Gold is So Rip-Snortin’ Cheap!

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Thus upon Gold’s weekly parabolic trend a week ago flipping from Long to Short, we assessed the numbers, wringing from them what we could best foresee, and wrote that Gold (then 1783) faced getting sold sub-17f00. And for this past week in settling yesterday (Friday) at 1733 — the net decline of -2.8% being Gold’s worst weekly loss in three months — price en route traded down to within 15 points (at 1714.9) of the 1600s. Again, to write and be right can be downright annoying, especially per the following graphic of Gold’s weekly bars from a year ago-to-date wherein said parabolic Short trend has only just started per the rightmost two red dots:

Gold’s technical saving grace however is the delineated 1789-1672 structural support zone. Gold’s fundamental saving grace is (by the price today of 1733) being just 47% of our opening Scoreboard currency debasement valuation of 3698. Too, 1733 — should we be correct about Gold reaching 2401 in 2021 — means a gain of 39% remains in the offing from here this year. And per currencies’ bizarro printing pace (other than the market never being wrong) hardly can valuation be “priced in” a wit.

The first time Gold reached 1733 (nearly 10 years ago on 09 August 2011) the U.S. Money Supply as measured by M2 was $9.5 trillion and the Gold supply was 175k tonnes. Since then, M2 has more than doubled, but the supply of Gold is only 14% higher. “So, why are we here?” you ask. “So, when do we leave?” we ask. (Ours is not to reason why, but rather be on board for departure).

“So, mmb, what you’re saying is there’s not too much more Gold downside from here?”

Squire, Gold is so rip-snortin’ cheap at this juncture ’tis a gift from the gods: currency debasement proves it so. Just as the S&P 500 is so fatally beyond expensive ’tis a trap to snap: lack of earnings proves it so.

(Note for those of you scoring at home during this Q4 Earnings Season: with 455 of the S&P’s 505 constituents having reported, 79% have beaten estimates … but just 59% have actually bettered their bottom lines over those of a year ago. And our honestly-calculated “live” price/earnings ratio for the S&P at this writing? 73.1x … share that with your money manager and then watch them squirm in their game to disclaim same. Or perhaps you’ll just hear crickets…)

That said, we’ve still Gold at the bottom of the year-to-date BEGOS Market Standings, the two big economic (stagflative?) winners being Oil and Copper. Indeed for you readers of our daily Prescient Commentary, you’ll recall our penning on 02 February (Oil then at 53) that “…structurally ‘twould appear price can run up to test the Jan 2020 high of 65.65…” Oil reached 63.81 this past Thursday, Black Gold thriving, but Real Gold diving. Here’s the table: