Tag Archives: gold

Portfolio Rebalancing – A Potentially Golden Opportunity

For a variety of reasons, gold is a widely-held asset class within investment portfolios. Many investors include gold in their asset allocation mix for its perceived ability to act as both a diversifier and as a potential store of value in times of uncertainty; these perceptions contribute to the concept of gold as a “core holding” in many diversified portfolios. Indeed, with the notable exception of Warren Buffett , 1 some of the investment community’s most distinguished names currently maintain investments in gold. 2 Like any investment, gold is subject to rebalancing or reallocation when its value relative to other portfolio components shifts significantly. Examining quarterly data from the beginning of 1976 (the year that gold started trading freely in the United States) through the quarter ended December 31, 2015, suggests that gold is overvalued relative to historical price relationships with the major agricultural crops of corn, wheat, soybeans and sugar. 3 In fact, at quarter-end December 31, 2015, the gold/corn ratio, defined herein as the number of bushels of corn an investor could buy with the proceeds from selling one troy ounce of gold, was 296 bushels versus a 39-year average value of 169 bushels. Gold investors attempting to maximize portfolio performance through disciplined quarterly or annual rebalancing may want to consider adjusting their gold holdings in tandem with their existing or anticipated agricultural sector portfolio investment mix. For example, the historical data for the gold/corn ratio suggests that a mean reversion 4 from December 31, 2015, levels of 296 bushels to the 39-year mean value of approximately 169 bushels of corn for each ounce of gold (bu/oz) could benefit an investor rebalancing gold for corn within their portfolio. Click to enlarge As illustrated in the chart above, at 296 bu/oz, the gold/corn ratio is approximately 75% above its nearly four decade average of 169 bu/oz. Hypothetically, if an investor sold gold and purchased corn at the current 296 bu/oz level, and the ratio subsequently retraced to its historical mean value of approximately 169 bu/oz, the investor would then be able to sell the corn and buy back 75% more gold than was originally sold to make the temporary reallocation from gold into corn. While the gold/corn ratio was historically above its 39-year mean at the end of Q4 2015, other major agricultural crops were also very near all-time historic highs for the same time period. Charts for the gold/wheat, gold/soybean, and gold/sugar ratios are shown below. The gold/wheat ratio was 80% above its 39-year mean value, the gold/soybean ratio was 77% above, and the gold/sugar ratio was nearly 47% above its historical 39-year mean average value. Click to enlarge Click to enlarge Click to enlarge The current availability of both futures contracts and futures-based exchange traded products for gold, corn, wheat, soybeans, and sugar makes rebalancing the gold and agricultural components within a portfolio easier than ever before. Investors and advisors need to make an assessment of the relative value of gold versus their other portfolio constituents, including agriculture, and appropriately adjust their allocations to suit their individual investment needs and objectives. 1 ” Why Warren Buffett Hates Gold .” NASDAQ 15 Aug. 2013: Web. October 9th, 2014. 2 Based on the 13-F filings for holders of the SPDR Gold Trust (NYSEARCA: GLD ) as of 12/31/15, and found using Bloomberg Professional, January 4th, 2016. 3 Analysis & corresponding charts were prepared by Teucrium Trading, LLC, using Bloomberg Professional, January 4th, 2016. All supporting detail available upon request 4 Mean Reversion : A theory suggesting that prices and returns eventually move back towards the mean or average. This mean or average can be the historical average of the price or return or another relevant average such as the growth in the economy or the average return of an industry. Additional disclosure: I have held in the near past, and may purchase in the near future, shares of DGZ as a proxy for short gold against my long agricultural holdings of corn, wheat, soybeans and sugar.

First Fed Hike Puts These ETFs In Focus

Months of speculation and nail-biting hearsay about the timeline of the first rate hike in almost a decade finally ended yesterday thankfully, with neither shocks, nor surprises. The Fed pulled the trigger at long last, raising benchmark interest rates by a modest 25 bps to 0.25-0.50% for the first time since 2006, making it official that the U.S. economy is out of the woods; though still has miles to go. The step also sets the U.S. apart from other developed economies and had a great impact on the global currency market. The Fed believes that the possibility of further improvement in the labor market as well as in inflation is ripe at the current level. Muted inflation mainly due to stubbornly low oil prices has been an issue for long for the Fed. But in the 12 months through November, the core consumer price index grew 2% (matching the Fed’s target), the highest reading since May 2014 , followed by the 1.9% advancement in October. Unemployment rate fell to 5%, a more than seven-year low level. Average hourly earnings are rising of late. What’s more noteworthy was that the Fed did not move an inch from the ‘ gradual ‘ rate hike trajectory. Also, the central bank indicated that while the job market criteria is apparently accomplished, the Fed’s future focus would be on the inflation reading, which is yet to pick up at a sustained pace. Global growth worry is another factor, which is holding the Fed back from acting fast on tightening. Fed’s Projection The Fed lowered its 2015 projection for personal consumer expenditure inflation to 0.3-0.5% from 0.3-1.0% and 0.6-1.0% guided in September and June, respectively. The projections were also slashed for 2016 and 2017 from 1.5-2.4% to 1.2-2.1% and from 1.7-2.2% to 1.7-2.0%, respectively. The expectations for 2016 and 2017 real GDP growth have been ticked down to 2.0-2.7% from 2.1-2.8% guided in September (Fed’s June prediction for 2016 was 2.3-3.0%) and to 1.8-2.5% from 1.9-2.6%, respectively. However, the real GDP growth expectation for 2015 has been changed to 2.0-2.2% from 1.9-2.5% projected in September. As already discussed, unemployment was the true healer with its 2015 expectation being 5%, almost in line with the 4.9-5.2% expected in September. The coming two years will also see the same uptrend as estimates for 2016 were lowered from 4.5-5.0% to 4.3-4.9% while the same for 2017 remained unchanged at 4.5-5.0%. The notable changes were in the projection for the benchmark interest rate for 2015, 2016 and 2017. Fed’s funds rate for the longer run may be maintained at 3.0-4.0% but projection for 2015, 2016 and 2017 were changed from negative 0.1- positive 0.9% to 0.1-0.4%, from negative 0.1- positive 2.9% to 0.9-2.1% and from 1.0-3.9% to 1.9-3.4%, respectively. Market Impact However, the historic move did not mess up the market, as the investing world was prepared well ahead of the meeting. In fact, the Fed gave the global market enough time to digest the news when the central bank brought the December rate hike possibility back on to the table in October end. With no drama in the December meeting, the market is now focusing more on a sluggish rate hike, not just the hike itself. As a result, probability of a dovish rate hike trail ahead cheered equity investors almost across the globe. Even the highly vulnerable areas like emerging markets also tacked on gains during the Fed meeting. This produced a handful of surprise winners and losers post meeting. However, bonds obeyed the rule book and started diving as soon as the Fed enacted the lift-off. The two-year benchmark Treasury yield jumped 4 bps to 1.02% on December 16 – a five and a half year high. However, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose just 2 bps to 2.30% and yield on the long-term 30-year bonds saw a 2 bp nudge to 3.02%. All bond ETFs were in the red. Given this, we have highlighted ETF winners and losers from the Fed move: The PowerShares DB US Dollar Bullish Fund (NYSEARCA: UUP ) – Natural winner The U.S. dollar is a common winner following the lift-off. The U.S. dollar ETF UUP gained 0.04% after hours. The iShares MSCI Emerging Markets (NYSEARCA: EEM ) – Surprise Winner Emerging markets normally fall out of favor in a rising rate environment as investors dump these high-yielding, but risky, investing tools for higher yields at home. However, possibility of a gradual hike boosted the emerging market ETF EEM by about 2% on December 16. The fund added 0.2% after hours. The SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (NYSEARCA: KRE ) – Natural Winner The regional bank sector was pleased by the Fed decision and the resultant rise in yields, as it tends to benefit from the steepening of the yield curve. As a result, regional bank ETF KRE was up about 1% and added 0.1% after hours. The Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (NYSEARCA: GDX ) – Surprise Winner but Potential Loser As soon as the greenback gains, commodity prices fall. Gold, one of the key precious metals, might have gained from the slower hike bet, but is likely to lose ahead. The SPDR Gold Trust (NYSEARCA: GLD ) tracking the gold bullion added over 1.2% while the largest big-cap gold mining ETF GDX added about 4% on the same day. The latter saw more gains as it often trades as a leveraged play on gold. But both lost over 0.3% and 0.6% in extended hours. The iShares Mortgage Real Estate Capped ETF (NYSEARCA: REM ) – Surprise Winner but Potential Loser Mortgage REITs perform better in a low interest rate environment. However, though high-yield REM added 3.2% yesterday, it might see a slump ahead. Original Post

Yamana Gold Is Making Progress On Reducing Its Cash Costs And Its Debt

Summary Yamana Gold recently announced its third quarter 2015 financial results. Total gold production of 325,897 ounces is a 9% increase from last year, with solid all-in sustaining costs per ounce of $841. Operating cash flow after changes in non-cash working capital was strong at $77.6 million. Foreign exchange hedges that will eliminated by year end will improve the company’s AISC on its core gold mines by $40 per ounce. Debt remains a little high, but a recent streaming transaction with Sandstorm Gold is a step in the right direction; shares are becoming attractive. Yamana Gold AUY data by YCharts Recent Stock Price: $1.95 Shares Outstanding: 946.56 million Market Cap: $1.85 billion 52-Week Range: $1.42 – $4.84 Gold miner Yamana Gold (NYSE: AUY ) recently reported its third-quarter 2015 financial results, and low all-in sustaining costs, higher production levels and a recent streaming transaction should all be seen as positive developments for the stock. First, I’ll discuss the company’s financial results, before giving an updated valuation. Strong Production: In the quarter, Yamana produced 325,897 ounces of gold (9% increase from last year), with notable increases seen at the Jacobina mine (32% increase), Gualcamayo (17%), and at Canadian Malartic (12%). Low AISC: More importantly, all-in sustaining costs came in at $841 per ounce, leading to cash flows form continuing operations after changes in non-cash working capital of $77.6 million, or $.08 per share. But without its non-core Brazilian gold mines, AISC would actually have been $748 per ounce. Brio Gold Outperforms: The monetization plan at the company’s Brazilian mines is going as planned. Yamana saw production of 38,430 gold ounces and an improvement in AISC to $866 per ounce at these mines. The company is still aiming to monetize these non-core Brazilian assets (either through an IPO, a straight-up sale, or a joint-venture), and these strong results should certainly help it achieve that goal. It’s still hard to tell how much Yamana can get for Brio Gold at this point in time, but the fact that Yamana has reduced AISC from $1,002 in the first quarter to $866 this past quarter is real positive news. Balance Sheet Improving: Yamana ended the quarter with $137.8 million in cash and equivalents, but this does not include the $148 million upfront payment Sandstorm Gold (NYSEMKT: SAND ) made to Yamana in the latest streaming transaction. So, the company’s current cash balance should actually be around $285 million, and Sandstorm is also required to make another $4 million payment in six months. Yamana also gained 15 million share purchase warrants in the deal, with a strike price of $3.50 and a term of five years (Sandstorm currently trades just under $3 per share). Declining Debt: In addition, Yamana’s total long-term debt declined to $1.86 million in the quarter, down from $2.025 billion a year ago, with a net debt position of $1.75 billion. However, following the streaming transaction, its net debt position would actually be reduced to $1.6 billion, with just $147 million left of its revolving credit facility, according to the corporate presentation (the plan is to get this balance to zero by the end of the year). Finally, Yamana’s debt repayment schedule remains flexible, as the company owes just $97 million in 2016, $18 million in 2017, and $112 million in 2018. Final Thoughts: In conclusion, I really think Yamana is about to turn a corner as the company is delivering on its operations, has reduced its net debt with a favorable streaming transaction, and has made significant progress at its Brio Gold mines. With an EV/EBITDA of just 4.38, shares look attractively valued here and could outperform peers on a gold price rebound.