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What’s Wrong With Gold Stocks?
By: Hard Assets Investor   Monday, August 04, 2008 12:42 PM
Sectors: Basic Materials

Earlier this year ("Gold Stocks Pay Off"), it seemed like the stars had lined up for gold stock investors. Gold equities looked cheap relative to bullion in mid-March, at least on the basis of the GLD/GDX ratio. The ratio, representing the price multiple of the SPDR Gold Shares Trust (NYSE: GLD) over the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (AMEX: GDX), had dipped to 1.75, its lowest level in three months. The chart pattern traced by the ratio reminded gold traders of market conditions three years before.

In mid-May 2005, gold had gotten ahead of mining stocks, according to watchers of the Philadelphia Gold/Silver Index (PHLX: XAU), a benchmark tracking the performance of a baker's dozen mining outfits. Gold's price, as a multiple of XAU's, had advanced to a historic plateau that rather predictably signaled a reversal point in the past.

Apparently, they were right. Those who bought mining equities and held them through early January 2006 watched their investments gain value at a pace nearly three times as fast as gold itself. XAU raced ahead 73.6% against bullion's 26% gain.

But there was no such move set up by this March's pattern. At least not yet. The GLD/GDX ratio, instead of falling, rose to new highs. It closed at 2.12 Friday.

 

Gold Bullion's Price Vs. Mining Stocks (GLD/GDX)

Chart: Gold bullion's Price vs. Mining Stocks

 

What went wrong?

Well, three things really. First and foremost, let's not forget that gold mining stocks are stocks. Though their issuers are engaged in the business of finding and producing a commodity, they're not commodities themselves.

In 2005, the equity environment wasn't ideal, but it was definitely better than now. We're currently looking forward to a low- or no-growth environment seasoned with high inflation. That's a noxious atmosphere for equities - even for gold stocks.

Mining stock prices are inherently more volatile than those of bullion. Since 2005, Axe's standard deviation (a measure of volatility), at 34.6% per annum, is nearly twice that of gold's. The outsized riskiness arises from the enormous influence gold's market price has on a mining company's earnings. That's where the second factor - production costs - comes in.

During gold's 20-year bear market, miners learned to survive by controlling costs. Using higher-grade and easy-to-find ore, producers tried to wrest profits from sub-$300 market prices.


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