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Posts Tagged ‘Gold’

Gold: Dont Expect Substantial Weakness

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

It looked as if Gold had gotten way too ahead of itself.  As you can see on the chart below, Gold surged to over 25% higher than its 200 day moving avergae.  It subsequently sold off about 10% to the 1,100 level. If you look at the past surge ahead of the 200 day (one was 37% and the other was about 30%) there seemed to be a sharp technical selloff combined with “base-building” for the next rally.

Gold and the 200 day moving average

We would bet though that this is not the time to expect a selloff on par with these previous technical related selloffs. In addition note that the last major selloff in Gold was from early 2008 to end of 2008 which of course coincided with the financial crisis, the stronger US$ and therefore weaker commodity prices across the board.  A quote from Marc Faber provides an interesting take on Gold for the next 6-12 months:

“A company’s stock could be less expensive at 100 dollars than when it was selling for 10 dollars, because earnings growth has outpaced the appreciation of the shares and therefore its price/earnings ratio has declined. So gold could be cheaper at the current price than when it was at less than 300 USD because of the explosion of foreign exchange reserves in the world, zero interest rates, the huge debt overhang, and the expectation of further money printing.”

Don’t get us wrong. Gold was one of the best performing global assets in the 2000s decade, and its unlikely it will carry forward with that leading performance. But for right now we see Gold trading much higher.

The Covert Analytics Team

Trends in the Investment Management Industry: ETFs

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010
This graph is a depiction of how the investment management industry has evolved since the 1980s. Whats most obvious is that the dominance held by traditional funds (ie mutual funds) is being replaced by the index funds or passive investment approach.  Also note the growing importance of alternatives.  By alternatives we mean the alternative invesmtment management industry (specifically hedge funds, private equity etc).  Under index funds we lump the growing asset classes devoted to commodities (including Crude, Gold, Silver, Agriculturals, etc).

Evolution of the Asset Management Industry

We think most investment advisors should abandon the desire to bringing the “best” in the investment management industry into their client portfolios.  Time after time, we have seen mutual fund managers with stellar “alpha” capability get destroyed on a absolute and relative basis (Bill Miller of Legg Mason and Richard Pzena of the Pzena Value Fund are some examples).  What about hedge funds? They never do any harm right? Wrong.  Forgetting for a moment the obvious disasters like Madoff, there have been a string of “high-flying, hot shot” hedge fund managers that blew up rather spectacularly. 

Some “meltdowns” to note of in the hedge fund world: Polygon Global, Platinum Grove, and Amaranth … which were forced to wind down after horrendous performance. A slew of other hedge fund disasters are “restructuring” their funds, something which to me sounds like changing around the terms so they can start charging egregious performance fees given they are years away from hitting their old “high water marks”. 

Regardless, the range of investment options via low cost index funds is growing at a steady rate. For those eager to implement asset allocation strategies across various stages of the business cycle, futures or index funds are the way to go.

The Covert Analytics Team