In mid-January I became concerned that the explosive early 2015 rally in gold and silver mining shares was overdone and therefore subject to a meaningful correction. Please see my January 20th post entitled "Is Gold Still The Most Hated Asset Class?". I personally liquidated all my precious metals position in favor of cash at that time.
Gold and Silver prices have broken sharply since their mid-January highs and have now retraced almost all the strong advance that had unfolded between early November and mid-January.
The most popular Gold ETF (symbol GLD) had rallied 14.5% from its early November 2014 low, but now it's up only 3.3% from that low.
The most popular Silver ETF (symbol SLV) had rallied 20.8% from its early November 2014 low, but now it's up only 3.8%.
Friday was a fairly significant down day for Gold and Silver prices as investors reacted to a stronger than expected February U.S. non-farm payrolls report, which will supposedly push the U.S. Federal Reserve to raise short term interest rates as soon as June 2015. While I have my doubts about the veracity of the latest employment data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS - where are the 40,000 confirmed job losses from the energy sector in the two monthly employment reports so far this year?), that's a story for another day.
In recent columns here, I have offered the suggestion that the recent correction in Gold and Silver prices has about run it course (and that a new advance was ready to get underway). In fact, as of Thursday's close, March 5th, I had accumulated a 10% allocation in gold mining shares (mostly in GDX and GDXJ), with the intent to increase this stake to near 20%. Of course, I didn't anticipate the "slam" in precious metals mining shares that unfolded yesterday, Friday, March 6th. Most Gold and Silver mining shares were down between 5% and 10% yesterday in reaction to about a 2.5% drop in the underlying precious metal prices.
So where do we stand now? I added significantly to my gold mining shares yesterday afternoon and I also bought meaningful positions in two silver stocks yesterday (AG and CDE). My allocation to this sector is now 30% of assets under management.
Despite the fact that Gold and Silver prices have given back almost all of their gains as posted in the November 2014 to January 2015 advance, most precious metals mining shares are still up sharply, on balance, from their late 2014 intra-day lows. Here is a representative sample of key stocks in this sector and their respective gains relative to intra-day lows posted late last year::
Goldcorp (GG) +12.0%
Barrick Gold (ABX) +13.1%
Newmont Mining +32.4%
Major Gold Mining Shares ETF (GDX) +12.9%
Junior Gold Mining Shares ETF (GDXJ) +9.4%
First Majestic Silver (AG) +46.7%
Coeur D Alene (CDE) +49.3%
Gold ETF (GLD) +3.3%
Silver ETF (SLV) +3.8%
Bottom Line: I see the recent relative strength in the gold and silver mining stocks, as compared to the underlying precious metals prices, as VERY positive and bullish for the entire sector immediately ahead!
P.S. Weekly chart sell signals were triggered at Friday's close, March 6th, in several major U.S. stock indexes as well as several sector indices. In the interest of full disclosure, I missed the entire decline in U.S. stock prices this past Friday and I do not have any short positions right now. Weekly chart buy and sell signals are the most reliable signals from my computer-based trading system. Here is the complete list of weekly chart computer-based sell signals in major indexes and sector indices at Friday's close, March 6th:
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)
Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (DIA)
Nasdaq Composite Index (OTC)
Nasdaq-100 Index (QQQ & NDX))
Russell 2000 Index (RUT)
Russell 2000 Index ETF (IWM)
Russell 2000 Value Index ETF (IWN)
Morgan Stanley High Tech Index (MSH)
Philadelphia Semiconductor Index (SOX)
Semiconductor ETF (SMH)
P.S. Weekly chart sell signals were triggered at Friday's close, March 6th, in several major U.S. stock indexes as well as several sector indices. In the interest of full disclosure, I missed the entire decline in U.S. stock prices this past Friday and I do not have any short positions right now. Weekly chart buy and sell signals are the most reliable signals from my computer-based trading system. Here is the complete list of weekly chart computer-based sell signals in major indexes and sector indices at Friday's close, March 6th:
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)
Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (DIA)
Nasdaq Composite Index (OTC)
Nasdaq-100 Index (QQQ & NDX))
Russell 2000 Index (RUT)
Russell 2000 Index ETF (IWM)
Russell 2000 Value Index ETF (IWN)
Morgan Stanley High Tech Index (MSH)
Philadelphia Semiconductor Index (SOX)
Semiconductor ETF (SMH)
Dow Jones Industrial Average Weekly Chart with Computer-generated Buy & Sell Signals |
Nasdaq Composite Index Weekly Chart with Computer-generated Buy & Sell Signals |
Russell 2000 Index Weekly Chart with Computer-generated Buy & Sell Signals |
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