Gold & Precious Metals
Silver Market Update – Bears Take a Knife To the Chest
Posted by Clive Maund
on Thursday, 4 December 2014 12:03
While silver’s 18-month chart admittedly looks awful at first sight, we can see (monday’s) spectacular hammer on it, which is viewed as calling the final low – even if the price does break below this low, it is unlikely to drop back much more. This chart makes plain that the strong resistance at the failed former support level in the $18 – $19 area will be a “tough nut to crack”, but silver could get back above this level surprisingly fast once the tide turns – and it is thought to have yesterday, especially if the dollar goes into a tailspin.

An Extraordinary Day In the Precious Metals Market
Posted by Clive Maund
on Wednesday, 3 December 2014 14:58
Yesterday was an extraordinary day in the Precious Metals markets, with a good chance that it signals the reversal from the brutal 3-year plus bearmarket that so many have waited so long to see. The day started with gold and silver plunging on the news that the Swiss voted against backing their currency with gold, but later in the day they rallied strongly on heavy turnover to close with giant reversal candlesticks on their charts. Regardless of the reasons for this bizarre behavior, technically this action looks very positive, and this is written with the awareness that gold has reacted back this morning on dollar strength.
On gold’s 6-month chart we can see how it approached its November lows in the early trade after the Swiss vote, but rallied strongly on big volume to close above its November highs, above the recently failed key support that is now resistance and above its 50-day moving average, which was quite an accomplishment, leaving behind a large “Bullish Engulfing Pattern” on its chart. This points to a probable strong advance dead ahead, so today’s reaction should be used to clear out any short positions, and also to go long aggressively with stops below the November low. This action by gold, and by silver, suggests that the current bull Flag in the dollar, which is getting a bit “long in the tooth”, may be about to abort.
On the 18-month chart we can see the unusual action in gold since its broke down below the key support level at last year’s lows late in October. After such a breakdown, going on price alone, we would naturally expect to see follow through to the downside, but there was very little reaction before it turned around and took on the support level that had become resistance. It backed off again last Friday and into yesterday morning before the dramatic reversal later in the day which took it back above the resistance. However, around the time gold dropped to new lows, COTs and sentiment indicators were already bullish, as we noted at the time, which made the market very difficult to call, but yesterday’s action was the most bullish we have seen in a long time, so there is a good chance that the bottom is in.
On the long-term 15-year chart we can see that the combination of the failure of support at last year’s lows, and the failure of the long-term uptrend, clearly opened up the risk of a drop back to the strong support in the $1000 zone, although matters were complicated by the already bullish COTs and sentiment, as mentioned above. Now, with yesterday’s bullish price and volume action, the smoke is beginning to clear, and we can see the implications of the bullish COTs and sentiment starting to translate into price and volume action. The result is that it looks like the bottom is in, and that gold won’t drop back as far as $1000 after all. Instead, it could take off higher from here, and given the heavy bearish sentiment that has prevailed of late, it could be a scorcher of a rally with the afterburners full on.
Now we will look at the dollar. Until now we have interpreted the tight sideways pattern in the dollar that has formed in recent weeks as a very bullish “running Flag” so called because it is upwardly skewed which makes it more bullish, which is shown on the 6-month chart below. However, we were also aware that COTs and sentiment for the dollar are already at bearish extremes, so our view was that the dollar would have one last upleg before calling it a day. The implications of the bullish action in gold yesterday are that this won’t happen – instead the dollar Flag will abort and it will break lower, or that if it does advance it won’t be by far. This is certainly a possibility as this Flag is getting “long in the tooth” and the uptrend in the dollar could thus be morphing into a bearish Rising Wedge.
The latest US dollar hedgers chart, which is a form of COT chart, shows readings that well into bearish territory, although they have eased somewhat in recent weeks as the dollar has crept higher.
Click on chart to popup a larger clear version.
Chart courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com
Optimism towards the dollar could scarcely be greater as the following chart for the US dollar optix, or optimism index, makes clear. Readings are in “nosebleed” territory. This may however only call for a significant reaction, not necessarily a bearmarket. It is worth noting that the dollar index is close to resistance at its 2009 and 2010 peaks.
Click on chart to popup a larger clear version.
Chart courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com
What about Precious Metals stocks? At first sight their charts don’t exactly look great, even though they have been outperforming gold in recent weeks, which is a positive sign in itself. On the 5-year chart for the HUI index, we can see its horrible long downtrend from 2011 – 2012 and how it still appears to be on the defensive, with moving averages in bearish alignment and zones of resistance overhead. However, with gold and silver suddenly looking a lot better, there should be some evidence of a potential trend change visible, and there is. Assuming the recent low holds, there is a marked convergence of the downtrend, which makes it a bullish Falling Wedge, and clearly it will be an important positive development when this index breaks out first above the nearby resistance shown and then out from the downtrend a little further above.
While the chart for the HUI index, which does not show volume, is not particularly encouraging, the same is not true of the chart for the Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners, code GDXJ. The 5-year chart for GDXJ shows that volume has built up steadily over the past year to arrive at tremendous climactic levels. The is definitely a sign that we are at a bottom, or close to it, since only fools sell at such low levels with such huge losses, and somebody is taking the other side of the trade, that somebody being Smart Money. The immense volume makes it all the more bullish, as it is shows rapid rotation of stock from weak to strong hands. We picked up on this earlier this year, and thought that the bottom might be in, but it has got even more extreme with the recent new lows.
Supporting the contention that the sector is bottoming is the Gold Miners Bullish Percent Index, which actually hit zero some weeks back at the recent low after the breakdown, but has now clawed its way back up to the still dismal reading of 6.67% bullish. There is obviously plenty of room for improvement here – and plenty of scope for a sector rally.
Turning now to the latest COTs we see that, while they are not as bullish as they could be, the readings are still on the bullish side, and we should bear in mind that last week’s uptick in Commercial short and Large Spec long positions preceded the sharp drop on Friday and into Monday morning, so it will be interesting to see how the COTs look after yesterday’s sudden recovery when they are released on Friday. ‘
Click on chart to popup a larger clear version.
The Gold Hedgers chart shown below, which goes all the way back to 2008 and is another form of COT chart, makes clear that historically, readings are quite strongly bullish now.
The latest Gold Optimism chart, or Optix, is strongly bullish as it shows that extreme pessimism still prevails towards gold, which is of course exactly what you want to see at or close to a market bottom…
The Rydex Traders continue to maintain their fine and long-standing tradition of being a contrary indicator. Their holdings in the Precious Metals sector are near record lows, which has got to be bullish.
According to the long-term XAU index over Gold chart, the sector is even more attractive than it was back in 2000 before the start of the bullmarket, because stocks have become so undervalued relative to gold – much more so than at the depths of the 2008 market crash and more still than in 2000. The rationale behind this is that when investors are fearful towards the sector, they favor bullion over stocks, as they know that bullion will always have value, whereas stocks can go to zero. What this chart shows is that right now they are more fearful towards the sector than they have ever been, and on a contrarian basis that is very bullish.
End of update.

It’s not just me that sees the value in gold, but entire nations. The Swiss voters decided not to back the Franc with a 20% gold reserve with a pledge never to sell its gold again. However, it is important to be encouraged that people are beginning to be concerned about fiat currency and foreign exchange manipulation. The Swiss made a mistake back in 1999 to drop their gold backing…..continue reading HERE

Black Friday for Precious Metals
Posted by Jordan Roy-Byrne - The Daily Gold
on Saturday, 29 November 2014 15:32
Black Friday has a few meanings. It has the retail connotation and interestingly also marks a Friday in September 1869 when the Gold price plummeted after two speculators attempted to corner the market. Today wasn’t that bad for precious metals but it was a Black Friday given the severe selloff and the particular day and time of year. Gold declined over 2% and Silver lost nearly 7% while gold miners slipped 8% (GDX) and nearly 12% (GDXJ). Oil drove the decline but showed how vulnerable precious metals still are. Black Friday marked the end of the current rebound while raising the probability that Gold has yet to bottom.
For the miners the significance of the decline is best illustrated on the weekly candle chart. Below are GDXJ and GDX. Simply put, the miners rallied back to previous support and retested the recent breakdown. After rallying for three straight weeks the miners tested resistance in each of the past two weeks. New resistance held and has ushered in the next decline in violent fashion.
While the miners often lead the metals, we recently realized that Gold has been the better barometer. It’s weakness (and not the miners’ relative strength in 2014) was correct. As we penn this, Gold is trading below $1170/oz and essentially at a new weekly low. The bear analog chart puts this bear in proper context. It appears likely to end up worse than a normal bear (excluding the crash) and that could be the result of the preceding 10 years without a significant bear market.
Almost every metric or indicator we look at makes a strong case for buying near $1000/oz Gold. Gold has tried but has been unable to bottom at $1200/oz. It ($1000/oz) is the next strong support and major target. The above bear analog makes the case that the current bear has more to go but not too much more. Furthermore, we’ve noted how a decline below $1100 should push various sentiment and volatility indicators to the kind of extremes that can induce a major trend change.
Gold has appeared very close to bottoming multiple times in the past 18 months yet its always rebounded before it could make its last plunge. Gold is once again trading at a new weekly low and in the coming weeks figures to inch closer and closer to major support. I am working hard to prepare subscribers to take advantage of what could be a lifetime buying opportunity. Consider learning more about our premium service including a report on our top 5 junior mining stocks to buy at the coming bottom.
Good Luck!
Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT

Swiss National Bank Will Have to Buy 70% of All Gold Mined Each Year….
Posted by Arabian Money
on Thursday, 27 November 2014 16:44
….if the referendum passes next Monday doubling prices.
“Switzerland was the last country in the world to leave the gold standard in 1999 and may be the first to take a major step to becoming a gold-backed currency next week.”
The Swiss National Bank would be forced to buy the equivalent of around 70 per cent of total global gold production for the next three years if the referendum being held in Switzerland next Monday is passed. Gold prices could easily double within a matter of weeks.
Recent polls have suggested an early surge in the ‘yes’ vote to 42 per cent has declined in recent days. But the large number of voters declaring themselves undecided will make the result on Monday a cliffhanger for gold and silver investors.
Gold standard
Switzerland was the last country in the world to leave the gold standard in 1999 and may be the first to take a major step to becoming a gold-backed currency next week. Many Swiss citizens are scared by the rise of paper money and money printing around the world and now regret having ditched the gold standard.
Experts say that if the Swiss vote ‘yes’ on Monday, the SNB will have to buy 1,500 tonnes of gold over the next five years, the equivalent of almost 70 per cent of the annual global output from gold mines.
Five million Swiss citizens are able to vote on a proposal that would force the central bank to triple its gold reserves from seven to 20 per cent of total foreign currency reserves. The vote is being keenly observed by financial markets and governments all over the world.
Under the ‘Save Our Swiss Gold’ initiative the SNB will have to hold at least a fifth of its assets in gold within five years. The bank will also be required to repatriate all Swiss gold held abroad and be banned from selling any of its holdings in future. A fifth of Switzerland’s 1,040 tonnes of gold reserves are in the vaults of The Bank of England while a third are deposited in the Canadian Central Bank.
Gold-backed Swisse
Opponents see this as fatally tying the hands of the SNB. The Swiss franc is already at a two-year high thanks to the referendum. The SNB has been forced to track the euro lower in recent years to avoid making Swiss industry hopelessly uncompetitive against the eurozone countries. This will be far more difficult to achieve with a gold-backed Swisse.
Still securing the position of the Swiss franc buy buying gold is far from being as mad as trying to do so by printing paper money as other central banks around the world are doing with their currencies. Somebody has to be the first to move towards sound money.


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