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UPDATE
ON THE AMEX GOLD BUGS INDEX (HUI)
by David Petch
www.treasurechests.info
February 12,
2007
According
to deflationists, we are at
the cusp of a collapse in the money supply. There are two articles I
previously published titled "Diatribes of a Deflationist" and
"Diatribes of a Deflationist II". I do not like to spew
information contained in prior research articles because unless I see
any change to an argument it is pointless to regurgitate the same
information. As such refer to the archives section of this site under my
name to review these and other prior material mentioned below.
Deflation
implies a sharp decline in ALL broad stock market indices but is likely
not going to be the case over the coming years. There is likely going to
be a reversal in the broad markets in mid March as mentioned in my most
recent article posted on the net titled "Hang on, the S&P is
Going Higher"; published in mid-November 2006, which will be met
with people touting that deflation has started. This will be a
much-required correction in the market; nothing has changed, except the
development of the pattern and the accompanying labeling scheme and
updated time frames for when the market will top out. If one checks out
the Elliott Wave pattern of the S&P 500 Index, it is in a corrective
pattern, which is due for a correction. I see the S&P still hitting
1500-1550, with an accompanying correction to 1150-1200 at worst. This
is going to be touted as "the next leg down", "the end of
the stock markets" etc. etc. but this will be an interim correction
in an upleg of the S&P that will last until 2010/2011. A piece I
wrote some time ago titled "S&P to 3000……….Here’s How
discussed how it can continue to advance: When the S&P has a
weighting of 25% oil stocks and 17-20% gold stocks a top is near and
currently 5% oils and 2% precious metals, we are no where near that
point yet. The S&P 500 Index is fluid, so stocks that do poorly will
be replaced by others that have a rise in earnings. The coming
correction in the S&P 500 Index will be a sharp correction, but it
does not mean the run-up in the S&P is over.
I
have seen many different articles posting different economic indicators,
what works etc. but the best I have seen is Elliott Wave, particularly
the version developed by Glenn Neely titled "NEOWave";. I
suggest anyone who is serious about learning Elliott Wave to purchase
his book titled "Mastering Elliott Wave". Glenn’s site is www.neowave.com
and has a wealth of post-Mastering Elliott Wave material referenced in
"Questions of the Week". There are numerous new developments,
many of which are directly applicable to today’s market and will help
to prevent errors in counting. There is not a better Elliottician on the
planet and if one wishes to accurately determine future market direction
and positions in a bull market I suggest at least viewing Glenn’s
book.
There
is an article I published some time ago titled "The Technical
Palette" describing the methods of technical analysis I use. For
those not familiar, I suggest a quick scan of this article in the
archives section of this web page under "David Petch" to
follow any analysis presented in the articles previously published on
the net.
If
deflation were to be upon us, then the price of gold should decline
also, but to a lesser extent thereby retaining its purchasing power.
Gold and oil stocks should also decline in price, but there is a problem
with this thesis………the commodity indices are in bull markets and
are poised to head higher (as per Elliott Wave Analysis). The supply of
commodities is extremely tight and by definition, higher demand with
diminishing supply creates a bull market. This bull market is different
however because we are nearing or past the point of Peak Oil as I
described in an article "Peak Oil and What it Means to You".
Peak oil translates into resource wars and wars are inflationary,
period. Coupled with government deficits and numerous other reasons
previously cited for inflation, that is the course of the next 4-6 years
at a minimum. Remember that rising prices are a symptom of monetary
expansion, it works no other way.
As
the analysis of the HUI presented nearly one month ago, there is no
indication of any bear market lying ahead for the HUI. In fact it is
about as bullish as one can get (Side note: I changed my longer-term
preferred count to reflect the alternate count, given extremely bullish
news for three companies we follow, but saw no follow through in share
price). Extreme bearishness of this Degree should not be seen at wave
[2].III, but rather the termination of wave II, prior to the start of
wave III. The wave structure supported my initial preferred count, but
switching to the alternate count (which had some labeling changes after
I actually had to sit down and do ratio analysis on wave structures to
confirm the count) removes any confounding issues I initially had.
With
the above being just one example of how we go about identifying value
for investors, if this is the kind of analysis you are looking for we
invite you to visit our site and discover more about how our service can
further aid in achieving your financial goals. Whether it’s top down
macro-analysis designed to assist in opinion shaping and investment
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again, pay us a visit and discover why a small investment on your part
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And
of course if you have any questions, comments, or criticisms regarding
the above, please feel free to drop
us a line. We very much enjoy hearing from you on these matters.
I
hope everyone has a great day and good luck with the gold bull
market.
David
Petch

© 2007 David Petch
Editorial Archive
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