The Madness of Mad Men

Before we get on to today’s Money Morning, don’t forget to check out Slipstream Trader, Murray Dawes’ free market update on YouTube.

He recorded it yesterday morning.

Murray was cock-a-hoop as weeks of groundwork bore fruit. We don’t know about you, but normally when you think of traders, you think of them making quick decisions… buying and selling in seconds.

If that’s the image you have of Murray, well, sorry to disappoint you. Rapid-fire trading isn’t Murray’s bag. We’ve seen how he works. He carefully pours over the charts… weighing up risk and reward.

This orderly approach means sometimes he’ll miss a good trade… but the extra work means he’ll avoid bad trades too… that explains his current record of 17 winners from 19 open positions – not even Murray is perfect <wink>.

Anyway, for a free behind-the-scenes peek at where Murray thinks the market is heading next, click here.

Meanwhile…

“For millennia, people have killed and died in pursuit of gold. In the recent downturn, so many investors have been eager to buy gold that it is sold in vending machines. Governments are as captivated by it as individuals are: for nearly a century, many nations’ central banks have stashed hoards of gold bullion in a vault at the New York Federal Reserve.” – New York Times

Reading that you’d think no-one has ever killed or died for paper money.

That no-one has ever killed or died for a leather briefcase.

And no-one has ever killed or died for a loaf of bread.

And the idea of gold in a vending machine… it’s almost as crazy as thinking you can stick a piece of plastic into a wall and suddenly paper money will appear… like magic!

As if that’s ever gonna happen… sorry? What’s that… ATMs you say.

Funnily enough, at the ‘Great Property Debate’ in Sydney a few weeks back, one of our fellow panellists was amused by the sight he saw at the Burj Tower in Dubai.

“It has gold vending machines in the lobby, ha, ha…”

We smiled.

More value than gold?

But the liberal media and mainstream attitude to gold shouldn’t surprise us. Another line from the New York Times states:

“When asked recently why central banks hold gold rather than, for instance, diamonds, Ben Bernanke said ‘tradition.’ Given the long history of humans considering gold valuable, does it make sense to continue this tradition, or should central banks focus on other assets with more intrinsic value?”

The New York Times doesn’t explain which assets have more intrinsic value than gold. We can only guess.

Perhaps the NYT is thinking of Aussie dollars, Euros, Chinese Yuan…

U.S. Treasury bonds…

Newspapers maybe!

We won’t get into a debate about intrinsic value. Except to say individuals and the market determine value.

Stocks have intrinsic value. So does property. And so does gold.

Guess what: chocolate bars and tinned fruit have intrinsic value too.

But only as long as they’re in demand. If no-one demands gold, property, shares, chocolate bars or tinned fruit their intrinsic value will be low… maybe even zero.

Anyway, News.com.au writes this morning:

“Gold back in favour as investors take cover from volatile markets”

In another sign of the mainstream not quite getting it, half the article is devoted to stories of people selling their gold… d’oh!

But look out, is gold in a bubble? The article says:

“The [Perth] Mint states that every week it has dozens of self-managed superannuation investors pouring up to $10 million into both gold and silver, which has also enjoyed phenomenal price growth.”

(Incidentally, our publishers – Port Phillip Publishing – have been one of those buyers at the Perth Mint… the metal is currently stored at a secure location. More details on why they’ve made this purchase soon…)

$10 million a week is $520 million a year. Or just 10% of what the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) turns over each day!

Or according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), $74.7 billion worth of building approvals went through in the 2010-2011 financial year… that means buyers spend over 100 times more on new housing than on gold and silver.

We’ll admit relative dollar values aren’t always relevant to decide if an asset is over-inflated. But it does tell you gold and silver are still fringe investments.

Fear Index higher but still low

So, is gold over-valued?

We can’t tell you for certain that it isn’t. Its value is determined by what the market is prepared to pay and receive for it.

But we do know that measured by James Turks’ Fear Index, gold is well below the early 1980s peak. Here’s a chart of his index going from 1967 to June 2010:

Is gold over-valued?
Source: gold-speculator.com

The small blue square on the right is our calculation of where the Fear Index is today – around 3.3%.

And our guess is the gold price is set to go even higher. Today the Wall Street Journal reports:

“The Federal Reserve should consider a new round of securities purchases to spur the economy if growth and employment keep languishing and inflation recedes, former top Fed officials said in a roundtable with The Wall Street Journal.”

If the Fed pours more fresh cash into the market that can only be good news for the gold price.

The question is how the Fed will stimulate. We doubt it’ll be as brazen as before. The mad men at the Fed are no doubt scheming to find a less obvious way of devaluing the dollar and unleashing more inflation on the world.

So what will they do? Who knows? We’ll have to sleep on it to see what we can come up with.

But predicting the actions of mad men is almost impossible. So even the craziest and dumbest idea we could think of will be a million miles away from the ideas swirling in the heads of Ben Bernanke and his pals.

What we do know is we’ll keep topping up on gold and silver at regular intervals… because we value gold and silver more than paper money.

Cheers.

Kris Sayce
Money morning Australia

We Warned You: But Did You Take the Advice?

[Aside: Can someone please turn off that bloomin’ crash alert!]

Dow Jones Industrial Average – down 265 points.

FTSE 100 – down 1%.

German DAX – smashed down 2.26%.

Italian MIB and Spanish IBEX both down over 2%.

Aussie dollar down to USD$1.075… and gold at a record USD$1,660.

It’s also near the all-time Aussie dollar record at $1,542.

And as we write, the Aussie market is down over 80 points.

From where we’re sitting the crash alert is deafening. Ear muffs are firmly in place.

But if you’ve followed our advice for the past three years you should be sitting comfortably today.

We warned you the so-called economic recovery was a sham… of criminal proportions.

Immoral and corrupt government officials and central bankers manipulating the market for their own benefit. And their banker buddies.

They win while the losers in this pathetic and disgusting game are the average wage earners.

Actually, we’ll rephrase that: …the average wage earners who don’t read Money Morning.

Did you buy more bank shares? We hope not…

As we’ve noted for some time, the Aussie market was in classic bubble-denial territory. The same denial the housing spruikers have been in.

That somehow Australia is different… we’ve got the Chinese commodities boom… the Aussie dollar is a new reserve currency… blah, blah, blah…

But if you ignored our advice and you followed the mainstream advice you probably bought Westpac shares on 25 May. That’s when Michael Pascoe told his Sydney Morning Herald readers:

“To use the Westpac example as it’s suffered more than most, taking a snapshot at $21.52 this morning, the stock was yielding 7 per cent fully franked – the equivalent of 9.8 per cent. Yes, the Pascoe family super fund happily added to its holding.”

This morning Westpac is trading at $19.90. The lowest price it has been since July 2009. Good trade!

On the other hand, you could have heeded our warnings about the three-year false rally – especially in banking stocks.

And it’s not as though we’ve been quiet on this point. We’re not playing Harry Hindsight after the crash. Just two weeks ago on 14 July we wrote, “Why It’s Too Soon to Buy Beaten-Down Stocks”.

You can read that article here…

We signed off with:

“So for you and your investments it means keeping your crash alert turned to high. Cash – while not perfect – is a great asset to hold right now.

“If you’re holding plenty of it in your bank account you’ll be well placed to buy cheap assets (including stocks and real estate) when the market takes another turn for the worse.

“Bottom line: a brief but small rally could be on the cards… but the fall that follows it is set to be much bigger.”

Sure enough, the market rallied… but it was short-lived. The fall that followed was – and is – much bigger than the rally:


Source: CMC Markets Stockbroking

Now look, we’re not saying we’re perfect. Picking stocks to buy is tough in this market. That’s why in recent months we’ve wound back the throttle in Australian Small-Cap Investigator. (Although we’re about to put our foot to the floor in the latest issue – due out this week!)

But saving you money is only half our job.

The other half is to give you advice that makes you money. But most of our money-making advice is advice you’ve got to pay for.

Trader wrong-foots the market

Something Slipstream Trader, Murray Dawes has done hand over fist for his traders this week.

While most investors panicked yesterday, looking to sell out or trying to buy – what they thought – were bargains, Murray calmly and coolly sent this message to his subscribers:

Market wrong footed

“The price action in markets last night after the US debt deal has been very telling. As suspected the euphoria from a deal lasted a nanosecond before everyone realised that there is no reason to be buying this market here. Italian and Spanish equity markets got smashed and the US saw heavy selling from the open.

“Many people were wrong footed by yesterday’s price action and we are now flirting with the major lows around 4450.

“I think it is worth having a short term trade here from the short side just in case this is the major break to the downside that I have been waiting for.

“There should be plenty of panic selling on the open after everyone got it wrong yesterday which should create some good downside momentum.”

Above this message were recommendations to short-sell four big, blue-chip Aussie stocks. This morning the market is trading 100 points below the “major lows around 4450.”

And Murray’s traders are already up 2-3% on these trades in just one day. And if those traders are using leverage (say, CFDs) the gains should be even bigger.

So, could the market still go lower?

It could. That’s why Murray’s keeping his options open and staying short.

All we know for certain is this: because of the deafening noise from the crash alert, we’ll keep paying attention to all the warning signs – gold, Swiss Franc, Aussie dollar, the VIX and interest rates.

Those are all things the politicians and central bankers think they can manipulate. But what they’re now figuring out is the free market is bigger and better than all of them.

Given a choice, we know which we’ll back to win any day of the week. Vive la laissez faire!

Cheers.

Kris Sayce
Money Morning Australia

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