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“Sapiens dominabitur astris.
Introduction
The
present paper is going to concentrate on the precious metals almost
exclusively. We shall also look at interest rates in the bond market, as
we believe there is an important relationship between the precious metal
markets and the bond market.
The
bond market dwarfs all other markets in size except the forex market,
which is the largest market in the world. We are talking about the U.S.
bond market – not the global bond market.
TheU.S.
bond market backs Federal Reserve Notes – our paper fiat currency. The
issuance of U.S. Treasury Bonds/debt is the fodder from which Federal
Reserve Notes rise.
These
are the same Federal Reserve Notes that we exchange with China and Japan
to purchase their exports to us with – which they in turn use to buy
U.S. Treasury debt. It is a most unique and fascinating arrangement to
say the least. It reminds us of the word: symbiotic – as with a
parasite and its host.
Interest
Rates
U.S.
Bonds – or obligations of debt as it were – pay interest rates to
the holders (buyers) of the debt. This is another fascinating
arrangement: the government sells debt that others purchase by lending
Federal Reserve Notes to the government.
These
are the same Federal Reserve Notes backed by the same Treasury Bonds.
They are the same Treasury Bonds the Fed uses to create Federal Reserve
Notes with.
If
you can follow that, you are doing quite well – as it still seems
incredibly unbelievable to me – and God knows I have tried to
understand it. Sometimes I wonder if mere mortals can understand it.
Conundrum
As
we have discussed in Gold
Wars: Gibson's Paradox & The Gold Standard and
other papers – there is a
relationship between interest rates, bonds, and gold. What that
relationship is depends on when you are looking at it.
Before
1995, when interest rates went down and money supply was easy – the
price of gold would rise. Interest rates and gold moved opposite to one
another. Once the economy overheated the Fed would raise interest rates
in response to rising price inflation. Higher interest rates would slow
the economy down, and with it the price of gold.
Suddenly
around 1995 this relationship reversed: as interest rates went down the
price of gold went down with them. This anomalous conundrum had all but
the wisest of monetary wizards wondering what was up. One thing was
certain: it was not the price of gold.
Why
do we mention this arcane topic, arguably best left for the new world
order architects of structured finance? Because suddenly interest rates
are rising and so is the price of gold. It appears that Gibson’s
Paradox still lives on – at least it would seem. However, appearances
can be deceiving.
Before
we show a chart of presently rising interest rates, we want to first
show a longer-term chart of interest rates. It shows the relentless and
prolonged period of falling interest rates the Fed has engineered.
Ten-Year
T-Note Yields

As
the above chart clearly illustrates – the Fed has been on a campaign
to continually lower interest rates in what appears to be a Sisyphean
slope to Hades. Now it appears that the slope is about to be broken. A
change in trend may be about to occur – or is it?
The
next chart shows the recent rise in interest rates associated with the
ten year Treasury note. Ten-year yields have breached the 5% level for
the first time since 2002.
Ten-Year
Treasury Note Yield

The
Jokester
The
Jokester loves to play jokes. He enjoys confusing others by employing
tricks of all persuasions. His favorite is the art of illusion.
How
does one go about catching the jokester? The best way to catch him is by
thinking as he does, and using that to turn the tables.
We
have said and we still say – the Fed does not want the long end of the
bond market to experience rising yields. If the bond market gets into
trouble – the real estate market will not be far behind.
The
real estate market is the crazy glue that is holding the house of cards
together. Even Mr. Magoo does not want to prick the housing bubble,
which is teetering on top of the debt bubble.
Somebody
Is Wrong
Before
1995, if interest rates started to rise – gold would go down.
Conversely, if interest rates went down, gold would go up. Gold and
interest rates had an inverse relationship, they moved in opposite
directions.
This
is fundamentally understandable. Gold is real money. Paper fiat
debt-money is just what the name says: debt. It is not real money. When
interest rates go down – bonds go up in value.
Bonds
are another form of paper debt, so it makes sense that if paper debt
obligations are going up in value, then real money that is not debt,
i.e. gold, would go up in value.
At
least it made sense until 1995. Suddenly the inverse relation turned 180
degrees. As we have seen by the above chart of interest rates – yields
kept going down – relentlessly.
The
price of gold should have been going up; instead, it kept going down –
relentlessly. If ever there was a conundrum, this was it.
Now
that interest rates are going up, according to pre 1995 parameters, gold
should be going down – instead it is going up. According to post 1995
parameters gold should be going up and it is.
One
of the two would appear to be wrong: either gold or bond yields.
However, perhaps there is more to all this than meets the eye at first
blush. Perhaps either the pre or the post parameters of the relationship
between interest rates and gold are wrong.
Intervention
What
happened in 1995 that turned the interest rate/gold ratio upside down?
Intervention 21st century style is what happened. Derivatives
are what happened. Structured finance is what happened. Suddenly black
was white and white was black.
The
Red Queen didn’t know what to do. She said to go ask Alice, when
she’s ten feet tall. And how happy were the people – when they
printed them all: tens, twenties, hundreds, and even thousands of
thousands stacked so tall.
It
was intervention by the Fed and other central bankers that affected the
market to reverse a long-standing inverse ratio between gold and
interest rates. Lending support were the mega international players: the
World Bank, the IMF, and the BIS.
We
offer one of many quotes from Gold
Wars: Intervention and Manipulation
that illustrates the hand at play:
J.
Virgil Mattingly’s 1995 statement to the FOMC:
“It's
pretty clear that these ESF (exchange stabilizing fund) operations are
authorized. I don't think there is a legal problem in terms of the
authority. The statute [31 U.S.C. s. 5302] is very broadly worded in
terms of words like 'credit' -- it has covered things like the gold
swaps -- and it confers broad authority.”
Gold
stands in the way of irresponsible bankers that will inflate and
inflate, continually debasing and devaluing our currency of its
purchasing power. Gold is the ever-watchful sentinel that gives first
warning of the banker’s misdeeds.
The
bankers know this – it is why they fear and shun gold. It keeps them
honest, healthy, and wise. However, their desires seek out other shores
more distant and alluring. The pull of nature is too strong – and they
are too weak.
As
we stated in Gold
Wars: Intervention and Manipulation during
a conference organized by the World Gold Council in Paris on November
19, 1999, Robert Mundell, Professor at Columbia University and 1999
Nobel Prize Laureate in Economics, made the following remarks during the
question and answer session after his speech on “The International
Monetary System at the Turn of the Millennium”:
“Gold
is subject to a lot of elements of instability, not the least of which
is the attempt on the part of several big governments to make it
unstable. [...] If you notice what happened in the past 20 years in
government policy in respect to gold, nobody sold gold when the price
was soaring to $800 an ounce. It would have been a good deal and it
would have been stabilizing if they would have done so. But people sell
it when it hits bottom; the British have been selling gold now that it
seems to have hit the very bottom. That element – governments selling
when the price is low or not selling when the price is high – makes it
destabilizing. Governments should [...] buy low and sell high.”
If
interest rates have been manipulated downward since 1995, and with them
the price of gold, then it would seem to make perverted sense that now
that interest rates are going up – that gold should go up as well.
Therefore,
does it still hold water that either gold or interest rates are wrong?
Maybe – maybe not: maybe both.
Which
relationship is right – should bonds and gold march together or in
opposite directions? In addition, might the present relationship change
again in the future?
I
believe that those capable of such wizardry have persuaded interest
rates to steadily fall as the charts indicate. Consequently, the long
existing inverse ratio between gold and interest rates no longer holds
sway – at least perhaps for a bit longer.
Now
gold is rising with interest rates. I do not believe the Fed and company
want the long end of the yield curve to rise. It will destroy what has
taken them decades to pull off. It might even destroy the real estate
market and with it the economy.
We
have a dilemma: just what is the Fed up to? Do they want an inverted
yield curve as we have repeatedly stated? Has the Fed lost control?
Perhaps they no longer have the power to persuade interest rates to heed
their beck and call.
The
most horrid of possibilities is that rising interest rates are the
desired choice. Perhaps a big hit to the real estate market is in order,
as who forecloses on the property?
Who
gets to keep whatever monies have been paid to date, and now gets to
confiscate the property as well. A piece of property that cost him
nothing to lend the money to, and which he can now lend to another –
ad infinitum.
Reversion
A few
rare individuals study and write daily about the Fed’s intervention. I
believe they are correct in their basic premise. Nevertheless, I offer a
somewhat different take on some of the subtle nuances that may be hiding
in the tall grass.
Presently
I still stand behind the belief that the Fed does not want the long end
of the yield curve to rise. In my opinion, the Fed wants an inverted
yield curve. This will allow for the short end of the market to rise,
providing the smoke and mirrors needed as a diversion to obfuscate their
profligate creation of tons and tons of paper fiat debt-money.
The
most probable way to accomplish this is by persuading energy,
commodities, and the precious metals to go down in price. The BIS has a
1.5 TRILLION dollar derivative interest rate position. That is some
serious money – even for make-believe money, especially when highly
leveraged.
Ask
Long Term Capital Management – they were experts at sophisticated
hedges. I never understood why they chose that name – it just didn’t
seem to go with their modis operandi, which was to lose all the capital
as quickly as possible.
If
the Fed chooses to act as above, this would provide the illusion of the
dreaded d-word: deflation. This would give the Fed their excuse to lower
interest rates and create reams of money to act as the liquidity and a
rising tide that keeps things floating.
In
the aftermath of Katrina, the price of natural gas was supposedly headed
for the moon. Every reason in the world was given why there would be
massive shortages this winter and skyrocketing prices for both natural
gas and oil.
In
January of 2006 we wrote in Black
Gold: U.S. Dollar Hegemony
“Suddenly in
November of 2005, the Federal Reserve gave its Approval
of proposal by JPMorgan Chase & Company (click
link for Fed Document of approval) “for commodity trading
activities, including physical transactions in energy-related ...
JPM Chase also must notify the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York...”
Even
more sudden was the 40% drop in natural gas prices. Do not underestimate
the power of the establishment. They are not the establishment by
accident.
It
looks like they can go one last round, however, they have spent a good
deal of their financial ammunition. They are in retreat to higher ground
to make one last stand.
I am
of the opinion, and it is just an opinion, as there are no facts to
inconvertibly prove the supposition; nevertheless, they will be
successful this time around, and will indeed persuade the markets to
concur one last time.
After
this is anyone’s guess. I believe that due to all the intervention;
all the creation of paper fiat debt-money; all the leveraged loans made
to finance and refinance real estate; and especially because of the
colossal derivative positions now in place – that there is coming a
time when interest rates will go up, yet the dollar will go down.
Bonds
will be going down and the real estate market with it. The stock market
will be quick to join the party – it may even set it off. Hopefully it
does not happen, cause it could get messy.
Below
are several charts of gold and silver, and various indexes of related
stocks. There is also a fascinating chart of the Dow/Gold ratio for the
past 200 years. The basic premise behind these charts is that we are
closer to an intermediate term correction in the gold and silver
markets, as compared to the start of a new intermediate term up leg.
A
short-term spike may still occur. The long and short of it is that we
believe that within the next six months the precious metals and related
stocks will be able to be bought at much lower prices.
All
bets are off, however, if war or other exogenous 10 sigma-like events
occur. A new world order now exists – at least for the short term.
Nevertheless, when the perfect comes – the imperfect shall cease to
be.
Gold
Daily Continuous

The
above chart shows gold to be overbought, however, that is what bull
markets do. They can stay overbought for quite awhile.
We
are still of the opinion that the rally is getting a bit long in the
tooth and frothy.
Next,
we have the five-year chart of gold, which shows that gold has broken
out of its channel of several years in the making.
Gold
Weekly 5-Year Chart

The
PPO at the bottom shows a very high reading. Histograms at the bottom
are just nudging over the zero line. Stochastics are very high as well.
Next
up is silver. Its rise is getting near parabolic now. It still can go
up, however, the risk to reward appears to be favoring the side of risk
being greater at this time.
Silver
Daily Continuous

The
five-year chart of silver shows an even more parabolic rise. All the
indicators on the chart show an overbought or nearly overbought level.
Caveat Emptor is all we can add.
Silver
Weekly - Continuous 5 Year Chart

The
chart of Newmont is one of the most troubling. It is the leader of the
pack as they say. Yet, while gold has been setting 20+ year highs,
Newmont has fallen considerably and has under performed the rest of the
market.
Newmont
Mining Corp.

The
charts of the XAU leave a bit to be desired. Last week the XAU had a
reversal down, which didn’t look too good. It has recovered somewhat,
however, it is still under performing.
XAU
Gold & Silver Index - Weekl

The
XAU daily shows the dominant markers on the chart. Many are flashing
caution.
XAU
Gold & Silver Index - Daily

Lastly,
we have the Dow/Gold ratio going back 200 years. This is a most
interesting chart, as it shows the relation of the Dow to Gold.
We
are presently lowering the ratio, which means the industrials are under
performing compared to gold. Richard Russell believes that before all is
said and done – that the ratio will return to near 1 to 1. We concur
and add – that is a scary thought.
Dow/Gold
Ratio

Conclusion
We
are nearer to an intermediate term correction in the precious metals and
related stocks then to the beginning of a new intermediate term leg up.
Several markets are presently at key pivot points: gold, silver,
precious metal stocks, commodities, energy, interest rates, and the
overall stock market.
That
all these markets are sitting at such crucial junctures is an amazing
coincidence.
Interest
rates APPEAR to be breaking out. The Fed is going to take at least one
last stand to stave off the onslaught of gold and silver. It remains to
be seen if the Fed can pull it off. To do so will delay a further rise
in long term interest rates – for the short term – if they still
have the power.
In
the not too distant future, the precious metal stocks will be much
cheaper than they presently are. A bit further down the road all major
markets: U.S. bond, stock, currency, real estate, and interest rates
will all be aligned and headed down.
Gold
and silver will be the only asset rising. The saber rattling on the news
is meant to be an affect that makes an effect of large proportions. The
Fed is painting itself into a corner but as wild animals behave in such
situations, it seems to be preparing to launch a last offensive.
The
Fed and all may well be trying to lure market players into untenable
positions that cannot remain supported from such pivotal levels. Once
the illusionary support is withdrawn – the markets thus set up –
will fall hard. Natural gas is a perfect example.
As we
quoted the Governor of the Bank of England in Gold
Wars: Gibson's Paradox & The Gold Standard:
“We
looked into the abyss if the gold price rose further. A further rise
would have taken down one or several trading houses, which might have
taken down all the rest in their wake.”
“Therefore,
at any price, at any cost, the central banks had to quell the gold
price, manage it. It
was very difficult to get the gold price under control but we have now
succeeded.”
It
appears da boyz still play with their little toys – not fully cognizant
of the power and responsibility of their actions.
The
gold and silver bull markets are alive and well. They will remain so.
Intermediate term corrections actually make them stronger. Positions
move from weak hands to stronger hands. Higher lows form and build a
stronger base from which the next assault to new highs occurs.
In a
gold bull market, the higher lows are more important than the higher
highs. As long as higher lows remain in place – higher highs will
naturally follow.
Back
in November of 2005, we wrote The
Charts Are Talking. Who's Listening? At
that time, we showed a bevy of cup and handle formations that appeared
to be indicating that a breakout in the gold and silver stocks was most
probable.
The
XAU was at 110 the HUI at 231. On February 2, 2006, we penned another
paper titled: The
Charts Are Talking: Is Anyone Listening? At
that time the HUI was at 340 – today it is at 348.
We
stated that the markets were just beginning to get a bit frothy and
warranted the awareness of such.
“That
is what disciplined traders do during rallies in bull markets: they sell
into strength, and buy during weakness. This is how one prospers in a
gold war. If further upside action occurs, we will continue to do the
same with a minimum of one third, and a maximum of two thirds, of our
trading portfolio.
That
does not mean that a correction is going to start tomorrow, as once
again, no one can predict the future. What it does mean is that to stay
disciplined and focused, by selling into strength, and buying on
weakness - that is what matters: money management and asset
allocation.”
Our
position remains the same. We have repeatedly sold into new highs and
near new highs As of now we are sitting on the sidelines waiting for a
much better entry point that we believe will be coming for the gold and
silver stocks.
Since
we place booked trading profits into accumulating physical gold and
silver we are quite content, especially as we said months ago – it
looked like silver was poised to outperform gold and we favored silver.
Silver cooperated nicely.
Lastly,
we agree with Michael Bolser – this is a Gold War. They have once
confiscated all personal gold holdings, and at another time reneged on
paying their contractual obligations to foreign nations to settle their
account balances with gold bullion as they had pledged. This was
Nixon’s contribution to world betterment.
Gold
is strong and gold will win this war, but remember all great warriors
learn to retreat during certain battles – to regroup and become
stronger to return another day – to win the war. Even Shaka Zulu used
the deadly effectiveness of this ploy. Caveat Emptor. Expect the
unexpected and be prepared.
“The
wise shall exercise dominion over the stars.”
Come
visit our new website: Honest
Money Gold & Silver Report
And read the Open
Letter to Congress


© 2006 Douglas V. Gnazzo
Editorial Archive
All
rights reserved. Any republication without written permission
of author
and Financial Sense prohibited.
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Douglas V. Gnazzo
Honest Money Gold & Silver Report, LLC
Canton Center, CT USA
Email
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About
the author: Douglas V.
Gnazzo is CEO of New England Renovation LLC, a historical restoration contractor
that specializes in restoring older buildings that are vintage historic
landmarks. He writes for numerous websites and his work appears both
here and abroad. Just recently he was honored by being chosen as a Foundation
Scholar for the Foundation for the Advancement of Monetary Education
(FAME).
Disclaimer:
The contents of this article represent the opinions of Douglas V.
Gnazzo. Nothing contained herein is intended as investment advice or
recommendations for specific investment decisions, and you should not
rely on it as such. Douglas V. Gnazzo is not a registered investment
advisor. Information and analysis above are derived from sources and
using methods believed to be reliable, but Douglas. V. Gnazzo cannot
accept responsibility for any trading losses you may incur as a result
of your reliance on this analysis and will not be held liable for the
consequence of reliance upon any opinion or statement contained herein
or any omission. Individuals should consult with their broker and
personal financial advisors before engaging in any trading activities.
Do your own due diligence regarding personal investment decisions. This
article may contain information that is confidential and/or protected by
law. The purpose of this article is intended to be used as an
educational discussion of the issues involved. Douglas V. Gnazzo is not
a lawyer or a legal scholar. Information and analysis derived from the
quoted sources are believed to be reliable and are offered in good
faith. Only a highly trained and certified and registered legal
professional should be regarded as an authority on the issues involved;
and all those seeking such an authoritative opinion should do their own
due diligence and seek out the advice of a legal professional. Lastly
Douglas V. Gnazzo believes that The United States of America is the
greatest country on Earth, but that it can yet become greater. This
article is written to help facilitate that greater becoming. God Bless
America.
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