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"A second consecutive close above the 5-week moving average in gold
bodes well for a break of this resistance level, after which $690 and $700
become strong resistance. The daily chart in silver shows the white metal clinging
tenaciously to the 5-day moving average, right into last week's $12+ resistance,
before Friday's rally catapulted silver cleanly through. The weekly chart... puts
the first target for this encouraging move in silver near $12.40. A successful
break above there could see as high as $12.60 with an eventual return to about
$13, though probably not in a straight line. As of Friday, the fate of the
metals looks good in the very short term and the very long term, but... the
possibility that a negative event or events may yet stand between here and
new highs persists.
"It should be noted the speech did not promise the Fed would necessarily
be proactive in its accommodation. The new focus on the "timeliest indicators" suggests
a more market sensitive approach, though, and while the nature of these chosen
indicators is a matter of speculation, the daily effective funds rate, credit
spreads, and yields of short term Treasuries all seem likely candidates. ~ Precious
Points: Notes from the Maestro, September 1, 2007
The breakout that precious metals investors having been waiting for all year
finally materialized this week, but is this rally more than just fool's gold?
Can these gains be sustained? Though gold may be very short term overbought,
the weekly chart in the yellow metal shows a little more room to run as price
rockets upward from the 5-week moving average. The 5-week sma, which is currently
below $685, has never reached above $700 during the current bull market, and
this could be an interesting development to monitor in judging the longevity
of this rally.

Silver also just had its best week in months, breaking through RSI trendline
resistance and closing above the 50-day simple moving average for the first
time since August 6. The resistance levels mentioned last week, $12.40 and
$12.6o, were acknowledged by the price action over the past five trading days,
but were ultimately shattered by the strength of this upward move. Though silver
closed above the 50-day sma, the vibration around this level suggests it could
be retested early next week, with $12.60-12.65 probably providing good support.
A positive test would clear the path for $13.00, which should prove formidable.

While the early rally in the metals was clearly anticipated by a last weekend's
update, Friday's breakout was a bit problematic and widely considered to be
technical, based on the move above $700 in gold and the damage to the dollar
after the startling low payroll data. But, more importantly, the action seems
reminiscent of the now familiar pattern where metals are initially bought as
money flees stocks only to be eventually sold as credit conditions deteriorate
in the face of an unmoved central bank. Though the Fed is likely to offer at
least some modest accommodation on or before September 18 if bank liquidity
is again threatened, the contagion that inflicted metals mid-August would probably
have to reemerge before any drastic action is taken.
Last week, as the media clamored about the Beige Book and the unemployment
data, the opinion had been clearly articulated here that the Fed would probably
pay more attention to market indicators like the overnight rate, credit spreads
and Treasury yields. Despite the continued unwillingness of European banks
to lend to each other, as demonstrated by the climb of the LIBOR, domestic
credit market indicators mildly improved and the Fed did not intercede apart
from a few term repos. Still, overnight rates have recently been closer to
the target than they had been in weeks and generally the financial markets
fell short of signaling the sort of acute disaster that would provoke an emergency
rate cut.
So, though relatively tight TIPS spreads and weak job growth signal that the
path to a cut is clear, the implications for metals, then, are less than certain.
Parabolic moves in the metals are always driven by speculation, by the movement
of hot money. And, as most traders know, the money can move out of metals as
fast as it flows in. A return to the panic of August, or a housing-led recession
beyond the Fed's ability or desire to mitigate, would have detrimental effects
on metals even if they retain their current higher trading range and prove
to outperform certain other asset classes. Ultimately, expansion of the money
supply will continue inflating the dollar denominated price of metals, particularly
if the ECB, BoE, or BoJ find themselves hiking rates by the end of the year.
And a Fed rate cut may be the catalyst that drives gold to the target in the
chart below, but, if you don't already know what comes next, you'll have to join to
find out.

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