Will Precious Metals Survive the Double Dip?
by
John Browne
Euro
Pacific Capital
Recently
by John Browne: Suiting
Up for a Post-Dollar World
It is rare
in recent history for precious metals to appreciate in parallel
with the broader stock market. Yet, this has been the case in the
two years since the stock market began crawling out of the wreckage
of the 2008 financial crisis. Although metals have vastly outperformed
US equities over that time frame, it is noteworthy that stocks have
gone up at all. Since January 2, 2009, the S&P 500 stock index
is up just about 50%. Over the same time, gold is up 68% and silver
is up a staggering 267%. With rising interest rates, oil at over
$100 a barrel, and the recovery running out of steam, many investors
are wisely asking if the markets are set for a sharp pullback. Given
the correlation that we have seen across asset classes, some are
making the seemingly logical conclusion that metal prices are vulnerable.
The results
of 2008 loom large in many calculations. In the second half of that
year, when the extent of the financial catastrophe emerged into
the light of day, the S&P 500 dropped some 31%. At the same
time, gold dropped by more than 7% and silver almost 39%. Recent
volatility in the shares of gold and silver mining stocks reveal
that the fear of such reversals may be a growing concern among investors.
But one example
does not a rule make, especially the example of a panic rush into
dollars and US Treasuries. Wise long-term investors make decisions
based upon fundamentals, and those for precious metals remain strong.
Throughout
history, precious metals, especially gold, have been seen as a store
of wealth and a hedge against inflation. But the assumption that
gold is always negatively correlated with the stock market is incorrect.
Rather, gold is negatively correlated with stability. For all intents
and purposes, gold is equivalent to cash in a portfolio. In that
role, it competes with the major fiat currencies.
Gold's rise
has thus been driven by cash demand on two fronts.
First, while
US savers have been pushed into the stock market in search of yield
for a couple decades, the underlying value of the US dollar has
deteriorated. This has driven more investors to allocate the cash
portion of their portfolios to precious metals, even while the S&P
rises. Both of these dynamics are motivated by the Fed's low interest
rate policies since the early 1980s.
But a policy
that causes precious metals and the stock market to correlate on
the upside will cause them to diverge on the downside. As the Fed
is forced to tighten interest rates, stocks will take the brunt
of slowing economic activity. Still, we don't expect the Fed to
be able to tighten to the level that real interest rates rise, i.e.
bank interest pays more than the rate of inflation, because this
could cause the federal government to default on its debts and further
harm the teetering housing market. In an environment of negative
real interest rates, gold should continue to rise.
The second
front driving cash demand is the explosive growth of Asian markets.
Traditionally, certain cultures, such as in India and China, have
favored gold and silver as both a display and as a store of wealth.
As wealth has been accumulated fast in these countries, their demand
for gold has increased greatly. In addition, their central banks
and those of other nations, such as Russia, also have been massive
buyers of gold in recent months. This trend is a continued bullish
indicator for precious metals regardless of how the US markets perform.
How might these
two factors ultimately benefit gold and silver?
There is a
growing realization that recent economic growth has been financed
by huge Federal Reserve subsidies. This has built up bullish momentum
in the metals market that should continue until real interest rates
turn positive. And even if interest rates do rise (which could be
a negative for metals) prices of existing Treasuries will fall.
Investors selling at a loss may turn to precious metals as an alternate
safe haven.
Meanwhile,
important international interest rates are already rising, including
in such key economies as China, Australia and in the EU. These moves
should channel the inflationary impact of QE and artificially low
U.S. interest rates back into the dollar, thereby exerting upward
pressure on the dollar prices of precious metals.
However, what
may be the single greatest upward price pressure is the increasing
fear of a debt crisis leading to a currency collapse. It is important
to recognize that, at $1,470 an ounce, gold stands at only some
61 percent of the present value of its 1980 all-time high of $850,
which, adjusted for inflation, is some $2,400 an ounce. Given the
frail state of the US economy today, the chance of a local collapse
is much higher than in 1980, when America was the world's largest
creditor - instead of its largest debtor.
Therefore,
it appears that, despite some volatility, the price of precious
metals could be set for a continued rise, and the stock market for
a steep fall. Indeed, if inflation materializes at rates equal to
those of 1980, a gold price above $2,400 looks feasible. Should
it be accompanied by increased fears of a debt crisis and a threat
of collapse in the US dollar, far higher prices could be in store.
April
18, 2011
John
Browne is senior market strategist for Euro Pacific Capital.
Copyright
© 2011 Euro Pacific Capital
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