Time to Aggressively Accumulate
posted on
Sep 08, 2008 12:37PM
Camino Rojo Mexico : In-situ - 4.0 million ounces gold; 68.32 million ounces of silver.
Far from Over: A Short-Term Correction in the Commodities Bull Market Provides Opportunities to Late-Comers and Savvy Investors
Today’s comment is by Eric Roseman, Investment Director and editor of Commodity Trend Alert for The Sovereign Society.
Commodities, especially oil and gold, are in a correction. But make no mistake: We’re NOT at the cusp of a bear market. On the contrary, smart investors should take advantage of currently depressed prices to aggressively accumulate shares in select precious metals and energy companies.
Since hitting an all-time high on July 3, 2008, the benchmark Reuters-CRB Index has declined 20% while crude oil prices have tanked 25%. Other commodities have declined even more. And gold stocks, as measured by the XAU Gold & Silver Index are down a blistering 35% since June.
Admittedly, the recent peak in oil prices was extreme, if not symptomatic of a short-term “bubble.” The same was true for most commodities where institutional fund-flows were manic in the hunt for positive returns the first six months of 2008.
Commodities have been the prime recipients of a global institutional boom. We’ve seen more commodity exchange traded funds this year. Also, hedge funds have been pouring money into commodities as managers searched for one of the few remaining profitable market segments in an otherwise horrible year for equities and bonds.
So Much for the “Big Trade”
The “big trade” over the last 12 months for hedge funds has been riding the wave in commodities, including oil and shorting or betting against financial stocks. And that trade reversed violently in July.
But while the market is right to discount a slowing global economy, it’s wrong to assume that the bull market in oil and most other commodities is over. You simply can’t make a case for the death of the bull when short-term cash rates are still below the rate of inflation and global money-supply (M-2) is growing in excess of almost 20% year-over-year, according to Grant’s Interest Rate Observer.
It seems as though investors who don’t remember the lessons of history are doomed to commit the mistakes of the past.
Remembering the 1970s Correction
Commodities are extremely volatile. Knowing that, it’s flat-out ridiculous to call this decline “a bear market” just because prices are down 20%. Oil, gold and other commodities plunged by almost 50% in the mid-1970s during the bull market. Then commodities went utterly gangbusters by 1980. Commodities can decline sharply even in a secular bull market.
But what about the U.S. dollar and its impressive 360-degree turn since mid-July against all major currencies? Isn’t that a bad omen for commodities? No. Longer term, the dollar is relegated to the dustbin as a laundry list of deficits hamper any serious gains or bear market rallies.
What’s amazing here is that everyone is running to buy dollars when the United States is still accumulating out-of-control deficits.
The Treasury’s budget deficit in July nearly tripled to US$102.77 billion, up 182% from July 2007. But what difference does it make? The U.S. just spends like crazy and the rest of the world finances this ponzi-scheme. It might not be this year or next year. But at some point, there will be a global crisis in confidence as America’s debt-to-GDP ratio, already at 6%, just explodes to uncontrollable levels.
But it’s not just budget deficits that threaten the dollar. There are also trade deficits as far as the eye can see. We’re also seeing two seemingly endless and expensive military conflicts. We have bulging social entitlement spending programs that have yet to peak. Not to mention, we have to finance more expensive financial institution bail-outs including the costly nationalization of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The list goes on and on…
How can a sensible investor not own gold and other tangibles in this madness?
In order for the United States to support all of this profligate spending it must expand credit or print money. And printing this sort of money – a colossal amount – will ultimately result in much higher inflation in 24-36 months.
Central Banks Are Determined to Stoke Inflation and That Will Benefit Commodities
Any way you slice it, this has been a bruising correction for commodities. But don’t call it a bear market. Commodities, unlike stocks, are far more volatile and can record daily price swings that are extremely wild – exceeding 5% or even 10% in a single day.
But bull markets in commodities don’t end with negative inflation-adjusted interest rates or with global money-supply (M-2) expanding at more than 20%. In the 18 years I’ve been in this business I’ve never seen credit expand at this rate – never. This tells me world governments are growing desperate to grow inflation amid a deflation in credit expansion and real estate. It’s inflate or die for the world’s central banks.
The next few months might continue to be painful for commodities. We are probably more than 50% of the way through this correction now with many commodities still in net supply deficit.
The way I see it, investors are confused because they can’t identify the current stage of the economic cycle. Are we still in an inflationary surge or is this the beginning of global deflation?
It’s this seemingly new direction in asset prices since mid-July that has triggered a wholesale run on commodities and an up-crash for the dollar. It’s been lightning fast and many investors are getting mauled.
It looks like the world economy is starting to deflate after a big post-2002 expansion. The forces of inflation and deflation are now fighting each other for the first time since 2001 and ultimately, inflation will win. If it doesn’t then the banks, financial markets, housing and everything else that revolves around finance and credit goes into the gutter.
Time to Print Like There’s No Tomorrow Again
Central banks are aware of this, especially Bernanke, a devout Great Depression scholar.
For the Fed and other central banks the strategy is to rescue the global financial system from the economic abyss or deflation. That means they’ll print credit like there’s no tomorrow. The Fed, the European Central Bank, the Bank of Japan and their international buddies are going to accelerate the expansion of credit to avoid a devastating deflation. Inflation will triumph.
The world still needs oil, it still has to drill for oil and gas, and gold production won’t grow for at least another 24 months amid ongoing supply disruptions in South Africa and Australia.
Oil drilling, major oil producers and gold mining stocks are my favorite long-term growth themes within the resource complex and are incredible purchases right now. Energy and gold mining stocks are incredibly attractive at these bombed-out levels and should be aggressively accumulated. Also, the offshore oil drillers are down by a quarter since July and are still home to the best profits in the energy patch.
ERIC ROSEMAN, Investment Director
P.S. You should use any pullback as a buying opportunity. Test-drive my service Commodity Trend Alert and I’ll show you how.