The
gold miners’ stocks have mostly ground higher over the past
half-year, forging a new upleg. Their fortunes have been dominated
by traders gaming the Fed’s extreme tightening cycle, which has
really bullied around gold. Despite these crazy sentimental and
technical distortions, gold stocks’ background seasonals shouldn’t
be overlooked. This sector’s strongest seasonal rally relative to
gold is well underway.
Seasonality is the
tendency for prices to exhibit recurring patterns at certain times
during the calendar year. While seasonality doesn’t drive price
action, it quantifies annually-repeating behaviors driven by
sentiment, technicals, and fundamentals. We humans are creatures of
habit and herd, which naturally colors our trading decisions. The
calendar year’s passage affects the timing and intensity of buying
and selling.
Gold stocks
display strong seasonality because their price action amplifies that
of their dominant primary driver, gold. Gold’s seasonality
generally isn’t driven by supply fluctuations like grown commodities
see, as its mined supply remains
relatively steady year-round. Instead gold’s major seasonality
is demand-driven, with global investment demand varying
considerably depending on the time in the calendar year.
This gold
seasonality is fueled by well-known income-cycle and cultural
drivers of outsized gold demand from around the world. Like
clockwork these power major spring, autumn, and winter seasonal
rallies in gold and thus its miners’ stocks. Interestingly market
forces behind the former are the least-understood out of all gold’s
seasonal surges. Maybe that’s why this imminent spring rally has
also proven gold’s weakest.
Yet surprisingly
gold stocks still enjoy their best seasonal outperformance
relative to their metal during these same coming months! So gold
stocks’ spring rally has proven their strongest seasonal one during
gold’s modern bull-market years. This contradictory mismatch
between gold’s worst seasonal rally and its miners’ best one offers
an important clue on the spring rally’s motivating impetus,
sentiment is likely the key.
Traders’
psychology exceedingly influences their capital-allocation
decisions. They won’t buy gold or gold stocks or anything unless
they are optimistic prices will climb on balance. After dark cold
winters in the northern hemisphere where the vast majority of the
world’s traders live, spring naturally breeds optimism. Its
glorious swelling sunshine and warming temperatures universally buoy
the spirits of nearly everyone.
The lengthening
daylight hours and improving weather from March to May bring joyful
anticipation of the summer vacation season. That’s such a wonderful
contrast to January and February, which often seem like
nose-to-the-grindstone months of relentless busyness. With things
looking up and traders generally feeling happier during springs,
their optimism makes them more bullish on much including gold
and gold stocks.
This
glass-half-full sentiment leaves traders more willing to deploy
capital to chase expected gains. And their optimistic buying feeds
on itself, fueling virtuous circles of strength. The more traders
buy gold and its miners’ stocks, the more they rally. Those
resulting gains attract in still-more traders, accelerating the
upside. Spring is exceptionally favorable for nurturing this
positive psychological feedback loop in markets.
Since it is gold’s
own demand-driven seasonality that fuels gold stocks’ seasonality,
that’s logically the best place to start to understand what’s likely
coming. This old research thread focuses on modern bull-market
seasonality, as bull and bear price action is quite different. Gold
enjoyed a mighty 638.2% bull run from April 2001 to August 2011,
fueling gold stocks skyrocketing 1,664.4% per their leading
index then!
Following that
secular juggernaut, gold consolidated high then started correcting
into 2012. But the yellow metal didn’t enter formal bear territory
down 20%+ until April 2013. That beast mauled gold on and off over
several years, so 2013 to 2015 are excluded from these seasonal
averages. Gold finally regained bull status powering 20%+ higher in
March 2016, then its modest gains grew to 96.2% by August 2020.
Another high
consolidation emerged after that, where gold avoided relapsing into
a new bear despite a serious correction. Later the yellow metal
started powering higher again, coming within 0.5% of a new nominal
record in early March 2022 after Russia invaded Ukraine. So 2016 to
2021 definitely proved bull years too, with 2022 really looking like
one early on. Then Fed officials panicked, unleashing market
chaos.
Inflation was
raging out of control thanks to their extreme money printing. In
just 25.5 months following the March 2020 pandemic-lockdown stock
panic, the Fed ballooned its balance sheet an absurd 115.6%! That
effectively more than doubled the US monetary base in just a
couple years, injecting $4,807b of new dollars to start chasing
and bidding up the prices on goods and services. That fueled an
inflation super-spike.
With big inflation
running rampant, Fed officials frantically executed the
most-extreme
tightening cycle in this central bank’s history. They hiked
their federal-funds rate an astounding 450 basis points in just
10.6 months, while also selling monetized bonds through
quantitative tightening. That ignited a huge parabolic spike in the
US dollar, unleashing
massive
gold-futures selling slamming gold 20.9% lower into early
September.
That was
technically a new bear market, albeit barely and driven by an
extraordinary anomaly that was unsustainable. Indeed
gold soon
rebounded sharply, exiting 2022 with a trivial 0.3% full-year
loss. Gold kept on powering higher, reentering bull territory up
20.2% in early February 2023! So I’m also classifying 2022 as a
bull year for seasonality research. Gold’s modern bull years
include 2001 to 2012 and 2016 to 2022.
Prevailing gold prices varied radically across these secular spans,
running just $257 when gold’s mighty 2000s bull was born to August
2020’s latest record high of $2,062. That vast range of gold levels
spread over all those long years has to first be rendered in
like-percentage terms in order to make them perfectly comparable
with each other. Then they can be averaged together to distill out
gold’s bull-market seasonality.
That’s accomplished by individually indexing each calendar
year’s gold price action to its final close of the preceding year,
which is recast at 100. Then all gold price action of the following
year is calculated off that common indexed baseline, normalizing all
years. So gold trading at 110 simply means it has rallied 10% off
the prior year’s close. Gold’s previous seasonality before 2022 was
added is shown in light blue.
Gold’s off-the-charts volatility last year spawned by that extreme
Fed tightening really yanked around its seasonal performance.
Averages improved early on as gold powered higher before those
extreme rate hikes
launched the US
dollar stratospheric. Gold’s resulting plummeting dragged its
seasonals sharply lower in 2022’s second half. But heading into
year-end, that gap almost closed again as gold rebounded.
Gold’s spring seasonal rally runs from mid-March to early June,
where it powers 3.6% higher on average. That is considerably worse
than the +4.1% prior to 2022. Gold’s spring rally was truncated
prematurely in mid-April last year. That’s when Fed officials’
uber-hawkish jawboning convinced traders that violent rate hikes
were coming. In early May the Fed hiked 50bp, followed by four
75bp monsters in a row starting in mid-June!
That
first one was the Fed’s biggest rate hike since November 1994,
something not witnessed in almost 28 years! Those extreme Fed
distortions left gold’s 3.6% spring rally even smaller than its 5.1%
autumn and 8.6% winter ones. But it really isn’t weak, as this
spring rally is the fastest compressed into just 2.6 months.
Gold’s autumn and winter rallies take much longer to unfold,
clocking in at 3.4 and 4.1 months.
So
gold actually surges at a 16.4% annualized pace during its
spring rally, compared to 18.4% and 25.0% in its autumn and winter
ones. Those aren’t trivial gains achieved by an enormous asset on
average over fully 19 years! And this year’s spring rally ought to
remain a huge outperformer, pushing gold’s spring-rally seasonals
back higher. At best between late February to late March, gold has
already blasted up 10.1%!
After waxing short-term overbought in late January, gold’s young
bull suffered a
sharp pullback in most of February. A confluence of several
unusual events contributed, including a European Central Bank dovish
surprise, a record seasonal adjustment in monthly US jobs, and
speculators’
gold-futures trading reports going dark. With that selling way
overdone, gold had already rebounded 2.4% before mid-March’s
fireworks.
The
Fed’s savage rate hikes were forcing huge unrealized losses
in some banks’ supposedly-safe portfolios of short-term US
Treasuries. That scared depositors into fearing technical
insolvency, fueling full-blown runs on otherwise-healthy banks!
That really lit a fire under gold in mid-March,
fueling massive
gold-futures buying. Traders were remembering gold’s legendary
safe-haven status in troubled times.
With
the Fed’s extreme tightening cycle threatening confidence in the
US banking system, futures-implied odds for more rate hikes
crashed. That slammed the US dollar lower accelerating speculators’
leveraged gold-futures buying. As traders love chasing upside
momentum, big gold surges often soon become self-feeding. This
dynamic combined with gold’s strong seasonal tailwinds should
amplify this year’s spring rally.
And
despite that economy-crushing frenzy of monster Fed rate hikes,
inflation continues to rage out of control. In the year since Fed
officials started hiking like madmen, monthly headline CPI inflation
has still averaged huge 7.8% year-over-year gains! That is
even more shocking considering the CPI is heavily lowballed,
intentionally underreporting price increases since they are so
problematic politically for the US government.
Yet
in the year before the Fed’s most-extreme hiking cycle ever
launched, the headline CPI looked better averaging 5.7% YoY gains. Rate
hikes can’t kill inflation driven by excessive monetary
expansion. In early March before the bank runs, the Fed’s balance
sheet remained 100.6% higher than pre-pandemic-lockdown-stock-panic
levels! Then in mid-March it soared back up to +107.7% as banks
rushed for Fed funding!
With
the US money supply still more than doubled, this inflation
super-spike has a long ways to run yet before prices normalize to
this vast deluge of new dollars. That is incredibly bullish for
gold. During the
last two inflation super-spikes in the 1970s, monthly-average
gold prices from trough to peak CPI months nearly tripled during
the first before more than quadrupling in the second! Today’s
gold bull is only starting.
So
odds favor this year’s spring rally continuing to prove outsized
relative to multi-decade gold-bull-year seasonal averages. That
certainly bodes well for gold stocks in the next couple months.
Their leading GDX VanEck Gold Miners ETF tends to amplify material
gold moves by 2x to 3x. But only birthed in May 2006, GDX is
too young for this long-term seasonal analysis. For that we need
the classic HUI gold-stock index.
It
is functionally interchangeable with GDX, containing the same
major gold miners. To test this, I remade this seasonal research
thread’s underlying spreadsheet by plugging in GDX instead of the
HUI starting in 2007. The resulting charts proved all but
identical, so for consistency’s sake I’m continuing to advance these
studies with the HUI. The gold stocks are naturally thriving this
spring, leveraging gold’s upside like usual.
Applying this same modern-gold-bull-year seasonality methodology to
gold stocks, they’ve averaged big spring-rally gains of 12.1%.
That’s much better than the autumn rally’s +8.1%, yet still behind
the winter rally’s +13.3%. But for several reasons, gold stocks’
spring rally still remains their seasonally-strongest one.
It actually was absolutely until 2022 was added, as gold stocks
plunged with gold starting in mid-April.
Before Fed officials panicked with their brutal rate hikes, gold
stocks’ spring rally averaged seasonal-best 13.5% gains over 18
years. That was ahead of both the +9.5% and +12.9% gains from
the autumn and winter rallies. As the most-extreme hiking cycle
ever and resulting extreme market anomalies can’t happen very often,
gold stocks’ spring-rally supremacy will likely reassert itself in
the averages in coming years.
But
even as these seasonals now stand including 2022’s gross
distortions, gold stocks’ spring rally is still their strongest.
Their seasonal upside leverage to gold runs a massive 3.4x
during this long secular timespan, dwarfing the 1.7x and 1.5x seen
during the autumn and winter rallies! And mirroring gold, the gold
stocks’ spring rally is also the fastest at 2.6 months. Autumn and
winter are way longer averaging 3.4 and 4.0.
So
annualized, the major gold stocks of HUI and GDX skyrocket up at
a phenomenal 55.2% pace during this spring-rally period! Those
fast gains trounce the 29.0% and 40.1% annualized rates on average
during the autumn and winter seasonal rallies. So in terms of raw
outperformance relative to gold, there’s no other time of the
calendar year more favorable for the miners. That’s confirmed by
fully 19 years of data.
Gold-stock fortunes are heavily dependent on trader psychology,
which grew really bearish during gold’s serious pullback in
February. So gold stocks have lagged gold’s spring-rally surge,
with GDX up 21.0% at best from early to mid-March. But before
2023’s spring rally runs its course by early June, GDX’s upside
leverage to gold should near the high end of its usual 2x-to-3x
range. That portends big gains in April and May.
When
gold is really running, gold miners’ big inherent profits
leverage to it help drive far-larger outsized gains. The last
example was in spring 2020, which proved exceptional due to that
pandemic-lockdown stock panic. From mid-March to late May, GDX
skyrocketed an astonishing 95.8% higher on a parallel massive 18.7%
gold surge! Again traders love chasing upside momentum, fueling big
self-feeding buying.
With
the lion’s share of gold’s and gold stocks’ spring rallies coming in
April and May, these have proven the strongest two-calendar-month
span of the year for this sector. This next chart carves up
gold-stock seasonals into more-granular calendar months using the
same indexing methodology. Despite the Fed’s walloping last April
and May, gold-stock seasonals remain explosively bullish during
the next couple months.
On
average during these same modern gold-bull years of 2001 to 2012 and
2016 to 2022, gold stocks surged 2.9% higher in April and 4.1% in
May! The former is narrowly the HUI’s fifth-strongest month in this
long secular span, while the latter takes the crown as the best. As
you can tell by the pre-2022 light-blue lines, these months were
even better before Fed officials unleashed hell on the markets to
fight inflation.
Before last year’s resulting extreme anomalies, April was gold
stocks’ third-best month at +3.6% while May was even better clocking
in at +4.9%! So while November and December together now seem to
rival this April-May span in terms of back-to-back gains, this
spring-rally timeframe remains the strongest. Last year’s crazy
Fed-distorted market action temporarily retarded April and May, then
goosed November and December.
Gold
stocks’ average upside leverage to gold during May has run a
colossal 4.4x, trouncing every other month! These next couple
months are the most-favorable time of the year to be heavily
deployed in the gold miners. Whether it is spring’s general
optimism leaving traders more likely to loosen their purse strings
to deploy capital or just momentum-chasing buying, gold stocks
really thrive from mid-March to early June.
With
the lion’s share of this seasonally-strongest span still coming,
it’s a great time to up your portfolio allocations to
fundamentally-superior
mid-tier and
junior gold miners. They are in the sweet spot for big upside
potential as gold powers higher. These smaller miners offer a
unique mix of sizable diversified production, great output-growth
potential, and smaller market capitalizations ideal for outsized
gains.
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The bottom line is
gold stocks usually experience a strong spring rally seasonally.
This is driven by gold’s own seasonality, where outsized investment
demand arises at certain times during the calendar year. Gold
usually enjoys a solid spring rally likely fueled by the universal
optimism this season brings. And since gold drives gold miners’
profitability, their stock prices naturally follow it higher
amplifying its gains.
That infectious
spring exuberance has proven very potent for gold stocks. Over the
last couple decades of gold-bull years, the miners have outperformed
their metal dramatically from mid-March to early June. No other
seasonal surge rockets so fast! And given this year’s backdrop of
raging inflation festering while the Fed backs off extreme hiking to
stop bludgeoning banks, gold’s and gold stocks’ upside potential is
exceptional. |