Market Updates
Keep up-to-date in the past week’s price action and the current geopolitical and economic factors driving the international and local precious metal markets.
Gold Continues to Tumble As Vaccine Optimism Hits New Highs
Vaccine optimism is the central driver of this movement. GDP growth anticipates a successful roll-out of the vaccine in H1 of 2020.
Don’t Trust the RBA, Negative Rates are Coming
The RBA says they aren't considering negative rates, but then they ruled out super low rates and QE.
In the Public Interest
Australia's Federal budget pushes the country to a record debt level while a FOI raises concerns whether the RBA is serving the public interest.
60-40 Portfolio a Wealth Hazard
The classic 60/40 portfolio could be a wealth hazard with low interest rates capping bond gains and equities facing a Baby Boomer retirement headwind.
Peddling Stimulus Poison
Precious metals experience a sharp correction but the bull market remains intact as central banks continue to peddle stimulus poison in a desperate attempt to keep the biggest bubble of all time inflated.
Aussie Banks Being Ghosted
Aussie banks are being ghosted by deferred loan borrowers - maybe a debt jubilee is required? Dumb money continues to pile in as smart money gets out. The hypocrisy of not adjusting the cash transaction reporting limit.
Gold’s Supercycle Tailwind
With the tailwind of an inflation driven commodity supercycle and the possibility of simultaneous Western and Eastern demand, gold could experience a rare price boost in the coming decade.
Risk Off, Gold On
Gold & silver remained range bound this week but not so for shares, which appear to be peaking in stupidity reminiscent of the crypto bubble in 2017-2018. With the All Ords sideways in ounces of gold, it may be prudent to reallocate away from risk assets to gold.
The How and Why of Gold and Silver
Precious metals spike and dump on Jackson Hole speech and we look at the how and why of gold and silver investing.
Buffett Buys Barrick
Gold failed to hold above US$2,000 but found support above $1,900 and is trading just above the previous all-time high in 2011.
We Are All Gold Bugs Now
We Are All Gold Bugs Now says Morgan Stanley, worried about inflation. While gold and silver were volatile on profit taking the broader long-term fundamentals remain unchanged and we are confident there are a plethora of investors waiting to buy significant dips.
Precious Metals Power Move
Another amazing week with gold pushing strongly through $2,000 and silver reaching just shy of $30. Over only 16 trading days the move in gold, as shown in the chart below, is an impressive 14.3% but silver steals the show at 46.7%.
Gold - The Only Real Vote You Have
Gold stopped short of hitting $2,000 but with a permanent change to mainstream market attitudes towards precious metals any decent dips in the price will likely be bought.
Silver Shines, Gold Gains
We focus on silver this week given its massive 17% gain. We expect the market to take a breather back to the mid $21s but in the long-term silver is clearly in a new bull market. We also look at how gold and silver in Australian dollars are less volatile than some blue chip stocks.
Mother of All Melt Ups
The markets are a very dangerous place for savers says Russell Napier with financial repression, US Federal Reserve turning on the liquidity taps and retail rookies running rampant.
Gold in a Positive Feedback FOMO Loop
A significant week for gold as it broke through the round number $1,800 level, a figure it last saw in 2011, on the back of concerns about a second COVID wave in the US.
Gold’s Mammoth Financial Year Return
Gold posted a massive 28.5% return for the 2019/2020 financial year, with silver a more than respectable 20.1%, but its 45 year compounded per annum return is also impressive.
The Great Central Bank Bubble of 2020
It is now time to leave the stock market party before the bubble blows. Yield breakdown is driving gold says Nick Frappell and professor shows that gold worked to reduce portfolio risk in the 1930s.
Markets in La La Land
Equity prices are insanely disconnected from their underlying fundamentals and in “La la land” according to Crescat Capital. Jeremy Grantham agrees saying that he is increasingly confident that stocks are “the fourth ‘Real McCoy’ bubble of my investment career” and that the recent price action is “crazy stuff”.
In Case of Financial Emergency…
Digital Finance Analytics estimates that the percentage of households in mortgage stress reached 37.5%, or 1.42 million households.
Gold recovered this week but looking back a few months it is still bound within a $1,680/$1,750 channel. Silver has had a strong recovery from its COVID bottom in March and is sitting around the mid-$17 as we write, with the gold:silver ratio staying below 100.
How High will the AUD Fly?
Nick Frappell talks about what the EFP is and discusses how it is priced, who trades it and its impact on gold prices in ABC Bullion’s 360 Monthly Review.
Gold continued to pull back in most currencies this week, but managed to remain above US$1,700, mainly on the back of some severe USD weakness. Silver briefly touched above US$18.00 before settling down to $17.70 at time of writing
A Golden Decade
Is surging private indebtedness creating a society of debt serfs and feudal creditor lords? We explore this question and more in this week’s review of Incrementum’s In Gold We Trust report, which says that the 2020s will be a golden decade.
Platinum was flat this week at USD $835 and Palladium fell back to $1,926, with both metals seeing a profound impact from COVID on both supply and demand.
Gold moved south of USD $1,700, ever so briefly, before rebounding to $1,720 on the back of US GDP Q1 data showing a 5% contraction on an annual basis. Silver also pulled back early in the week before rebounding back above $17.40.
Gold Confiscation – Feasible or Fantasy?
This week, Crispin Odey got a lot of headline coverage, when he said that gold ownership could become illegal if inflation spikes.
AUD strengthened this week to 65.6 US cents, seeing gold in AUD $50 lower than this time last week. Silver pulled back to $26.20 from recent highs above $27.
Half the Aussie Workforce on Government Support
Officially unemployment only rose slight to 6.2% but we say realistically over 50% of the workforce is on government support.
We also look at trade tensions between China and Australia and how Eastern demand will boost metal prices, as well as the use of the stock market as a store of value.
Gold went up to $1,730 this week and the AUD remains strong at 64.5 US cents, preventing us from seeing new highs in AUD terms for now. Silver remains the metal to watch as it creeps 5% higher.
Wealth Destruction on a Catastrophic Scale
This week Harvard University professor Ken Rogoff called for deeply negative US interest rates; the market agrees with traders betting on negative US rates by early 2021. Freelance CEO said 74% of Australian workforce is now being paid by the government - we discussed how to protect yourself from the money printing necessary to pay for this.