Climbing Gold Prices Climbing Gold Prices: Gold Crosses the Rhine by Dan Denning The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Tuesday, December 13, 2005 Dan Denning discusses Climbing Gold Prices in relation to climbing oil prices, and examines whether they have peaked or will keep rising. ------------------------- - A golden takeover target; the second-ever Rude
Awakening "group research project,"
- Gold – poised to deliver a decisive and shocking
victory in the monetary realm and,
- Classic rude mail, the whereabouts of the missing
Empire charts and more...
------------------------- Eric Fry, while enjoying the glittering hues of a gold bull market, reports... "Eric and Joel," began a Monday morning email from Strategic Investments editor, Dan Denning, "I'm sure you two are making hay of having mentioned Burlington as a takeover target...It was all there in the Nov. 11 edition of the Rude Awakening. And then today, voila, Conoco bids $31 billion for Burlington! Nice job." We thanked Dan somewhat sheepishly for the compliment, knowing full well that the idea was neither Joel's nor mine. It's true that Burlington Resources appeared in the November 11th issue of the Rude Awakening as a prospective takeover candidate, but only because you, the Rude Awakening faithful, had identified this company as such. As many of you may recall, we asked you, the readers of the Rude Awakening, to identify mid-sized oil companies that YOU believed would be attractive acquisition targets for a larger oil company. And thanks to your enthusiastic and thoughtful responses, we managed to fill an entire column with your ideas! "After wading through all the responses from Rude readers," we explained in our November 11 column, "we identified 35 unique stock ideas, many of which received multiple endorsements. Domestic natural gas stocks topped the list of prospective takeover candidates. Steve Heraty of San Diego, California, expressed the logic that seemed to inspire these picks: "'A few years back BP - British Petroleum - took out Amoco mainly for their huge U.S. gas reserves and acreage positions. The majors do not want to be left out of increasing their stake in long-lived domestic Natural Gas reserves. There will be a lot of money made in this area over the next few years. LNG or liquefied natural gas accounts for only 2 to 3 percent of supply right now. So to get domestic gas you grow by acquisition of dominant players like...Anadarko Petroleum, a company with large, domestic natural gas reserves. Bottom line, in the energy sector, companies are looking to acquire quality domestic natural gas assets.' "In addition to APC, the other popular takeover candidates in the natural gas sector included Apache Corp (APA), Burlington Resources (BR), Southwestern Energy (SWN), Ultra Petroleum (UPL) and Devon Energy (DVN)..." If you missed the original story, you might want to check it out here: www.the-rude-awakening.com/RAissues/2005/Nov/11-11-05.html Perhaps some of the takeover candidates identified by our readership will yet be of interest to a major oil company. On a related note, we recently highlighted a few takeover candidates in the gold stock sector. If, as Dan Denning suggest below, the gold bull market is just warming up, takeover fever will spread to the gold stock sector as well... --- Advertisement --- 4 Minutes a Week is All it Takes... to TRIPLE your money over the next 6 months... GUARANTEED! Introducing one special "alternate" investment - which does not involve buying stocks or bonds and even soars when stocks fall apart... Just over the last two years, you could have made at least eight times more buying this secret investment instead of buying traditional stocks... Is that something you are willing to pass up? Learn about this GUARANTEED investment secret NOW! http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/RTA/ERTAFC12 ------------------------- Gold Crosses the Rhine By Dan Denning When Allied soldiers charged the beaches of Normandy on June 6, 1944, victory seemed very uncertain and, at best, very distant. Nine months later, the Allies crossed the Rhine into Germany. Gold's recent charge through $500 an ounce will lead to a similarly decisive and shocking victory in the monetary realm. Last summer, I suggested that the crude oil/gold was establishing an important low. So far, so good. With gold's move to $533 an ounce, the ratio has jumped sharply since summertime. So let's revisit this ratio and consider what it might imply for oil, gold, and gold stocks. In late August I observed: "The age of peak oil has arrived, but its investment and economic consequences are just beginning to filter down to the consumer level. Individual standards of living will be affected as permanently higher energy costs make their way into your daily life...Oil's move up to $65 and above signals a bottom in the crude oil/gold ratio. "That means two things: First, it takes fewer barrels of oil than ever to buy an ounce of gold. So far, this has been evidence of oil strength, and not of gold weakness. Gold futures are in the $450 range as we go to press. The ratio, then, can't be explained away as gold weakness. The second thing the ratio indicates is coming gold strength. This will happen even as oil prices climb higher. "Obviously, that means gold prices have to climb faster than oil prices. In the inflationary scenario I describe below, you'll see just how that happens. If you don't yet have a position in physical gold or gold stocks, now is the time to take one. "Since then, spot gold prices have moved up another 20%. And oil, despite coming off all-time highs is trading around $60 a barrel. And if, as I suspect, the gold bull market will accelerate over the coming months, merger and acquisition activity in the gold sector will also accelerate, just like it has in the oil sector. The oil/ratio bottomed last summer at 6.17, meaning it took 6.17 barrels of oil to buy an ounce of gold. Today—with oil at $59.94 and gold at $538—the ratio is at 8.9 and climbing. The good news is, the ratio could double from here and still have plenty of room to grow.  Climbing Gold Prices: Gold and Oil will Rally Together
If the ratio continues to rise, to say, twelve, while the oil price remains around $60, you'd get a gold price of $720 an ounce ($60 x 12). But twelve is just an arbitrary number. The all-time high for the ratio occurred back in 1988, at 33. If the ratio soared that high again, while the oil price stayed near $60, you'd have gold at around $1,980 per ounce, which sounds about right to me. I don't expect that to happen tomorrow, however. Gold will visit $2,000 an ounce sometime over the next few years, but not while oil languishes at $60 a barrel. Most likely, both commodities will rally together to some extent. The ratio skyrocketed in 1988 because the world was awash in cheap oil, while gold rallied. In other words, the ratio was high not because gold was "back" but because oil was historically cheap. Today, the situation is entirely different. The age of cheap oil is over. And it is ending at exactly the same time that gold is emerging from its two-decade long slumber. In other words, we're headed to a place where the oil/gold ratio doesn't make a new high, but where gold and oil both make new highs in absolute and inflation-adjusted terms. We're headed to a place where gold hits $2,000 an ounce and oil hits $100 a barrel, in the process sending the oil/gold ratio to around 20. "Nonsense!" you say. "The top is in!" Sign Up for The Rude Awakening Start your mornings off with a dose of Rude news. The Rude Awakening is dedicated to highlighting phenomena in the financial markets that others may not see. Let the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times "break news." Sign up FREE Today! We will not share your email address with anyone else, period. -Andrew Palmer, Director E-commerce Marketing We Value Your Privacy |
Maybe, but gold's recent spurt above $500 closely resembles oil's "breakout" above $40 in the middle of last year. At that time, most investors believed oil to be putting in a major top. OPEC, Wall Street and the major oil companies all considered $30 to be the "normal" price of oil. Few imagined a world where $60 would become the new "normal" price of oil. Likewise, most investors seem to consider gold's latest rally a "fake-out breakout," rather than the beginnings of an enduring gold rally. Climbing Gold Prices: Gold vs. Public Opinion Gold, from both a technical and psychological perspective, has been engaged in a war of attrition against public opinion and the belief in the dollar. The move about $500 is like the Normandy invasion. And above $525, the July, 1944 break of German lines in Operation Cobra. This advance turned the war from a creeping reenactment of World War I into a war of movement again, the way it had begun with the German blitzkrieg of France. Only this time it was American and British tanks moving east, not German tanks moving west. Of course, it's worth nothing that the Allied drive to the Rhine stalled in the Ardennes forest in December of 1944. In fact, on December 16th, 1944, the 101st Airborne Division was surrounded at Bastogne during a surprise German winter offensive. (The battle at Bastogne is described well in the mini-series "Band of Brothers," which makes a nice Christmas gift). Eventually, of course, the Allies broke out at Bastogne and on March 7th of 1945, crossed the Ludendorf railway bridge at Remagen, across the Rhine and into Germany. Of the 22 road bridges and 25 rail bridges across the Rhine, the bridge at Remagen, taken by the 9th Armored Division, was the only bridge the Germans had not destroyed, although they tried to demolish it twice. "This bridge is worth its weight in gold," Eisenhower, is claimed to have said. Simply stated, gold has crossed the Rhine...and now begins its inevitable conquest of paper currencies and its inexorable advance toward monetary hegemony. The move gold is making now argues for bigger and stronger gains ahead in 2006. And both moves in oil and gold make perfect fundamental AND geopolitical sense. Oil is moving on increased global demand. Even $44 billion of new investment planned in Kuwait--which would boost current production from 2.5 million bpd to four million--is not going to bring enough supply on line to meet the growing demand of India and China. And this assumes the Kuwaitis (or the Saudis, or the Iraqis) can actually produce what they target. And, even if they can, for how long? Oil wells don't deplete as fast as natural gas wells. But when you have to start pumping seawater in to a well to boost production, you're simply hastening the rate at which you exhaust all the cheap, high quality petroleum from the ground. Also, note that the Kuwaitis are not boosting money spent on exploration, but production. Perhaps they are hoping to get top dollar for the 100 million barrels of oil they claim to have in the ground. Geopolitically, oil is at the center of many national grand strategies. It's going to stay there for awhile. And the price will go higher. Climbing Gold Prices: Find the Gold Gold is rising because of the fundamental mismanagement of the dollar by Alan Greenspan. And to be fair, in the club of central bankers who destroy the purchasing power of their currency, Alan Greenspan has a lot of company. Their respective tactics and strategies might differ, but the result is the same: decreased confidence in paper money and an increased appetite for gold. In the meantime, you probably won't see Congress hauling the gold miners in front of the TV lights to ask about huge mining profits. But that doesn't mean the insiders at the gold majors haven't already done what their colleagues in the oil industry did: make a list of acquisition targets. Gold production CAN be increased, but you've got to find the gold first. That means you have to explore for it. And with higher gold prices on the horizon, the incentive for finding it is definitely there. Gold majors, looking to add new assets to the balance sheet, are going to be in an acquiring mood. Fortunately, I think there's a simple way for investors to profit from this Christmas shopping by the gold majors - without having to speculate in junior exploration stocks. I've recommended how in the Jan issue of Strategic Investment, which I hope to have in your hands by the end of the week. While awaiting Dan's ideas, we'd like to direct you to two related items: 1) The Rude Awakening column of December 6th, entitled "A Golden Tan," in which gold stock expert Michael Martin identified a few gold companies worthy of acquisition and;
2) The second-ever Rude Awakening "group research project." Since we had so much fun the first time around, let's do it again. Please identify mid-sized gold companies that YOU believe would be attractive acquisition targets for a larger gold or resource company. You may email your suggested stock ideas to Joel at aussiejoel@the-rude-awakening.com The suggested stock must have a market capitalization greater than $250 million. No small caps, please. And obviously, no inside information, please. We will examine the submissions that we receive over the few days and will provide a sampling of the best ideas in the December 20th issue of the Rude Awakening. --- Advertisement --- PROTECT YOURSELF... From The Biggest One Year Loss of Wealth in World History! It's going on all over the country: house sticker prices going up, up, upin most cities, while home prices are going down in reality. That's right, YOUR HOUSE is worth LESS than you think... In fact, your house is probably losing value and you don't even know it. The truth is being hidden from you. Get the truth now... http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/DRI/EDRIFC03 ------------------------- [Joel's Note: A real rude classic here…actually, this is vintage rude. Of the mass of emails from proud owners of an "inverted Jenny" copy of Empire of Debt, this one stood head and shoulders above the rest: "I noticed while laying in the bathtub having a glass of wine looking through the charts in "Empire of Debt", that some were mislabeled but figured you guys were coming down to the wire and had to get the material out sans a good solid proof read. Now you tell me, after thoroughly reading, dog-earing, folding, spindling and mutilating the copy that I have a collectors item on my hands............Move over Flyin' Jenny I've got the next million dollar lottery ticket...by the way, could I get the big payout in gold instead of $US? A great read." – C.B. And what of those charts, anyway? The full, correct version right here: www.the-rude-awakening.com/empirecharts.html Cheers, Joel And the Markets... | Monday | Friday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,768 | 10,779 | -11 | -0.1% | S&P | 1,260 | 1,259 | 1 | 4.0% | NASDAQ | 2,261 | 2,257 | 4 | 3.9% | 10-year Treasury | 4.55 | 4.53 | 2.00 | 4.51 | 30-year Treasury | 4.75 | 4.73 | 2.00 | 4.70 | Russell 2000 | 690 | 689 | 1 | 5.8% | Gold | $527.60 | $526.40 | $1.20 | 20.6% | Silver | $8.75 | $9.01 | -$0.26 | 28.4% | CRB | 333.70 | 327.81 | 5.89 | 17.5% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $61.45 | $59.39 | $2.06 | 41.4% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 119.71 | JPY 120.71 | 1.00 | -16.7% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.1953 | $1.1811 | -142 | 11.8% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7753 | $1.7551 | -202 | 7.5% |
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