specifically lead the rest of the sector. Examples of this include but are not limited to 1931, 2000-2001 and 2008. Yet there are instances of precious metals lagging after major bottoms. The best example is 1976. A smaller example is during 2004 when precious metals corrected but commodities kept moving higher. We’ll get to 1976 later but first lets examine the present.

The chart below plots the major commodity groups with the sector as a whole (CCI) at the bottom. Note how the CCI and all groups (except precious metals) peaked from the end of February 2011 to April 2011. Yet precious metals didn’t peak until around Labor Day 2011. Today we see that the CCI has clearly broken out of its downtrend and ended its bear market. Note how the 80-week moving average, formerly resistance has become support. It makes sense that because precious metals peaked last in 2011, they will lag the initial recovery of the commodity sector.