I had previously written about the Gold/XAU ratio and some hedged investment opportunities. The strategy was inspired greatly by the research of John Hussman. According to Hussman, since 1974 when the ratio is above 5, the XAU has followed with annualized gains of 89.6%. When the ratio is above 5 and the economy is weak as signaled by an ISM Purchasing Managers Index below 50 (indicating a contracting manufacturing sector), gold miner shares have appreciated 125.6%. The current Gold/XAU ratio is 7.01 and ISM PMI for March is 36.3.
After nearly 13 weeks since the original article was written, here is an update on the performances of the gold ETF (GLD), the short gold ETN (DGZ), and the gold miners ETF (GDX) as well as ratios:
Symbol
1/13/09 Open
4/3/09 Close
Return
GDX
28.97
34.87
20.37%
DGZ
27.64
25.43
-8.00%
GLD
80.94
87.59
8.22%
Gold
823.9
893.3
8.42%
XAU
106.86
127.56
19.37%
Gold/XAU
7.71
7.01
Gold/GDX
28.44
25.62
Symbol
10/28/08 Open
4/3/09 Close
Return
GDX
17.16
34.87
103.21%
DGZ
31.7
25.43
-19.78%
GLD
73.03
87.59
19.94%
Gold
731.6
893.3
22.10%
XAU
64.37
127.56
98.17%
Gold/XAU
11.37
7.01
Gold/GDX
42.63
25.62
I had originally suggested a conservative investor could purchase GDX and short GLD (or as a substitute, use the short Gold ETN, DGZ) until ratios regress closer to the mean. Obviously, GDX does not perfectly represent XAU but is highly correlated and holds many of the same companies. One could purchase all of the holdings of the XAU index in order to duplicate it exactly; as easier strategy for the common investor would be to use the GDX ETF. The other suggestion was that more aggressive investors could just make a one-sided trade by going long GDX or shorting gold, depending on one's analysis of the previous metals sector and the conviction of that analysis. The easy money in the mining sector was made at the end of 2008, however given the ratio is still at high levels, I think there is some money left to be made using a long/short strategy on the gold/xau(gdx) ratio.
If we were to assume the gold/gdx ratio would return to a ratio of around 19 or less (a rough equivalent to a ratio of 5 on the gold/xau using the current gdx/xau ratio of .273), then that would project to a price of $47.02 on GDX, an appreciation of 34.9%, if we assume the current gold price of $893.3. If GDX were to remain unchanged, using a ratio of 19 gives us a price of $662.5 on gold, a decline of 34.8% in gold.
Using the Gold/XAU ratio, we come up with similar numbers using a ratio of 5. At current gold prices XAU would be at 178.66, an appreciation of 40%, or at a constant XAU of 127.56 and a ratio of 5, gold would be at $637.8. A more likely scenario is we end up somewhere in between in the near term. The risk in this trade is that the gold/xau (GDX) ratio reverses its recent downward trend. However, given the current distance from historical levels this is unlikely in the intermediate term. To mitigate this risk, one could use stop losses in this trade.
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