If you don’t own gold, now’s a good time to buy

By Dominic Frisby Oct 19, 2011

Dominic Frisby

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I’m not sure we are going to see new highs in gold any time soon.

In fact, I’d wager some meaningless nickel coins that we’ve already seen the high for 2011. (The $1,923 an ounce level that was set in early September).

But I would also argue that we’ve seen the lows for the year as well.

After its summer excesses, which were duly chastened when gold fell almost $400 in a week, I would argue that gold is now stabilising nicely above $1,600.

And I suggest that, for those of you that don’t have a position, now is a good time to get one.

What does gold normally do at this time of year?

Of course you could listen to the perma-bears, who have predicted as many as 17 of the last five corrections in gold, and decide that gold is in a bubble; that it has no use so what’s the point?; that we’re in deflation, so gold will fall; or write it off because it doesn’t pay any interest.

That’s fine by me. Go ahead. I will sit on my little pot of gold and occasionally taunt you. Or eat a large portion of humble pie, if you prove to be right. (Which you won’t).

Meanwhile, for those who don’t already have a position, or who are looking to increase an existing one, I think an opportunity to get long is about to present itself.

I like to use a mixture of fundamental analysis – why would this market rise or fall? – and technical analysis (TA). Too much reliance on either one does not suit me. I like to marry the two.

How to buy gold bullion

James McKeigue explains the best ways to buy gold coins and bars.

I know that gold is in a bull market. I know and understand the fundamental arguments for gold – currency debasement, negative real rates, a banking crisis, monetary stress, a global debt horror fiasco, several thousand years of history and so on. So there are my fundamentals.

A lot of wiser heads than mine knock TA, but I like it. Once I have my fundamentals in place in my mind, TA helps me to identify entry points, exit points and apply some money management. In other words, the fundamentals help me to decide on an investment path, and TA helps me to navigate the journey.

Let’s first consider the seasonal patterns for gold. This first chart below shows the average monthly moves of gold over the last 40 years. Normally, you would expect to see a strong move in gold in early October – which we have had – followed by a decline in the second half of the month.

We appear to now be experiencing that too. Gold began the week at $1,680, went as low as $1,630 yesterday before rallying to $1,660.

Gold 40-year average

I like to be aware of seasonal patterns, but, for me, they are a secondary, not a primary trading indicator. September, for example, is usually a strong month for gold. This year it was horrible. So I don’t rely on seasonals.

(My thanks, as always, go to Nick Laird of www.sharelynx.com for the chart. Incidentally, I interviewed Nick this week in my podcast – he had some extremely interesting insights. This will be uploaded to my site later in the week).


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A good buying opportunity is coming up

What has, however, become one of my primary technical indicators for gold is the 144-day moving average (144-dma). This shows the average price of gold over the last 144 days. Perhaps it’s coincidence, or perhaps it’s because 144 is a Fibonacci number, I don’t know. But the 144 dma has proved to be an astonishingly reliable bottom-caller since 2009. It seems to have caught the lows once again.

If you look at this next chart, you will see the gold price with, underneath, a red line, which is the 144-dma. Gold’s slides, since 2009, always seems to halt here. (It slipped through briefly a fortnight ago, but this was outside of New York trading so we will cut the 144-dma some slack).

Gold price and 144-dma

It was the trader Michael Hampton who first alerted me to this average, so credit where credit’s due. I was the first, I think, to write about it, but it’s now finding some renown in the gold-watching blogosphere. Sadly with these things, the more people that are aware of it and use it, the less they work.

But we can worry about that if and when it happens.

Gold currently sits at $1,650. The 144-dma lies at $1,606 and rising. I dare say the two will meet in the coming fortnight, which is when you should be looking to get long. Leave some orders in the $1,610 to $1,630 area maybe? And, if you want to play it really safe, put in a stop loss somewhere beneath that red line.

Gold will never fall below £1,000 an ounce again

As for gold in pounds, I would say buying as close to £1,000 an ounce as you can get makes a great deal of sense. I like making bold pronouncements, so why don’t I give you one here? Gold will never fall below £1,000 an ounce again. Triple-digit gold, in sterling terms, is a thing of the past.

The current price by the way is £1,050 an ounce, so I’m cutting it pretty fine and could easily end up with egg on my face. But I’m making this call as much out of sterling bearishness, as I am gold bullishness.

In short, even though I suspect we’ve seen the highs for the year in gold, we can expect new highs some time in 2012. Now is an opportunity to position yourselves to enjoy them.

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• This article is taken from the free investment email Money Morning. Sign up to Money Morning here .

Comments (19)

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  • 1. timf

    (19 October 2011, 10:50AM)  Complain about this comment

    other than holding gold coins and bars and junior gold minors (not a great success of late!), what else do you recommend one holds? Certainly physical ETFs (PHAU). Anything else?

  • 2. HJP Miles

    (19 October 2011, 10:54AM)  Complain about this comment

    OK so what is the best and most cost effective way to buy physical gold?

  • 3. John Fitzgerald

    (19 October 2011, 11:12AM)  Complain about this comment

    Hear, Hear Dominic,
    if you're wrong so am I. I'm tempted to say you should stop publishing, sit on gold and wait.
    I'm into gold miners rather than the physical stuff. It's been a horrible year as share prices tumbled. I've held on for the most part, with some profit taking, and have accumulated more positions recently at exceptionally low prices. A comparison with 2008-09 reveals gold miners bottomed about the same time as equity markets in Q4 '08 but then the miners took off and left equities behind.
    Mkt Vectors Gold Miners, (GDX) had more than doubled in value by the first anniversary of the low point in Oct '08!
    If history is any guide we could see strong positive divergence between gold miners and wider equities markets very soon. I will be surprised if I do not see GDX at least 50% higher a year from now & possibly much more.
    Good luck investing!

  • 4. Dave M

    (19 October 2011, 11:13AM)  Complain about this comment

    want to top-up an existing holding using ETF's but as gold is priced in dollars undecided on whether its a dollar-denominated ETF eg GBS or sterling one eg PHGP. Can't get my head around the currency implications. Any simple rule of thumb ?

  • 5. Kojak

    (19 October 2011, 11:42AM)  Complain about this comment

    I believe you have previously this year written that gold and silver could retrace to lower levels than you now state. This is fine but WHY? Secondly you do not mention the long and short positions in your analysis and the net futures' position is surely very relevant in an analysis.
    Lastly some sites have a response from the article writer. Could you do this?
    An article on the effect of re-introducing exchange controls on the ability to invest in the precious metals themselves would be interesting perhaps.
    Like your articles.

  • 6. Matt D

    (19 October 2011, 11:42AM)  Complain about this comment

    Where can I buy physical gold. Also what mechanisms are out there for trading other than physical. Any recommendations on companys to facilitate any of the above ?

  • 7. James

    (19 October 2011, 12:34PM)  Complain about this comment

    I find it amazing that anyone can doubt the value of investing in GOLD. Every serious portfolio should own a % mixture of gold investments including bullion, ETFs and funds. There is no doubt that if you have held some gold and property in your portfolio over the last 25 years, you would have done very well ,thank you!

  • 8. David A

    (19 October 2011, 12:57PM)  Complain about this comment

    Dave M - it doesn't really matter. Either way, if you are resident in the UK you are getting the performance of gold in sterling. Which is probably a good thing at present.

    If you compare (say) PHAU and PHGP you will see significant divergence due to currency movements. However, that is comparing apple and oranges (securities priced in dollars and pounds). When you convert the PHAU price into sterling, the difference is minimal.

    You might like to make sure you choose an ETF that buys physical metal (like each of the above) as safer than one that buys futures. If topping up, you might prefer one from a different provider than your current investments just in case the rumours about these funds not always having all the physical gold they should have are true - to spread the risk).

    If investing outside a pension or ISA (or in a SIPP that supports it) you could consider Bullion Vault. It's a bit more complex to buy and sell, but charges are quite low and it may be safer.

  • 9. jrj90620

    (19 October 2011, 06:23PM)  Complain about this comment

    Good to read someone sticking with their long term beliefs.So many people change with the wind.

  • 10. Matthew Amadeus Devereux

    (19 October 2011, 07:15PM)  Complain about this comment

    Dear Mr.Frisby,

    This is a political message so naturally you are free to delete it as you wish.

    My new British government does not intend to confiscate gold from citizens in the manner of the government in the USA in the 1930s.

    Best wishes,

    M.A.D.
    Surrey.

  • 11. Michael Lewis

    (19 October 2011, 08:50PM)  Complain about this comment

    What I want to know is - are bit coins now a buy for Moneyweek?

    Since they've lost 90% or so of their value since the question:
    'Could this virtual currency become the new gold standard...'
    was (rhetorically we presume) posed ;)

  • 12. Paul Elliott

    (19 October 2011, 08:58PM)  Complain about this comment

    Dominic - Any chance of digging out that scatter chart (historic) showing that the price of gold always rises during times of negative real interest rates and falls in times of positive real interest rates. Indeed, the two are inversely proportional in direction and scale.

    Another interesting point read elsewhere suggests that gold wins when it is simply the least unattractive of all investment options - including holding cash in inflationary times.

  • 13. Concerned Citizen

    (19 October 2011, 10:06PM)  Complain about this comment

    # 11. MAD

    Begs the question: Do you know in what manner your new British government intends confiscating gold?

  • 14. spesbona - cape

    (19 October 2011, 10:08PM)  Complain about this comment

    What bothers me is the enormous gold holdings of the West, excluding the UK since financial genius Gordon Brown flogged it all off for a song. Didn’t the IMF sell off a huge swag of its gold in the ‘80’s in order to hurt the (white) South African economy? It worked didn’t it? Lets face it, our governments want us to leave our dosh in the banks earning no interest, so they can use and abuse it. They must hate the idea of people putting their money into gold. The problem is – because they own so much of it – they could control its value. What if they were to periodically flog off a million ounces thus depressing the price to deter small investors, as the IMF did to punish South Africa? Of course it would be quickly snapped up by China and India at a “bargain” price of under $1000 an ounce but the “little people” would have been taught a short sharp lesson – “now don’t you go buying Gold little Johnny, it’s dangerous – its a big boys toy”..!

  • 15. Dr Bob

    (20 October 2011, 07:44PM)  Complain about this comment

    "A lot of wiser heads than mine knock TA"

    Listen to them.

    "I like to be aware of seasonal patterns....I don’t rely on seasonals"

    Why be aware of an unreliable indicator?

    "perhaps it’s because 144 is a Fibonacci number, I don’t know. "

    The reason you don't know is that there is no reason.

    "Gold will never fall below £1,000 an ounce again"

    'Doubt is not a pleasant mental state, but certainty is a ridiculous one'

  • 16. Grahame

    (20 October 2011, 09:47PM)  Complain about this comment

    Tip: After Precious Metal Bear days shift your investment from Gold to Silver. Silver will almost certainly have fallen further after such drops. After the rise back up, shift it back.

  • 17. ScarFace

    (21 October 2011, 10:42AM)  Complain about this comment

    2 types of experts; those who don't know and those who don't know they don't know. Getting close to £1,000 per oz.

  • 18. HALO

    (27 October 2011, 09:03AM)  Complain about this comment


    I am 50% invested in gold: Bullion, Miners & ETF's. Is that too much?
    I reckon the risk with equities is greater than the risk with gold.
    Would appreciate advice.

  • 19. Hot Penny Stocks

    (05 November 2011, 01:09PM)  Complain about this comment

    I am very glad to visit this awesome blog. Really, it's a good effort. Keep it up forever...


    ENTB

    http://www.pennyplayersclub.com/

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