If You Don’t Own Gold Stocks, You Need To
January 25th, 2007
January 25, 2007 - This past week, I saw a professional newsletter that stated that there was almost nothing good to buy right now. That most major markets including leading emerging markets in China and India were overbought and that a buying opportunity would not present itself until there were major corrections. Though I mostly agree with that statement as it pertains to traditional stocks, this comment reflects how narrowly focused the overwhelming majority of self-proclaimed investment “gurus” out there tend to be.
One asset class that corrected steeply at the end of 2006 and beginning of 2007 was gold stocks. If you read my previous blog posts over the last several weeks then you’ll know that this week was the time to get in. Even if you haven’t, with the past couple of days being stellar for gold stocks, it is not too late. Of course, I can’t be positive that gold has bottomed, but the risk-reward scenario is strong enough that this week I’ve added to my positions so that I’m 75% or more into all the final positions I desire in this asset class. And if you haven’t yet established positions, it’s still not too late.\
Why?
It is always better to buy into this asset class a little a late during dips and consolidation phases and sell out of this asset class a little late during bull runs versus buying and selling too early. Why?
During consolidation phases and corrections, declines in gold stocks can be steep and rapid. Often there are days of temporary rises when it seems that the correction has bottomed, only to be followed by another steep decline much to the dismay of many investors. It is better to wait for some sustained momentum, and perhaps give up 5% of the next upleg rather than get in too early, lose 30%, sell out prematurely and miss huge gains that follow. As far as selling, how many stories have you heard about people that owned Microsoft and sold out at a 50% profit only to miss the next several thousand percent they could have had had they held on? Again because gold is such a volatile asset, and you may be tempted to sell out during a great upleg after 150% profits, it is better to widen your stop loss strategy at this point to account for the volatility of this asset class.
If your stock dips 25% from this point, and then goes another monster run of 400%, you don’t want to be kicking yourself. Widening your stop loss point where you would be stopped out at a 90% gain is still a huge gain, and probably sufficient to keep you in the game during even a steep correction in a continuing upleg. As you gain experience, you will develop a better feel for exactly how much you may need to widen your stop losses to prevent getting sold out too early, but always remember that is much better to sell out a little late and give up some of your profits rather than sell out too early and give up enormous profits that you would have earned by holding on.
A word of caution. You must know what you are doing when you buy into gold stocks. During major gold bull runs there literally have been differences of several hundred percent in the returns of even major gold stocks. You will almost never see differences of this kind among similarly structured companies in any other major asset class. For example, seeing a 20% return in Exxon stock but a 370% return in British Petroleum just isn’t very likely to happen. We at SmartKnowledgeU™ offer the most comprehensive guidance for exactly how to identify the best gold stocks to purchase but as long as you learn how to do it before you do it, that’s the most important step.
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J.S. Kim is the founder and Managing Director of SmartKnowledgeU™, a comprehensive online investment course that uses novel, proprietary advanced wealth planning techniques and the long tail of investing to identify low-risk, high-reward investment opportunities that seek to yield 25% or greater annual returns.
Entry Filed under: General, Invest in Gold











4 Comments Add your own
1. thao vinh | January 25th, 2007 at 5:43 pm
What would be an ideal gold purchase, stocks or funds?
2. J.S. | January 25th, 2007 at 7:16 pm
Hi Thao,
I hate hate hate funds. I think great stocks will outperform great funds 1000 times out of 1000. So stocks are the way to go. Definitely consider some of the majors like Goldcorp and Newmont Mining but if you learn how to pick the small unkowns, the junior developers, explorers, and producers, this is where people will make legendary gains.
Good investing,
J.S.
3. daniel | January 25th, 2007 at 11:41 pm
what do you think about nxg?
4. J.S. | January 26th, 2007 at 11:46 pm
Hi Daniel,
Northgate is not a stock that I follow so I can’t comment on it. However, even if I did follow that stock and recommend it, I would always say perform your own due diligence. A common mistake many investors make is just following the advice of someone else without performing any of their own due diligence.
And many people get burned because of this. I have read all kinds of advertisements from newsletters that proclaim,”But this stock for 1,850% gains by April, 2007!” but when I’ve actually taken the time to read some of the analysis accompanying the sales pitch, I’ve found many holes in the analysis and sometimes i’ve even found gross misrepresentations of the risk involved, with “professional” analysts claiming a company has millions of ounces of proven reserves in the ground when they only have millions of ounces of resources that haven’t even proven to be economically mineable yet. Services that make such erroneous claims will be sure to cause many investors that buy such stocks on knee-jerk reactions to lose lots of money.
Take the time to learn how to analyze the smaller gold developers, producers, and explorers. You are on the right track because you just can’t buy the majors and expect to make lots of money. You’ll make good money buying the majors but you’ll make phenomenal money by supplementing your portfolio with a good mix of the junior developers, explorerers and producers. And all you need is several monster winners. Even if you have some losers in the mix, they will become irrlevant because at the end of the day, it’s only your absolute returns that matter.
Or of course, you could always learn exactly. how to do this by signing up for our course online
. Our systems should be live again this week.
Happy investing,
J.S.
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