It's been a Great Year!
Mary Anne & Pamela Aden
The Aden Sisters
December 23, 2003
Courtesy
of www.adenforecast.com
Gold is hot and gold shares
have been even hotter. They soared this month as gold broke above
the important $400 level and excitement is in the air. Gold's
even attracting some attention in the mainstream financial world,
and it's about time.
Gold's been bullish for almost
three years and it's now risen 60%. Gold shares have skyrocketed
614% (HUI) and 167% (XAU) to average391% gains over the past
three years. HUI is up 123% in the past nine months and gold
shares have been the best investment by far, strongly outperforming
stocks, bonds and everything else.
GOLDEN TIMES
Nevertheless, the general public
remains skeptical or unaware of what's happening in the world
of gold. They're still in the stock market, either trying to
recoup their 2000-2002 losses or jumping into the latest hot
sector. But since we're already in the hottest sector, our view
is why bother. And with most investors still focused on the stock
market, it's actually good for us because it means the bull market
in gold and gold shares has a lot further to go, and it will
once mainstream investors catch on and jump on board, which will
drive prices even higher.
We've been recommending a very
large position between 40% to 60% of your total portfolio in
gold related investments for nearly two years now. But if you
haven't bought yet, it's not too late.
Gold is in a major uptrend,
it's solid and the overall environment couldn't be more positive.
We feel strongly all investors should have some gold and plan
to hold it for as long as this bull market lasts, which could
be several more years. Sure, there will be ups and downs along
the way, like there are in all markets, and some could be volatile,
but the idea is to buy and hold for the long-term.
As time goes on, it seems more
likely that this could end up being the mother of all bull markets,
perhaps exceeding the 1980 high at $850, at least that's the
way things are shaping up.
TIME FOR A REST
But we also know, gold has
risen far and fast over the past few months and this intermediate
rise, which we call C, could end at any time and gold is due
for a breather. In other words, it could cool down and correct
for a while, which would be normal, and if it does that'll provide
a good buying opportunity if you haven't bought yet, or want
to add to your positions.
What if we don't get a downward
correction? We think we will because markets simply don't go
straight up or straight down. But anything is possible and if
you're worried about missing the boat and haven't bought yet,
then average in by buying some now and some later, ideally during
a downward correction at better prices.
Some say these markets are
risky and you should beware. But a 78% drop in Nasdaq within
two years compared to double and triple-digit gains in gold,
and gold shares seems a lot more risky. Yes, stocks have rebounded
this year but the gains in the strongest stock indices haven't
come close to the gains in the HUI gold share index over the
past two years (see Chart 1).
So despite what you hear, go with these major trends and you'll
continue to maximize your investment returns.
IS THE ECONOMY REALLY
SOLID?
Listening to CNBC and other
stock market commentators, you'll hear how great the economy's
doing, sales are up, stocks are going higher and so on. Most
of this is true. The U.S. economy is surging at an over 8% growth
rate and consumers are shopping like mad, which should keep the
economy strong for now since consumer spending accounts for 70%
of GDP.
All this shopping and economic
growth, however, doesn't necessarily mean the stock market's
headed higher. Remember, the markets look ahead. The rise in
stocks over the past year was anticipating what we're now seeing,
not the other way around.
The economy is booming because
the Fed had the money spigots wide open for a long time. The
government has been borrowing and spending like mad to finance
military and other expenses, taxes have been cut and we're now
looking at the biggest budget deficit in U.S. history. Interest
rates have stayed low and consumers have been enticed to spend.
The end result, we now also have the largest trade deficit in
history.
As we've mentioned before,
if Wal Mart were a country it would be among China's top importers.
So as we keep shopping, we're boosting the economy but we're
also making the trade deficit larger, which now nearly guaranties
a much weaker dollar.
INFLATION: Coming
back
This seems to be okay with
the U.S. because as long as stocks and real estate go up due
to massive Fed liquidity, who cares if the dollar goes down.
Plus, it'll help reduce the trade deficit. But the weak dollar
and all the monetary fuel will eventually lead to inflation,
which we're now beginning to see.
We all know inflation is very
bullish for gold. So as the Fed pumps, consumers shop, the dollar
falls, the spending and war on terrorism continue, and inflation
begins to surface, gold will surge. It may not happen right away,
but all signs tell us this time really is different than anything
we've seen since gold's bull market in the 1970s.
But as we previously mentioned,
don't be surprised if we see gold go lower first before it heads
higher. In fact, that would be normal bull market behavior.
TECHNICALS: A normal correction
is due
Our favorite gold timing indicator
on Chart 2B helps us identify the intermediate moves in the gold
price. This tells us when an intermediate rise or decline is
due, when it's likely over, and the strength or weakness tells
us a lot about the overall bull market.
The A's & C's coincide
with the intermediate gold rises while the Bs and Ds correspond
to intermediate gold declines.
A "C" rise has been
underway for five months now (see Chart 2A). C rises tend to
be the best rise in the A-D pattern. In a bull market, C rises
tend to reach new highs and it's the rise that reinforces the
bull market. The current rise has been a fully expressed C rise
in both time and price. It reached our $400- $415 target and
it's lasted longer than most C rises of the past two decades.
This is great bull market action.
Note the indicator (Chart 2B)
has stayed above the D-B uptrend during the current rise. This
means the C rise won't be over until this uptrend is broken and/or
if gold closes and stays below $390. Once this happens, which
could be soon because it looks like the C rise is topping, a
D decline will begin and it could last 9 to 12 weeks, on average.
D declines tend to be the worst
decline in the A-D pattern. So we'll likely see gold, and especially
gold shares, under pressure for a couple of months, but gold's
major bull market will remain in force as long as gold stays
above $355. Also be prepared that we may not see a steep decline
if the dollar stays weak, but some sideways action instead while
the overbought situation is worked off.
If you want to take some good
profits in gold or silver shares, now's the time to do it. If
you do, keep your gold and silver, and at least half of your
gold and silver shares because the major trend is up. If you
want to ride through the correction, that's okay too and then
add to, or buy new positions once the D decline is over.
Meanwhile, we look forward
to another good year in 2004 and we wish you all a happy holiday
season.
-- Mary Anne & Pamela
Aden
December 22, 2003
Mary Anne
& Pamela Aden are internationally known analysts and editors
of The Aden Forecast, a market newsletter providing specific
forecasts on gold, gold shares and the other major markets.
Click here
to visit their website at http://www.adenforecast.com/
________________
321gold Inc Miami USA
|