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Gold Market
Update
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By Clive
Maund
Nov 16 2009 11:57AM
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Originally published November 15th, 2009
On longer-term charts gold looks great here as it
accelerates away from its recently completed 20-month consolidation
pattern. The prospect is for a powerful, steep multi-month advance,
punctuated by mostly brief periods of consolidation. In the last update we
examined the long-term charts to divine the big picture and as this has not
changed since, we will in this update look at the shorter-term charts to
consider the immediate outlook as gold is now overbought, and also pay
attention to the dollar and euro, which are on the cusp of big moves that
obviously have important implications for all markets.

The year-to-date chart for gold looks extraordinarily
bullish. It shows how gold is now accelerating away from the recently
completed major consolidation pattern, with the early October breakout
being followed by a classic test of support late in October. Since we are
looking for - and expect to see - a parabolic acceleration away from the
"gravitional pull" of the huge trading range, it is particularly
satisfying to be able to draw a parabolic arc on this chart which already
has three exact contacts. This parabolic arc is clearly of the utmost
importance - gold is an automatic buy on any contact with it, and failure
of this arcing trendline will be a sell signal. Gold ran into a little bit
of trouble late last week which was hardly surprising as it had become
critically overbought on its RSI indicator shown at the top of the chart,
however, there is still considerable room for it to advance further and
continue to accelerate as made plain by the MACD indicator at the bottom of
the chart, which is only moderately overbought. It is important here to
point out that in the dynamic advancing phase, which gold is now in, it can
BECOME OVERBOUGHT AND STAY OVERBOUGHT PERHAPS FOR MONTHS ON END, with minor
reactions to ease overheating.

The 6-month chart makes clear why gold reacted back sharply
last Thursday. It had arrived at the return line of the channel shown in a
short-term critically overbought state, calling for consolidation/reaction
to ease the overbought condition. However, Friday's robust recovery is a
strongly bullish indication, so any further reaction is likely to be minor.
The channel shown is provisional and given that gold has the potential to
continue to accelerate, we should not be surprised to see it break above
the top line of the channel shown in due course, once it is less
overbought.

With the course of the dollar having major implications for
gold and silver, and indeed all markets, it is timely for us to take look
at it here, as it appears to be on the cusp of a big move. On the
year-to-date chart for the dollar we can see that it is pushing towards the
apex of a large Falling Wedge pattern. Normally Falling Wedge patterns are
bullish but in the case of the dollar we do not have sufficient contacts
with its boundary trendlines, particularly the top trendline, that we can
be very sure of an upside breakout - it could BREAK DOWN instead and drop,
possibly precipitously, towards the pale red parallel return line shown. If
this happens we are looking at a massive drop that would stoke an enormous
runup in gold, which as we have just seen, it is in position to make. One
thing is for sure though, and that is that the dollar is on the verge of a
more rapid move than we have seen for many months. A situation like this,
where it is very difficult to divine in advance the direction of breakout,
is usually due to the market waiting on some completely unpredictable
"black swan" event. Some gold bulls and goldbugs have
understandably been rattled by the dire predictions of market forecasters
like Karl Denninger and Ronald Rosen, who are in effect predicting a
deflationary implosion, and soon. They may well be right if the
"recovery" engineered by the powers that be via an orgy of
manufactured liquidity and rock bottom interest rates is derailed by
factors beyond their control, but it is very hard to determine if this will
happen immediately, or in 6 months or in 2 years' time or at all - maybe
the Asian tiger economies will ride to the rescue of the entire world. In
the meantime, however, we could see a period of robust inflation that
continues to drive up the price of gold and silver and many other
commodities. We don't need to expend valuable cerebral energy trying to
figure out the answer to this riddle ahead of time, however, because as
pragmatic traders we simply continue to ride gold's parabolic uptrend,
garnering huge profits along the way, and we only need to consider hitting
the exits should it fail. A tragic irony is that many Precious Metal stock
investors will miss out on the developing huge rally in the sector, due to
having been burned to a crisp during last year's meltdown, which has left
them either wiped out or psychologically in no fit state to play the game.
They are so spooked by the prospect of another broad market meltdown
dragging everything down the hole that they are going to sit and watch the
whole show from the sidelines, probably entering belatedly at much higher
levels. Their fears are perfectly understandable - there could be another
such meltdown, but the difference between them and us is that we are in the
game and comfortable with it, because we have our predetermined point at
which to hit the exits if the wheel comes off.

The dollar's Falling Wedge pattern is neatly reflected by
the Rising Wedge pattern in the euro, which is precisely what we would
expect to see. It has to be said that the euro does look like it is running
out of puff on this chart. However, like the dollar, it could instead break
out upside and run at the pale blue parallel return line shown.
Even if the dollar does break out upside and the euro to
the downside, it does not automatically mean that gold and silver are going
to get crushed, although it obviously doesn't help. In the changing world
we live in we could find ourselves in a situation where the dollar and gold
rally at the same time, in other words gold's rate of advance exceeds that
of the dollar, so that it outruns it. Whatever the dollar does however we
are clear - we can safely remain long gold whilst it remains above its
parabolic uptrend line, only if it breaks below it will we need to consider
evasive action.
Clive Maund
clivemaund@gmail.com
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The above represents the opinion and analysis
of Mr Maund, based on data available to him, at the time of writing. Mr
Maund's opinions are his own, and are not a recommendation or an offer to
buy or sell securities.
Mr Maund is an independent analyst who
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