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Originally published September 13th, 2009.
Investors will much more readily forgive a market commentator who is bullish
and wrong than one who is bearish and wrong. This explains why, with gold tantalizingly
close to breaking out to new highs, bearish or cautious articles on the yellow
metal are few and far between. Amongst the bullish commentaries we have Jim
Willie's "13 reasons for major Gold Breakout" and the "A light goes on in Russell's
brain" by the venerable Richard Russell. On www.clivemaund.com we are pragmatists
whose overriding concern is to make money, or at least avoid losing it, and
whilst we are well aware of the bullish case for gold and the convincing upbeat
arguments of many writers, we also keep a lookout for bearish signals, and
there are some important ones at this time. As a result of these mixed signals
we have remained perched on the fence in recent weeks, during a period in which
gold has broken out upside from an important large triangular pattern, but
has not thus far succeeded in breaking out to new highs. Does this fence sitting
mean that we have foregone the opportunity to garner profits in this market?
- no sir, it does not. We very rarely consider "straddle" options because of
the doubled decay burden of the time value of holding both Calls and Puts,
but having called the breakout by gold from its Triangle days before i occurred,
we decided to boldly go (go boldly?) and load
up with heaps of cheap Calls and Puts in gold itself on the NYMEX and in iShares
Comex Gold Trust, SPDR
Gold Trust and Newmont
Mining, with an eye to using the Puts to protect long positions in gold
stocks generally as well. The trade worked out perfectly as we offloaded
all the Calls for a whacking great profit into strength early last Tuesday
morning when gold formed a short-term peak, and we hung on to the Puts. The
gains on the Calls vastly exceeded the losses on the Puts, and if things now
turn sour we might easily recoup our losses on the Puts and even end up gaining.
In any event we now have a heap of cheap Puts free and gratis which go at least
some way to insulating our stocks positions from losses. The other approach
that we employ to maximize upside gearing and minimize downside is to go with
the stocks of younger dynamic mining companies that are either going into production
or close to doing so, and thus in the accelerated growth phase of their stock
lifecycle, avoiding the lumpen old monster stocks that matured a long time
ago. We should not forget, however, that investors and speculators will dump
everything indiscriminately over the side, regardless of quality or intrinsic
value, if a broad based selloff sets in.

Now we will take a fresh look at gold in the light of the latest price action
and COT data. On the 3-year chart we can see how gold duly broke out upside
from its large triangular pattern and rose sharply, which was the scenario
assigned the higher probability. With all moving averages in bullish alignment
it's a case of "so far, so good" but we note that it is now increasingly overbought
and has risen into the zone of very heavy resistance approaching its highs.
Much more worrying for gold bulls is the explosion in the Commercials' short
positions, which have risen "off the scale" - we will look at this a little
later.
This is a good point at which to ask ourselves the question - "What is the
scenario that would cause maximum damage to the average PM sector investor,
and at the same time funnel his resources most efficiently into the pockets
of Big Money?" This is an easy one to answer - it would be a gold breakout
to new highs that would trigger a wave of buy stops and lead to many chart
followers and a broad swath of investors piling in. Having "lobster potted" the
majority Big Money could then engineer a savage reversal and plunge and you
had better believe that they have got the clout to do it - this is the game
they played with copper last year.For this reason there is no way we are selling
our Puts, which we ended up getting for free anyway, and we will roll them
if they expire.

On the 6-month chart we can examine recent action in more detail. After the
sharp breakout from the Triangle, gold rose strongly for another day before
the rally was slowed considerably by the heavy resistance approaching the highs.
We sold our Calls at the top of the "shooting star doji" in the early trade
last Tuesday. A bullish hammer appeared after some reaction on Thursday that
was followed by gains on Friday, however, the price did not rise above Tuesday's
intraday high. Gold is getting into critically overbought territory on its
RSI indicator with its MACD showing an increasingly overbought condition, and
as is very obvious on its 3-year chart, it is in a zone of heavy resistance.
These factors in themselves do not preclude a breakout to new highs soon, although
they do suggest that a period of consolidation first would be beneficial. However,
what does make it look a lot less likely short-term is the COT structure, which
according to past correlations now looks decidedly bearish.

On www.clivemaund.com we don't subscribe to the David versus Goliath nonsense.
This is because in our experience Big Money almost always wins, which is hardly
surprising given their extensive network of connections throughout the banking
system, governments, the markets and policymaking in general - they know what's
going down and when. Even when it looks like they are going to lose, as during
the banking crisis of last year and early this year, they simply push the bill
for the consequences of their excesses onto everybody else. We therefore aim
to align ourselves with them as much as possible. You have as much chance of
winning when you oppose them as a hedgehog has of making it across a freeway
south of Los Angeles. Bearing this in mind the latest COT chart is, or should
be, disconcerting for bulls, for as we can see the Commercial short position
exploded according to the latest data, which does not include the last 3 days
of last week, so it can be presumed to have climbed to even higher levels as
gold finished the week at a closing high. This means one of two things - either
Big Money are going to have their heads handed to them on a plate as gold breaks
out and rockets higher (historically unlikely), or the average investor in
the PM sector, egged on by the plethora of bullish gold reports doing the rounds,
is going to end up as roadkill before much longer, which could involve a false
breakout to new highs and a concomitant explosion of Commercial short positions
to an even greater extreme. The silver COT chart is even more extreme. Our
tactics are therefore generally to remain long but to protect positions either
with close stops, which before the Triangle breakout were just below the support
at the apex of the Triangle for, but should now be raised, or with out-of-the-money
Puts. This position will be reviewed if the COT structure becomes even more
extreme. An additional factor that needs to be taken into account by PM stock
investors is the increasing likelihood of the broad stockmarket breaking lower
as it is now approaching the apex of a bearish Rising Wedge pattern and the
time of year when investors are most prone to get jittery.
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Clive Maund,
CliveMaund.com
The above represents the opinion and analysis of Mr. Maund,
based on data available to him, at the time of writing. Mr. Maunds opinions
are his own, and are not a recommendation or an offer to buy or sell securities.
No responsibility can be accepted for losses that may result as a consequence
of trading on the basis of this analysis.
Mr. Maund is an independent analyst who receives no compensation
of any kind from any groups, individuals or corporations mentioned in his reports.
As trading and investing in any financial markets may involve serious risk
of loss, Mr. Maund recommends that you consult with a qualified investment
advisor, one licensed by appropriate regulatory agencies in your legal jurisdiction
and do your own due diligence and research when making any kind of a transaction
with financial ramifications.
Copyright © 2004-2009 CliveMaund.com
All Rights Reserved.
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