The Technical Trader’s view:
Weekly Continuation Chart
Gold is not showing signs of strength.
The charts don’t tell us why obviously.
The third pull back from 1000 may be just a prelude to a surge – a second shoulder of a bull Continuation Head and Shoulders chart – in which case it should hold around these levels or hereabouts.
Is there evidence in the near-term charts for that optimism?
DAILY CHART
Well, the short-term picture is not so encouraging. The recent push down has been because of the penetration down through the prior High support at $892 .
The market has previously bounced from that level four times.There may be a large flag in the making.
We’ll know soon enough. In which case the bulls will be waiting for a break up through the falling diagonal around 930 currently.If not then next support lies at $831.And then there will be growing disappointment with the pull back through the long-term $873 level.That might lead to still more selling.
The Macro Trader’s view:
After briefly retesting the US$1,000.00 level in mid February, the Gold market has been correcting lower, and currently there seems little sign of an end to this period of weak price action.
The reasons for Gold’s weakness aren’t fundamentally clear cut, as several relationships that have held throughout most of the period covering the long bull market in gold appear to have broken down:
-Previously, periods of Dollar weakness have worked in gold’s favour and sent the market higher,
-Equity market weakness also has previously worked in gold’s favour, and
-Bearish price action in Bonds has proved bullish too.
But since late February these factors have been in play at various times, but have failed to support the Gold market.
Even the start of quantum easing by first the Bank of England and then the US Federal Reserve has failed to halt this market’s slide, even though many market operators and analysts have expressed anxiety over the possible return of inflation if the authorities do not remove the sizeable stimulus injected into the leading economies in a timely manner.
What seems to be working against the Gold bulls currently is the belief that a recovery isn’t that far off, as the US Administration is on the verge of gaining Congressional approval for Obama’s US$1.8T budget deficit, which some hail as the equivalent of the New Deal introduced by Roosevelt in the 1930’s and others claim is the road to ruin as the US is set to rack up enormous deficits for many years to come, which will greatly inflate the National debt, and has caused China, the US Governments biggest creditor, to fret over the long term value of its more than US$1.0T of reserve assets.
In fact so worried are the Chinese authorities that they have recently called for an alternative world reserve currency to the Dollar to be established.
But over recent months some US data has shown improvement:
-Retail sales has been stronger than expected,
-Durable goods has beaten consensus on the up side,
-Housing starts and building permits, were both recently stronger than expected, albeit coming from a low base, and
-Possibly of greatest importance, new and existing home sales reported the previous week, were both stronger than expected.
Taken together with the optimism that resulted from the recent G20 meeting, traders cannot be blamed for stepping back from markets that are traditionally safe haven trades during times of economic or geopolitical stress.
But we judge the US economy is far from fixed, and the FOMC minutes released yesterday under line this fact as the Fed downgraded their forecasts for growth. Moreover the markets are worried about the flood of new Sovereign debt that is about to hit, with the US and UK both recently suffering difficult bond actions, which has led one or two leading commentators to suggest the authorities begin printing money as a means of funding their spending and overcoming funding issues; surely another longer term inflationary worry.
In short a recession that has been dominating the markets and the news headlines for a considerable period has matured to an extent where the bad news is “old hat” and traders are eagerly casting around for any good news that can be used to justify the premature view that a recovery is at hand.
If that were the case, conservative institutions like the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan and the ECB wouldn’t either be actively involved with quantum easing, or on the brink of adopting it as a policy tool.
The recession is likely nowhere near over, and when it is the overhang of government debt is likely to restrain economic growth and productivity and prove inflationary, leading us to the conclusion that the Gold market remains long term Bullish and will eventually recover from this period of weakness.
Mark Sturdy,John Lewis
Seven Days Ahead
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