The Gold and Oil Correction

What’s going on with gold and oil?

Here’s what we know. Prices for both gold and oil were moving upward for most of the spring and well into summer. Then prices hit a peak. Gold touched $980 per ounce. Oil topped $146 per barrel. Now prices are falling.

Back when oil was in the $140s, I said — in both print and broadcast interviews — that oil prices were running up too far, too fast. I predicted that oil prices would decline to $100-110, based on the fundamentals. Well, we’ve seen the decline and we’re almost there.

High oil prices have caused big changes in patterns of consumption. Indeed, the U.S. Department of Energy just announced that U.S. oil demand fell by about 800,000 barrels per day during the first half of 2008, compared with the same period last year. This is the biggest volume decline in 26 years, since the recession of the early 1980s.

Sure, some headlines describe what’s going on as something like the “oil bubble” or “commodities bubble” popping. Some people are talking and acting as if we were going back in time to the last era of cheap energy, cheap gold and cheap commodities. But don’t believe it. Don’t bet on it. And don’t play the markets that way.

A Gold And Oil Correction Was Due

What’s going on? We are in the midst of a short- to medium-term correction in the trends for energy and resources. Keep this in mind: This is a CORRECTION, not a fundamental change in the long-term correlation of things.

The long-term trends are still upward, in terms of value and pricing. But for now, the money is leaving energy and resources for pastures that look greener.

What pastures are greener? Well — speaking of green — the U.S. dollar is strengthening. It turns out that the euro is not the powerhouse currency that a lot of people believed it was. So the dollar has been strengthening against the euro for the past couple of weeks.

The Euro Can Go Down

And it turns out that euroland has its own economic problems. In fact, the euro can go down against the dollar, as well as up. That’s exactly what has happened. Euro down, dollar up. So in consequence, we are seeing the dollar going up, and oil and gold going down.

There is more to the equation. The economists are describing a recession occurring in parts of the euroland economic space. Germany — with Europe’s largest economy — has been hard hit, so there’s been quite a bit of drag on the euroland economy.

And then there are indications that the long-awaited U.S. recession is finally just around the corner. Really, we are just in the middle innings of the banking meltdown and housing crash in the U.S. The recent stock market turnaround may just be the seventh- inning stretch. I expect to see more large banks and investment houses either fail or get bailed out before the end of 2008.

So with two of the world’s largest economies about to enter the doldrums, world markets are seeing demand for energy and commodities slacken.

Thus, we have monetary issues with the dollar. And there are demand issues with economic slowdown in two of the world’s largest economic blocks. Prices for benchmark items like gold and oil are falling.

Stocks to be looking at…

And this is taking the stuffing out of energy and gold stocks. The mining stocks are down. The oils and service companies are down. It’s painful to watch. But it’s not a reason to give up.

As I said, this is a correction. This is an August swoon. Share prices are down, so it’s time to look at your shopping list. You can pick up shares in 2008 and pay 2005 prices. You can build a portfolio for the next five years with some prudent stock picking in the next couple of months.

Some of the most beaten-up oil and oil service companies are Apache (APA: NYSE), Halliburton (HAL: NYSE), Baker Hughes (BHI: NYSE) and Superior Energy Services (SPN: NYSE).

Some of the most beaten-up miners are Kinross Gold Corp. (KGC: NYSE), Yamana (AUY: NYSE), Hecla Mining (HL: NYSE) and the development-stage NovaGold (NG: AMEX).

When oil and gold turn around — which they will — all of these companies should do very well.

That’s all for now.

Byron W. King
Energy and Oil

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