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Back
to the Big Picture
By
Gary Tanashian
Biiwii.com September
12, 2008
Since the last letter a lot has
transpired and much of it has not been good - for my personal
investment stance, for my country and for a good portion of the
interconnected global economy. From the most recent (July)
letter, GOR Fest: Conclusion:
Stock
markets are enjoying a respite from the pain, as are the
banks. Soon oil may follow. It says here that the true
places to be have not changed through all the emotional short term
drama; short term treasury instruments (or equivalent global
government debt) for short term liquidity and gold for intrinsic
value. A bonus would be a
rebound in gold stocks due to the leverage that would fuel their
bottom lines in the 'gold outperforms commodities' scenario.
With oil having likely topped, the setup is in place to watch gold and cash
begin to outperform all assets as the deflation impulse sends people
running for safe liquidity. As stated many times, gold may
decline in this atmosphere (although I am bullish on the nominal as
well as asset-relative price, it is certainly possible), but it
should outperform by a wide margin most other asset classes and
unlike cash, it will retain enduring value far into the
future. Jewelry is not what is important here. Nor is
industrial usage or rising commodity prices. What is
important, given the pressure on nations to burn their currencies,
is investment value. I
would not change much about the above conclusion 1.5 months
later. The stock market is still attempting to deny the
severity or even the existence of the recession which is now
in force in the USA and rapidly spreading across the globe. A
"deflation impulse" is certainly sending people (and
institutions) "running for liquidity". This is why I
have suggested healthy exposure to short term treasury instruments
for liquidity purposes (as opposed to value) - thanks to Robert
Prechter and EWI I learned the importance of cash equivalents in the
safest forms many years ago. Speaking of EWI, they are proving
right on many fronts now as the ultimate contrarians have their
day. Even gold is playing to their script - an outcome that
has always been on the table in my analysis as well, although not
necessarily my preferred outcome. I highly recommend the free
signup to Club EWI and getting the free report: 2008:
The Year Everything Changes. This is either deflation or a
deflation scare after all, and these people know a thing or
two about the subject. Oil is
likely near a short term bottom and could have a relief rally in
time to kick off the home heating season. Incidentally, I just
bought enough of the US Oil Fund at the equivalent of $100/barrel as
a hedge. The advantages of this strategy are that I am taking
a market neutral stance at a technically specified level as opposed
to my oil delivery company's 'lock in' price, and the hedge can be
dropped at the push of a button as events dictate, so there is no
"lock". After a possible counter trend rally, I
expect oil to be lower in the spring than it is now. Gold
and the gold stocks? What can I say? I have been right
and I have been wrong. I was probably among the first gold
bulls to conjure up a potential
target of low 700's for gold and have been watching the Head
& Shoulders top form in the HUI since a potential right shoulder
was merely a twinkle in the market's eye. I became very
cautious as commodity bulls continued to party. Why have I
been wrong then? Because had I been smart enough to quantify
the correlation between the commodity mania and the assumptions
about inflation baked into that cake... had I known the levels to
which the 'get me outta here at all costs!' flight to liquidity of
the commodity bulls would affect the gold miners, I would have been
100% cash. Instead I personally opted for 'healthy' cash
levels and a mentality of bottom feeding in stages. The
distinction between this tact and 'catching a falling knife' is that
I am fundamentally engaged - for better or worse - and thus
compromised as a pure technician. In fact, with gold stocks I
have rarely been more bullish in the big picture than I am right
now. A true bottom feeder BOTTOM FEEDS and that is what I have
been doing. What I
would like to do now is put up some monthly charts. I have
found these big picture charts do well enough on their own in
telling their story. As major US financial institutions
continue to take the dirt nap and as we lurch ever further into
socialism with barely a whimper from the public, as the financial
noise of the day melds into a kind of relentless static, I often
find peace in the big picture. Following are linear scale
charts as opposed to the usual log scale. These charts do a
better job of showing dramatic price fluctuations. 
Bull
over? It is possible that gold entered a cyclical bear within
an ongoing secular bull market. This would effectively shake
out all those who think rising oil, rising copper, rising
healthcare, rising food, etc. is inflation and go hand in hand with
the potential scenario "gold may indeed decline in a deflation
impulse, but it will decline less than positively correlated
commodities". Please excuse the typo. It should
read "many will call 'bull over' when seeing MA's like THIS
violated...". 
What
else needs to be said about Huey? It is not only in a bear
market, it has incurred most of the bear market damage in what might
be record time. This is a crash. There is no other way
to put it. HUI has finally however hit
the 260 H&S top target that has been hanging over our heads
since it was confirmed by the break of the neckline around
400. It still says here that in a contraction - and if this
isn't a major economic contraction that will be fought tooth and
nail with inflation policy, I don't know what is - the gold miners
bottom lines will benefit handsomely. 
A
look at the TNX-IRX yield curve ratio. As Bob
Hoye will tell you, the curve rises during a contraction and the
above chart is bullish. Contraction it is. 
Remember
your old uncle... the one who would always do embarrassing things at
family get togethers? Jokes that were always a little 'off';
flatulence at the most inappropriate times; long winded diatribes of
a politically incorrect nature? Well, he is back and he has
crashed the party and if this chart is to be believed and respected
- I do respect it - he is here to stay for a good while. That
is because an entire investing world - save for a very few - has
placed its stance, in highly leveraged fashion, on the concept that
the US Dollar is any more worthless than the other major
currencies. I have previously argued that the Dollar will find
nearly impossible odds in trying to overcome the noted major
resistance. This level should repel the Dollar in the short
term, given the extremes that so many markets - including USD - have
come to on daily and weekly charts. But
the Dollar's ultimate fate will be decided by the level of
de-leveraging still to come and the state of competing economies,
most notably Europe and China. Suffice it to say the Chinese
are very pleased with the increasing value of their Dollar reserves,
not to mention being let off the hook by the American tax payer in
the Fanny & Freddie mess. If this is not a tell on the
desperation of our policy makers... 'Keep China happy, they hold all
those treasuries!!' Is the
solution in the Euro? How about oil? 'Got to own those
resources' say the inflation traders. But this is economic
contraction and in this environment, cash is king and the other
alternative, gold, is going to rise from court jester to crowned
prince as most nations face increasing pressure to "burn their
currencies" in the name of economic survival.
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