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Bulls climb a wall of worry and bears slide down the slope of hope. So go
two well-known investment proverbs. The first one could apply to gold and silver
investors.
As silver and gold break out into new highs, we begin to hear the calls for
an end of the precious metals bull market. This may come in articles, which
state that the US Dollar plunge is now over or perhaps high prices have finally
unleashed new supply onto the markets. I even read one article that stated
that though gold had advanced over one hundred dollars above its last major
high of $730 back in May 2006, it was STILL in a correction phase. Come on
guys, a bit of common sense would not go amiss here, in my book gold breaking
$100 above old highs is not a correction, it's a bull market!
Of course, I can't say with an oath where exactly silver and gold are going,
but I believe it is higher yet and I just want to present two items which help
bolster that opinion. You may have your own favorite reasons but first I start
with a simple Elliott Wave pattern. Bull markets trace out a 5-part wave that
reflects investor sentiment and eventually mania. The three phases are the
smart money recognizing a bear market bottom and getting in at the ground floor
to create the first wave of buying. The second wave of buying occurs when specialist
investment funds pick up the smell of a bull market and add further buying
and momentum to the market. The final wave is often a "blow-off" phase when
the bull market is all over the front pages and the mainstream investor is
looking for a piece of the action. The phrase "blow-off" denotes a final pent
up release of investor energy that drives the prices to wild and overvalued
numbers.

We have seen the pattern many a time in other markets both on a small scale
and a grand scale across a diversity of asset classes. Elliott Wave numerates
these phases of investor psychology as waves 1, 3 and 5. In between these we
have the correction waves 2 and 4, which punctuate and recalibrate overt enthusiasm.
I read a lot about Elliott Waves where a whole load of patterns are allowed
and this just brings in greater scope for erroneous interpretations. So I want
to keep it simple and say that this is how I see the silver market. We have
done with wave 4 and we are now onto wave 5. As I said, wave 5 is a high probability
blow off event.
There is no real problem with this wave pattern; the bull began back in 2003
with wave 1 which had a mini blow off in 2004. Wave 2 corrected and then wave
3 surged on to a bigger blow off in 2006. Wave 4 corrected the exuberance and
now we are off to the races again with a final wave 5 and going by the previous
two waves, yet another bigger blow off.
The other interpretation to all this would have been that waves 1 to 3 were
actually just a bigger correction called an ABC wave. This is the favoured
pattern of hyper-deflationists who foresaw a brutal and fast crash for any
hard asset as a deflationary depression set in. The fact that we have new highs
has put that more pessimistic ABC interpretation to bed.
A further clue to me in this pattern that this is not a "crash and burn" scenario
is the way silver corrected after it hit its May 2006 high near $15. It dropped
but only as an "abc" wave (see chart) suggesting this was no major market
top but another was yet to come. I say that because most major bulls end with
a downward and more aggressive "12345" impulse wave.
Finally, just look at how silver has taken off since the lows of August 16th
2007. Compare that to the gradients on the first waves (wave 1) of the 2004
and 2006 blow offs (see chart). What can I say except the charts are pointing
to an extraordinary event in silver, something that only the classic blow off
of 1980 may outdo. I won't say anymore, the chart is getting too cluttered
with bullish signs.
The silver spike of 2008 will be a notable event and many will lose money
on it as they get on too late or get off too late. That's the raw fact of free
market capitalism; it takes from the poor silver strategists and gives to the
good (or fortuitous) silver strategists. Make sure you are in the latter camp;
don't rely on feelings when it comes to taking your profits. Get the objective
tools you need to get the job done.
Further comments can be had by going to my silver blog at http://silveranalyst.blogspot.com where
readers can obtain a free issue of The Silver Analyst and learn about subscription
details. Comments and questions are also invited via email to silveranalysis@yahoo.co.uk.
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