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For gold it is usually sell in March not May

May 17, 2016

Every year when we get to May (sometimes even earlier) we start to hear the “sell in May and go away” narrative pick up. The post below takes a closer look at gold seasonality to show this is not correct. The seasonally weak period for gold actually starts in March which is hand in hand with the PDAC curse. It is also noteworthy that the weak period ends sooner than most investor accept – August.

Bull markets can kick the trend and March of this year could have been telling everyone that. There was no PDAC curse as the rice of gold opened the month at $1,238.90 and closed the month $1,234.50. Yes it was down but $4.40 is noting after the years of pain we just went through. If gold can continue to grind through the next 3 months this fall could be where we see another nice run up.

Click here to visit the original posting page over at MarketWatch.

We’re now in the middle of a period in which bullion tends to perform poorly

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (MarketWatch) — Gold is in the middle of its six-month seasonally unfavorable period.

That period began in March and lasts through August, as you can see from the chart at the top of this column. It’s analogous to the stock market’s six-month time frame that goes by the name of “sell in May and go away.”

In gold’s case, though, it starts (and ends) two months before equities, so perhaps we should call it “sell in March and go away.”

I’m bringing this seasonal pattern to your attention because it’s an additional explanation for the three-month trading range in which gold has been stuck since February. In my column last Friday, as you may recall, I pointed to unfavorable sentiment as one cause. Seasonal patterns appear to be another.

Since gold began trading freely in the U.S. in the early 1970s, bullion has produced an annualized return of only 1.2% in the March-August period, versus 13.4% in the other six months of the year.

Gold’s seasonal headwinds this time of year were a topic of conversation at last week’s Las Vegas MoneyShow. Doug Fabian, editor of the Successful ETF Investing newsletter and one of the speaker’s at that event, noted those headwinds and advised clients “to be prepared for a bit of short-term turbulence” in gold and gold-mining stocks. However, he remains bullish on the sector for the longer term.

How strong a statistical foundation is there for gold’s “six months on, six months off” seasonal pattern? To find out, I fed gold’s monthly returns since the early 1970s into my PC’s statistical software. It found the seasonal tendency to be significant at the 95% confidence level that statisticians often use to conclude that a pattern is genuine.

The past 12 months have been a good illustration of that tendency. In 2015’s seasonally unfavorable period (March through August), bullion lost 6.5% of its value. In contrast, in the six-month favorable period that began last September and lasted through the end of February, bullion gained 8.8%.

One thing missing, however, is a plausible explanation for why that pattern should exist in the first place. The only seasonal factor I’m aware of traces to Indian jewelry demand: Indian couples often schedule their weddings to coincide with the festival of Diwali, which occurs in mid-October to mid-November.

Still, as strong as this factor might be, it’s hard to see how it accounts for all of gold’s six-months-on, six-months-off pattern.

For now, though, you may not care whether gold’s trading range is due to unfavorable seasonal tendencies, unfavorable sentiment or both. Either way, it means gold is unlikely in coming weeks to mount a sustainable rally.

For more information, including descriptions of the Hulbert Sentiment Indices, go to Hulbert Ratings or email mark@hulbertratings.com.

Discussion
42 Comments
    May 17, 2016 17:17 AM

    I agree with point that March is a seasonally rough period for gold and have mentioned that each year, that the “PDAC Curse” isn’t just cute, it is a seasonal norm.

    As for the mantra “Sell in May and go Away” this is typically applied to the general stock markets more than Gold, but there is a slow to sluggish period for May-August, and I posted in detail on this 2 weeks back so I’m just going to re-post those thoughts and each year’s gold chart for people to inspect for themselves:

    __________________________________________________________________________

    On May 7, 2016 at 8:28 pm,
    Excelsior says:

    I thought there may be a different perspective on the summer doldrums. As you know, I trade all year long, and don’t give a rip what day or month it is, as there is always opportunity each an every day.

    However, having said that, there are seasonal periods that are interesting in how they may rhyme or have certain tendencies. For example, the “Sell in May and go away….” mantra or the “Summer Doldrums.”

    ***The seasonality of this time of year May/June/July/early August can really just be a more boring consolidation period without the extreme moves to the upside or downside. Many market observers have noted the the sell in May and go away or Summer Doldrums in precious metals, because this time of year is often rather uneventful, and there are typically bigger percentage moves in other asset classes or sectors.

    Yes, I’m sure people will note a few times where the metal spikes or drops in this time period, but if you look year after year, the general trend in the time frame of (April – early August) is a sideways consolidation. The selling starts before May [typically in late April], and just like we just experienced at the end of and tends to “muddle around” sideways until roughly early August. Clearly Summer doesn’t even start until late June, so really much of this stagnant trading is actually in the Spring, but then is followed by slow start to Summer = the Summer Doldrums.

    In my experience, it isn’t so much a matter of selling in May and buying back in September, or having a rigid definition of holding through the whole summer down to the calendar dates. Really the late Spring/early Summer doldrums are a time where investors lose interest in Gold and they focus on vacations, football & soccer games, cheerleading practice, beaches, lakes, camping, fishing, and kids with Summer vacation from school, so some tend to lose focus of the Gold narrative during this time frame.

    However, once school goes back into session in August and vacations are over, things tend to heat up one direction or another (this is already well underway by September in most cases).

    Basically, if one sets the parameters on inspection from how investors did selling in May band buying back on Sept 21st, then this misses the point of the Sell in May or Summer Doldrums period IMO. There are clearly some investors that did this in past from May to September, but I know very few people these days that are out of the marketplace for that long of a time period these days. Instead, what many people I’ve read or listened to in the past did in the sideways consolidation periods of the past were to sell out positions, place them in other sectors with more Alpha, and then came back in the July/August time frame in the later Summer.

    As supporting evidence, check out the following annual charts on Gold that show from late Spring to early Summer has a tendency for Gold to be range-bound in general in the late April – early August zone each month:
    _________________________________________________________________________

    2007 Annual gold Chart. Notice the range from 650ish-690ish from late April-early May:

    http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=%24GOLD&p=D&st=2007-01-01&en=2007-12-31&id=p79130030910

      May 17, 2016 17:18 AM

      2008 Annual gold Chart. Notice the range from 844 -956 range from late April-early May:

      http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=%24GOLD&p=D&st=2008-01-01&en=2008-12-31&id=p25368668742

        May 17, 2016 17:18 AM

        On May 7, 2016 at 8:33 pm,
        Excelsior says:

        2009 Annual gold Chart. Notice the sideways range from late April-early May, especially compared to the volatility the rest of this recovery year. Things really based in the late Spring and early Summer before really taking off:

        http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=%24GOLD&p=D&st=2009-01-01&en=2009-12-31&id=p71923869912

          May 17, 2016 17:19 AM

          On May 7, 2016 at 8:35 pm,
          Excelsior says:

          2010 Annual Gold Chart. This year was a breakout year for Gold, but if you look at where things are to start May, and where things are to start August, then essentially, even though there was nice little bump, things had returned to about the same level.

          http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=%24GOLD&p=D&st=2010-01-01&en=2010-12-31&id=p51636312806

            May 17, 2016 17:19 AM

            On May 7, 2016 at 8:37 pm,
            Excelsior says:

            2011 Annual Gold Chart – Again, this was a HUGE year for Gold, but if you look at the period from late April – early August, it was basically trading in a sideways channel before rocket-launching up.

            http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=%24GOLD&p=D&st=2011-01-03&en=2011-12-30&id=p20499667884

            May 17, 2016 17:20 AM

            On May 7, 2016 at 8:39 pm,
            Excelsior says:

            2012 Annual Gold Chart – Notice the consolidation in late April – early August where Gold was in a bullish wedge, and then finally broke to the upside in late August at the apex.

            http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=%24GOLD&p=D&st=2012-01-02&en=2012-12-31&id=p91314623630

            May 17, 2016 17:20 AM

            On May 7, 2016 at 8:41 pm,
            Excelsior says:

            2013 Annual Gold Chart – For most analysts of the Gold sector, 2013 was a very strange and bearish year where everything broke down. There were no late Spring – early Summer doldrums in 2013, just downside pain…… but again, it was a strange year.

            http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=%24GOLD&p=D&st=2013-01-01&en=2013-12-31&id=p91224423152

            May 17, 2016 17:21 AM

            On May 7, 2016 at 8:44 pm,
            Excelsior says:

            2014 Annual Gold Chart. While this was a roller-coaster year, if you look at where Gold was in late April, and where it was in early August, then it was essentially in the same place. (again, I had a blast trading Gold to the long and the short side all year, but if someone sold in preparation of May, and then bought back in early August, they would have exited and entered around the same pricing level.

            http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=%24GOLD&p=D&st=2014-01-01&en=2014-12-31&id=p08698718026

            May 17, 2016 17:23 AM

            On May 7, 2016 at 8:46 pm,
            Excelsior says:

            2015 Annual Gold Chart – Last year the range-bound doldrums were really April through early July, then the bottom fell out and things got more lively, but around this time a year ago was still a bit boring.

            http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=%24GOLD&p=D&st=2015-01-01&en=2015-12-31&id=p61634863014
            __________________________________________________________________________

            On May 8, 2016 at 2:37 pm,
            John K says:

            Hi Shad:

            Here is an interesting quote from Gerald Appel’s book Technical Analysis.

            “Virtually all net gains in the stock market that have taken place during the last half century or so have taken place between November 1 and April 30 of each year.May to October periods have essentially broke even,with stocks often returning slightly less to investors than risk-free income producing investments during these months.
            _________________________________________________________________________

            On May 8, 2016 at 6:56 pm,
            Excelsior says:

            Thanks John K. Very interesting and that is a fairly long timeline he researched. In general that is the point I was making for Gold from late April through early August as a seasonality factor. It isn’t so much investors losing money as thing forming a sideways channel where little progress is made.

            Having said that, as a trader, I love it when things get stuck in a trading channel because you can go long, then short, then long, then short and ride the waves back an forth. I’m in the markets every day, regardless the season, and think there are always opportunities in individual stocks or ETFs. However, there are times where I put more focus on other sectors in the late Spring and early Summer.

            I’m curious about this year though, because if the Summer were to be really strong for PMs and commodities in the face of a further weakening dollar then things could be much more lively. I was just referencing the historical years from 2007-2015 because many summers I let off the gas in PMs and just held with what I had, and got more into Energy, Emerging Markets, or used the 3x leveraged ETFs to ride the waves in PMs to get more oomph in a flat-lined market.

            Cheers!

            May 17, 2016 17:26 AM

            On May 7, 2016 at 8:51 pm,
            Excelsior says:

            Again, I don’t think it is so much traders selling out completely for fear of losing money, as much as it is just a period of time that year after year, consolidated sideways in a boring and sluggish range that was like watching paint dry.

            Since we have a good chance at having a transition year, there is no guarantee that past performance will equate to future results, but if history “rhymes” then I would not be surprised to see a range develop here over the next few months.

            If however, things really get moving to the upside or downside (like in 2013) then we may have either the final capitulation or the confirmation that new Bull is underway. Our buddy Glenfidish has mentioned that if Gold was to put in a really solid Summer and breakout during a typically sideways consolidation period, that this would be good confirmation that we have turned the page on the big bad bear, and are in the new bull.

            May 17, 2016 17:01 AM

            Thanks Shad…..a nice brief/charts on the gold doldrums.

            May 17, 2016 17:24 AM

            Glad to share some ideas mj12.

            In past years I was one of those traders that rotated mostly out of miners in the summer and went into different sectors but got more serious in July/August. At present I’m around 1/3 invested and have been adding to positions and picking up a few new ones in May, but I’m watching with much more interest as we may have a lively summer for a change.

            Best of luck to you in your investing whether we have summer doldrums, downside tantrums, or upside explosions.

            May 17, 2016 17:56 AM

            I concur with your strategy (trading precious in the doldrums). Price is long overdue for a summer tempest.

          May 17, 2016 17:37 AM

          EX …….GREAT INFO………AS ALWAYS………APPRECIATE………….JTHELONG

            May 17, 2016 17:44 AM

            Right on my good man Contrarian’s Contrarian Frank…….J….The LONG…….OOTB

            My posts today were……The LONG…… 🙂

    May 17, 2016 17:29 AM

    CALLLING BOB MORIARTY!! I see you are pumping CGE. CGE’s property is joke. Their neighbor has the goods. Chester desparately tried to get his hands on FMG’s property but couldn’t. CGE is a fine property but the really rich rock is next door at FMG and that is where the real money will be made.

    May 17, 2016 17:30 AM

    I meant joke compared to FMG’s property. CGE’s property is good.

      May 17, 2016 17:54 AM

      How many Chester Millars are working at FMG?

      I bought First Mexican shares at $.25 in 2007. They are now $.035. What possible difference could it make who has the best ground? The question should be, who has the best management?

        May 17, 2016 17:56 AM

        I would agree if we were talking about a complicated mine start up and process. The path CGE and FMG are taking is the same. Simple HL mining, small scale in easy jurisdication. I would put more weight on your management comments if we were talking a large scale project in different jurisdiction. We’ll soon see.

          May 17, 2016 17:28 AM

          Peter: I’ve been waiting on First Mexican for 9 years and watched it decline from where I bought to the current price for a 86% drop. I’ll bet my total investment that CGE gets into production first. Management really does make a difference.

            May 17, 2016 17:47 AM

            I wouldn’t bet with you on that as you will be correct. However, I would bet with you on who will generate more profit. I am still not ruling out CGE and FMG coming together or CGE taking a run at FMG. Could make a really nice mine and the area CGE is focusing on is several hundred meters from FMG’s high grade area. There core sheds are within spitting distance.

            May 17, 2016 17:45 PM

            Thanks guys. After this discussion, I may just buy a little of each company and hope they end up merged in the end 🙂

            May 17, 2016 17:13 PM

            Peter R: My thoughts were that if First Mexican took an all share deal with Corex with Chester Milliar on board, it would be the deal of the century for both companies. FMG may have the superior property but hasn’t put out a press release in two years and is $300, 000 in the hole. They should merge.

    May 17, 2016 17:34 AM

    OK – So I realize that was a lot of info to post, but we had covered this very topic in detail 2 weeks ago, and I spent a lot of time writing on the topic at that time, and getting each years Gold Chart compile from 2007-2015.

    I encourage investors to check out the notes above each years gold chart above.

    Lastly, other newsletter writers and economic pundits keep posting a misleading picture trying to be “contrarians” or “myth-busters,” but they are the ones’s missing the point. Nobody is claiming that investors will lose alot of money in May, June, July, August, and September and that they should buy back in October. (???).

    The point of the doldrums is that they are sluggish with a downside bias on a seasonal basis. As a result, in years past, traders would exit their trades or just leave on core positions, and then go trade other sectors, and return in late July to August (not September).

    PS – We already noted that investors could be looking a much different summer season since this is as transition year in PMs. If gold is strong this summer, then that would be another indicator that the bear market is over and the Gold bull is in motion.

      May 17, 2016 17:59 PM

      The point is : the commercials have always been in control of Au/Ag markets for most of the last 15 years. Now havoc is at all doors and their back is against the wall. The scariest thing is their ability to blow everything up if they must. THe most dangerous time financially in the history of western civilization!

        May 17, 2016 17:18 PM

        Agreed Marty that havoc is at all doors and their back is against the wall.

        Like Chris Temple mentioned yesterday….”We’re in a weird place.”

        I remain fascinated by just how long the whole global economic charade has been held together in the first place with the global currency wars, bailouts, bail ins, central bank funny money glue, the China slowdown, the energy sector breakdown, wacko trade agreements, sanctions being lifted on old rivals and sanctions being increased on new ones, price rigging allegations, bond market bubbles, derivatives growth to astronomical levels, and my new favorite is politicians and bankers just talking markets into submission……

        Things are teetering on the brink…but somehow no matter what the world keeps turning.

        May 17, 2016 17:18 PM

        Marty:

        You have life in a blender. The speculators rule in every market and always have. The commercials are both producers and consumers and as such are pretty much neutral as to direction. Unless you think the commercials go out and point a gun to the heads of the speculators and force them to buy, you don’t understand how the markets work.

        500 fools may talk about naked shorts and comes defaults but the only reason the commercials are short is because the speculators are long. Someone has to make a market and it’s not the speculators, it’s the commercials. You don’t understand what you are talking about.

        The commercials do not have their backs against the wall, they never do. All it will take is a dip in the market and the speculators will panic as they always do.

          GH
          May 17, 2016 17:03 PM

          I’m a bit confused Bob–how is it the speculators rule in every market, if they always panic?

            May 17, 2016 17:41 PM

            GH: Good question. They drive prices up by buying long which forces the commercials to cover by going short. Once at record longs, they panic at every down blip and force the price lower by closing long positions by selling. Speculators always are the driving force up and down.

            Read the piece I wrote on Dec 23 of last year when speculators has the smallest long position in many years.

            Think about it for yourself. Speculators can force the commercials to cover their positions either long or short but commercials can’t force speculators into the market. Commercials make a market for speculators who drive the market.

    May 17, 2016 17:13 AM

    EXACTLY …..

    “If gold is strong this summer, then that would be another indicator that the bear market is over and the Gold bull is in motion.”

      May 17, 2016 17:43 AM

      I sincerely hope that is what plays out, but I’m doing my best to stay objective because hope is never a trading strategy I employ.

      While it really feels like the new bull market is already underway, and the miners have been just tearing up to new highs all year long, I’m still not 100% convinced. I won’t break out the party hats and bubbly until Gold closes definitively above $1307.80 (Jan 2015 peak) and $1321.50 (the 2013 spike low on huge volume that kicked off the sideways to down consolidation for the last 3 years).

      http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=%24GOLD&p=D&st=2012-05-01&en=2016-05-17&&id=p27575549638

    May 17, 2016 17:05 AM

    Great posts,Excelsior.

      May 17, 2016 17:31 AM

      Thank Pete. I did get back over to yesterday’s market wrap and saw you great post on the West African gold miners, and then the info on Kootenay. I responded back to you but just wanted to say that interview you posted was appreciated.

        May 19, 2016 19:21 PM

        Thanks,Excelsior

    Tad
    May 17, 2016 17:03 PM

    Very interesting Ex.
    July looks the best time to top up holdings… while everyone’s at the beach with their kids!
    Thanks for the posts; I missed those the first time around (10 days ago).

      May 17, 2016 17:51 PM

      Glad to share Tad. Yes, in year’s past July/August was a time I’d watch more closely, but I’d caution that a few times they took a nose dive in August & September so it doesn’t always break to the upside.

      Having said that, if we get a big gold breakout over the next 2 months, then seasonality trends will likely be discarded, and the metals could move up despite the doldrums, taking out the key resistance targets, and confirming for all that the Gold bull is on for a new cycle.

      May you have a prosperous rest of the week sir.

        May 17, 2016 17:52 PM

        Another thought is that the miners have started to diverge from the underlying metals recently and may just keep on trucking even if Gold and Silver trade in a range.

    May 17, 2016 17:10 PM

    Excelsior, you’re a good man.glad to hav you here. You remind me of me.

      May 17, 2016 17:56 PM

      I take that as a great compliment Marty, as you are usually invested in a lot of the same companies and I enjoy your comments on KER. BTW – I wrote you back somewhere that I had just seen your comments on Golden Arrow from the weekend show and agree that the JV with Silver Standard is very interesting and they may be a takeout candidate for SSRI. Very cool.

    May 17, 2016 17:00 PM

    Typhoon Exploration jumped 53% today and is above the 200 week MA for the first time in almost five years…

    http://schrts.co/oIoad4

      May 17, 2016 17:49 PM

      Wow. The OTC didn’t move today, so I hadn’t noticed the primary Canadian ticker’s movement. Thanks for the heads up.

      Now that I look the Bid/Ask numbers went up substantially so once somebody does bid on Typhoon, it will be a nice gain.

        May 17, 2016 17:52 PM

        That’s pretty neat that it finally took out the 200 week MA. I was wondering if the market had forgotten about Typhoon.