Posted by AGORACOM
at 11:37 AM on Tuesday, January 21st, 2020
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Gold is a hedge against inflation that is being used more and more
Goldex CEO pointed to a recent Goldman Sachs report that pointed to gold as being a better hedge than oil.
This view is the new consensus that will increase demand for gold.
(Kitco News) What can take the
gold market from $1,550 to $1,600 and higher? Goldex CEO and founder
Sylvia Carrasco told Kitco News that she is not ruling out the $1,900 an
ounce level this year if geopolitical and trade tensions escalate in
the current economic climate.
There are a number of strong drivers supporting gold prices this
year, including geopolitical and trade tensions, global debt, dovish
central banks, weakening U.S. dollar as well as the political situation
in the U.S., Carrasco said on Thursday.
“Last year, I said that the perfect storm was forming and I think I
would use this phrase again. The perfect storm is now happening,”
Carrasco noted. “Gold should be around $1,600 if nothing else crazy
happens. At this moment in time, I can see gold between the $1,500 and
the $2,000 mark during 2020.”
If the market sees a further increase in geopolitical tensions or
additional trade concerns this year, gold will surge towards $1,900,
Goldex CEO pointed out. And if things do calm down, Carrasco does not
see gold falling much below $1,500 an ounce.
“It is going to be another record year,” she said, referring to gold
hitting record-highs in many currencies last year. “And it will be
mainly due to geopolitical tensions raising prices higher.”
“With the current economic climate, gold should be between $1,500 and
$1,600. If on top of that bare minimum, you add very strong
geopolitical tensions or commercial trade issues, then you take it from
$1,600 up to $1,900,” she added.
At the time of writing, the spot gold price was trading at $1,560.40,
up 0.24% on the day and up 2.8% since the start of the year.
Gold is a hedge against inflation that is being used more and more by
investors who are realizing the benefits of the yellow metal, Carrasco
said.
“Gold is the hedge that people should be using. I wouldn’t build my
personal wealth portfolio just on gold. But gold is more and more
clearly overtaking oil and any other hedging mechanisms … Gold will be a
good trade whether for speculative reasons or for trading,” she noted.
Goldex CEO pointed to a recent Goldman Sachs report
that pointed to gold as being a better hedge than oil. Carrasco added
that this view is the new consensus that will increase demand for gold.
Gold began the year with a bang as U.S.-Iran tensions flared up and surprised the markets in the first two weeks of January.
“The rally we’ve seen is based on geopolitical tensions between the
U.S. and Iran. We need to see also the reasons behind Trump’s approach
when it comes to Iran … In September, the U.S. ended up a positive net
exporter of oil for the first time in history. That gives you a reason
why Trump thinks he is not affected by the tensions even though the rest
of the world is affected,” Carrasco described.
Also, U.S. President Donald Trump was driven by the goal to distract
the market from the impeachment proceedings against him, she added.
Going forward, gold prices are likely to rise further, especially
considering that most of the major central banks around the world are
not planning to start raising rates any time soon.
“Central banks using unconventional ways … Is there going to be an
increase in interest rates in Europe or in the U.S.? The answer is no.
And if interest rates are not going to increase, gold is the first one
that is affected,” Carrasco said.
On top of that, the central banks will remain significant gold buyers
in 2020. “That’s another reason why gold prices will increase this
year,” she said.
Growing debt also supports higher gold prices this year, the CEO
added. “We’ve been talking about debt for years — how corporate debt and
government debt continues to increase. More debt effectively means a
potentially weaker U.S. dollar. The moment the U.S. dollar is weak,
where do you go? The only safe place is gold. And I think we are going
to be seeing a weakening dollar as the year continues,” Carrasco
described.
Posted by AGORACOM
at 10:43 AM on Tuesday, January 21st, 2020
SPONSOR: Applied BioSciences is a vertically integrated company focused on the development and commercialization of novel, science-driven, synthetic cannabinoid therapeutics / biopharmaceuticals; targeting the endocannabinoid system to treat a wide-range of diseases across multiple therapeutic areas. Click Here for More Info
Before we can take a look at how CBD and the Endocannabinoid System (ECS) work together, we must first understand the ECS.
The human body has an endocannabinoid system, just like it has an
endocrine system and a number of other systems that work together to
function. The ECS is what makes it possible for CBD, THC, and other
cannabinoids in the marijuana and hemp plants – there are hundreds – to
work on the body.
In 1988, researchers found the first cannabinoid receptor
in the brain of a rat. They found that the receptors interacted
exclusively with receptors found in the cannabis compound, THC. That’s
the cannabinoid everyone’s most familiar with because it is the compound
responsible for the stoned feeling associated with marijuana
consumption.
The researchers discovered that the receptors were concentrated in
areas of the brain that plays a role in a number of physiological and
mental processes, including emotion, motor coordination, high cognition,
and memory.
In 1993, another cannabinoid receptor was discovered. It was found
distributed throughout the immune system and peripheral body tissues. It
displayed the same reaction to THC as the first receptor.
In 1995, the two receptors, that had been named CB1 and CB2, were
found not only in rats, but in humans, and thousands of other species.
As technology advanced, researchers further explored the relationship
between cannabinoid receptors in the body, known as endocannabinoids,
and the cannabinoid receptors in cannabis compounds such as CBD oil and THC – known as phytocannabinoids.
What is the Purpose of Endocannabinoids?
The endocannabinoid system was discovered in the late 1990s, and
since then, researchers have learned a great deal about the relationship
between phytocannabinoids and endocannabinoids.
Because we know endocannabinoids are present throughout the body in
numerous functions, researchers believe they may help maintain these
functions.
Imagine for a moment the body is a machine, where each system works
together to keep the machine moving and working. The immune system, for
instance, would be the filtration system. The brain would be the
motherboard, and the endocannabinoids help to maintain the systems.
CB1 receptors are concentrated in the brain and central nervous
system. Your central nervous system is responsible for maintaining all
the core functions such as pain perception, stress response, motor
activity, and memory.
CB receptors are located in many of the peripheral organs in the
body, suggesting they are core components of the cardiovascular system,
the immune system, and the muscular system.
Why Phytocannabinoids Matter
Machines, whether due to natural aging, poor maintenance, or damage,
may malfunction. And like those machines, our body’s systems and parts
can break down and malfunction, causing issues within the entire body
and any number of health conditions.
Endocannabinoids help maintains your body’s health, but if the level
of endocannabinoids in the body declines, in theory, they’d only be able
to maintain the body’s current state of health. As such, there likely
wouldn’t be enough to stop it from declining any further. Over time, the
health level decreases gradually, and in the process, creates bigger
health problems.
That’s where phytocannabinoids, such as CBD come into play.
How CBD Works in the Body
Research
has taught us that when CBD bonds with either the CB1 or CB2 receptors
in the body, it either alters or improves that receptor’s capabilities,
which improves that receptor’s functionality.
If the body is suffering a cannabinoid deficiency, adding them to your body, for example, by using CBD gummies for stress,
helps to equalize the deficiency. Right now, studies point to the
theory that cannabinoids are a finite resource. The deficiency of
cannabinoids may cause a number of health issues, including irritability
and headaches.
Essentially, using CBD enables us to boost our ECS. Because it bonds
with our CB1 and CBD2 receptors, CBD helps the body maintain vital
health functions and helps restore balance, also known as homeostasis,
within the body. This is the reason it has so many health benefits.
CBD Benefits
When you really think about it, the majority of health problems can be traced back to an imbalance somewhere in the body.
In a healthy body, all is as it should be, and the body is balanced.
In an unhealthy body, however, there is either too much or too little of
something (or multiple somethings). This creates a disruption in
homeostasis and presents a variety of symptoms, which vary depending on
the nature of the imbalance.
Think about the various health conditions that are a result of
imbalance, and how CBD can help improve these conditions by restoring
balance:
Inflammation: This is often characterized by a part of
your body swelling, and sometimes becoming hot. It can be incredibly
painful, and range from mild, to severe enough to incapacitate someone.
Inflammation in the body is linked to autoimmune disorders, arthritis,
and bacterial infections. CBD can be helpful
to treat inflammation because it suppresses the inflammatory pathways
and responses, stimulates regulatory cell production, and manages our
pain perception.
Seizures: Seizures are the result of erratic electrical
impulses in the brain, which causes violent shaking in the body. In
patients suffering from two severe forms of epilepsy known as Lennox
Gaustat Syndrome and Dravet Syndrome, CBD reduces the number of seizures
because it slows down the excitatory nerve activity and subdues the
brain’s reaction to the intense signals that cause the overload.
Anxiety and stress: Most people experience stress and
anxiety as a response to situations that are perceived as unwanted,
dangerous, or risky. Hormonal imbalance or excessive messages in the
brain boosts cortisol levels and causes you to feel stress. CBD combats
this by regulating how your brain responds to stress signals and
maintaining normal cortisol levels.
These, of course, are only a few examples of the studies supporting CBD as an effective treatment.
There are hundreds of other studies supporting its use to treat a
wide number of other conditions, such as addiction, acne, depression,
schizophrenia and more. It’s all because of our ECS, and the fact that
our bodies contain parts linked directly to the cannabis plant is pretty
amazing.
Posted by AGORACOM
at 8:23 AM on Monday, January 20th, 2020
Cardston, Alberta–(Newsfile Corp. – January 20, 2020) – American Creek Resources Ltd.
(TSXV: AMK) (the “Company” or “American Creek”) is pleased to announce
that it has entered into a property purchase agreement pursuant to which
it will acquire the precious and base mineral undersurface rights
relating to 45 Crown Grant claims commonly referred to as the “Glacier
Creek Claims” located in the Stewart area, British Columbia, from a
subsidiary of Strikepoint Gold Inc. (TSXV:SKP)(“Strikepoint“). In
consideration for the Glacier Creek Claims, the Company will pay
Strikepoint $50,000, issue 3,000,000 common shares to Strikepoint, and
grant Strikepoint a 0.5% NSR royalty over the Glacier Creek Claims which
NSR royalty may be purchased by the Company at any time for $500,000
cash.
The Glacier Creek Crown Grant claim package consists of claims that overlap a portion of the Company’s
present Dunwell property as well as extending beyond the current
Dunwell property boundaries. The net effect being a significant
expansion of the Dunwell project and associated mineral rights.
Darren
Blaney, President & CEO of the Company stated: “We are very pleased
to be able to acquire this package of Crown Grants as it makes sense to
amalgamate the claims into one property. This acquisition expands our
Dunwell property considerably and provides for increased exploration
potential as work is done in the immediate area hosting the historic
Dunwell Mine as well as in the surrounding region. We believe that the
Dunwell Mine and the multiple bonanza grade gold and silver showings
within several kilometers of the mine are all related geologically and
are part of a large underlying system”.
Completion of this
acquisition is conditional upon, among other things, receipt of all
necessary regulatory approvals, including approval of the TSX Venture
Exchange.
Any shares issued pursuant to this transaction will be subject to a 4 month hold period pursuant to applicable securities laws.
About American Creek
American
Creek is a Canadian junior mineral exploration company with a strong
portfolio of gold and silver properties in British Columbia.
Three
of those properties are located in the prolific “Golden Triangle”; the
Treaty Creek and Electrum joint venture projects with Tudor Gold/Walter
Storm as well as the 100% owned past producing Dunwell Mine.
A
major drill program was conducted in 2019 at Treaty Creek by JV partner
and operator Tudor Gold. The focus of the program was on the Goldstorm
zone where drilling has produced very wide intercepts of gold including a
780 meter intercept of 0.683 g/t gold including a higher grade upper portion of 1.095 g/t over 370.5 meters.
The
Treaty Creek Project is a Joint Venture with Tudor Gold owning 60% and
acting as operator. American Creek and Teuton Resources each have 20%
interests in the project. American Creek and Teuton are both fully
carried until such time as a Production Notice is issued, at which time
they are required to contribute their respective 20% share of
development costs. Until such time, Tudor is required to fund all
exploration and development costs while both American Creek and Teuton
have “free rides”.
A drill program was also recently concluded on
the 100% owned Dunwell Mine property located near Stewart. Assay
results are pending.
The Corporation also holds the Gold Hill,
Austruck-Bonanza, Ample Goldmax, Silver Side, and Glitter King
properties located in other prospective areas of the province.
For further information please contact Kelvin Burton at: Phone: 403 752-4040 or Email: [email protected]. Information relating to the Company is available on its website at www.americancreek.com
Posted by AGORACOM
at 12:49 PM on Sunday, January 19th, 2020
Sponsor: Affinity Metals (TSX-V: AFF) a Canadian mineral exploration
company building a strong portfolio of mineral projects in North
America. The Corporation’s flagship property is the Drill ready Regal
Property near Revelstoke, BC. Recent sampling encountered bonanza grade
silver, zinc, and lead with many samples reaching assay over-limits.
Further assaying of over-limits has been initiated, results will be
reported once received. Click Here for More Info
From the HRA Journal: Issue 314
The fun doesn’t stop. Waves of liquidity continue to wash traders
cares away. Even assassinations and war mongering generate little more
than half day dips on Wall St. It seems nothing can get in the way of
the bull rally that’s carrying all risk assets higher.
It feels like it could go on for a while, though I think the
liquidity will have to keep coming to sustain it. By most readings,
bullishness on Wall St is at levels that are rarely sustained for more
than a few weeks. Some sort of correction on Wall St seems highly
likely, and soon. Whether its substantial or just another blip on the
way higher remains to be seen.
The resource sector, especially gold and silver stocks, have had
their own rally. Our Santa Claus market was as good or better than Wall
St’s for a change. And I don’t think its over yet. I think we’re in for
the best Q1 we’ve seen for a few years. And we could be in for something
better than that even. I increasingly see signs of a major rally
developing in the gold space. It’s already been pretty good but I think a
multi-quarter, or longer, move may be starting to take shape.
I usually spend time on all the metals in the first issue of the
year. But, because the makings of this gold rally are complex and long
in coming I decided to detail my reasoning. That ended up taking several
pages so I’ll save talk on base metals and other markets for the next
issue.
No, I’m not writing about Louis IV, though there might be some
appropriateness to the analogy, now that I think about it. The quote is
famous, even though there’s no agreement on what it was supposed to
mean. Most figure Louis was referring to the biblical flood, that all
would be chaos once his reign ended.
The deluge I’m referring to isn’t water. It’s the flood of money the
US Fed, and other central banks, continue to unleash to keep markets
stable. Markets, especially stock markets, love liquidity. You can see
the impact of the latest deluge, particularly the US Fed’s in the chart
below that traces both the SPX index value and the level of a “Global
Liquidity Proxy†(“GLPâ€) measuring fiscal/monetary tightness and
weakness.
You can see the GLP moved lower in late 2018 as the Fed tightened and
the impact that had on Wall St. Conversely, you can see the SPX running
higher in the past couple of months as the US backed off rate
increases, increased fiscal deficit expansion, and grew the Fed balance
sheet through, mainly, repo market operations.
Wall St, and most other bourses, are loving these money flows. The
Santa Claus rally discussed in the last issue continued to strengthen
all the way to and through year end. As it turned out, the Fed either
provided enough backstop in advance or the yearend repo issues were
overstated. The repo market itself was calm going through year end and a
lot of the short-term money offered by the Fed during that week wasn’t
taken down.
Everything may have changed in the past couple of days with the
dramatic increase in US-Iran tensions. I don’t know how big an issue
that will be, since no one knows what form Iran’s retaliation will be or
how much things will escalate. I DO think it’s potentially a big deal
with very negative connotations, but it may take time to unfold. Someone
at the Fed thought so too, as the past couple of days saw a return to
large scale Fed lending in the repo market.
I’ve no doubt Iran will try and take revenge for the assassination of
its most famous military commander by the US. But I don’t know what
form it will take and if this means the US has drawn itself into the
Mideast quagmire even more. I fear it has though. The US is already
talking about adding 3,000 troops to its Mideast presence and they’re
just warming up. Even larger scale attacks, if they happen, may not
derail Wall St, but they’re certainly not a positive development at any
level.
We know how stretched both market valuations and sentiment were
before the Suleimani drone strike. The chart below shows a three-year
trace of the “fear/greed indexâ€. You can see that its hardly a stable
reading. It flip flops often and extreme readings rarely hold for long.
At last check, the reading was 94% bullish.
Sentiment almost never gets that bullish and, when it does, nothing
good comes of it for bulls. A reading that close to 100% tells you we’re
just about out of buyers. Whatever happens in and around Iran, I think a
near term correction is inevitable. The only question is whether it’s a
large one or not.
A rapid escalation in US-Iran tensions could certainly make a near
term correction larger. If the flood of liquidity continues though, a
correction could just be another waystation on the road to higher highs.
There are a couple of other dangers Wall St still faces that I’ll touch
on briefly at the end of this article. First however, lets move on to
the main event for us-the gold market.
It wasn’t just the SPX enjoying a Santa rally this year. Gold
experienced the rally we were hoping for that gold miner stocks seemed
to be foretelling early last month. Gold’s been doing well since it
bottomed at $1275 in June, but it didn’t feel that way during the long
hiatus between the early September high and the current move. The gold
price currently sits above September’s multi-year high, after breaching
that high in the wake of the Baghdad drone strike. And the first
retaliatory strike by Iran. Volatility will be very high for a while
going forward.
I think we’ll see more multi-year highs going forward. I hate that
the latest move higher is driven by geopolitics. Scary geopolitics and
military confrontations mean people are dying. We don’t want to profit
from misery. And we won’t anyway, if things get ugly enough in the
Mideast to scare traders out of the market.
Geopolitical price moves almost always unwind quickly. I’d much
prefer to see gold moving higher for macro reasons, not as a political
safety trade. I expect more political/military inspired moves. As the
Iran conflict unfolds. Make no mistake, Iran is NOT Iraq. Its army is
far larger, better trained and better equipped than Iraq. This could get
ugly.
The balance of this piece will deal with my macro argument for higher
gold prices over an extended period. The geopolitical stuff will be
layered on top of that for the next while and could strengthen both gold
prices and the $US in risk-off trading. It should be viewed as a
separate event from the argument laid out below.
What else is driving gold higher? In part, it was gold’s inverse
relationship with the US Dollar. As you already know, I’m not a believer
that “its all about the USD, all the time†when it comes to the gold
market. That’s an over-simplification of a more complex relationship. It
also discounts the idea of gold as its own asset class that trades for
its own reasons.
If you look at the gold chart above, and the USD chart below it, its
immediately apparent that there isn’t a constant negative correlation at
play. Gold rallied during the summer at the same time the USD did and
for the same reason; the world-wide explosion of negative real yields.
Gold weakened a bit when yields reversed to the upside and the USD got a
bit of traction, but things changed again at the start of December.
The USD turned lower and lost two percent during December. US bond
yields were generally rising during the month and the market (right or
wrong) was assuming economic growth was accelerating. So, neither of
those items explains the USD weakness.
If gold was a “risk off†trade, you sure couldn’t see it in the way
any other market was trading. So, is there another explanation for
recent strength in the gold price, and what does it tell us about 2020
and, perhaps, beyond?
Well, I’ve got a theory. If I’m right, it could mean a bull run for gold has a long way to go.
Some of this theory will be no surprise to you because it does
partially hinge on further USD weakness. There are long term structural
reasons why the US currency should weaken. But there are also
fluctuating sources of demand for USDs, particularly from offshore
buyers and borrowers that transact in US currency. That can create
enough demand to strengthen the US over long periods. We just went
though one such period, but it looks like that may have come to an end,
with more bearish forces to the USD reasserting themselves.
How did we get here? Let’s start with the big picture, displayed on
the top chart on the next page. It gives a long-term view of US Federal
deficits and the unemployment rate. Normally, these travel in tandem.
Higher unemployment means more social spending and higher deficits.
Government spending expands during recessions and contracts-or should-
(as a percentage of GDP) during expansions. Classic Keynesian stuff.
You rarely see these two measures diverge. The two times they did
significantly before, on the left side of the chart, was due to “wartime
deficits†which acted (along with conscription) to stimulate the
economy and drive down unemployment.
You can see the Korean and Vietnam war periods pointed out on the chart.
The current period stands out for the extreme size of the divergence.
US unemployment rates are at multi decade lows and yet the fiscal
deficit as a percentage of GDP keeps rising. There has never been a
divergence this large and its due to get larger.
We know why this is. Big tax cuts combined with a budget that is
mostly non-discretionary. And the US is 10 years into an economic
expansion, however weak. Just think what this graph will look like the
next time the US goes into recession.
We can assume US government deficits aren’t going to shrink any time
soon (and I think we can, pun intended, take that to the bank). That
leaves trade in goods to act as a counterbalance to the funding demand
created by fiscal deficits.
The chart above makes it clear the US won’t get much help from
international trade. The US trade balance has been getting increasingly
negative for decades. It’s better recently, but unlikely to turn
positive soon, and maybe not ever.
To be clear, this is not a bad thing in itself, notwithstanding the
view from the White House. The relative strength of the US economy and
the US Dollar and cheaper offshore production costs have driven the
trade balance. It’s grown because Americans found they got more value
buying abroad and the world was happy to help finance it. It’s not a bad
thing, but not a US Dollar support either.
The more complete picture of currency/investment flows is given by
changes in the Current Account. In simplified terms, the Current Account
measures the difference between what a country produces and what it
consumes. For example, if a country’s trade deficit increases, so does
its current account deficit. If there are funds flowing in from overseas
investments on the other hand, this decrease the Current Account
deficit or increase the surplus.
The graph below summarizes quarterly changes in the US current
account. You can see how the balance got increasingly negative in the
mid 2000’s as both imports and foreign investment by US companies
increased.
Not coincidentally, this same period leading up to the Financial
Crisis included a sustained downtrend in the US Dollar Index. The USD
index chart on the bottom of the next page shows the scale of that
decline, from an index value of 120 at the start of 2002 all the way
down to 73 in early 2008.
The current account deficit (and value of the USD) improved markedly
up to the end of the Financial Crisis as money poured into the US as a
safe haven and consumers cut back on imports. The current account
deficit bas been relatively stable since then, running at about
$100bn/quarter until it dipped a bit again last year.
Trade, funds flows and changes in money supply have the largest
long-term impacts on currency values. When the US Fed ended QE and
started tightening monetary conditions in 2014, the USD enjoyed a strong
rally. The USD Index was back to 100 by early 2015 and stayed there
until loosening monetary conditions-and lots of jawboning from
Washington-led to pullback. Things reversed again and the USD maintained
a mild uptrend from early 2018 until now.
There are still plenty of US Dollar bulls around, and their arguments
have short-term merit. Yes, the US has higher real interest rates and
somewhat higher growth. Both are important to relative currency
valuations as I’ve said in the past. Longer term however, the “twin
deficits†-fiscal and current account-should underpin the fundamental
value of the currency.
Movements don’t happen overnight, especially when you’re talking
about the worlds reserve currency that has the deepest and largest
market supporting it. Changing the overall trend for the USD is like
turning a supertanker. I think it’s happening though, and it has big
potential implications for commodities, especially gold.
Dollar bulls will tell you the USD is the “cleanest shirt in the
laundry hamperâ€, referring to the relative strength of the growth rate
and interest rates compared to other major currencies. That’s true if we
just look at those measures but definitely not true when we look at the
longer term-fiscal and current account deficits.
In fact, the US has about the worst combined fiscal/current account deficit in the G7. The chart at the bottom of this page, from lynalden.com
shows the 2018 values for Current Account and Trade balances for a
number of major economies, as a percentage of their GDP. It’s not a
handsome group.
Both the trade and current account deficits are negative for most of
them. In terms of G7 economies, the US has the worst combined
Current/Trade deficit at 6% of GDP annually. You may be surprised to
note that the Current/Trade balance for the Euro zone is much better
than the US, thanks to a large Trade surplus. Much of that is generated
by Germany. Indeed, this chart explains Germanys defense of the Euro.
It’s combined Trade/Current Account surplus is so large it’s currency
would be skyrocketing if it still used the Deutschmark.
Because the current account deficit is cumulative, the overall
international investment position of the US has continued to worsen. The
US has gone from being an international creditor to an international
debtor, and the scale if its debt keeps increasing. That means it’s
getting harder every year to reverse the current account position as the
US borrows ever more abroad to cover its trade and fiscal deficits.
Interest outflows keep growing and investment inflows shrinking.
Something has to give.
The US has to borrow overseas, as private domestic demand for
Treasury bonds isn’t high enough to fund the twin deficits. In the past,
whenever the US Dollar got too high, offshore demand for US government
debt diminished. It’s not clear why. Maybe the higher dollar made
raising enough foreign funds difficult, or perhaps buyers started
worrying about the USD dropping after they bought when it got too
expensive. Whatever the reason, foreign holdings of US Treasuries have
been declining, forcing the US to find new, domestic, buyers.
Last year, the US Fed stopped its quantitative tightening program,
due to concerns about Dollar liquidity. Then came the repo market. Since
September, the Fed’s balance sheet has expanded by over $400 billion,
mainly due to repo market transactions.
The Fed maintains this “isn’t QE†because these are very short duration transactions but, cumulatively, the total Fed balance sheet keeps expanding. The “QE/no QE†debate is just semantics.
What do these transactions look like? Mostly, its Primary Dealers,
banks that also take part in Treasury auctions, in the repo market. The
Fed buys bonds, usually Treasuries, from these banks and pays for them
in newly printed Dollars. That injects money into the system, helps hold
down interest rates in the repo market and, not coincidentally,
effectively helps fund the US fiscal deficit. To put the series of
transactions in their simplest form, the US is effectively monetizing its deficit with a lot of these transactions.
The chart below illustrates the problem for the Primary Dealer US
banks. They’ve got to buy Treasuries when they’re auctioned-that is
their commitment as Primary Dealers. They also need to hold minimum cash
balances as a percentage of assets under Basel II bank regulations.
Cash balances fell to the minimum mandated level by late 2019- the
horizontal black line on the chart. That’s when the trouble started.
These banks are so stuffed with Treasuries that they didn’t have
excess cash reserves to lend into the repo market. Hence the blow up
back in September and the need for the Fed to inject cash by buying
Treasuries. The point, however, is that this isn’t really a “repo market
issueâ€, that’s just where it reared its head. It’s a “too many
Treasuries and not enough buyers†problem.
It will be tough for the Treasury to attract more offshore buyers
unless the USD weakens, or interest rates rise enough to make them
irresistible. Or a big drop in the federal deficit reduces the supply of
Treasuries itself.
I doubt we’ll see interest rates move up significantly. I don’t think
the economy could handle it and it would be self-defeating anyway, as
the government deficit would explode because of interest expenses. And
that’s not even taking into account the fact that President Trump would
be freaking out daily.
Based on recent history and political expediency, I’d say the odds of
significant budget deficit reductions are slim and none. That’s
especially true going into an election year. There’s just no way we’re
going to see spending restraint or tax increases in the next couple of
years. Indeed, the supply of Treasuries will keep growing even if the US
economy grows too. If there is any sort of significant slowdown or
recession the Federal deficit will explode and so will the new supply of
Treasures. Not an easy fix.
Barring new haven demand for US Treasuries, odds are the Fed will
have to keep sopping up excess supply. That means expanding its balance
sheet and, in so doing, effectively increasing the US money supply.
That brings us (finally!) to the “money shot†chart that appears
above. It compares changes in the size of the Fed balance sheet and the
US Dollar Index. To make it readable and allow me to match the scales, I
generated a chart that tracks annual percentage changes.
The chart shows a strong inverse correlation between changes in the
size of the Fed balance sheet and the value of the USD. This is
unsurprising as most transactions that expand the Fed balance sheet also
expand the money supply.
It’s impossible to tell how long the repo market transactions will
continue but, after three months, they aren’t feeling very “temporaryâ€.
To me, it increasingly looks like these market operations are “debt
monetization in dragâ€.
I don’t know if that’s the Fed’s real intent or just a side effect.
It doesn’t really matter if the funding and money printing continues at
scale. Even if the repo market calms completely, the odds are good we
see some sort of “new QE†start up. Whatever official reason is given
for it; I think it will happen mainly to soak up the excess supply of
Treasuries fiscal deficits are creating.
I don’t blame the FOMC if they’re being disingenuous about it. That’s
their job after all. If you’re a central banker, the LAST thing you’re
going to say is “our government is having trouble finding buyers for its
debtâ€, especially if its true.
With no prospect of lower deficits and apparent continued reduction
in offshore Treasury holdings, this could develop into long-term
sustained trend. I don’t expect it to move in a straight line, markets
never do. A severe escalation in Mideast tensions or the start of a
serious recession could both generate safe-haven Treasury buying. Money
flows from that would take the pressure off the Fed and would be US
Dollar supportive too.
That said, it seems the US has reached the point where a substantial
increase in its central bank’s balance sheet is inevitable. Both Japan
and the Eurozone have gotten there before the Fed, but it looks like it
won’t be immune.
The Eurozone at least has a “Twin surplus†to help cushion things.
And Japan, considered a basket case economically, had an extremely deep
pool of domestic savings (far deeper than the US) to draw on. Until very
recently, Japan also ran massive Current Account surpluses thanks to
decades of heavy investments overseas by Japanese entities. Those
advantages allowed the ECB and especially the BoJ to massively expand
their balance sheets without generating a huge run up in interest rates
or currency collapse.
I don’t know how far the US Fed can expand its balance sheet before
bond yields start getting away from it. I think pretty far though.
Having the world’s reserve currency is a massive advantage. There is
huge built in demand for US Dollars and US denominated debt. That gives
the Fed some runway if it must keep buying US Treasuries.
Assuming a run on yields doesn’t spoil the party, continued balance
sheet and money supply expansion should put increasing downward pressure
on the US Dollar. I don’t know if we’ll see a move as large as the
mid-2000s but a move down to the low 80s for the USD Index over the
course of two or three years wouldn’t be surprising.
It won’t be a straight-line move. A recession could derail things,
though the bear market on Wall St that would generate would support
bullion. Currency markets tend to be self-correcting over extended
periods. If the USD Index falls enough and there is a bump in US real
interest rates offshore demand for Treasuries should increase again.
The bottom line is that this is, and will continue to be, a very
dynamic system. Even so, I think we’ve reached a major inflection point
for the US currency. The 2000s were pretty good for the gold market and
gold stocks. We started from a much lower base of $300/oz on the gold
price. Starting at a $1200-1300 base this time, I think a price above
$2000/oz is a real possibility over the next year or two.
It’s not hard to extrapolate prices higher than that, but I’m not
looking or hoping for those. I prefer to see a longer, steadier move
that brings traders along rather than freaking them out.
This prediction isn’t a sure thing. Predictions never are. But I
think the probabilities now favor an extended bull run in the gold
price. Assuming stock markets don’t blow up (though I still expect that
correction), gold stocks should put in a leveraged performance much more
impressive than the bullion price itself.
There will be consolidations and corrections along the way, but I
think there will be many gold explorers and developers that rack up
share price gains in the hundreds of percent. That doesn’t mean buying
blindly and never trading. We still need to adjust when a stock gets
overweight and manage risk around major exploration campaigns. The last
few weeks has been a lot more fun in the resource space. I don’t think
the fun’s over yet. Enjoy the ride.
Like any good contrarian, a 10-year bull market makes me alert of
signs of potential trouble. As noted at the start of this editorial, I’m
expecting continues floods of liquidity. That may simply overwhelm
everything else for a while and allow Wall St to keep rallying, come
what may.
That said, a couple of data points recently got my attention. One is
more of a sentiment indicator, seen in the chart below. More than one
wag has joked that the Fed need only worry about Wall St, since the
stock market is the economy now. Turns out there is more than a bit of
truth to that.
The chart shows the US Leading Indicator reading with the level of
the stock market (which is a component of the official Leading
Indicator) removed. As you can see, without Wall St, the indicator
implies zero growth going forward. I’m mainly showing it as evidence of
just how surreal things have become.
The chart above is something to keep an eye on going forward. It
shows weekly State unemployment claims for several major sectors of the
economy. What’s interesting about this chart is that claims have been
climbing rapidly over the past few weeks. Doubly interesting is that the
increase in claims is broad, both within and across several sectors of
the economy.
I take the monthly Non-Farm Payroll number less seriously than most,
because it’s a backward-looking indicator. This move in unemployment
claims looks increasingly like a trend though. It’s now at its highest
level since the Financial Crisis.
It’s not in the danger zone-yet. But its climbing fast. We may need
to start paying more attention to those payroll numbers. If the chart
below isn’t a statistical fluke, we may start seeing negative surprises
in the NFP soon. That won’t hurt the gold price either.
Source and Thanks: https://www.hraadvisory.com/golds-big-picture
Tags: #VRIC Posted in Affinity Metals, All Recent Posts | Comments Off on Gold’s Big Picture SPONSOR: Affinity Metals $AAF.ca $SII.ca $TUD.ca $GTT.ca $AMK.ca $OSK.ca $RKR.ca
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at 2:44 PM on Saturday, January 18th, 2020
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From the HRA Journal: Issue 314
The fun doesn’t stop. Waves of liquidity continue to wash traders
cares away. Even assassinations and war mongering generate little more
than half day dips on Wall St. It seems nothing can get in the way of
the bull rally that’s carrying all risk assets higher.
It feels like it could go on for a while, though I think the
liquidity will have to keep coming to sustain it. By most readings,
bullishness on Wall St is at levels that are rarely sustained for more
than a few weeks. Some sort of correction on Wall St seems highly
likely, and soon. Whether its substantial or just another blip on the
way higher remains to be seen.
The resource sector, especially gold and silver stocks, have had
their own rally. Our Santa Claus market was as good or better than Wall
St’s for a change. And I don’t think its over yet. I think we’re in for
the best Q1 we’ve seen for a few years. And we could be in for something
better than that even. I increasingly see signs of a major rally
developing in the gold space. It’s already been pretty good but I think a
multi-quarter, or longer, move may be starting to take shape.
I usually spend time on all the metals in the first issue of the
year. But, because the makings of this gold rally are complex and long
in coming I decided to detail my reasoning. That ended up taking several
pages so I’ll save talk on base metals and other markets for the next
issue.
No, I’m not writing about Louis IV, though there might be some
appropriateness to the analogy, now that I think about it. The quote is
famous, even though there’s no agreement on what it was supposed to
mean. Most figure Louis was referring to the biblical flood, that all
would be chaos once his reign ended.
The deluge I’m referring to isn’t water. It’s the flood of money the
US Fed, and other central banks, continue to unleash to keep markets
stable. Markets, especially stock markets, love liquidity. You can see
the impact of the latest deluge, particularly the US Fed’s in the chart
below that traces both the SPX index value and the level of a “Global
Liquidity Proxy†(“GLPâ€) measuring fiscal/monetary tightness and
weakness.
You can see the GLP moved lower in late 2018 as the Fed tightened and
the impact that had on Wall St. Conversely, you can see the SPX running
higher in the past couple of months as the US backed off rate
increases, increased fiscal deficit expansion, and grew the Fed balance
sheet through, mainly, repo market operations.
Wall St, and most other bourses, are loving these money flows. The
Santa Claus rally discussed in the last issue continued to strengthen
all the way to and through year end. As it turned out, the Fed either
provided enough backstop in advance or the yearend repo issues were
overstated. The repo market itself was calm going through year end and a
lot of the short-term money offered by the Fed during that week wasn’t
taken down.
Everything may have changed in the past couple of days with the
dramatic increase in US-Iran tensions. I don’t know how big an issue
that will be, since no one knows what form Iran’s retaliation will be or
how much things will escalate. I DO think it’s potentially a big deal
with very negative connotations, but it may take time to unfold. Someone
at the Fed thought so too, as the past couple of days saw a return to
large scale Fed lending in the repo market.
I’ve no doubt Iran will try and take revenge for the assassination of
its most famous military commander by the US. But I don’t know what
form it will take and if this means the US has drawn itself into the
Mideast quagmire even more. I fear it has though. The US is already
talking about adding 3,000 troops to its Mideast presence and they’re
just warming up. Even larger scale attacks, if they happen, may not
derail Wall St, but they’re certainly not a positive development at any
level.
We know how stretched both market valuations and sentiment were
before the Suleimani drone strike. The chart below shows a three-year
trace of the “fear/greed indexâ€. You can see that its hardly a stable
reading. It flip flops often and extreme readings rarely hold for long.
At last check, the reading was 94% bullish.
Sentiment almost never gets that bullish and, when it does, nothing
good comes of it for bulls. A reading that close to 100% tells you we’re
just about out of buyers. Whatever happens in and around Iran, I think a
near term correction is inevitable. The only question is whether it’s a
large one or not.
A rapid escalation in US-Iran tensions could certainly make a near
term correction larger. If the flood of liquidity continues though, a
correction could just be another waystation on the road to higher highs.
There are a couple of other dangers Wall St still faces that I’ll touch
on briefly at the end of this article. First however, lets move on to
the main event for us-the gold market.
It wasn’t just the SPX enjoying a Santa rally this year. Gold
experienced the rally we were hoping for that gold miner stocks seemed
to be foretelling early last month. Gold’s been doing well since it
bottomed at $1275 in June, but it didn’t feel that way during the long
hiatus between the early September high and the current move. The gold
price currently sits above September’s multi-year high, after breaching
that high in the wake of the Baghdad drone strike. And the first
retaliatory strike by Iran. Volatility will be very high for a while
going forward.
I think we’ll see more multi-year highs going forward. I hate that
the latest move higher is driven by geopolitics. Scary geopolitics and
military confrontations mean people are dying. We don’t want to profit
from misery. And we won’t anyway, if things get ugly enough in the
Mideast to scare traders out of the market.
Geopolitical price moves almost always unwind quickly. I’d much
prefer to see gold moving higher for macro reasons, not as a political
safety trade. I expect more political/military inspired moves. As the
Iran conflict unfolds. Make no mistake, Iran is NOT Iraq. Its army is
far larger, better trained and better equipped than Iraq. This could get
ugly.
The balance of this piece will deal with my macro argument for higher
gold prices over an extended period. The geopolitical stuff will be
layered on top of that for the next while and could strengthen both gold
prices and the $US in risk-off trading. It should be viewed as a
separate event from the argument laid out below.
What else is driving gold higher? In part, it was gold’s inverse
relationship with the US Dollar. As you already know, I’m not a believer
that “its all about the USD, all the time†when it comes to the gold
market. That’s an over-simplification of a more complex relationship. It
also discounts the idea of gold as its own asset class that trades for
its own reasons.
If you look at the gold chart above, and the USD chart below it, its
immediately apparent that there isn’t a constant negative correlation at
play. Gold rallied during the summer at the same time the USD did and
for the same reason; the world-wide explosion of negative real yields.
Gold weakened a bit when yields reversed to the upside and the USD got a
bit of traction, but things changed again at the start of December.
The USD turned lower and lost two percent during December. US bond
yields were generally rising during the month and the market (right or
wrong) was assuming economic growth was accelerating. So, neither of
those items explains the USD weakness.
If gold was a “risk off†trade, you sure couldn’t see it in the way
any other market was trading. So, is there another explanation for
recent strength in the gold price, and what does it tell us about 2020
and, perhaps, beyond?
Well, I’ve got a theory. If I’m right, it could mean a bull run for gold has a long way to go.
Some of this theory will be no surprise to you because it does
partially hinge on further USD weakness. There are long term structural
reasons why the US currency should weaken. But there are also
fluctuating sources of demand for USDs, particularly from offshore
buyers and borrowers that transact in US currency. That can create
enough demand to strengthen the US over long periods. We just went
though one such period, but it looks like that may have come to an end,
with more bearish forces to the USD reasserting themselves.
How did we get here? Let’s start with the big picture, displayed on
the top chart on the next page. It gives a long-term view of US Federal
deficits and the unemployment rate. Normally, these travel in tandem.
Higher unemployment means more social spending and higher deficits.
Government spending expands during recessions and contracts-or should-
(as a percentage of GDP) during expansions. Classic Keynesian stuff.
You rarely see these two measures diverge. The two times they did
significantly before, on the left side of the chart, was due to “wartime
deficits†which acted (along with conscription) to stimulate the
economy and drive down unemployment.
You can see the Korean and Vietnam war periods pointed out on the chart.
The current period stands out for the extreme size of the divergence.
US unemployment rates are at multi decade lows and yet the fiscal
deficit as a percentage of GDP keeps rising. There has never been a
divergence this large and its due to get larger.
We know why this is. Big tax cuts combined with a budget that is
mostly non-discretionary. And the US is 10 years into an economic
expansion, however weak. Just think what this graph will look like the
next time the US goes into recession.
We can assume US government deficits aren’t going to shrink any time
soon (and I think we can, pun intended, take that to the bank). That
leaves trade in goods to act as a counterbalance to the funding demand
created by fiscal deficits.
The chart above makes it clear the US won’t get much help from
international trade. The US trade balance has been getting increasingly
negative for decades. It’s better recently, but unlikely to turn
positive soon, and maybe not ever.
To be clear, this is not a bad thing in itself, notwithstanding the
view from the White House. The relative strength of the US economy and
the US Dollar and cheaper offshore production costs have driven the
trade balance. It’s grown because Americans found they got more value
buying abroad and the world was happy to help finance it. It’s not a bad
thing, but not a US Dollar support either.
The more complete picture of currency/investment flows is given by
changes in the Current Account. In simplified terms, the Current Account
measures the difference between what a country produces and what it
consumes. For example, if a country’s trade deficit increases, so does
its current account deficit. If there are funds flowing in from overseas
investments on the other hand, this decrease the Current Account
deficit or increase the surplus.
The graph below summarizes quarterly changes in the US current
account. You can see how the balance got increasingly negative in the
mid 2000’s as both imports and foreign investment by US companies
increased.
Not coincidentally, this same period leading up to the Financial
Crisis included a sustained downtrend in the US Dollar Index. The USD
index chart on the bottom of the next page shows the scale of that
decline, from an index value of 120 at the start of 2002 all the way
down to 73 in early 2008.
The current account deficit (and value of the USD) improved markedly
up to the end of the Financial Crisis as money poured into the US as a
safe haven and consumers cut back on imports. The current account
deficit bas been relatively stable since then, running at about
$100bn/quarter until it dipped a bit again last year.
Trade, funds flows and changes in money supply have the largest
long-term impacts on currency values. When the US Fed ended QE and
started tightening monetary conditions in 2014, the USD enjoyed a strong
rally. The USD Index was back to 100 by early 2015 and stayed there
until loosening monetary conditions-and lots of jawboning from
Washington-led to pullback. Things reversed again and the USD maintained
a mild uptrend from early 2018 until now.
There are still plenty of US Dollar bulls around, and their arguments
have short-term merit. Yes, the US has higher real interest rates and
somewhat higher growth. Both are important to relative currency
valuations as I’ve said in the past. Longer term however, the “twin
deficits†-fiscal and current account-should underpin the fundamental
value of the currency.
Movements don’t happen overnight, especially when you’re talking
about the worlds reserve currency that has the deepest and largest
market supporting it. Changing the overall trend for the USD is like
turning a supertanker. I think it’s happening though, and it has big
potential implications for commodities, especially gold.
Dollar bulls will tell you the USD is the “cleanest shirt in the
laundry hamperâ€, referring to the relative strength of the growth rate
and interest rates compared to other major currencies. That’s true if we
just look at those measures but definitely not true when we look at the
longer term-fiscal and current account deficits.
In fact, the US has about the worst combined fiscal/current account deficit in the G7. The chart at the bottom of this page, from lynalden.com
shows the 2018 values for Current Account and Trade balances for a
number of major economies, as a percentage of their GDP. It’s not a
handsome group.
Both the trade and current account deficits are negative for most of
them. In terms of G7 economies, the US has the worst combined
Current/Trade deficit at 6% of GDP annually. You may be surprised to
note that the Current/Trade balance for the Euro zone is much better
than the US, thanks to a large Trade surplus. Much of that is generated
by Germany. Indeed, this chart explains Germanys defense of the Euro.
It’s combined Trade/Current Account surplus is so large it’s currency
would be skyrocketing if it still used the Deutschmark.
Because the current account deficit is cumulative, the overall
international investment position of the US has continued to worsen. The
US has gone from being an international creditor to an international
debtor, and the scale if its debt keeps increasing. That means it’s
getting harder every year to reverse the current account position as the
US borrows ever more abroad to cover its trade and fiscal deficits.
Interest outflows keep growing and investment inflows shrinking.
Something has to give.
The US has to borrow overseas, as private domestic demand for
Treasury bonds isn’t high enough to fund the twin deficits. In the past,
whenever the US Dollar got too high, offshore demand for US government
debt diminished. It’s not clear why. Maybe the higher dollar made
raising enough foreign funds difficult, or perhaps buyers started
worrying about the USD dropping after they bought when it got too
expensive. Whatever the reason, foreign holdings of US Treasuries have
been declining, forcing the US to find new, domestic, buyers.
Last year, the US Fed stopped its quantitative tightening program,
due to concerns about Dollar liquidity. Then came the repo market. Since
September, the Fed’s balance sheet has expanded by over $400 billion,
mainly due to repo market transactions.
The Fed maintains this “isn’t QE†because these are very short duration transactions but, cumulatively, the total Fed balance sheet keeps expanding. The “QE/no QE†debate is just semantics.
What do these transactions look like? Mostly, its Primary Dealers,
banks that also take part in Treasury auctions, in the repo market. The
Fed buys bonds, usually Treasuries, from these banks and pays for them
in newly printed Dollars. That injects money into the system, helps hold
down interest rates in the repo market and, not coincidentally,
effectively helps fund the US fiscal deficit. To put the series of
transactions in their simplest form, the US is effectively monetizing its deficit with a lot of these transactions.
The chart below illustrates the problem for the Primary Dealer US
banks. They’ve got to buy Treasuries when they’re auctioned-that is
their commitment as Primary Dealers. They also need to hold minimum cash
balances as a percentage of assets under Basel II bank regulations.
Cash balances fell to the minimum mandated level by late 2019- the
horizontal black line on the chart. That’s when the trouble started.
These banks are so stuffed with Treasuries that they didn’t have
excess cash reserves to lend into the repo market. Hence the blow up
back in September and the need for the Fed to inject cash by buying
Treasuries. The point, however, is that this isn’t really a “repo market
issueâ€, that’s just where it reared its head. It’s a “too many
Treasuries and not enough buyers†problem.
It will be tough for the Treasury to attract more offshore buyers
unless the USD weakens, or interest rates rise enough to make them
irresistible. Or a big drop in the federal deficit reduces the supply of
Treasuries itself.
I doubt we’ll see interest rates move up significantly. I don’t think
the economy could handle it and it would be self-defeating anyway, as
the government deficit would explode because of interest expenses. And
that’s not even taking into account the fact that President Trump would
be freaking out daily.
Based on recent history and political expediency, I’d say the odds of
significant budget deficit reductions are slim and none. That’s
especially true going into an election year. There’s just no way we’re
going to see spending restraint or tax increases in the next couple of
years. Indeed, the supply of Treasuries will keep growing even if the US
economy grows too. If there is any sort of significant slowdown or
recession the Federal deficit will explode and so will the new supply of
Treasures. Not an easy fix.
Barring new haven demand for US Treasuries, odds are the Fed will
have to keep sopping up excess supply. That means expanding its balance
sheet and, in so doing, effectively increasing the US money supply.
That brings us (finally!) to the “money shot†chart that appears
above. It compares changes in the size of the Fed balance sheet and the
US Dollar Index. To make it readable and allow me to match the scales, I
generated a chart that tracks annual percentage changes.
The chart shows a strong inverse correlation between changes in the
size of the Fed balance sheet and the value of the USD. This is
unsurprising as most transactions that expand the Fed balance sheet also
expand the money supply.
It’s impossible to tell how long the repo market transactions will
continue but, after three months, they aren’t feeling very “temporaryâ€.
To me, it increasingly looks like these market operations are “debt
monetization in dragâ€.
I don’t know if that’s the Fed’s real intent or just a side effect.
It doesn’t really matter if the funding and money printing continues at
scale. Even if the repo market calms completely, the odds are good we
see some sort of “new QE†start up. Whatever official reason is given
for it; I think it will happen mainly to soak up the excess supply of
Treasuries fiscal deficits are creating.
I don’t blame the FOMC if they’re being disingenuous about it. That’s
their job after all. If you’re a central banker, the LAST thing you’re
going to say is “our government is having trouble finding buyers for its
debtâ€, especially if its true.
With no prospect of lower deficits and apparent continued reduction
in offshore Treasury holdings, this could develop into long-term
sustained trend. I don’t expect it to move in a straight line, markets
never do. A severe escalation in Mideast tensions or the start of a
serious recession could both generate safe-haven Treasury buying. Money
flows from that would take the pressure off the Fed and would be US
Dollar supportive too.
That said, it seems the US has reached the point where a substantial
increase in its central bank’s balance sheet is inevitable. Both Japan
and the Eurozone have gotten there before the Fed, but it looks like it
won’t be immune.
The Eurozone at least has a “Twin surplus†to help cushion things.
And Japan, considered a basket case economically, had an extremely deep
pool of domestic savings (far deeper than the US) to draw on. Until very
recently, Japan also ran massive Current Account surpluses thanks to
decades of heavy investments overseas by Japanese entities. Those
advantages allowed the ECB and especially the BoJ to massively expand
their balance sheets without generating a huge run up in interest rates
or currency collapse.
I don’t know how far the US Fed can expand its balance sheet before
bond yields start getting away from it. I think pretty far though.
Having the world’s reserve currency is a massive advantage. There is
huge built in demand for US Dollars and US denominated debt. That gives
the Fed some runway if it must keep buying US Treasuries.
Assuming a run on yields doesn’t spoil the party, continued balance
sheet and money supply expansion should put increasing downward pressure
on the US Dollar. I don’t know if we’ll see a move as large as the
mid-2000s but a move down to the low 80s for the USD Index over the
course of two or three years wouldn’t be surprising.
It won’t be a straight-line move. A recession could derail things,
though the bear market on Wall St that would generate would support
bullion. Currency markets tend to be self-correcting over extended
periods. If the USD Index falls enough and there is a bump in US real
interest rates offshore demand for Treasuries should increase again.
The bottom line is that this is, and will continue to be, a very
dynamic system. Even so, I think we’ve reached a major inflection point
for the US currency. The 2000s were pretty good for the gold market and
gold stocks. We started from a much lower base of $300/oz on the gold
price. Starting at a $1200-1300 base this time, I think a price above
$2000/oz is a real possibility over the next year or two.
It’s not hard to extrapolate prices higher than that, but I’m not
looking or hoping for those. I prefer to see a longer, steadier move
that brings traders along rather than freaking them out.
This prediction isn’t a sure thing. Predictions never are. But I
think the probabilities now favor an extended bull run in the gold
price. Assuming stock markets don’t blow up (though I still expect that
correction), gold stocks should put in a leveraged performance much more
impressive than the bullion price itself.
There will be consolidations and corrections along the way, but I
think there will be many gold explorers and developers that rack up
share price gains in the hundreds of percent. That doesn’t mean buying
blindly and never trading. We still need to adjust when a stock gets
overweight and manage risk around major exploration campaigns. The last
few weeks has been a lot more fun in the resource space. I don’t think
the fun’s over yet. Enjoy the ride.
Like any good contrarian, a 10-year bull market makes me alert of
signs of potential trouble. As noted at the start of this editorial, I’m
expecting continues floods of liquidity. That may simply overwhelm
everything else for a while and allow Wall St to keep rallying, come
what may.
That said, a couple of data points recently got my attention. One is
more of a sentiment indicator, seen in the chart below. More than one
wag has joked that the Fed need only worry about Wall St, since the
stock market is the economy now. Turns out there is more than a bit of
truth to that.
The chart shows the US Leading Indicator reading with the level of
the stock market (which is a component of the official Leading
Indicator) removed. As you can see, without Wall St, the indicator
implies zero growth going forward. I’m mainly showing it as evidence of
just how surreal things have become.
The chart above is something to keep an eye on going forward. It
shows weekly State unemployment claims for several major sectors of the
economy. What’s interesting about this chart is that claims have been
climbing rapidly over the past few weeks. Doubly interesting is that the
increase in claims is broad, both within and across several sectors of
the economy.
I take the monthly Non-Farm Payroll number less seriously than most,
because it’s a backward-looking indicator. This move in unemployment
claims looks increasingly like a trend though. It’s now at its highest
level since the Financial Crisis.
It’s not in the danger zone-yet. But its climbing fast. We may need
to start paying more attention to those payroll numbers. If the chart
below isn’t a statistical fluke, we may start seeing negative surprises
in the NFP soon. That won’t hurt the gold price either.
Source and Thanks: https://www.hraadvisory.com/golds-big-picture
Posted by AGORACOM
at 4:36 PM on Friday, January 17th, 2020
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From the HRA Journal: Issue 314
The fun doesn’t stop. Waves of liquidity continue to wash traders
cares away. Even assassinations and war mongering generate little more
than half day dips on Wall St. It seems nothing can get in the way of
the bull rally that’s carrying all risk assets higher.
It feels like it could go on for a while, though I think the
liquidity will have to keep coming to sustain it. By most readings,
bullishness on Wall St is at levels that are rarely sustained for more
than a few weeks. Some sort of correction on Wall St seems highly
likely, and soon. Whether its substantial or just another blip on the
way higher remains to be seen.
The resource sector, especially gold and silver stocks, have had
their own rally. Our Santa Claus market was as good or better than Wall
St’s for a change. And I don’t think its over yet. I think we’re in for
the best Q1 we’ve seen for a few years. And we could be in for something
better than that even. I increasingly see signs of a major rally
developing in the gold space. It’s already been pretty good but I think a
multi-quarter, or longer, move may be starting to take shape.
I usually spend time on all the metals in the first issue of the
year. But, because the makings of this gold rally are complex and long
in coming I decided to detail my reasoning. That ended up taking several
pages so I’ll save talk on base metals and other markets for the next
issue.
No, I’m not writing about Louis IV, though there might be some
appropriateness to the analogy, now that I think about it. The quote is
famous, even though there’s no agreement on what it was supposed to
mean. Most figure Louis was referring to the biblical flood, that all
would be chaos once his reign ended.
The deluge I’m referring to isn’t water. It’s the flood of money the
US Fed, and other central banks, continue to unleash to keep markets
stable. Markets, especially stock markets, love liquidity. You can see
the impact of the latest deluge, particularly the US Fed’s in the chart
below that traces both the SPX index value and the level of a “Global
Liquidity Proxy†(“GLPâ€) measuring fiscal/monetary tightness and
weakness.
You can see the GLP moved lower in late 2018 as the Fed tightened and
the impact that had on Wall St. Conversely, you can see the SPX running
higher in the past couple of months as the US backed off rate
increases, increased fiscal deficit expansion, and grew the Fed balance
sheet through, mainly, repo market operations.
Wall St, and most other bourses, are loving these money flows. The
Santa Claus rally discussed in the last issue continued to strengthen
all the way to and through year end. As it turned out, the Fed either
provided enough backstop in advance or the yearend repo issues were
overstated. The repo market itself was calm going through year end and a
lot of the short-term money offered by the Fed during that week wasn’t
taken down.
Everything may have changed in the past couple of days with the
dramatic increase in US-Iran tensions. I don’t know how big an issue
that will be, since no one knows what form Iran’s retaliation will be or
how much things will escalate. I DO think it’s potentially a big deal
with very negative connotations, but it may take time to unfold. Someone
at the Fed thought so too, as the past couple of days saw a return to
large scale Fed lending in the repo market.
I’ve no doubt Iran will try and take revenge for the assassination of
its most famous military commander by the US. But I don’t know what
form it will take and if this means the US has drawn itself into the
Mideast quagmire even more. I fear it has though. The US is already
talking about adding 3,000 troops to its Mideast presence and they’re
just warming up. Even larger scale attacks, if they happen, may not
derail Wall St, but they’re certainly not a positive development at any
level.
We know how stretched both market valuations and sentiment were
before the Suleimani drone strike. The chart below shows a three-year
trace of the “fear/greed indexâ€. You can see that its hardly a stable
reading. It flip flops often and extreme readings rarely hold for long.
At last check, the reading was 94% bullish.
Sentiment almost never gets that bullish and, when it does, nothing
good comes of it for bulls. A reading that close to 100% tells you we’re
just about out of buyers. Whatever happens in and around Iran, I think a
near term correction is inevitable. The only question is whether it’s a
large one or not.
A rapid escalation in US-Iran tensions could certainly make a near
term correction larger. If the flood of liquidity continues though, a
correction could just be another waystation on the road to higher highs.
There are a couple of other dangers Wall St still faces that I’ll touch
on briefly at the end of this article. First however, lets move on to
the main event for us-the gold market.
It wasn’t just the SPX enjoying a Santa rally this year. Gold
experienced the rally we were hoping for that gold miner stocks seemed
to be foretelling early last month. Gold’s been doing well since it
bottomed at $1275 in June, but it didn’t feel that way during the long
hiatus between the early September high and the current move. The gold
price currently sits above September’s multi-year high, after breaching
that high in the wake of the Baghdad drone strike. And the first
retaliatory strike by Iran. Volatility will be very high for a while
going forward.
I think we’ll see more multi-year highs going forward. I hate that
the latest move higher is driven by geopolitics. Scary geopolitics and
military confrontations mean people are dying. We don’t want to profit
from misery. And we won’t anyway, if things get ugly enough in the
Mideast to scare traders out of the market.
Geopolitical price moves almost always unwind quickly. I’d much
prefer to see gold moving higher for macro reasons, not as a political
safety trade. I expect more political/military inspired moves. As the
Iran conflict unfolds. Make no mistake, Iran is NOT Iraq. Its army is
far larger, better trained and better equipped than Iraq. This could get
ugly.
The balance of this piece will deal with my macro argument for higher
gold prices over an extended period. The geopolitical stuff will be
layered on top of that for the next while and could strengthen both gold
prices and the $US in risk-off trading. It should be viewed as a
separate event from the argument laid out below.
What else is driving gold higher? In part, it was gold’s inverse
relationship with the US Dollar. As you already know, I’m not a believer
that “its all about the USD, all the time†when it comes to the gold
market. That’s an over-simplification of a more complex relationship. It
also discounts the idea of gold as its own asset class that trades for
its own reasons.
If you look at the gold chart above, and the USD chart below it, its
immediately apparent that there isn’t a constant negative correlation at
play. Gold rallied during the summer at the same time the USD did and
for the same reason; the world-wide explosion of negative real yields.
Gold weakened a bit when yields reversed to the upside and the USD got a
bit of traction, but things changed again at the start of December.
The USD turned lower and lost two percent during December. US bond
yields were generally rising during the month and the market (right or
wrong) was assuming economic growth was accelerating. So, neither of
those items explains the USD weakness.
If gold was a “risk off†trade, you sure couldn’t see it in the way
any other market was trading. So, is there another explanation for
recent strength in the gold price, and what does it tell us about 2020
and, perhaps, beyond?
Well, I’ve got a theory. If I’m right, it could mean a bull run for gold has a long way to go.
Some of this theory will be no surprise to you because it does
partially hinge on further USD weakness. There are long term structural
reasons why the US currency should weaken. But there are also
fluctuating sources of demand for USDs, particularly from offshore
buyers and borrowers that transact in US currency. That can create
enough demand to strengthen the US over long periods. We just went
though one such period, but it looks like that may have come to an end,
with more bearish forces to the USD reasserting themselves.
How did we get here? Let’s start with the big picture, displayed on
the top chart on the next page. It gives a long-term view of US Federal
deficits and the unemployment rate. Normally, these travel in tandem.
Higher unemployment means more social spending and higher deficits.
Government spending expands during recessions and contracts-or should-
(as a percentage of GDP) during expansions. Classic Keynesian stuff.
You rarely see these two measures diverge. The two times they did
significantly before, on the left side of the chart, was due to “wartime
deficits†which acted (along with conscription) to stimulate the
economy and drive down unemployment.
You can see the Korean and Vietnam war periods pointed out on the chart.
The current period stands out for the extreme size of the divergence.
US unemployment rates are at multi decade lows and yet the fiscal
deficit as a percentage of GDP keeps rising. There has never been a
divergence this large and its due to get larger.
We know why this is. Big tax cuts combined with a budget that is
mostly non-discretionary. And the US is 10 years into an economic
expansion, however weak. Just think what this graph will look like the
next time the US goes into recession.
We can assume US government deficits aren’t going to shrink any time
soon (and I think we can, pun intended, take that to the bank). That
leaves trade in goods to act as a counterbalance to the funding demand
created by fiscal deficits.
The chart above makes it clear the US won’t get much help from
international trade. The US trade balance has been getting increasingly
negative for decades. It’s better recently, but unlikely to turn
positive soon, and maybe not ever.
To be clear, this is not a bad thing in itself, notwithstanding the
view from the White House. The relative strength of the US economy and
the US Dollar and cheaper offshore production costs have driven the
trade balance. It’s grown because Americans found they got more value
buying abroad and the world was happy to help finance it. It’s not a bad
thing, but not a US Dollar support either.
The more complete picture of currency/investment flows is given by
changes in the Current Account. In simplified terms, the Current Account
measures the difference between what a country produces and what it
consumes. For example, if a country’s trade deficit increases, so does
its current account deficit. If there are funds flowing in from overseas
investments on the other hand, this decrease the Current Account
deficit or increase the surplus.
The graph below summarizes quarterly changes in the US current
account. You can see how the balance got increasingly negative in the
mid 2000’s as both imports and foreign investment by US companies
increased.
Not coincidentally, this same period leading up to the Financial
Crisis included a sustained downtrend in the US Dollar Index. The USD
index chart on the bottom of the next page shows the scale of that
decline, from an index value of 120 at the start of 2002 all the way
down to 73 in early 2008.
The current account deficit (and value of the USD) improved markedly
up to the end of the Financial Crisis as money poured into the US as a
safe haven and consumers cut back on imports. The current account
deficit bas been relatively stable since then, running at about
$100bn/quarter until it dipped a bit again last year.
Trade, funds flows and changes in money supply have the largest
long-term impacts on currency values. When the US Fed ended QE and
started tightening monetary conditions in 2014, the USD enjoyed a strong
rally. The USD Index was back to 100 by early 2015 and stayed there
until loosening monetary conditions-and lots of jawboning from
Washington-led to pullback. Things reversed again and the USD maintained
a mild uptrend from early 2018 until now.
There are still plenty of US Dollar bulls around, and their arguments
have short-term merit. Yes, the US has higher real interest rates and
somewhat higher growth. Both are important to relative currency
valuations as I’ve said in the past. Longer term however, the “twin
deficits†-fiscal and current account-should underpin the fundamental
value of the currency.
Movements don’t happen overnight, especially when you’re talking
about the worlds reserve currency that has the deepest and largest
market supporting it. Changing the overall trend for the USD is like
turning a supertanker. I think it’s happening though, and it has big
potential implications for commodities, especially gold.
Dollar bulls will tell you the USD is the “cleanest shirt in the
laundry hamperâ€, referring to the relative strength of the growth rate
and interest rates compared to other major currencies. That’s true if we
just look at those measures but definitely not true when we look at the
longer term-fiscal and current account deficits.
In fact, the US has about the worst combined fiscal/current account deficit in the G7. The chart at the bottom of this page, from lynalden.com
shows the 2018 values for Current Account and Trade balances for a
number of major economies, as a percentage of their GDP. It’s not a
handsome group.
Both the trade and current account deficits are negative for most of
them. In terms of G7 economies, the US has the worst combined
Current/Trade deficit at 6% of GDP annually. You may be surprised to
note that the Current/Trade balance for the Euro zone is much better
than the US, thanks to a large Trade surplus. Much of that is generated
by Germany. Indeed, this chart explains Germanys defense of the Euro.
It’s combined Trade/Current Account surplus is so large it’s currency
would be skyrocketing if it still used the Deutschmark.
Because the current account deficit is cumulative, the overall
international investment position of the US has continued to worsen. The
US has gone from being an international creditor to an international
debtor, and the scale if its debt keeps increasing. That means it’s
getting harder every year to reverse the current account position as the
US borrows ever more abroad to cover its trade and fiscal deficits.
Interest outflows keep growing and investment inflows shrinking.
Something has to give.
The US has to borrow overseas, as private domestic demand for
Treasury bonds isn’t high enough to fund the twin deficits. In the past,
whenever the US Dollar got too high, offshore demand for US government
debt diminished. It’s not clear why. Maybe the higher dollar made
raising enough foreign funds difficult, or perhaps buyers started
worrying about the USD dropping after they bought when it got too
expensive. Whatever the reason, foreign holdings of US Treasuries have
been declining, forcing the US to find new, domestic, buyers.
Last year, the US Fed stopped its quantitative tightening program,
due to concerns about Dollar liquidity. Then came the repo market. Since
September, the Fed’s balance sheet has expanded by over $400 billion,
mainly due to repo market transactions.
The Fed maintains this “isn’t QE†because these are very short duration transactions but, cumulatively, the total Fed balance sheet keeps expanding. The “QE/no QE†debate is just semantics.
What do these transactions look like? Mostly, its Primary Dealers,
banks that also take part in Treasury auctions, in the repo market. The
Fed buys bonds, usually Treasuries, from these banks and pays for them
in newly printed Dollars. That injects money into the system, helps hold
down interest rates in the repo market and, not coincidentally,
effectively helps fund the US fiscal deficit. To put the series of
transactions in their simplest form, the US is effectively monetizing its deficit with a lot of these transactions.
The chart below illustrates the problem for the Primary Dealer US
banks. They’ve got to buy Treasuries when they’re auctioned-that is
their commitment as Primary Dealers. They also need to hold minimum cash
balances as a percentage of assets under Basel II bank regulations.
Cash balances fell to the minimum mandated level by late 2019- the
horizontal black line on the chart. That’s when the trouble started.
These banks are so stuffed with Treasuries that they didn’t have
excess cash reserves to lend into the repo market. Hence the blow up
back in September and the need for the Fed to inject cash by buying
Treasuries. The point, however, is that this isn’t really a “repo market
issueâ€, that’s just where it reared its head. It’s a “too many
Treasuries and not enough buyers†problem.
It will be tough for the Treasury to attract more offshore buyers
unless the USD weakens, or interest rates rise enough to make them
irresistible. Or a big drop in the federal deficit reduces the supply of
Treasuries itself.
I doubt we’ll see interest rates move up significantly. I don’t think
the economy could handle it and it would be self-defeating anyway, as
the government deficit would explode because of interest expenses. And
that’s not even taking into account the fact that President Trump would
be freaking out daily.
Based on recent history and political expediency, I’d say the odds of
significant budget deficit reductions are slim and none. That’s
especially true going into an election year. There’s just no way we’re
going to see spending restraint or tax increases in the next couple of
years. Indeed, the supply of Treasuries will keep growing even if the US
economy grows too. If there is any sort of significant slowdown or
recession the Federal deficit will explode and so will the new supply of
Treasures. Not an easy fix.
Barring new haven demand for US Treasuries, odds are the Fed will
have to keep sopping up excess supply. That means expanding its balance
sheet and, in so doing, effectively increasing the US money supply.
That brings us (finally!) to the “money shot†chart that appears
above. It compares changes in the size of the Fed balance sheet and the
US Dollar Index. To make it readable and allow me to match the scales, I
generated a chart that tracks annual percentage changes.
The chart shows a strong inverse correlation between changes in the
size of the Fed balance sheet and the value of the USD. This is
unsurprising as most transactions that expand the Fed balance sheet also
expand the money supply.
It’s impossible to tell how long the repo market transactions will
continue but, after three months, they aren’t feeling very “temporaryâ€.
To me, it increasingly looks like these market operations are “debt
monetization in dragâ€.
I don’t know if that’s the Fed’s real intent or just a side effect.
It doesn’t really matter if the funding and money printing continues at
scale. Even if the repo market calms completely, the odds are good we
see some sort of “new QE†start up. Whatever official reason is given
for it; I think it will happen mainly to soak up the excess supply of
Treasuries fiscal deficits are creating.
I don’t blame the FOMC if they’re being disingenuous about it. That’s
their job after all. If you’re a central banker, the LAST thing you’re
going to say is “our government is having trouble finding buyers for its
debtâ€, especially if its true.
With no prospect of lower deficits and apparent continued reduction
in offshore Treasury holdings, this could develop into long-term
sustained trend. I don’t expect it to move in a straight line, markets
never do. A severe escalation in Mideast tensions or the start of a
serious recession could both generate safe-haven Treasury buying. Money
flows from that would take the pressure off the Fed and would be US
Dollar supportive too.
That said, it seems the US has reached the point where a substantial
increase in its central bank’s balance sheet is inevitable. Both Japan
and the Eurozone have gotten there before the Fed, but it looks like it
won’t be immune.
The Eurozone at least has a “Twin surplus†to help cushion things.
And Japan, considered a basket case economically, had an extremely deep
pool of domestic savings (far deeper than the US) to draw on. Until very
recently, Japan also ran massive Current Account surpluses thanks to
decades of heavy investments overseas by Japanese entities. Those
advantages allowed the ECB and especially the BoJ to massively expand
their balance sheets without generating a huge run up in interest rates
or currency collapse.
I don’t know how far the US Fed can expand its balance sheet before
bond yields start getting away from it. I think pretty far though.
Having the world’s reserve currency is a massive advantage. There is
huge built in demand for US Dollars and US denominated debt. That gives
the Fed some runway if it must keep buying US Treasuries.
Assuming a run on yields doesn’t spoil the party, continued balance
sheet and money supply expansion should put increasing downward pressure
on the US Dollar. I don’t know if we’ll see a move as large as the
mid-2000s but a move down to the low 80s for the USD Index over the
course of two or three years wouldn’t be surprising.
It won’t be a straight-line move. A recession could derail things,
though the bear market on Wall St that would generate would support
bullion. Currency markets tend to be self-correcting over extended
periods. If the USD Index falls enough and there is a bump in US real
interest rates offshore demand for Treasuries should increase again.
The bottom line is that this is, and will continue to be, a very
dynamic system. Even so, I think we’ve reached a major inflection point
for the US currency. The 2000s were pretty good for the gold market and
gold stocks. We started from a much lower base of $300/oz on the gold
price. Starting at a $1200-1300 base this time, I think a price above
$2000/oz is a real possibility over the next year or two.
It’s not hard to extrapolate prices higher than that, but I’m not
looking or hoping for those. I prefer to see a longer, steadier move
that brings traders along rather than freaking them out.
This prediction isn’t a sure thing. Predictions never are. But I
think the probabilities now favor an extended bull run in the gold
price. Assuming stock markets don’t blow up (though I still expect that
correction), gold stocks should put in a leveraged performance much more
impressive than the bullion price itself.
There will be consolidations and corrections along the way, but I
think there will be many gold explorers and developers that rack up
share price gains in the hundreds of percent. That doesn’t mean buying
blindly and never trading. We still need to adjust when a stock gets
overweight and manage risk around major exploration campaigns. The last
few weeks has been a lot more fun in the resource space. I don’t think
the fun’s over yet. Enjoy the ride.
Like any good contrarian, a 10-year bull market makes me alert of
signs of potential trouble. As noted at the start of this editorial, I’m
expecting continues floods of liquidity. That may simply overwhelm
everything else for a while and allow Wall St to keep rallying, come
what may.
That said, a couple of data points recently got my attention. One is
more of a sentiment indicator, seen in the chart below. More than one
wag has joked that the Fed need only worry about Wall St, since the
stock market is the economy now. Turns out there is more than a bit of
truth to that.
The chart shows the US Leading Indicator reading with the level of
the stock market (which is a component of the official Leading
Indicator) removed. As you can see, without Wall St, the indicator
implies zero growth going forward. I’m mainly showing it as evidence of
just how surreal things have become.
The chart above is something to keep an eye on going forward. It
shows weekly State unemployment claims for several major sectors of the
economy. What’s interesting about this chart is that claims have been
climbing rapidly over the past few weeks. Doubly interesting is that the
increase in claims is broad, both within and across several sectors of
the economy.
I take the monthly Non-Farm Payroll number less seriously than most,
because it’s a backward-looking indicator. This move in unemployment
claims looks increasingly like a trend though. It’s now at its highest
level since the Financial Crisis.
It’s not in the danger zone-yet. But its climbing fast. We may need
to start paying more attention to those payroll numbers. If the chart
below isn’t a statistical fluke, we may start seeing negative surprises
in the NFP soon. That won’t hurt the gold price either.
Source and Thanks: https://www.hraadvisory.com/golds-big-picture
Posted by AGORACOM
at 12:32 PM on Friday, January 17th, 2020
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From the HRA Journal: Issue 314
The fun doesn’t stop. Waves of liquidity continue to wash traders
cares away. Even assassinations and war mongering generate little more
than half day dips on Wall St. It seems nothing can get in the way of
the bull rally that’s carrying all risk assets higher.
It feels like it could go on for a while, though I think the
liquidity will have to keep coming to sustain it. By most readings,
bullishness on Wall St is at levels that are rarely sustained for more
than a few weeks. Some sort of correction on Wall St seems highly
likely, and soon. Whether its substantial or just another blip on the
way higher remains to be seen.
The resource sector, especially gold and silver stocks, have had
their own rally. Our Santa Claus market was as good or better than Wall
St’s for a change. And I don’t think its over yet. I think we’re in for
the best Q1 we’ve seen for a few years. And we could be in for something
better than that even. I increasingly see signs of a major rally
developing in the gold space. It’s already been pretty good but I think a
multi-quarter, or longer, move may be starting to take shape.
I usually spend time on all the metals in the first issue of the
year. But, because the makings of this gold rally are complex and long
in coming I decided to detail my reasoning. That ended up taking several
pages so I’ll save talk on base metals and other markets for the next
issue.
No, I’m not writing about Louis IV, though there might be some
appropriateness to the analogy, now that I think about it. The quote is
famous, even though there’s no agreement on what it was supposed to
mean. Most figure Louis was referring to the biblical flood, that all
would be chaos once his reign ended.
The deluge I’m referring to isn’t water. It’s the flood of money the
US Fed, and other central banks, continue to unleash to keep markets
stable. Markets, especially stock markets, love liquidity. You can see
the impact of the latest deluge, particularly the US Fed’s in the chart
below that traces both the SPX index value and the level of a “Global
Liquidity Proxy” (“GLP”) measuring fiscal/monetary tightness and
weakness.
You can see the GLP moved lower in late 2018 as the Fed tightened and
the impact that had on Wall St. Conversely, you can see the SPX running
higher in the past couple of months as the US backed off rate
increases, increased fiscal deficit expansion, and grew the Fed balance
sheet through, mainly, repo market operations.
Wall St, and most other bourses, are loving these money flows. The
Santa Claus rally discussed in the last issue continued to strengthen
all the way to and through year end. As it turned out, the Fed either
provided enough backstop in advance or the yearend repo issues were
overstated. The repo market itself was calm going through year end and a
lot of the short-term money offered by the Fed during that week wasn’t
taken down.
Everything may have changed in the past couple of days with the
dramatic increase in US-Iran tensions. I don’t know how big an issue
that will be, since no one knows what form Iran’s retaliation will be or
how much things will escalate. I DO think it’s potentially a big deal
with very negative connotations, but it may take time to unfold. Someone
at the Fed thought so too, as the past couple of days saw a return to
large scale Fed lending in the repo market.
I’ve no doubt Iran will try and take revenge for the assassination of
its most famous military commander by the US. But I don’t know what
form it will take and if this means the US has drawn itself into the
Mideast quagmire even more. I fear it has though. The US is already
talking about adding 3,000 troops to its Mideast presence and they’re
just warming up. Even larger scale attacks, if they happen, may not
derail Wall St, but they’re certainly not a positive development at any
level.
We know how stretched both market valuations and sentiment were
before the Suleimani drone strike. The chart below shows a three-year
trace of the “fear/greed index”. You can see that its hardly a stable
reading. It flip flops often and extreme readings rarely hold for long.
At last check, the reading was 94% bullish.
Sentiment almost never gets that bullish and, when it does, nothing
good comes of it for bulls. A reading that close to 100% tells you we’re
just about out of buyers. Whatever happens in and around Iran, I think a
near term correction is inevitable. The only question is whether it’s a
large one or not.
A rapid escalation in US-Iran tensions could certainly make a near
term correction larger. If the flood of liquidity continues though, a
correction could just be another waystation on the road to higher highs.
There are a couple of other dangers Wall St still faces that I’ll touch
on briefly at the end of this article. First however, lets move on to
the main event for us-the gold market.
It wasn’t just the SPX enjoying a Santa rally this year. Gold
experienced the rally we were hoping for that gold miner stocks seemed
to be foretelling early last month. Gold’s been doing well since it
bottomed at $1275 in June, but it didn’t feel that way during the long
hiatus between the early September high and the current move. The gold
price currently sits above September’s multi-year high, after breaching
that high in the wake of the Baghdad drone strike. And the first
retaliatory strike by Iran. Volatility will be very high for a while
going forward.
I think we’ll see more multi-year highs going forward. I hate that
the latest move higher is driven by geopolitics. Scary geopolitics and
military confrontations mean people are dying. We don’t want to profit
from misery. And we won’t anyway, if things get ugly enough in the
Mideast to scare traders out of the market.
Geopolitical price moves almost always unwind quickly. I’d much
prefer to see gold moving higher for macro reasons, not as a political
safety trade. I expect more political/military inspired moves. As the
Iran conflict unfolds. Make no mistake, Iran is NOT Iraq. Its army is
far larger, better trained and better equipped than Iraq. This could get
ugly.
The balance of this piece will deal with my macro argument for higher
gold prices over an extended period. The geopolitical stuff will be
layered on top of that for the next while and could strengthen both gold
prices and the $US in risk-off trading. It should be viewed as a
separate event from the argument laid out below.
What else is driving gold higher? In part, it was gold’s inverse
relationship with the US Dollar. As you already know, I’m not a believer
that “its all about the USD, all the time” when it comes to the gold
market. That’s an over-simplification of a more complex relationship. It
also discounts the idea of gold as its own asset class that trades for
its own reasons.
If you look at the gold chart above, and the USD chart below it, its
immediately apparent that there isn’t a constant negative correlation at
play. Gold rallied during the summer at the same time the USD did and
for the same reason; the world-wide explosion of negative real yields.
Gold weakened a bit when yields reversed to the upside and the USD got a
bit of traction, but things changed again at the start of December.
The USD turned lower and lost two percent during December. US bond
yields were generally rising during the month and the market (right or
wrong) was assuming economic growth was accelerating. So, neither of
those items explains the USD weakness.
If gold was a “risk off” trade, you sure couldn’t see it in the way
any other market was trading. So, is there another explanation for
recent strength in the gold price, and what does it tell us about 2020
and, perhaps, beyond?
Well, I’ve got a theory. If I’m right, it could mean a bull run for gold has a long way to go.
Some of this theory will be no surprise to you because it does
partially hinge on further USD weakness. There are long term structural
reasons why the US currency should weaken. But there are also
fluctuating sources of demand for USDs, particularly from offshore
buyers and borrowers that transact in US currency. That can create
enough demand to strengthen the US over long periods. We just went
though one such period, but it looks like that may have come to an end,
with more bearish forces to the USD reasserting themselves.
How did we get here? Let’s start with the big picture, displayed on
the top chart on the next page. It gives a long-term view of US Federal
deficits and the unemployment rate. Normally, these travel in tandem.
Higher unemployment means more social spending and higher deficits.
Government spending expands during recessions and contracts-or should-
(as a percentage of GDP) during expansions. Classic Keynesian stuff.
You rarely see these two measures diverge. The two times they did
significantly before, on the left side of the chart, was due to “wartime
deficits” which acted (along with conscription) to stimulate the
economy and drive down unemployment.
You can see the Korean and Vietnam war periods pointed out on the chart.
The current period stands out for the extreme size of the divergence.
US unemployment rates are at multi decade lows and yet the fiscal
deficit as a percentage of GDP keeps rising. There has never been a
divergence this large and its due to get larger.
We know why this is. Big tax cuts combined with a budget that is
mostly non-discretionary. And the US is 10 years into an economic
expansion, however weak. Just think what this graph will look like the
next time the US goes into recession.
We can assume US government deficits aren’t going to shrink any time
soon (and I think we can, pun intended, take that to the bank). That
leaves trade in goods to act as a counterbalance to the funding demand
created by fiscal deficits.
The chart above makes it clear the US won’t get much help from
international trade. The US trade balance has been getting increasingly
negative for decades. It’s better recently, but unlikely to turn
positive soon, and maybe not ever.
To be clear, this is not a bad thing in itself, notwithstanding the
view from the White House. The relative strength of the US economy and
the US Dollar and cheaper offshore production costs have driven the
trade balance. It’s grown because Americans found they got more value
buying abroad and the world was happy to help finance it. It’s not a bad
thing, but not a US Dollar support either.
The more complete picture of currency/investment flows is given by
changes in the Current Account. In simplified terms, the Current Account
measures the difference between what a country produces and what it
consumes. For example, if a country’s trade deficit increases, so does
its current account deficit. If there are funds flowing in from overseas
investments on the other hand, this decrease the Current Account
deficit or increase the surplus.
The graph below summarizes quarterly changes in the US current
account. You can see how the balance got increasingly negative in the
mid 2000’s as both imports and foreign investment by US companies
increased.
Not coincidentally, this same period leading up to the Financial
Crisis included a sustained downtrend in the US Dollar Index. The USD
index chart on the bottom of the next page shows the scale of that
decline, from an index value of 120 at the start of 2002 all the way
down to 73 in early 2008.
The current account deficit (and value of the USD) improved markedly
up to the end of the Financial Crisis as money poured into the US as a
safe haven and consumers cut back on imports. The current account
deficit bas been relatively stable since then, running at about
$100bn/quarter until it dipped a bit again last year.
Trade, funds flows and changes in money supply have the largest
long-term impacts on currency values. When the US Fed ended QE and
started tightening monetary conditions in 2014, the USD enjoyed a strong
rally. The USD Index was back to 100 by early 2015 and stayed there
until loosening monetary conditions-and lots of jawboning from
Washington-led to pullback. Things reversed again and the USD maintained
a mild uptrend from early 2018 until now.
There are still plenty of US Dollar bulls around, and their arguments
have short-term merit. Yes, the US has higher real interest rates and
somewhat higher growth. Both are important to relative currency
valuations as I’ve said in the past. Longer term however, the “twin
deficits” -fiscal and current account-should underpin the fundamental
value of the currency.
Movements don’t happen overnight, especially when you’re talking
about the worlds reserve currency that has the deepest and largest
market supporting it. Changing the overall trend for the USD is like
turning a supertanker. I think it’s happening though, and it has big
potential implications for commodities, especially gold.
Dollar bulls will tell you the USD is the “cleanest shirt in the
laundry hamper”, referring to the relative strength of the growth rate
and interest rates compared to other major currencies. That’s true if we
just look at those measures but definitely not true when we look at the
longer term-fiscal and current account deficits.
In fact, the US has about the worst combined fiscal/current account deficit in the G7. The chart at the bottom of this page, from lynalden.com
shows the 2018 values for Current Account and Trade balances for a
number of major economies, as a percentage of their GDP. It’s not a
handsome group.
Both the trade and current account deficits are negative for most of
them. In terms of G7 economies, the US has the worst combined
Current/Trade deficit at 6% of GDP annually. You may be surprised to
note that the Current/Trade balance for the Euro zone is much better
than the US, thanks to a large Trade surplus. Much of that is generated
by Germany. Indeed, this chart explains Germanys defense of the Euro.
It’s combined Trade/Current Account surplus is so large it’s currency
would be skyrocketing if it still used the Deutschmark.
Because the current account deficit is cumulative, the overall
international investment position of the US has continued to worsen. The
US has gone from being an international creditor to an international
debtor, and the scale if its debt keeps increasing. That means it’s
getting harder every year to reverse the current account position as the
US borrows ever more abroad to cover its trade and fiscal deficits.
Interest outflows keep growing and investment inflows shrinking.
Something has to give.
The US has to borrow overseas, as private domestic demand for
Treasury bonds isn’t high enough to fund the twin deficits. In the past,
whenever the US Dollar got too high, offshore demand for US government
debt diminished. It’s not clear why. Maybe the higher dollar made
raising enough foreign funds difficult, or perhaps buyers started
worrying about the USD dropping after they bought when it got too
expensive. Whatever the reason, foreign holdings of US Treasuries have
been declining, forcing the US to find new, domestic, buyers.
Last year, the US Fed stopped its quantitative tightening program,
due to concerns about Dollar liquidity. Then came the repo market. Since
September, the Fed’s balance sheet has expanded by over $400 billion,
mainly due to repo market transactions.
The Fed maintains this “isn’t QE” because these are very short duration transactions but, cumulatively, the total Fed balance sheet keeps expanding. The “QE/no QE” debate is just semantics.
What do these transactions look like? Mostly, its Primary Dealers,
banks that also take part in Treasury auctions, in the repo market. The
Fed buys bonds, usually Treasuries, from these banks and pays for them
in newly printed Dollars. That injects money into the system, helps hold
down interest rates in the repo market and, not coincidentally,
effectively helps fund the US fiscal deficit. To put the series of
transactions in their simplest form, the US is effectively monetizing its deficit with a lot of these transactions.
The chart below illustrates the problem for the Primary Dealer US
banks. They’ve got to buy Treasuries when they’re auctioned-that is
their commitment as Primary Dealers. They also need to hold minimum cash
balances as a percentage of assets under Basel II bank regulations.
Cash balances fell to the minimum mandated level by late 2019- the
horizontal black line on the chart. That’s when the trouble started.
These banks are so stuffed with Treasuries that they didn’t have
excess cash reserves to lend into the repo market. Hence the blow up
back in September and the need for the Fed to inject cash by buying
Treasuries. The point, however, is that this isn’t really a “repo market
issue”, that’s just where it reared its head. It’s a “too many
Treasuries and not enough buyers” problem.
It will be tough for the Treasury to attract more offshore buyers
unless the USD weakens, or interest rates rise enough to make them
irresistible. Or a big drop in the federal deficit reduces the supply of
Treasuries itself.
I doubt we’ll see interest rates move up significantly. I don’t think
the economy could handle it and it would be self-defeating anyway, as
the government deficit would explode because of interest expenses. And
that’s not even taking into account the fact that President Trump would
be freaking out daily.
Based on recent history and political expediency, I’d say the odds of
significant budget deficit reductions are slim and none. That’s
especially true going into an election year. There’s just no way we’re
going to see spending restraint or tax increases in the next couple of
years. Indeed, the supply of Treasuries will keep growing even if the US
economy grows too. If there is any sort of significant slowdown or
recession the Federal deficit will explode and so will the new supply of
Treasures. Not an easy fix.
Barring new haven demand for US Treasuries, odds are the Fed will
have to keep sopping up excess supply. That means expanding its balance
sheet and, in so doing, effectively increasing the US money supply.
That brings us (finally!) to the “money shot” chart that appears
above. It compares changes in the size of the Fed balance sheet and the
US Dollar Index. To make it readable and allow me to match the scales, I
generated a chart that tracks annual percentage changes.
The chart shows a strong inverse correlation between changes in the
size of the Fed balance sheet and the value of the USD. This is
unsurprising as most transactions that expand the Fed balance sheet also
expand the money supply.
It’s impossible to tell how long the repo market transactions will
continue but, after three months, they aren’t feeling very “temporary”.
To me, it increasingly looks like these market operations are “debt
monetization in drag”.
I don’t know if that’s the Fed’s real intent or just a side effect.
It doesn’t really matter if the funding and money printing continues at
scale. Even if the repo market calms completely, the odds are good we
see some sort of “new QE” start up. Whatever official reason is given
for it; I think it will happen mainly to soak up the excess supply of
Treasuries fiscal deficits are creating.
I don’t blame the FOMC if they’re being disingenuous about it. That’s
their job after all. If you’re a central banker, the LAST thing you’re
going to say is “our government is having trouble finding buyers for its
debt”, especially if its true.
With no prospect of lower deficits and apparent continued reduction
in offshore Treasury holdings, this could develop into long-term
sustained trend. I don’t expect it to move in a straight line, markets
never do. A severe escalation in Mideast tensions or the start of a
serious recession could both generate safe-haven Treasury buying. Money
flows from that would take the pressure off the Fed and would be US
Dollar supportive too.
That said, it seems the US has reached the point where a substantial
increase in its central bank’s balance sheet is inevitable. Both Japan
and the Eurozone have gotten there before the Fed, but it looks like it
won’t be immune.
The Eurozone at least has a “Twin surplus” to help cushion things.
And Japan, considered a basket case economically, had an extremely deep
pool of domestic savings (far deeper than the US) to draw on. Until very
recently, Japan also ran massive Current Account surpluses thanks to
decades of heavy investments overseas by Japanese entities. Those
advantages allowed the ECB and especially the BoJ to massively expand
their balance sheets without generating a huge run up in interest rates
or currency collapse.
I don’t know how far the US Fed can expand its balance sheet before
bond yields start getting away from it. I think pretty far though.
Having the world’s reserve currency is a massive advantage. There is
huge built in demand for US Dollars and US denominated debt. That gives
the Fed some runway if it must keep buying US Treasuries.
Assuming a run on yields doesn’t spoil the party, continued balance
sheet and money supply expansion should put increasing downward pressure
on the US Dollar. I don’t know if we’ll see a move as large as the
mid-2000s but a move down to the low 80s for the USD Index over the
course of two or three years wouldn’t be surprising.
It won’t be a straight-line move. A recession could derail things,
though the bear market on Wall St that would generate would support
bullion. Currency markets tend to be self-correcting over extended
periods. If the USD Index falls enough and there is a bump in US real
interest rates offshore demand for Treasuries should increase again.
The bottom line is that this is, and will continue to be, a very
dynamic system. Even so, I think we’ve reached a major inflection point
for the US currency. The 2000s were pretty good for the gold market and
gold stocks. We started from a much lower base of $300/oz on the gold
price. Starting at a $1200-1300 base this time, I think a price above
$2000/oz is a real possibility over the next year or two.
It’s not hard to extrapolate prices higher than that, but I’m not
looking or hoping for those. I prefer to see a longer, steadier move
that brings traders along rather than freaking them out.
This prediction isn’t a sure thing. Predictions never are. But I
think the probabilities now favor an extended bull run in the gold
price. Assuming stock markets don’t blow up (though I still expect that
correction), gold stocks should put in a leveraged performance much more
impressive than the bullion price itself.
There will be consolidations and corrections along the way, but I
think there will be many gold explorers and developers that rack up
share price gains in the hundreds of percent. That doesn’t mean buying
blindly and never trading. We still need to adjust when a stock gets
overweight and manage risk around major exploration campaigns. The last
few weeks has been a lot more fun in the resource space. I don’t think
the fun’s over yet. Enjoy the ride.
Like any good contrarian, a 10-year bull market makes me alert of
signs of potential trouble. As noted at the start of this editorial, I’m
expecting continues floods of liquidity. That may simply overwhelm
everything else for a while and allow Wall St to keep rallying, come
what may.
That said, a couple of data points recently got my attention. One is
more of a sentiment indicator, seen in the chart below. More than one
wag has joked that the Fed need only worry about Wall St, since the
stock market is the economy now. Turns out there is more than a bit of
truth to that.
The chart shows the US Leading Indicator reading with the level of
the stock market (which is a component of the official Leading
Indicator) removed. As you can see, without Wall St, the indicator
implies zero growth going forward. I’m mainly showing it as evidence of
just how surreal things have become.
The chart above is something to keep an eye on going forward. It
shows weekly State unemployment claims for several major sectors of the
economy. What’s interesting about this chart is that claims have been
climbing rapidly over the past few weeks. Doubly interesting is that the
increase in claims is broad, both within and across several sectors of
the economy.
I take the monthly Non-Farm Payroll number less seriously than most,
because it’s a backward-looking indicator. This move in unemployment
claims looks increasingly like a trend though. It’s now at its highest
level since the Financial Crisis.
It’s not in the danger zone-yet. But its climbing fast. We may need
to start paying more attention to those payroll numbers. If the chart
below isn’t a statistical fluke, we may start seeing negative surprises
in the NFP soon. That won’t hurt the gold price either.
Source and Thanks: https://www.hraadvisory.com/golds-big-picture
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at 9:37 AM on Friday, January 17th, 2020
Cardston, Alberta–(January 17, 2020) – American Creek Resources Ltd.
(TSXV: AMK) (OTC Pink: ACKRF) (“American Creek”) (“the Corporation”)
would like to cordially invite you to visit us at Booth #435 at the Vancouver Resource Investment Conference
(VRIC) to be held at the Vancouver Convention Centre West (1055 Canada
Place, Vancouver) on Sunday January 19th – Monday January 20th, 2020.
The Vancouver Resource Investment Conference has been the bellwether
of the junior mining market for the last twenty-five years. It is the
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Roundup held in Convention Center with sails and VRIC held in Convention Center with grass.
We also invite you to visit us on Wednesday January 22nd and Thursday January 23rd at Booth #1024, in the Core Shack at the Association for Mineral Exploration (AME) Roundup’s 37th annual conference held at the Vancouver Convention Centre East, under the sails of Canada Place.
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For further information please contact Kelvin Burton at: Phone: 403 752-4040 or Email: [email protected]. Information relating to the Corporation is available on its website at www.americancreek.com
Posted by AGORACOM
at 9:32 AM on Friday, January 17th, 2020
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