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Four Things Investors Should Know About Gold's 'Bear Market'

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"See how much money you've got at risk, and remind yourself why you got into precious metals in the first place."

gold bear market

We don't make price forecasts at BullionVault (one reason we're not on CNBC very often). Nor do we claim gold must only go higher forever. There's a good time to own gold, we think, and a bad time.

So far, 2013 isn't proving much fun, despite fresh Eurozone crisis, plus ongoing attacks on the value of currency by central banks everywhere.

How come? Money managers have clearly grown tired of the financial crisis, if not blasé. After a full decade of year-on-year gains, gold's drop is a natural outcome, and by no means does this fall undermine gold's safe haven appeal. It may well, however, be costing you money you'd really rather not lose.

So what's our take? For what it's worth. . .

1. Stockmarkets have risen—and expecting gold (aka crisis insurance) to rise at the same time would be illogical, if not greedy. Only during the first round of ultra-low interest rates in 2003-2007, when easy money fuelled the very top of the global credit bubble, did gold rise together with equities, real estate, commodities, fine art and everything else with a price tag.

Gold then continued to rise when the credit bubble exploded. If this 2013 drop doesn't suggest the crisis is over, it at least says it's taking a breather.

2. Gold's chart pattern is horrible—we're no "technical analysts", but plenty of professional gold traders are. Falling through $1525 on Friday, the gold price also dropped through £1000 and €1200 per ounce for U.K. and Euro investors. Put the BullionVault price chart onto 5 years, and you can see why those prices came to be called long-term "support" levels. Technical analysis now says they're likely to act as "resistance", capping price gains for the near-term at least.

3. Beware "bear market" talk—the newswires today all point to gold now being in a "bear market". They mean more than simply that the price is falling. Instead, they mean it has dropped 20% or more from its peak, the technical definition of a "bear" (according to Wikipedia if no one else). Such drops are certainly rare for gold since it began rising in 2001. But in both mid-2006 and again in late-2008 the gold price fell harder, down more than 25% and 33% respectively before resuming the upwards trend.

4. Gold has risen so strongly, for so long, a big setback has become overdue. Gold has gone up 12 years straight in U.S. Dollars. For U.K. investors, it's risen every year except one since 1998. That's a remarkable stretch, far longer than gold's successive gains in the 1970s and longer even than the U.S. stockmarket's record-breaking run from 1982 to 1989. Nothing moves in a straight, but the gold price has done a good impression so far in the 21st century.

And if this drop does prove merely a pullback, instead of the end, it could still cut much deeper yet.

Between Jan. 1975 and Sept. 1976, the price of gold in Dollars fell by almost one-half. Lots of private investors sold out, taking big losses as U.S. inflation receded. But that crisis wasn't yet over. As inflation then soared faster than interest rates once again, the gold price rose eight-fold to its ultimate top in Jan.1980.

Knowing to take profits then was still nigh-on impossible however, and as gold began a long two-decade drop, lots of private investors and professional money-managers got pulled in by the violent swings of the early '80s.

In reviewing your position in either silver or gold today, beware of panic selling. See how much money you've got at risk, and remind yourself why you got into precious metals in the first place. Has the long-term picture changed? We don't believe the financial crisis is done yet. But right now, Wall Street and the gold price say otherwise.

Adrian Ash
(c) BullionVault 2013


Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.


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