Gary Tanashian | Apr 24, 2023 08:41
It’s been two decades of pain with interim bullish flashes in gold stocks, and the herds are painfully aware. They’ve learned their lesson, and now they could miss a coming opportunity as gold stocks gear up for a comeback.
Herds herd. That is what they do. Herds follow well-established trends. Herds subscribe to convention and that which sounds the most normal about their experience. Herds herd. Sheep herd. Humans herd.
Today the herds are herding to a well-established narrative that gold stocks suck. Why not just buy gold? Gold stocks have underperformed their product metal for years. Everybody knows that.
100% correct, dear herds! Bravo. But weren’t you the same herds buying gold stocks because your perma-bullish guru advised so? Weren’t you buying gold stocks because of inflation? Because the Fed is inflating?? Welcome to a new paradigm that you may herd several years down the road but not any time soon.
With some important indicators to stay aligned with the macro backdrop having either aborted their major trends or registered unsustainable extremes, the herds bred of the last two decades’ trends may find themselves off sides. Does it pay to be a “Sheeple,” as some gold bugs call those not enlightened to the concept of real money and real value in a paper/digital system gone mad and choking on debt? No. Never be a Sheeple. They herd.
Ah, but are not some gold bugs also Sheeple? They are if they are extrapolating forward the last couple of decades of gold miner under-performance to gold based on the macro that was instead of the macro that will be. To this point, over those 20 some odd years, they have believed the inflation touts justifying investment in gold stocks because… INFLATION!!!
That was a wrong-headed analysis during those cyclical inflationary years, and now, as an era of either deflationary pressure or economically ineffective/corrosive inflation (Stagflation) engages and brings on a counter-cyclical environment (i.e., the long-term “everything bubble” bursts), the rules will have changed and by extension, so will outcomes.
But herds herd. They follow their instincts, ignoring new paths forward. This article does not focus on the indications that the bubble is finally unwinding. They’ve been covered routinely.
But as one primary example, let’s review once again what I feel is the most visually stunning picture of big picture macro change – and quite possibly a primary indicator to the end of the bubble age – the Continuum, AKA monthly chart of the United States 30-Year Treasury bond yield – breaking the gentle trend of disinflationary signaling against which the Federal Reserve routinely manufactured inflation.
The bond market gave license to the inflating Fed over the decades of declining long-term bond yields. That bubble-making is all done now, from this perspective.
Okay, so the macro is changing. What does that imply for gold stocks?
Well, I am glad you asked. Gold stocks leverage the price of gold. But leverage is a thing that works both ways, positively and negatively. Without trying to over-explain my artwork on the chart below, I’ll ask you to take it in, consider it and think about history…
Meanwhile, there is short-term and long-term. This article discusses a long-term situation that is in its early stages of evolution and the potential for a macro pivot within that. In the shorter term, there is management to be done of the pullback or correction that began.
If you are a trader, you might consider taking some profit.
So yes, there is short-term and long-term. Personally, I don’t like to suffer pullbacks, even those within bull markets, without at least making preparations, whether mentally or tactically. But it sure is a lot more fun managing corrections (AKA opportunities) within bull markets, which I think this will turn out to be.
Within the long-term bear market, there were plenty of rallies and exciting phases. The ill-fated 2016 launch comes to mind as we noted on May 30th of that year that the fundamentals were degrading for the rally that would ultimately blow out and end a couple of months later.
The herd kept on buying as silver led gold, the miners, commodities, and stock markets in a cyclical inflationary frenzy. Do you see? The herd bought inflation – the very thing that has foiled the sector eventually, every time it rallied or bulled along with the promoters’ bullhorns and the cheerleaders’ golden pompoms.
But the macro backdrop, in its disinflationary bond market signaling (ref. 1st chart above) that permitted chronic inflation operations by the Fed for decades, was never beneficial for the gold mining industry as cyclical inflated assets routinely out-performed gold and the miners leveraged that to the downside.
So now, what happens if the macro has changed profoundly? Herds herd and forward-looking speculators take advantage. If you’ve been doped up on the dogma of the last 2 decades, prepare to get clear-headed and think for yourself. Years of drudgery may morph into something much more fun (and manageable).
* Yup, I actually wrote the word “investors” relating to gold stocks. The herds would think that is crazy talk. The herds herd.
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