The Gold Report:
You have warned that the S&P 500 and NASDAQ are in retreat and that we
are entering a bear market that our grandkids will have to live through. What
are the signs of that?
Steven Hochberg: The
retreat hasn't been very big so far, but we see a couple of signs that its
start is imminent.
First, we look at all markets through our model, which is
called the Wave Principle. It is based on R.N. Elliott's discovery that waves
of social mood, from optimism to pessimism and back to optimism, create
specific patterns. We believe the market is at the end of its long rally
because that wave pattern is coming to its terminal point. That's the main
indicator.
But we also look at other indicators to confirm or refute
what we're seeing. Many indicators are confirming that we're in the end
stages of the rally that started in 2009. Sentiment is one. Sentiment tends
to get very extreme at trend reversal points. It is extremely optimistic at
highs and extremely pessimistic at lows. The bears shrink down to almost
nothing when you're coming into a rally high. A service called Investors
Intelligence tracks the percentage of bulls and bears among advisers.
Recently, the bear contingent shrank down to 13.3%, which was the lowest in
27 years.
Another indicator is the percentage of money and money
market funds relative to assets. That number is at a historic low. That means
managers don't feel that they need to hold anything back in reserve in case
of a market decline. They're fully invested with this market. The exact
opposite happens at lows. At the lows in 2002 and 2009, managers had a huge
percentage of their money in money market funds, the reason being that the
market had been going down and they were scared. Now, we're at the opposite
end.
Internally, the market is starting to thin. The rally is
narrowing. For example, the small-cap sector, as indicated by the Russell
2000 Index, made its closing high in March 2014, and it has not confirmed the
Dow's rally to a new high or to the NASDAQ. This narrowing is typical at the
end of a stock rally, until finally only a couple of sectors are going up.
Then, everything rolls over and goes to the downside. That is where we're
arriving at in this cycle. I think the next major move for stocks will be to
the downside.
TGR: What does this
transition look like? Will small caps and large caps be affected differently
during the transition?
SH: Initially, perhaps,
but eventually they will go down together.
The small-cap sector, which represents the higher-beta,
less-liquid stocks within the overall market, tends to top out a bit sooner.
We look at the ratio of small caps to large caps by
dividing the Russell 2000 by the Russell 1000 Index. It has been nine months
since the Russell 2000 hit its high. Since then, the ratio is down 11%.
During that same time, the blue chips have been making higher highs. That
ratio has a succession of lower lows and lower highs. It's in a downtrend.
That's a key signal that the market is thinning and ready to go down. When
the blue chips roll over, both will be aligned on the downside.
TGR: On Nov. 11, you
issued an interim report that said for the first time in three years your
charts were indicating that a significant countertrend rally was at hand.
What are the Elliott Waves telling you?
SH: That was a
countertrend rally specific to gold—a fascinating market that we have
followed and will continue to follow closely.
Gold topped out in September 2011 at a $1,921/ounce
($1,921/oz) spot price and has declined pretty persistently until now. It
went sideways in late 2013 into early 2014, but the Elliott Wave pattern that
we were following suggested gold would go down again, and it has.
We've been forecasting these waves of optimism and
pessimism as they've been unfolding to the downside in gold. For the first
time in three years, we were able to count a complete declining Elliott Wave
pattern from gold's 2011 high. That's why we issued a combined interim report
from our two main newsletters, The Elliott Wave Theorist, written by
Robert Prechter, and The Elliott Wave Financial Forecast, which I
write with my partner, Peter Kendall. This was only the second combined
interim report that we've put out in our history. We did it because we saw
extremes in sentiment that suggested to us the start of an impending gold
rally. I think that rally is in its very infancy right now. Ultimately, it's
going to carry gold higher. I think gold has upside potential from here.
TGR: You talk about the
importance of sentiment in your analysis, but different parts of the
investing market act differently. What is the role of small traders versus
goldbugs and institutions in both bear and bull rallies? Who turns first?
SH: That's a good
question, and it's interchangeable.
We here at Elliott Wave International are goldbugs
because we believe that gold—as it has been for centuries—is true money.
In the context of our report, which came out two trading
days after gold's recent low, we were referencing goldbugs as investors who
were never going to turn bearish on gold; people who were forecasting
$5,000/oz, $10,000/oz gold. Eventually, we'll probably get there, but nothing
is straight up.
We're trying to take a more pragmatic approach, a
tactical approach based on what the waves tell us. For example, sentiment,
which is a big part of the gold sector, had gotten very extreme. Several days
before gold hit its all-time high in September 2011, the Daily Sentiment
Index, put out by trade-futures.com, moved to a record high of 96% on a
five-day average. That means virtually all the traders thought gold was going
higher. To us, this extreme ebullience was consistent with a high. Fast
forward to today, the Daily Sentiment Index of traders had fallen to a record
low of 5%. That was significant.
For small traders, the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (CFTC) tracks futures and options traders. The weekly Commitment
of Traders Report chops the market into three cohorts: small traders whose
positions are so low they really don't have to report to the CFTC; the large speculators;
and the commercials, or the insiders. Each cohort moves in its own ways.
For example, when gold was at $1,800/oz in October
2012—which was a countertrend rally high, in other words a lower high than it
was in 2011—small traders had moved to the greatest net long in 11 years in
futures and options. Even though gold was not at a new high, the small
traders were more bullish than they were at the high. Now, small traders have
gone from that October 2011 largest net long in 11 years to recently having
their largest net short position in 15 years. Gold is down 37% and the small
traders are betting it's going to continue to the downside. Just as they were
wrong in October 2012, we think they're going to be wrong here at this low.
TGR: Based on that, what
is your target price for gold in 2015?
SH: I think a reasonable
target price is in the $1,440–1,525/oz range. We'll be able to refine that as
we see the wave structure unfold and do our internal calculations. Based on
what the Elliott Waves are showing, I think this is a countertrend rally.
Major declines typically have an ABC pattern. You have
your A wave down, then you have a B-wave rally that retraces a percentage of
the preceding decline and then you go down in a C wave to make what is the
final low in an ABC pullback, or decline.
We think that November's low is the A wave, that initial
leg down, to be followed by a B-wave rally. The A wave lasted from September
2011 to November 2014. The B wave will probably last well into 2015, if not
all year.
TGR: What do the charts
tell you about silver?
SH: Silver will move more
or less with gold. As gold rallies in its B wave, silver will rally in its
equivalent B wave. A reasonable target price would be around $22.50/oz, maybe
up to $26/oz in the countertrend rally. It's going to take a couple of months
to get up there.
TGR: Are you also positive
on the platinum group metals?
SH: Yes, they should go
higher, too. So will oil most likely, although we think oil will decline further
before the rally. Once that rally gets going, it would not be unreasonable to
see oil at $84/barrel, maybe $95. That's probably a reasonable target in a
countertrend rally, but first we have to get a low in place.
TGR: Is oil more difficult
to predict because there are so many political factors at play?
SH: We don't think that
outside factors cause markets to move. We think outside news events are
simply the result of socio-psychological forces that have already occurred
and have already been reflected in the waves.
We think movements are endogenous. They're internal. As
people get more pessimistic or optimistic, their behavior traces out waves.
The news reports that you read are simply after-the-fact accounts of people's
emotions, or waves, of optimism and pessimism that have already been
expressed.
The Elliott Waves look pretty clear in oil, as well as
gold and silver.
TGR: Is the recent
downside in commodities more about the strength of the U.S. dollar than
what's actually happening in the commodities sector?
SH: I would say the trends
in commodities and oil and trends in the dollar are more coincident than
causal.
Since May, the commodity markets have been down and the
dollar has been rallying very strongly, giving the appearance that it's all due
to the dollar going up and the commodities going down relative to dollars.
But all correlations or movements tend to be time dependent.
By that I mean there are times when they move apart as
they are right now, and there are times when they move together.
For example, from January through November 2005, the
dollar was rallying; it was up 15%. Commodities in the CRB Index were
up 17%. Both were moving together. Today, they're moving apart. It appears
that one is causing the other, but I think they're really coincident moves at
this point.
TGR: What do your charts tell you about the prospects for the
dollar versus the yen and the euro in 2015?
SH: In the longer term, we're very bullish on the dollar.
The dollar made its low in 2008 and has quietly been creeping higher.
Longer term, I think the dollar will go higher because we're going into a
deflationary environment. That's significant for the dollar because most of
the debt in the world is denominated in dollars. Debtors will need dollars to
pay their debts, whether that happens through repayment, default,
restructuring or whatever.
Having said that, the dollar has had a major run since May. In terms of
the Elliott Wave structure, it appears that we're in the very latter stages
of a five-wave rally from the May low. Just as gold had a five-wave decline
and came into a low and is now due for a big B-wave rally. Something similar
could be said for the dollar, but in the opposite direction.
The dollar is in the late stages of a five-wave rally and sentiment is
extreme. The Daily Sentiment Index hit 95% on Nov. 6. That means only 5% of
the traders thought the dollar was going to go down; 95% thought it would
continue to rally. The fact that this extreme sentiment is occurring in the
fifth wave of a five-wave move suggests to us that we're in for a correction
in the dollar. So, while we are bullish longer term, it's not going to be a
straight line. We've had a great run-up. We're due for a correction in the
coming months.
TGR: In light of these trends, what is the optimum strategy for
investors going into 2015?
SH: That's a tough question to answer. The value of a lot of assets
goes down in a deflationary environment. The metals are down from 2011, oil
is down from 2008, commodities are down from 2008, the 10-year Treasury note
is down from a high in July 2012. A lot of markets and asset classes are
already deflating. Even though we expect a countertrend rally in some of
these assets, it will be a difficult rally to play. When the U.S. stock
indexes roll over, there will be an across-the-board deflation in which a lot
of assets go down together. Fashioning a strategy is very difficult in this
type of environment.
We are telling our subscribers to be safe in 2015. If that means cutting
back on stocks or increasing short-term Treasury holdings—do what you believe
will keep you safe.
I think safe means probably short-term Treasuries, even though they're not
paying you anything. If you have to be in stocks, be as defensive as
possible. I like gold for money you want to speculate with on a shorter-term
basis. A gold rally is likely to unfold over several months.
TGR: Steven, thank you for your time and your insights.
Readers can get a free copy of "Gold & Silver:
How to Use the Wave Principle to Identify Actionable Opportunities" here.
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