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Dow
& Gold: Very Different 'Bull' Markets
By
Gary Tanashian
Biiwii.com June
24, 2008
In our last letter the Dow-Gold Ratio
(DGR) was highlighted in anticipation of a reset/recalibration
of investor sentiment, which is a normal part of how markets
function. It is also a vital mechanism for getting the
majority onto the wrong side of the trade although the evidence is
strong that the majority has been on the wrong side all throughout
Alan Greenspan's credit and inflation fueled bull market.
Stocks have gone up albeit in a vastly under-performing manner
compared to precious metals and commodity resources. Recently
on the blog I updated
the DGR from a daily standpoint that is worth a look. To
continue our theme, with the Dow threatening new bear market lows
and even gold enduring a sustained correction, let's again check in
to see which is real and which is 'Memorex', this time using simple
nominal monthly charts. First up and in light of this bearish
big picture of the S&P 500, we have the Dow looking bearish
in the big picture as well. To the bearishly forked SPX chart we add the following
monthly chart of Mr. Jones. 
The
16 month exponential moving average works well here as an indicator
of the Dow's health (or lack thereof). Throughout the five
year long final leg of the major bull market the ema 16 acted as strong
support. During Greenspan's inflation fueled bull (R.I.P.
2003-2007) however, with naughty players knowing on some level that
their bull market was illegitimate in real terms (as measured in
gold, silver and resources as opposed to devalued paper money), there were several
breaks below this moving average only to have repeated monthly
closes back above. This 'bull' was not as self-assured as its
secular predecessor yet it still carries legions of conventional,
pliable and unquestioning investors to where ever they are going. The index
is signaling that all is not well with parameters
so clear and so close to breaking down. The bulls cannot
afford to lose the moving average on a monthly close, but where are
they going to find 800-900 points in a week? Worse yet would be
a breakdown below the highs from 1999 as noted by the green dotted
line. It is no wonder that the only thing the bullish case has
going for it presently is extremely negative sentiment. The
above chart is a nightmare waiting to happen BUT THE DOW IS
AT MAJOR SUPPORT. Until it breaks it is not broken and
it is hard to believe policy makers won't try something, such as
strong talk (Would they dare take action? Unlikely since the
Fed follows the bond market and T-bills are are now in
alignment with the Fed's current 2% funds rate) on inflation since the
effects of inflation are certainly weighing on the
market now. This mess is on the verge and no doubt Mr.
Bernanke is feeling pressure to do or threaten something to change the
mix. But it's all been said before, right? How long will
markets be willing to suspend disbelief before gold inevitably
begins its next leg up? Speaking of
gold and speaking of negative
sentiment, the precious metals sector has certainly come off its euphoric highs
where we lonely subscribers to old fashioned sound money and sound
market beliefs were joined by global casino patrons looking for
safety (and maybe a wink wink... play while they were at it)
as they rushed into the barbarous relic along with short term
treasuries and anything else they could find that was nailed down
firmly to the deck of the listing Titanic as it struck an iceberg
with a polar BEAR on it. Well, thankfully
many of them are gone now. Nobody but nobody is buying the
metal through BullionVault
banners on Biiwii.com nor the blog. While I would appreciate
the commission, I certainly do appreciate the 'tell' on gold.
The majority are either scared or awaiting lower
targets - among them is my 700-750 potential target from March, which I
no longer think plausible due to current sentiment - that have
been laid out in various media as the stock market hope rally continued,
major world powers rattled their swords shouting "Strong
currency, strong currency... shazahhhh, strong currency I tell you!!"
and Ben Bernanke and Hank Paulson reassured markets that they've got
it under control. I don't believe them and when I look at this chart I
realize all is well with gold which, with the relic finally back in
its counter-cyclical suit, means all is not well with economies,
financial systems and the idea of an orderly global macro framework. Here we see the picture of a true bull market
coming off the over bought status that had me quite concerned back
in March. 
Have
you ever seen anything so beautiful? Can you take a hit to 800
if you are participating in a real and secular bull market,
sentiment is no longer overly bullish and authorities world wide are
trying to convince you that the worst of the 'credit crisis' is over? The trend line
from 2005, a visual lateral support cluster, 62% Fibonacci retrace
of the last major upward leg, the
18 month ema (which has acted as impeccable support throughout the
entire bull market) and the lower panel indicators coming back to
comfort levels all argue that 800 is solid. But this
begs two questions; 1) Will it get down to that level? After
all, there is long term support at the 1980 highs and 2) Will
most investors who have not yet protected themselves have the guts
to buy there? My answers, were I to guess would be 1) yes and
2) no. Short term desperation on the part of policy makers
(aided by some downside wiggle room on this chart) may overwhelm the low ebb sentiment in the gold
sector in regard to the first question. As for the second, the
public has a long and proud history of buying any market when it
feels safest to do so. They may not even begin feeling
good about buying until the 1200 to 1500 range or after the pretense
of current inflation fighting foolishness has gone by the
wayside. What will the Fed say tomorrow? What will Trichet respond
with? How long will TreasSec Paulson be taken seriously?
All unknowns that can affect the short term. Good thing in
secular bull markets I do not think short term. I am
positioned with cash and awaiting the 800 level but my bag is filled
with core-plus holdings as well. Either I am on the
wrong side or the conventional crowd is. That's nothing new since
2002 in my case and longer than that for the insightful minority
that have been aboard since the very beginning of this real bull
market. Meanwhile, the truths born of the previous secular (20
years) trends - bullish for stocks and bearish for gold - are still
widely accepted by the mainstream and to me that is the most bullish
fundamental of all in gold's favor.
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