Posts Tagged ‘Steve Sjuggerud’

Gold & Apple Both Beating the Bear

Monday, July 26th, 2010

i-Phones and Gold Investing make one helluva "pairs trade" right now…

THIS CHART
shows the tale of two "crisis-beating" assets – Gold and Apple Inc., writes Brian Hunt in Steve Sjuggerud’s Daily Wealth.

In the past three years, just about every asset you can think of has either lost money or treaded water. The 2008 credit-crisis selloff was so severe, even recent rallies haven’t been able to carry assets back to their levels of a few years ago. Two exceptions here are Gold Bullion and shares of Apple.

This is what’s called a "performance chart." Performance charts graph the percentage returns of assets against each other. In this case, it’s the past three years of gold (gold line) and Apple shares (blue line).

Amazingly, both assets have registered the same gains since mid-2007…around 80%. Gold is enjoying price strength because of its role as "real money" crisis insurance. Apple is enjoying brand dominance in phones and music players. It’s a heck of a "pairs trade".

Buy gold at the lowest price available, and store it – securely – at the lowest cost possible by using BullionVault

Source:Gold & Apple Both Beating the Bear

A Gold Profit Strategy

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

How do you know when it’s a bull market and time to buy gold…?

I’VE COME UP
with a Simple Strategy to tell you when to buy gold…and when not to own it, writes Steve Sjuggerud in his Daily Wealth email.

It’s so simple, you could teach a monkey to follow it.

Best of all, US$10,000 invested in this Simple Strategy would have turned into nearly $2 million since the start of the ’70s. Just buying gold – and holding it – over the same time frame would have turned $10,000 into just $300,000.

The chart here tells the story. The blue line is the Simple Strategy. The gold line is the price of gold:

Not only did this Simple Strategy dramatically outperform the price of gold, it did so with substantially less volatility…

My Simple Strategy managed to steadily rise from the lower left of the chart to upper right. It almost entirely avoided gold’s big Dollar-price fall in 1975-1977. And it generally avoided gold’s two-decade fall from 1980 to 2000.

The Simple Strategy is so simple, it’s almost embarrassing. But it is based on an important point. Let me explain it.

How do you know when it’s a bull market in gold? The crucial point is to recognize when gold is only rising because there’s a bear market in the Dollar.

You see, if the US Dollar is crashing against other currencies, it’s probably also going down in terms of gold. That can make it look like gold is in a bull market. But what if gold is falling in terms of the Euro or the Yen? That’s not a gold bull market.

So what is a bull market in gold?

One simple definition is: when gold is going up in terms of the world’s most important currencies. I took a look at the four most widely traded currencies – the US Dollar, the Euro, the British Pound, and the Japanese Yen. And I came up with my Simple Strategy. Here’s how it works:

If gold is up versus all four currencies over the previous month, then buy gold. Repeat the next month.

That’s it. And when I tested it over the last 40 years of data, the results were astonishing.

When gold was up versus all four currencies in the most recently ended month – when my Simple Strategy flashed a buy signal – gold rose at a compound annual rate of 35%. My Simple Strategy was in buy mode about a third of the time. (All the rest of the time, gold lost money.)

So if you’d simply stuck to buying gold when you got a signal, and then switched to cash (Treasury bills) when the signal was off, you’d have turned a US$10,000 investment in 1971 into nearly $2 million today.

Since 1971, the price of gold has risen at a compound annual rate of 9.2% a year. By using this much less volatile Simple System, where you’re invested in gold about one-third of the time, your wealth would have compounded at 14.5% a year.

This system is simple, but it’s sound. History shows that a great predictor of when gold will go up is when it’s already going up versus the major currencies.

It would be easy to refine my Simple Strategy to produce more dramatic results (and chances are we will for a future product we’re working on). Or you could leverage it up with a double-long gold fund, for even bigger profits.

But at the very least, now you know how to find out if conditions are bullish for gold. And in case you’re curious, we are currently in a bull market in gold…and we have been since March. Each month, gold has been up against all four currencies. Trade accordingly.

Buying gold today? Make it simple, secure and cost-effective here…

Source:A Gold Profit Strategy

Gold's Smooth, Long-Term Uptrend

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

The Gold Price began this bull market in 2002…

NOW THAT
the Gold Price has soared from $925 an ounce to $1200 an ounce, it’s amazing how many people CNBC trots out to explain every random $20 move in the metal, writes Brian Hunt in Steve Sjuggerud’s Daily Wealth.

Trying to analyze every move in the Gold Price is a waste of time. We don’t see gold as an investment. We see it as real-money "crisis insurance". We bought our gold long ago…and we hope to never have to use it. Not much more "analysis" is needed here.

We also encourage folks to take the "long view" when taking stock of their gold holdings. This long view – a 10-year chart of gold – is our chart of the week.

Gold began its uptrend in 2002. Since then, it has climbed higher every single year…and now sports one of the smoothest long-term uptrends in history.

You’ll also notice the long-term trendline we’ve drawn in blue. As you can see, gold could fall all the way down to $900 an ounce and remain within the confines of its uptrend. Keep this sensible view in mind when listening to the ridiculous short-term-focused commentary that goes for "analysis" these days.

Want to buy gold at live market prices today? Go to world No.1 BullionVault now…

Source:Gold's Smooth, Long-Term Uptrend

Gold's Smooth, Long-Term Uptrend

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

The Gold Price began this bull market in 2002…

NOW THAT
the Gold Price has soared from $925 an ounce to $1200 an ounce, it’s amazing how many people CNBC trots out to explain every random $20 move in the metal, writes Brian Hunt in Steve Sjuggerud’s Daily Wealth.

Trying to analyze every move in the Gold Price is a waste of time. We don’t see gold as an investment. We see it as real-money "crisis insurance". We bought our gold long ago…and we hope to never have to use it. Not much more "analysis" is needed here.

We also encourage folks to take the "long view" when taking stock of their gold holdings. This long view – a 10-year chart of gold – is our chart of the week.

Gold began its uptrend in 2002. Since then, it has climbed higher every single year…and now sports one of the smoothest long-term uptrends in history.

You’ll also notice the long-term trendline we’ve drawn in blue. As you can see, gold could fall all the way down to $900 an ounce and remain within the confines of its uptrend. Keep this sensible view in mind when listening to the ridiculous short-term-focused commentary that goes for "analysis" these days.

Want to buy gold at live market prices today? Go to world No.1 BullionVault now…

Source:Gold's Smooth, Long-Term Uptrend

Buy What's Working, Sell What's Not

Saturday, July 3rd, 2010

Gold Mining stocks are outperforming the ailing stock market…

"DO MORE
of what’s working, and less of what’s not." That’s what supertrader Dennis Gartman regularly writes, says Steve Sjuggerud in Daily Wealth.

This is the right advice. As Dennis has explained over the years, you’ll get half of the gain of a bull market in the last 10% of its duration (i.e. in the last year of a 10-year rally).
 
Whether it’s dot-com stocks or commodities, you never know what is heading straight up. But if you do more of what is working – if you buy into the uptrend – you have a chance at capturing big gains.
 
The problem is, it seems like nothing is working right now. For example, I wrote about big drug companies on Friday. The sector is cheap and ignored – two of the things I look for. Drug giant Pfizer is trading at just six times this year’s estimated earnings.
 
But the problem with Pfizer (and the drug companies) is there’s no uptrend yet. I’m buying at record cheap prices. But I know I’m swimming upstream to start…and that’s not where I really want to be. We can do better.
 
So where’s an uptrend now? What’s working today? Gold Mining stocks are working.
 
While everything else has fallen, gold stocks held on. The biggest names in gold stocks – Barrick, Goldcorp, and Newmont, are all trading very close to new highs for 2010. The uptrend is in place here. And relative to the price of gold, Gold Mining stocks still look cheap right now.

When gold rises, the profits of Gold Mining companies rise even more. So when gold goes up, gold stocks should soar. But get this: Gold is up 30% in the last two years. Based on the tried-and-true rules, gold stocks should be up 60% or more. But gold stocks are only up 10% in the last year.

Gold has soared. But gold stocks haven’t. That leaves them "cheap" relative to the price of gold…and need to catch up. Gold stocks are also ignored. Because while there’s plenty of talk about gold out there, the average man on the street doesn’t own a gold stock. Heck, the average investor probably doesn’t own a gold stock.

We have what I like to see. Gold Mining stocks are cheap relative to gold. Most people don’t own them. And, importantly, gold stocks are working right now. Remember, you want to own more of what is working and less of what is not. Gold stocks fit that bill.

Want physical Gold Bullion instead to start? "If there’s an easier way to Buy Gold, I’ve yet to find it," says one BullionVault user…

Source:Buy What's Working, Sell What's Not