Source: Peter Krauth for Streetwise Reports 01/04/2021
In investing, as in life, perspective is everything.
To some, gold at $1,525 as we started out 2020 seemed expensive. Today, it’s trading at $1,940, producing a 27% gain.
And yet, from several viewpoints, gold still looks cheap at current prices. Debt, easy money and geopolitical risks are ever present. And these have all been tough on the U.S. dollar. Ongoing weakness in the greenback looks set to continue, providing a huge tailwind for gold prices.
So much, well beyond the kitchen sink, has been thrown at trying to support the economy and kick-start activity. Yet we can’t ignore vital indicators. Negative-yielding debt levels, ongoing negative real interest rates and anemic money velocity despite exploding money supply mean rising hard asset prices look inevitable.
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I think 2021 will see these trends continue. As a result, I expect gold will not only regain its all-time high set in August, but establish a markedly higher new record level this year.
As a result, gold at $1,940 is likely to look like a bargain by the end of 2021.
Economic Activity Is Weak, For Now
Some charts are important for investors to know and understand. But few, if any, surpass a comparison of real interest rates with the price of gold. One thing is certain, gold investors need to keep a close watch on it.
The visibly high negative correlation between these two assets is undeniable.
As a result, investors need to ask themselves what direction they think real rates will follow from here. I’d simply like to point out that, since late 2019 when real rates crossed into negative territory then headed sharply lower, kicked off a big rally in gold.
If someone argues that gold doesn’t pay a dividend, you can tell them neither do many “safe” bonds, which now lose money instead.
Global negative yielding debt is close to an all-time record of its own, nearing $18 trillion as we begin 2021. How long are pension funds and other institutional investors likely to keep pushing such bonds higher when they guarantee the holder a negative return, even before accounting for inflation?
If ever there was a clear bubble, this could well be it.
And finally, a look at M2 Money Supply versus the Velocity of that money is also very revealing.
It took a huge expansion in M2 just to get velocity to tick higher. By all accounts, the Fed needs the velocity to pick up, and has limited means to achieve that. But with Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) rapidly gaining acceptance, weak velocity could reverse in a marked way as the government itself fires up spending.
With all this in mind, it’s not a shocker to see gold performing well, and likely to continue doing so.
Gold’s Heading in the Right Direction
After multiple years of consolidation, gold surpassed its 2011 nominal high, and is closing in on its all-time high established in August.
Now gold appears to be breaking out from its downward trend channel, which started back in August.
We can see not only that the RSI and Momentum indicators confirm a bottom in late November, but also that the gold price has been mostly above its 50-day moving average since mid-December.
And looking at the gold stocks to gold ratio, some progress is appearing there as well.
The ratio has been establishing higher low and lower highs, with support from the momentum indicators since late November. I expect a breakout soon to the upside, which will likely confirm both higher gold stocks and probably also higher gold prices.
Additionally, we have the Gold Miners Bullish Percent Index, which also turned higher in mid-December, suggesting a new upleg for gold stocks since reversing from a low of 35.
Americans are unemployed at the highest rate since the Great Depression. The Fed is hell bent on destroying the dollar (it has no other choice). And with interest rates at zero, investors are effectively being forced to take on risk or lose purchasing power.
This confluence of factors continues to shine brightly on hard assets in general, and gold and gold stocks in particular. Gold’s bull market has plenty of upside ahead. A few month’s correction like we’ve just experienced should not dissuade you. Instead, that needs to be used to reassess and buy the dip, if need be.
Being well informed provides perspective. And perspective helps make better decisions.
Gold’s clearly done correcting and is still cheap. I think we’ll see $2,300 gold in 2021. Enjoy this next rally.
–Peter Krauth
Peter Krauth is a former portfolio adviser and a 20-year veteran of the resource market, with special expertise in energy, metals and mining stocks. He has been editor of a widely circulated resource newsletter, and contributed numerous articles to Kitco.com, BNN Bloomberg and the Financial Post. Krauth holds a Master of Business Administration from McGill University and is headquartered in resource-rich Canada.
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