Monday, June 27, 2011

The Fabled Ratio

DJIA
open11,934.58
close 12,043.56 up 108.98
day high 12,098.81
day low 11,934.05
today's volume 177,920,112
3mo avg. daily volume 170,635,679
Average P/E  13.4
1 year change +18.73%

DJTA
open 5,219.23
close 5,259.19 up 45.04
day high 5,270.02
day low 5,196.86
today's volume 14,701,568
3mo avg. daily volume 16,872,528
Average P/E  20.0
1 year change +24.00%

The DOW/Gold Ratio has been talked to death (or life possibly in this case) for decades.  All foolish speculation aside, watching ratio's instead of prices give a much more relative and ultimately realistic view of how different markets react to each other.  People have talked ratio's for millennia, dating back in all cultures to the barter days before kings and kingdoms placing their faces and claiming authority through seigniorage.  Those same kingdoms have always tried to fool the public by shaving value from those mandatory coins either literally, or by devaluing them by using other less appealing products like copper, tin or paper, and most popular today, the 1's and 0's of binary in today's digital money.  But ratio's have held true, and those who ignore them are doomed to repeat the fools errands of those past.

When Charles Dow created his averages of the markets, they were based on a simple principle, the cumulative value of the average equals an ounce of gold... This ratio has stood the test of time as an indicator (at the very least) of over or undervaluation of the famed Dow Jones Industrial Average.  As rampant speculation through cheap leverage comes to a grinding halt, the averages have begun to realign themselves.  Although the grand US Dollar itself, incumbent placeholder as the true international reserve currency may be the cause for the diminishing role in industrial production and demand and a global cooling of speculation, as money exits investments and turns towards safety, the dollar, being the cause, is no longer the only place large scale investors are turning to.  Likely, as prices shift, one can assume the general investor will be soon to follow, although as usual, a day late and a very literal dollar short.

With a very legitimate, but elementary understanding of the DOW to Gold Ratio, one assumes that the most common way to track if the DOW to Gold Ratio is accurate is that when the DOW goes up, Gold goes down, and vice versa.  However, there are more scenario's the investor should be aware of, and although not perfectly cyclical, here is a look at how those could unfold.

 Scenario 1 shows a period I believe to be over at this point.  As example, see the two charts below showing the drop and rebound in the markets from 2008/2009 until today. The drop in the DOW from around 12,000 to 6,500 was roughly 45% fall.  Gold fell from around 1,050 to 700, a 33% fall.  See Scenario 2 above.  What is more telling is the recovery time.  The last time Gold reached a low price retrenchment that lined up with the old highs of 1,050 before the 2008/'2009 fall was October/November 2009, about exactly a year after it hit bottom.  Since then, gold has made an impressive $500 an ounce rise.  The DOW, on the other hand is, for the first time since, seeming to make that same claim as we speak, taking about 2 1/2 years to do so.  Despite the talking heads on TV, this is not recovery momentum.  This is clawing your way out of a fallen house.  Although I am no chartist, what the DOW appears to be doing is making a head-and-shoulders pattern which should signify downturn and should put the kibosh on those still determined to live in recovery fairy-tale land.

With the cause of the problem lying with the devaluation of the US Dollar, the likelihood that both sides of the ratio continue to rise, even at different levels should subside.  I would argue that we are currently seeing Scenario 2 and 3 play out, as the DOW long-term should remain level or slide down, the price of gold should increase over the same period of time.  During the Final manic phases of the Gold Bull Market, the DOW should have reached bargain prices causing wise investors to begin liquidating preservation positions like Gold and buying equities for pennies on the dollar.  Eventually, should the government choose to attempt to consolidate the value of our medium of exchange, making the assumption we still call it "the Dollar," our currency will find bottom values and interest rates rise.  At this time most of the wise investors will have sold their preservation positions off to those who are certain it is the right thing to do because everyone else around them seems to have figured it out already, and Gold will begin it's long decline as the equities markets begin to climb again and interest rates eventually seem reasonable.  Unfortunately for most, to find these bargains, the only way is to go against the flow or general consensus, which most will be incapable of bringing themselves to do. 

Monday, June 20, 2011

DJIA
open 12,003.30
close 12,080.38 up 76.02
day high12,099.87
day low11,971.29
today's volume 127,250,559
3mo avg. daily volume 166,653,114
Average P/E  13.4
1 year change +15.59%

DJTA
open 5,147.51
close 5,201.22 up 42.67
day high 5,220.88
day low 5,141.43
today's volume 15,604,888
3mo avg. daily volume 16,502,725
Average P/E  20.0
1 year change +17.31%

ALL THAT GLITTERS IS NOT PAPER PROMISES
As a result of the Dodd-Frank Act enacted by US Congress, a new regulation prohibiting US residents from trading over the counter precious metals, including gold and silver, will go into effect on Friday, July 15, 2011.  
As a result, although the courts’ interpretation of Section 742(a) is unknown, Section 742(a) is likely to have a significantly negative impact on the OTC cash precious metals industry. Here too, it is essential that those who offer to be a counterparty to OTC metals transactions seek professional help to discuss possible operational and regulatory contingency plans. 
The actual rule CLICK HERE; a transaction if it "results in actual delivery within 28 days or such other period as the Commission may determine by rule or regulation based upon the longer period as the Commission may determine by rule or regulation based upon the typical commercial practice in cash or spot markets for the commodity involved;" Alas, the commission has decided not to intervene and keep the exemption status window so small as to affect virtually all exchanges which transact in the gold and silver spot market. 
(from the Zero Hedge Blog

Eliminating the OTC markets on precious metals, and limiting purchases to those which can be delivered within 28 days should cause some minor panic movements in metals prices and OTC markets over the next few weeks.  Short term this should be very good for those looking at increasing positions in the tried-and-true physical positions in these markets as one would assume that sell-off's over the next few weeks will hopefully bring pricing down on the metals market in general.  However, as it limits the exposure available in these markets, the long term outlook for physical product should prove enticing to those who understand the bigger picture.

THIS IS SPARTA!!!
The hottest topic these days is Greece.  With sovereign debt piling up and a European Union debating action, or in a less polite way of saying it, doing their best to shirk the Union's responsibilities, buying Greek debt at 30% or so interest seems rather exciting.  However, with default an expectation, one should force themselves into positions of patience, waiting for the "pennies on the dollar" scenario that is likely to present itself.  The European Union may have gotten ahead of itself with all the additions over the years, extended past the strengths of England, France and Germany to those of lesser capable nations like Spain, Portugal, Ireland, Italy and Greece (what we call the PIIGS).  The question remains, does Greece eventually bow out gracefully or not?  The outspoken Merkel and her German counterparts will likely fall back on the wishes of their domestic constituency and leave the PIIGS for the slaughter.  We all would hate to see another Weimar Republic-esque downfall where neighboring countries are pouring into Greece, or Italy, or Spain searching for huge values, leaving the country bankrupt, and the purpose of the Union was to avoid these situations entirely, but when all else fails, Greece doesn't keep Merkel in office, Germany does, so the political pandering will lean more towards the home-front.

International attention has been on this for, in my mind, one reason.  This is like allowing the opposing coach to watch your practice right before the Super Bowl.  The real game to come is the default of larger markets like larger portions within the Euro zone (ie Italy) and of course impending concerns over our own national debt here in the US.  How the IMF and European Union handle this situation will set precedent for coming incidents further down the line.  

SPEAKING FOR THEMSELVES
Options are limited these days.  After the down days posted last week and the HUGE volume of trades followed by a moderate rise today on average to down volume, one would deduce that the markets have lost their luster.  The average person may not be clawing their way past competition for hedge products like land, certain commodities and metals, but they are certainly using their money for mortgage payments and food instead of their brokerage accounts.  As the future becomes more clouded, we tend to adjust our eyes to something closer.  Why debate growth over the next 20 years when we're busy making sure we're fed over the next 20 days.  Bernanke will keep the system afloat through Quantitative Easing packages as long as the rest of the world will allow, but bailing water on a sinking ship doesn't fix the hole, and over time that hold will get bigger.  The markets are speaking for themselves, the only think that has shown real growth in recent years in unemployment figures.  Deflation may be a bullet in the head, but our current inflationary problem is one in the stomach, and the end result will be the same.

Friday, June 17, 2011

DJIA
open 11,962.66
close 12,004.36 up 42.84
day high 12,072.89
day low 11,962.51
today's volume 342,005,995
3mo avg. daily volume 163,359,704
Average P/E  13.4
1 year change +15.05%

DJTA
open 5,123.84
close5,158.55 up 54.01
day high5,179.97
day low5,108.31
today's volume 30,001,896
3mo avg. daily volume 16,282,493
Average P/E  20.0
1 year change +16.50%

A whole lot of noise for a whole lot of nothing.  Unless cnn.com has its numbers wrong, the volume on the rise in response to the negative news from the Philly Report yesterday  seems a little excessive to me.  The DJIA, sitting well below it's 50 dma and closing in on about 1.5% from the 200 dma yesterday certainly enticed traders today.  Russell is testing a new system right now regarding determining if certain market sectors are in bullish or bearish trends.  Let's track these over the coming months and see how these play out...

Projected to go up
Gold +
Transports +
($WTIC) Crude + 
Currently down but should change to projected to go up
Dow - (but close to turning up)
Projected to go down
Util –

NASDAQ –

SPX -
Wilshire –
($USD) Dollar Index –
($UST) Ten year T-note – 
XLE (energy) –
RTH (retail) –

(DJW) World Index –

(XHB) Home Builders –

($RUT) Russell 2000 –

(SOX) Semi-conductors –

($XEU) Euro –

FXI (China 25 Index) –

XLF (Financials) –

Silver –
GDX –

Goog –

AAPL –

GS –

Banking ($DJTBAK) –

Munis (MUB) –

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

DJIA
open 12,075.12
close 11,897.27
day high 12,075.20
day low11,862.53
today's volume 182,496,537
3mo avg. daily volume 166,025,952
Average P/E  13.4
1 year change +14.34%

DJTA
open 5,142.63
close 5,104.52
day high 5,150.51
day low 5,092.05
today's volume 18,808,239
3mo avg. daily volume 16,479,062
Average P/E  20.0
1 year change +14.27%

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Financial Incumbancy


DJIA
open 11,954.56
close 12,076.11
day high 12,120.80
day low 11,954.56
today's volume 159,618,956
3mo avg. daily volume 167,549,292
Average P/E  13.4
1 year change +18.50%

DJTA
open 5,091.83
close 5,168.14
day high 5,189.49
day low 5,091.83
today's volume 16,228,886
3mo avg. daily volume 16,599,672
Average P/E  20.0
1 year change +19.02%

Watching markets for the last year has been... interesting at best.  Huge moves in the commodities, especially items like wheat, corn and silver.  Silver ran from just over $17.50 an ounce to just shy of $50.00 in about 9 months time.  Following a lovely Fibonacci retrenchment it currently sits around $35.57.  The Dow continues to meander up regardless of the US budget concerns that Geithner has been spouting for the past few months.  

The GOP opened their debates last night.  They seem to be ignoring the all-important argument about which one of them deserves the nomination and seem much more adamant about bonding together in attack of the Obama economic plans over the past few years.  Given the state of employment, inflation and the "growth" of the economy in general here in the US, it does not surprise that this will likely become a battle of "who dislikes the Obama administration the most."  Perhaps there will be some genuine exchange of ideas and Lord willing, plans, but when it comes to our national political structure, I'd bet against it.

Dow Theory seems more complicated to me now than ever.  Decreasing volume and increasing cost.  There are lack of alternative options out there and a potential downgrade of the US debt from its seemingly everlasting AAA rating puts investors on the defensive, hence increased popularity of the underlying assets themselves, and the companies that produce them.  However, with concerns over other major economies like China looming on the horizon, I wonder how those commodities will fare.  When almost half of all items like steel and iron ore are consumed by a single country, the potential for disaster seems much too high for me.  Gold remains the easy alternative, showing promising returns year after year.  As long as the average investment advisor continues to be told by the companies that have captured them that gold is a volatile and speculative investment, I continue to recommend holding the undervalued asset.

Circa 1979, I await patiently the likelihood of increasing interest rates and decreased lending capabilities.  The GOP may know the source of the problem and what has continued to keep it afloat, but a good politician seeks financial and social stability first and foremost, how else can one maintain positions of authority unless the constituency is sated!?  The solution has not presented itself and the other international players rely too heavily on the stockpiles of green paper they have accumulated.  Just like a political election, the incumbent holds almost all the cards, and the US Dollar remains so.  This is a recession, like the wars we fight, that seemingly has no end.