Tag Archives: Silver

Cautious Stock Market Investors

U.S markets will be closed today in observance of the Martin Luther King Jr holiday. Some markets will be open like futures, but I will stay away from the market today because of the lack of volume and liquidity.

I will follow oil and gold prices and all the commodity traders should keep in mind that Crude Oil inventories will be released on Thursday at 11:00am, instead of the normal Wednesday 10:30 am release due to Monday`s holiday.

Gold is on the move and can go up about 25%, and the precious metal is the best performing asset class so far this year. It`s golden days for day traders. Take a look at the oil price. It`s like roller coaster, jumping up and down, and oil had the biggest gain in 2 1/2 years, ending the trading session of friday 5,82% higher.

The reason why the stock market didn`t follow the oil price on friday can be the disappointing retail sales report in early trading on friday. Retail sales dropped 0,9% vs a 2% forecast. The S&P ended Friday with a 27 point gain, and ended the week 25 points lower. That`s down 1,24% for the week.

The Dow saw triple digit profits on Friday with a 191 point gain, and it closed at 17511,57, wrapping up the week with a 226 point loss. Friday`s Preliminary Consumer Confidence report was a beacon of hope for the bulls. The report not only beat expectations. That`s the highest level in 11 years!

A number of questions marks seem to have investors leaning back on their heals this year. This is; plummeting oil prices, geopolitical turmoil and continued divergence between the world`s major economies like Japan, China, U.S and the Euro zone.

All the investors eyes are on the world`s central banks. The Davos meeting later on this week will be interesting, and the ECB is expected to deliver a stimulus package later this month. Investors will wait for definitive word from the ECB regarding its widely anticipated stimulus plan.

Bond market rose across the board as interest rates dropped lower, with the 10-year Treasury rate falling below 2%. The downtrend in rates is not good, and is a symptom of deflationary pressures which is worse than inflation. Plummeting energy prices are adding fuel to the fire.

The U.S dollar continued its bullish climb last week, putting downward pressure on the commodity sector as a whole. This trend can last awhile longer.

Investors are cautions and it seems everyone is a bit hesitant to commit to new, bullish positions until some questions are resolved. I will wait for a clearer trend to emerge and 1,200 in small-cap stocks need to break before I call the bullish trend in equities alive.

 

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Shiny bull. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Shiny bull nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in precious metal products, commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Shiny bull and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.

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Switzerland said no to Gold

The central banks are holding the gold prices up, and without their buying power the prices would probably trade lower, so the central banks are one of the greatest demand components for the gold prices.

Gold

Yesterday, Switzerland could boost the gold price, but they didn`t. Switzerland had a referendum yesterday, and voters rejected a referendum requiring the Swiss National Bank to hold 20% of its 520 bullion franc balance sheet in Gold. Switzerland already have the worlds highest amount of bullion per capita.

If they voted yes, they would have to purchase at least 1,500 metric tons of gold over the next five years, and could have helped the gold price to skyrocket. Two third of the population in Switzerland voted no, and with lower oil prices, and imminent raising rates in the U.S, the demand for gold is declining as a hedge against inflation.

There was some support for the gold right before the vote, and there is some pressure on gold now. Right now, the gold is trading at $1,171,00 and is down followed by silver which is plummeting at the moment. The outlook for gold is not looking good right now, and signs of dangerous deflation have also made the gold less attractive.

Gold is also a reliable safety net that a country can have against an impending crises or a currency meltdown, but that is not the scenario right now, because the U.S dollar is increasing. The U.S dollar has been your safe heaven for months, not the gold which I talked about months ago.

The investor sentiment is negative and gold prices are once again headed for the trading area at $1,150, which is a support level that have been in focus for a while now.

It shouldn`t be like that, because what we see now is massive quantitative easing, Ebola, turmoil in the Middle East and rebellion in Ukraine. This is normally enough to make the gold prices to skyrocket, but not this time.

The question is when the gold price will start to climb, not if. Unfortunately, I don`t think that the price will increase next week or in the near future. I like gold, but I can`t hide the fact that the gold has been in a bear market for years.

We are at levels putting many producers in a dangerous zone which is below break-even. We know the demand for gold is there. Huge demand from China and India, but more important is to look at the supply.

You buy gold when there`s less supply than demand. You buy gold when the U.S dollar and other currencies are doomed to lose value due to inflation. You buy gold when the money printing machine is heating up, and you buy gold when the debt is increasing.

This is the key. Take a look at the supply, and you know that this will change in the future. It is the opposite of what we see in the oil market right now. The oil shale revolution added billion of barrels of supply to the oil market that have pushed the oil prices down.

The supply in the gold market will not increase. Many gold miners will face problems when the gold price is declining and it is too expensive to start a new mine which cost hundreds of millions. I will look for bold bullion, gold ETF and quality gold stocks as a solid play in the future. Bearish in a short-term, bullish in a long run.

 

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Shiny bull. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Shiny bull nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in precious metal products, commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Shiny bull and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.

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Understanding Gold

Gold and silver are complicated assets to price, because prices depend on the valuation of other assets and on differences between U.S data and the rest of the world. Stocks and currencies depend on fundamental data, but for gold and silver it is more complicated. The gold and silver prices express the strength of the global economy vs the expectations of real interest rates in the U.S.

Gold

Understanding the gold and silver prices is the key to unlocking the mystery of fiat money. Do you remember the collapse in Russia in 1999, South East Asia in 1997, and Brazilian and other South American currency crises from 1992 to 1994? Many lost all their savings, because of the collapse of their governments currencies.

Gold cannot suffer such a collapse in value because gold cannot be created by any government at will. That`s why the governments would like to convince the populace that it should disregard gold as a monetary asset and embrace its fiat currencies.

All previous experiments with fiat currencies ended in disaster. Our history books are littered with examples of empires that were built on hard work and destroyed by a devaluation of their currency. But this time is different. Central banks are doing the same thing at the same time; printing money. So, you have to look at the dollar compared to other currencies.

Understanding the gold and silver prices is the key to unlocking the mystery of fiat money. Compared to the prices in the past, the gold price should be $2,500, $4,000, $7,000 or even $14,000, but it isn`t. It is declining.

Fed successor Janet Yellen said (November 2013); «I don`t think anybody has a very good model of what makes gold prices go up and down.» Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke told (July 2013) Congress he doesn`t pretend to understand gold prices. Nobody does.

Gold and Silver are correlated to copper, oil price, Chinese investments and to global money supply and inflation. Higher supply of U.S oil and slower growth weakened the oil price and also the gold and silver price. Copper and oil got under pressure by the slowing Chinese real estate investments.

Chinese law to disallows to buy a second home, helped to calm these investments along with high interest rates.

The main driver for high gold prices in the «gold bubble» during the end of 1970`s was driven by U.S inflation, but what now as the emerging markets achieve half of global GDP? It will be difficult to view the gold price related to U.S inflation now. Falling food and energy prices in Europe are an indicator of weak EM.

Central banks in EM reduced their dollar share and bought gold between 2010 and 2012. India holds 10% of reserves in gold, while China holds 1,7% and Brazil only 0,5%. Countries with current account deficit (India: 10% Central bank gold holdings), Belarus (30%) and Egypt (25%), prefer gold to stabilize their currency.

Western central banks still stick with the former IMF rule not to buy gold any more.

The gold share is very high for many European countries, while it is still low in EM central banks. Central banks of Germany, Italy and France are all three with 70% gold holdings, and they could all build up their reserves during the Bretton Woods era.

All other countries fixed their N currencies against 1 currency, the U.S dollar, in the Bretton Woods system. The Fed was obliged to exchange on ounce of gold into $35 U.S dollar. (N:1 currency system). President Nixon closed this cheap gold at $35 window in 1971.

Gold lost its status with flexible exchange rates, and the IMF demonization of gold policy even urged central banks to sell their gold. Central banks in Switzerland and the UK followed these calls, and the Fed is still the leasing central bank in an implicit N:1 system of central banks (Bretton Woods II).

Quantitative easing makes the gold rise and the dollar to weakens, because private investors and some central banks move out of the dollar and into gold. If the U.S employment falls, then the dollar appreciates which is about to happened now. EM will be more expensive and with lower oil prices the U.S trade deficits diminishes.

U.S funds will find treasuries more attractive relative to gold and silver and normally when the real interest rates is high, the gold price is weak and vice verse. When the U.S economy improves the gold price falls, and the chances of a Fed Funds rate hike increase, but that`s far in the future.

The gold price moved upward together with oil prices and wages during the 1970`s inflation expectations. Wages is playing a role as an underlying factor for interest rates and the gold price. At that time, Fed Chairman Volcker hiked interest rates so that unions stopped higher wage demands, new supply (North-sea oil) suppressed the oil price and the incomes of EM, while the global growth was sluggish.

Fed Chairman Volcker destroyed the gold price by keeping inflation (and company margins) under control and the stock price rose again. Now wages is declining (wage share of GDP) and the company margins are increasing. The gold price have dropped sharply in a few days and are trading below its 1,200 support level. It can go down to 1,000 and below.

A report published by the World Gold Council «China`s gold market: progress and prospects» suggests that the demand for gold will increase by 20%, from 1,132 tonnes per year to at least 1,350 tonnes by 2017. It was a record level of Chinese demand for gold in 2013, and 2014 is suggested to see consolidation, the succeeding years are likely to see sustained growth.

The market began liberalising in the late 1990s, and China is the number one producer and consumer of gold. It is expected to see the market to continue to expand, irrespective of short-term blips in the economy.

Mr. Greenspan said gold is a good place to put money these days given its value as a currency outside of the policies conducted by government. Gold is down 1/3 since it’s all time high of $1,921,50 in September 6, 2011. On October 29, he told the Council of Foreign Relations that the Fed`s $4 trillion balance sheet is a «pile of tinder, but hasn`t been lit.» Once the central banks stop «sitting on» their reserves, said tinder will ignite «inflation will eventually have to rise,» and in turn, «gold will move higher, measurably so.» (Fxsteet.com).

Gold is a hedge against inflation, and not against times of crises. Right now, the problem is not inflation, but the opposite; something worse called; deflation. Gold can go down while inflation increases, as they did from 1980 to 2000. It`s difficult to understand the setting of the gold price, so I will continue to look at the technical analysis. Gold is still  in a bearish market.

 

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Shiny bull. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Shiny bull nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in precious metal products, commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Shiny bull and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.

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Gold is at a critical level

The dollar hit a four-year peak compared to major currencies today, and while the dollar is moving higher, the gold is declining. The dollar is moving higher as everyone have all their eyes on the expectations of interest rate in the U.S right now.

Gold

Strong economic data could prompt the U.S central bank to raise interest rates faster and sooner than expected, and that could boost the dollar. The pressure on gold from a stronger dollar was mitigated by a fall in equity markets after Honk Kong riot police advanced on pro-democracy protesters in the worst unrest since China took over the former British colony two decades ago. Gold is traditionally seen as an alternative investment during times of political instability.

Gold is still in a bearish territory. At the end of last year, the precious metal started to move higher. We saw higher highs and people were bullish. It was a positive sign, but it was a positive sign in a negative trend.

The precious metal is still declining and it is just a matter of time before we see a test of the critical support at $1,185. Gold moved higher when the U.S forces began bombing raids in Syria, but gold is down together with Silver, which is below $18 right now.

We can see the same trend in Platinum, which moved sharply lower, down almost $40, and palladium down almost $30, so Gold continues to get more expensive relative to its precious cousins.

A portfolio should contain about 10% of precious metals, because as we have seen over the past decades, gold can cushion an investment portfolio during times of crises. Right now we are at a very interesting and perhaps critical juncture with respect to the direction of the gold price as it approaches a key support level.

It can move up and it can move down, and I`m following some key support and resistance levels for the precious metals. The gold price can move down to $1000 and below. It all depends on happenings around the world.

The signals out there is mixed which makes the bulls and bears very frustrated. That`s why it is important to trade what you see, not what you think. I`m exited about the coming weeks and moths.

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What`s next in the stock market?

Take a look at the Silver. Now trading at $17,50! Down another 1,17% only today! Gold is also in a red territory, trading at $1,210,80. Down -0,71% so far today. Copper is trading at $303,95, while Crude Oil (Brent) is trading at 97,20.

This is not what many investors expected. Many was bullish on gold and are still buying with both hands, but the precious metals is declining every day. Yesterday, we saw good economic data. Housing prices are up in the best market in 22 years. What will happen next in the market. Please be sceptical about everything I say, but as an investor I need to predict the market.

SPX Sept 14

Here are some thoughts: The U.S economy can continue to grow with inflation subdued and the interest rates will probably increase next year, but in a gradual pace. Stocks will probably be supported by higher earnings instead of higher valuations. If so, the S&P 500 will continue to go up to about 2,250 next year.

But what if the stock market goes up like I mentioned above and the valuations melt up in the prices of the stocks when the growth remain the same, and at the same time, the dollar keeps going up and remain strong? Then a lot of capital will flow into the U.S market again. Fed will slow down its pace of monetary normalization, and companies support higher stock prices with more share buybacks.

Maybe this is the end? This is the top, and it stops right here. It is the end of the bull market. It is a slowdown in Japan and in Europe and China has a housing bubble that will burst, and all this will stop the whole global economy.

It`s many outcomes, and that`s why it is important to trade what you see, not what you belive. Expect the unexpected, because you`ll never know what`s gonna happen out there, but when it happens, it happens fast.

 

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Shiny bull. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Shiny bull nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in precious metal products, commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Shiny bull and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.

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Filed under Commodities, Stock market