The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.
Stocks are selling off globally. Commodities are down, but gold is holding up the best. Money is pouring into the perceived safe havens, the U.S. dollar and treasuries. Is it the late fall of 2008 or late spring of 2010?
Without further information, you can't answer that question. There is a global financial crisis occurring now because of the problems with the euro. There was a global financial crisis in 2008 because of the collapse of the prices of derivatives related to subprime mortgages. The problems with subprime debt had begun the year before and started impacting stocks in July 2007. Stocks were already in an advanced bear market sell off by the fall of 2008. The current euro crisis is only a few months old and U.S. stocks are only in a correction so far (loss of over 10% versus loss of over 20% for a bear market).
The current stock market sell off is worldwide as it was in 2008. It goes without saying the stocks in the eurozone are suffering, but technical damage can be found in major markets everywhere. The Dow Jones has broken key support at 10,000 twice already. The Nikkei gave up its significant 10,000 level a while ago, closing at 9521 last night. The Hang Seng has fallen below important support at 20,000, dropping to 19,378. In the UK, the FTSE is barely holding above 5,000 today.
The trade-weighted dollar (DXY) was as high as 88.71 in New York this morning (June 7th). This is higher than its peak in November 2008, but not as high as the top in March 2009. There was a major sell off in the middle, with the euro (FXE) having a sharp rally. Something similar is likely to happen early this summer. The dollar is very overbought and the euro is very oversold. The euro has traded as low as 1.1878 today. It may pop back up to the 120 support level and if not, there is stronger support around 115. The dollar is already hitting major resistance, so the set up for a short-term reversal looks like it is taking place.
As would be expected, U.S. treasuries have rallied strongly during the euro crisis. It is highly unlikely that they will get to the extremely low levels they did in 2008. As treasuries rally, interest rates go down of course. Interest rates on the 10-year fell to around 2.00% in December 2008. They were at 3.18% this morning. There is strong chart support at and just above the 3.00% level. So not much more of a treasury rally, interest rate sell off should be expected for now.
Currently gold has recaptured its safe haven status. It was selling off with the euro between last December and this February. Then it started rallying with the U.S. dollar, although it usually trades opposite to the dollar. Gold sold down in the fall of 2008. Central bank leasing was responsible for this. The big banks and large hedge funds leased gold at a small price and then sold it on the market to raise desperately needed cash. This is not happening at the moment to a significant enough degree that it can offset buying elsewhere. Ironically, a sharp relief rally in the euro could be short-term bearish for gold. Despite the selling in the fall of 2008, gold still closed the year up along with the U.S. dollar and U.S. treasuries. Almost every other asset closed down. It's still too early to tell if 2010 will end the same way.
Disclosure: None
Daryl Montgomery
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21
This posting is editorial opinion. Like all other postings for this blog, there is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.
Showing posts with label trade-weighed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trade-weighed. Show all posts
Monday, June 7, 2010
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Gold Rumbles as Dollar Crumbles

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If the U.S. dollar chart was a person, it would be a stroke victim. The trade-weighted dollar has been falling since March and can't seem to rise for more than a few days before falling down again. The dollar's latest rally (triumphed by the American mainstream media) in the second half of October took it from 75 to just below 77 where it bounced down from its rapidly declining 50-day moving average. After a major gap down on Monday, instead of rallying strongly to fill the gap, the dollar remained comatose. It broke the 75 level decisively this morning trading as low as 74.77. This is another 18-month low. Comments by Fed officials on Tuesday led to the latest round of selling.
In contrast to the dollar chart, the gold chart looks like someone training for the Olympics. Gold hit another all time record high this morning. Spot gold traded as high as $1117.60 and spot silver as high as $17.71 so far. Technically speaking gold is in a textbook perfect breakout from a solid 18-month base, which is over 300 points deep. A technician would expect the rally to be at least the depth of the base. In a bullish market, double the depth is quite possible. Since the breakout took place at $1025, this would take gold to the $1300 or $1600 level. Gold is in a seasonally strong period until next March, so the rally should last until around then before a significant pause would be needed.
Gold is rising on the flood of liquidity that is being pumped into the global financial system. The same flood of liquidity is drowning the U.S. dollar. A number of Federal Reserve officials made comments Tuesday about U.S. employment likely continuing for a long time and the need for the Fed to maintain super low interest rates. In an eye popping comment, the Dallas Fed president acknowledged that the easy money was damaging the dollar, but he was unconcerned as long as the decline was orderly. So as long as the U.S dollar collapses slowly instead of suddenly, everything is fine. This is the wisdom from the people in charge folks.
The economic geniuses at the Fed are not worried about inflation, as is also the case across the pond in the other quantitative easing powerhouse, the Bank of England. There is no case in history where significant excess money creation didn't lead to inflation, but why be bothered by historical fact. How excessive the money creation is this time is indicated by a gauge kept by Morgan Stanley which measures the amount of cash circulating in the global economy as a percent of total economic activity. It is at a record high by far. Of course, you don't need complex money measures to determine if there is inflation. Gold has been the inflation thermometer throughout the ages and it indicates quite clearly that inflation is heating up.
Disclosure: Long gold, silver. No positions in the U.S. dollar.
NEXT: Action Speaks Louder than Words for U.S. Dollar
Daryl Montgomery
Organizer,New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21
This posting is editorial opinion. Like all other postings for this blog, there is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.
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Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Precious Metals Becoming More Precious

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Gold had another all-time closing high yesterday in New York, the second in three days. It is trying to rally to an all-time intraday high and complete its long awaited breakout. Gold traded as high as $1020 in the overnight markets. The all-time intraday high, also hit in the overnight markets, is $1033. There is gold's third time trading in the over $1000 area (and there were two more times close to $1000) in the last 18 months. Unlike the first two times, which were sharp spikes up, this time gold has stayed in the $1000 area for several days. The other two times were also in February and March, times when gold tends to peak for the year. This time gold is hitting $1000 at the beginning of its seasonally strong period. The gold charts are extremely bullish looking and gold has put in an 18-month base. Conditions for a strong , powerful breakout look good.
Gold leads the precious metals. The other precious metals are not even near their all-time highs, although silver is much closer than platinum or palladium. All three have industrial uses. Silver is the only one of the three with a history of monetary use. Silver already became overbought on the daily charts in early September and has continued to go up since then. It was as high as $17.33 overnight. Gold has not yet become overbought on the dailies. In strong rallies a stock or commodity will get overbought and stay overbought for months.
While the precious metals are rallying, the U.S. trade-weighted dollar is slowly crumbling. As of this writing, it is trading at 76.38, but has been as low as 76.19. The yearly low is 75.89 and this was hit 11 months and 3 weeks ago. A new yearly low could be hit at any time from today onward. There are a lot of traders that automatically short yearly lows and this is seen as technical weakness. The U.S. dollar has already hit multiple yearly lows against the euro in the last several days.
Buying into a gold rally is a lot better deal than buying into the current stock rally. The gold charts are technically very strong, while the stock index charts have shown a great deal of weakness, yet the rally somehow continues. The premise behind the stock rally, the reviving economy, is also false. The premise behind the gold rally, rising inflation, is quite solid however. Both rallies are fueled by the money printing quantitative easing that the U.S. Fed is engaging in. This has always caused inflation in the past and gold is telling us this is happening again.
A correction to yesterday's blog: the ticker symbol for the natural gas ETF mentioned is HZBBF.
NEXT: The Inflation Trade
Daryl Montgomery
Organizer,New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21
This posting is editorial opinion. Like all other postings for this blog, there is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.
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Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Gold Breaks $1000!

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As of this morning, gold has been above $1000 an ounce three times. The first time was in March 2008 when it reached $1033 and the second was February 20th of this year when gold reached $1006. Slightly after 4 AM New York time, gold traded at $1007. Gold also traded close to the $1000 mark in July 2008 and early this June. Unlike previous attempts to break the $1000 an ounce level, this one is taking place at the beginning of gold's bullish seasonal period that runs from August to February.
Gold has had a spectacular rise that began only last Tuesday. Most of the technical indicators on both the daily and weekly charts are not even remotely overbought. The technical patterns look more like a pre-rally. They have not even reached the usual rally formations yet. Until they do, choppy trading around the strong resistance level of $1000 is quite likely. A break higher now is possible, but is not likely to last too long initially. A rally will take hold after awhile however. Gold now has a long 18-month base and that can act as a springboard for a long and powerful breakout that can last for several months.
Silver was as high as 16.80 this morning and is trading at a yearly high. It is trading in a band of resistance between 16 and 19. It may get stuck in this area for awhile as well. Once it clears the 19 area it is likely to go to new highs breaking through the 21 level reached in March 2008. Silver always follows gold.
As would be expected the U.S. dollar is not doing well this morning. DXY, the ETF for the trade-weighted dollar, traded as low as 77.14 pre-market. This is a new low for the sell off that began in March and well below the breakdown level of 78.33. This is the third time this level has been breached. The dollar is weak and the precious metals are strong because the G20 made a pledge this weekend to keep their unprecedented stimulus efforts going. Stocks are rallying as well, not reflecting any potential growth in the global economy as the mainstream media is reporting, but because more liquidity rallies stocks. If it is interpreted as inflationary, it also causes gold and silver to rally and the U.S. dollar to tank. The market's message today is quite clear.
NEXT: Inflation Versus Recession
Daryl Montgomery
Organizer,New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21
This posting is editorial opinion. Like all other postings for this blog, there is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.
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