Despite the decline this past week, gold seems to be regaining favor
with global investors, as just a week earlier it had been flirting with
the $1,800 an ounce mark. Quite a change from the sentiment in early
summer when some investors were questioning whether the yellow metal’s
decade-long bull run was coming to a close.
The rebound in investor sentiment toward gold, of course, coincided
with the launching of open-ended QE3 (or QE infinity) by the Federal
Reserve. Since then gold has “barely paused for breath. It has, as
discussed previously, touched all-time highs in terms of euros or Swiss
francs.
QE3 certainly seemed to worry some investors. These people moving
into gold are concerned about things such as competitive devaluations
and the debasement of currencies in an attempt to pay back enormous debt
loads with a cheaper currency. This road – currency debasement –
eventually leads to inflation most believe.
So it is really is not surprising that, according to UBS, investors
in exchange traded funds raised their holdings by 158 tons since the
beginning of August to a record 2,681 tons of bullion recently.
Many of the world’s best investors are in agreement with the average
person putting his or her money into gold. The list of names is
impressive: George Soros, John Paulson, Ray Dalio and Bill Gross.
Ray Dalio, founder and chief investment officer of Bridgewater
Associates – the world’s largest macro hedge fund, told CNBC viewers
recently: “Gold should be part of everybody’s portfolio. We have a
situation now when you have too much debt. Too much debt leads to the
printing of money to make it easier to service. All of those things mean
that some portion [of a portfolio] should be in gold.”
Dalio’s conclusion? “Only gold and real assets would survive.”
All of this positive macro news about gold has managed to influence
the gold chart too. According to asset manager Blackrock, “the gold
chart has turned decidedly bullish.” Blackrock was speaking about the
so-called “golden cross”. That occurs when the 50-day moving average
moves above the 200-day moving average.
Blackrock noted that the last time gold’s chart looked so good was
shortly after the Federal Reserve announced QE1, the first round of
money printing. It said that if gold does the same thing it did back
then, the price of the precious metal will hit $2,400 an ounce by next
summer. Of course, macro factors like Chinese and Indian demand for
physical gold will play a major role in whether we reach those lofty
levels.
While I am bullish on gold longer term the chart patterns, volume and
sentiment for both gold and silver are overwhelmingly bearish looking
for the next couple weeks. I sharp pullback is likely to unfold before
they take another run at resistance and breakout to new highs.
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