"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, June 5, 2020

Gold Plumbs $1,672 on "Stunning" Jobs Report; Copper & Stocks Soar

Map of Early Mines in Eureka (circa 1880s)
Note: Ruby Hill Mine inset no longer a Barrick operation
Eureka, Nevada

Friday, Jun 5, 2020 AM

***
"I cannot overstate the potential harm the coronavirus can do to the world economy." (Eureka Miner, January 31, 2020)

"WARNING: Too quiet on the copper front? Red metal at currency-like volatility!" @Eurekaminer March 4, 2020 [Comex copper fell into Bear Country March 13, 2020] 
***
Follow the ole Colonel on twitter @Eurekaminer

Next Week Target Gold Price: $1,665 per ounce, Target Silver Price: $17.25 per ounce

My latest Kitco News commentary: Gundlach copper-gold indicator: low volatility in unexpected places (4/28/2020, Kitco News) [summary of recent commentaries given at the bottom of the blog]

An easy-to-understand overview on gold (32 slides, read explanation below each slide): History of gold and which countries have the most


Morning Miners!

CNBC Business News reporter Carl Quintanilla called this morning's jobs report "stunning." It was. The adjective was repeated later in a Presidential tweet. A shocking 2.5 million jobs were added in the month of May. Headline unemployment fell to 13.3% from 14.7%. Expectations were Depression era levels of 19-20%. Encouraging and welcome news.

This was also great news for the red metal and stocks which rallied aggressively higher. July copper is above the key-$2.5 per pound level. Gold took a trip to the locker room.

For the moment, investors are rotating from safe-havens like gold to "risk-on" assets like stocks. However, we're still early in the covid-19 game and I believe there is a path to $1,800+ for 2020. The push-pull between equities and stocks will continue for some time. Here is my Elko Daily Free Press column on the subject submitted in May and posted yesterday. It will also be included in the upcoming Mining Quarterly:

Baker: Gold in the time of coronavirus (Elko Daily Free press, 6/4/2020)

Comex August gold is trading at $1,683.3 per ounce (10:12 am Eureka Time). It pulled up from the earlier morning low of $1,671.7.

Silver fell with gold but some technical numbers for silver continue to shine [see Silver Watch below].

Comex July Silver currently trading at $17.51 per ounce (10:12 am Eureka Time). 

Copper is showing some major giddy-up this morning: 

Comex July copper is presently $2.5475 per pound (10:12 am Eureka Time). Copper is up 5% this week [see Weekly Summaries below, recorded earlier this morning].

Here's how I explained my gold  and silver outlook to the Kitco News Weekly Gold Survey this morning:

After a stunning upside employment report, domestic equities are on a tear; gold is not. Falling like a rock below the key $1,700-level, the yellow metal is trying to find footing in April lows as market participants quickly rotate from safe-havens to risk-on assets. For example, the red metal soars as Treasury's plummet in price. Comex copper has proudly risen above the $2.5 per pound level this morning extending a rally established from March 19th. This is important because the red metal is a key indicator of global recovery.

From an interest rate viewpoint, real rates are still bullishly negative as inflation expectations continue to rise faster than Treasury yields. However, Japanese and some European 10-year bonds have turned marginally positive which is potentially a bearish indication for gold.* Something to monitor as offshore economies participate in economic recovery from covid-19.

I believe precious metals will continue to experience downward pressure next week with gold falling to $1,665 per ounce and silver following to $17.25 per ounce. A note of caution: markets could quickly switch back to a "risk-off" posture if the rapid rise of covid-19 cases in some areas of the U.S.  persists [currently 9 states]. This has the potential to slow the re-opening process.

Bottom line, gold volatility will track volatility in equities for some months to come. There is still a path to the $1,800-level this year.

These are the strange times of coronavirus.

* U.S. real rate -.40%, 10-year Inflation expectation 1.22%; 10-year bonds: German Bund -0.29%, France +0.01% and Japan +0.04%

Since it continues to dominate markets, a covid-19 summary is updated below. The ole Colonel has also included the overview of the 1918-1919 Influenza impact on Eureka County from previous posts (bottom of blog).

COVID-19 Update

There is a dandy website created for Eureka County to track and report on the covid-19 pandemic:


Here are the grim covid-19 statistics reported this morning (last week in parentheses):

U.S.A. 1.880,703 (1,731,035) covid-19 cases; 108,496 (102,201) deaths
Nevada 9,266 (8,350) covid-19 cases; 432 (410) deaths


If you want to track the charts and projections that Dr. Anthony Fauci and Dr. Deborah Birx reference, check out this site (included in the Eureka website also):


Click on the "United States of America" tab to find individual states. The "deaths-per-day" chart projections give the best time duration estimate because death is a lagging indicator. The models have been recently updated through August 4th given early openings in some states:

This is only a model prediction - it can change and adapt as we learn more each day.

Remember each region has its own curve and numbers can vary widely state-to-state, county-to-county. Social distancing is currently our only weapon to change the curve's shape. 

Stay safe  and distant my friends.

Copper, Oil & China Updates

July Comex copper is up 5% for the week, presently trading at $2.5475 per pound. Here's a recent column from Mining.com showing that copper demand should become strong in China:


This column from last week in Mining.com explains how complicated the copper story is becoming:


The Saudi-Russia oil price war in combination with covid-19 has had a devastating impact on the oil markets. This morning Nymex WTI is trading up at $38.92 per barrel. The front month NYMEX futures contract plumbed a historic low of negative $37.63 per barrel on Monday, 4/20/2020.

China, which still represents copper's highest demand, is on the mend. Here is my China Indicator updated through this morning (see above 2/18/2020 Kitco column). A low number is good. A bottom of 0.3012 occurred after the signing of the Phase I deal seemed certain (Friday, 1/10/2020). This low was replaced yesterday, 6/4/20, at 0.2351This AM the indicator sits at 0.4460 below the coronavirus peak of 1.8399 set February 11th and below the 5-year average (0.78). The covid-19 pandemic is stabilizing in China, but let's keep an eye for any moves higher given recent U.S./China tensions (click on chart for larger size).


China 2-rho Divergence Indicator

I've been actively tweeting market news/events during the week so please follow me at @Eurekaminer.  I usually tweet Sunday night on the Monday Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) for a heads up on copper & gold prices in the Year of the Rat.

To ponder: In numerology the year 2020 reduces to the number 4 - a dreaded number in Chinese culture. And yes, it is the Year of the Rat...a double-whammy for sure.


Remember, you can register with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) for updates by e-mail. Look at the situation summary tab on their website for updated U.S. infections and deaths.
                             
Weekly Summary

Here is a weekly summary chart of gold and my 16 favorite market variables. They are grouped in categories "Commodities", "Interest Rates", "Indexes" and "Currencies" of 4 variables each. Over time, each variable has played some part in the gold story. It is prudent to monitor all 16 to understand the key price drivers that are currently active for the yellow metal. Importantly, this is not a unique collection of variables but one that works well for the ole Colonel

Because The Eureka Miner is a morning report, Friday AM prices are compared with the closing prices of the previous week (click on charts for larger size):


This weekly chart of comparative value tracks the value of gold relative to key currencies, commodities and indexes :


Silver Watch

Comex silver is below $18 per ounce (see Weekly Summaries above).

Please check this out if you get the silver bug:

How to Invest in Silver (Debbie Carlson, U.S. News & World Report, August 1, 2019)

How to smartly buy gold and silver:

How to Mine Physical Precious Metals for an IRA (Debbie Carlson, Barrons, Sept. 8, 2019)

The gold-to-silver ratio (GSR) set a new high Wednesday, 3/18, of 123.9 ounce per ounce solidly above July 11 high of 91.3 - a trend down from this top is bullish for silver if the Lustrous One continues its rally. 

At 96.48 silver is historically very cheap relative to gold!

The 10-year average GSR is much lower at 68.6 ounce per ounce.

The 3-month beta with gold is bullishly above unity at 1.74 (i.e. on average, the daily % rise or fall of silver price is beta times the % change in gold price). You prefer a high beta (i.e. greater than 1.00) when gold rallies higher (click on image for larger size).

Gold-to-Silver Ratio
Historical note:

In the past, when gold and silver were legal tender (see gold overview link below headline photo), it was important to set a value relationship between them. In 1792, the U.S. fixed its price at 15:1. This means that 1 troy ounce of gold was worth 15 troy ounces of silver. Over the years, as this ratio has changed, precious metal investors have used it as a signal of when to buy.

Stay tuned.

Inflation Watch

Inflation expectations made a high of 2.18% April 23, 2018. They have tracked steadily down from there with a dive to the 0.5%-level before reversing higher, yesterday's number is 1.22%. Expectations have been rising at a faster pace than 10-year U.S. Treasury yields resulting in negative real rates again (see Weekly Summary Charts) - a bullish signal for a non-interest earning asset like gold.
10-year Inflation Expectations

Many believe, including the ole Colonel, that gold price is more sensitive to inflation expectations than other measure of inflation. My January Kitco News commentary explains the importance of tracking "real rates" which are a function of inflation expectations:


 Old Glory
Eureka, Nevada

Chart to Monitor

Here's a chart to monitor for 2020 (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 reversed into a downward channel bottoming again October 1, 2018 (0.4063). Currently this AM the AUSP is at 0.5302 below the high of 0.7029 set March 23, 2020. Importantly, the ratio has aggressively left the downward trending channel with an uptrend trend of higher-lows starting with the October 2018 low. This week the ratio still maintains lots of daylight above that trend (red dotted line) - bullish gold!

Six Things to Watch in 2020

The ole Colonel's beer bet (won on an intraday basis Tuesday, January 7th!). I have since revised it [parenthesis]:

Gold will break [on a closing basis] $1,600 per ounce before the 4th of July 2020

We'll keep the bet alive by looking at closing instead of intraday prices - what a sport! [won on a closing basis February 18th]

My top six things to watch for 2020:
  1. Copper prices -  I'd like to see copper prices push us above $6,500 per tonne ($2.95 per pound). A fall below the $6,000-level ($2.72) would be a bad sign - for example, U.S./China trade Phase I in trouble or escalating geo-political unrest. [Update: Covid-19 has pushed copper below $6,000 per tonne].
  2. Chinese yuan - strengthening below 7 USDCNY is a good sign that their economy and trade are on an improving track (Weekly Summary). Sustained weakening above the 7-level is a red flag. [Chinese yuan is above 7 USDCNY again]
  3. U.S. dollar - will it remain strong or begin a period of decline? Foreign demand for Treasury debt has kept the dollar strong but rising U.S. deficits and countries trying to move away from dollar dependence (e.g., China, Russia) are countervailing forces not to be ignored. The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) made its high September 30 this year and has been in a downtrend of lower-lows since (99.38 September high). This reports tracks the Invesco DB US Dollar Index Bullish Fund (UUP) (27.01 September high, see Weekly Summary below for latest price). Finally, overseas interest in Treasurys has been fueled by negative interest rates abroad. This report monitors the German 10-year bund (Weekly Summary) as a benchmark for foreign Treasury demand. [Update: Covid-19 has caused liquidations as market participants rush to the U.S. dollar for safety. This has surged the U.S. Dollar Index above 100]
  4. Interest Rates - there is an almost uncanny relationship between the yield on the benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury and the copper-to-gold ratio (CGR, Weekly Summary). I've written about this extensively since 2017 ( see The Colonel's Latest Kitco News Commentaries below). Bottom line, a rising CGR signals higher interest rates for 2020. [Update: Covid-19  appears to have reversed the trend higher, 10-year Treasury is near record lows].
  5. Real rates - The 10-year inflation adjusted Treasury yield, or real rate, is the difference between the nominal yield and inflation expectations (aka 10-year "break-even" rate). Since gold is a non-interest earning assets it performs best when real rates are near zero or negative. This report tracks real rates (Weekly Summary) and inflation expectations (Inflation Watch). Since gold is often considered an inflation hedge it is prudent to track both. In 2020, inflation may pick up (gold bullish) but if interest rates rise faster, an increasing real rate dampens interest in in the yellow metal (gold bearish). [Real rates have been negative since March 23, 2020]
  6. Gold-to-S&P 500 ratio (AUSP) - Gold's relationship with equities is key to monitor. Gold lost value to the S&P 500 from Donald Trump's election until October of 2018. Since then it has regained value in a trend of higher-lows (see Chart to Watch). We entered 2020 with that trend higher challenged. Falling below trend would be a very bearish sign for gold. [Update: Covid-19 has put the AUSP solidly above trend].
Predictions aside, 2020 will no doubt be an exciting year in the markets. Get ready for a roller-coaster ride, pardner. I remain bullish gold!

The Colonel's Latest Kitco News Commentaries

Please checkout my latest Kitco News columns on the stunning relationship of copper and gold prices with interest rates:


Copper, gold & the coronavirus (2/18/2020, Kitco News)







1918 Influenza in Eureka County (Update)

I've been searching old newspapers (newspapers.com) to see how Eureka County was affected by the 1918-1919 Spanish Influenza Pandemic. With 500 million cases worldwide and an estimated death toll exceeding the military fatalities of WWI and WWII, Eureka County also suffered fatalities from this deadly virus. Influenza was first detected in the U.S.A. in January 1918 but didn't make it to Northern Nevada until October of that year. 

Typical newspaper column of the day reporting
1918 Influenza in Northern Nevada

There were cases reported in surrounding counties of Lander, White Pine and Elko. Some nearby cities/towns cited with influenza were Reno, Carson City, Winnemucca, Silver City, Elko, Pioche and Tonopah. So far, I haven't found any newpaper columns specifically citing Eureka County but with a little digging (using findagrave.com) discovered two confirmed deaths, one in Palisade and another in the ghost town of Mineral (Mineral Hills Cemetery, headline photo). There are four possible influenza deaths in Eureka cemeteries and one in Beowawe. That's seven total for the County, still 
digging [UPDATE below puts the death count at 38 confirmed which includes 1919 and a re-occurrence in 1922].

Charles Safford Walker 
(photo: findagrave.com)

Mining and Army training camps were often where trouble began. The main line east-west railroad was suspected to be a path of transmission. I've been informed by Roger Colton that his great uncle,Charles Safford Walker (1882-1918, 36 years old), died of complications after the flu. Mr. Walker was then the owner of the Palisade Ranch. The death certificate listed the cause of death as “bronchial pneumonia following influenza,” October 31, 1918. The town of Palisade is located on the mainline in the north County suggesting that trains may have indeed been an enabler for virus spread in rural communities.

Roy Plummer Gravesite 
(photo: Robert Frenchu)

A second confirmed death is Roy Plummer (Nov. 21,1896 to Dec. 23, 1918, 22 years old) buried in the Mineral Hills Cemetery. Here is his death certificate:

Death Certificate for Roy Plummer

Here is a recent news column from the Carson City Nevada News:

Echoes of the past: Exploring the 1918 influenza epidemic in Nevada (Carson City Nevada News - Carson Now, April 19, 2020) 

UPDATE April 18, 2020: After posting the above, Rhonda Shandler Gardner reached out to me and provided some excellent research she compiled on the very same subject. Rhonda worked from recorded death certificates to identify 19 influenza deaths in Eureka County in 1918, 10 in 1919 and 9 in 1922. This is a total of 38 confirmed and there are other "possibles" declared simply as pneumonia on the death certificate. The 1922 record indicates the re-occurrence of Spanish Influenza in Eureka County. The 1918 deaths include four I found (above) and eliminated some others. 

Here is a link to her detailed and informative research: 


Interestingly, a lot of these cases occurred in sheep camps and ranches in Antelope Valley and Bean Flat. Here is a death certificate for Alfred Pedlar of Bean Flat from Rhonda's research (35 years old, died November 23, 1918):

Death Certificate for Alfred Pedlar


Cheers,

Colonel Possum & Mariana



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