"The history of Eureka lies in its future." - Lambert Molinelli, 1878

DISCLOSURE

The author/editor of the Eureka Miner owns common shares of local mining stocks, McEwen Mining (MUX) and General Moly (GMO). Please do your own research, markets can turn on you faster than a feral cat.

Friday, February 22, 2019

Gold Flirts with $1,350, Red Metal Rocks; Elephant Dance, Barrick & Newmont; McEwen Reports


Red Metal Rocks, Mariana Titus (2011)

Friday, February 22, 2019 AM

Next Week Target Gold Price: $1,340 per ounce, Target Silver Price: $15.96 per ounce.
High/Low range: $1,352/$1,314 per ounce

My 2019 Beer Bet: Gold will rise above $1,380 per ounce by May Day 2019

Morning Miners!

Where to begin? A great week for the metals as corporate elephants begin to dance.

Let's start with copper. Today, the red metal rocked on the London Metal Exchange (LME) to $6,458 per tonne, the highest level since last July. That's $2.93 per pound coming very close to the key-$3 per pound level. Comex copper followed, trading within a penny or two of the LME this morning - up nearly 5% for the week. Most of this pop comes from improving sentiment about the ongoing U.S./China trade negotiations.

Comex gold was no slouch either coming within a whisker of the $1,350-level Wednesday ($1,349.4), currently trading currently at $1,331.5 per ounce. This is how I framed the outlook for Kitco News this morning:

Even with currents of optimism flowing, the broader view of declining global growth keeps safe haven plays like gold in gear. This is allied by a whiff of commodity inflation with higher oil prices and copper just below the key $3 per pound level - the broader Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOM) is once again above 170, a high for 2019. Inflation expectations are also picking up keeping 10-year real rates suppressed below 1%. This provides an improving environment for gold investors. [see inflation expectation chart]

Gold also outpaced major currencies euro and yen this week and reaffirmed its positive correlation with a strengthening Chinese yuan - a very strong currency showing for the Lustrous One. [see currency charts]

[full report is included below]

Here is a new gold model based on the the Japanese yen (USD/JPY), 10-year real rates and the Chinese yuan (USD/CNY). It demonstrates good accuracy over a three-month period. The estimation error is less than 1% and explains all but 7% of the variance in gold price (in statistical terms R-squared = 0.924 which is quite good). This suggests gold is transitioning from a pure safe-haven play to more currency-like behavior with a strong correlation with the yuan:

(click on chart for larger image)

Keep the faith! Gold will go further up the stairs in 2019.

This mornings' price action:

Comex gold (4/19 contract) $1,331.5 per ounce, 
Comex silver (3/19 contract) $15.860 per ounce
Comex copper (3/19 contract) $2.9360 per pound

Have a good weekend!

My latest Kitco News commentaries:



Elephant Dance, Barrick & Newmont

On the corporate front, Barrick Gold (GOLD) acknowledged it has reviewed the possibility of a merger with Newmont Mining (NEM) in an all-stock transaction. You may remember Barrick and Newmont came close to merging before but talks in 2014 broke down. The two giant miners have also discussed a joint venture for their Nevada operations.The chief executives of these two giants  and Newcrest Mining (OTCPK:NCMGY), a potential partner in a merger deal, will all be in Florida next week for a BMO Capital Markets mining conference. Hmm....

McEwen Mining Reports

Yesterday released their report for 2018:


TORONTO, Feb. 21, 2019 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- McEwen Mining Inc. (NYSE: MUX) (TSX: MUX) today reported fourth quarter and full year results for the period ended December 31, 2018. For the year, McEwen Mining achieved record production of 175,640 gold equivalent ounces(1) (“GEOs”), at cash costs of $817(2) per GEO and all-in sustaining costs (“AISC”) of $1,002 per GEO. Our 2019 production guidance is 210,000 GEOs, a 20% increase over 2018 production, at average cash costs and AISC per GEO of $877 and $1,034, respectively. 

During 2018, we invested heavily in areas that we believe will enhance our future growth and profitability. We invested $35 million in exploration, $66 million in construction at the Gold Bar Mine in Nevada, and $10 million to advance our Fenix and Los Azules projects. As a result we are reporting a consolidated net loss for 2018 of $45 million, or $0.13 per share. At December 31, 2018 we had cash and liquid assets of $38 million, including cash and restricted cash of $31 million. In August 2018 we raised $50 million in debt to fund construction of the Gold Bar Mine. We decided to debt finance a portion of the required capital rather than issuing equity because we strongly believed that higher gold and silver prices were close at hand, and that our share price should improve as a result.

McEwen stock (MUX) is above the $2-level at $2.01 per share. 

Inflation Watch

Inflation expectations made a 2018 high April 23, 2018 above trend lines of higher lows (dotted lines, click on chart for larger size). But now those trend lines have been broken dramatically to the downside as shown in this chart:

10-year Inflation Expectations

Note: In the above chart inflation expectations peaked at 2.14% February 2, 2018 and then moved higher April 23 to 2.18%. May 29 dramatically broke a trend line of higher-lows falling to 2.04%. This Wednesday expectations are picking up more momentum at 1.89%. The older trend lines of higher-lows are shown in dark blue. Those trends extend from June 21, 2017 low of 1.66%. Currently, we are recovering from the January 3 low of 1.68% and now above the level of November 27, 2017 (red dashed line).

My latest Kitco News commentary explains the importance of tracking "real rates" which are a function of inflation expectations:


Interest rates and inflation numbers going forward are greatly influenced by central bank policy worldwide. This Kitco commentary discusses what some of the moving parts are as well as useful indicators - watch the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) and euro/yen cross rate:

The Gartman Gold Trade Revisited (Kitco News, 2/14/2018)

Several of the charts in these columns are updated in this report.

 Old Glory
Eureka, Nevada

Scorecard 

Here's a scorecard on where we stand with some of our favorite metals. 

Intraday highs on the Comex futures exchange (note new continuous chart baseline): 

Gold $1,365.4 per ounce (continuous chart April, 2018)
Silver $18.160 per ounce (continuous chart September 2017))
Copper $3.2955 per pound ($7,265 per tonne, continuous chart December 2017)



Comex copper is very bullishly trading up from last Friday at $2.9360 per pound ($6,473 per tonne), now  only 10.9% below the December 2017 high. Maintaining prices above $6,000 per tonne is a key benchmark to price recovery. 

Improving global growth had kept the red metal above the key $3 per pound-level in 2017. Initial trade war fears in 2018 dipped the red metal below this mark but copper then rebounded above $3. Current trade war tensions with China and deteriorating economic conditions there coupled with a strong U.S. dollar have sent the red metal plummeting. However, copper is now technically only in correction territory (i.e. 10% down) given recent optimism about a U.S./China trade deal this spring.

Total copper stored in LME and Nymex warehouses is 0.204 million tonnes and is more than one-half below the 0.5 million tonne mark of early-2018. The Nymex warehouse tonnage is behind the LME and now considerably below the 100,000 tonne mark.

LME inventories are falling again after January gains: 


It is instructive to keep our eyes on the Nymex inventories which are still falling (LME 139,500 versus Nymex 65,119 tonnes):


My Input to Kitco News 

Next Week target gold price $1,340 per ounce. Target silver price $15.96 per ounce.

Here is my input to the Kitco News Weekly Gold Report:

Gold continues to show good resilience as market sentiment improves and global stock markets make gains with increasing optimism regarding U.S./China negotiations. Notably, the yellow metal made a dash at the $1,350-level Wednesday, retreated to this week's low yesterday at $1,323.3 per ounce (Comex, 4/19) only to find itself back in the middle of the range trading around $1,330 this morning.

What's up?

Even with currents of optimism flowing, the broader view of declining global growth keeps safe haven plays like gold in gear. This is allied by a whiff of commodity inflation with higher oil prices and copper just below the key $3 per pound level - the broader Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOM) is once again above 170, a high for 2019*. Inflation expectations are also picking up keeping 10-year real rates suppressed below 1%**. This provides an improving environment for gold investors.

Gold also outpaced major currencies euro and yen this week and reaffirmed its positive correlation with a strengthening Chinese yuan - a very strong currency showing for the Lustrous One.

I believe we remain on a push-pull path to the $1,380-level by spring flowers. Next week should show further progress with a target price of $1,340 per ounce with silver following at $15.96 per ounce. 

* BCOM 159.72 (12/31/2018), currently 171.58
** currently inflation expectations are 1.89% compared to the January bottom of 1.68% (1/13/2019), source: FRED; 10-year real rate = 0.75% (Bloomberg)

Additional Note:

The fate of the Chinese yuan remains a key tell for gold and copper; a material drop in valuation could impact copper negatively. Something to watch: the yuan dramatically weakened from mid-April 2018 and now appears to be strengthening again.

The yuan stayed below 7.0 USD/CNY for 2018, starting stronger  and then followed by a weakening trend. It has re-strengthened in 2019. The yuan is currently at 6.7149 USD/CNY but with still a lot of daylight above the March 26, 2018 low (i.e. much stronger level) of 6.2342. A 1-month yuan volatility is a low 0.35%. Something to watch compared to 1-month volatilities of euro and yen.

The euro & yen 1-month volatilites are 0.54% & 0.53% respectively; Comex gold 1-month volatility is elevated at 1.12%.

Weekly Summary February 22, 2019



Yearly Summary for 2018


(click on table for larger size)

Although Comex gold price lost some steam in 2018 (down 2.1%) it made healthy gains on key commodities copper and oil (up 22.8% & 30.2%). Against the broader Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOMTR:IND), it advanced a respectable 10.3%. 

Importantly the yellow metal outpaced the S&P 500 stock index by 4.3% making it a better investment than domestic stocks for 2019. This leaves gold it in a strong position for 2019.

Only the Japanese yen, an alternative safe haven, fared better by gaining 4.1% over gold for the year.

Yearly Summary for 2017


(click on table for larger size)

Comex gold gained nearly 14% for 2017 but was outpaced by Comex copper that enjoyed a 32% uptick in price. Comex silver lagged both for a  respectable 7.2% gain. Overall, gold gained 12% on the broader Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOMTR:IND) which includes everything from crude oil to things that oink. In terms of major currencies, gold in terms of yen advanced almost 10% but slipped 0.4% relative to the strengthening euro.

Although gold slipped 5% in value relative to the S&P 500 it was not a bad year at all for the yellow metal!



Gold Price Outlook for 2019 (1H)

My 2019 Beer Bet: Gold will rise above $1,380 per ounce by May Day 2019

The first-half of 2019 will be a push-pull to higher $1,380+ gold prices underpinned by a trend of higher lows. This outlook is based on a weakening U.S. dollar and real interest rates that have peaked for the near-term against a volatile backdrop of Washington and geopolitical uncertainty.

Over the last five years, gold has been negatively correlated with 10-year real rates 71% of the time. This is reassuring given the popular assumption about opportunity cost for holding a gold position – the higher real rates go, the more costly to keep a non-interest bearing asset like gold. Falling real rates support rising gold prices and vice-versa. Less often, more dominant drivers are at play and gold price appears insensitive to changes in real rates. The low gold price volatility from mid-April to late-September is a good example. Over this time, the yellow metal behaved as a currency. It was highly correlated with the Chinese yuan; to a lesser degree, the euro and yen; and much less, to real rates. 

Which case will be true for the first half of 2019? My latest Kitco Commentary posits the former to be the most likely which is bullish for gold:


In addition to real rates, other important charts to monitor are the gold-to-S&P500 or AUSP (see "Chart to Watch" below) and gold in terms of major currencies euro and Japanese yen (directly below). An explanation of the charts below is given in this Kitco News column:

The Gartman Gold Trade Revisited (Kitco News, 2/14/2018)

Gold value for all three currencies is trending higher after a double-bottom for gold in U.S. dollar terms (August 17 & September 27, 2018) 

Click on the image for a larger size:


Gold in euro & yen terms with margin above 2013 lows

Divergence has resumed for gold in terms of euro compared to yen:



Gold euro/yen spread widens again in 2018

Note for currency buffs: Value parity in the above chart occurs when the EUR/JPY cross rate is 139.24; something to watch for - presently 125.42 suggesting continued divergence from parity.

Chart to Watch

Here's a chart to watch for 2018. Click on the image for a larger size:


Gold-to-S&P 500 Ratio

An important gold ratio is gold-to-S&P500 or AUSP. The ratio bottomed in early-December of 2015 and reversed to a bullish trend, peaking February 11, 2016 (0.6849). It bottomed December 20, 2016 (0.4973) trended higher but then bearishly bottomed again December, 12, 2017 (0.4661) and again October 1, 2018 (0.4063). Currently this AM the AUSP is at 0.4782 and below the recent high of 0.5409 set at the close December 21, 2018. Importantly, the ratio had bullishly broken the upper rail (dotted green line) of the downward trending channel but is now falling back to that boundary. Falling below would be a bearish signal for gold.

Cheers,

Colonel Possum & Mariana



Photos by Mariana Titus if not otherwise noted.

Friday, February 15, 2019

Gold Touches $1,323: McEwen Gold Bar All-In Cost $975, 7.4 Year Mine life

Historic Jackson Mine, "Old Shaft"
Eureka, Nevada
(click on map for larger image, 2014)

Friday, February 15, 2019 AM

Next Week Target Gold Price: $1,315 per ounce, Target Silver Price: $15.56 per ounce.
High/Low range: $1,332/$1,295 per ounce

Old Timer Quiz: How did the Jackson Mine become a key milestone in Eureka history? 

My 2019 Beer Bet: Gold will rise above $1,380 per ounce before May Day 2019

Morning Miners!

Another good week for gold. Like the Energizer Bunny, the yellow metal "keeps going" in 2019. As I have said before, it will be a push-pull to $1,380 per ounce before spring flowers and we're off to a good start. 


This morning Comex gold touched $1,323.1 per ounce before pulling back to trade around $1,320 and will likely consolidate to the $1,315-level next week. That's the push and pull. Be patient, we're heading higher soon on the back of a 2.5-month uptrend.

Kitco News Allen Sykora included my thoughts in his Weekly Gold Survey:

Richard Baker is one of the analysts who sees a temporary pullback in gold, calling for consolidation of the recent gains. He pointed out that the metal had a good week despite a strong dollar and gains in U.S. equities...

He said 10-year inflation expectations are rising again from the early-January bottom, stabilizing real rates below [1%]. “This is a bullish tailwind for gold going forward,” Baker said. “However, there is probably some consolidation ahead next week before a move higher to the retake the January high ($1,331.10).”

My complete Kitco News report is included below.

Here is a new gold model based on the the Japanese yen (USD/JPY), 10-year real rates and the Chinese yuan (USD/CNY). It demonstrates good accuracy over a three-month period. The estimation error is less than 1% and explains all but 7% of the variance in gold price (in statistical terms R-squared = 0.927 which is quite good). This suggests gold is transitioning from a pure safe-haven play to more currency-like behavior with a strong correlation with the yuan:

(click on chart for larger image)

Keep the faith! Gold will go further up the stairs in 2019.

This mornings' price action:

Comex gold (4/19 contract) $1,320.0 per ounce, 
Comex silver (3/19 contract) $15.615 per ounce
Comex copper (3/19 contract) $2.6770 per pound

Have a good weekend!

My latest Kitco News commentaries:



McEwen Mining Gold Bar Mine Update

Here is the latest good news on the McEwen Mining Gold Bar Mine:


TORONTO, Feb. 05, 2019 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- McEwen Mining Inc. (NYSE: MUX) (TSX: MUX) is pleased to report that construction of the Gold Bar Mine in Nevada’s prolific Battle Mountain-Cortez Trend is nearing completion, just 14 months after breaking ground in November 2017.

The Mine is on schedule for inaugural gold production in late February 2019. Commercial production will follow when the Mine’s systems reach a steady state, which is expected by the end of Q1. The project is tracking on our original capital cost estimate of $81.4 million. 150,000 tons of ore have been placed on the heap leach pad since starting in December 2018. A few weeks ago leaching was initiated and gold is being dissolved by the cyanide solution at the desired rate. We estimate that the Gold Bar Mine will produce 55,000 ounces (oz) gold in 2019 at an all-in cost of approximately US$975 per ounce.

December and January were challenging months on site with heavy snow and cold temperatures delaying some work. Remaining activities to complete the process plant include electrical work, instrumentation installation, and commissioning of the gold refinery circuit. We would like to thank all our employees and subcontractors for their dedication to the job at hand whatever the conditions. 2018 exploration drilling has extended the estimated mine life to 7.4 years. 

The future addition of the Gold Bar South resource to the mine plan should further extend the mine life by a minimum of one year. Our 2019 exploration budget on the Gold Bar property is $4.4 million. Exploration drilling will target both near surface and deep Carlin-type mineralization.

Inflation Watch

Inflation expectations made a 2018 high April 23, 2018 above trend lines of higher lows (dotted lines, click on chart for larger size). But now those trend lines have been broken dramatically to the downside as shown in this chart:

10-year Inflation Expectations

Note: In the above chart inflation expectations peaked at 2.14% February 2, 2018 and then moved higher April 23 to 2.18%. May 29 dramatically broke a trend line of higher-lows falling to 2.04%. This Wednesday expectations are picking up more steam at 1.86%. The older trend lines of higher-lows are shown in dark blue. Those trends extend from June 21, 2017 low of 1.66%. Currently, we are recovering from the January 3 low of 1.68% and now above the level of November 27, 2017 (red dashed line).

My latest Kitco News commentary explains the importance of tracking "real rates" which are a function of inflation expectations:


Interest rates and inflation numbers going forward are greatly influenced by central bank policy worldwide. This Kitco commentary discusses what some of the moving parts are as well as useful indicators - watch the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) and euro/yen cross rate:

The Gartman Gold Trade Revisited (Kitco News, 2/14/2018)

Several of the charts in these columns are updated in this report.

 Old Glory
Eureka, Nevada

Scorecard 

Here's a scorecard on where we stand with some of our favorite metals. 

Intraday highs on the Comex futures exchange (note new continuous chart baseline): 

Gold $1,365.4 per ounce (continuous chart April, 2018)
Silver $18.160 per ounce (continuous chart September 2017))
Copper $3.2955 per pound ($7,265 per tonne, continuous chart December 2017)



Comex copper is bullishly trading up from last Friday at $2.6770 per pound ($5.901 per tonne), now  18.8% below the December 2017 high. Maintaining prices above $6,000 per tonne is a key benchmark to price recovery. 

Improving global growth had kept the red metal above the key $3 per pound-level in 2017. Initial trade war fears in 2018 dipped the red metal below this mark but copper then rebounded above $3. Current trade war tensions with China and deteriorating economic conditions there coupled with a strong U.S. dollar have sent the red metal plummeting. Copper is technically moving back toward territory (i.e. down 20% or more) even with recent optimism about a U.S./China trade deal this spring . 

The Caixin/Markit Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for December fell to 49.7 from 50.2 in November, marking the first contraction since May 2017. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast only a marginal dip from November to 50.1, just above the neutral 50-mark dividing expansion from contraction on a monthly basis. (Reuters 1/1/2019)

Update (1/21/2019): China GDP for 2018 was a slower 6.6% with the last quarter at an annualized 6.4% - the slowest quarter since 1990!

Earlier this in January China inflation numbers fell below expert expectations further suggesting a slowing Chinese economy (CPI 1.9% year-on-year versus 2.1% expected). 

Update (1/14/2019): The U.S. dollar value of China imports fell 7.6% year-over-year versus an expectation of 5.0%. The is the largest pullback in two years underling the impact of U.S. tariffs

Freeport McMoRan (FCX) CEO Richard Adkerson made two important observations on copper late last year:
  1. Freeport is a victim of the U.S.-China trade tensions which are prompting them and other mining companies to defer investments in new projects, and “that will add to this impending supply gap situation for the industry.” 
  2. He also noted that speculators are bearish about copper “due to macro-drivers, and this is having a significant impact on price.”
Total copper stored in LME and Nymex warehouses is 0.220 million tonnes and is more than one-half below the 0.5 million tonne mark of early-2018. The Nymex warehouse tonnage is behind the LME and now considerably below the 100,000 tonne mark.

LME inventories are leveling off again after January gains: 


It is instructive to keep our eyes on the Nymex inventories which are still falling (LME 147,900 versus Nymex 72,417 tonnes):


My Input to Kitco News 

Next Week target gold price $1,315 per ounce. Target silver price $15.56 per ounce.

Here is my input to the Kitco News Weekly Gold Report:

Gold had a good week despite a strong U.S. dollar and rising domestic stock markets. Earlier this month, the U.S. dollar index [DXY] bounced off its 200-day average like a rubber ball* as the U.S. economy signaled strength relative to the rest of the world and on optimism about U.S./China trade negotiations. 

Gold remains resilient transitioning from a purely safe haven play earlier this year to more currency-like behavior. It has regained a strong correlation to the Chinese yuan and gained value on the week relative to both the Japanese yen and euro. 10-year inflation expectations are on the rise again from their early-January bottom** stabilizing real rates nicely below 1%***. This is a bullish tailwind for gold going forward. However, there is probably some consolidation ahead next week before a move higher to the retake the January high ($1,331.1).

My gold target is $1,315 per ounce with silver following at $15.56 per ounce.

My latest 3-month gold model based on the Chinese yuan, Japanese yen and 10-year real rates indicates an upper bound of $1,332 and lower bound of $1,295. The expected mean price is $1,313.[see plot in headline discussion]  

* Today DXY = 97.08 versus 200-day moving average 95.86
** currently inflation expectations are 1.86% compared to the January bottom of 1.68% (1/13/2019), source: FRED
*** 10-year real rate = 0.80%, source: Bloomberg

Additional Note:

The fate of the Chinese yuan remains a key tell for gold and copper; a material drop in valuation could impact copper negatively. Something to watch: the yuan dramatically weakened from mid-April 2018 and now appears to be stabilizing below 7.0 USD/CNY again.

The yuan stayed below 7.0 USD/CNY for 2018, starting stronger  and then followed by a weakening trend. It has re-strengthened in 2019. The yuan is currently at 6.7644 USD/CNY but with still a lot of daylight above the March 26, 2018 low (i.e. much stronger level) of 6.2342. A 1-month yuan volatility is a low 0.38%. Something to watch compared to 1-month volatilities of euro and yen.

The euro & yen 1-month volatilites are 0.53% & 0.50% respectively; Comex gold 1-month volatility is elevated at 1.14%.

Weekly Summary February 15, 2019



Yearly Summary for 2018


(click on table for larger size)

Although Comex gold price lost some steam in 2018 (down 2.1%) it made healthy gains on key commodities copper and oil (up 22.8% & 30.2%). Against the broader Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOMTR:IND), it advanced a respectable 10.3%. 

Importantly the yellow metal outpaced the S&P 500 stock index by 4.3% making it a better investment than domestic stocks for 2019. This leaves gold it in a strong position for 2019.

Only the Japanese yen, an alternative safe haven, fared better by gaining 4.1% over gold for the year.

Yearly Summary for 2017


(click on table for larger size)

Comex gold gained nearly 14% for 2017 but was outpaced by Comex copper that enjoyed a 32% uptick in price. Comex silver lagged both for a  respectable 7.2% gain. Overall, gold gained 12% on the broader Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOMTR:IND) which includes everything from crude oil to things that oink. In terms of major currencies, gold in terms of yen advanced almost 10% but slipped 0.4% relative to the strengthening euro.

Although gold slipped 5% in value relative to the S&P 500 it was not a bad year at all for the yellow metal!



Gold Price Outlook for 2019 (1H)

My 2019 Beer Bet: Gold will rise above $1,380 per ounce before May Day 2019

The first-half of 2019 will be a push-pull to higher $1,380+ gold prices underpinned by a trend of higher lows. This outlook is based on a weakening U.S. dollar and real interest rates that have peaked for the near-term against a volatile backdrop of Washington and geopolitical uncertainty.

Over the last five years, gold has been negatively correlated with 10-year real rates 71% of the time. This is reassuring given the popular assumption about opportunity cost for holding a gold position – the higher real rates go, the more costly to keep a non-interest bearing asset like gold. Falling real rates support rising gold prices and vice-versa. Less often, more dominant drivers are at play and gold price appears insensitive to changes in real rates. The low gold price volatility from mid-April to late-September is a good example. Over this time, the yellow metal behaved as a currency. It was highly correlated with the Chinese yuan; to a lesser degree, the euro and yen; and much less, to real rates. 

Which case will be true for the first half of 2019? My latest Kitco Commentary posits the former to be the most likely which is bullish for gold:


In addition to real rates, other important charts to monitor are the gold-to-S&P500 or AUSP (see "Chart to Watch" below) and gold in terms of major currencies euro and Japanese yen (directly below). An explanation of the charts below is given in this Kitco News column:

The Gartman Gold Trade Revisited (Kitco News, 2/14/2018)

Gold value for all three currencies is trending higher after a double-bottom for gold in U.S. dollar terms (August 17 & September 27, 2018) 

Click on the image for a larger size:


Gold in euro & yen terms with margin above 2013 lows

Divergence has resumed for gold in terms of euro compared to yen:



Gold euro/yen spread widens again in 2018

Note for currency buffs: Value parity in the above chart occurs when the EUR/JPY cross rate is 139.24; something to watch for - presently 124.6 suggesting divergence from parity.

Chart to Watch

Here's a chart to watch for 2018. Click on the image for a larger size:


Gold-to-S&P 500 Ratio

An important gold ratio is gold-to-S&P500 or AUSP. The ratio bottomed in early-December of 2015 and reversed to a bullish trend, peaking February 11, 2016 (0.6849). It bottomed December 20, 2016 (0.4973) trended higher but then bearishly bottomed again December, 12, 2017 (0.4661) and again October 1, 2018 (0.4063). Currently this AM the AUSP is at 0.4767 and below the recent high of 0.5409 set at the close December 21, 2018. Importantly, the ratio had bullishly broken the upper rail (dotted green line) of the downward trending channel but is now falling back to that boundary. Falling below would be a bearish signal for gold.

Cheers,

Colonel Possum & Mariana



Photos by Mariana Titus if not otherwise noted.

Friday, February 1, 2019

Gold $1,331 Finds Its Mojo, Resilient on Jobs Report, Up and Away

Back in the Day
Eureka, Nevada

Friday, February 2, 2019 AM

Next Week Target Gold Price: $1,310 per ounce, Target Silver Price: $15.86 per ounce.
High/Low range: $1,330/$1,300 per ounce

Old Timer Quiz: When did the Keyhole Bar first open?

My 2019 Beer Bet: Gold will rise above $1,380 per ounce before May Day 2019

Morning Miners!

Not a bad week for gold miners, pardner.

Using a baseball analogy, I forecast last Friday, "Gold at least gets a base hit to $1,300 next week after two strikes this month - maybe even a home run to $1,320!" BAM - a Comex high of $1,331.1 per ounce yesterday. This morning, gold has settled back to trade at $1,327. 

Here are my most recent thoughts on the yellow metal as relayed to Kitco News Editor Allen Sykora this morning:

Gold achieved escape velocity this week and is in safe orbit above the $1,300-level. A dovish FOMC statement removed the expectation gravity of aggressive Federal Reserve tightening and stronger U.S. dollar - at least for the time being. Bullishly, 10-year real rates have dropped 20 basis points this month and the U.S. Dollar Index continues to struggle to stay above its 200-day average. Gold made weekly gains against key commodities, major currencies and even recovering equity markets.

Today's much stronger-than-expected employment report moderates gold's advance some but the yellow metal is showing resilience this morning. I believe it likely that gold prices will consolidate around the $1,310-level next week before advancing higher in the coming weeks. It will succeed on its push-pull ascent to $1,380+ in the first-half of 2019. Silver will find support next week just below the $16-level. 

There is more supporting gold now than just the safe haven status of the last several months. Evidence for this is erosion of the tight correlation with the Japanese yen, an alternative safe haven, and with falling equities. The mantra of stocks-down-gold-up-yen-strong is giving way to days when stocks and gold advance together. Something to monitor closely [see next chart].

And what about that early morning employment report? Not bad at all after a lot of nervousness about the recent government shutdown. Headline unemployment nudged up to 4%  but, by a separate survey, 304,000 jobs were added in January.  Although there was a downward revision to the December numbers, the 3-month average is a healthy 241,000 per month. The U.S. economy is still purring even though global growth is slowing. Average hourly earnings were a tad disappointing, up 0.1% versus an expected 0.3%, but a 12-month gain of 3.2% is encouraging. Time to ask the boss for a raise.

 A detailed gold price analysis is presented in my latest Kitco News commentaries:



An updated chart from the latest commentary can be found next in below the next paragraph. Also, checkout the "Yearly Summary 2018" in chart form below.

My recent model of gold, based on the S&P 500, 10-year real rates and the Japanese yen (USD/JPY) was quite useful for predicting upper and lower bounds. The estimation error was less than 1% but alas, it blew up this week (tecnically when errors exceed 2-standard deviations or "sigma"). This tells us there is something new underpinning gold prices - stay tuned. (click on image or larger size):


Keep the faith! Gold will go further up the stairs in 2019.

This mornings' price action:

Comex gold (4/19 contract) $1,327.7 per ounce, 
Comex silver (3/19 contract) $16.070 per ounce
Comex copper (3/19 contract) $2.7785 per pound

Have a good weekend!

Inflation Watch

Inflation expectations made a 2018 high April 23, 2018 above trend lines of higher lows (dotted lines, click on chart for larger size). But now those trend lines have been broken dramatically to the downside as shown in this chart:

10-year Inflation Expectations

Note: In the above chart inflation expectations peaked at 2.14% February 2, 2018 and then moved higher April 23 to 2.18%. May 29 dramatically broke a trend line of higher-lows falling to 2.04%. This Wednesday expectations are picking up some steam at 1.84%. The older trend lines of higher-lows are shown in dark blue. Those trends extend from June 21, 2017 low of 1.66%. Currently, we are recovering from the January 3 low of 1.68% and slightly above the level of November 27, 2017 (red dashed line).

My latest Kitco News commentary explains the importance of tracking "real rates" which are a function of inflation expectations:


Interest rates and inflation numbers going forward are greatly influenced by central bank policy worldwide. This Kitco commentary discusses what some of the moving parts are as well as useful indicators - watch the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) and euro/yen cross rate:

The Gartman Gold Trade Revisited (Kitco News, 2/14/2018)

Several of the charts in this column are updated below.

 Old Glory
Eureka, Nevada

Scorecard 

Here's a scorecard on where we stand with some of our favorite metals. 

Intraday highs on the Comex futures exchange (note new continuous chart baseline): 

Gold $1,365.4 per ounce (continuous chart April, 2018)
Silver $18.160 per ounce (continuous chart September 2017))
Copper $3.2955 per pound ($7,265 per tonne, continuous chart December 2017)



Comex copper is bullishly trading up from last Friday at $2.7785 per pound ($6,126 per tonne), now  15.7% below the December 2017 high. Improving global growth had kept the red metal above the key $3 per pound-level. Initial trade war fears dipped the red metal below this mark but copper then rebounded above $3. Current trade war tensions with China and deteriorating economic conditions there coupled with a strong U.S. dollar have sent the red metal plummeting. Copper is technically moving away from bear territory (i.e. down 20% or more) on new optimism about a U.S./China trade deal this spring . 

The Caixin/Markit Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) for December fell to 49.7 from 50.2 in November, marking the first contraction since May 2017. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast only a marginal dip from November to 50.1, just above the neutral 50-mark dividing expansion from contraction on a monthly basis. (Reuters 1/1/2019)

Update (1/21/2019): China GDP for 2018 was a slower 6.6% with the last quarter at an annualized 6.4% - the slowest quarter since 1990!

Earlier this month China inflation numbers fell below expert expectations further suggesting a slowing Chinese economy (CPI 1.9% year-on-year versus 2.1% expected). 

Update (1/14/2019): The U.S. dollar value of China imports fell 7.6% year-over-year versus an expectation of 5.0%. The is the largest pullback in two years underling the impact of U.S. tariffs

Freeport McMoRan (FCX) CEO Richard Adkerson made two important observations on copper late last year:
  1. Freeport is a victim of the U.S.-China trade tensions which are prompting them and other mining companies to defer investments in new projects, and “that will add to this impending supply gap situation for the industry.” 
  2. He also noted that speculators are bearish about copper “due to macro-drivers, and this is having a significant impact on price.”
Total copper stored in LME and Nymex warehouses inched up this week to 0.235 million tonnes, but is more than one-half below the 0.5 million tonne mark of early-2018. The Nymex warehouse tonnage is behind the LME now below the 100,000 tonne mark.

LME inventories bumped up up this week


It is instructive to keep our eyes on the Nymex inventories which are still falling (LME 149,100 versus Nymex 85,970 tonnes):


My Input to Kitco News 

Next Week target gold price $1,310 per ounce. Target silver price $15.86 per ounce.

Here is my input to the Kitco News Weekly Gold Report:

Gold achieved escape velocity this week and is in safe orbit above the $1,300-level. A dovish FOMC statement removed the expectation gravity of aggressive Federal Reserve tightening and stronger U.S. dollar - at least for the time being. Bullishly, 10-year real rates have dropped 20 basis points this month and the U.S. Dollar Index continues to struggle to stay above its 200-day average. Gold made weekly gains against key commodities, major currencies and even recovering equity markets.

Today's much stronger-than-expected employment report moderates gold's advance some but the yellow metal is showing resilience this morning. I believe it likely that gold prices will consolidate around the $1,310-level next week before advancing higher in the coming weeks. It will succeed on its push-pull ascent to $1,380+ in the first-half of 2019. Silver will find support next week just below the $16-level. 

There is more supporting gold now than just the safe haven status of the last several months. Evidence for this is erosion of the tight correlation with the Japanese yen, an alternative safe haven, and with falling equities. The mantra of stocks-down-gold-up-yen-strong is giving way to days when stocks and gold advance together. Something to monitor closely.

Additional Note:

The fate of the Chinese yuan remains a key tell for gold and copper; a material drop in valuation could impact copper negatively. Something to watch: the yuan dramatically weakened from mid-April 2018 and now appears to be stabilizing below 7.0 USD/CNY again.

The yuan stayed below 7.0 USD/CNY for 2018, starting stronger  and then followed by a weakening trend. It has strengthened in 2019. The yuan is currently at 6.7310 USD/CNY putting a lot of daylight above the March 26, 2018 low (i.e. much stronger level) of 6.2342. A 1-month yuan volatility is 0.73%. Something to watch compared to 1-month volatilities of euro and yen.

The euro & yen 1-month volatilites are 0.49% & 0.49% respectively; Comex gold 1-month volatility is slightly elevated at 1.02%.

Weekly Summary February 2, 2019



Yearly Summary for 2018


(click on table for larger size)

Although Comex gold price lost some steam in 2018 (down 2.1%) it made healthy gains on key commodities copper and oil (up 22.8% & 30.2%). Against the broader Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOMTR:IND), it advanced a respectable 10.3%. 

Importantly the yellow metal outpaced the S&P 500 stock index by 4.3% making it a better investment than domestic stocks for 2019. This leaves gold it in a strong position for 2019.

Only the Japanese yen, an alternative safe haven, fared better by gaining 4.1% over gold for the year.

Yearly Summary for 2017


(click on table for larger size)

Comex gold gained nearly 14% for 2017 but was outpaced by Comex copper that enjoyed a 32% uptick in price. Comex silver lagged both for a  respectable 7.2% gain. Overall, gold gained 12% on the broader Bloomberg Commodity Index (BCOMTR:IND) which includes everything from crude oil to things that oink. In terms of major currencies, gold in terms of yen advanced almost 10% but slipped 0.4% relative to the strengthening euro.

Although gold slipped 5% in value relative to the S&P 500 it was not a bad year at all for the yellow metal!



Gold Price Outlook for 2019 (1H)

My 2019 Beer Bet: Gold will rise above $1,380 per ounce before May Day 2019

The first-half of 2019 will be a push-pull to higher $1,380+ gold prices underpinned by a trend of higher lows. This outlook is based on a weakening U.S. dollar and real interest rates that have peaked for the near-term against a volatile backdrop of Washington and geopolitical uncertainty.

Over the last five years, gold has been negatively correlated with 10-year real rates 71% of the time. This is reassuring given the popular assumption about opportunity cost for holding a gold position – the higher real rates go, the more costly to keep a non-interest bearing asset like gold. Falling real rates support rising gold prices and vice-versa. Less often, more dominant drivers are at play and gold price appears insensitive to changes in real rates. The low gold price volatility from mid-April to late-September is a good example. Over this time, the yellow metal behaved as a currency. It was highly correlated with the Chinese yuan; to a lesser degree, the euro and yen; and much less, to real rates. 

Which case will be true for the first half of 2019? My latest Kitco Commentary posits the former to be the most likely which is bullish for gold:


In addition to real rates, other important charts to monitor are the gold-to-S&P500 or AUSP (see "Chart to Watch" below) and gold in terms of major currencies euro and Japanese yen (directly below). An explanation of the charts below is given in this Kitco News column:

The Gartman Gold Trade Revisited (Kitco News, 2/14/2018)

Gold value for all three currencies is trending higher after a double-bottom for gold in U.S. dollar terms (August 17th & September 27th) 

Click on the image for a larger size:


Gold in euro & yen terms with margin above 2013 lows

Divergence has resumed for gold in terms of euro compared to yen:



Gold euro/yen spread widens again in 2018

Note for currency buffs: Value parity in the above chart occurs when the EUR/JPY cross rate is 139.24; something to watch for - presently 125.1 suggesting divergence from parity.

Chart to Watch

Here's a chart to watch for 2018. Click on the image for a larger size:


Gold-to-S&P 500 Ratio

An important gold ratio is gold-to-S&P500 or AUSP. The ratio bottomed in early-December of 2015 and reversed to a bullish trend, peaking February 11, 2016 (0.6849). It bottomed December 20, 2016 (0.4973) trended higher but then bearishly bottomed again December, 12, 2017 (0.4661) and again October 1, 2018 (0.4063). Currently this AM the AUSP is at 0.4902 and below the recent high of 0.5409 set at the close December 21, 2018. Importantly, the ratio has broken the upper rail (dotted green line) of the downward trending channel and is now trending up (i.e. higher lows).

Cheers,

Colonel Possum & Mariana



Photos by Mariana Titus if not otherwise noted.