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Has Gold Become A Counter Cyclical Commodity?

Published 08/08/2016, 06:15 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM
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The title of this segment is actually the subject line of an email sent by subscriber ‘RK’ on Friday, after the post-Payrolls update that included the following statement that RK questioned. From the update…

Gold is getting clobbered as it should. Let’s please keep it real, because a lot of gold bugs are not going to. The case for gold, silver and commodities rests on an inflationary phase, which strong jobs and wages would indicate out ahead. But for now, the hit to the precious metals is logical.”

The case for commodities (cyclical) always rested on an inflationary phase, but in noting that the same is true for gold it appears that we have deviated from the preferred case for a strong, longer-term precious gold bull; and indeed we have. The point I have been making as the Semiconductor Equipment cycle went positive a few months ago and gold broke down vs. palladium more recently, is that cyclical forces are at work now. That would not be the preferred fundamental environment for gold or gold miners.

In lumping the gold sector in with the ‘inflation trade’, it is just one of many areas in which to deploy capital for an inflationary environment, which is why I often go on about tuning out the gold-obsessive “community”.

The concept is very simple, yet it can get confusing because there are so many opinions and analytical sources flying around out there that it can be hard to cut through the noise. Using the 2002-2007 ‘Greenspan Blueprint’ as we have been doing, it is as simple as noting whether or not gold is out-performing or under-performing vs. cyclical commodities. With a couple of notable exceptions, it continues to do so.

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Gold has under-performed silver (1st) and then palladium (2nd). These are two precious metals with more pro-cyclical characteristics than gold (given their industrial uses), and it stands to reason that the earliest, most sensitive indications of a cyclical (and potentially inflationary) environment would come from within the precious metals complex.

The 2013 signal in Palladium-Gold for example, confirmed the Semiconductor Equipment sector’s up ramp that we noted that January.

In the current phase, we noted the Semi Equipment up ramp in March and began to follow it, looking for a 3 month ‘bookings’ up trend, which was achieved in April (data released in May).

Semiconductor Ramp Up

We then noted a potential ‘W’ bottoming pattern in the cyclical PALL-Gold indicator. This has now all but confirmed a cyclical bounce, if not a phase bounce (that would come with a cross up in the moving averages). If other commodities follow suit, including those that at least partially impair gold mining cost structures, the gold sector would become a low priority investment destination.

PALL:Gold Weekly 2010-2016

Conversely, if the current economic bounce turns out to be a fortuitous (and convenient) pre-election bounce that is doomed to flame out, the gold sector would go right back to being the primary investment destination in a renewed counter cyclical environment.

Remember, this is not the market report with the pompoms and gold bug slogans. It is the market report that tries to understand what is happening, in the long-term, intermediate-term and short-term. What has been happening, especially since Brexit put an exclamation point on the deflationary bear phase that had enveloped markets post-2014, is a cyclical bounce.

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By using indicators like those above, it supported our view in looking past ‘BREXIT!!!’ and a couple of bad employment reports, which were for analytical purposes, hype and backward looking data, respectively. And what do you know? July Payrolls just marked the second strong report in a row. We always need to look forward, not backward and not at the headlines of the day.

The good ship Lollypop sails on, servicing itself quite nicely with Education and Health Services, Professional and Business Services, Retail Trade and last but never least, Leisure and Hospitality.

Employment Levels by Industry, Seasonally Adjusted 1996-2016

So for the time being at least, if things continue toward a cyclical backdrop the gold sector would not be special (at best) and could be at risk because of its big run-up amid fear, angst and the counter cyclical environment we began tracking a year ago with the Macrocosm theme. The pompom brigade may continue to obsess on the sector in a vacuum. But we will need to go where the short, intermediate and long-term analysis says to go.

Right now it says “cyclical”, for a bounce at least. We remain on the intermediate plan. But markets being what they are, no plan is black and white or foolproof. The next segment shows gold’s counter cyclical setup still the dominant trend.

Latest comments

I read within the last week or so that central banks were making LARGE gold purchases, including the US, and there was a graph to show this was a major change from previous periods. In addition to inflation one must take into account fear, disruption and uncertainty. Brexit was a disruption and thus fear and uncertainty abound. Only the lack of a clue hawks discredit the massive deflationary times that we currently live. And finally when it comes to correlations such as inflation to gold, one will lose substantial money betting on 100% tie.
To think that Gold is only related to an inflationary environment is a misconception of its value. We have a deflationary environment because of the artificially low and even negative interest rates that abound. It is the mass bond fueled debt covering (money printing) that is responsible for the rise of Gold and the very real perception that we are on the verge of banking collapses all over the place. Naturally debasing currencies should lead to a rise in the value of Gold. It is the artificial manipulation that has in reality held the price down. It is also this vast money printing that has held the markets up. Take that manipulation away and you will rapidly see a decent into the dust. You can manipulate reality for so long, but in the end it will reassert itself and most likely in a very dramatic way.
Well said. And you are absolutely correct.
I must say, that is a brilliant point of view.
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