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Deciding when to buy and when to sell (in any market) is a difficult process.
Since there are no guarantees, the best one can do is to gather bits and pieces
of information that lead to a logical conclusion. In other words, try to connect
the dots!
DOT I
We can see from this chart that our long consolidation dating back to December
of 2004 has centered around the previous high achieved earlier in the year.
The RSI and MACD are showing a moderate oversold condition - - while we may
fall further, a turn to the upside is expected sooner rather than later.
DOT II
Switching to a weekly perspective cuts out some of the noise we see in the
daily chart technical indicators. Here the intermediate tops and bottoms are
more clearly defined. Also take note that each correction has bottomed at or
near the previous top. We can also see that 3 of the 4 major highs shown here
occurred in the November-January time period. This means we want to be positioned
for a move before we hit that critical period. However, most
people I know do not trade futures - - so while now may be a good time to load
up on physical bullion, most gold bugs can't "make money" on swings in the
price of gold... they depend on the gold stocks. This leads us to our third
dot, which centers around the HUI.
DOT III
Here we compare moves in PM stocks to moves in the price of gold itself.
The red vertical lines indicate a new high in the price of gold. This phenomenon
clearly has been shrugged off by the gold stocks every time it occurs. However,
the blue vertical lines indicate
the reactionary confirmation low made by the POG. Apparently, the stocks don't
move until gold "proves" it's not going to fall back under a previous "maginot
line" of resistance. Had we bought on this signal the last two times it occurred,
and sold when gold made a new high, we would have been in perfect position
for all the major twists of this bull market in gold. Keep in mind that markets
of any type throughout history are famous for not doing what you think
they should do - - as I'm sure you've heard before, "The market can
remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent."
Those are the dots. I've connected them in the manner I believe they fit
together best. Buying or selling....that part is up to you.
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