Buying The Fear In Gold

 | Jul 22, 2018 01:20AM ET

Far too much analysis is put out there linking gold with inflation. It is true that gold often acts as an effective inflation hedge, but it all too often fails in that capacity.

Far too much analysis is put out there linking gold with war, terror, pestilence and other conditions of human suffering. The surest way to spot a gold promoter, if he is not pumping inflation, is his pitch for gold as a disaster hedge. Yes okay, and I have a little Unibomber shack in Montana to sell you too.

Far too much analysis is put out there linking gold with the vast “resources” and “hard assets” trades. These things are of a cyclical nature and gold is ready and waiting as the anchor of stability on the counter cycle, as cyclical assets are liquidated. At best gold under performs when resources and commodities are booming during inflationary growth phases in the global economy, and should be held only for long-term considerations at those times.

On shorter-term phases, you buy the fear in gold when many gold bulls, influenced by factors like those noted above, are puking their metal to the lowest bidder. It is an almost ritualistic “running of the gold bugs” as I call it.

The most recent liquidation was probably instigated by large speculative interests that chased the momentum of the last inflation trade, which gold did lead in December of 2015 as it bottomed 1-2 months before the tide began to lift silver, the miners, commodities and US and global stock markets. This inflation trade has been largely anti-USD, and it has weakened in the face of the recently firm USD. Simple.

But what is not so simple is the concept that as counter-cyclical forces begin to liquidate the various asset trades, the US dollar (the reserve currency counter-party to the… asset party) rises against the wishes of global casino patrons, not to mention a US president who wants his cake and would like to eat it too . The opportunity in gold and especially gold stocks comes when the gold bugs who’ve been chasing the conditions noted in the first 3 paragraphs above finally give up in despair, thinking that Uncle Buck is the enemy.

Now, I had personally expected gold to bounce after the moving average “death cross” on the chart below as so often happens when TAs warn about this scary sounding condition. Indeed, gold did bounce from 1240 into the 1260s just after the cross, but it was a pretty lame affair, after which the liquidation resumed.

I’ve been slowly adding the gold and silver bullion fund Central Fund of Canada (CEF), as noted recently in and in-week updates. That is because the risk vs. reward proposition for gold and silver is greatly improved. How do I know that? Check out the bottom panel of this chart where I’ve added the current CEF discount to NAV of around 4%. In other words, gold bugs are not even accepting a 4% discount on CEF’s metal. Seems like a pretty good deal.

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After a volume spike and washout yesterday, today painted a positive candle in gold, silver and CEF as well. We’ll see if this marks a bottom or not. But we are talking risk vs. reward, not trying to pick an exact bottom.