by Sean Brodrick, Resource Strategist, The Oxford Club
The sovereign gold bonds are aimed at curbing domestic demand for physical gold among investors. People can turn in gold and get bonds against them, paying an interest rate of around 3%. The bonds are for five to seven years, and for five, 10, 50 and 100 grams of gold. However, the depositor earns an interest rate below regular Indian government bonds (recently 7.75%). And that won’t compensate him for various risks. In gold monetization, people turn in bullion or jewelry at a bank. While it’s being held, the owner will earn 2% to 3% in interest, tax-free. The aim here is enhancing the domestic supply of physical gold for jewelers. India is doing this because it wants to get the masses of idle gold lying dormant in vaults and households throughout the country out into the open. It’s especially meant to appeal to temples rumored to be sitting on vaults of gold. So how well are these schemes working? Well, Indian gold imports are surging. That tells me these grand plans aren’t working at all. Chinese Gold Demand Is Strong, Too China’s gold demand as tracked by deliveries out of the Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE) is very strong over the summer months – a time when demand is usually weak. In fact, the flow of gold through the SGE is already 36% higher than last year and 13.5% higher than the level of 2013. And 2013 was a record year. So, if you’ve been hearing in the media that Chinese gold demand is down this year, well, not if the deliveries out of the SGE are any indicator. Sure, second-quarter demand was way down. But it’s coming back in a big way. In fact, a recent eight-week period saw 512 metric tons of gold withdrawn from the SGE. That’s higher than global mine production, which would be around 492 tons over the same time frame. Here’s the thing: Chinese demand is usually stronger at the end of the calendar year as the Chinese New Year approaches. That’s when domestic gold consumption normally is at its highest. This year isn’t set in stone. But it sure looks like it could set a new record. Gold Miners Are “Absurdly Cheap.” The Philadelphia Gold & Silver Index (XAU), the oldest of the gold miner indexes, has broken the low it made back in November 2000, when the gold bullion price was only $265 per ounce. Gold stocks aren’t just cheap right now. They’re stupid cheap. Many of them are turnaround stories, just waiting to head higher. Here are some facts I recently told my $10 Trigger Alert subscribers about mega-minerBarrick Gold (NYSE: ABX)…
- It expects all-in sustaining costs of $840 to $880 per ounce in 2015. The company has made slashing costs one of its top priorities.
- It’s poised to ride a gold rally. Barrick should receive an extra $330 million in incremental EBITDA for every $100 rise in the price of an ounce of gold.
- It’s slashing debt. Barrick is on track to reduce $3 billion in debt by 2016. On top of that, the company has $4 billion in an undrawn credit facility. So it can ride out the bad times.
- Barrick is cheap! The stock is trading at 0.79 times sales and 0.74 times book value.
With fundamentals like this, you know it won’t take much to send Barrick and other quality miners blasting higher. And the really interesting thing is that gold miners look like they might be bottoming right now. Check out this chart for the biggest gold miner ETF, Market Vectors Gold Miners (NYSE: GDX). By any measure, that is an ugly-looking chart. But this is where bottoms are formed. And you can see that a deeper low in price was not confirmed by the momentum indicator on the bottom of the chart. In short: It looks like the bears are running out of steam. Now, combine this with the extreme undervaluation in miners, the fact that the best miners are cutting costs sharply, the surge in demand out of China and India, and the strange rise in gold lease rates in London. It’s a recipe for a red-hot rally. When it comes, you won’t want to miss out. Good investing, Sean Editorial Note: In recent years, resources and resource stocks have taken a beating. There’s no question about it. But as we near the bottom, now is the time when opportunistic investors should be licking their chops. The question is: How can you tell the difference between an undervalued yet quality miner… and a company that could be toxic to your portfolio? To help you answer that question, Sean created the Resources to Riches Alliance. This easy-to-follow course – broken into eight parts – will teach you everything you need to know about investing in the energy and natural resource markets. Even better, we’re currently offering a $50 discount to new members. Simply click this link and enter the code RICH50 at checkout.