LPL Financial Weekly Market Commentary for May 6, 2012

by Rose Greene, CFP on June 5, 2012

Gold: It’s Back

Jeffrey Kleintop, CFA
Chief Market Strategist
LPL Financial

Highlights

  • Fortunately for investors, as Treasuries became the most expensive they have ever been, another safe haven emerged last week that had been lost to investors seeking safety in recent years: precious metals.

  • While stocks may be nearing an attractive entry point, precious metals — after suffering bigger losses and beginning to exhibit a return to a traditional safe-haven behavior — may be rising on investors’ shopping lists as they start to look at deploying cash positions.

As investors sought a safe haven from falling markets last week, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note (which moves in the opposite direction of the price) hit a record low going back to the 1950s, as it fell to 1.45% [Figure 1]. Fortunately for investors, as Treasuries became the most expensive they have ever been, another safe haven emerged last week that had been lost to investors seeking safety in recent years: precious metals.

 While historically acting as a refuge for investors during stormy markets, gold prices have been driven by multiple factors including the demand from China and India in recent years. This has resulted in a departure from gold’s former role as a defensive investment. Gold has tracked the ebb and flow of global growth, especially growth in Asia, in recent years. For example, gold plunged 30% from mid-March to mid-November of 2008 (according to Bloomberg data), as the global financial crisis emerged, offering investors little safety from the similar decline in the stock market. Furthermore, this year, gold prices tracked the slowdown in China’s economic growth, moving down in lockstep with China’s Leading Economic Index as key data releases reflected slowing growth and missed economists’ estimates.

But that behavior changed last week as gold prices rose despite weak global economic data, including data from China that pushed bond yields lower (and prices higher), as you can see in Figure 2. The release on Friday, June 1 of China’s PMI, a widely-watched manufacturing gauge for China, was surprisingly weak and registered a sharp pullback to 50, the threshold between a growing and shrinking manufacturing economy in China. Investors began to look at gold as a safe haven again rather than a barometer of global or Asian economic growth.

Gold had fallen 19% from early September of last year until mid-May 2012, as the price in dollars per troy ounce fell from 1900 to 1540, nearly making it a bear market for the precious metal. Since May 16, 2012 gold is up 5.5% with most of that gain, 4 percentage points, coming on Friday, June 1 as stocks, as measured by the S&P 500, fell 2.5%.

This change in gold’s behavior may be lasting. Currency is a major driver of gold price movements. For example, the rise in the value of the dollar accounted for about half of the 19% decline in gold prices prior to this week. The strong dollar, driven by money flowing into the U.S. from Europe and elsewhere, has weighed on the price of gold measured in dollars. A turnaround in the direction of the dollar would be a plus for gold prices.

Last week’s softer U.S. economic readings for key data like the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) and employment make it more likely we will see a new program of stimulus from the Federal Reserve (Fed) as the current “Operation Twist” draws to a close this month. That action by the Fed may weaken the dollar and add further fuel to gold prices, sustaining gold’s new behavior as a safe haven.

A safe haven may be valuable given the volatility that may result from upcoming events:

  • June 6: European Central Bank meeting
  • June 10 & 17: French parliamentary elections
  • June 17: Greek elections
  • June 19 – 20: Federal Reserve meeting
  • June 28 – 29: European Union summit

And as of mid-July 2012, Greece will run out of money if the second round of bailout funds are not dispersed due to Greece failing to live up to the agreement that was crafted late last year.

While stocks may be nearing an attractive entry point, precious metals — after suffering bigger losses and beginning to exhibit a return to a traditional safe-haven behavior — may be rising on investors’ shopping lists as they start to look at deploying cash positions.

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