GOLD COULD RISE 115%
1 December 2009 by TPC 2 Comments

David Rosenberg is calling himself Goldberg this morning as he continues to
state the case for gold.  He thinks the yellow metal is in a secular bull
market, but could be highly susceptible to a near-term pull-back.  Like our
recent report from Casey
Research<http://pragcap.com/how-and-why-china-will-flood-the-gold-market>,
Rosenberg believes
China<http://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=js&ver=ZZ4KpTfy1bY.en.&am=!Iec9iPCj39i5BXHS0fIucl_S-sNCwikmN0BuHFUEZJLKUA#>could
be a major source of the fuel for higher gold prices:

Gold just capped off its best month in a year — up 14% in November and 34%
so far in 2009. Not even the S&P
500<http://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&view=js&name=js&ver=ZZ4KpTfy1bY.en.&am=!Iec9iPCj39i5BXHS0fIucl_S-sNCwikmN0BuHFUEZJLKUA#>can
compete with that. Helping drive the latest gains was the news out of
the China Gold Association that the country’s gold demand is on pace this
year to exceed 450 metric tonnes, a 14% increase over the 395.6 tonnes in
2008. (In contrast to India, jewelry sales are up double-digits in China so
far this year.) By way of comparison, China, which recently surpassed South
Africa as the world’s largest producer, is on its way to 310 tons of newly
mined output this year, or more than 30% below its level of demand.

It’s not just the middle-class in China that is starting to buy gold, but
the central bank, which has very deep pockets, is going to do likewise. We
just came across a Bloomberg News article quoting an official from the
state-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (Ji Xiaonan,
the Chief) as saying “we recommend China increase its gold reserves to 6,000
metric tons within three-to-five years and possibly to 10,000 tons in eight
to 10 years.” China’s reserves, after a 76% buildup since 2003, currently
stand at 1,054 tons, so we are talking here about the prospect of some
pretty heaving buying in coming years.

If China were to lift their gold reserves to 5,000 tonnes, which is
equivalent to about two years of global production, that shift in demand
would boost the gold price by $800/oz to around $2,000 ($1,978) based on our
models. If China moves towards 10,000 tonnes, well, that would end up taking
the gold price to $2,623/ounce if our calculations are in the ball-park.

Make no mistake, we are gold bulls. Central banks have deep pockets and
production of gold is stagnant so the demand-supply backdrop for bullion is
bullish. At the same time, we have to pay respect for market positioning
over the near-term. The market for precious metals is overextended right now
after the parabolic move of the past two months. The net speculative long
position has swelled to a record 273,552 contracts (100 ounces each) on the
COMEX. Open interest has never been higher, at 693,661 contracts. So this is
one crowded trade — as is the short-trade on the USD against all the major
currencies, especially the commodity-based units.

[image: ROSENBERG: GOLD COULD RISE
115%]<http://pragcap.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/rose2.PNG>

So, we could get a meaningful gold correction at any time, and we are
talking about a correction in what is still a secular bull market — the
200-day moving average is $970/oz, which means we could get as much as a 20%
pullback and no fundamental trendline would be violated. We remain long-term
gold bulls, and our commentary remains fundamentally bullish, but anything
that could spark a countertrend rally in the U.S. dollar, which is our
principal near-term concern, would put gold at a much better price point for
investors than the peak we are at today.

-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM

"Expect The Unexpected"
Blog: http://fuzylogix.blogspot.com/

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