The
Dow-Gold Crossover Part II
Ignition ... when?
Alex Wallenwein
Yes, I know. There were a couple of mis-firings on the way. So what? Getting
a gold-shuttle up into orbit isn't that easy, after all. At least, it didn't
blow up like Challenger did in 1986.
But a powerful sign of either an imminent lift-off (or a new gold-attack)
is occurring right now. In the first Dow-Gold Crossover article I predicted a time, not
far off, where the Dow and gold - which have trended together from mid-2003
until Early January 2005 - will part ways. (by the way, if you're still not
convinced that gold and the Dow have become buddies - and the Dow and dollar
enemies - of late, pl
ease consider this chart):

When
the Dow starts falling off, but gold continues its inexorable upward
trend, all kinds of hell will break loose.
And it looks like that's about to start happening.
During a few weeks, from January 19th until February 6th or so, the 20-month
old dollar-Dow inversion appeared to have dissolved itself. Yesterday, the
Dow officially went back into the red zone for the year (which it hasn't really
left but for a brief moment) while the dollar continues to resume its fall.
Naturally, as the dollar resumed its descent, gold resumed its only briefly
stalled upward momentum. This appears to be turning into the long-awaited Dow-Gold
Crossover. (In the process, another Euro vs Dollar Monitor prediction from
January came true: the short-term dollar-bounce/gold-droop resolved itself
before the end of February, 2005).
What will happen now will show how much 'oomph' is left in the old US/Fed economic
consortium.
Greenspan has not indicated that faster rate rises are on the horizon. Continued
quarter-point hikes til the end of the year are already priced into the dollar.
His bit about the current account deficit self-correcting as a result of "market
forces" hasn't convinced anybody, so the dollar is back in decline and
gold back in rising mode.
If the Dow now joins the dollar on its downward journey, it will be exceedingly
difficult to trash gold. Therefore, if gold is successfully trashed to keep
investors fixated on the Dow while the dollar is falling, then there is quite
a bit of moxie left in that old paper-engine.
If gold keeps on rising, on the other hand, but the Dow keeps falling, then
we're very near the end of the "Miracle on 20th and C Street" (the
address of the Federal Reserve building in DC).
Why would the Dow keep falling?
Because Al "the Green Goblin" Greenspan has miscalculated
somewhat - but that's understandable, given how many lies the guy has
to keep spinning at the same time. It gets confusing after awhile.
True to form, just about at the time when his continuous rate rises were showing
some bite and were promising to prop up the falling dollar enough to forestall
a world-wide headlong flight into alternative currencies, the Dow started turning
south.
Take a look at the period from December 31st to mid-January on this chart:

Then,
from mid-January until early February, gold fell while the Dow and
the dollar rose together - briefly. That's okay with the US establishment.
But now, with the dollar still falling, the Dow is having a hick-up
while the anti-dollar contingent (gold and the euro) are slowly rising
again.
The very short time frame does not really allow any serious prognostications
as to a sustained major gold rise in the short term. But when you include the
XAU gold stock index in this analysis, then we get quite a different picture
- as gold stocks have often acted as a lead-indicator for COMEX gold. (Interesting
to note here is the February 4th time slot on this chart. It looks like the
dollar, gold, and the XAU [the hot-pink line] changed directions within a day
of each other, while the Dow briefly continued its uptrend.)

At
that point, the dollar resumed its downward path, gold began to slowly
climb, and the XAU shot up like a bat out of hell. All the while,
the Dow kept on rising back to its December 31st level, which it
only reached a few days ago - before falling again.
Right now, the dollar-Dow down move in the face of a gold/XAU up-move
is only two days old, but there are fundamental developments that indicate
this may well continue.
Only two days ago, the Green Goblin has said that inflation and inflationary
expectations were "well anchored". Today, February 18, 2005,
we find that the PPI shows a significant up-tick in core producer prices
during January, to the tune of 0.8 percent. That's a whopper for
just one month - and a nice little glove slapped in the goblin's face
- curtesy of the market.
Of course, real consumer price inflation has been strong for some time
as Jim Puplave showed in several of his last expositions. But now, that PPI
increase - since it is likely to continue - will soon trickle down to even
official representations of consumer price levels. Either that, or companies
will be afraid to pass it on - and their profit margins will shrink.
That doesn't bode well for the Dow.
Higher inflation means rising interest rates, which means tighter
money, which means higher debt payments for individuals and businesses,
which means lower profit margins all around ... which is of course bad
for stocks.
On top of that, when higher inflation causes faster rate increases is will
tend to boost the dollar which is NOT in the US establishment's interest
since it is bad for the Dow. (See the top chart).
Real bad.
But here is the problem: Greenspan has shown in his last two speeches before
Congress that he is afraid of faster rate rises. He played the likelihood
of those down by emphasizing how "low" inflation supposedly is. Now
the PPI-jump is forcing his hand - either way, causing him to stick his foot
right up his mouth. (Pretty agile for an old man, isn't he?)
Either he raises rates (and therefore chokes the economy off) faster,
or he keeps his "measured" pace and the dollar goes back into free-fall
mode - as it is already wont to do despite his series of rate hikes since June
last year. Neither contingency is in his play book, so he is in a bit of a
tight spot here.
In short: The sorcerer's apprentice is watching the broomsticks carry bucket
after bucket of water into the den. But this particular apprentice's main problem
is: The sorcerer ain't comin' home!
He's dead - if there ever was a "chief sorcerer" out there.
Our Goblin himself is now chief magician 'extraordinaire' - and none
greater has ever lived, according to the press. There's no one to turn
to but God himself - but God has been systematically excluded from all
of the establishment's magnificent calculations.
So, it looks like "all systems go" for the (possibly final)
Dow-Gold Crossover.
If the Dow turns down while gold (and especially the gold stocks)
move up for any length of time, an eventual stampede out of stocks and
into gold-related investments is inevitable - and that is exactly what
the establishment is afraid of.
With inflation up, bonds will fall and long term rates will rise, making debt
payments more expensive, houses more expensive, and all of this is bad fo rthe
Dow ... yada, yada, yada. We've talked about it all ad nauseum in previous
essays.
Now, it seems it's about to happen.
I hope you've bought lots of 'physical' on gold's way down from $455 to $410.
If not, this would be a good time - before the COMEX' decoy gold price goes
over $500 this year, and then beyond. (Isn't it wonderful that you can actually
buy real metal at these phony prices?
)
Got gold?
Alex
Wallenwein
Editor,
Publisher
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Email: awallenwein@houston.rr.com |