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Gold - The next leg upDavid Chapman The past few months must be frustrating for gold bugs. After a good year in 2003 that saw the Gold rise 19.5%, the TSX Gold Index up 13.6%, the Philadelphia Gold & Silver Exchange (XAU) jump 41.8% and the Amex Gold Bugs Index (HUI) leap 67.4%, the first few months of 2004 have been disappointing with the all of the exchanges down on the year. Since the topping in November 2003 the gold indices and the stocks have been generally in a gentle down trend of roughly 10%. When one compares this to the sharp drops seen in the first few months of 2003 this has, in some respects, been barely discernible. Gold's fortunes of course are tied to the US Dollar and for the past couple of months the US Dollar has been trying to bounce after a sharp drop through 2003. Indeed gold stopped rising before the US$ bottomed and therefore it should be no surprise that gold once again has started to rise even as the US$ tries to maintain a firmer stance. Indeed gold made its most recent bottom in early March 2004 and since then is up about $20 and is not far off the highs seen in early January. Gold prices could be leading the market. In the latter part of 2003 as the US$ continued to fall and gold stocks started their period of softness, physical gold prices continued to rise into early 2004. This divergence was eventually realized when gold prices fell bottoming just below $400 in early March. At the same time the gold stocks failed to put in new bottoms a potential positive divergence. But since then gold has broken out of a triangle pattern while the stocks are still struggling to catch up. The breakout has targets of up to $450. Further gold has, as our chart shows below, broken out against other currencies including the Euro and the Canadian Dollar. Gold in Yen is in a steady uptrend. This is a very positive sign as while Gold in US$ has been rising since the lows in 2001 the gains in other major currencies had been muted. We have long suspected that in a world of ongoing currency devaluation that gold would eventually begin to rise against all currencies and not just the US$. That process may be getting under way. There are numerous reasons that gold's fortune is going to continue to rise. Many of them are found in a recent article in Financial Sense by Jim Puplava entitled "Super Bull." The reasons are well worth repeating.
As Puplava points out the current global situation is very reminiscent of the 1930's where dangerous conflicts and trade wars were a norm. Only this time the stakes are larger because the amount of outstanding debt is considerably higher. Many believe that if there is a market meltdown that the gold stocks could fall with them. While initially there might be some sell-off history suggests otherwise. In the 1930's the few gold companies around did fall with the market in the Crash of '29. By the time the bottom came around in 1932 and the Dow Jones Industrials fell 89% with the revaluation of gold upward from $20.67 to $35 companies such as Homestake Mining surged 10 fold. Dr. Richard Appel presented
this argument in a recent
article entitled "Will gold shares follow common stocks
lower? An historical perspective." Historically the best
argument against this happening is the bear market of 1973/1974
whose chart is presented below. While the Dow Jones Industrials
was losing some 46% in 1973/1974, Gold soared from the $60 area
to over $200. Homestake Mining rose from about $2 to almost $10. We leave you with a small group of gold mining producers, which are forming interesting bullish technical patterns for the next leg up in the gold bull market of the first decade of the new century. Company...Symbol/Exchange...Internet/Phone March 26, 2004 The opinions,
estimates and projections stated are those of David Chapman as
of the date hereof and are subject to change without notice.
David Chapman, as a registered representative of Union Securities
Ltd. makes every effort to ensure that the contents have been
compiled or derived from sources believed reliable and contain
information and opinions, which are accurate and complete. Neither
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