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Gold Looks Right For Bottom-Fishing

Rick Ackerman
Wednesday, Nov 2, 2005

Excerpt from Rick's Picks (website).
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Gold is starting to look attractive again. We've been waiting for a buying opportunity since mid-October. That's when the Comex December contract touched 483.10, a single tick above an important hidden-pivot target at 483.00 that I'd flagged several weeks earlier. Here's what I wrote at the time, on September 28:

Upside targets for the December contract could not be much clearer. A hidden pivot at 483.00 is my minimum projection, but if the futures close above it, or trade higher than 484.10 intraday, you can confidently expect the next hidden pivot to be achieved, at least: 500.00.

Nothing has changed since. Which is to say, a run-up to $500.00 is all but guaranteed if and when the December futures surpass 484.10. We needn't wait for the breakout to jump aboard, nor shall we. Yesterday, in fact, in an alert disseminated via the Bulletin Launcher, I recommended bidding 457.30 (a hidden-pivot support) with a stop-loss of just 40 cents. In addition, the Pick of the Day trade was in Newmont Mining. There are two very promising hidden supports in NEM just below current levels, and either can be used to open a position with relatively little risk. Moreover, the pivots are close enough to each other that long-term investors can scale-in stock once the upper support is touched.

There was one additional precious-metal trade that I disseminated intraday - in the Street TRACKS Gold shares (GLD), an ETF that gives one direct exposure to bullion's price fluctuations. Our bid was 13 cents beneath the intraday low, but I remain confident the order will be filled if we are patient. Our goal is not to load up on gold come hell or high water, but to do some cautious bottom-fishing at a level that appears to offer excellent betting odds.

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More GOOG Epiphanies

I promised you a report on Google in today's edition, and it is reprinted below. It was written by Professor Ross Miller, a wise and witty contributor to my favorite chat group. Ross has written three books: Paving Wall Street, What Went Wrong at Enron (with Peter C. Fusaro), and Computer-Aided Financial Analysis. Other work by him can be found at his web site, Miller Risk Advisors

Readers may recall that I had a Google-related epiphany a few weeks ago after lunching with the very bright son of a friend, a sophomore at Stanford University. He writes computer-product reviews for the campus newspaper, and, as I mentioned, is not too keen on Microsoft's product line. He says that anything Microsoft can do Google can do better via a Web-based application, and that, within ten years, Google will be eating Microsoft's lunch. So now you know why I've since started looking for rally targets in Google rather than places to short the Mother of All Tops.

The ruminations of Prof. Miller buttress our hunch that, at nearly $400 a share, Google still has a long way to go. Think of it as Microsoft at $100/share before the stock's first split.

Google Again

By Ross Miller

For the second year running I am asking/forcing my MBA students to predict the price over a suitable short period of time. [Note: Rick's Picks disseminated a $407 minimum target for Google a while back, when the stock was trading around $346. Yesterday it touched a new all-time high of $384.] Last year it  was for the month of November. This year's calendar is running a bit  later, so I am doing the four-week period following Veteran's Day.  They also have to construct a portfolio that includes 10,000 shares of Google, to try to perform the best relative to a suitably realistically insane performance evaluation measure. (My introductory students have to  minimize daily returns variance, while the advanced ones get to be  like real hedge fund managers and generate the highest Sharpe ratios.) As I did last year, three-quarters of the grade comes from the written explanation and not the performance-something that my faithful readers  applauded as a realistic approximation of how research analysts are  rewarded. (It is better to be clever and wrong, than dull and right.)

Last year, all the people like me who thought the best prediction was to have Google move up smartly were outpredicted by those who went by the textbook, used the Capital Asset Pricing Model (after a fashion), and computed some miniscule gain for the month. The students who thought Google would plummet when a big lock-up of shares was lifted in November, suffered as well as they deserved to. Of course, those of us who believed in Google and the innate irrationality of investors, were ultimately vindicated.

Now it's time to roll the dice again.

Google Is Everywhere

Google had a good year. Its forward-looking P/E ratio dropped from stratospheric to a mere 41. Every week, it's a new product or a new strategic alliance for them. Google is teaming up with Sun Microsystems. Happy happy joy joy. (You don't hear people say that much these days, do you?) I am surprised  that the pop star who just had the baby and whose name I refuse to include in my commentaries because it generates massive spurious hits from GOOGLE didn't name her child "Google." Just wait, Google Magazine, should be out any day now. Now that Martha is bombing out of "The Apprentice," maybe we will have Google Apprentice.

But I have not come here to praise Google, but to offer them useful advice that they will ignore. Like most other computer geeks, my favorite Google product is the award-winning Google Earth. If you have not already done so, you must absolutely run the program on a large (30" or bigger), hi-res (WXGA or better) monitor. A scroll mouse also helps tremendously. Impressive is not the half of it.

The Next Level

I had used Microsoft's Terraserver occasionally, but it was slow and hard to move around. Google's big innovation is to get the maps to you fast (assuming you have a broadband connection) and let you move around them even faster. Google Earth is great, but it can be even greater and ultimately Google's fate will rest not on getting up on stage with Scott McNealy (he's soooo yesterday), but on taking things to the next level.

Mind-blowing as it is, Google Earth is still in beta and it shows. Google's core product, the search engine, has as its primary virtue a minimal user interface. Google Earth, on the other hand, has a clumsy user interface. The left-hand side of the screen has all sorts of nested check boxes and searching for places in the standard Googlebox interface can lead to weird and frustrating results. Equally disturbing is that the maps have an inexplicable lack of uniformity.

For example, [when] the Flintstonian hurricane [was] bearing down on Florida, I thought I would pay a visit to the Keys. Sadly, they are blurred out. Ditto for large chunks of Greenwich, Connecticut and many other exciting places. Have rich people bribed Google not to let voyeuristic computer geeks zoom down into their private tennis courts? Are hedge fund managers harboring nuclear missile silos among their poolside cabanas?

No Privacy

Boston, however, is a different story. I can see the skylights on the townhouses of Louisberg Square and the perennial protesters outside the Massachusetts State House a few blocks away. (The special military black-ops version of Google Earth is required to see what the signs that they are carrying say.) Maybe rich Democrats, like the ketchup people, are not afforded the same privacy as rich Republicans and Libertarians.

Google's challenge can be summed up in a single word. My more senior readers may remember that in the movie "The Graduate," the title character played by Dustin Hoffman was told that "plastics" was the magic word.  Today, that word would be "semantics." The problem with Google Earth is that it does not tell you the meaning of what you are seeing ("semantics" means "meaning") and especially not what it means specifically to you. It does not even provide the objective knowledge required to begin to derive that meaning. In Boston, it does not know about the protestors in front of the State House, or the swan boats in the Public Garden Lagoon, or that Community Boating owns many of the sailboats that you see in the harbor. Its "local knowledge" is rather limited and it volunteers nothing. If you don't enter the right query in the Googlebox or check the right boxes, you won't learn anything. And you can forget about it ever telling you if a certain area is safe to walk around at night.

Earth as a Billboard?

(Here is an entire parenthetic paragraph on a frightening thought that I had the first time I saw Google Earth. I was not frightened by the privacy implications, because that black-ops comment I made earlier was no joke. While the exact capabilities of military eyes-in-the-sky are highly classified info, a reasonable guess is that they have ten times the resolution of the best that Google Earth has to offer. If you don't wash your car, they will know. What is really frightening, however, is that people are going to start advertising on the tops of buildings in a big way now that everyone can see them over the Internet. Boston may still look quaint and delightful from the air now, but in a few years it will be one big Citgo sign. Incidentally, you can see the back of the current Citgo sign if you know what you are looking for, but not the front, on Google Earth. Of course, the casual cybervisitor from Iceland will have no idea that that is what he is looking at.)

While syntax is easy to program into computers, semantics is not. But with sufficiently powerful hardware, semantics can be faked. For example, technicians in far-away lands who know little of how things work here in the U.S. except for what they see on "The Simpsons" and "Desperate Housewives" and in the first-run movies that they get to see before we do, are essentially faking understanding what irate and often clueless customers are asking them. We are not that many years away from the time when computers can do a much better job of faking it.

Biggest Challenge

Anyone who has ever visited a friend in a place where they have never been before knows that the better the friend knows them, the better will be his or her suggestions as to what to visit and what to do. Furthermore, because friends presumably have shared experiences, the meaning of the local geography is molded by those experiences.

The real issue with Google the corporation is: "Are they faking it?" Are they just a bunch of guys with Asperger's syndrome to whom real life is as devoid of meaning as the results of a Google search, or are they capable of not just endowing the world with meaning, but grokking it as well? We already know the answer for Microsoft, whose dictionary literally does not include the word "grok." Time will tell if Googlers can climb out of their box and not only develop technology that helps us see the world, but also does something to change it for the better.

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Taming the Mini-Futures

Trading the S&P futures with a stop-loss of one point or less? Come visit our archives to see how it's done.

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Rick Ackerman
email: publisher1@rickackerman.com

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Information and commentary contained herein comes from sources believed to be reliable, but this cannot be guaranteed. Past performance should not be construed as an indicator of future results, so let the buyer beware. Rick's Picks does not provide investment advice to individuals, nor act as an investment advisor, nor individually advocate the purchase or sale of any security or investment. From time to time, its editor may hold positions in issues referred to in this service, and he may alter or augment them at any time. Investments recommended herein should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor, and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. Rick's Picks reserves the right to use e-mail endorsements and/or profit claims from its subscribers for marketing purposes. All names will be kept anonymous and only subscribers' initials will be used unless express written permission has been granted to the contrary. All Contents ©2005, Rick Ackerman. All Rights Reserved. You can subscribe here.

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