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We have already begun wrapping up with the summary above, but
let’s check the DGR, with Dow testing resistance and a gap in gold
terms by daily chart. This could be viewed as an emotional retrace of
the panic from the ‘Flash Crash’™ of last spring.
 
 
Now let’s get to a critical point of the analysis that has
been carried forward for much of Hope ’09. Please take a moment
and reflect upon the weekly DGR chart above, then come back and we’ll
discuss.
Ready? Dow as measured in a real money surrogate (not
inflated, not indebted, no ‘income’ return) topped out in
2000. This is Gold Bug 101, so let’s move on. In 2001
everything changed as a secular cycle began when the wellspring of post
Volcker goodwill ran dry and inflation saturation began to kick in. We
are now ten years into an era whereby paper and digital money are used as
economic fuel, with stimulus on demand. This is promoted by the Federal
Reserve and funded by the Treasury Department here in the US, and by
equivalent entities throughout the developed world.
The first shaded zone represents the 2003-2007 cycle that
resulted from Alan Greenspan’s inflationary policies at the turn of the
century. It was kicked off by post-bubble monetary policy. It was
also indicated by a notable bullish divergence by weekly MACD in the
ratio. Stock markets subsequently recovered a bit measured in gold
terms, but then continued on in their ‘real’ bear market,
resisted every step of the way by the weekly EMA 100.
With the whopper of a panic in 2008, we now have a Dow upward
correction in gold terms once again, sprung as before by a MACD
divergence. Add the weekly EMA 100 of this ratio to our growing list of
indicators to watch going forward. We are obviously in a new cycle that
is doing many of the same things the late great ‘Inflation Bull R.I.P.
2003-2007’ did. The question now is in timing.
Recall that the 2007 spectacle ended with oil making a very
noisy run to near $150 a barrel. Today, copper is at all-time highs,
grains are exploding and we are on the precipice of a bubble, which would
become the mother of all inflation induced bubbles if the T bonds yield (no
pun intended, but I think another one of those little tag lines was just
born). The best tag line however, belongs to von Mises: Crackup Boom.
If indeed it is to be a continued inflation cycle, the stock
markets will probably continue upward, and gold will continue to shine a
light of honesty as to what is behind the process. Silver would
probably lead. Gold stocks might recover strongly and target our HUI
680 level, and yet their investment merits would be gone up in the smoke of
an inflationary blaze. A world of investment possibilities (or more
accurately, imperatives) would then open up. Gold and silver would be
de facto money in this new Wonderland, even if gold’s miners would be
also rans due to rising cost issues. Vital commodities would not be
money, but they would be ‘grabbed’ aggressively.
If however, just maybe things reverse in the heretofore ongoing
macro inflation/deflation game back toward deflation and rising Treasury
bonds, the gold stocks could potentially decline to the HUI 470 area or even
lower if things get bad enough. This would be my preferred opportunity
to invest because you just know the speculators would be puking them up with,
but possibly to a lesser degree than gamed items like Rare Earths, Copper,
Grains, etc. All of this against improving gold mining fundamentals.
(Ed. Note: NFTRH currently holds a firm core+ of gold stocks,
employing the discipline not to try to out think a still ongoing bull
market. If the parameters do indeed change, so too will the investment
stance).
Gary Tanashian
www.Biiwii.com
Copyright
© 2005-2009 Gary Tanashian
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