What Gold’s Bull Market (That’s Right, Bull Market) Means For Miners

 | Apr 12, 2015 02:25AM ET

One of the oddities of floating exchange rates is that they cause people to view the world in terms of their own national currency. For Americans that means looking out through a window that is distorted by the dollar’s recent surge. A C$100-a-night Vancouver BC hotel room, for instance, cost about US$100 in 2013 and now costs about $80. Most other Canadian products are commensurately cheaper, making a week north of the border suddenly a lot easier to fit into the family budget. Though fundamentally not much has changed.

Another big distortion is in local-currency gold prices. Here in the US, Gold has been in a brutal bear market since 2013. But for people in most other countries,living as they are with relatively weak currencies, gold’s bull market has resumed without missing a beat. In the past week, gold rose by 3.5% and 2.2% in euros and pounds, respectively. And that’s par for the recent course. Here’s a chart from Kitco showing the past six months’ gold price action. Note that it’s down a bit in US dollar but up by varying amounts against the other major currencies. These are six-month numbers, so annualizing them produces very nice gains, especially in euros where it’s about 35%.