HUI
Bull Seasonals 2
Adam Hamilton
Archives
Mar 21, 2008
After an incredibly volatile week for the precious metals, PM-stock
traders are very worried. Despite Bernanke's Fed forcing real
interest rates even more massively negative, gold plunged. The
PM-stock traders, never paragons of courage anyway, panicked.
The HUI gold-stock index plummeted with gold.
We were stopped out of a lot
of trades in the carnage, but the great thing about stop losses
is they automatically get your capital out early in a sharp plunge.
So we are now blessed with lots of dry powder to scoop up irrationally
beaten-down bargains. Great opportunities have bloomed! I will
discuss our trading strategy in depth, including specific new
trades, early next week in Zeal Speculator.
But today my mission is to
explore gold and HUI seasonals. This week's sharp selloff that
rained terror on the PM realm like hailstones of fire makes seasonals
more relevant than ever. A seasonal perspective really helps
put the recent extreme volatility and heavy selling pressure
in gold and the HUI in context. Contrary to the legions of Chicken
Littles frantically squawking today, perhaps the sky is not falling.
Seasonality, of course, is
the tendency for a price to behave in a particular way at a particular
time during the calendar year. The key word here is tendency,
as seasonals are seldom the primary driver of prices. They are
more like prevailing winds influencing prices peripherally. An
aviation analogy nicely illustrates this concept.
If you are flying somewhere,
you'll reach your destination regardless of the prevailing winds
at altitude. But it is certainly nice to have a tailwind, as
it will shorten your flight time. The engines on the airplane
are the primary driver of its velocity, but prevailing winds
can really affect the time (and fuel) it takes to reach your
destination. In the financial markets seasonals are like these
prevailing winds, an important secondary influence.
Interestingly both gold and
the HUI have exhibited strong seasonal tendencies over their
powerful bulls. Both tend to be strong at certain times of the
calendar year and weak at other times. While it is easy to understand
why a grown commodity like wheat has seasonal tendencies, I find
many traders are surprised to learn that seasonality even exists
in gold and PM stocks. Orbital mechanics don't affect mining,
after all.
If you'd like more background
on some of the cultural drivers of gold seasonality, check out
my initial
essay in this series. It also explains the methodology used
to construct these updated seasonal charts below, so I won't
rehash that discussion here. Instead let's dive right in to gain
some important seasonal perspective on gold and the HUI today.
Any discussion on HUI seasonals
has to start with gold itself, as this metal is the primary driver
of gold stocks' fortunes. Over the long term, higher gold prices
mean higher profits for the companies mining this metal. And
in the stock markets, higher profits ultimately translate into
higher stock prices. So as always, we have to look to gold first
to understand the gold stocks' volatile gyrations.
This chart looks at an annual
composite of the gold price's calendar tendencies since 2000.
Daily gold price data for each year is indexed starting at 100
and then all the resulting annual indexes are averaged. Thousands
of formulas and one complex spreadsheet later, the final results
are rendered above. Since 2000, gold has exhibited a very clear
and strong seasonal uptrend reflecting this metal's secular bull.
If you apply standard technical
analysis to this uptrend, gold seasonality has definite support
and resistance lines shown above. Generally gold doesn't retreat
much below its seasonal support. Thus when it hits seasonal support,
it is usually an excellent time to add long positions. Note that
one of only three support approaches during the year happens
in mid-March! Gold tends to be weak right now.
Now lest you suspect the sharp
selloff just witnessed this week has unduly influenced the charts
in this essay, I cut off this data as of February 29th, 2008.
So all these charts reflect average Marches from 2000 to 2007,
but not 2008. You hardcore skeptics can prove this to yourself
by carefully comparing March in these charts with March in my
last seasonal
charts from September 2007. March seasonality is identical!
So even before this week, seasonal
weakness in gold in mid-March was a well-established tendency.
In fact, gold generally started selling off in late February
before finally bouncing at seasonal support in mid-March. While
not as apparent above, in earlier seasonal charts not including
February 2008 this selloff was two-phased. It started modestly
in late February, then gold consolidated sideways for a couple
weeks, and then it fell more sharply into mid-March.
But this year, of course, gold
bucked its usual seasonal tendency. It surged into late February
when it usually tends to start correcting. Then it consolidated
near its highs, in the $970s, for the first couple weeks of March.
And then it started surging again, contrary to seasonal tendencies,
to close over $1000 for a couple days. So perhaps this week's
sharp plunge was simply seasonality catching up with gold in
a very temporally-accelerated way. Three weeks' worth of seasonal
selling was done in three days!
At least it's certainly a provocative
thought to ponder. Gold traders are worried that the Fed's negative
real-rate policies are now somehow mysteriously helping the US
dollar. They are worried that hedge funds unwinding leveraged
commodities positions must think this commodities bull is over.
But wouldn't it be ironic if gold was simply overbought, needed
to retreat a bit, so seasonals finally caught up with it quickly?
Understanding context is critical
to psychologically weathering sharp adverse moves. Gold hit $925
for the first time in history on January 28th, $950 on February
27th, $975 on March 3rd, and $1000 on March 14th. So just two
months ago, the levels gold plunged to this week would have been
considered fantastically high! This metal has certainly earned
a breather, and seasonally a pullback was probable anyway.
And if you can stay coldly
rational in the midst of a howling sentiment storm, the mid-March
seasonal support approach is very bullish. Starting about now,
gold tends to rally strongly into late May. On average from 2000
to 2007, this rally carried the gold price 5% higher. The next
two months are usually one of gold's biggest seasonal rallies
of the year. And today's seasonal support approach is where it
launches.
I suspect gold will have little
problem embarking on its usual March-to-May seasonal rally this
year. Many bullish forces are stacking up behind it, building
upside pressure. The key one is inflation. So far, higher commodities
prices largely have not been passed on from producers to consumers.
But they soon will be. As general prices rise, interest in gold
among mainstream investors will grow dramatically.
On top of this, the Federal
Reserve has ramped the US MZM money supply by a jaw-dropping
16.0% over the past year! Relatively more money chasing relatively
fewer goods, services, and gold means higher prices. And Ben
Bernanke's disastrous negative real-rate policy, right out of
the inflationary 1970s playbook, is extremely bullish for gold
and bearish for the US dollar. Gold will thrive.
And as goes gold, so go the
gold stocks. While sentiment amongst PM-stock traders was decimated
this week, they will be back when gold resumes rallying. I've
been actively trading PM stocks since this HUI bull began in
late 2000 and I've never seen a more manic-depressive lot. In
the HUI's 1331% bull to date, sharp selloffs to shake out the
weak hands have been par for the course. Once they've exited,
rallying resumes.
So with gold likely near the
launching point for one of its three biggest seasonal rallies
of the year, how do the HUI seasonals line up? Pretty darned
well! If you quickly scroll between the gold chart above and
this HUI chart, you'll see that HUI seasonals generally mirror
and amplify the underlying gold seasonals rather nicely. The
HUI too also hits seasonal support in mid-March and then rallies
seasonally into late May.
Once again, this data is current
as of the end of February. So the indexed and averaged March
shown here has no data from March 2008. And what do we see? HUI
weakness in late February accelerating into a mid-March low right
along seasonal support. The HUI has already had a strong tendency
for years to grind lower into the middle of this month, and this
week's plunge played into it.
This year, the HUI rallied
into late February as its seasonals suggest. But instead of starting
to pull back then, it consolidated sideways for a week and then
started retreating modestly. But gold drives the gold stocks,
so the HUI caught the gold fever and surged to a new all-time
high of 515 on March 14th. But this rallying, fun though it was,
was contrary to the HUI's usual seasonal tendency to retreat
into mid-March.
So perhaps like gold, the HUI's
seasonals finally caught up with it this week. Instead of having
three weeks to pull back seasonally and bleed off greed, the
HUI had three days. And of course the sharper a move, the more
fear is generated which tends to exacerbate that move. While
this week's selloff was irrationally fearful and extreme, it
did occur near a seasonally weak time of the year. It had a tailwind.
Now please realize I am not
emphatically saying that an accelerated seasonal catch-up is
what hammered gold and the HUI. Seasonals are merely secondary
drivers. But if the primary driver was a short-term overbought
gold price that needed to retreat, and the Fed scared leveraged
speculators into unwinding gold longs, then the weak seasonals
added a tailwind. Seasonals could help explain this plunge's
severity, and maybe some of its timing, even though they weren't
its prime mover.
I know from past consulting
experience that some PM-stock traders won't survive a week like
this. The leveraged ones using debt to bet with other people's
money can be totally wiped out by sharp selloffs like we saw
this week or last August. The traders without emotional control
can be so psychologically scarred that they never want to see
another PM stock as long as they live. Both camps sent me e-mails
this week.
But if you prevailed and your
rationality and sanity is intact, this mid-March seasonal support
approach in the HUI offers great opportunities. Just like gold,
one of the HUI's three biggest seasonal rallies of the year tends
to erupt out of these mid-March seasonal lows. It tends to run
into late May and is really quite powerful with a 16.3% average
indexed gain.
A 16% run in about 10 weeks
may not sound like much by PM-stock standards, but realize two
key things. First, this is an indexed average from 2000 to 2007
encompassing 8 years. As the widening yellow standard-deviation
bands above reveal, the spread on individual March-to-May seasonal
rallies is quite broad. Second, seasonals are merely a tailwind,
not a primary driver. We must look to the primary driver for
clues on the size of this rally.
As I wrote in February on HUI upleg structure,
it looks like the HUI is currently in one of its periodic massive
uplegs of this bull market. While awesome in hindsight, these
massive uplegs are very challenging psychologically in real time.
Sharp selloffs within the uplegs aren't uncommon, as PM stocks
do everything in their power to shake out bulls too soon before
their greed-driven highly-profitable climaxes.
If today's upleg continues
to unfold like a massive upleg, it should see half its gains
in its final two months. At past massive uplegs' average duration,
today's upleg's final two months run into mid-May. May is also
the highest-probability topping time seasonally, by far, for
all of the HUI uplegs of this bull. Thus if this upleg continues
higher after this week's panic, it will have a strong seasonal
tailwind leading into May.
The biggest gains of this entire
HUI bull have been witnessed during the final two months of massive
uplegs. And to have seasonal tailwinds concurrent with these
probable final two months of our current upleg is all the better.
So despite this week, probabilities still appear to favor a big
HUI rally heading into May. Gold stocks are really compelling
to buy even at $800 gold, let alone today's awesome prices.
So with a primary driver, continuing
high gold prices, and a secondary influence, bullish seasonals,
lining up, this week's sharp HUI selloff seems totally irrational.
While emotions can spark fast anomalous moves, emotional extremes
never persist. When the dust settles and rationality returns,
PM stocks should prove irresistible. This final chart looks at
the HUI bull seasonals indexed monthly instead of annually.
Monthly indexing then averaging
reveals the same seasonal tendencies discussed above from a different
perspective. The HUI tends to be weak seasonally heading into
mid-March. It pulls back rather sharply but then recovers late
in the month. And then April tends to be flat as sanity slowly
returns to the easily-excitable PM-stock-trader herd. But then
this sector tends to soar in May in one of its biggest monthly
rallies of the year.
Between 2000 and 2007, the
HUI's seasonal selloff in mid-March provided one of the four
best opportunities to go long gold stocks of the entire year.
Odds are 2008 won't break this tendency. Out of extreme fear
comes great opportunity, and this year's outsized selloff drove
far more fear than is normal seasonally. It is never easy buying
during widespread fear, but that is how contrarians earn big
profits.
I really wish I could tell
you that I expected such a sharp HUI selloff in mid-March, but
I didn't. I was well aware of this seasonal tendency to retreat,
but I suspected it would be just a lazy consolidation and pullback
this year like usual. Its raw magnitude caught me by surprise
too. But such is speculation. The volatility and surprises are
what make this game so exciting. The markets never cease to astonish!
The upside of big selloffs
is they create excellent buying opportunities. Short-term fear
temporarily overwhelms long-term fundamentals so prices are briefly
driven down to totally irrational lows. Astute and fearless traders
can swoop in and buy on the cheap. And the prudent PM-stock traders
running stop losses just recovered much capital from stopped
trades, most at gains, that is now ready to be redeployed.
Not only should we be regaining
the seasonal tailwinds now, but gold stocks have yet to fully
reflect gold's stellar run since August. Regardless if gold stabilizes
at $900, $850, or $800, mining gold is going to be a lot more
profitable going forward than it has been in the past. In calendar
2007, the gold price averaged $697. So far this quarter, the
average has soared to $926! Sooner or later gold stocks will
be bid up to reflect this. Even after a big pullback, the days
of sub-$700 gold are probably history.
The timing of this fear-driven
panic selling is really fortuitous in one way. Back in November,
my business partner Scott Wright and I started wading through
the morass of junior gold stocks. We started with 285, gradually
researching them all and whittling the field down to our 12 favorites.
Just this week Scott finished his brand new Zeal Report fundamentally
describing each of our favorite junior golds in depth.
Juniors are small and very-high-potential
stocks, so they are even more slave to sentiment than larger
gold miners. They tend to thrive the most late in massive uplegs
when widespread greed returns, like in spring 2006. If we are
indeed in another massive upleg due to peak in May 2008, they
should soar again soon.
The panic selling this week
helped drive our favorite gold juniors even lower, offering stellar
buying opportunities. If this HUI upleg remains on track, today
is a rare junior-gold fire sale right before greed is likely
to return with a vengeance once traders realize gold isn't going
to zero. Buy our
awesome new report today to get the fundamental lowdown on
our favorite high-potential junior golds!
Also, as always, we'll continue
to explain our actual commodities-stock trades as we launch them
in our acclaimed monthly Zeal Intelligence newsletter. If you
are tired of being tossed to and fro by your own capricious emotions
or those of the marketplace, you'll love our analyses. After
actively trading this gold-stock bull since its birth, we offer
a strong, steady, logical, and unemotional anchor of cutting-edge
research and real-world trading knowledge. Subscribe today!
The bottom line is gold and
HUI seasonals have long exhibited a tendency to retreat in mid-March.
While this week's selloff was far sharper and more extreme than
seasonally expected, the metal and stocks had been bucking seasonal
trends in the weeks prior to this. So perhaps a secondary driver
of the severity of these selloffs was simply overstretched seasonals
springing back, doing a few weeks' worth of work in a few days.
While such an extreme selloff
stung, good traders never lick their wounds. They look forward.
Heading into May, seasonal tailwinds are due to resume. Over
the past 8 years, they have driven one of the three biggest annual
seasonal rallies in both gold and PM stocks. They ought to again,
with PM stocks not yet reflecting new high prevailing metals
prices even after the metals selling. So unless you think gold
is going to zero, carpe diem!
Adam Hamilton, CPA
Mar 21, 2008
Thoughts, comments, or flames? Fire away at zelotes@zealllc.com. Due to my staggering and perpetually increasing e-mail load, I regret that I am not able to respond to comments personally. I will read all messages though and really appreciate your feedback!
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