The rebound in the precious metals sector continues. Friday, Gold pushed to another new high, near $1340/oz. Gold stocks led by the HUI Gold Bugs Index and GDX also made a new high with juniors and Silver right behind. The greatest traders say the move comes first and then the reason later. When it comes to Gold we are always analyzing the reason behind the moves so we can distinguish between reactions and reflex moves and those moves that are part of a real bull market. The market may be starting to sniff out a potential big catalyst for Gold that could drive its breakout in 2018.
With respect to Gold and Bonds an important change has taken place in recent months. The two asset classes had been positively correlated. When rates declined, Gold moved higher. When rates rebounded, Gold struggled. That is what happens when inflation is low and not trending. However, now we see
As we've written in the past, higher long-term yields are bullish when they rise faster than short-term yields. That is a steepening of the yield curve and indication of inflation.
At present, higher long-term rates could help bid Gold in a few different ways. First, for those who are seeking income they enhance the appeal of bonds relative to stocks. Second and more importantly, higher long-term rates will hurt what is an over-indebted economy and government at somepoint. Debt payments rise. Credit growth can slow. The threshold of that remains to be seen. Perhaps it could be 3.00% on the 10-year yield.
It is counterintuitive but upward pressure on long-term rates can be very bullish for Gold (in the present environment) as it necessitates the need for lower or stable long-term rates (amid an inflationary environment). It all comes back to debt. At somepoint rising rates negatively impact the economy and the government's balance sheet. If that creates the need for central bank intervention and monetization while inflation is running then that is what can push Gold to $2000-$3000/oz in the next several years.