• 526 days Will The ECB Continue To Hike Rates?
  • 526 days Forbes: Aramco Remains Largest Company In The Middle East
  • 528 days Caltech Scientists Succesfully Beam Back Solar Power From Space
  • 928 days Could Crypto Overtake Traditional Investment?
  • 933 days Americans Still Quitting Jobs At Record Pace
  • 935 days FinTech Startups Tapping VC Money for ‘Immigrant Banking’
  • 938 days Is The Dollar Too Strong?
  • 938 days Big Tech Disappoints Investors on Earnings Calls
  • 939 days Fear And Celebration On Twitter as Musk Takes The Reins
  • 941 days China Is Quietly Trying To Distance Itself From Russia
  • 941 days Tech and Internet Giants’ Earnings In Focus After Netflix’s Stinker
  • 945 days Crypto Investors Won Big In 2021
  • 945 days The ‘Metaverse’ Economy Could be Worth $13 Trillion By 2030
  • 946 days Food Prices Are Skyrocketing As Putin’s War Persists
  • 948 days Pentagon Resignations Illustrate Our ‘Commercial’ Defense Dilemma
  • 949 days US Banks Shrug off Nearly $15 Billion In Russian Write-Offs
  • 952 days Cannabis Stocks in Holding Pattern Despite Positive Momentum
  • 953 days Is Musk A Bastion Of Free Speech Or Will His Absolutist Stance Backfire?
  • 953 days Two ETFs That Could Hedge Against Extreme Market Volatility
  • 955 days Are NFTs About To Take Over Gaming?
  1. Home
  2. Markets
  3. Other

Gold and Silver Trading Alert: Is the Rally in Gold Over?

Gold Trading Alert originally published on January 26th, 2015 9:54 AM:


 

Briefly: In our opinion speculative short positions (half) are currently justified from the risk/reward perspective.

Gold's rally took place along with the U.S. dollar's rally and this was encouraging for gold bulls, but gold's reaction after the 1,140 billion euro QE program was announced was very disappointing. Is the rally over and will the gold market plunge once again?

In short, it's possible, but not imminent. Let's move right to the charts (charts courtesy of http://stockcharts.com).

$USD US Dollar Index - Cash Settle (EOD) ICE
Larger Image

Our previous comments on the USD Index and its link to gold remain up-to-date:

The USD Index rallied just like we'd been expecting it to. The breakout above the 2005 high was confirmed so the next move was likely to be to the upside and we didn't need to wait long to see one. The USD Index soared as the euro declined on the QE news. The interesting thing about this rally is that it's likely not over, as no resistance level was reached yesterday and the next significant resistance is above 96. That's where we expect the USD Index to stop for longer or perhaps where this rally would end. The former seems more likely at this time.

Why didn't gold decline despite a move higher in the USD Index? Because it was not the inherent strength of the U.S. dollar that caused the move - it was the weakness of the euro (let's keep in mind that the USD Index is a weighted average of various USD-linked currency rates and the EURUSD pair has the weight of over 50%). Investors were getting out of the euro and some of them were buying U.S. dollars and some of them were buying gold - hence both assets went up.

Now, the USD Index moved much higher yesterday, but gold didn't move much, which could mean that gold actually did not show strength by holding up well in spite of the USD's rally, but that it showed weakness by not rallying more given the declining value of the euro.

Overall, we think the implications for gold are bearish at this time for the short term. Naturally, the European QE is a bullish piece of news for gold in the medium- and long term.

Please note that gold declined in today's pre-market trading without a rally in the USD Index (in fact, the USD declined slightly).

$GOLD Gold - Spot Price (EOD) CME
Larger Image

On the long-term chart we can see what we've already written above - that gold moved just a little higher. Gold just got an excellent trigger to move higher - above the long-term resistance line - and it didn't work. Gold didn't break out. We view it as a bearish sign.

Gold indeed declined after the bearish sign and it could be on its way to form the final bottom close to the long-term cyclical turning point.

$GOLD Gold - Spot Price (EOD) CME
Larger Image

Our previous comments remain mostly up-to-date:

We finally saw some strength in gold, which might seem encouraging until you recall what caused the move. The move was "supposed to" be bigger given the announcement. The size of the move is something that looks like it's about to be erased and the breakout seems likely to be invalidated. At this time we think that 2 additional daily closes would be required above the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement until we can say that the breakout is confirmed and that higher prices are likely.

Gold is already lower and back below the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement. The invalidation is a bearish signal on its own and is quite likely to lead to further declines. The short positions in the precious metals sector that we opened based on Thursday's closing prices (gold closed at $1,302 on Thursday; the alert was sent/posted before the markets opened on Friday) are already profitable.

Will gold fall further?

$GOLD:$USD Chart
Larger Image

The chart featuring the gold to USD Index ratio clearly suggests so. The ratio moved a bit higher recently, but didn't manage to move back above the strong resistance created by the 2013 low and the 2008 high. The medium-term trend remains down.

$SILVER Silver - Spot Price (EOD) CME
Larger Image

On Friday we wrote the following:

We have a similar situation in silver. The white metal moved higher, but only slightly above the 2013 low. The breakout could be invalidated any day now, especially given the size of the rally and comparing it to what caused it.

We have just seen an invalidation of the breakout as silver moved visibly back below the 2013 low. We wrote about silver's "ability" to "break out" before declining once again multiple times in the past so those who have been following our analysis for some time should not be surprised by this invalidation. The implications are bearish.

There was no breakout in gold stocks, which was one of the factors that made us doubt the breakout in silver.

$HUI Gold Bugs Index - NYSE Arca INDX
Larger Image

In the previous alerts we wrote the following:

The 3 important resistance levels intersect close to the 210 level: the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement, the 50-week moving average, and - most importantly - the declining long-term resistance line. If gold stocks manage to break and confirm the breakout above this level, it might serve as a confirmation that another major upswing is underway. For now, the current rally looks similar to the corrections that we saw in July 2013, in late-2013 to early-2014, and in June 2014.

This resistance (combination of resistances) was reached (...). The HUI Index is either about to break out or about to decline once again. Since there has been no breakout so far, the odds are that it will decline once again.

We already saw a decline yesterday (which was more visible than the one seen in gold), so we have a small indication that we'll see another decline shortly. To be honest, that's not a strong indication. Since gold stocks reached a strong resistance after a visible rally, then a pullback is to be expected and is not necessarily a sign of big weakness. It is more bearish than not, though.

Yesterday, gold stocks had a good reason to rally (Euro-QE announcement) but they didn't - they declined. Consequently, it seems that the decline was indeed indicating weakness in the precious metals market.

As soon as the HUI Index moves back below its 2013 low and this move is confirmed, it will make further - significant - declines much more likely.

$HUI:$GOLD Gold Bugs Index - NYSE Arca/Gold - Spot Price (EOD) INDX/CME

The HUI to gold ratio has already closed back below its 2013 low, so the bearish indications are present.

Summing up, based on the announcement of the QE program in the Eurozone, the situation in the precious metals market improved for the medium and long term, but based on the gold's, silver's and - most importantly - mining stocks' reaction, the outlook deteriorated for the short term. Today's bearish action in the precious metals confirms the above.

It seems that keeping the short positions in the precious metals is justified from the risk/reward perspective at this time as the profits on them are likely (in our opinion) to become even bigger. The trade is risky, so we are still using a limited amount of capital. We will likely increase it if we see additional bearish confirmations in the coming days.

We will be re-evaluating these positions on a daily basis. As always, we'll keep our subscribers updated should our views on the market change. We will continue to send them our Gold & Silver Trading Alerts on each trading day and we will send additional ones whenever appropriate. If you'd like to receive them, please subscribe today or sign up for our free mailing list today.

To summarize:

Trading capital (our opinion): Short positions (half) in gold, silver and mining stocks with the following stop-loss orders and initial (!) target prices:

Gold: initial target level: $1,245; stop-loss: $1,318, initial target level for the DGLD ETN: $64.60 ; stop loss for the DGLD ETN $55.00
Silver: initial target level: $16.73 ; stop-loss: $18.63, initial target level for the DSLV ETN: $55.63 ; stop loss for DSLV ETN $41.94
Mining stocks (price levels for the GDX ETN): initial target level: $20.40 ; stop-loss: $24.23, initial target level for the DUST ETN: $15.55 ; stop loss for the DUST ETN $9.28

In case one wants to bet on lower junior mining stocks' prices, here are the stop-loss details and initial target prices:

GDXJ: initial target level: $25.43 ; stop-loss: $32.17
JDST: initial target level: $10.50 ; stop-loss: $5.19

Long-term capital (our opinion): Half positions in gold, half positions in silver, half position in platinum and half position in mining stocks.

Insurance capital (our opinion): Full position

You will find details on our thoughts on gold portfolio structuring in the Key Insights section on our website.

Thank you.

 

Back to homepage

Leave a comment

Leave a comment