By Joe Foster, VanEck
The gold price continued to move higher after becoming oversold ahead of the December 13 Federal Reserve (the “Fed”) rate announcement.
After reaching a 17-month high of $1,366 per ounce on January 25, gold finished the month with a $42.10 (3.2%) gain at $1,345.15 per ounce. The move to new highs was driven by U.S. dollar weakness. The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY)1 sunk to lows last seen in 2014, due to currency comments and trade tariffs announced by the Trump administration, strong economic data from the Eurozone, and European Central Bank (ECB) minutes that suggested it might move sooner than expected to unwind its bond buying program. The last days of the month brought some weakness for gold as markets begin to see increasing chances of a Fed rate hike in March.
Gold Stocks Consolidated and Valuations Remain Attractive
Gold stocks seem to be consolidating after outperforming gold in December. The equities trailed gold bullion in January as the NYSE Arca Gold Miners Index (GDMNTR)2 advanced 2.0% and the MVIS Global Junior Gold Miners Index (MVGDXJTR)3 declined 1.6%. Many companies reported positive fourth quarter and year-end production results. Due to the muted reaction in their share prices, valuations continue to track below long-term averages. In the current environment, gold stocks are not receiving much attention as investors focus on the broader stock market, cryptocurrencies, and other commodities.
Rising Bond Rates, Full Employment, Global Growth Spur Inflation Expectations
A surge in interest rates was also supportive of gold in January, as 10-year U.S. Treasury rates advanced to their highest level in nearly four years. In 2017, rising bond rates proved to be a headwind for the gold price. However, since mid-December rates have risen in tandem with the gold price. We believe this is because the latest increase in rates has been driven by inflation expectations rather than activity from the Fed. It seems the market is beginning to view full employment, tax stimulus, and synchronized global growth as inflationary. Commodities have been trending higher. There is also growing potential for protectionist trade policies and purchasing managers globally are finding it increasingly hard to fill demand. There is a nationwide truck shortage in the U.S. and The Wall Street Journal reports strong wage growth in several metropolitan areas.
Structural Changes in Economy, Demographics Likely to Mute Inflation
While inflation could pick up, we do not believe it will reach levels that might drive gold. In fact, we believe there have been structural changes in the economy that mute the inflationary cycles that goods and services experienced in the past. Globalization, immigration, and technology have evolved to enable companies to produce as much as needed to meet demand. Bottlenecks do not last. Everything has become commoditized. Competition is intense. E-commerce drives retail. Low wage immigrants take unwanted jobs. Many companies are announcing one-time bonuses and other perks with the new tax cuts. At this time, we have not heard of any company announcing permanent wage increases. Contracting, outsourcing, and automation keep wage growth low. Demographics are also anti-inflationary as boomers move into harvest mode. For years the Fed has failed to raise inflation to its targeted 2% by flooding the economy with liquidity. That liquidity, instead of raising consumer price inflation in the real economy, has generated asset price inflation in the financial economy — stocks, bonds, real estate, cryptocurrencies, art, etc. Now the Fed is tightening. Gold or gold stocks are seen as a real economy inflation hedge, however we do not see it as a significant driver in 2018.
Late-Stage Economy Has Entered the Mania Phase
In our December commentary we talked about the risks of a downturn in a late-cycle economy, as well as the possibility of a market decline that morphs into a debt-driven financial crisis. We now believe the markets have entered the mania phase of this cycle. A series of experiments by Harvard and MIT grad students reported in The Wall Street Journal show that when rates are low, investors’ appetite for risk increases beyond what seems logical. It is hard to characterize the price action of cryptocurrencies as anything but a mania. The High Tech Strategist newsletter quotes economic historian Charles Kindleberger: “At a late stage, speculation tends to detach itself from really valuable objects and turn to delusive ones. A larger and larger group of people seeks to become rich without any understanding of the processes involved”.
Across other markets the mania is broadly based. Goldman Sachs estimates that the prolonged bull market in stocks, bonds, and credit has left a measure of average valuation at the highest since 1900. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)4 had the most new highs ever recorded in 2017 and saw its longest run without a 3% correction. The S&P 500 Index (SPX)5 has broken similar records. Margin debt on major stock exchanges tracked by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) increased 21% in 2017. The Wall Street Journal found the outperformance of growth stocks in January was the most in such a short period aside from the last year of the dot-com bubble. Manias rarely end quietly. When they end, they typically crash. They can last for years and we speculate that the current mania might run its course into 2019. Former Chairman of the Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan famously recognized “irrational exuberance” in the markets three full years before the peak of the tech bubble in 2000.
As Mania Reaches Extremes, A Look at Gold’s Performance Across Cycles
Gold is recognized as a hedge against financial stress and tends to outperform other investments in severe market downturns. In a June 2017 report, ETF Securities looked at gold’s performance during drawdowns of over 15% in the S&P 500. Since 1982 there have been ten such S&P drawdowns that averaged -24.4%. The corresponding average performance of gold was +7.2%. A 2011 bulletin by Lombard Odier looked at gold real returns in major global banking crises since the Great Depression. They found five banking crises lasting from 12 to 57 months during which the real performance of gold averaged +20.6%.
Most people reading this report carry the Tech and Housing mania in their financial memory. In the table we broadly characterize the markets since 1995 as bull/manias, crashes, and recoveries to see how stocks and gold investments behaved in each. We examine the returns of the S&P 500, gold, the Philadelphia Stock Exchange Gold and Silver Index (XAU)6 and the actively managed VanEck International Investors Gold Fund (Class A – INIVX).
Bull/Manias:
Crashes:
Recoveries:
IMPORTANT DISCLOSURE
1. U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) indicates the general international value of the U.S. dollar. The DXY does this by averaging the exchange rates between the U.S. dollar and six major world currencies: Euro, Japanese yen, Pound sterling, Canadian dollar, Swedish kroner, and Swiss franc.
2.NYSE Arca Gold Miners Index (GDMNTR) is a modified market capitalization-weighted index comprised of publicly traded companies involved primarily in the mining for gold.
3.MVIS Global Junior Gold Miners Index (MVGDXJTR) is a rules-based, modified market capitalization-weighted, float-adjusted index comprised of a global universe of publicly traded small- and medium-capitalization companies that generate at least 50% of their revenues from gold and/or silver mining, hold real property that has the potential to produce at least 50% of the company’s revenue from gold or silver mining when developed, or primarily invest in gold or silver.
4.The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) is a price-weighted average of 30 significant stocks traded on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the NASDAQ.