Below is an excerpt from a commentary originally posted at www.speculative-investor.com on 1st May 2011. 
Below  is a chart comparison of the Barrons Gold Mining Index (BGMI) and the  US$ gold price covering the period from 1974 through to 1984. In other  words, this chart captures the final 6 years of the secular bull market  that ended in 1980 and the first few years of the secular bear market  that would ultimately continue until 1999-2001. Note that the BGMI  portion of the chart has a linear scale whereas the gold portion of the  chart has a log scale.
The chart shows that:
1. Major  corrections in gold stocks and gold bullion ended during the second half  of 1976. As an aside, these corrections unfolded in parallel with an  economic rebound.
2. The BGMI traded sideways for about two years  beginning in early 1977, despite the fact that gold bullion was in a  strong upward trend throughout this period. As a result, in late 1978  the BGMI was still about 50% below its 1974 peak even though gold  bullion had returned to its 1974 peak.
3. Although the BGMI  finally began to trend upward in 1979, its weakness relative to gold  bullion became even more pronounced due to gold's dramatic upward  acceleration.
4. When gold bullion peaked at $800-$850 in January  of 1980, the BGMI was no higher than it was in 1974. This means that  the BGMI did no better than 'tread water' over a multi-year period  during which the gold price quadrupled.
5. The BGMI and gold  bullion pulled back sharply from their January-1980 peaks into April of  that year, at which time the gold sector of the stock market commenced a  spectacular 6-month advance that would take the BGMI to almost double  its January-1980 peak even though the gold price remained well below the  high made early in the year. That is, there was massive strength in the  mining stocks relative to the bullion during the months AFTER the  bullion had reached its ultimate peak.
6. The BGMI and gold bullion commenced long-term bear markets in October of 1980.
 
 
 
 
    
   
 
 
 As  to why the major gold mining stocks (as represented by the BGMI) fared  so poorly relative to gold bullion during the huge 1977-1980 rally in  the gold price, we can only surmise. We suspect that it was due to a  combination of the following factors:
 a) Increasing mining costs.
 
 b) A failure to generate substantial increases in free cash flow due to the cost of replenishing in-ground reserves.
 
 c) Rising interest rates.
 
 d)  Widespread belief that the rise in the gold price and the resultant  increase in gold mining profitability would prove to be unsustainable.
 
 e) The political risk associated with mining in some parts of the world.
 
 The  huge run-up in the gold-mining sector that occurred AFTER the gold  price peaked in January-1980 was probably due to the combination of the  relative cheapness of the stocks (caused by their subdued response to  the earlier multi-year rally in gold bullion) and the general belief  that the gold price would move to much higher levels over the years  ahead (the majority of market participants never realises that a  long-term bull market has ended until well after the fact).
 
 With  the exception of rising interest rates, the factors that contributed to  the poor performance of the average gold mining stock relative to gold  bullion during the second half of the 1970s have also contributed to the  failure of the major gold mining stocks to provide any leverage to  gains in the bullion price over the past several years. This is why we  haven't been interested in owning the major gold mining stocks over the  past several years, except as short-term trades when they become very  'oversold'.
 
 The juniors are capable of providing the leverage we  seek, although it has been a hard slog in the realm of junior gold  mining stocks over the past few months.
 
 -urce: GoldSeek.com
 
 
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