On September 8th I wrote ($1000 gold: Is the third time a charm?) that if gold could clear $1,000 an ounce without attracting enough selling to bring it back below that level (as happened twice before) then $1,000 could become the new floor rather than the ceiling. So far, that has been the case.

When I wrote that I was thinking about oil in 2004. At the time I wrote that if oil could clear $40 a barrel and stay above that level,  the $40 area could become the permanent floor.

And you know what happened after that. Oil kept rising, eventually trading at over $140 in 2008. And then the mass liquidation of assets occurred bringing oil down along with just about everything else.  But when it traded down to $40 (late 2008 and early 2009) it found support and currently is back up in the high 70′s.

Well, this morning here’s what I read from Dr. Marc Faber:

“Gold won’t fall below $1,000 an ounce again after rising 27 percent this year to a record as central banks print money to help fund budget deficits, said Marc Faber, publisher of the Gloom, Boom & Doom report.

The precious metal rose to all-time highs in New York and London today as the dollar weakened. The Dollar Index, a gauge of value against six other currencies, has declined 7.9 percent this year and today fell to a 15-month low. News last week of bullion purchases by the Indian and Sri Lankan governments raised speculation that other countries would follow suit.

“We will not see less than the $1,000 level again,” [my emphasis] Faber said at a conference today in London. “Central banks are all the same. They are printers. Gold is maybe cheaper today than in 2001, given the interest rates. You have to own physical gold.”

China will keep buying resources including gold, he said.

Faber is making more of a bold prediction than I would make. But I sure wouldn’t be surprised if he’s right.

 

I’ve studied and used Commitment of Traders (COT) data for years. Before I get into how to use the information to make money, let me briefly explain what a COT report is.

The COT reports are compiled by the government (U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission) and provide a breakdown of each Tuesday’s  positions held by traders of  futures markets. The weekly reports are released every Friday at 3:30 p.m. Eastern time.

Here’s part of a sample report…

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This is a COT report for gold futures. It was released today, Friday 10/30/09,  for data as of Tuesday, 10/27/09. Gold futures are traded on the Commodity Exchange (COMEX). There are three types of futures traders represented in the report — Non-commercial, Commercial, and Non-reportable.

The Non-commercials are large speculators. They’re usually commodity funds, hedge funds and other large futures traders trying to profit from trading the futures market — in this case, gold.

Commercials use the commodity in their business activities. A good example of a commercial trader would be a gold mining company using the futures markets to hedge the price of its production. Think of the commercial traders as the “smart money.” They’re the ones “in the know.” They actually use or produce the commodity. The commodity is their business so they have to know a lot about it and they get the best information.

The Non-reportables are small speculators. Their positions aren’t large enough to have to report weekly positions to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). So the small speculators are just lumped together in a category called non-reportables.

The group I focus on are the commercial traders — the smart money. They will tend to sell futures contracts when prices are rising and buy futures contracts (or sell less futures contracts) when prices are falling.

Let’s use a gold mining company as an example. Let’s say the price of gold is $800 an ounce. As the price of gold moves up toward $1,000 an ounce the company is making more money on its production (all things being equal). So the company may want to lock in profits and hedge its risk against falling gold prices by selling futures at higher prices.

On the other hand, let’s say the price of gold is $800 an ounce and starts falling toward $600. The company may not have profits to lock in. Or it may think there is not much risk of prices falling much further. So it may decide against selling futures contracts. Or it may buy back the futures contracts it sold at higher prices.

Now notice the commercial position on the above gold COT report. Commercials are long (have bought) 89,306 contracts and they are short (have sold) 372,785 futures contracts. So they are “net short” 283,479 contracts (372,785 minus 89,306). That’s a big net short number. And that’s because gold prices have been going up. Remember the commercials sell as prices are rising and they buy as prices are falling.

Okay, here’s one way you can use the report to make money. It has been my experience that when the commercial traders have the smallest net short position (or the largest net long position) they have had in the previous 18 months it means the underlying commodity is undervalued and, therefore, presents a very good buying opportunity.

On the other hand, when commercial traders have the largest net short position (or the smallest net long position) they have had in the previous 18 months it presents a good selling opportunity. So the idea is to buy when the commercials are have the most bullish position and sell when they have the most bearish position.

I’ll give you a recent example.

On March 3,  2009 the COT report for cotton showed a maximum bullish commercial position of net long 16,051 contracts. It was the largest net long position for commercial traders of cotton futures in 18 months. Cotton futures at the time were trading at 42.50 cents per pound.

On October 20, 2009 the COT report for cotton showed a maximum bearish commercial position of net short 50,523 contracts. It was the largest net short position in 18 months. In other words, the commercials were selling more and more  futures contracts as the price went up. Cotton futures were now trading at 67.23 cents per pound. That’s about a 37% increase in price in about seven and a half months.

I played it by buying the cotton ETF (BAL). I bought BAL at 23.78 a share on March 5,  2009. I sold it on October 26, 2009 at 35.46 — over a 50% gain.

I monitor the COT reports every week. I’ll post the buying and selling opportunities in the members area when I see them and how to play them.

Oct 302009
 

Member question: Larry, you seem to really like gold. Why? Also, what’s the best way to buy it and how much should I own?

Read the answer

 

There is an interesting item on Bloomberg:

Gold would need to rise more than sixfold to top the 1980 record, using a more accurate inflation-adjustment, said John Williams, an economist and the editor of Berkeley, California- based Shadowstats.com. He said the government has understated the cost of living over the past two decades with adjustments in the way it measures the basket of goods and services monitored by the U.S. consumer price index, or CPI.

Gold futures for December delivery closed Oct. 16 at $1,051.50 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Comex division, gaining for a third straight week.

“If the methodologies of measuring inflation in 1980 had been kept intact, gold would have to hit $7,150 to be the equivalent of the 1980 record [my emphasis],” Williams said.

So whatever you think about gold, don’t think it’s expensive. It’s just in the early stages of catching up.

 

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I haven’t posted in awhile. But the last time I penned a thought I was commenting on the September 11th Commitments of Traders report for gold.

I essentially made two points: The report indicated a big commercial net short number which often, but certainly not always, tends to put a damper on prices for awhile. And if you have existing precious metal positions (you do, don’t you?) you should stick with your existing plan, manage your risk, and let the market go as high as it wants to go.

Since then, gold did back off for awhile, falling from a high of $1024 an ounce to a low of $985. But even heavy commercial selling can’t keep a raging bull down. And yesterday gold made a very strong advance, closing at an all-time high of  $1042.

What lit the fire under the precious metals yesterday? If I told you the truth I would just say it’s a bull market and that’s what bull markets do — they go up. But I realize people have to have reasons for why things happen. It seems the British newspaper, The Independent, reported that Arab states — along with China, Russia, and France — are making secret plans to stop using the U.S. dollar for oil trading. That bit of news didn’t do the dollar any good. But it did a world of good for gold. It makes sense to me. Why would anyone want to own U.S. dollars these days?

The bottom line is to ignore the news and know that bull markets always go a lot further up than anyone thinks they can. Enjoy the ride.

 

Gold is trading over $1,000 an ounce in early morning trading. It’s the third time since March of 2008 that it has reached that  level. The first two times $1,000 proved to be a tough ceiling to break through and gold sold off significantly.

This time? Like everybody else, I haven’t the slightest idea.  But I think a breakout has a good chance of it sticking this time, even if it has a modest pullback first. If so, $1,000 could become the new floor rather than the ceiling.

Update: Bespoke makes a couple of good points. If gold manages to hang on to today’s gains it will be an all-time closing high. Also, this move above $1,000 is getting a lot less attention than the two previous attempts, which makes this quote appropriate..

They say a watched pot never boils, but once you take your eye off of it…

Indeed.

Sep 052009
 

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Gold was the star performer this week and attracted the usual attention that anything receives when it makes a big move. And as I noted in a previous post, the action began on Wednesday. There was another advance on Thursday. There was a minor attempt at a pullback on Friday, but by the end of the day the metal was back close to its highs for the week.

So what now?

Gold made its all-time high in March of 2008. It then got caught up in the wholesale liquidation of assets that affected most markets for the remaining of last year. It made a rally attempt at the high in February of this year that failed. That failure is understandable since it was a “v-shaped” rally off the low made in the latter part of 2008. V-shaped rallies often fail.

Now it appears to be heading for another test of the all-time high. But I think this one holds much more promise than the February rally. It’s not v-shaped. Gold has been moving sideways all summer. So it has formed a nice base. The breakout this week came out of that base. It’s been my experience that breakouts out of a sideways pattern have much more potential for a sustained move than what we saw in February.  It also moved up on good volume even though it was a slow week before a major holiday.

All that is good for gold. However, we won’t know if this rally is for real until it gets back to the March ’08 high (just over 100 for the gold ETF, GLD). If it clears the high on good volume and stays above it there is nothing to keep it from moving much higher. But that’s still a big “IF.”

I think there are two reasonable strategies for those who own gold (I’m talking about the liquid forms of owning gold, like GLD, not the physical metal with high transaction costs). One is to just enjoy the ride as long as it lasts, with your previously planned exit strategy in place. The other would be to take a little off the table on this rally — holding on to the rest of the position — and wait and see if gold does make new all-time highs.

If you don’t own gold, but you would like to, you may very well get another chance to buy it. Healthy, long-lasting breakouts will usually give you another chance to buy on a pullback closer to the breakout area.

But you shouldn’t even be making these decisions after the fact. You should already have a plan before you enter into a position. You should already have a system, an exit strategy, a positions sizing strategy — all the things we will be talking about at Grail Investing.

I’m merely walking you through the thought process of one experienced investor.

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