Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Another Spectacular Up Leg For Gold.



The S&P 500 has rebounded about 100% in 100 weeks. What crisis? What new normal? The economy is recovering and happy times are here again. Old normal is back. Stocks for the long run! Permabears be damned! The permabulls are back! Rates are low, core inflation is low, its Goldilocks time!

US stocks are only following the same pattern they’ve followed in the last three bear markets. The midpoint crash (1907, 1937, 1974, 2008) gave way to a furious rebound in each case. Following 1937, the market retraced 62% of its losses. Following 1907 and 1974, the market peaked three and a half years later after retracing roughly 95% of the losses. Three and a half years and a 95% retracement equates to the S&P 500 peaking at 1500 in April of this year.

Before you assume I’m a permabear gold-bug, take a look back 2009. With the S&P 500 at 764, I called for a 15% decline before the market bottoms and rallies for months and significantly in percentage terms.

Data from Bank of America Merrill Lynch survey of asset managers and hedge funds who cumulatively manage nearly $1 trillion. Shows what percentage are overweight or underweight US equities. The percentage of managers overweight US equities has soared in recent months and is basically at a 10-year high.

This growing bullish sentiment will coincide with the S&P 500 hitting major multi-year resistance. Excessive bullish sentiment coupled with multi-year resistance is not exactly a recipe for a major breakout. It’s a recipe for the end to this cyclical bull market.

Moreover, as we’ve noted time and time again, the factors that will cause stocks to reverse are the same factors that will propel precious metals into the early stages of a bubble. Increased monetization will be required as interest rates begin to rise and as the economy fails to grow fast enough to mitigate the debt burden. New debts and the rollover of old debts will be financed at higher rates, thereby increasing the debt burden which in turn, impacts the government's ability to juice the economy.

Higher rates won’t be good for stocks and higher rates won’t mitigate inflation or inflation expectations. The reason being, when you have a super high debt load (as most Western nations do) higher rates only exacerbate the debt burden. It will force local and state governments as well as the federal government to cut back, which has an impact on GDP. Higher inflation will also cut into corporate margins. We are expecting a mild bear market and not the 40%-plus decline we’ve seen recently.

Moving along to gold, we see a lack of interest in the market yet it is currently only 3% from its all-time high.

Furthermore, a survey of wealth manager of Canada showed only 33% of advisers as bullish on gold. That figure was 64% as recently as the fourth quarter of 2010.

This doesn’t mean gold will immediately soar. More so, it tells us that gold’s downside is limited as sentiment has shifted significantly.

With stocks nearing major resistance carrying excessive bullish sentiment and gold’s downside limited, let’s take a look at the gold/S&P 500 chart (above). The 2009-2010 price action has some similarities to the 2006-2007 price action. The chart shows that this is likely a good time to increase positions in gold and reduce positions in stocks.

After all the bubble bursts of the past decade, everyone wants to be a contrarian. If you are a regular Joe investor, now is your opportunity to be a contrarian and look smart in a few years. Mainstream managers now feel vindicated and feel a chance to promote stocks again. Don’t make the mistake many have already made twice. I’m writing this for the mainstream investor and the retirement investor because I don’t want to see them get sucked back into the market at the wrong time courtesy of asset managers who will find any reason to promote stocks.

Meanwhile, gold is providing an excellent opportunity. Its holding up well while the focus is currently elsewhere. The hot money is out of gold, yet it's only 3% off its highs. In the long run, that is scary bullish. In the coming months look for stocks to peak and for gold to regain its leadership.

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