Wall Street Wrap – Goldman ups Gold to $1,200

By Robert Perrego, at 5:44 pm on November 11th, 2009

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (NYSE: GS) raised their price target on gold to $1,200, citing continued low interest rates and central bank buying.  The interesting shift over the past year or so has been that central banks are now net buyers of gold, where in the past they were sellers.  “Gold conspiracy” allegations exist, due in part to central bankers being such traditional sellers of gold.  The “conspiracy” is that the world’s central banks are suppressing the price of gold to hide the true rate of inflation.  Goldman has noticed that central banks are now deciding that even if their government needs money, and the gold they have had on hand for decades now has a very large profit built in, the perception is that a) it is going higher, and b) that it is a good way to diversify from paper currency, most importantly the dollar.  Governments from India to China to Chile are now net buyers of gold.

China reported that their industrial production was up 16% showing that somewhere on the planet an economy is doing well.  Next week Obama travels to China and he has stated he will ask them to appreciate their unit of currency, the yuan.  China has seen decent internal economic growth but a large share of their jobs still rely on the export business.  Appreciating the yuan will make U.S. goods cheaper relative to Chinese goods, and thus hopefully create more jobs here at home.  Sounds good right?  Appreciating the yuan also depreciates the dollar even more, and that means the trillion dollars plus the Chinese are holding will be worth less.  The Chinese may agree to appreciate the yuan even though they lose jobs and dollars, as they would like to see the U.S. consumer back on their economic feet and buying Chinese goods like locusts as we did in the good old days.

The reason I am so bullish on gold, and pretty much every other commodity, is that if this economic recovery remains tepid and jobs are hard to find worldwide, we could end up with a spiral race to the basement among the world’s currencies.  Each government will be trying to steal jobs from the others by devaluing their currency to make their products cheaper worldwide.  As the currencies are devalued, relatively, commodities increase in value.  It is not easy to run a printing press and have a gold bar pop out the other end.

The Dow Jones Industrial Index was up 44.29 points today (+0.43%, 10,291.26) with the S&P 500 gaining 5.5 points (+0.50%, 1,098.51) and the Nasdaq 100 put in the strongest performance rising 9.78 points (+0.55%, 1,782.95)

New York Spot Gold is up $11.90 an ounce (+1.08%, $1,117.70, 4:54 p.m.) and traded an all time high of $1,119.60 this morning.  Something VERY unusual happened today as both the Dow and gold rose AND the dollar was UP!  For quite some time now the Dow and gold would go exactly opposite the dollar.  I can see the Goldman stamp of approval on gold hyping up some buyers but the Dow rising too?  This is very strong relative performance for gold, and my chart of the iShares Gold ETF (NYSE: GLD) shows me that gold has now broken out to the topside of the ‘return’ or ‘reaction’ line of its trend channel.  This is very bullish as this means there is NO MORE resistance to the upside.

Nymex crude was up 23 cents to $79.20 a barrel today.  Hurricane Ida turned into tropical storm Ida and is no longer threatening oil production in the gulf.

The home-builders were on fire today with Toll Brothers (NYSE: TOL) saying business jumped a greater than expected 42% year over year.  This had all the home-builders up over 5%.  TOL +16.42%, BZH +12.35%, PHM +8.13%, DHI +5.73% and LEN +5.73%.

Tomorrow we get Jobless Claims.  Let’s look at this positively, Thursdays are always an adventure now.

Wall Street Wrap – The Fed Stands Still, Gold Trades $1,099

By Robert Perrego, at 5:25 pm on November 4th, 2009

As widely expected, The Federal Reserve Open Market Committee maintained its target for the federal funds interest rate at 0 to 0.25% today stating that it “continues to anticipate that economic conditions are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period.”  This caused the dollar, which had been selling off before the announcement, to drop even farther with the PowerShares DB US Dollar Bullish Fund (NYSE: UUP) dropping 0.88% on the day (-$0.20, $22.48) and propelling New York Spot Gold to trade as high as $1,099.  This maintenance of low interest rates caused a rally in the home builders with Pulte Homes Inc. (NYSE: PHM) +3.46%, Lennar Corp. (NYSE: LEN) +3.43% and D. R. Horton Inc. (NYSE: DHI) +3.12%, all gaining on continued low mortgage rates.

Click here to read the full FOMC Statement

The Dow Jones Industrial Average, which had been up all day and traded its highest level a half hour after the announcement at 9928, got sold off into the close dropping 113 points within the last hour of trading.  The Dow 30 closed up 30.23 points at 9,802.14 (+0.30%) with the S&P holding onto gain of 1.09 points (+0.10%, 1,046.50).  The Nasdaq 100 also barely managed to finish positive 1.47 points (+0.08%, 1,680.67).

With the low interest rates and the dollar getting hit left and right, the commodity space has been red hot.  Looking at various commodities and the dollar exchange traded fund, the vehicles the common investor can use to most easily invest in, we find the following returns for 2009 thus far;

  • Market Vectors Coal ETF (NYSE: KOL) +114.5%
  • iPath DJ AIG Copper ETN (NYSE: JJC) + 109.6%
  • United States Gasoline (NYSE: UGA) +88.8%
  • Market Vectors Steel ETF (NYSE: SLX) +79.6%
  • SPDR Gold ETF (NYSE: GLD) + 23.8%
  • United States Oil Fund (NYSE: USO) +22.8%
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average +11.7%
  • PowerShares DB MS Agriculture ETF (NYSE: DBA) +0.2%
  • PowerShares DB USD Dollar ETF (NYSE: UUP) -8.83%
  • Unites States Natural Gas (NYSE: UNG) -57.8%

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is included here as lately it has traded much like a commodity.  With the current U.S. interest rates so low, the dollar is being used to fund the carry trade and is shorted to provide funds to invest in other ‘risky’ assets (for more on this see my Wraps from 11/1, 10/31, 10/30).  This use of the dollar in the carry trade has established an inverse relationship between the dollar and the stock market, much like commodities.

Looking at these returns we can see that the good news is food is not seeing much inflation and if you heat your home with natural gas this may be a cheap winter.  The bad news is gasoline has almost doubled so you will have to stay home and eat in.

Much speculation has been running around the financial community about whether or not a commodity bubble is forming.  Just looking at absolute returns does not give enough information to define a bubble, as these different commodities are influenced not only by a diving dollar, but by things such as economic activity (coal, copper, steel, oil), inflation expectations and currency diversification needs (gold), consumer income and purchasing patterns (gasoline, food) and the simple supply of the commodity (natural gas).

I do not think we are into a commodity bubble as there have been a series of positive economic numbers out of China (remembering commodities are a global situation) which directly influences the demand for, and price of oil, copper, coal and steel.  The United States economy has also improved as evidenced by the 3.5% GDP report from last week.  Judging from the Fed’s statement today, interest rates will be kept very low for awhile in order to juice job creation and this will keep the dollar weak and the commodity run up will continue.  Also, the overall market; commodities, stocks and bonds, all dropped for a ways before the start of 2009 so rising from a lower starting point makes the run up percentage numbers look larger.  With the specter of a trillion dollar health care reform and cap and trade costs looming in the United States political future, along with the current budget deficit, I do not see the dollar strengthening appreciably anytime soon.  There longer term outlook for commodities remains positive.

Nymex crude rose 80 cents today (+1.01%, $80.18, 4:50 p.m.) regaining the $80 level.  Gold has been the market darling lately trading an all time high of $1,099 an ounce today and was last seen at $1,091.80 (+0.69%, 5:00 p.m.).  Yesterday’s move by the Reserve Bank of India of buying 200 tonnes of gold from the IMF shows the argument why gold may be nowhere near a top.  The inflation/deflation arguments about gold will mean nothing if the offshore assets denominated in dollars start to diversify into gold.  Of all the major currencies of the world gold has the smallest market by far.  Were Russia, China, Japan, India and the Middle East dollars to all diversify to just 5% of foreign reserves into gold, the price could top $2,000 easily.

Market Wrap – In This Corner The Fed Champ Benjamin Bernanke!

By Robert Perrego, at 4:26 pm on June 25th, 2009

Yesterday Republican Congressman Darrell Issa threw down the gauntlet with some pretty strong language concerning a cover-up, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Bank of America.  Today Congress grilled Bernanke and he testified through this mess like a champ.

Just looking at this logically – who would you bet on in this bout?  Considering that if Congress had a smoking gun or any damning evidence they would have used it long ago, you could have felt pretty safe putting your money on Bernanke.  On top of this let’s count the number of Ph.D’s, experts and geniuses we have in Congress these days…

The market bet on Bernanke today and won.  Not only did the good vibe out of watching Bernanke slap aside Congress’s questions hearten buyers but the 7-Year Treasury auction went well with a 2.82 cover ratio causing yields across the curve to drop.  More importantly, this brought mortgage rates down a little after being on the rise of late, becoming a concern as higher rates mean more costly homes and it would be nice to sell a few more houses these days (30 year fixed – 5.6%).  All in all, the $104 billion the government borrowed this week showed no sign that bond buyers were all too worried about the next trillion dollars plus to come.  Even if these auctions were for refunding purposes the fact that buyers stepped up is a positive sign.

First Quarter GDP’s final revision came out at 8:30 a.m. and was revised up to -5.5% from -5.7% while jobless claims came in above what was expected at 627,000 with the consensus being 613,000.  Seems like the market is getting a little immune to bad jobs data as the Dow jumped 173 points strong out of the open and kept the pace most the day.  613,000 – 627,000, ah, that’s only a 2% difference.

The Dow Jones closed up 172.54 points (+2.07%, 8472.40) and was as high as 8490 at it’s intra-day peak.  The S&P 500 led the trio closing up 19.33 points (+2.14%, 920.27) and put a little safety space between the much ballyhooed 900 support level all the talking heads keep talking about and the Nasdaq 100 added 28.76 points (+1.98%, 1475.82).

Lennar and Avis lost money but the stocks made money as they lost less than they were expected to.  I did that in Vegas once and, net-net, I still lost money.  Avis Budget Group, Inc. (NYSE: CAR) lost 48 cents a share which is better than losing the 63 cents the street expected and stock jumped 16.6% to $5.29.  Of course it did not hurt that Hertz Global holdings, Inc. (NYSE: HTZ) announced favorable Q2 and full year guidance.  Now over from the auto related disaster sector to the home building disaster sector – Lennar Corporation (NYSE: LEN) lost 49 cents a share after non-recurring items and the street expected them to drop 63 cents a share.  Lennar jumped 16.3% on the news and that is a little less than Avis but they did lose 1 penny a share more.

Crude Light Sweet Oil added $1.56 and closed above $70 a barrell ($70.32) on news of a Nigerian pipeline attack.  I always wonder if these guys buy call options before they run off and play ‘destructo’.  Gold rose but on a percentage basis less than the market (0.7% vs. 2.07%) with the New York Spot Price rising $6.80 an ounce to $939.90 at 4:15 p.m. est.

The sector race came in like this: Industrials +2.97%, Energy +2.9%, Consumer Cyclicals +2.88%, Technology +2.03% and Communications +2.00%.

Looking at this you can see that two of the more economically sensitive sectors led the pack – consumers cyclicals and industrials.  This could be showing us that into this latest market dip, buyers are betting that we won’t test the previous lows, and in fact, they are getting a little aggressive and maybe even greedy looking to play a more prolonged run up in the market.

Trading screens were all green today with our best pop since June 1st which could be the market’s proxy vote for Bernanke getting reappointed in 2010.  Ben has done a pretty solid job and got us this far and it has not been easy sailing lately.  My vote – Ben did what he had to do no matter what it was and the market is still standing.  Get off his back!