Christmas Week Data Points to Rosy 2010

Last week markets were subdued as many economists and investors on Wall Street and Main Street took several days off to prepare for holiday celebrations.

The data that did arrive was mostly reminiscent of the spirit of St Nick – slipping coinage into stocks without their owner’s knowledge.

A report on the Tuesday before Christmas showed that US corporate profits in the third quarter were up sharply from the second quarter of 2009. Profits in the third quarter rose an annualized 68.0%, following a 24.5% boost in the second quarter. Corporate profits of course are a strong indication when determining the direction of a company’s stock price. When corporate profits rise, then it is a good bet the stock price will get a lift. The report underscores the fact the US corporate profits have now been up for three consecutive quarters — a fact that shakes out any lingering economic doomsday advocates and gives additional fundamental underpinnings to a stock market that continues to be bullish. (Some indexes now up well over 75% since March)

On the same day, a report on existing home sales revealed steeply higher numbers in November on the heels of record growth in October. Existing home sales rose 7.4% in November on top of October’s 9.9% lift-off. The year-on-year rate is now up 44%. The annual unit sales rate of 6.54M single-family homes and condominiums flew by even the most optimistic estimates of only 6.34M dwellings for November.

Retail sales rates in the week before Christmas Day were also jovial. The Redbook retail report illuminated results of plus 1.9% year-on-year. Many feared that a big snowstorm on the east coast would hamper sales, but the net effect of the snow was a big pick up in online shopping instead. Cumulative weekly retail results this quarter continue to point to a quite positive effect on Q4 GDP results.

A very bright spot in the economic data came on Christmas Eve. The initial jobless claims reports continue their downward trend. The claims fell another very substantial 28,000 in the Dec. 19 week to 452,000. The current report points to what it calls a “long-term trend of improvement.” The four-week average also fell to 465,250 for a 2,750 decrease. Continuing claims also keep retreating to a level now at about 5M. As we said back in early November, the trends for both initial and continuing claims show sizable improvement and point to our conclusion back then, that net US job growth has now likely begun. (Just in time for Christmas) The December payrolls report (released on January 8th) will confirm that fact.

The best news is that as we move further into 2010, the job market situation will continue to improve substantially. Now that net job loss has stopped, net job growth can begin.

As our jobs chart trend predicted in November, the US economy will likely be adding nearly 500,000 jobs per month by mid 2010. Thanks Santa!

(click chart to enlarge)

Source Data: US Dept of Labor

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Third Round Of Gold Upleg Ready To Start

The recent gold upleg has proceeded fairly predictably based on previous trends.  Like the Octrober correction and consolidation the December correction and consolidation has laid a firm foundation for the third round of the upleg.

FIRST ROUND

With gold trading around $995 on 9 September 2009 in Gold Party Barely Started I wrote, “This puts $1,300 gold and $25 silver within range without greatly exceeding previous trading norms”.

Slightly later on 9 October 2009 with gold below $1,050 I was interviewed on BNN:

BNN HOST: You said the credit crisis has not been calmed but intensified. Why? … So as we get more and more concerned with the top of that pyramid, the derivatives play, you are talking about $1,300 bullion. How do you get to that figure?

TRACE: $1,300 bullion comes from looking at the 200 day moving averages and where gold has consolidated and where it goes based on the usual uplegs.  It looks like we are following the same thing that happened in 2004 with the rise in 2005, the consolidation in 2006, which went to the rise in 2007, and the consolidation in 2008, and it looks that it will lead to a similar rise in 2009 and 2010 which will take gold to $1,300 which should be a little bit above its 200 day moving average. But in the same trading ranges as we saw in 2005 and 2007.

For the rest of October we saw gold consolidate and prepare for the second round of this upleg.  The credit crisis intensified with CIT and Dubai.  Commercial real estate is still frozen and about $600B needs to be refinanced during 2010.  The spread between 2 and 10 year Treasuries has been getting omnious at highs not seen since the early 1980’s.

SECOND ROUND

On 28 October 2009 with gold trading at $1,031, the lowest price since the BNN interview, in Gold Party Intermission Nearly Over, I wrote:

While the probability for a profitable trade is not nearly as high as it would be should the price relative to the 200dma be significantly below the 200dma there is still room for the price to run as we enter winter.  The October intermission is likely coming to a close. …

The current correction and consolidation of gold appears to be within trend and expected based on the seasonality.  November is the strongest month and this recent correction on low volume is laying a strong foundation for a large move upwards.

Within 26 trading days gold for LBMA delivery was $1,218.75.

THIRD ROUND

Gold is currently trading at about $1,105 with a 50dma of $1,114.57 and a 200dma of $989.68 or a current price of 1.116x the 200dma.

There has been no substantive change to the quality of US Treasuries and the Federal Reserve is failing with quantitative easing.  The Greater Depression is still being intentionally exacerbated by the Obomba administration.  States are in even worse shape; so make sure you keep nothing in a safety deposit box or it may end up on Ebay.

One substantive change is that private ownership of gold now surpasses officially reported central bank holdings.  Big players like John Paulson with over $4B in gold investments is flanked by David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital and Paul T. Jones of Tudor Investments and the sheeplike investment community is beginning to change its attitude towards the Ancient Metal of Kings.  Freedom is good for business and private gold ownership is good for freedom.

As Ludwig von Mises wrote,

It is impossible to grasp the meaning of the idea of sound money if one does not realize that it was devised as an instrument for the protection of civil liberties against despotic inroads on the part of governments. Ideologically it belongs in the same class with political constitutions and bills of rights.

After seeing the record and the numbers I chuckle at some of the Establishment ‘financial professionals’.  For example, in January 2009 on my article ‘How the Treasury Bubble Will Burst and Why‘ at Seeking Alpha I received a comment from Alan Brochstein, CFA of AB Analytical Services and fellow Gold Standard Contributor who provides analytical services for hire. He said, “Trace, sorry, but this makes absolutely no sense…” This is not surprising considering his 8 Dec 2008 article ‘Own Gold? Time to Fold‘ where he stated, “Gold remains a sucker’s bet…”

Since Mr. Brochstein’s article gold has powered from $772 to $1,104.  But gold is not a portfolio asset; everything else is.  For those who perform mental calculations of value using gold as the numeraire the results are truly stunning and likely to lead the market entrepreneur to be shell-shocked.  It appears that following the advice of most of these ‘financial professionals’ peddling paper coupons was the real sucker’s bet.  Scoreboard.

CONCLUSION

Everything appears in place for the third round of gold’s upleg.  The previous two rounds have followed the same predictable pattern found during 2005 and 2007.  The fundamental reasons for owning gold have not changed.  Quantitative easing is failing as little colored tickets evaporate, federal budget deficits are ballooning, States are bankrupt, extremely respected money managers are moving into bullion, the world needs a new reserve currency and private ownership of gold is at record highs.

Sure, the third round of the upleg could not materialize for any number of reasons such as interest rates being raised, the mythical Cibola being discovered, etc.  As the upleg progresses the gold to silver ratio should probably close from the current 63.27 towards a more normal 50-55.  The better time to buy gold, silver or platinum was before the first or second rounds of this upleg.  But if the precious metals are absent from one’s portfolio then the second best time to buy them is now.  And by all means, avoid the GLD ETF despite the caterwauling of the prospectus challenged illiterate apologists as it is merely a paper ticket that struts around like the precious metal.

DISCLOSURES:  Long physical gold, silver and platinum with no position the problematic SLV or GLD ETFs.

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