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Gold
Versus Industrial Commodities
By
Steve Saville
The
Speculative Investor
May
13, 2008
Below is an extract from a
commentary originally posted at www.speculative-investor.com
on 11th May, 2008.
Gold
and Oil
With
reference to the following long-term chart*, notice that oil moved
back and forth within a wide horizontal trading range between 1980
and the early years of the current decade before finally breaking
out to the upside in 2004. Notice, as well, that after it broke
above long-term resistance at $40 in 2004 it quickly gained about
$15 (37%) and then dropped all the way back to $40 to 'test' its
breakout before resuming its upward trend.
Now
refer to the following long-term gold chart*. Rather than
oscillating within a wide horizontal trading range for a couple of
decades, gold trended lower from its 1980 peak to its 2001 trough.
However, there's a similarity between gold's price action over the
past 6 months and oil's price action during the second half of 2004
in that, as was the case with oil, gold's initial break above
long-term resistance defined by its early-1980s high has been
followed by a sharp pullback to 'test' the breakout. As part of this
testing process gold could drop back to $800 or perhaps even a bit
lower, but the point is that this price action is quite normal and,
in the grand scheme of things, bullish.
Despite
its recent sharp pullback, the above long-term chart creates the
appearance that the gold market is very extended and in need of a
lengthy consolidation. It certainly wouldn't surprise us if gold
spent many months consolidating between $800 and $1000 before
embarking on its next upward leg, but while gold may look overbought
on the above chart it is not remotely close to being over-VALUED.
Relative to oil, for example, gold is presently not far above the
40-year LOW reached in 2005. It is also cheap relative to copper and
the Dow Industrials Index.
That gold is presently very low relative to oil and moderately low
relative to copper and the US stock market tells us that there is
still very little recognition of today's monetary problems. That
this is, indeed, the case is also evident from most of the
commodity-related commentary we see/hear each week. Considering the
price action the quantity of staunch commodity bulls is surprisingly
small, but the fully-committed commodity bulls that do exist tend to
focus almost exclusively on supply/demand fundamentals. It rarely
seems to occur to them that all of these commodities couldn't
possibly be rising in price at the same time if there were no
problem with the money in which the prices are denominated.
Now we see mainstream analysts coming out with $200/barrel oil-price
forecasts, but a $200/barrel oil price would mean a huge increase in
energy-related expenditure, which could only be possible if there
were an equally huge reduction in expenditure elsewhere OR a huge
increase in the supply of money. Any price is possible if you
increase the money supply enough. Just ask the average Zimbabwean.
Anyway, our point is that the monetary problems are not YET widely
understood, which, in turn, creates gold's upside potential. Gold's
REAL upside will stem from more and more people coming to the
realisation that the rising prices they see are, first and foremost,
a symptom of a monetary problem, as opposed to a consequence of
China's economic growth or the other popular non-monetary reasons
that are regularly dished out.
*Long-term charts courtesy of www.sharelynx.com
Gold and the Industrial Metals
During 2007 the gold/GYX ratio (gold relative to the Industrial
Metals Index) reached a short-term peak during the first 5 weeks of
the year, pulled back sharply into the early part of May, and then
trended higher over the remainder of the year. 2008 seems to be
following a similar pattern in that gold/GYX reached a short-term
peak during the first 5 weeks of the year and then pulled back
sharply into the early part of May. As evidenced by the following
chart, it has just reversed upward.
We expect the similarities to continue. In particular, we expect
that recession-like conditions within the US, slowing growth
elsewhere, and widening yield/credit spreads over the next several
months will propel gold upward relative to industrial metals such as
copper.

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