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Gold-Stock Trading Volume Really Growing

Gold-stock trading volume is high and growing, revealing much trader conviction behind the strong early-year rallies in gold and silver stocks. The higher the volume underlying any particular move, the greater its strength and staying power. And the volume in the gold juniors, which are slaved to sentiment, is incredible. Since trading volume generally grows as uplegs mature, seeing such high volume already in such a young gold-stock upleg is a very bullish omen. There’s no doubt the gold-mining stocks remain deeply out of favor, collateral damage from the Fed’s gross financial-market distortions of recent years. But sentiment is shifting, with stock traders starting to regain interest in this left-for-dead sector. Gold-stock trading volume is really growing as capital returns. And since higher volume is an essential precursor to major new uplegs, its growth is a very bullish portent. The leading gold-stock sector benchmark these days is the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (NYSEARCA: GDX ). Its excellent basket of the world’s elite gold and silver miners, which are effectively market-capitalization weighted within this ETF, deftly mirrors the stock-market fortunes of this entire industry. And they’ve certainly been ugly thanks to the Fed’s artificial stock-market levitation. As the US stock markets soared in 2013 on the Fed’s wildly unprecedented QE3 debt monetizations , all demand for alternative investments including gold withered. Gold’s resulting epic plunge on extreme selling of SPDR Gold Trust ETF ( GLD) shares obliterated the gold stocks. GDX plummeted 54.5% in 2013, and then drifted another 13.0% lower last year. It’s no wonder stock traders utterly despise gold stocks today. But they sure shouldn’t, as the most out-of-favor battered-down sectors always have the greatest upside potential. And stock investors and speculators are starting to understand this. In January 2015, heavy gold-stock buying catapulted GDX 21.3% higher! Gold stocks were almost certainly the best-performing sector in the entire stock markets. And that buying was even more impressive coming on heavy volume . Naturally price action itself is the most-important technical indicator, since it exposes underlying supply-and-demand trends. Ultimately all stock prices are determined by the balance between shares offered and bid for. But trading volume, how many shares change hands daily, is a critical secondary indicator. It reveals traders’ overall conviction for any particular move, and thus its strength and potential staying power. While low-volume moves are likely to soon fizzle out as they quickly exhaust themselves, high-volume moves often signal major trends . And this young new year’s gold-stock buying has happened on big volume. This greatly increases the odds that a major reversal happened in gold stocks late last year as they hit apocalyptic fundamentally-absurd lows, and that a major new upleg is just getting underway. This bullish revelation is readily apparent in a long-term gold-stock volume chart. Since GDX is easily the most-popular destination for stock-market capital seeking gold-mining exposure, its trading volume is an excellent proxy for this sector’s as a whole. But since gold stocks are usually excessively volatile, raw GDX volume isn’t a great measure over a long span of time. Share-price fluctuations mask the real trend. At GDX’s unadjusted record high approaching $67 in September 2011, 100 shares were worth $6700. But after subsequently collapsing 75% to its recent nearly-all-time-record low under $17 in November 2014, those same shares were only worth $1700. Obviously shares traded at high GDX prices were a lot more significant than shares traded at low prices. So it’s important to adjust for such divergent prices. This is easily accomplished through a simple construct called capital volume . Each day’s actual share trading volume is multiplied by that day’s adjusted (for stock dividends and splits) closing share price. That shows the amount of capital actually changing hands in GDX shares in perfectly-comparable terms across long periods of time. And even from this perspective, the growth in GDX trading has been massive. This chart shows GDX capital volume over the past 4 years or so, rendered in red. Since trading volume is such a hyper-volatile dataset, a 21-day moving average (one month) is included in yellow to distill out the underlying volume trend. Finally GDX itself is superimposed over the top in blue for reference. The trading-volume growth in GDX shares recently has been very impressive, even in capital-volume terms. The recent extremely-low gold-stock price levels reflect the universal antipathy for this sector. In early November, GDX was trading at the same levels only seen for a single trading day in the dark heart of late 2008’s once-in-a-century stock panic! Gold stocks had almost never been so deeply out of favor as they were late last year. The great majority of stock traders had forgotten about this sector or left it for dead. In such an exceedingly-bearish environment, gold-stock trading volume should’ve shriveled away to nothing. With stock investors and speculators presumably having virtually zero interest in owning gold stocks, GDX’s capital volume ought to have totally collapsed. But incredibly just the opposite happened! The total value of this benchmark gold-stock ETF’s shares changing hands continued to steadily grow. This trend actually began way back in mid-2012, thanks to the underlying gold-price action which is the ultimate driver of gold-mining profits and hence gold-stock price levels. After gold soared to extremely-overbought levels in August 2011, it needed to correct. And this happened naturally over the next 9 months or so, where gold retreated about 19%. This fueled a 41% GDX correction over a similar span. The gold stocks were bottoming in mid-2012, and soon started surging again as gold recovered. But that nascent gold rebound was short-circuited by the Fed’s radically-unprecedented third quantitative-easing campaign launched just before the critical presidential elections. The stock markets started to soar on the Fed’s massive inflationary money printing and endless promises of a lot more if necessary. So gold started to collapse, crushed by the deluge of new supply unleashed by stock traders dumping GLD gold-ETF shares far faster than gold itself was being sold. Gold stocks immediately followed gold lower, and leveraged its downside like usual. So GDX’s capital volume grew despite lower share prices throughout 2013 on heavy selling. That kicked off the longstanding volume uptrend shown in this chart. There were certainly episodes in GDX’s anomalous Fed-sparked collapse that reflected selling surging to capitulation levels. Inevitably in any long downtrend, the great majority of investors and speculators give up and throw in the towel. The numbers of capitulating traders swell during particularly sharp plunges to major new lows. Such periodic flushing events of traders fleeing GDX helped ramp its volume. Since stock traders are typically-emotional human beings, their collective decisions on when to buy and sell as a herd are fueled by popular greed and fear. And these dangerously-misleading emotions for traders grow very asymmetrically . While greed mounts gradually as uplegs power higher, fear flares up quickly in major selloffs. So high-volume selling episodes marking widespread capitulation are normal. But provocatively, recent years’ biggest gold-stock volume spikes didn’t merely come in capitulations. Instead they also arrived in this sector’s periodic sharp rallies. Note that GDX capital volume soared in the summer-2013 rally, spring-2014 rally, and summer-2014 rally. That is very contrary to normal market behavior, defying expectations. It likely reflects sizable latent investor interest in gold stocks despite their struggles. This surprising buy-like-crazy-on-gold-stock-rallies trend continued since GDX plumbed its latest major low in mid-December. As gold stocks recovered in the 7 weeks since, GDX capital volume just soared. And it’s really at incredible levels these days. In January 2015, GDX capital volume averaged $1.2b per day. That’s considerably higher than August 2011’s $0.9b, which was heading into GDX’s record high! This is extraordinary and exceedingly bullish for the beaten-down gold stocks. In major uplegs, trading volume grows gradually . It tends to start out small as the early contrarians buy in, and then slowly ramps up. As prices rise, they capture the attention of more traders who decide to buy in later and ride the upleg. So if gold-stock trading volume is already this high now, imagine how high it will balloon later. Volume and interest are steadily growing in gold stocks, despite epically-bearish sentiment still plaguing this sector. The early contrarian investors buying in now ahead of the thundering herd are likely to earn fortunes as gold stocks mean revert higher. This sector is tiny relative to general stocks, and still has vast room to rally yet coming off such extreme lows. It won’t take much capital to catapult it far higher. After the last time GDX’s price briefly fell to such extreme lows in late 2008’s crazy stock panic, this gold-stock ETF would more than quadruple over the next several years. And the late-2014 lows were even more extreme than the stock panic’s in valuation terms. In late October 2008, gold had plunged near $732. Yet in early November 2014 when GDX hit those same lows, gold was fully 56% higher near $1144! As I’ve been pounding the table about in recent months, it is fundamentally absurd for gold stocks to be trading as if gold was far lower than it really is since the yellow metal drives their profits and hence ultimately stock prices. In terms of the venerable HUI/Gold Ratio , gold stocks were trading at levels last seen over 11 years earlier when gold was near $350. Seeing the same levels at $1150 was ludicrous . And that’s probably the primary motivation behind the early contrarian stock investors and speculators already flooding back into this deeply-out-of-favor sector. They understand stock prices are forever cyclical , that huge mean reversions higher always follow extreme lows. Their buying is the vanguard of a major sentiment shift getting underway in gold stocks, which will eventually eradicate the excessive fear dogging them. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the junior gold stocks . Unlike the elite gold and silver majors that comprise GDX, the juniors generally don’t have operating mines. And without cashflows, there’s no fundamental case to be made for them needing to mean revert far higher merely at current prevailing gold prices. With no operations, junior-gold stock levels are far more based on sentiment than fundamentals. GDX conveniently has a sister ETF that tracks junior explorers and smaller miners, the Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF (NYSEARCA: GDXJ ). While GDX’s capital-volume chart is very encouraging, GDXJ’s is just shocking . It offers the most conclusive evidence I’ve yet seen that gold stocks as a sector have decisively bottomed, with a major new upleg underway as sentiment starts to shift. While major gold and silver miners have suffered an exceedingly-rough couple of years thanks to the Fed’s gross financial-market distortions, the juniors have been destroyed. No one has ever seen such carnage in these explorers and small miners, it’s radically unprecedented. GDXJ certainly reflects this, even though it contains the biggest and best of the juniors. It plummeted a staggering 60.8% in 2013 alone! Things got so bad in the middle of that year that GDXJ’s custodians felt compelled to execute a risky 1-for-4 reverse stock split . Investors generally hate reverse splits, because the lower share numbers in their accounts leave them feeling cheated. And it certainly didn’t help GDXJ, which continued to sell off into the end of 2013. Volume and interest continued steadily shrinking, as they had been doing for years. And it’s not hard to understand why. Without operations, junior gold companies have to rely on share offerings to finance their efforts to find deposits and bring them to production. With share prices falling seemingly forever with no bottom in sight, investors overwhelmingly fled this risky sector. Countless juniors were forced to shut their doors, unable to obtain financing in the most-hostile environment ever witnessed. So even hardcore contrarians largely abandoned the juniors, they were just too risky. But when gold started to show some signs of life early last year, capital flooded back into this tiny subsector. As GDXJ shot higher, capital volume exploded to record average levels. It faded again as gold retreated in the spring of 2014, but then skyrocketed as gold surged mid-year on Janet Yellen claiming there was no inflation. After averaging a trivial $52m per day of GDXJ shares changing hands in 2013, capital volume in this leading junior-gold-stock benchmark had multiplied dramatically to $393m on average in July 2014. After a drought of investor interest lasting years, they were finally starting to return. Then unfortunately extreme gold-futures shorting crushed gold late last year, pulling the rug out from under the juniors. The resulting capitulation selling was staggering beyond belief, just gargantuan. In November 2014 as gold-stock prices collapsed to brutal new lows, stock traders fled GDXJ so aggressively that average daily capital volume hit an astounding $639m! If that isn’t the king of all capitulations, I don’t know what is. Just look at the recent capital-volume spike in GDXJ’s chart compared to everything that came before it. Once again junior gold stocks are a pure sentiment play , they are difficult if not impossible to value on a fundamental basis with no operations. And seeing such an epic capitulation late last year just has to mark peak fear in this subsector, and therefore gold stocks as a whole. Once every trader susceptible to being spooked into selling low is scared out, that signals maximum fear and therefore the ultimate bottom . Such a crazy capitulation extreme in a gold-stock subsector wholly hostage to sentiment is the best bottoming indicator I’ve ever seen. It vastly increases the odds that gold stocks are not going any lower and a new upleg is getting underway as sentiment starts shifting away from extreme fear. And GDXJ itself actually supports this thesis. Though it lagged GDX in January 2015, it still climbed 15.9% higher. But much more important than juniors’ still-anemic gains was GDXJ’s huge capital volume last month. It averaged $488m per day in January, which is absolutely enormous compared to this ETF’s entire history outside of late 2014’s extreme capitulation! When GDXJ approached its all-time record high near $152 split-adjusted in April 2011, capital volume averaged just $88m per day in March 2011. Remember that upleg life cycles see rising trends in volume. Initially as new uplegs are born, they are driven by a relatively small fraction of contrarian investors. Then as prices gradually rise, they attract in more and more capital so volume grows on balance. And if the junior-gold trading volume is already this high, just imagine how much investor interest is coming as GDXJ continues to march higher. Gold and silver stocks have vast room to keep running. Not only were they just trading at fundamentally-absurd price levels, but investors are radically underinvested in this sector after abandoning it over the past couple years. The market capitalization of the gold and silver stocks remains so small that this sector could easily quadruple and still account for well under 2% of stock investors’ overall portfolios. And with stock traders now flocking back to gold via GLD shares in a big way, gold itself is starting to mean revert dramatically higher. That will drive great investor interest in the precious-metals miners’ stocks. The growing capital inflows will ultimately power this tiny sector far higher. And stock investors and speculators can definitely ride these great coming gains in GDX and GDXJ, which are fine ETFs. The bottom line is gold-stock trading volume is high and growing. This reveals much trader conviction behind the strong early-year rallies in gold and silver stocks. The higher the volume underlying any particular move, the greater its strength and staying power. And the volume in the gold juniors, which are slaved to sentiment, is incredible. Their extreme capitulation just witnessed likely marks the final bottom. And volume grows as uplegs mature, so seeing such high volume already in such a young gold-stock upleg is a very bullish omen. As gold stocks continue powering higher on balance, more and more traders will jump in for the ride accelerating their climb. And there is vast room for buying after a couple years of investors totally abandoning this sector. Gold stocks will have to soar far higher to normalize. Adam Hamilton, CPA February 6, 2015 Copyright 2000 – 2015 Zeal LLC (ZealLLC.com) Disclosure: The author has no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) The author wrote this article themselves, and it expresses their own opinions. The author is not receiving compensation for it. The author has no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article. Additional disclosure: I own GDXJ call options, as well as extensive positions in gold and silver stocks which have been recommended to our newsletter subscribers.

ETFReplay.com Portfolio Update

The ETFReplay.com Portfolio holdings have been updated for February 2015. I previously detailed here and here how an investor can use ETFReplay.com to screen for best performing ETFs based on momentum and volatility. The portfolio begins with a static basket of 14 ETFs. These 14 ETFs are ranked by 6 month total returns (weighted 40%), 3 month total returns (weighted 30%), and 3 month price volatility (weighted 30%). The top 4 are purchased at the beginning of each month. When a holding drops out of the top 5 ETFs it will be sold and replaced with the next highest ranked ETF. The 14 ETFs are listed below: Symbol Name RWX SPDR DJ International Real Estate PCY PowerShares Emerging Mkts Bond WIP SPDR Int’l Govt Infl-Protect Bond EFA iShares MSCI EAFE HYG iShares iBoxx High-Yield Corp Bond EEM iShares MSCI Emerging Markets LQD iShares iBoxx Invest Grade Bond VNQ Vanguard MSCI U.S. REIT TIP iShares Barclays TIPS VTI Vanguard MSCI Total U.S. Stock Market DBC PowerShares DB Commodity Index GLD SPDR Gold Shares TLT iShares Barclays Long-Term Trsry SHY iShares Barclays 1-3 Year Treasry Bnd Fd In addition, ETFs must be ranked above the cash-like ETF SHY in order to be included in the portfolio, similar to the absolute momentum strategy I profiled here . This modification could help reduce drawdowns during periods of high volatility and/or negative market conditions (see 2008-2009), but it could also reduce total returns by allocating to cash in lieu of an asset class. The top 5 ranked ETFs based on the 6/3/3 system as of 1/31/15 are below: 6mo/3mo/3mo LQD iShares iBoxx Invest Grade Bond VNQ Vanguard MSCI U.S. REIT TLT iShares Barclays Long-Term Trsry TIP iShares Barclays TIPS SHY Barclays Low Duration Treasury Since all of the current holdings are still ranked in the top 5 there is no turnover this month. In 2014 I introduced a pure momentum system, which ranks the same basket of 14 ETFs based solely on 6 month price momentum. There is no cash filter in the pure momentum system, volatility ranking, or requirement to limit turnover – the top 4 ETFs based on price momentum will be purchased each month. The portfolio and rankings will be posted on the same spreadsheet as the 6/3/3 strategy. The top 4 six month momentum ETFs are below: 6 month Momentum TLT iShares Barclays Long-Term Trsry VNQ Vanguard MSCI U.S. REIT LQD iShares iBoxx Invest Grade Bond VTI Vanguard Total U.S. Stock Market The top 4 ETFs are the same as last months, so there is no turnover for February. Disclosures: None How did this change your view of ? More Bullish More Bearish It Didn’t This impact ( ) More Bullish More Bearish Unchanged Thanks for sharing your thoughts. Submit & View Results Skip to results » Share this article with a colleague

Hedge Against 2015 Central Bank Surprise With Gold

In the first month of 2015 alone, we have seen surprises from the Central Banks of Switzerland, India and Singapore. SNB is now moving to weaken the CHF at an undefined range and might follow Singapore’s practice of linking the CHF against a basket of trade weighted currencies. RBI and MAS surprise moves are related to inflation and serves to weaken their currencies. Biggest risk is Fed not raising rates in mid 2015 causing unexpected financial instability although this is a slim possibility now. Gain small exposure to gold through XAU/USD or GLD to hedge against financial instability. Background of Central Bank Surprises This is only the first month of the year but already 2015 is starting out to be a year of Central Bank surprises. The first Central Bank decision to shock the world and this might not be the last in terms of scale of impact is the decision by the Swiss National Bank (SNB) to abandon the EURCHF floor of 1.20 in an unscheduled press conference on 15 January 2015. This overshadowed the second Central Bank surprise decision by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to cut interest rates by 25 basis points on the same day. Then to round it up, tiny Singapore, perhaps influenced by the Swiss or the Fed (took action on same day as the FOMC Statement) have decided to ease monetary policy through their exchange rate on 28 January 2015. In this article, I will go through the surprises of various Central Banks of Switzerland, India and Singapore and then its implications for Gold. Finally I am going to shift my focus on the biggest Central Bank surprise this year which might give investors a reason to gain exposure to gold for hedging purpose. Spotlight on Switzerland The SNB surprise decision set the benchmark for Central Bank surprise with its trademark adjustment between scheduled meetings complete with a hastily summoned press conference to drop the bomb on the unsuspecting investing public. The SNB decision to abandon the peg is because it knows that it cannot possibly hold the line after the ECB has gotten legal green light to print more euros through its QE program. The implications on gold has been mentioned in detail in my previous article, The SNB Catalyst For GLD . Now we have renewed speculations that the SNB has already swapped one form of intervention for another. While the SNB finds it hard to defend the line at $1.20 after announcing it to the world, it is managing the rise of the CHF after the abandonment at an unknown level. In the USDCHF and EURCHF charts below, we can see that the CHF has been weakening after its sharp strength on the day of the surprise announcement. (click to enlarge) (click to enlarge) I will not repeat what is stated in the chart above and I believe enough ink has been spilled on this topic. What is worth mentioning is that SNB Vice Chairman (second only to SNB Chairman Thomas Jordan) Jean-Pierre Danthine proclaimed 3 days before the peg abandonment that it is still official policy which certainly fooled everyone. The lesson is that if the Central Bank wants to surprise or fool you if they want to do something as drastic as removing a cap to prevent any ‘leakage’ which will be the same as a formal announcement and not even the IMF has heard of it beforehand. Now this same Jean-Pierre mentioned that the SNB is now back in action to weaken the CHF and it is considering to follow Singapore’s lead to link its currency to a basket of trade-weighted currencies. If this is followed through, it would mean that the official level is now secret or at the very least constantly changing. While the SNB has a credibility issue now, they have a good record of intervening in the market and they hold the upper hand as they have more latitude to print CHF. We can the effects of their action in the charts above which reversed the natural strengthening of the CHF on the following Monday on 19 January 2015 and the CHF started to weaken. In other words, the SNB only allowed the weakening for 2 market days after their announcement. While his personal reputation might be in tatters now, we can see it from the SNB interest and believe that the SNB would not allow the CHF to weaken too much and weaken the economy. India and Singapore The RBI also surprised the market by cutting interest rates by 25 basis points to 7.75% in between meetings on the same day as the SNB. This is its first cut since March 2013 and it is not scheduled to meet until 03 February 2015. This cut is motivated by the weakness in fiscal conditions and the weakening inflation environment. The timing of this move shows that RBI Governor Dr. Raghuram Rajan might be under the influence that inflation would be soft with a weaker Europe and QE in full mode for Europe and Japan. This indicates that Rajan is trying to get more bang for his money in weakening the Indian Rupee. The more recent surprise came from Singapore’s Central Bank, Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS). MAS controls inflation through the exchange rate against its trade partner and like Switzerland, it is a small country with a large export sector. Singapore process the oil with its refineries and Switzerland process the gold of other countries among other manufacturing exports. Both countries have an active and well regarded financial services center in the world too. The Straits Times announced that MAS has moved to ease its policy band of exchange rates on 28 January 2015 as it cuts its inflation outlook from 0.5% to 1.5% to -0.5% to 0.5%. This has caused the SGD to weaken against the USD by at least 1% on that day. This announcement came before its scheduled meeting in April 2015 and surprised the market. While this does not have a big impact on the market, this shows the tendency for Central Bank to surprise the market. (click to enlarge) The USDSGD has strengthen 1.04% from the opening price of 1.3387 to its closing price of 1.3529 on the day of the MAS announcement as shown on the chart above. This is part of the gradual strengthening process of the USD against the SGD so this is not such a drastic move. Will there be a Fed Surprise? In light of these Central Bank surprises, the biggest surprise of all will be the decision by the Fed to delay its rate hike decision from mid 2015 which is the market consensus to a later date of the last quarter of 2015 or even early 2016. While this remains a fairly unlikely event, we will have to consider hedging a portion of our exposure against such a possibility especially those who are expecting higher bond yields with the rate hike. Of course, one can always hedge through exposure to equities which will raise with a de facto monetary loosening with a delayed rate, equities does not give much of a hedge against systemic risk or financial instability that can come about from Central Bank actions. Recall that the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis occurred because its central bank cannot stand against currency speculation attacks or how George Soros made his name and money by prevailing against the Bank of England. Gold will be your friend if the failure of the Fed to raise rates in a timely manner triggers systemic instability in the financial system after priming the market for such an extended period with its first taper hints in 2013. There are 2 liquid ways to gain exposure to gold in your portfolio and they are either the forex way or the Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) way. Hedging for a Fed triggered Financial Instability For those with access to a brokerage account, they can gain exposure with a long XAU/USD position. Note that XAU is the forex symbol for gold. The weekly chart below shows that gold has a multi-week turnaround into strength after months of weakness. This represents the market fledging worry about financial stability which I have mentioned in my previous articles. This is not a full fledged worry yet if not gold would have spiked higher but a clear manifestation nonetheless. (click to enlarge) We can also note that representation of volatility ATR is creeping up too. (click to enlarge) The daily chart of XAU/USD shows us that this week and probably the next will present good entry price for gold as the market is in retracement. (click to enlarge) For those without access to a forex broker, the SPDR Gold Trust ETF (NYSEARCA: GLD ) will do. As you can see above, it has a volume of 8.4 Million on 28 January 2015 and this is its average volume. It also has a market capitalization of $31.09 billion which makes it at least as liquid as the XAU/USD which has a bid-ask spread of $0.22 on my FXCM broker. As the recent SNB surprise decision has shown, leverage can cut both ways and for investors who wants to avoid the leverage in forex, GLD is the way to hedge your exposure. It is better to be early than late.