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DBP: Precious Metals Likely To Soften

When I last wrote about precious metals in October of last year, I focused primarily on what they (especially gold) can tell us about other commodity and asset classes. But, I did assign gold “a ‘Hold’ rating, because I expect continued weakness in commodities” even though “the metal also has

Chart A. Precious metals have outperformed other asset classes since October. (Stockcharts.com)

Chart B. Earnings and industrial metals cycles tend to be correlated with one another. (Robert Shiller data, World Bank)

Chart C. Bond yield cycles also appear to have turned. (St Louis Fed)

Chart D. The S&P 500 has also suffered, as equities begin to correlate with the market cycle. (St Louis Fed; Shiller data)

Chart E. Commodity cycles have historically had a consistent rhythm with respect to one another. (Author)

Chart F. Commodity cycles tend to have standard relationships with earnings and interest rates, as well. (Author)

Chart G. Real commodity prices have been strongly correlated with the earnings yield as far back as the 1870s. (World Bank; Shiller data)

Chart H. Silver prices seem to follow the earnings yield, but have seem more rangebound. (World Bank; Shiller data)

Chart I. Like silver, platinum prices seem rangebound. (World Bank; Shiller data)

Chart J. Real gold prices appear to be less sensitive to the Gibson Effect than other commodities, including other PMs (World Bank; Shiller data)

Chart K. Precious metals momentum is high relative to Treasuries. (Stockcharts.com)

Chart L. Gold momentum is high but slowing. (Stockcharts.com)

Chart M. Platinum momentum had been less strong, but has spiked in recent weeks. (Stockcharts.com)

Chart N. Silver, perhaps because of its affinity to industrial metals, has also been relatively subdued, but recently spiked. (Stockcharts.com)

Chart O. Because of the nature of the market cycle, gold often tracks the ratio of industrial metals prices to long-term bond yields (World Bank; St Louis Fed)

Chart P. Gold has risen consistently relative to grains over the last 25 years. (World Bank)

Chart Q. The relationship between gold and copper seems to have stabilized by the late 1970s. (World Bank)

Chart R. The gold/oil ratio has almost always been rangebound and also seems to react to overall commodity conditions. (World Bank; St Louis Fed)

Chart S. PMs generally anticipate market cycles, thus making them all the more difficult to predict. (Stockcharts.com)

Chart T. Relative momentum in gold and Treasuries is likely the key metric to watch and act on. (Stockcharts.com)

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