first majestic silver

Gold: It’s Baaaack!

February 18, 2016

Gold bullion and gold stocks came back from the dead, attracting new money defying the rout in commodities. Gold held its value better than other assets. That previous haven, the dollar plunged sparking a scramble for safety, amid the demise of bullish market sentiment, the peaking of every market from Shanghai to Nasdaq, Middle East turmoil and concerns over the health of the global financial outlook. Although, this long overdue correction was well advertised, the markets now view the glass as half empty, rather than half full.   

Fear has replaced optimism. Until recently, the market has ignored red flags for months, including oil sliding for much of last year, China’s slowdown and Japan’s adoption of negative interest rates joining the ongoing currency war. Nothing new here.

What is new, is China’s use of its massive foreign exchange hoard to prop up the renminbi amid the massive selling of US debt by Russia, China and Middle East players resulting in a “cashing out” of the billions of IOUs printed by the Fed. Those dollar denominated debt once languished in the vaults are now coming home to roost, causing the US dollar to finally fall. The lack of growth in the US only reaffirms that the “pushing on a string” quantitative easing is not working. Expanding their balance sheets to lower rates has become less effective over time. And, of course the prospect of another socialist president or even The Donald was enough to send gold higher.

The rate hike? It was a non-event, partly because it was the most well-advertised event for much of the past couple years. Nevertheless, few recall that between 2005 and 2006, interest rates went up 17 times, yet gold soared 50 percent. Meantime, central banks continue to buy the yellow metal. China is buying 50 tonnes a month joining Russia and other central banks. Even the gold ETF attracted almost a billion in only a month in contrast to the $2 billion of withdrawals over the last year.

Near term, gold is technically overbought, and a brief pullback would present another attractive buying opportunity for those who missed the boat by listening to Goldman’s economists. Following that, we expect a bull run to $1,300 per ounce and then a target to the old high, yes $2,000 per ounce. Gold will be a good thing to have.

Politicization of Policy

When Mr. Obama took office, the US deficit was $10 billion and with less than a year left in his term, it is now $19 trillion or more than 75 percent of GDP which does not include growing entitlements and Medicare bills. Debt has grown twice as much as GDP which is unsustainable. And despite numerous government shutdowns, congressional stalemates and promises, Mr. Obama has brought out another Keynesian $4.2 trillion budget, leaving a fiscal time bomb for his successor. However, in addition to the growing entitlement burden, the ratcheting up of debt leaves little room to manoeuvre in a stressed credit environment. And elsewhere? Brazil might miss a debt repayment. Venezuela is bankrupt. Puerto Rico defaulted. Despite the politicization of the budget deficit, reality must set in and bills must be paid, even though the Fed is studying following Japan and Europe into negative interest rate territory. The first rate increase in almost 10 years is an example of the politicization of monetary policy.

Unlike Msr. Alexis de Tocqueville’s concern that the biggest danger to US democracy was the tyranny of the majority, today he would have been concerned about the tyranny of the minority. It seems mainstream politics is under attack with the populist uprising a backlash against the one percenters or a Robin Hood solution of taking from the rich to give to the poor. Although the populists’ solution of Trump and Sanders are different, left unsaid is that the popularity of their message is not the message itself but a consequence of the politicization of economic and monetary policy such that they have become so intertwined, that the Trump/Sanders success validated the politicization of government policy. This failure has created unrealistic expectations that inevitably disappoint and thus the thirst for change. Ignoring the majority, politicians have simply created their own monster. Capitalism is under fire and policy uncertainties have created a risk premium.

How Low Can They Go?

Worries about growth prompted Japan to introduce a new stage of quantitative easing by adopting negative yields, lowering rates into negative territory. In other words you pay the bank to hold your money. This experimental policy follows Switzerland, Sweden and Denmark and a quarter of government bonds today, trade below zero. Negative interest rates were last seen in the Dirty Thirties.

However, the impact on commercial banks is considerable, introducing distortions in the financial markets ruining spreads. The implications of the negative cost to holding currencies is widespread and reflects that fiat money has been constantly debased by central banks. Money is no longer money. Purchasing power is gone. On the other hand, corporate borrowers and in particular, the junk players have been paying higher rates such that the spread is the largest since the Lehman Brothers’ collapse of 2008. This is the start of an upside world. That investors are willing to accept negative rates suggests that today they are more concerned over the safety of their money and whom they have left their deposits with.

An example of the central banks’ waning credibility is that running out of options, they are caught up in a competitive currency war, a zero sum game exacerbated by negative rates. We believe that this next stage of quantitative easing reflects the shifting of the enormous surplus of money that was created and the sloshing around suggests that investors are reluctant to invest in long term projects, or even today, buy bonds. And, dividend models are about to be thrown out the window as investors become concerned that stocks are now too expensive, having been declared only too cheap, a year ago. Consequently, investors have become super-cautious seeking that safehaven, gold.

Central banks’ rock bottom interest rates policies, cannot be relied upon as the ultimate backstop, having singularly failed to resurrect their flagging economies with trillions of stimulus. The market has called Chairwoman’s Yellen’s bluff. Central bankers have lost the markets’ confidence. Quantitative easing allowed the central banks to purchase massive amounts of debt with newly printed money in order to depress interest rates which in turn was to stimulate borrowing and revive the economy. Wrong. Instead central banks threw more money at the problem, such that their balance sheets became top heavy with debt. Those bloated reserves have crippled the banking system. Banks traditionally make money on the spread however with those assets now in negative territory, these “too big to fail” players have experienced difficulties in an “illiquid negative rate environment”. And, as China unwinds their stockpile of foreign exchange reserves in support of the renminbi, that money is beginning to work itself through the system, with dangerous implications.

Contagion is Back

An unintended consequence and not so lucky are the financial institutions that funded the oil and gas boom, in particular the shale players. Too big to fail Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse and Wells Fargo are trading at a fraction of their peaks over concerns that non-performing losses will swamp their capital. These banks were at the epicenter of the 2008 collapse. The move to negative interest rates will squeeze bank profits and upsets the traditional banking model, removing their safety net. To no surprise the price of insurance went up again in a déjà vu moment of 2008. Wall Street lent billions to junk rated borrowers and now have worthless oil rigs and leases as collateral. Of course Wall Street offloaded some of those liabilities in newly created structured products to their clients. Wells Fargo has $17 billion of exposure. Bank of America has $21.3 billion exposure. Italian banks are carrying almost 20 percent non-performing loans. For these ailing banks, who are going to bail them out? Last time, it was the central banks but after the Cyprus bank debacle they shifted that responsibility to the depositors in a “bailing in” move. And now the Germans have a “bail-in” plan for government bonds that could impose “haircuts” on holders, imperiling the eurozone itself. Caveat Emptor!

Regulatory Reform

Money continues to be debased. Cash itself was targeted by governments closing tax havens in the quest for revenues. Central banks are even getting rid of highly valued denominated currency. Capitalizing on this vacuum, entrepreneurs have introduced alternatives. In reaction to the increasing regulatory burden, technology has revolutionized fund raising. Bitcoin is the latest digital currency.

Blockchain technology has taken the bitcoin one step further, allowing fund raising, back office payments, and eliminating due diligence all in one click. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) itself issued its first white paper on virtual currencies. In simple terms, the use of blockchain technology is a glorified ledger enabling electronic payments giving banks huge advantages. Central banks have climbed aboard as blockchain transactions can eliminate tax avoidance, money laundering, fraud and terrorist transfers. In other words, the old school banks are giving way to the cyberbanks. Similarly, technology could help the old stock exchanges. The truth however, is that the ultimate currency is waiting. We believe gold which is time tested over thousands of years, will outlast the bitcoins and blockchain technology because today’s paper currencies are found wanting. History shows that stores of values are to be highly prized when there is a lack of monetary discipline. Alternatives to the dollar will gain in value. Gold anyone?

China Rising?

In the nineties, many Asian countries pegged their currencies to the dollar. This summer, China dropped the peg to the dollar in order to make the renminbi more independent and market oriented which resulted in a six percent decline. China spent more than $100 billion to support the renminbi and there are talks of capital controls. China dipped into the world largest reserves which was accumulated from years and years of trade surpluses. While capital controls would slow the outflow, China’s growing ambitions has dictated a “going out policy” to secure needed resources via larger and larger M&A deals such as ChemChina’s $43 billion bid for Switzerland’s Syngenta. With the largest reserves in the world, China is using its financial heft to pursue a “one belt, one road” initiative of building global trade links, assisted by Chinese led financial institutions like the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.

While China limits renminbi outflows, one of five cross border deals totaled $157 billion. China remains the world’s largest importer of oil and the collapse in oil prices is a windfall and better than a super tax cut. The Chinese are simply capitalizing on the lower prices by stockpiling their strategic reserves and, of course becoming the world’s largest market for gas guzzlers last year. And while many point to the decline in luxury goods, the drop was due more to the ongoing crackdown on corruption and wasteful spending. Growth in car sales, year over year are still at the highest levels in the world. China’s monthly gold purchases are a step towards making the “redback” a major currency, rivaling the greenback. We believe the authorities move to make the redback independent and break the defacto link to the American financial hegemony was because of concerns over the dollar’s long term value.

Recommendations

US slow growth and huge debt burdens ultimately raises questions about the repayment of that debt. The age old discipline of supply leaves the dollar only one way to go. Vast amounts of dollars are held everywhere. Gold will continue to rise in value as long as the United States keeps drifting towards fiscal instability. Their system is debt clogged that not even a one percent yield could coax buyers.

Gold’s new bull market has just begun. As long as America consumes much more that it produces and owes much more than it owns, the avalanche of dollars will keep coming. What damages trust in the dollar, damages the world. Gold is an alternative to the dollar for central banks. We thus believe gold will continue to outperform stock markets this year, as it has for the first part of this year. Gold is that new/old global currency.

Gold stocks have bottomed. The bear market for gold is over and the miners have recorded the strongest gains in years as many reported stronger cash flow as a result of debt reductions and asset sales. Kirkland Lake successfully closed its deal with St. Andrews reflecting that it is now cheaper to buy reserves than explore and develop. Tahoe recently purchased Lake Shore Gold to lessen its exposure to Guatemala and establish a toehold in the attractive Timmins camp which is undergoing a consolidation leaving Goldcorp without a partner now that $500 million Borden is on hold. Of interest is that few producers replaced reserves that they mined last year. We continue to recommend the more liquid senior producers like Barrick and Agnico-Eagle. We also like intermediate producers like Eldorado, B2Gold as well as juniors like McEwen Mining. A rising tide lifts all boats. We would take advantage of the move and use Yamana, Iamgold and Kinross as sale candidates.

Agnico-Eagle Mines Ltd.

Agnico reported a 67 percent increase in reserves at Amaruq to 3.3 million ounce. Flagship La Ronde, Canadian Malartic, Goldex, and La India mines performed well. Agnico also paid down debt in the quarter but plans $100 million spending at Nunavut Territory. Reserves grades increased at La Ronde, Canadian Malartic and Goldex. The company is expanding La Ronde again as well as looking at Meliadine beyond 2019. Agnico has eight operating mines in Canada, Finland and Mexico and though production will be flat, we like Agnico’s pipeline and execution capabilities. Agnico has a strong balance sheet of $1.37 billion of liquidity. We like the shares here.

Barrick Gold Corp

Big miner Barrick’s results were slightly better than guidance and importantly as promised, the company chopped $3 billion off its debt load. Importantly the Street is convinced that Barrick is on the right course. Barrick has the largest gold reserves in the world and its “back to basic” strategy currently in vogue has met wide acceptance. Barrick also has multi-million ounce pipeline potential at Lagunas Norte in Peru, South Arturo in Chile and Goldrush in Nevada. We believe Barrick can still reduce debt by a billion or so through a number of asset sale options. Importantly Barrick generated free cash flow and while we expect a pruning of its large asset base, the heavy lifting has largely been done. We also expect John Thornton to maintain a strict discipline philosophy, and believe that he will seek strategic joint ventures. It is here that John’s background will be an advantage and we continue to recommend the shares here for its large insitu reserve base, quality management and back to basics strategy.

B2Gold Corp.

B2Gold is a mid-tier miner with four mines, La Libertad, Limon, Masbate, and newly commissioned Otjikoto in Namibia. Otjikoto’s ramp up is going well and recoveries approached 95.1% which was consistent with guidance. B2Gold is spending $140 million at its four operating mines, including a mill expansion at Otjikoto and additional tanks at Masbate. Importantly Fekola’s construction has begun and the company has emphasized that it has various financing options from streaming to slowing down capex in order to complete the buildout at Fekola. Thus, concerns of an equity issue are misplaced. The key is that B2Gold has a solid operating and execution background. We like the shares here.

Centerra Gold Inc.

Unlike most producers, Centerra’s proven and probable reserves increased almost ten percent to 8.4 million ounces. The company also reported a positive feasibility study at Oksut in Turkey. However, while reserves overall increased, at Kumtor in the Kyrgyz Republic proven and probable reserves actually declined to 5.6 million ounces. We believe the protracted negotiations with the Kyrgyz Republic has resulted in curtailed capex. Centerra has become more of a high risk situation and while the stock is cheap here, we believe that the ongoing negotiations will continue to be protracted and there are better situations elsewhere.

Kinross Gold Corp.

Kinross produced almost 2.6 million ounces and reported results in line with expectations with a healthy contribution from Paracatu and Round Mountain. Kinross closed the pricy acquisition of Round Mountain plus Bald Mountain in Nevada. Kinross, will spend close to $600 million this year and plans a revamped feasibility study at Tasiast. While the revamped feasibility study will undoubtedly cost less, it is important to note that pre-stripping costs remain large and is an overhang over the economics of this project. Meantime, we believe that the Nevada acquisitions offset in part the healthy geopolitical risk that Kinross carries because of its two mines in Russia. We prefer B2Gold here.

John R. Ing

[email protected]


Throughout history the ruling class has always sought to own gold and silver because they represent purity and longevity.
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