Showing posts with label Jimmy Rogers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jimmy Rogers. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

On Gold and Silver Technicals and Fundamentals




As the U. S. state and Federal finances continue to inspire little confidence, at least gold has no liabilities against it. It is the ultimate physical "money of the mind". Here are one-year and max charts for the ETF "GLD", which has tracked the price of gold closely to date (click on graphs to enlarge).
It is now 7 months since the early December peak in gold's price. Gold then corrected sharply but stayed over the $1000/ounce level that had been formidable resistance till fall 2010. Then new highs came, then the sell-off to under $1200.

Going back to the formation of GLD, every time it has made a new high and then 7 months later the price was below that of the prior high, one has had a good buy entry. The only adverse period would have gotten one in shortly before the fall 2008 panic. But if one is a long-term investor wishing to hedge against imprudent management of the currency by the authorities, than even sharp down-moves are, if brief, not all that meaningful.
Meanwhile, the fundamentals of gold as a percentage of money stock outstanding, all equity valuations, the debt levels outstanding, and many other parameters that I have seen all suggest that gold is at most fairly valued against competing asset classes or perhaps severely undervalued.
My belief is quite simple. When the monetary authorities are tight and reward cash, as in Paul Volcker's first term as Fed chairman, gold prices will trend down until it is truly "undervalued". However, ever since 9/11/01's events, the authorities have been "easy" in various degrees, only maxing interest rates to, but not above, inflation rates in 2006-7. We have seen that the bubble economy could no longer withstand even that balanced rate structure. Ever since then, inflation has been the desired order of the day, and gold has responded accordingly. To put it perhaps the more correct way, the dollar has responded accordingly, depreciating in price against the unchanging entity, gold.
Peter Brimelow wrote an article two days ago with some positive fundamental and technical news: Asia is buying, and bullish sentiment is moderate and moderating.
Given what may be exaggerated concerns about the short-term future of the U. S. economy and various overseas economies, it may be that silver has more upside price potential than gold; many observers including the heavyweight Jim Rogers prefer it on various chart and fundamental grounds. One can purchase shares in Silver Bullion Trust, run by the same folks who run the well-regarded Central Fund of Canada (CEF), at almost no premium to NAV, unlike CEF, which is over 40% silver (the rest gold) in its metals ownership. This fact suggests that indeed the speculative retail interest in silver is quite restrained now.
With money in the bank (pretend money, really) yielding almost nothing, the opportunity cost to hold metals is nominal. It's amazing to think that a security that returns a mere 2% after commissions two years from now beats a 2-year Treasury. If gold and silver merely track half of the true price inflation rate, will they beat "cash"?
Copyright (C) Long Lake LLC 2010

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Bad News Cycle

The Bloomberg.com headlines look poor today:

Volcker Chafes at Obama Panel Delay, Strains With Summers Rise:
The story is that Volcker looks to be more of a figurehead than an influential person. TOO BAD.

Goldman, JPMorgan Won’t Feel Effects of Executive-Salary Caps:

Some analysts said the new rules wouldn’t have much effect.

Obama, 47, “is not proposing to go back and get that $18.4 billion in bonuses back,” Laura Thatcher, head of law firm Alston & Bird’s executive compensation practice in Atlanta, said of the cash bonuses New York banks paid last year, the sixth- biggest haul in history. “Right now, we have not clamped down” on pay at banks.

Huge Paydays

In addition, some executives may be compensated for the potential reduced salaries with restricted stock grants, which may result in huge paydays after the bank repays the government assistance with interest.

“They’re just allowing companies to defer compensation,” said Graef Crystal, a former compensation consultant and author of “The Crystal Report on Executive Compensation.”
The restrictions are “a joke,” he said, because “if the government is paid pack, you can be sure that the stock will have risen hugely.”


So yesterday's headlines by the president look to be mostly PR.

U.S. Automakers ‘Choking’ Without Credit Await Fed Loan Program

“This is what is choking us to death,” Mark LaNeve, GM’s sales chief, said in an interview Feb. 3 after the biggest U.S. automaker posted a 49 percent drop in January sales in its home market. “If you can’t get credit, you can’t sell vehicles.”

The comment here is that everyone in the industry has known for years that the "Big Three" were finance companies masquerading as manufacturers. The country has to get away from debt-financed production and consumption. A modest proposal: given how rapidly Big Three cars depreciate, ban auto loans for more than, say, half the value of the car.

Eventually supply and demand will come into balance. The demand, however, will be real demand. Environmentalists such as Barack Obama should be in favor of a lower trend-line auto sales chart.


GSK delivers EPS of 104.7p before major restructuring
Dividend increased 8% to 57p


(See GSK.com for above, not Bloomberg)

Not stated in the GlaxoSmithKline press release is the fact that earnings were actually down 40% year on year, the stock buyback program was cancelled to pay for the dividend increase, and a mysterious legal charge occurred in the quarter that apparently shareholders are not supposed to know anything about.

Back to Bloomberg.com:

Russia Fueling Ruble Tumble With Loans, Banks Say

Russia’s central bank is exacerbating the ruble’s 35 percent plunge since August, even as it struggles to defend the exchange rate, by providing loans to banks that speculate on the currency, say Alfa Bank and UniCredit SpA.

And from their video section, this headline:

(Jimmy) Rogers Says Russia May Break Up

Cheery!

Worker Anger Sees Brown Facing Winter of Discontent

Spreading strikes, reduced workweeks and tens of thousands of job cuts are throwing British Prime Minister Gordon Brown back to the 1970s.

I have been saying for some time that what is happening is a toxic mix of the 1930s and 1970s.
Another Bloomberg article reports that the Bank of England lowered rates to a further record low of 1%.

Senate Adds Homebuyers’ Tax Cut to Stimulus as Final Vote Nears

Swiss Re Gets $2.6 Billion From Buffett After Loss

However, a man named Grodzki is pictured on Bloomberg.com's video section as saying that Buffett's stake in Swiss Re is "reassuring". Perhaps he was making a great pun. The truth is that Buffett is a shark. Perhaps he means that he is reassured that Buffett knows that Swiss Re lost its shirt venturing into derivatives in a vain search for growth and that Berkshire will probably prosper. It is not reassuring that the giant reinsurer Swiss Re joined the insurers Ambac, MBIA and others in forgetting that its role in society was to be a strong reinsurer, not to produce profits generated by gambling.

Senate Adds Homebuyers’ Tax Cut to Stimulus as Final Vote Nears

Closer to home, Republicans were allegedly making progress in getting the "stimulus" bill to eliminate non-stimulating spending. It appears that just as in the TARP bailout bill last fall, the Congress really just wants to borrow and spend more. The debt culture remains on top for now.

Perhaps you can be reassured that living in Japan in the 1990s post-bubble was not so bad. On the other hand, from the Leslie Howard movie The Scarlet Pimpernel is the great quote (which I attempt to repeat from memory): "There is nothing quite so bad as that which is . . . not so bad".

Have a good day.

Copyright (C) Long Lake LLC 2009