Oro GOLD: blow off move in corso

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November 2, 2010

Gold has performed very strongly over the past decade, trouncing equities and bonds in the process and handing investors who own the SPDR Gold Shares (NYSE: GLD) or the iShares Gold Trust (NYSE: IAU) handsome gains. Amid a heated debate about whether gold is in a bubble, it's worth taking a historical view to examine the risk investors are taking by paying more than $1,300 for an ounce of gold.

Gold's real return: zero

In fact, gold appears to have eked out a small positive real return over time. Using data from the World Gold Council and precious metal dealer Kitco, I was able to construct a series of inflation-adjusted gold prices going back to 1851, according to which gold generated a historical average return of 0.7% per annum. However, even that small positive real return is a bit of a mirage resulting from the powerful gold rally we've witnessed. Indeed, as recently as 2005, gold's average real return over 154 years was zero, period.
That shouldn't be surprising: There is no reason to expect that an inert asset that produces no cash flows and has few industrial applications to accrete value. By stating that gold has returned nothing, I'm not disparaging the yellow metal; rather, it shows that the precious metal has acted as a store of value -- over the very long term (for practical purposes, however, gold's price volatility makes it unsuitable as a store of value). That's consistent with the notion that it is an alternative currency that no government can debase.
Still, this alternative currency could be in for a big devaluation. To see why, look at the following graph of 10-year trailing real returns for gold since 1861 (based on average annual gold prices):
GoldTrailingRealReturns.jpg


Sources: World Gold Council, Kitco.

Recent gains could reverse


There are two important observations to make:
  1. Gold returns are mean-reverting: The alternating peaks and valleys in the graph illustrate the fact that periods of higher-than-average returns tend to usher in periods of lower-than-average returns, and vice-versa. That's not surprising since this property shows up across different asset classes, including stocks.
  2. Investors who have owned gold over the past 10 years have earned a real return that is far in excess of the historical average. In fact, there is only prior period that witnessed higher returns: the bull market in gold that culminated in January 1980. Judging by gold's performance over the next two decades, that top capped off an enormous bubble.
Putting one and two together suggests gold returns going forward will be lower than the ones we have become accustomed to during the past decade. Just how severe could a reversal be? Let's take a look at the current price of gold in context. The following chart shows the average annual price of gold expressed in constant 2010 dollars (i.e., inflation-adjusted):
GoldRealAnnual.jpg



Sources: World Gold Council, Kitco.

Gold could fall by two-thirds!

Gold is galloping ahead of its historical average (the red line)! In fact, the price of gold would need to fall by almost two-thirds to get back to its long-term average of $456/ ounce, not to mention that markets typically overshoot. That's a sobering thought if you have a significant position in gold.

Don't let the gold hucksters fool you
Gold is inherently a speculative asset. Despite what I wrote above, I do believe that it represents an attractive, but high-risk, speculation, as the current supply demand dynamics look compelling. However, I can't rule out that things will turn out differently than I expect them to. If the economic recovery stabilizes and high inflation doesn't materialize, gold could decline significantly from its current level.
Let me emphasize that point: At these prices gold is no safe haven; it's an active bet on a specific scenario for the U.S. economy. Super-investor John Paulson owns gold because he believes the U.S. will experience double-digit inflation, but if that doesn't pan out, the bet could prove costly. Major gold miners that have closed out their hedges, including AngloGold Ashanti (NYSE: AU), Barrick Gold (NYSE: ABX) and Gold Fields (NYSE: GFI) would share in the pain.

Gold is now a bubble
I have been bullish on gold ever since I began looking at this market in February 2009, and I have argued against the idea that this is a bubble. As I review my thesis, I now believe it's likely that we are in bubble territory; nevertheless, I remain bullish because the conditions are in place for this bubble to continue expanding.
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Warning! Gold Could Drop Below $500 (ABX, AU, CEF, GFI, GLD, IAU, PHYS)


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alcuni ritengono che il prezzo dell' oro senza eccessi speculativi dovrebbe essere intorno a $800 -$900 , molto più in basso dei prezzi attuali.
Oggi il prezzo dell' oro è in deciso ribasso

11/12/10 - 12:51 PM EST

Gold Prices continued their roller coaster ride Friday and were tanking by double digits on technical selling and as rumors circulated that China might raise interest rates.

Gold for December delivery was shedding $37.30 to $1,366.30 an ounce at the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The gold price Friday has traded as high as $1,410 and as low as $1,364.80.
The U.S. dollar index was losing 0.15% to $78.10 while the euro recovered slightly after an early morning decline to $1.36 vs. the dollar. The spot gold price was down more than $46, according to Kitco's gold index



Gold prices were suffering as speculation mounted that China might raise key interest rates to combat rising inflation. Thursday's consumer price index showed that year-over-year inflation in the country rose 4.4%, which was higher than expected, despite efforts to take money out of circulation.
China has raised the amount of money banks must keep in reserve multiple times over the past year but inflation still remains an issue. Although inflationary indicators are good for gold as they make the metal more appealing as a safe-haven asset, a rate hike would hurt metal prices. A rate hike would limit the flow of "free money" in the country which would give consumers less cash to buy gold.
The selloff was also triggering sell stops, which forces a trader to sell his position when the gold price declines to a certain level. New money was also hesitant to come back into the game until the carnage stops.
"Looks like more position sellers from ETFs are starting to appear," says George Gero, senior vice president at RBC Wealth Management. Gero also noted that open interest dropped in gold on the Comex which signals that any rallies we saw this week were actually short-covering or option-covering rather than new long positions.
An uncertain global economic climate and jittery equity markets are also not helping gold as many investors are selling some of their long positions in gold to raise cash and cover losses elsewhere. Gold has been one of the top-performing assets this year up 27% year to date.


"Given the scale of gains posted over the past few weeks the metals remain vulnerable to a deeper correction as traders lock in profits and generate cash to cover margin requirements in other sectors," says James Moore, analyst at thebulliondesk.com, in his daily metals report.
Jon Nadler, senior analyst at Kitco.com, a gold believer but with a more conservative outlook, believes that without a real crisis gold prices are due for a deeper correction. "The going has gotten fairly tough around $1,425 or so ... these were largely sentiment and momentum-based gains ... The market I see is a market that believes it received a full $1 trillion from the Fed ... Basically we're not in crisis mode."
....

Nadler believes that gold's "parabolic rise" will only balloon into a real deep correction when it comes and that it could be 60% to 80% of current prices. "It will look like a cave in ... the trend change will be something to watch." A 60% correction would leave prices between $800-$900, which is what some analysts believe the real price of gold is if you take speculation out of the market.
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Gold Prices Get Slaughtered - TheStreet


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Dec 21, 2010 at 09:44
Fresh shocks to the financial system could see the gold price surge to $2,000 an ounce by 2012, seeing it move closer to its inflation-adjusted all-time peak reached in the 1980s.
As inflation fears mount, the price of the precious metal will be pushed to £1,600 in 2011 and reach $2,000 by the end of 2012, it has been forecast, as investors clamour to buy safe haven assets.
Capital Economics – a late converter to the pro-gold camp – says that fears of a China-US trade war and some sort of break-up of the European Monetary Union are likely to spook investors, nudging them towards the commodity as a store of value.
'We are increasingly positive on gold. A firmer dollar, fading inflation fears and greater risk appetite may limit upside in the next few months. But the price of gold should continue to be supported by demand for a safe haven from other potential economic and financial shocks,' Capital said.
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Gold tipped to reach $2,000 by 2012 - Citywire
 

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