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Ignore the naysayers - gold is not in a bubble
Money Morning | 25 November, 2009
From Dominic Frisby, in London
Dear Money Morning Reader,
We had another good week for gold last week, as it climbed momentarily above $1,150 an ounce. The strength and speed of this move is surprising even me.
They say the hardest thing about riding a bull market is staying on. The bull will always try to throw you off. There are many who have not been as exposed to this move as they would have liked. Some have missed it altogether.
Now the bubble-callers are out once again. So today let’s look at a couple of their most recent arguments and see if they carry any weight...
One of my definitions of a bubble is “a bull market in which you don’t have a position”. How many of those that say gold is in a bubble are acting out of resentment over the fact that they have missed the move? A fair few, I daresay.
Yes, gold has had a fantastic run and is starting to look overbought. But this is a bull market. Bull markets can stay overbought for long periods of time. Overbought readings show that money is moving into the market at a quickening pace. We have always said that gold is small market and when institutional money moves in it will quickly push things higher. That is what is happening.
Are adverts offering to buy your gold a sign of a bubble?
A number of people have pointed to the proliferation of adverts offering to buy your gold as a sign of a bubble and a top.
But these companies are offering to buy your gold. They are buying gold off Joe Ignorant. It is when they start offering to sell you gold that alarm bells should be ringing. Joe Ignorant is selling his gold to them, because he doesn’t know its potential. It is when Joe Ignorant starts buying that we are headed into bubble territory.
I believe the model of these companies is to buy gold jewellery (which isn’t pure, by the way - other metals are mixed in to make it harder. 24 carat gold jewellery is considered too soft). They pay below spot rate for the gold, melt it down and then sell it as scrap at closer to the spot rate – which is moving higher every day.
Gold's headed for a bubble, but it's not there yet
We’ve heard it all before. Gold was in a bubble two years ago when it hit $650 an ounce, and before at $500. Gold will hit bubble territory one day but we are not there yet. I have a number of long-term price targets, which I shall outline in a future Money Morning. This bull market, which began in 2001, is now some eight years old. We are beyond the stealth phase and into the awareness phase (see chart below from a previous Money Morning).
Institutions have woken up to it, investors have woken up to it – but not all of them. We are not at the mania phase yet, there is no “new paradigm”. That will come in several years' time - perhaps as governments and central banks start to talk about returning to a gold standard or similar.
Of course we could easily have a correction here. The bull market could easily throw people off yet again, and the US dollar is due a rally which would hurt gold. But gold is not in a full-blown bubble yet – unless, that is, you are using my definition of the word: a bubble is a bull market in which you don’t have a position.
Until next time,
Dominic Frisby
Turning to the markets...
The JSE all share index traded closed down 0.17% yesterday. The gold mining index plunged 2.14%. Resources lost 0.59%. Banks and financials added 0.69% and 0.45% respectively. Industrials remained unchanged and the platinum mining index dropped 0.72%.
London’s FTSE100 closed down 0.59%. The Dow Jones fell 0.16 % and the Nasdaq decreased 0.31%.
Tokyo’s Nikkei closed 0.29% up. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng slid 0.18%.
Brent crude is currently trading at $76.77 per barrel.
Spot gold’s trading at $1,1176.10 and platinum was last quoted at $1,462.00
And here’s how the rand is performing against the major currencies:
R/$7.44
R/£12.37
R/€11.15
Editors note
Gareth Stokes
Money Morning Editor
MoneyMorning is a concise, fast paced, daily e-letter. It brings you local and global expert commentary on what makes the economy tick, and shows you how to profit financially and intellectually from future trends before everyone else. You’re guaranteed to get reliable, actionable and sometimes even witty and sceptical advice that’s ALWAYS provocative!
