金鉱株の春ラリー5 by Zeal
最後の2段落だけ訳をいれておきます。
この記事は先週水曜締め切りで金曜に発行されたものです。
Gold Stocks’ Spring Rally 5
Adam Hamilton February 28, 2020 3225 Words
Unfortunately this
year’s potential spring rally is more
clouded than usual. Speculators’ positioning in gold futures
remains excessively-bullish, their buying firepower largely
expended. And investors have been ignoring gold to chase recent
record-high stock markets. But if gold can consolidate high or push
even higher, the gold stocks will likely surge to outsized
gains this spring as their profits growth dazzles investors.
残念なことに、今年の潜在的春ラリーはいつものようになるかよくわからない。先物投機筋のポジションは極端に強気で、彼らの買い余力はほとんど尽きている。そして投資家も最近の株高でゴールドを追いかけていない。しかしもしゴールドが高値安定しさらに上昇するなら、金鉱株は桁外れの上昇となるだろう、抜け目のない投資家は金鉱会社の巨額利益を見逃さないだろう。
Adam Hamilton, CPA February 28, 2020 Subscribe
この記事は先週水曜締め切りで金曜に発行されたものです。
Gold Stocks’ Spring Rally 5
Adam Hamilton February 28, 2020 3225 Words
Before their recent surge on gold regaining $1600, the gold stocks
spent much of the past half-year or so largely drifting sideways to
lower. That high consolidation really weighed on sentiment, with
greed giving way to apathy. This sector normally tends to suffer a
seasonal slump into mid-March, paving the way for gold stocks’
spring rally. That’s their second-strongest seasonal surge of the
year running into early June.
Seasonality is the
tendency for prices to exhibit recurring patterns at certain times
during the calendar year. While seasonality doesn’t drive price
action, it quantifies annually-repeating behavior driven by
sentiment, technicals, and fundamentals. We humans are creatures of
habit and herd, which naturally colors our trading decisions. The
calendar year’s passage affects the timing and intensity of buying
and selling.
Gold stocks
exhibit strong seasonality because their price action mirrors that
of their dominant primary driver, gold. Gold’s seasonality
generally isn’t driven by supply fluctuations like grown commodities
see, as its mined supply remains
relatively steady
year-round. Instead gold’s major seasonality is demand-driven,
with global investment demand varying considerably depending on the
time in the calendar year.
This gold
seasonality is fueled by well-known income-cycle and cultural
drivers of outsized gold demand from around the world. The
seasonal gold year starts in late July as Asian farmers begin
reaping their harvests. They plow some of their surplus income into
gold. That’s soon followed by the famous Indian wedding season in
autumn, with its heavy gold buying for brides’ dowries during
marriage-auspicious festivals.
After that comes
the Western holiday season, where gold jewelry demand surges for
Christmas gifts for wives, girlfriends, daughters, and mothers.
Following year-end, Western investment demand balloons after bonuses
and tax calculations as investors figure out how much surplus income
the prior year generated for investment. Then after that Chinese
New Year gold buying flares up heading into February.
These
understandable cultural factors drive surges of outsized gold demand
between late summer and late winter. But interestingly there is one
more gold-demand spike in spring. Over the years I’ve seen a
variety of theses explaining this mid-March-to-early-June gold
rally, but nothing definitive like for the rest of the year’s
seasonality. As silly as it sounds, I suspect spring itself
is the reason for this demand surge.
Sentiment
exceedingly influences investing, which requires optimism for the
future. Investors won’t risk deploying their scarce capital unless
they believe it will grow. And the glorious expanding sunshine and
warming temperatures of spring naturally breed optimism. The
vast majority of the world’s investors are far enough into the
northern hemisphere that spring has a major psychological impact,
buoying their spirits.
While spring’s
seasonal impact on gold itself is more muted, the gold stocks tend
to blast higher anyway as capital floods in. That optimism fuels
gold stocks’ most upside leverage to gold seasonally
throughout the calendar year. If their recent gold-$1600 surge
didn’t pull forward too much buying, gold stocks’ spring rally
should get underway near mid-March. That usually portends outsized
gains in this contrarian sector.
Since it is gold’s
own demand-driven seasonality that fuels gold stocks’ seasonality,
that’s logically the best place to start to understand what’s likely
coming. Price action is very different between bull and bear years,
and gold remains in a younger bull market. After falling to
a 6.1-year secular low in mid-December 2015 as the Fed kicked off
its last
rate-hike cycle, gold powered 29.9% higher over the next 6.7
months.
Crossing the +20%
threshold in March 2016 confirmed a new bull market was underway.
Gold corrected after that sharp initial upleg, but normal healthy
selling was greatly exacerbated after Trump’s surprise election
win. Investors
fled gold to chase the taxphoria stock-market surge. Gold’s
correction cascaded to monstrous proportions, hitting -17.3% in
mid-December 2016. But that remained shy of a new bear’s -20%.
Gold rebounded
sharply from those anomalous severe-correction lows, nearly fully
recovering by early September 2017. But gold failed to break out to
new bull-market highs, then and several times after. That left
gold’s bull increasingly doubted, until June 2019. Then gold
surged to a major
decisive breakout confirming its bull remains alive and well!
Its total gains grew to 57.8% by late
February 2020, still small for gold.
Gold’s last mighty
bull market ran from April 2001 to August 2011, where it soared
638.2% higher! And while gold consolidated high in 2012, that
was technically a bull year too since gold just slid 18.8% at worst
from its bull-market peak. Gold didn’t enter formal bear-market
territory until April 2013, thanks to the crazy
stock-market
levitation driven by extreme distortions from the Fed’s QE3 bond
monetizations.
So
the bull-market years for gold in modern history ran from 2001 to
2012, skipped the intervening bear-market years of 2013 to 2015,
then resumed in 2016 to 2020. Thus these are the years most
relevant to understanding gold’s typical seasonal performance
throughout the calendar year. We’re interested in bull-market
seasonality, because gold remains in its younger bull today and
bear-market action is quite dissimilar.
Prevailing gold prices varied radically throughout these modern
bull-market years, running between $257 when gold’s last secular
bull was born to $1894 when it peaked a decade later. All those
years along with gold’s latest bull since 2016 have to first be
rendered in like-percentage terms in order to make them
perfectly comparable. Only then can they be averaged together to
distill out gold’s bull-market seasonality.
That’s accomplished by individually indexing each calendar
year’s gold price action to its final close of the preceding year,
which is recast at 100. Then all gold price action of the following
year is calculated off that common indexed baseline, normalizing all
years regardless of price levels. So gold trading at an indexed
level of 105 simply means it has rallied 5% from the prior year’s
close, while 95 shows it’s down 5%.
This
chart averages the individually-indexed full-year gold performances
in those bull-market years from 2001 to 2012 and 2016 to 2019. 2020
isn’t included yet since it remains a work in progress. This
bull-market-seasonality methodology reveals that gold’s spring rally
is its last push higher before the summer doldrums arrive. While
this is gold’s smallest seasonal rally of the year, the gold stocks
greatly leverage it.
During these modern bull-market years from 2001 to 2012 and 2016 to
2019, gold’s spring rally tended to start in mid-March on
average. From that major seasonal low following the winter rally,
gold often starts grinding higher before its gains accelerate
through April and May. This spring rally has generally run its
course by early June. Across the 16 bull years in this study, gold
averaged modest spring rallies of 3.3%.
This
spring rally unfolds rapidly, with an average duration of just 2.7
months. That makes it the smallest and shortest of gold’s
three major seasonal rallies, falling way behind the champion 9.1%
winter rally that precedes it and the strong 6.2% autumn rally that
follows the
summer doldrums. Nevertheless, it is still well worth trading.
3.3% gains really do make a difference, and naturally about half of
years exceed this mean.
On
average gold’s spring-rally bottoming occurred on March’s 10th
trading day, which will be the 13th this year. If today’s seasonals
stay true to form, gold will slump in the first couple weeks of
March. But that seasonal pullback between the winter and spring
rallies is pretty modest, averaging just 1.4% over a few weeks at
most. The resulting mid-March lull in gold prices spawns an
excellent gold-stock buying opportunity.
Gold’s average seasonal performances in March, April, and May during
these modern bull-market years ran -0.4%, +1.5%, and +0.7%. While
even April is only gold’s 6th-best month of the year, it still has
an outsized impact on gold-stock prices. This has to be
sentiment-driven. Optimism runs high in the spring anyway, and
plenty of bullish psychology lingers following gold stocks’ strong
winter rally in preceding months.
But
this year’s spring gold rally definitely faces some challenges, as
2020’s gold buying so far
has been
precarious. It’s important to remember that seasonality defines
mere tendencies over long spans of time, like prevailing
tailwinds or headwinds. These can amplify or retard gold’s price
action driven by its two dominant primary drivers, speculators’
collective gold-futures trading and investment-demand trends.
Unfortunately neither has been firing on all cylinders in recent
months. That’s why gold has only slowly ground higher since its
last upleg originally peaked in late September, despite 2020’s
shocking geopolitical news. Gold should’ve soared with the
US and Iran attacking each other militarily, and a terrifying
potential global pandemic wreaking havoc in China. But the capital
inflows to catapult it higher didn’t materialize.
Even
after late February’s surge back over $1600, gold was just 6.8%
higher than its initial upleg-topping levels 5.7 months earlier.
Given the ominous news flow, gold should’ve blasted way higher. Its
lethargic reaction is the result of gold-futures speculators not
being able to materially buy, as their capital firepower was
largely exhausted. And investors distracted by euphoric stock
markets haven’t been interested in buying.
The
spring rally’s seasonal tailwinds alone won’t be able to overcome
these challenges. Gold needs to see significant-to-sizable capital
inflows from speculators or investors to power higher in the next
few months. Gold-futures speculators have essentially been
all-in since late December, when their total longs and shorts
were running 100% and 0% up into their own gold-bull trading
ranges! Their buying was tapped out.
That
100% longs and 0% shorts held by these hyper-leveraged traders is
the most-bearish-possible near-term setup for gold. They have
little room to buy, but vast room to sell when the right catalyst
hits. And the least extreme specs’ excessively-bullish gold-futures
bets had become since was still 89% longs and 5% shorts in early
February. These collective bets still have a lot of
mean-reversion normalizing left to do!
While gold-futures speculators mostly haven’t been able to buy,
investors have proven indifferent since mid-October or so. That’s
when the Fed launched its
extreme QE4
campaign monetizing huge amounts of Treasuries. Those colossal
liquidity injections catapulted the stock markets higher, generating
extreme complacency and euphoria. That has killed demand for
prudently diversifying stock-heavy portfolios with gold.
It
isn’t likely to return until recent extreme record-high stock
markets plunge into a deep and lingering correction, or gold keeps
surging fast enough to attract in momentum investors like last
summer. But that seems like a long shot today with gold-futures
specs’ buying power mostly expended. Without sizable capital
inflows gold’s spring rally this year threatens to be muted, unless
something changes to bring them back.
And as goes gold,
so go gold stocks. Gold stocks also exhibit strong
seasonality, which is of course the direct result of gold’s own
seasonality. Since gold-mining costs are largely fixed when mines
are being planned, fluctuations in gold’s price flow directly into
amplified moves in gold-mining profits. Higher gold prices drive
much-higher earnings for the gold miners, which attract in more
investors to bid up stock prices.
The ironclad
historical relationship between the price of gold,
gold-mining
profitability, and therefore gold-stock price levels is
exceedingly important to understand. If you need to get up to
speed, I wrote an essay looking at gold-stock price levels
relative to gold
in late January. Fundamentally gold stocks are leveraged plays
on gold, and usually really outperform in the spring on gold’s
seasonals and general optimism.
This next chart
applies this same bull-market-seasonality methodology used on gold
directly to the gold stocks. It looks at the average annual indexed
performance in the flagship HUI NYSE Arca Gold BUGS Index in these
same bull-market years of 2001 to 2012 and 2016 to 2019. Using the
HUI is necessary because the popular GDX VanEck Vectors Gold Miners
ETF was only born in May 2006, missing bull years.
That was halfway
into the last secular gold-stock bull, which ran from November 2000
to September 2011. Over that long 10.8-year span, the HUI
skyrocketed a life-changing 1664.4% higher on gold’s parallel 638.2%
bull! Gold-stock prices naturally mirror and amplify gold
action since it dominates gold-mining earnings. That’s true across
entire secular bulls, within individual uplegs, and even in
calendar-year seasons.
Gold
stocks’ seasonal spring rally is much stronger than gold’s,
buttressing that spring-optimism-drives-stock-buying thesis.
Between mid-March to early June, the gold stocks have averaged hefty
11.5% rallies in these 16 modern bull-market years. That makes for
exceptional 3.5x upside leverage to gold’s 3.3% seasonal
spring rally! Interestingly this proves gold stocks’ best seasonal
leverage to gold’s gains by far.
While the HUI averaged larger 15.2% surges during gold’s winter
rally, that only made for 1.7x upside leverage to gold’s big 9.1%
gain. And the HUI’s 9.0% average gain during gold’s autumn rally
also only amplified gold’s 6.2% surge by 1.5x. Though the
gold-stock spring rally’s 11.5% average gains rank second out of the
seasonal-rally trio, it offers the most bang for the buck in
gold-stock upside compared to gold!
Like
gold, the gold miners’ stocks suffer a seasonal slump from late
February to mid-March. That has averaged 2.7% in these modern
bull-market years. So don’t get discouraged if we see a typical
early-March slump in this sector. That’s usually just a mild
pullback before gold stocks’ strong spring rally gets underway. Any
seasonal weakness is a good opportunity to add new gold-stock trades
relatively low.
The
gold stocks’ post-winter-rally pre-spring-rally lull tends to bottom
on March’s 11th trading day, which will be the 16th this year. From
there the HUI surges 11.5% higher on average over the next 2.7
months into early June. That gold-stock spring-rally span naturally
closely mirrors gold’s own. How the gold stocks fare over the next
several months really depends on what the yellow metal ends up doing
ahead.
If
gold keeps grinding higher, its miners’ stocks should follow and
leverage its gains. Gold needs to see rekindled capital inflows
to pull that off. If gold drifts sideways, odds are the gold stocks
will too. And if gold suffers a counter-seasonal spring selloff on
gold-futures speculators dumping longs and adding shorts to
normalize their excessively-bullish positions, the gold stocks will
track their metal lower like usual.
But
gold stocks’ spring outperformance relative to gold in any of these
scenarios will certainly be justified by their fundamentals. Their
Q4’19 results are being reported and this latest earnings season
will wrap up by mid-March. In
the preceding
Q3’19, the major gold miners of GDX averaged all-in sustaining
costs of $910 per ounce. With that quarter’s average gold price
near $1474, that implied gold-miner profits of $564.
Those were up a staggering 36.2% sequentially quarter-on-quarter and
68.9% year-over-year! Q4’19’s results are likely to continue
showing spectacular gold-mining profits growth, as average gold
prices rose slightly to $1483. Assuming the GDX major gold miners’
Q4’19 AISCs are in line with their preceding four-quarter average of
$897, that implies sector earnings of $586. That would be up a
massive 72.9% YoY!
And
so far in Q1’20, gold has averaged $1576 which makes for another big
6.3% QoQ gain. As investors figure out the stock markets’ best
earnings growth is coming in this obscure contrarian gold-mining
sector, that could easily fuel major gold-stock outperformance
relative to gold again. This year’s outsized spring gold-stock
rally could very well happen for fundamental reasons even if gold’s
own spring gains remain muted.
This last chart
breaks down gold-stock seasonality into even-more-granular monthly
form. Each calendar month between 2001 to 2012 and 2016 to 2019 is
individually indexed to 100 as of the previous month’s final close,
then all like calendar months’ indexes are averaged together.
Slicing up seasonal tendencies this way shows May has actually
averaged gold stocks’ strongest month of the year in modern
bull-market years!
During the 16 Aprils in these gold-bull-market years, the gold
stocks as measured by the HUI saw average gains of 1.0%. But the
lion’s share of the spring-rally gains came in May, where
average gains more than quadrupled to 4.4%! For decades if not
longer, May has been one of the best and most-important months to be
heavily long gold miners’ stocks. Only August now manages to rival
it thanks to 2019’s surge.
The
key to gold stocks’ spring rally is to get your capital deployed
by mid-March, when gold stocks swoon to their spring-rally
bottoming. In intra-month terms the initial gains are often fast in
late March as gold stocks rebound out of their seasonal lull. But
then the spring rally tends to slow down in mid-April, which
invariably discourages impatient and short-sighted traders. The
real gains come in May, when gold stocks surge.
Of course the
standard seasonality caveat applies that these are mere
tendencies, not primary drivers of gold or gold stocks.
Seasonal tailwinds can be easily drowned out by bearish sentiment,
technicals, and fundamentals. Seasonality doesn’t always work,
especially when it doesn’t align with the primary drivers of
sentiment, technicals, and fundamentals in that order. That casts
this year’s spring rally into some doubt.
Ultimately gold stocks will follow gold, since their earnings
amplify changes in its price. If gold-futures speculators start
selling en masse to normalize their excessively-bullish positions,
that will certainly force gold lower. If investors enamored with
recent
Fed-levitated stock markets don’t resume consistently buying
gold, it’s not going to rally. If gold is sufficiently weak in
coming months, gold stocks will follow it lower.
But
if gold can hang in there and consolidate high, or better yet rally
on resurgent investment demand, the gold stocks should enjoy
excellent spring-rally gains. The major gold miners’ earnings are
soaring in a market where profits growth is getting harder to find.
As American stock investors figure this out, this small contrarian
sector will see major capital inflows catapulting gold-stock prices
much higher in years ahead.
The
key to riding any gold-stock bull to multiplying your fortune is
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The bottom line is
gold stocks often experience a strong spring rally seasonally. This
is driven by gold’s own seasonality, where outsized investment
demand arises at certain times during the calendar year. Gold
usually enjoys a solid spring rally likely fueled by the universal
optimism this season brings. And since gold drives gold miners’
profitability, their stock prices naturally follow it higher while
amplifying its gains.
要約すると、金鉱株は季節的に春にラリーを起こす。この減少はゴールド自身の季節性によるものだ、一年のなかで特定の時期に巨大な投資需要を引き起こすためだ。春は多くの人の気持が大きくなり通常ゴールドはラリーを起こす。ゴールドの値動きが金鉱会社に大きな利益を引き起こしその株価はゴールド変動を増幅する。
要約すると、金鉱株は季節的に春にラリーを起こす。この減少はゴールド自身の季節性によるものだ、一年のなかで特定の時期に巨大な投資需要を引き起こすためだ。春は多くの人の気持が大きくなり通常ゴールドはラリーを起こす。ゴールドの値動きが金鉱会社に大きな利益を引き起こしその株価はゴールド変動を増幅する。
残念なことに、今年の潜在的春ラリーはいつものようになるかよくわからない。先物投機筋のポジションは極端に強気で、彼らの買い余力はほとんど尽きている。そして投資家も最近の株高でゴールドを追いかけていない。しかしもしゴールドが高値安定しさらに上昇するなら、金鉱株は桁外れの上昇となるだろう、抜け目のない投資家は金鉱会社の巨額利益を見逃さないだろう。
Adam Hamilton, CPA February 28, 2020 Subscribe