Showing posts with label Stock market index. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stock market index. Show all posts

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Adam Hamilton: Stock Bear Looms

  

  Adam Hamilton provides another clue for our quest for catalyst for the Gold market. We are not shorting the markets in times of QE up to infinity, but rather looking for the new Bulls propelled by monetary suicides.
  Coupled with multiple occurrences of Hindenburg Omen and recent call from Charles Nenner this bearish call should be treated with outmost respect. 
  We have shared here before the correlations between falling equity markets and Gold price presented by Adam Hamilton.

Adam Hamilton: Gold and GLD Exodus Reversal MUX, TNR.v

"Adam Hamilton provides now a very compelling case for the General Equity Markets and GLD relationships and correlations and if you do not think that trees can grow straight up to the sky we are at the historical point in the markets development in the age of FED central planning now."

Charles Nenner to Moneynews: US Headed for Recession and It's 'Going to Be Bad'


"Charles Nenner talks about the potential of another recession in the U.S. and his Call must be taken seriously. Surging rates these days even before the beginning of the Tapering will put enormous pressure on the consumers and coupled with high gas prices his prediction can become true again."





ZEAL:

Adam Hamilton     August 23, 2013     3001 Words

The US stock markets have enjoyed a dazzling year, levitating to a long series of new record highs.  But this relentless advance has stalled in August, with selling pressure mounting.  Even most of the bulls readily agree that a material selloff is overdue after such a mighty run.  But actually the odds are high this necessary retreat will extend well beyond normal pullbacks or even corrections into a new cyclical bear.

The mere idea of a looming stock bear is certainly heretical these days, but this is not surprising.  By early August, the flagship S&P 500 stock index (SPX) had powered an astounding 152.7% higher since March 2009!  Being so deep into such a spectacular cyclical bull has naturally left speculators and investors very complacent.  Most have forgotten that markets don’t move in one direction forever, they flow and ebb.

Still, late in mature cyclical bulls the ever-rising chances for the birth of a new cyclical bear are the last thing traders want to hear.  So let’s shelve that controversial thesis for now and start at common ground.  Nearly every smart bull either expects a material stock-market selloff or thinks one would be very healthy.  And technical and sentimental indicators are nearly unanimous in declaring the SPX very overbought.

Discussing all of these would require a sizable tome, but here’s an overview.  The SPX is stretched far aboveits trailing 200-day moving average.  Complacency is extremely high and fear non-existent as measured by key sentiment gauges.  2013’s SPX levitation has been on low and dwindling volume and narrowing market breadth, with fewer and fewer individual stocks maintaining the rally’s momentum.

Students of the markets can elaborate on these major topping indicators in depth, and expound on dozens more.  So the bears and smart bulls alike definitely agree that some kind of material selloff in the US stock markets is either already underway or imminent.  The only real questions are about its ultimate magnitude and duration.  The difference between a down day and a bear market is simply one of degree.

This is reflected in how material stock-market selloffs are categorized.  Anything under 4% is merely a series of down days without any formal name.  When selloffs extend from 4% to 10% off their preceding highs, they are called pullbacks.  Once they forge over 10%, they become known as corrections.  And if the selling continues long enough to push them over 20%, these selloffs become cyclical bear markets.

Pullbacks are fairly common in cyclical bull markets, usually on the order of 3 or 4 per year.  Corrections are considerably rarer, only happening about once a year on average.  Both types of selloffs are critical for keeping bull markets healthy.  They act to rebalance sentiment, bleeding off greed before it grows excessive enough to threaten the bull market’s very existence.  Selloffs are an essential safety valve.

One of the primary reasons a material selloff is so overdue today is the remarkable lack of them since mid-November 2012 when this year’s relentless levitation was born.  During the 9 months since, there has only been one pullback and zero corrections.  As this first chart shows, this is very anomalous.  The longer a bull market goes without a material selloff to rebalance sentiment, the more precarious it gets.

Even by the precedent of today’s cyclical bull, the recent lack of material selloffs is striking.  The SPX is rendered in blue below, with every pullback and correction of its entire bull run noted in yellow and red respectively.  Especially the past year or so is really conspicuous for the absence of these healthy and essential events.  The benchmark VIX fear gauge is also shown in red, warning of extreme complacency.


In the 8.5 months between mid-November 2012 and early August 2013 where the SPX soared 26.3% higher, there’s only been one material selloff.  And at 5.8%, it was merely a smallish pullback running between late May and late June.  There were minor series of down days amounting to 3.1% in late December, 2.8% in late February, and 3.2% in mid-April, but they didn’t even approach pullback magnitude.

As of the middle of this week, August’s nascent SPX selloff had grown to 3.9%.  But all these selling events were very minor.  The smaller the selloff, the less greed it bleeds off and thus the more sentiment remains out of balance.  Prior to 2013, the average pullback in the SPX’s entire mighty cyclical bull was over 7.0%.  So the lone 5.8% in the past 9 months’ incredible levitation is far from sufficient to rebalance.

And that explains the rampant euphoria plaguing the stock markets this year.  The financial media has been bursting at the seams with analysts and traders touting stocks as the only place to be.  Many have been arguing a correction-magnitude selloff is all but impossible!  Talk about hubris.  The longer any bull market goes without big-enough selloffs to deflate greed, the more this dangerous emotion flourishes.

Thus long stock-market levitations without material selloffs inevitably lead to full-blown corrections.  The last example occurred back in mid-2011, when the SPX corrected sharply.  Much like today, it had spent 9.9 months levitating with only two mild pullbacks.  So when the selling finally arrived, it was big.  So much complacency and greed had built up that it took a serious 19.4% selloff to fully eradicate that imbalance.

The parallels between that last SPX levitation and today’s are ominous.  Measured by that flagship index, the stock markets had climbed 33.3% in 9.9 months.  Today we are at 26.3% in 8.5 months.  The second pullback of that earlier levitation occurred late in it, and was relatively mild.  A slightly-higher secondary top was seen soon after as the perma-bulls foolishly refused to heed the dangers of overbought markets.

Sound familiar?  The technical pattern we’ve seen in recent months matches the early-2011 topping pattern remarkably well.  A long SPX levitation sans-pullbacks generated extraordinary complacency and greed, and the initial mild pullback was ignored by the bulls.  Their topping-indicators-be-damned buy-the-dips mentality was able to bully the SPX up to a secondary high on low volume, but it soon failed too.

And thus a correction arrived then and is certainly overdue now.  On average a correction-magnitude selloff happens about once a year in a healthy cyclical bull market.  As of early August’s recent high, the SPX had gone a breathtaking 22.0 months without a correction!  That just boggles the mind.  This bull’s previous spans between corrections were merely 13.5m and 9.9m.  Never has one been more overdue.

Corrections are easy to comprehend in the abstract, but are scary events to weather.  They force stock prices down so close to bear-market territory that most of the greedy traders who were hyper-bullish at the preceding top totally capitulate.  Back in both mid-2010 and late 2011 just after this cyclical bull’s previous corrections, I wrote hardcore contrarian essays that were very bullish when everyone else was terrified.

Corrections drag the great sentiment pendulum from extreme greed and complacency at the preceding top to extreme fear and despair at that selloff’s nadir.  A merely average correction is 15%.  Measured off the SPX’s latest early-August peak, that would hammer the SPX back down to 1453.  That’s not only 11.5% lower than this week’s levels, but would erase the SPX’s gains for this entire calendar year!

But it’s been so darned long since this cyclical bull has seen a necessary and healthy correction that I can’t imagine it will be small or average.  Complacency is always high at major toppings, as measured by the low VIX.  Since this implied-volatility index effectively measures prevailing fear, a low reading shows the absence of it which is complacency.  Recent months’ VIX lows have revealed extraordinary complacency.

So even if this cyclical bull is alive and well and has years left to run as Wall Street analysts have boldly asserted all year long, a big correction is overdue and inevitable.  The last correction was 19.4% in mid-2011, which is about as big as they can get.  A similar event today off the recent highs would crush the SPX down to 1378, another 16.1% below this week’s levels.  Just imagine the havoc that would wreak!

Round that big-correction target to 1375.  This mighty cyclical bull first challenged 1375 in April 2011, and first achieved it a year later in March 2012.  So at the nadir of the next correction, somewhere between 1.4 and 2.3 years of this entire 4.4-year-long cyclical bull’s gains will have vanished!  Both investors and speculators alike will have had their wills broken by that point, being extremely pessimistic and bearish.

Remember that the difference between a down day and a cyclical bear market is merely one of degree.  There is simply no arguing that the US stock markets are way overdue for a major correction.  And once that comes to pass, and the SPX is 17%, 18%, 19% off its recent peak, it won’t take much additional selling to push it over that 20% threshold.  One big down day would do it.  That would make a new bear.

Now calling for a new cyclical bear market in stocks is not something that can be done lightly.  Material selloffs that ultimately grow big enough to exceed 20% only happen in very specific conditions.  I didn’t even start thinking about one until a year ago.  Back in mid-2011 halfway through the last major correction, I evenactively argued against a new cyclical bear.  Cyclical bears are only born when cyclical bulls mature.

The really ominous thing today is our current cyclical bull is long past mature.  It has lasted much longer and risen much farther than average, which is the real reason a new stock bear looms.  While Wall Street and the vast majority of investors are loath to admit it, we remain mired deep within a secular bear.  These are simply very long consolidations, where the stock markets grind sideways for a whopping 17 years.

Stock markets move in great third-of-a-century cycles I call Long Valuation Waves.  The first half of each single wave is a secular stock bull, and the second half a secular stock bear.  The entire reason the bear half exists for those 17 long years is to allow stock-market valuations to mean revert from excessive highs at the ends of the preceding bull.  Like all major market reversions, they overshoot before the bear ends.

These secular bears force stock markets to grind sideways on balance, giving underlying corporate earnings time to catch up with high stock prices.  Mechanically this happens through a series of shorter cyclical bears and cyclical bulls within the secular-bear span.  It is nearly impossible to be a successful investor if you don’t understand these secular and cyclical cycles and their impact on stock prices.

This next chart shows our current SPX secular bear superimposed over the last one between 1966 and 1982.  This perspective is invaluable yet hard to find, the financial media almost never talks about it.  Wall Street perpetually tries to convince investors that anytime is a great time to buy stocks.  But the investors who foolishly buy general stocks high near the ends of mid-secular-bear cyclical bulls get slaughtered.


The past 13 years’ secular bear dominates the long-term SPX charts, it is undeniable.  Stocks have simply ground sideways at best since the last secular bull topped in March 2000.  While the financial media has been elatedly celebrating new record highs this year, at best the SPX was only up 11.9% over the 13.4 yearsbetween March 2000 and August 2013.  This compounds to about a 0.85% annual return.

Earning capital gains in the general stock markets of less than 1% per year at best for over 13 years is horrendously bad.  Factor in inflation, and there were actually big real losses.  Dividends helped offset some of these, but overall the long-term investors who stayed invested throughout this secular bear have still suffered substantial losses at best.  Secular bear markets are brutally unforgiving, eviscerating the naive.

Their sideways grinds are a series of cyclical bears and bulls.  The cyclical bears generally cut stock prices in half, and then the subsequent cyclical bulls generally double them again back up to their starting point.  So while secular bears slaughter buy-and-hold investors, they are very profitable to trade.  The key is buying stocks when they near secular support, then selling later when they hit secular resistance.

Secular support and secular resistance on the SPX are around 750 and 1500 respectively.  Support is hit after mid-secular-bear cyclical bears, and resistance is hit after mid-secular-bear cyclical bulls.  Like any technical lines, these are zones and not hard limits.  The SPX can overshoot in both directions, but not for long.  Soon the dominating secular trading range reasserts itself and sucks the SPX back into its maw.

In late January 2013, the SPX broke above this 1500 secular resistance.  In late March, it edged up to new all-time nominal highs (though it had and still remains far from real ones).  The last mighty cyclical bull topping in October 2007 overshot as well, but soon succumbed to the unyielding secular bear.  So not even 1700 on the SPX gets us out of the woods until the bear’s mission has been accomplished.

And that is to force the stock markets to trade sideways for long enough for valuations to plunge from extremely overvalued to extremely undervalued levels.  In P/E-ratio terms, secular bears are born at general-market valuations above 28x earnings (twice the 14x long-term fair value) and end around 7x earnings (half fair value).  Today’s secular bear won’t end until the SPX hits 7x earnings once again.

When it was born way back in early 2000, the SPX traded in a spectacular bubble at 43.8x.  7.6 years later in October 2007 when the last cyclical bull topped, its P/E ratio had fallen to 21.3x.  While the SPX was at the same levels, corporate earnings had grown enough to cut valuations in half.  But stocks were still very expensive.  Even during those epic stock-panic lows in early 2009, the SPX only fell to 11.6x at worst.

That was 9.0 years into this secular bear, and the best chance the stock markets had to hit those 7x secular-bear-ending levels.  They failed, virtually assuring this valuation-driven secular bear would continue for its entire 17-year normal duration.  Today 13.4 years into that span, the SPX is once again at the same hightopping valuation of 21.2x seen in late 2007.  Its work far from done, this secular bear is far from over.

Greatly amplifying the danger today, the SPX is not only far above its secular-bear resistance of 1500 but the current cyclical bull has powered far too high for far too long.  It is up an astounding 152.7% over 4.4 years (or 53 months)!  Meanwhile the average size and duration of modern mid-secular-bear cyclical bulls is only a doubling over 35 months.  The more excessive the extreme, the bigger and faster the mean reversion.

The secular bear that has been plaguing the stock markets since early 2000 hasn’t even come close yet to accomplishing its mission.  Today’s stock-market valuations are three times higher than the 7x target, and even at their lowest point in early 2009 were still 2/3rds higher.  And this secular bear still remains several years away from hitting their tight average duration of 17 years.  It hasn’t had sufficient time to mature yet.

So as you can see, the US stock markets are in an extraordinarily dangerous place today.  They are very overdue for a selloff, and that almost certainly has to grow into a major correction to rebalance sentiment.  And one or two sizable down days late in a major correction when sentiment is dismal is all it takes to push the SPX over that 20% threshold into cyclical-bear territory.  These ultimately cut stock prices in half!

With today’s stock markets euphoric and overbought, with the recent years’ cyclical bull way too old and too high, investors and speculators alike have to be exceedingly careful in the months to come.  Wall Street will deny the coming selloff is meaningful every step of the way down, lulling traders into false security until it is way too late.  You need proven battle-hardened contrarians to help you navigate this transition.

That’s us at Zeal.  We’ve spent decades intensely studying and trading the markets.  We buy low when others are afraid and then later sell high when others are brave.  Fighting the crowd has proven wildly successful.  As of the end of June, we’ve recommended and realized 655 stock trades to our newsletter subscribers since 2001.  They averaged stellar annualized realized gains of +28.6% during a secular bear!

We publish acclaimed weekly and monthly newsletters for speculators and investors.  In them I draw on our decades of hard-won experience, knowledge, wisdom, and ongoing research to explain what is going on in the markets, why, and how to trade them with specific stocks as opportunities arise.  Alternative investmentsincluding gold thrive in cyclical bears.  So if you’ve not been paying attention to the markets, now is the time to get focused again.  Big changes are afoot.  Subscribe today!

The bottom line is the US stock markets are overdue for a material selloff after their massive levitation this year.  And this has to snowball into a full-blown correction since it has been so anomalously long since the last one.  Today’s euphoric sentiment will be so ravaged by the time that correction hits the high teens that it won’t be hard for it to edge over 20% into cyclical-bear territory.  That will push the selloff target to 50%ish!

A new stock bear looming is far from a radical idea, it is merely a high-probability mean reversion.  The ongoing secular bear remains too young to give up its ghost, and far from accomplishing it valuation mission.  Valuations remain very expensive, while the SPX’s cyclical bull is extremely overextended in both magnitude and duration terms.  In light of all this, it’s hard to imagine a new stock bear not being born.

Adam Hamilton, CPA     August 23, 2013 "

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Saturday, July 27, 2013

Adam Hamilton: Gold-Stock Rebirth

  

  Adam Hamilton is one of the best technicians we are following here. Technical analysis is not the precise scenes, but it gives a very good framework for the potential timing of the fundamental catalyses in your investment theme.


We have a very nice multi year potential Buy signal on Gold weekly chart - the move must be confirmed by closing over 1350 and after that 1410 range.


Chinese gold demand could hit 1,000 tonnes this year, World Gold Council says


Rob McEwen: Now's a Good Time to Build Mines – Gold Will Go Higher MUX, TNR.v

"Rob McEwen is pushing forward despite all market hesitation towards his goal - to be included in S&P 500. Now this dream looks to be as far away as his prediction for the Gold to hit 5,000 dollars. But Mr Gold Corp stands by his grounds and says that Gold will go to 5,000 and "even higher".


Kitco:

Friday July 26, 2013 14:24
Gold stocks are actually enjoying a great month, a stark contrast to this year’s brutal death spiral lower.  But after catapulting up by more than a quarter in less than a month, investors are wondering what to do next.  Is it time to cut losses before the catastrophic plunge resumes, or double down on the birth of a major new upleg?  With this sector still wildly oversold and absurdly undervalued, I’m betting on the latter.
Traders viscerally despise precious-metals miners and explorers these days, for good reason.  Year-to-date as of late June, the flagship HUI gold-stock index had plunged an astounding 53.4%!  This was against a backdrop of stellar general-stock performance, where the benchmark S&P 500 surged 12.4%.  Even gold’s rotten year to that point, -26.7%, was great compared to the excruciating gold-stock carnage.
With a horrendous track record like that, many investors wonder why anyone would even risk a penny in this sector.  The answer is simple, past performance.  Over a 10.8-year span ending in September 2011, the HUI skyrocketed an astonishing 1664.4% higher!  Vast fortunes were won in the last decade’sgreatest bull run, during a secular bear in general stocks no less.  Over that span the S&P 500 actually fell 14.2%.
There’s understandably not many gold-stock bulls left after this year’s cataclysmic purge, but a stubborn remnant of battle-hardened contrarians remain.  We are bullish on gold stocks because we are bullish on gold.  Gold stocks were abandoned this year because traders believed gold’s secular bull had died.  But if it hasn’t, and gold resumes powering higher, gold stocks must be bid up radically to reflect this reality.
I’ve studied and written about gold’s wildly unprecedented 2013 selloff a great deal.  It was largely driven by two factors, forced liquidations among highly-leveraged futures traders and a capital rotation out of the huge GLD gold ETF into general stocks.  But these two sources of outsized gold supply flooding the market are inherently unsustainable.  They have burned themselves out and are already starting to reverse.
The dominating gold-futures market is extremely out of balance, with speculators’ long contracts nearing stock-panic lows and their short contracts around wildly-outlying record highs.  This is going to ignite amonster gold short squeeze as traders buy gold futures to unwind these anomalies.  And once gold’s new upleg convinces money managers it is righteous, they will flood back into GLD to ride gold’s recovery.
And if gold is heading higher again, the gold stocks are due for the biggest upleg of their entire secular bull.  Just a month ago, sentiment was so apocalyptic for gold stocks that traders hammered them to HUI levels first seen nearly a decade earlier in September 2003.  But back then gold and silver were merely around $390 and $5.25.  So seeing these same gold-stock levels with gold over 3x higher was absurd!
Traders were betting gold would keep on plunging indefinitely, and gold stocks were priced accordingly.  But as gold recovers from 2013’s unsustainable selling anomaly, this whole sector will have to be dramatically repriced.  That’s why we’re in store for a breathtaking renaissance in gold stocks, a rebirth to a new golden age.  And the 26.9% HUI gains over the past month or so are merely the tip of the iceberg.
Mean reversions are one of the most powerful forces in all the markets, and I’ve never seen a sector more overdue for a bigger one than gold stocks.  When historical relationships that defined an entire secular bull are temporarily knocked seriously out of whack, they inevitably bounce back and overshoot as long as the underlying secular bull remains in force.  So as gold recovers, the gold stocks are going to soar.
There are two powerful mean-reversion dynamics that are going to force gold stocks dramatically higher in the coming years, technical oversoldness and fundamental undervaluation.  The former is detailed in this first chart, which shows the leading gold-stock index over the past decade or so.  It is superimposed on top of a simple yet powerfully-effective technical indicator I created many years ago called Relativity.
Relativity measures oversoldness (the time to buy low) and overboughtness (the time to sell high).  These conditions arise when a price has moved too far too fast to be sustainable based on its own historic precedent.  The indicator simply divides a price by its trailing 200-day moving average, resulting in a multiple that forms a horizontal trading range over time.  The HUI’s oversoldness remains near records.
Blasting up over a quarter in less than a month sounds like a big rally, and it is.  But this nascent bounce has still barely even made a dent in the HUI’s staggering year-to-date losses.  You wouldn’t even notice it on the far right of this chart if I hadn’t pointed it out, it is utterly trivial in context.  So on a pure technical basis, the gold stocks still have vast room to surge higher to mean revert back up to their historical norms.
In late June the HUI was battered to just 0.535x its 200dma.  Normal oversold levels for this index over the past decade are way up at 0.95x its 200dma, so this was a stupendous anomaly.  The only other time such extreme oversoldness was witnessed was during 2008’s once-in-a-century stock panic.  That was the last time traders truly believed gold’s secular bull was ending, so they raced to flee from sinking gold stocks.
With the greatest general fear we’ll see in our lifetimes gripping the stock markets back then, the HUI was hammered to far-more-oversold levels than this past month’s.  At worst in October 2008, this index was crushed to 0.382x its 200dma!  But out of extreme oversoldness, extreme uplegs are born.  When selling waxes that intense, everyone susceptible to being scared into selling is sucked in which leaves only buyers.
Indeed over the subsequent several years, the HUI more than quadrupled to dazzling new all-time record highs.  And the smaller elite gold and silver miners and explorers we trade multiplied the gains in the major gold stocks that dominate the HUI.  The brave contrarians who bought during and shortly after 2008’s crazy stock-panic selling anomaly, including us and our subscribers, subsequently won fortunes.
Even more interesting in light of today’s extreme gold-stock anomaly was the blinding speed of that initial upleg.  Mean reversions out of one extreme nearly always overshoot to the opposite one.  The farther you pull a pendulum to one side before releasing it, the farther it swings to the other side of its arc before stabilizing.  Just 7 months after the HUI’s hyper-oversold October 2008 low, it had rocketed back up to overboughtness.
That metric has been 1.40x the HUI’s 200dma historically, as you can see in this chart.  Any time the HUI exceeded that level, it had advanced too far too fast.  Thus it was due for a healthy correction to rebalance away the excessively-greedy sentiment that always prevails at major toppings.  This precedent suggests the HUI could again rebound to overbought levels around rHUI 1.40x easily within the next year or so.
This is really stunning and highlights the sheer magnitude of gold stocks’ anomalous 2013 selloff.  Today the HUI’s 200dma is near 360, or 44% higher from this week’s levels.  Add 40% on top of that, and we are talking about a 504 HUI in relatively short order.  That is a doubling from here merely from a normal technical mean reversion out of exceedingly-oversold levels.  The gold stocks’ rebirth is going to be big.
Some traders argue that with the HUI down 67.4% since its September 2011 high, the secular gold-stock bull has to be dead.  No bull can weather such a catastrophic loss.  But gold stocks have always been an exceptionally-volatile sector unlike any other.  Back in 2008 thanks to that stock panic, the HUI plummeted a similar 70.6%.  Yet it still more than quadrupled to new bull highs over the subsequent years.
Secular commodities bulls don’t end when technical milestones are breached, they end when global supply-and-demand fundamentals no longer support them.  And gold drives gold-mining profits, and profits ultimately drive stock prices universally in the markets.  So as long as global gold demand growth exceeds supply growth on balance, gold is heading higher and the gold stocks will follow.  It’s that simple.
The second mean-reversion dynamic that is going to catapult gold stocks higher after technical oversoldness is fundamental undervaluation.  This is best expressed through the HUI/Gold Ratio, the daily close of the HUI divided by the daily close of gold.  Charted over time, this shows when the gold stocks are relatively expensive or relatively cheap compared to the dominant driver of their profits and hence stock prices.
In late June when gold stocks hit their nadir, the HGR fell to 0.169x.  The HUI close was just over a sixth of the gold close.  Of course any ratio means nothing without context, and the past decade of gold-stock price action provides plenty of it.  HGR levels have historically been somewhere between much to far higher for gold’s entire secular bull.  So a massive mean reversion is overdue in the HGR as well.
Before 2008’s epic stock panic shattered all kinds of longstanding market relationships, the HGR averaged 0.511x over a 5-year secular span.  I still believe this is this bull’s fundamentally-righteous baseline and the HUI will return to it before this secular gold bull ends.  Silver not only already regained its pre-panic average relative to gold, but greatly exceeded it during early 2011.  There’s no reason gold stocks won’t as well.
And when they do, the potential gains from this mammoth mean reversion are jaw-dropping.  Assuming that gold never rallies again, at this week’s gold levels a 0.511x HGR implies the HUI at 675.  That’s a staggering 170% higher from where the HUI traded mid-week.  And as gold continues rallying, first on futures-speculator short covering and later on general investment demand flooding back, this target rises accordingly.
But you sure don’t have to agree with me on pre-panic HGR levels returning.  The HUI plummeted far faster than gold during the stock panic, and the resulting psychological shock broke countless pre-panic gold-stock investors.  They gave up and will never return, too scarred from that once-in-a-century event.  Incidentally it crushed the HGR to 0.207x at worst, a 7.5-year low.  June 2013’s extreme was far worse.
After the stock panic’s higher extreme-low HGR, this ratio rebounded dramatically and overshot as the HUI recovered far faster than gold.  This is how mean reversions usually work, which is why they are so darned fun and profitable to trade.  In less than 11 months after the stock-panic lows, the HGR soared to 0.437x as the HUI leveraged gold’s gains.  Assuming flat gold, a similar run today would mean a 131% rally.
But again keying off a mean-reversion overshoot may seem too aggressive.  So let’s consider a far-more conservative one, the entire post-panic average HGR before 2013’s radically unprecedented gold-selling anomaly.  Between 2009 and 2012, the HGR averaged 0.346x.  There is absolutely no doubt in my mind that the HUI will return to this modest level, it is one of the surest bets I’ve ever seen in my entire life.
Just hitting 0.346x at current gold levels, with no overshoot, would put the HUI at 457.  That’s still 83% higher than today!  And lest you worry 450 is unattainably high, which it sure feels like, that was actually where the HUI began 2013 before this year’s extreme selling anomaly.  Traders have come to accept June’s gold-stock levels as normal and righteous, but they are anything but.  They were an unsustainable extreme.
But these assumptions are way too conservative for a mean reversion, which will definitely overshoot to the upside after the HGR just plummeted to 12.5-year lows.  The HUI has never been lower relative to the metal that drives gold-stock profits in this entire secular gold bull!  And the idea that gold will remain flat is silly given futures speculators’ record short positions that helped drag it down.  These have to be covered.
The only way to do that is by buying back the vast quantities of gold effectively borrowed and sold in the futures market.  This buying will drive a monster gold rally.  The unwinding of these shorts will certainly at least push gold back up to the levels it entered 2013 at, near $1675.  Plug in the 0.346x post-panic-average HGR to that gold price, and you get a 580 HUI target.  That’s 132% higher than current levels!
Add in the inevitable mean-reversion overshoots in both gold and the HUI, and pick smaller high-potential fundamentally-awesome gold and silver stocks that amplify the HUI’s gains, and you can see why this battered sector looks so exceedingly bullish today.  The unwinding of price extremes, especially when they are downside ones driven by unsustainable fear and despair, is truly a wonder to behold.
That’s why gold stocks are about to be reborn, arising like phoenixes out of the ashes.  Both technically and fundamentally, gold stocks were hammered down to levels far too extreme to be sustained.  Investors and speculators were selling them on the premise that gold’s secular bull had given up its ghost so the metal was doomed to spiral far lower still.  But as July is already proving, that thesis simply wasn’t correct.
Hyper-oversold sectors subsequently rally dramatically as prices mean revert.  The same is true with wildly undervalued sectors fundamentally.  And with both mean-reversion dynamics converging in the hated gold stocks, their price-appreciation potential in the coming months and years is epic.  As long as gold’s secular bull is alive and well, gold stocks are just beginning their biggest upleg of this entire bull.
Six months from now, you won’t have to be a contrarian to ride it.  Traders will have finally seen with their own eyes how far and fast gold stocks climbed, how thoroughly their renaissance obliterated late June’s despairing psychology.  But the price of waiting will be forgoing huge gains, probably on the order of a double from here.  Real contrarians are far better off buying now, before the rest of the traders figure this out.
The bottom line is gold stocks are being reborn out of the ashes of this year’s wildly anomalous selloff.  With gold itself recovering and due to head much higher in its own mean reversion, it is literally impossible for gold stocks to remain excessively low.  They are overdue for a massive mean reversion higher of their own out of hyper-oversold and radically-undervalued extremes.  It’s going to be huge.
In late June gold stocks traded at levels first seen a decade ago when gold was only a third as high.  They hadn’t been that oversold since 2008’s once-in-a-century stock panic, after which they more than quadrupled.  And relative to gold, they’d never been lower and more undervalued.  These extreme anomalies couldn’t last and are already unwinding.  The mean reversion out should be this bull’s biggest gold-stock upleg.
By Adam Hamilton, CPA
www.ZealLLC.com

zelotes@zealllc.com"

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