Gold Market Update - July 27, 2008 By: Clive Maund
-- Posted Sunday, 27 July 2008
While the broad stockmarket has staged a relief rally from deeply
oversold in response to the Fannie and Freddie bailout and oil has tumbled
over the past week or two, both as predicted, gold has suffered more
collateral damage than expected from these factors resulting in quite heavy
losses in the Precious Metals sector. Conspiracy theorists are arguing that
gold was deliberately targeted in order to help protect the dollar at a
time when it is especially vulnerable due to the European Central Bank
raising rates. Whatever the truth of this the magnitude of the decline in
gold was not actually that great as we will shortly see when we examine the
chart, while the danger to the dollar has certainly not been mitigated - on
the contrary it has gotten worse.
On the
1-year chart we can see that gold last week broke down from the supporting
bowl pattern that had recently propelled it to 3-month highs. At first
sight this might be viewed as a bearish development, but what commonly
happens with these cup and bowl patterns is that a "handle" forms
after such a breakdown. This involves the price breaking down or sideways
out of the bowl after first ascending higher at the right side of it - a
development that can de disconcerting to inexperienced traders. What then
typically happens is that the price tracks sideways for a while in a
relatively narrow range forming a "handle" proportionate to the
cup or bowl preceding it before the advance resumes. This is what we can
now expect to occur with gold. All moving averages are in bullish alignment
and downside is viewed as limited here. So gold is now expected to track
sideways for between several weeks and perhaps up to 5 or 6 weeks between
approximately the current price and the highs, before it breaks out to new
highs.
On the
1-year dollar chart we can that last week`s rally changes nothing. After
looking like it was breaking down, the dollar snook back into the weak
countertrend channel in force from mid-March and in so doing bought a
little more time, but as we can see the steadily falling long-term moving
averages drawing closer overhead look set to drive it lower before much
longer. This fits with the fundamentals where the US Fed and the US
government have made it clear with their recent actions in respect to
Fannie and Freddie, and before that Bear Stearns via J P Morgan, that the
largest hogs will be able to push their snouts squarely into the trough, so
that their ears are flapping above their eyes, assured that the faucet will
be kept wide open with a limitless supply of electronically created feed.
In other words, if they are big enough to bring down the system down should
they fail, they will be hooked up to the "taxpayer life-support
system", socialist style, regardless of whether they end up nearly
killing their hosts. This is what is meant by the term "too big to
fail". What this must inevitably mean is a lot more dollars flying
around, as if there aren't enough already, and alot more inflation, neither
of which are renowned for causing the price of gold to fall.
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