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There are technical and fundamental similarities in all bull markets. In the
case of Gold today and the Nasdaq in the mid 1990s, there are several key technical
similarities. I will show these in two charts.
In this case there are three important similarities. There is a running correction
for a few years, the squeezing in of several bollinger bands and finally, a
breakout from the price channel. Below is a chart of the Nasdaq. The running
correction occurred from 1992 to 1995. As the market began its parabolic ascent
(in 1995), all the bollinger bands (20, 40 and 80 week) were squeezed in which
suggests a strong move in all time frames. Each time the market touched the
lower 80-week band (1984, 1987, 1990, 1994, 1998) proved to be a very important
low.

The same things are evident in Gold's chart below. The action since May of
2006 has been a running correction. We showed the form in the last chart. (Essentially,
the counter-trend "B" move advances to a new high followed by a "C" decline
that bottoms right at or near the previous impulsive top, which in this case
is May 2006). Secondly, all of the bollinger bands are squeezing in. The market
already touched the lower 40-week band, which hadn't happened since 2005. The
market came very close to touching the lower 80-week band. That hasn't happened
since 2001. A correction of primary degree is in the later stages.

Conclusion
These charts show how secular bull markets move from steady and gradual to
parabolic. The transition involves a long corrective period that is difficult
to correctly diagnose until its later stages. The bollinger bands are extremely
helpful as they allow us to measure volatility across all time frames. For
Gold, its primary correction is near its end while the short and medium term
corrections may have a bit more time to go. We'd like to see volatility in
those time frames compress a bit more. Stay tuned for our next update, as we'll
have more insightful charts.
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