Agoracom Blog

Sunday Evening Update

Posted by Peter Grandich at 9:56 PM on Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

The Giants squeaked one out while the Jets didn’t even make it to Turkey Day before basically being put out of their misery. Forty years as a fan and if not for a tremendous blessing to become friends with the best player I believe ever worn the green and white, I would have to say being a Jets fan has taken years off my life. How many more years can a Jet fan endure the phrase, “Wait til’ next year?”

Gold is flying in Asia. Outside of a rather small group of professionals who have remained strong advocates through thick and thin (I would hope I’d be included in that camp with Jim Sinclair, Bill Murphy, GATA and a few others), this move has left both perma-bears, former bulls (who became weak-kneed below and at $1,000 an ounce) and much of the financial media in the “dust.”

My upside target of $1,200 now appears to be within sight before years-end (if it gets to $1,195 I won’t shed a tear).

Many ask why has this occurred? The better question is to ask why did so many miss it?

I’ve compared this move above $1,000 to the U.S. Stock Market breaking above 1,000 in the early 80s. For several decades, the stock market was capped around 1,000. Stocks became so out of favor that “Business Week” magazine wrote a famous front page heading entitled, “Stocks are Dead.” An unknown soothsayer at the time named Robert Prechter Jr. predicted 3,000 on the DJIA. Most thought that was crazy. Well, we all know what happened.

I’m not saying gold is going to $14,000 like the DJIA did, but I do believe there are some commonalities. For starters, the DJIA traded between 700 and 1,000 for quite awhile and when it finally broke out, it ran sharply while most kept saying it had to come back just as sharp. Such has been the case after gold traded between $700 and $1,000. I and some others argued that this set gold up for a run to $1,200-$1,300 when we got and stayed above $1,000. Most have missed it and keep calling (and hoping) it comes back to them.

Another similar factor is that in the early stage of the DJIA run, a few highly respected money guys turned very bullish on equities after years of bearishness and/or near total avoidance of equities. Recently, such well-known “financial” experts like Steve Einhorn, Paul Tudor Jones and John Paulson have become big gold buyers/believers.

And one more common ingredient, equities, went from lack of ownership by the public-at-large to the absolute favorite asset to own. While gold remains hated by the vast majority who sell and report on financial assets, as well as by some perma-bears who will become as unimportant as the Number One perma-bear of the late 1990s, Andy Smith, gold is/has become an asset class to many outside of North America.

There are also several other long-term bullish factors like the fact that Central Banks, who used to only know one way to go when it came to gold – sell, are now buyers. Mine supply continues to be limited and hedging, the once cut-your-nose-to-spite-your-face move by mining companies, is now a dead issue.

Is it too late to buy gold? It’s no longer cheap. But if the craze for equities proved anything for almost 25 years (interrupted by a few sharp corrections and bear markets), it’s that the boat needs to get pretty filled up before it finally sinks of its own weight. The fact that gold is still either hated, ignored or misunderstood by most, especially in the U.S., makes me believe the long-term end is nowhere in sight. Is a correction coming? Absolutely, but not before those perma-bears who have been wrong for seemingly as long as the Jets haven’t been to the Super Bowl, are put out of their misery. Forgive me if I don’t attend their funeral.

We’re about to enter one of the best seasonal periods for equities. This coming week tends to be up for U.S. stocks. I do believe between now and year-end may come the long-awaited time for me to dust off my bear suit. Stay tuned.

Remember, the U.S. Dollar Index needs to at least close above 76.50 before any thought of a dollar bear market rally can become legit. The very fact so many people in recent days are talking about a rally can either make it a self-fulfilling prophecy or actually set us up for another down leg. We live in very interesting times, no?

Sleep tight tonight as tomorrow is shaping up to be a very interesting day.

Oh, before I sign-off, I’d like to play a video I posted when gold went above $1,000. The attackers are the gold bears in my mind when we hit $1,000 and the those defending are the few true gold bulls who have not wavered these last couple of hundred dollars.

8 Responses to “Sunday Evening Update”

  1. Randy says:

    Excellent piece by Bill Fleckenstein on “How much longer can gold rise” (Quick answer is much longer):

    http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Investing/ContrarianChronicles/how-much-longer-can-gold-rise.aspx

  2. Gary T. says:

    Without a doubt, Jon Nadler is the Andy Smith of the 21st century. Sorry Peter but Nadler’s funeral will be a pleasure to attend. The amazing thing is he continues to dig his own grave. I love every minute of it.

  3. Bruce says:

    In addition to Randy’s post, you might also like to take a listen to a Nov. 20/09 interview with the same Bill Fleckenstein, very interesting and a very smart guy. Just click on the “MP3 NOT for redistribution” button: http://www.kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/Broadcast/Entries/2009/11/20_Bill_Fleckenstein.html

  4. SavageNation says:

    Rare Earths junior Greenland Minerals And Energy Limited (GGG.AX) ramped 25%. What’s going on?

  5. detour dejour says:

    One of the few other gold experts who have remained strong gold advocates through thick and thin is Robert Chapman (The International Forecaster). I’m not sure that you would include Jim Willie (The Golden Jackass) in this select camp, but his take on the rogue tungsten gold market this week is priceless at:
    http://www.contraryinvestorscafe.com/player/player.php?utype=PU&pid=62242&aid=345#

  6. Ken G. says:

    detour Robert Chapman has been charged by the SEC in a stock fraud, was a very bad stockbroker years ago and has moved out of the country since being charged. Jim Willie was banned from appearing at gold shows in Canada and IMO is a racist. These two characters don’t deserve to be put in the same commentary as Sinclair, Grandich and Murphy.

  7. Steve Cone says:

    @ Kenny G.
    Given the SEC’s record (and our government’s proclivity for destroying its enemies), being charged by them with anything could (oxymoronically) be construed as a feather in Chapman’s chapeau and a badge of courage of sorts. As for Willie, I was not aware that good standing with the gold show gang was a criterion for assessment of expertise. Your unsubstantiated charge of racism is (I would hope) beneath you.

  8. seth says:

    Robert Chapman has no badge of honor and was a very bad stockbroker http://www.rgm.com/articles/sec7.html

    Willie is a hate monger

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