“Am
concerned there is a real crisis brewing.
Oil at $95; gold at $800 (and keep in mind that’s a suppressed
price!) And Sec Lend [Fed
securities lending] 4 days -- is it in the last 10 days – we’re OVER
TEN BILLION DOLLARS?! Is that a weekly all time all time
record??!
“WHY???
Most peaks in gold are covered by a war or capped by a crash,
eh?!”
Let’s
examine the recent spike in the gold price before we attempt to find the
answer to this question.
Gold
closed at a 27-year high on Friday at $806/oz.
That’s one of the highest levels seen since the all-time high
was made in 1980. What on
earth is the runaway gold price rise telling us?

As
far as stock market crash, the odds are extremely low against this
happening. With the IBES
Valuation Model showing a 36% undervaluation of the stock market and
with insider buying and securities lending volumes this high, a stock
market crash would be unprecedented at this point.
There is simply too much in the way of support for this to occur.
Now
what about the second alternative, namely, war?
This is a more likely scenario.
It could be that gold “smells” war in the very near future
and is doing what gold normally does when war is in the future.
The same thing happened heading in the second war with Iraq in
2003.
This
time it seems Iran has come into the crosshairs of the Bush
Administration as being the next target of Mid East occupation.
In June, the U.S. government issued an official warning to all
Americans not to travel to Iran, according to an A.P. report.
A more recent headline from the Financial Times reports, “US
hits Iran with financial sanctions (Rest of world urged to follow
lead).” It seems there
are many in Washington who desperately want war with Iran and are going
out of their way to get it!
Could
the gold and oil price action be foretelling us of military action soon
to come?
As
an aside, if war is waged in Iran in the upcoming months, this will
provide the pretext for the next increase in monetary liquidity.
Remember what happened in 2003 when the war in Iraq began?
The U.S. was absolutely flooded with money and a series of bull
markets all across the stock and commodity arenas provided distractions
to keep Americans from being overly concerned with the war.
Any
war that is declared in the current economic milieu is sure to be
greeted with less than an enthused response.
Ergo, “a priming we shall go” will be the tune the Fed sings
as the next phase of Middle East war gets underway.
The
headlines of the financial newspapers have also given us reason to
remain bullish on stocks from an intermediate-term standpoint.
Now, after all those weeks of hand-wringing over the “credit
crisis,” the press has given investors yet another reason to “be
afraid…be very afraid.
The
new crisis of the hour? More
inflation!
Tuesday
Financial Times contained an article by Michael Mackenzie, “Dollar and
oil swings prompt fears of inflation.”
We’ve seen this recurrent inflation theme several times in the
past few days in the press and it seems to be a widespread fear.
This fear is just what the market needs to keep the “Wall of
Worry” intact and the bull market going forward.
Mark
Dodson has an interesting take on inflation from the standpoint of the
global economy. He writes,
“For all the talk of so many economists who now recognize and talk
about the twin forces of globalization and the technology revolution and
the increase in competition that results, they continue to rely on
Phillips curve style models that look at things like unemployment and capacity
utilization in the US to determine if inflation is coming on the scene.
They are using 20th
century economic models in the 21st
century.
“Even
if you believe in a Phillips curve model, global capacity and
global unemployment should be what you are looking for, and no one has
the slightest clue what those numbers are.”
Indeed,
it seems everyone is afraid of a resurgence of inflation
following the Fed’s interest rate cut and they’ll be even more
afraid if the Fed cuts the rate again.
But
inflation (properly speaking) is the last thing the stock market and
economy have to worry about. The
true inflation story is contained in this long-term chart showing the
continuous yield on the 10-Year Treasury.
The recent spike in bond prices and corresponding drop in yields
has the all the marks of money going into the proverbial “bomb
shelter” seeking protection from the latest crisis of the hour.
It is most certainly not a sign the market is worried about
inflation.

Dodson
adds, “Commodities (input prices) might be through the roof, but the
final goods prices that are included in popular inflation measures show
inflation that is well under control. Same old story. We like the way
that ISI puts it: what emerging economies (Think China) buy, they
inflate; what they sell, they deflate.”
Now
what about gold stocks? Here
we are in the month of November, a time known for showing seasonal
improvement of the mining stock sector.
December-January are normally the best months of this seasonal
time frame but sometimes November can be positive as well.
The
XAU’s track record in the month of November going back the past 15
years is a mixed one. There
have been six negative Novembers, seven positive ones and two neutral
ones. The past 15-year
record shows no strong seasonal tendency one way or another.
When
we look at the past four Novembers, however, we see that every November
since 2003 has been a winning one for the XAU as measured from the start
of the month until the finish. Here’s
hoping that November 2007 will make it five in a row.
Among
the other major mining companies reporting quarterly earnings, Silver
Wheaton (SLW, $17.11) announced Wednesday lower net earnings of $19.2
million ($0.09 per share) from the sale of 3.1 million ounces of silver,
compared with $22.5 million ($0.10 per share) from the sale of 3.5
million ounces of silver in 2006. Operating
cash flows for the latest reporting period were also lower at $27.1
million versus $28.3 million a year ago. SLW’s revenues fell short of
consensus. However, Silver
Wheaton’s earnings-per-share (EPS) beat analysts’ consensus.
The
remaining companies due to release third quarter earnings in upcoming
days are as follows:
Goldcorp
(GG): Nov. 9
Hecla
(HL): Nov. 8
Iamgold
(IAG): Nov. 8
Pan
American (PAAS): Nov. 9
Silver
Standard (SSRI): Nov. 5
I’ll
leave you with this. The
following headline article was discovered on the CNNMoney.com newswire
yesterday. The article’s
headline says:
“Gold
stocks: Few gems left to unearth (The price of gold may continue heading
skyward but analysts say investors need to tread cautiously if thinking
of adding mining stocks to their portfolio)”
This
headline holds forth bullish implications from a contrarian standpoint
and is yet another anecdotal piece of evidence that the uptrend for gold
and silver stocks should continue, notwithstanding a few potholes along
the way.

© 2007 Clif Droke
Editorial Archive
Clif
Droke
P.O. Box 3401
Topsail Beach, N.C. 28445-9831 USA
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