Gold News

Did CNBC Spike the Gold Price?

Sleb says buy, price jumps, long-term investors see a correction...

WHEN celebrity investor Mark Cuban announces to the world that he is investing in gold, is that a sign that the ride up is just getting going, or that it has already peaked? asks The Gold Report.

We reached out to long-time experts in the sector for a better understanding of what is moving the markets – negative interest rates, a topping Dollar, Fed testimony, increased gold buying in China – and what that means for junior mining stocks in the coming months.

A lot of investors were turning back to gold in mid-February as an alternative to a larger stock market that didn't seem to make sense anymore. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 1.6% in one day, falling below its August low and spooking the chart-watchers.

"I think people are so confused about this market. Nobody really understands what's happening, including me," billionaire businessman Mark Cuban told CNBC's "Fast Money: Halftime Report" on February 11.

"When traders don't know what to do, they go where everybody is. And I thought that would be gold."

He then shared his recent purchase of gold call options, not as a hedge, but in anticipation of momentum pushing the price of the metal higher.

The day before, Frank Holmes, CEO and chief investment officer at US Global Investors Inc., predicted in his blog that gold was shaking off its downward trend after three years of losses and that these highs will be "stickier" than previous rallies. His optimism was based on the gold price breaking through above the 200-day moving average.

Holmes pointed to increased demand for gold from China, where physical delivery reached a record 2,596 tonnes, and increased gold coin sales in Europe, the US and Australia. He also noted that a trend toward negative interest rates in Sweden and Japan also makes gold more attractive.

Joe Foster, lead investment team member with the Van Eck International Investors Gold Fund, also credited increased Asian demand for pushing precious metal prices up, and pointed out that what is good for gold could be even better for gold equities. In a note to investors, Foster said;

"It makes sense that equities should outperform gold during rising gold prices, and underperform if gold falls. We now see the industry in the best shape it has been in for a long time.

"Unfortunately, this positive transformation of the sector coincided with, and to some extent was intensified by, a period of falling gold prices. Equities have consistently demonstrated their effectiveness as leverage plays on rising gold during these past years."

Many saw the declining stock market trends as bullish for precious metals and commodities. Jeb Handwerger, in a Feb. 8 article titled, "Did Precious Metals and Junior Gold Miners Just Bottom?", said:

"Now we could be in the early stages of a massive bull market in junior equities off of a historic low breaking above the 200-day moving average. Meanwhile, the US Dollar has failed to break through early 2015 highs and is heading lower, breaking below the 200-day moving average."

Eric Coffin, editor of the HRA (Hard Rock Analyst) family of publications, said in an interview with The Gold Report in December that the US Dollar Index had topped, and that could mean gold equities had bottomed. Reached Feb. 12, he said, "It is shaping up just the way I thought it would." He pointed to negative bond rates as making even a zero yield on gold look attractive.

Coffin also didn't see the change in sentiment as a temporary blip:

"I don't see a reversal in the near term because there are no easy answers. New York is going to enter a bear market and that is good for gold and it will be even better for gold equities, which tend to give you more leverage to gold price changes."

He ventured that generalists coming back to the market would start with the quality producers, and work their way down the food chain.

Shadowstats editor John Williams also pointed to currency concerns for the change in investor sentiment toward the shiny metals. "A weakening Dollar, perceptions of dwindling prospects for aggressive rate hikes by the Federal Reserve and mounting global market concerns as to financial system stability all have combined to boost gold and silver prices," he said.

Williams also did not see much light for the larger economy on the statistical horizon:

"Exacerbating market difficulties, US economic reporting in the near term should continue to deteriorate markedly, not only with generally downside surprises and continuing weakness ahead for monthly data, such as industrial production, but also with downside revisions to, and outright contractions in, near-term GDP reporting. These circumstances should help to keep further Fed tightening in check until after the November presidential election, and generally should keep downside pressure on the exchange-rate value of the US Dollar, with upside pressure on prices for precious metals."

Doug Casey has long preached that gold is a commodity like coffee, copper or aluminum. "But unlike other commodities, gold is money," he reminded his readers in an email on Feb. 11. "It's held its value for thousands of years. Gold is a safe-haven asset, which is why investors often buy gold when the stock market is struggling."

In that note, he reiterated that "with the FANG stocks dropping – Facebook (FB), Amazon (AMZN), Netflix (NFLX), and Google (GOOG) – the Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX) is carving out a bottom from one of the worst busts ever, a 74% drop from its 2011 high."

Casey's prediction? During gold's last bull market, gold stocks soared 273%. During the gold bull market before that, gold stocks soared 206%. And gold stocks soared 602% during the gold bull market from 2000 to 2003. "We think gold stocks could surge as much or more during the next rally."

Swiss fund manager for AgaNola Ltd., Florian Siegfried, added a global perspective to the volatility:

"Since the beginning of the year, gold has soared against every fiat currency, including the US Dollar. Gold stocks have outperformed bullion, and both the miners as well as the metal have been generating higher highs and higher lows. Technically, this is an encouraging picture, as typically seen at the beginning of a bull market in precious metals. Many brokers are skeptical that this rally in gold will hold, and virtually no research house has lifted its gold forecast – yet. This is positive for bullion's future price appreciation potential.

"Fundamentally, I think we are at a key reflection point for precious metals. After 637 rate cuts and $12.3 trillion in global quantitative easing, I think the world is finding out that governments and world central banks have created a colossal Keynesian failure, which is now starting to unravel. Gold is a hedge against government, and the 16% rise in the bullion price this year is telling a story. Central banks have no more dry powder to reinflate the markets. I think the free market is now in an early stage of a lengthy process where all asset prices will revert to their mean and where fair market value will ultimately be restored."

Siegfried's vision for gold was upbeat, calling this "a cyclical bull market for precious metals" with the opportunity in mining stocks still "in front of us."

Bob Moriarty, founder of 321gold.com, warned that while gold may be entering a bull market, it probably won't be a smooth climb up. "When you have the HUI at 59% in two weeks, betting on it going up another 59% in two weeks is irrational. It should correct, and it would be perfectly natural for it to correct."

Moriarty put the gold trend line in perspective by pointing out the long climb up for the larger market. "The S&P and the Dow have been topping for a year. We have started to crash, but even during a crash, you have countercyclical moves."

The inevitable correction would be temporary, Moriarty predicted. "I am expecting a bit of a gold correction after the upward moves at the beginning of the year, but when the market starts up again, a lot more people will be getting on board."

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