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"By nature man hates change; seldom will he quit his old home till it has
actually fallen around his ears." ~ Thomas Carlyle 1795-1881, Scottish
Philosopher, Author
Extracted from the Feb 2009 Market update.
Gold managed to surge past 960 and actually traded all the way to 1004 before
rapidly pulling back. Even though the Dow has gone on to put in a series of
new 52 week lows and has now traded well below 7000 , Gold has not surged to
new highs, this suggests that the Gold sector could be in for a sharp and short
correction which could roughly last 3 months. If Gold trades below 900 for
more than 7 days, the correction will probably gather steam and at the very
least Gold should trade down to the 840-870 ranges. A weekly close below 840
could trigger a test of the 780 ranges.

The oil to gold ratio hit an extreme point in the last week of February, prior
to this 1 oz could purchase between 22-24 barrels, now one can purchase 26
barrels of oil. It appears that some sort of correction is imminent in the
gold markets or the oil is going to experience a very strong move upwards,
or it could be a combo of the above two scenarios. Several strong negative
divergence signals have been flashed and this usually is a sign of an upcoming
correction, thus either Gold mounts a strong correction with oil mounting a
mediocre rally or oil mounts a strong rally and Gold mounts a mediocre correction.

Gold came within trading distance of testing its old highs at 1014, but ran
out of steam as it hit 1004. It is now entering into a short term corrective
phase (2-3 weeks) and a break below 880-900 for more than 3 days in a row would
suggest that the correction is picking up steam as well as the duration. If
Gold breaks below the 880-900 ranges for more than 3 days, it will most likely
lead to a longer term correction that could last as long as 6 months.
Taking a look at gold from the intermediate perspective, a break below 810
for more than 3-5 days in a row will be a pretty clear indication that Gold
could trade down to the 750 ranges and possibly to the 720 ranges.
Silver
It mounted a very strong rally from its lows and as a result the pattern has
changed and become more bullish. This now means that Silver could have potentially
put in a long term low last November when it traded down to the 8 dollar ranges.
We still expect Silver to pull back but the pull back could be limited to the
9 dollar ranges. If, however, Silver trades below 9.00 for more than 7 days
in a row, it could potentially trade all the way to the 7.20-7.50 ranges before
stabilising, but as of now the likelihood of silver trading below 8 dollars
is rather slim. We will be looking forward to open up several new positions
in Silver as soon as the appropriate buy signals are generated. A pull back
to $9 or below should be viewed as a screaming buy.
Palladium

Palladium has traded down to the 180 ranges several times and on the last
3 occasions it has flashed a series of back to back positive divergence signals;
from a long term perspective, this is a very positive development and virtually
guarantees that Palladium will one day be trading well past 1000 dollars .
On the short to intermediate time frames, palladiums strength will be determined
by how it responds to the corrections in the Gold and Silver markets. If during
this corrective phase Palladium can hold above 180 even if Gold were to trade
to say the 720-750 ranges, then it would be very strong sign that this market
is just waiting for a reason to explode. Expect this market one day to move
in bursts of 30-50 dollars a day. If you have no position in bullion, now would
be a great time to add to your positions and continue to add to them on all
pull backs.
Our bullion dealer of choice is Larry Laborde, we have dealt with him for
years without a single negative incident; in on our opinion he is one of the
most honest players out there and will never pressurise you into making decision http://www.silvertrading.net.
Conclusion
Individuals should understand that while we expect Gold and silver to pull
back, we do not expect them to crash; this bull market still has a long way
to go and to completely bail out now, would be a very foolish mistake. It does,
however, make sense to take some money of the table with the intent of re deploying
it down the line. Any strong pull back should be viewed as lovely long term
buying opportunities; the long term trend for the dollar is negative and believe
it or not, inflation will strike very suddenly and with force, as was the case
with deflation.
"The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable man persists
in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends
on the unreasonable man." ~ George Bernard Shaw 1856-1950, Irish-born
British Dramatist
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