Casey
Files:
The Battle for $900 Gold
David Galland
Casey Research International
Speculator
written May 2, 2008
posted May 6, 2008
The current "battle"
in the gold market is around the $900 level, a fairly steep retrenchment
from the recent highs of $1,011.
Some investors, their hopes dashed that $1,000 would be quickly
and decisively overrun, are seeing disaster in this correction
and dropping their gold as they run for cover.
So... do we at Casey Research
think we're now seeing a reversal in gold's fortunes?
In a word, no.
I'm not going to go into meticulous
detail here, because that sort of coverage is found in our Casey
Research paid publications. But I do want to share some thoughts
with you that may be of some use... if for nothing more than
playing them back to me in sarcastic emails several months down
the road if we're proven wrong.
A few key things to ponder
as the battle for $900 gold rages...
1. The current correction is not yet exceptional: Since
the current bull market began in earnest in 2001, there have
been 9 corrections in excess of 8%.
During the three worst pullbacks, gold fell 15.98%, 18.27%, and
27.7%, respectively. And the average of those corrections is
13.6%, so the latest, which touched 18% at its worst, is only
marginally worse than average.
Put another way, for the current
pullback to match the sharpest correction to date, a drop of
27.7%, gold would have to fall to about $730. Could it happen,
again? Sure, why not?
And if it does, rest assured
that, just as they did when gold moved down by that percentage
in May of 2006 - falling from $725 to $567 - analysts will line
up to say that the back of the gold bull has been broken. But
if you had listened to the naysayers back then and bailed out
at the bottom of that correction, you would have missed a rebound
of close to 100%.
I mention this to stress that
the fits and starts we are currently experiencing are nothing
unusual. Quite the opposite, they're the norm for any sustained
bull market. In the 1970s' sustained gold bull market, a similar
pattern occurred.
The bottom line is that
if you are going to invest in the resource sector, you need to
take a long view. And,
I would stress once again, you have to be invested with money
that you can afford to lose a substantial portion of and not
be overly concerned. Otherwise you'll invariably become shell
shocked during periods of volatility and be prone to breaking
ranks and selling at the worst possible time.
2. The big gold companies are delivering: One of the largest
mining companies in the world, Newmont Mining, just released
its first-quarter 2008 financials, the first of the big gold
producers to do so.
As we have been forecasting, they had record sales of $1.94 billion,
realized a record price of $933 per ounce sold, and saw their
cash operating margin soar by 119% from the same period last
year. Further, net income was up 444% from Q1 last year. And
the company's cash operating margin rose to a record $537 million
in Q108 over the prior record $419 million earned in the previous
quarter.
Over the next couple of weeks,
we'll see a string of similar results from the other major producers,
offering a stark contrast to the billions upon billions in losses
being suffered by the banks, investment houses, housing industry,
airlines, etc.
So, what happened to Newmont's
shares on releasing its financials? They fell, albeit modestly,
victim to this week's softening gold price and a dumb remark
by the minister of mines of Ghana - where Newmont has significant
projects - about the need for mining reform in that country.
More on that latter topic momentarily.
The key point is that the increase
in the profitability of the gold miners, a prerequisite for the
entire gold share complex to get moving, is now materializing.
3. Oil is stubbornly holding on over $100 and food prices
are on the rise everywhere. This is simply the most visible
evidence of the inflation now gripping the world.
We've said for years that there is a very tight correlation between
rising oil prices and rising gold prices. While oil prices may
moderate at some point Ð because, again, no market goes straight
up or down Ð the trend is clearly for sustained high prices.
This is additional support for gold in our view.
So... given gold's correction,
you might go right ahead and sell your gold. I'm hanging on to
mine. And if I'm hanging on to my gold, I'm hanging on to my
gold stocks, because that's where the real juice will be.
When I look at the alternatives
and the amount of risk I have to take to get even a 10% return
right now, I am comfortable biding my time, continuing to buy
gold and gold share bargains with the expectation that the 100%,
200%, 500% gains down the road will catch me up in a hurry.
David Galland
Managing Director
Casey
Research, LLC.
###
Doug Casey
David Galland is the Managing Director
of Casey Research, publishers of the Daily Resource PLUS,
a free e-letter offering a concise recap of the 24 hour action
in gold, silver, energy, base metals, currencies and more...
as well as Doug Casey's monthly International Speculator
advisory, presenting comprehensive, unbiased research on undervalued
gold and other resource stocks.
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