gold investment, silver investment

Dollar Tops, while PM Stocks Bottom: There's More to Seasonality Than Summer Doldrums

November 6, 2009, 12:00 PM

This essay is based on the Premium Update posted November 6th, 2009. Visit our archives for more gold articles.

This has surely been an exciting week for gold and silver investors. The post-Halloween rally that I mentioned in the previous Premium Update, took metals and corresponding stocks substantially higher, and gold itself reached new highs - at least in nominal terms. The mainstream media are now reporting gold-related stories on a big scale and "gold prices" is the second most often searched for phrase on http://finance.yahoo.com. The contrarian's among us might be concerned about this fact, as we all know what happens, when everyone gets on the same side of the boat. However, gold DID break above $1,000 recently, and also verified it, so the excitement now is quite natural. In other words - there is no divergence that would indicate that a top is in. On the other hand, I'm still receiving e-mails, in which Readers suggest that gold does not have to go up, that its too high, etc. This is encouraging, because it means that a certain amount of investors is still out of the market, and can get in, thus fueling further gains.

The divergence that I'm referring to would take place if we were getting close to serious resistance levels after a huge rally without any breather whatsoever, and still everyone and their brother would be bullish on gold. This is what I prefer to see, as a confirmation, when timing tops. I don't know if you recall this, but that was the case before the February 2009 top.

If you've been reading the news and following our essays you know that the IMF announced in September that it would sell 403 tons to finance loans to developing nations. It was a foregone conclusion that the IMF would sell the entire amount to central banks rather than flood the open market. Central banks themselves are no longer selling gold. Rather they are holding on to their gold reserves as the value of fiat currencies decline. In some cases they are increasing their holdings as countries like China, with large holdings of U.S. dollar assets, are worried about the declining value of the U.S. dollar.

Therefore, we have another signal that the fundamental situation remains favorable. Still, it is not fundamental factors that drive markets in the short- and medium-term - emotions do. This is why we need to turn to charts (courtesy of http://stockcharts.com) and their analysis for more details as to what the next several weeks and months may bring us. Let's begin with the U.S. Dollar.

USD - Long Term Chart

The medium-term chart confirms that the "breakout" has been barely visible, and that it is not a significant development - at least not yet. The previous breakdown below the September 2008 low has been verified by trading for a few weeks within the red-ellipse area, after which it moved once again above this price level. Yet, this rally did not take the USD Index very far - after an intraday spike on Tuesday, dollar moved much lower. The action in the RSI indicator suggest that a local top is behind us.

If we get a move below the 75.5 level - which I consider likely - it would serve as a non-confirmation of the breakout, and that is a very strong bearish signal. Naturally, it would be a very strong bullish signal for gold. Given the recent strength of the yellow metal it seems that even if we would see USD rally from here, the only thing it would cause gold to do is to consolidate by trading sideways for some time. Going back to the USD Index itself, please take a look at the short-term chart below.

USD - Short Term Chart

The short term chart reveals that the Tuesday top materialized almost exactly on the day that was indicated by the seasonal pattern (marked with the black vertical line) and it took place just after touching the short-term resistance level. This means that the counter-trend "rally" phase is already behind us, and that lower prices are to be expected in the next several days (and probably also weeks).

Please note that the "near top" vertical lines have also marked favorable buying opportunities in gold and silver. These were not necessarily the exact bottoms in the precious metals, but they were close enough for one to be glad that they purchased PMs at that time. Since it was only a few days ago, it serves us as another factor pointing to the necessity of being already in the precious metals market at least (!) with one's long-term holdings.

However, the situation in the precious metals stocks is a little more complicated. Let's turn to the chart of the GDX ETF (proxy for the sector) for details.

GDX - Short Term Chart

The precious metals stocks moved higher along with the rest of the precious metals market, but the shape of the rallies in the past two months may make you concerned that PM stocks are forming the head-and-shoulders top formation. I agree that the price pattern itself is visible, but I don't thing that there is much too worry about. The head-and-shoulders pattern is formed when there is simply not enough buying power to push price to higher levels.

In the "head" part of the pattern the price fails to go much above the previous top, and in the final, third attempt to move to new highs, it doesn't even go above the previous (head) one. Since there is not enough buying power, the volume is lower with each upswing preceding a top (shoulder/head/shoulder). Without the confirmation in form of declining volume the whole logic behind this formation is flawed. That is precisely the case with the precious metals stocks, as this weeks rally took place on a huge volume - definitely higher than the one on which the "head" was formed. Therefore, I don't think that the head-and-shoulders pattern should concern you at this point.

On the other hand, the RSI is not overbought, so further gains are possible and likely. It seems that the bottom has been put exactly in tune with the seasonal tendency (red vertical lines on the chart), and higher prices are to be expected. The volume has been low yesterday, which is a natural during a small consolidation after a quick move. Several precious metals stocks have been lagging the GDX ETF lately, but I wouldn't worry about this situation, as it is normal, especially near local bottoms.

Summing up, the popularity of gold as an investment has grown in the past several weeks, but this fact by itself is not enough to turn the long-term outlook for PMs bearish. The price of gold is moving higher and central banks begin to accumulate it instead of dumping it on the market, thus invalidating one of the key arguments against holding the yellow metal. The situation in the PM stocks is more cloudy, as this market is more likely to be influenced by a sell-off in the general stock market, but at this point the technical of the GDX ETF don't point to lower prices in the near term.

In other news, the results of the recent survey for my Subscribers indicate that the "seasonal patterns" (used also in this week's analysis) are very popular, and therefore I'm beginning to develop additional unique charts/tools based on them. To make sure that you are notified once the new features are implemented, and get immediate access to my free thoughts on the market, including information not available publicly, I urge you to sign up for my free e-mail list. Sign up today and you'll also get free, 7-day access to the Premium Sections on my website, including valuable tools and charts dedicated to serious PM Investors and Speculators. It's free and you may unsubscribe at any time.

There is one more thing that I would like to let you know about - if you wanted to gain access to the Premium Service using the PayPal system, but you were having problems with it, we have created a page to assist you. The page includes a video with detailed instructions to opening a PayPal account, and several links to pages with step-by-step guide to changing the credit card that is associated with a PayPal account - the most common problem is that individuals have "old" PayPal accounts with outdated credit cards, and therefore cannot use them. Please note that PayPal can be used in case you don't have a well-known credit card, or you don't have a credit card at all - you can use you bank account directly.

Thank you for reading. Have a great and profitable week!

P. Radomski

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If I had a dollar for every time that I’ve been asked how high could gold go in the past few weeks, and I used these dollars to buy silver, the white metal would also be above its 1980 high today :-) This week I provide you with two time/price combinations that are likely to mark gold topping areas in the future. Other features this week include: gold, and silver stocks (several stocks have been lagging the indices...), seasonal tendencies in silver, USD, and PM stocks, and much more. Last, but definitely not the least, this week's update includes the updated version of the gold/silver top juniors ranking. Make sure you check it out!

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