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by Eric Roseman

For the first time this year gold prices are breaking important technical support levels. In fact, gold might drop below US$800 an ounce before this painful correction is over.

Worse, gold stocks have collapsed since July. These stocks now sit at the same levels they were at two years ago.

Gold prices are now in negative territory this year for the first time since mid-2005. That year also coincided with a U.S. dollar bear market rally that drove the dollar 12.8% higher against the euro. Still, gold finished 2005 with an 18% gain.

Major Correction Likely

The correction now underway in gold prices will probably be far more severe than the declines posted in mid-2005.

We're seeing a wicked U.S. dollar reversal this month and commodities are coming undone.

Since peaking on July 11, the CRB Index has tanked a cumulative 19%. Meanwhile gold prices have declined 16% and the XAU Gold & Silver Index has plummeted 34%.

If commodities were heavily overbought heading into July, then now the opposite is true. We've seen brutal declines in just four weeks of trading.

Now, a possible economic slowdown in Europe, Japan and other economies has caused traders to abandon the "carry trade," (buying high-yielding currencies with weak dollars to finance global speculations). As the dollar strengthens, higher yielding currencies, including gold, are likely to decline further.

Blame It On Oil and Germany

What's causing the latest drop in gold prices? You can blame it on the resurgent U.S. dollar, falling crude oil prices, and the latest batch of economic data in Germany. The latest data coming out of the biggest Eurozone economy points to a contraction of second quarter gross domestic product [GDP]. This data was critical because it compelled foreign exchange traders around the globe to shift their focus and dump the euro last week.

A big drop in crude oil prices is another major factor lending support to rising stock values since mid-July. As inflationary pressures continue to ease, the market has begun to discount the possibility of a quick economic recovery in the United States later this year.

Lower commodity prices act like a tax cut for consumers. These lower prices reduce the coast of living and allow consumers to spend more disposable income to non-energy and food items.    

The dollar, of course, had been heavily oversold for months. Since peaking just north of 1.60 euro, the greenback has rallied an impressive 6.5% since early July.

In Europe, economic growth is now slowing sharply following the release of second quarter German GDP, which showed a contraction. Along with other stumbling economies in the Eurozone, the European Central Bank (ECB) is unlikely to keep raising interest rates this year - especially if oil prices continue to decline.

That makes U.S. dollar assets more attractive for prospective investors because Europe is behind the United States in the economic and credit cycle.

Dollar Rally Won't Last Forever

Fundamentally, there is nothing to support a long-term U.S. dollar rally. 

Unlike 1995 when the dollar established a secular bear market low against major currencies, this uptrend will inevitably run out of gas.

Bear market rallies appear quite convincing and can muster significant strength over a short period of time. But this one simply has no long-term muscle.

Let me explain. In the late 1990s, the United States posted consecutive budget surpluses, enjoyed massive foreign direct inflows and low consumer prices in an environment of accelerated disinflation. No major military conflicts occurred and oil prices crashed to US$10 a barrel by late 1998 amid the Asian economic crisis and the collapse of hedge fund Long Term Capital Management.

Today's U.S. and global macroeconomic scenario is nothing like it was 13 years ago.

Soaring deficits, two major military conflicts, a distressed consumer, rising unemployment and a bear market in housing won't lend support to a secular dollar rally. In fact, Bill Gross, PIMCO's bond king, predicts lower interest rates in the United States over the next several months as deflationary pressures continue to drain economic growth. Lower rates won't support the dollar.

Remember the Credit Crunch?

The Fed is in no condition to raise borrowing costs despite high inflation. The ongoing credit crunch has not abated with overnight borrowing costs still elevated and mortgage-backed securities still clogged.

Over the last 30 days the stock market is up almost 8% but most credit indices remain at the same level or lower ever since Treasury Secretary Paulson guaranteed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac wouldn't fail.

That tells me credit markets are still far from stable as the economy remains fractured across key industries like housing, retail, autos, and airlines.

Gold Stocks for a Song

While gold prices are likely to decline further in this correction, gold mining stocks have already been pounded much harder. That makes some of the best mines in the business highly attractive at these low levels.

One important indicator I track now suggests a massive rally lies ahead for distressed gold stocks. 

Since 1974, the Gold-XAU ratio has been greater than 5.0 for about 15% of the period.

The XAU Index or Philadelphia Gold & Silver Index is a composite of leading gold and silver mining companies. Most of the stocks in this index are large-cap gold shares.

When the Gold-XAU ratio has been 5.0 or more, like now (currently at a whopping 6.02), the XAU Index has recovered with an annualized gain of 89.6%.

When the ratio has been 4.0 or higher, the XAU Index has rallied an average 27.4%. But when the XAU has traded at 3.0 or less, the index has declined an average -36.6%.

The Last Time This Chart Looked Like This Gold Rallied Over 280%

$GOLD: $XAU Chart

This chart above is quite mind-blowing if you're a Gold-Bug. Basically it strongly points to a major up-crash for gold stocks. No one can say exactly when this will happen but it's safe to say speculators will earn a bundle once it bottoms.

The current Gold-XAU ratio is an extreme 6.02 as of August 7 and at 5.99 as of August 11. The last time this ratio stood north of 6.0 was back in 2001. Seven years gold stocks soared more than 280%.

For now, the U.S. dollar rally still has legs and gold along with most commodities will probably continue to decline.

The buck has been badly oversold for months. Now the greenback is embarking on a secular bear market rally. But without higher interest rates to support the buck, balanced budgets or a rapid return to above-trend economic growth, there is absolutely no reason for the dollar to sustain this rally beyond a few months.

The United States will not escape an economic recession, possibly a hard recession. The contraction of credit combined with deflationary forces still plaguing the housing industry are events that won't disappear with a minor housing rescue package or a government spending bill.

The real threat to the United States is deflation, not inflation. This threat to consumption will likely lead to below trend growth for at least another six to 12 months.

The dollar's rally won't last forever. Don't abandon gold.   

This article has 14 comments:

  •  
    Aug 14 09:02 AM
    Amen!
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 14 09:49 AM
    I certainly agree with you. Nothing has changed fundamentally in economics or world politics that would weaken gold long-term. I own gold; I don't trade gold. I will sell my gold when there is world peace and the U.S. is out of debt. Which means my kids will inherit my gold.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 14 10:59 AM
    After 8 years gold is finished. Dont you look at the dollar? Dollar up----gold down. The last time gold topped (1980), it took 28 years to break even. A great investment?

    Wake up!!!
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 14 11:08 AM
    It actually doesn't even matter what the dollar does. The dollar is the inverse of other shaky currencies--not the inverse of gold. Gold reacts to inflation. Today's inflation report showed a 17-year high at 5.6 percent headline inflation. Of course the federal figures are under-reported. In the meantime, wages have fallen significantly, according to the Department of Labor. Watch gold rev up the rest of the year.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 14 12:23 PM
    CLH,

    I don't plan on holding for 28 years. Have you ever held an investment 28 years? In 3 years when gold IMO is 2K+ I may decide to get out depending on the markets. You need to make better cases for your opinions and it's quite obvious your short gold...
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 14 01:54 PM
    In times like these, it used to be, gold and real estate.
    Today it's pretty much the one that's left--with all the more reason!!. Yes, silver's included.
    The only real estate worth a look is farmland, maybe a small piece for your potatoes.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 14 02:12 PM
    twocents.blogs.com/web...
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 14 04:19 PM
    FOOL'S GOLD OR THE LONDON FIX ?

    Last March I went to buy some Walgreen Ice Cream....price $99 cents. Then last June I went to buy some Walgreen Ice Cream ,price $1.39. This August I got the Walgreen ice cream and plunked $1.50 to the cashier. She said it was not enought. I needed $1.59. HYPER INFLATION? You Bet Your Sweet Bank Book it is !! And gold can not even stay above prices of the 1980s. Congress does not have a clue. A
    all they can see is the price of gasoline and oil. When you use the Euro
    the price of oil is up only 15%. Congress is so concern about the import of oil, but has no concern for the import of cash. Send these morans packing. Impeach Congress! Buy gold and hope that it goes down. Otherwise we are wiped out with higher prices and hyper inflation.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 14 05:15 PM
    You had a downdraft from people who sold out of commodities funds and ETFs, which created selling in gold. If oil and gold were truly correlated, gold would have gone up between March and July, just as oil did, but it didn't. This is a technical sell-off. One the sector rotation hysteria subsides, gold will likely rise again. And once people face up to the fact that we are only in the 4th inning of this crisis, it will rise again beyond $1000.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 14 08:38 PM
    CLH Yea I bet your buying financial stocks and auto stocks and airline stocks and realestate ..............
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 14 11:01 PM
    I wish I were as certain of the upcoming performance of gold miners as you are. I do believe that gold will sooner or later bottom and then rise nicely. I think, though, that ease of investing in gold via an ETF (like GLD) may have reduced the attractiveness of gold miners. If you look at the performance of miners vs gold for the last few gold uplegs since 2001 you will see that the miners' outperformance vs gold has been diminishing, especially since the appearance of GLD in late 2005. Your historical relationships do not factor this in. And now with the double-gold ETF, this makes it even easier to profit from gold without having to take on all the risk of the miners.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 15 12:25 AM
    Gold has more going for it than not going for it IMHO. Our economy is in trouble, more so than across the ocean. China has a surplus and just 1% reserves in gold. Matter of time before they start diversifying out of the treasuries. I could go on and on here on the "fundamentals&quo... but the bottom line is that Buffett, Jim Rogers, Ken Heebner, & Stephen Leeb are all basically short the dollar and long commodities. I'm not the smartest guy in the world, but I know not to bet against these guys...
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 15 12:14 PM
    Nobody knows when to buy/sell gold excluding daytraders like me.
    I don't care about your graphs or your knowledge of the world,in early 1980's when gold crashed for 20 years guys like you went broke.
    Probably you are the new generations of such losers as those that bought gold then are not alive anymore.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Aug 16 04:01 PM
    While I liked most of your arguments, the 2nd last paragraph confused me. On one side, you said "Don't give up on Gold." In the 2nd last paragraph, you said "The real threat to the United States is deflation, not inflation."

    If you see deflation in the near future and gold is an inflation hedge like it is known to be, why would you recommend people to hold gold now? Could you elaborate on these seemingly contradicting statements?
    Reply | Link to Comment
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