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What's Next for Your Gold Investment?
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
August 19, 2008

Gold is down 20% from its highs... So what should we do? What's next for gold?

Gold peaked at around $1,000 an ounce in March of this year. Now it's around $800. Does that mean the bull market is over?

Before you write off gold... let's take a look at gold's last bull market – the decade of the 1970s – and compare it to today. First, let's look at today:

Gold Is Up 200% Since 2002
You think gas is expensive now? Consider this:

The chart looks great – and then it looks bad...

From January 2002 to earlier this year, gold soared from less than $300 an ounce to $1,000 an ounce – an incredible run. Even better, the run was remarkably pain free... with the exception of a fall of 20% or so in May 2006. Even though gold has recently given back $200, investors are up about 200% since the beginning of 2002.

Now let's consider the same time frame above (six years and eight months). Only this time, let's start from the beginning of 1970:

Gold Fell Nearly 50% in 1975-76
You think gas is expensive now? Consider this:

As you can see, gold soared from $35 to near $200 by 1975. But then, by the six-years-and-eight-months mark, gold had fallen to around $100 – nearly a 50% fall!

Looking at a chart like that, you might have thought the gold bull market was over. But if we extend that chart out for the rest of the 1970s... The 50% decline turned out to be just a blip:

By 1980, Gold Had Soared Past $800
You think gas is expensive now? Consider this:

From 1970 to January of 1980, gold ran from $35 to $800. Despite its 50% fall in 1975-76.

Our friend John Doody – an economics professor turned editor of Gold Stock Analyst (GSA) – told his subscribers today a similar story yesterday:

The current "bear" market is simply a painful correction in Gold's ongoing bull market. What should happen is Gold resuming its gains versus all currencies. In GSA's opinion, the only uncertainty is "when."...GSA sees no change in the Dollar's fundamentals to end Gold's bull market.

Gold is priced in U.S. dollars. And the dollar has had its finest one-month run in a very long time... The Aussie dollar has lost over 10% of its value in a month versus the U.S. dollar. And other currencies, including the euro and the Swiss franc, lost nearly as much. (To see the carnage, check out the currency charts at the DailyWealth Market Window.)

Our friends at Seabridge Gold (SA) also have some strong comments on the gold market, in their just-released second-quarter report. As Seabridge sees it, the dollar's rise has combined with other market factors "to create a perfect storm for gold, a storm which should be relatively short lived, in our opinion." (Click here to read the rest of Seabridge's gold-market commentary.)

You can explain at least half of gold's fall by the nearly 10% rise in the dollar. And as John Doody and Seabridge explain, the rise of the dollar is probably a temporary phenomenon.

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Is This the End of the Gold Bull Market?

We have no guarantees that gold will resume its bull market now, or ever. But history shows gold has fallen as much as 50% before continuing a huge bull market. That helps put the recent 20% fall in perspective.

If history is any guide, over the course of the next five years, gold could fall farther than you think... and then soar higher than you can imagine.

Good investing,

Steve

Editor's note: Steve Sjuggerud is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Steve Sjuggerud.

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ONE COMMODITY CHART YOU SHOULD WATCH

News from Mr. Market: More rough waters ahead for commodity producers.

We've covered the long-term argument for elevated commodity prices many times: Rapid economic growth in China and India will act as a tailwind on commodities for many years. But every big bull market suffers corrections on the march higher... and the current weakness in raw materials is likely to continue for a while longer. Here's why:

Stock markets all over the world reached new lows last week. Since stocks tend to "price in" things that lie six to 12 months into the future, this signals a weaker global economy. A weak economy means lower copper consumption. Lower copper consumption means lower profits for copper producers like Freeport-McMoRan (FCX).

Freeport's shares have fallen from $120 to $84 in the past few months. As you can see from the chart below, it might be time to "put a fork" in Freeport's uptrend. This is one we're watching...

Freeport McMoran Copper & Gold

Copper prices have sunk to a six-month low, retreating almost 20 per cent to $7,150 a tonne on Tuesday, since hitting a record high of $8,930 a tonne in early July, as the red metal suffers a severe case of summertime blues.

Sentiment towards copper, the benchmark industrial commodity, has been dented by the sharp fall in oil prices, the dollar's revival and broader concerns about the global economic outlook.

The slowdown in the US economy has led to a broader downturn across the industrialised world with the eurozone, UK and Japan on the brink of recession.

Growth in global industrial production will slow from 4.2 per cent in 2007 to 2.8 per cent this year, according to Citigroup.

Financial Times

Corrections are inevitable in any uptrend and the natural resources sector is no exception, say investment managers who oversee funds in all asset markets and who have no specific interest in talking up commodity prices.

The caveat is global recession, but that is unlikely given forecasts of 8-10 percent growth this year in China, the world's fourth largest economy, despite stalled activity during the Olympics.

"When you have a long-term uptrend, excesses build up along the way. We are witnessing a correction," said Mark Mobius, executive chairman at Templeton Asset Management.

"Demand for commodities will remain at a high level in countries like China and India. If we see a serious worldwide recession, then we will see the end of the commodities boom."

– Reuters

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