Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Gold Fever

Today we saw Gold reach a new high largely on rumors of Gulf States entering into non dollar price agreements with BRIC countries. While the validity of that story remains in question, there is no doubt that the Dollar's reserve status is being called into question. Calls for an international reserve currency comprising a basket of currencies and, provocatively, a Gold component have Gold bugs salivating.



Gold

The chart everyone is humming about is Gold. As seens on its weekly chart below Gold has emerged from over a years of consolidation below the important $1000 mark. As a rule of thumb, the longer the consolidation the larger the pivotal move.





A cautionary note on Gold. First and foremost is it's behavior relative to the Stock Market. We expect Gold will trend with the general market. Specifically, a sell-off in the market is likely to coorespond with a sell-off in Gold as we saw in 2008. Considering the S&P 500 is over 55% off it's March low calls for a correction and even a crash should not be completely ignored. That said, the trend is our friend and we see clear evidence of a fresh uptrend in the making.



Today we spotlight two stocks poised to benefit from a runnup in Gold and Silver.

IAG


HL - Helca Mining




(click to enlarge images)

Sunday, June 21, 2009

What future for Crude?


Update: I am goood. Chart


(click to enlarge images)


After a near 50% run-up in crude it appears a pullback in in the offing. We're tipped off by the break of a triangle on the daily chart providing us a nice early short entry with relatively tight stops.

First off, the Stop Loss value for a short entry would be the forging of a new high at $74. If Crude can push above that the breakdown has failed.

Providing further weakness continues, we can estimate where Crude may find support using the above two charts. The most likely and obvious level come in around $62-63. There we find a convergence of technical support in the channel line, the 50 DMA and former resistance. Further evidence comes in the form of Fibonacci confluenceat $60.5 . The $55 level has more significant support but requires a hard departure from the channel and a break of important DMA's. Possible but not likely, at least not all at once.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Platinum reborn?


(click to enlarge images)

Platinum appears to have reached the bottom of it's price channel and is embarking on a fresh new upswing. Today's action (not shown in the chart) has platinum breaching the 20 DMA cleanly. It needed to break through this level lest it become resistance. The timing is in tune with secondary indicators showing upward momentum is afoot.

The chart is not without trouble. Cautionary levels exist between $1190 and $1200. Recall that Platinum recently fell out of a well defined channel that began in November. This doesn't spell automatic doom, but it bears noting. This new upswing could be a simple retracement only to commence with more downward action. The space between $1190 and $1200 will tell that story.

It will need to work well past these level in order to go onto new highs. This might be an opportune level to more up stops if a trade has been entered at current levels ($1140).

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Platinum


(click to enlarge images)

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Weekend Update

We can see that the trend channel is still very much in tact. Last weeks surprise earnings report by Wells Fargo led the market to the upper extreme of the band it's been following religiously since November 08.


It's important to remind ourselves the difference between Bull and Bear market rallies. Bull market rallies are slow plodding affairs that last months. Bear Market rallies are strong, violent and relatively short. Which profile does this rally fit?

S&P Analysis
The picture is a bit mixed, but from a risk/reward perspective this marks an opportunity to take risk off the table. Trend lines and channels are not some mysterious force controlling the market. They do however show a predictable rate of economic advance or decline while the mood of the market swings from optimistic to pessimistic. Reducing long exposure to the stock market here is prudent for a number of reasons as shown by the chart.

Indicators are leaning mostly bearish but not decidedly so...yet. On the Bull side (green arrows), RSI is still rising and not yet in overbought territory. We are also 1 week into a 20/50 EMA cross. On the Bear side (red arrows) the MACD histogram is showing a slowing of momentum though. And the Stochastics have past the overbought level and deteriorating. Most importantly, we notice the upper trend, where the market currently sits, is meeting significant overhead supply. While the trend line might be pierced it is highly doubtful the market will advance cleanly through this area. More likely it will begin to break down and continue to obey the channel.



Four Bad Bears

(reproduced with permission, courtesy of dshort.com)


When comparing past Mega Bears a couple of things become clear. First these markets all obey a well defined channel. Second, if our current market were turning around it would make it the shortest of the four - highly unlikely considering the economic fundamentals going forward. So while we may indeed poke our head above our heretofore reliable channel it is highly unlikely we will sustain at this level. Balancing risks to rewards it appears we have realized 80-100% of our current move. Don't let cacophony of optimism loosen you appreciate of risks.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

S&P
Implications for the S&P..... sub 700 by May-June:


Monday, April 6, 2009

No charts today, but our bounce is tiring. The market appears rready for a short term retracement. With earnings season upon us this may be an opportune time to reduce risk.

Friday, March 6, 2009

No bottom yet

The market continues its quest for price discovery. The Dow theory is alive providing a clear confirming signal that the bottom is nowhere in sight. Though still far from it's ultimate bottom, an interim bottom appears imminent. Patience will be a rewarding virtue for all would be knife catchers. Enough with the cliches and a look at some charts.

As predicted last week the market sell off has accelerated. These waterfall sell offs culminate in a capitulative spike that flushes all optimism. This purge of sellers will result in a new round of buying lifting the markets from their lows. Counter-trend rallies can be a fools game even when you know what to look for. The purpose of this weeks update is to remind readers we are not there yet.

DOW


Note from the chart that interim plunges are accentuated by a volume spike. These go hand and hand with higher than normal volume, first down then back up, That's the flush we await with AIG and GM fighting over who mans the handle.

GOLD

Gold has been acting predictably within it's trading band. While it hasn't completely tagged its trend line it did bounce nicely off the 50 DMA. Secondary indicators are mixed and I remain skeptical we won't test 900 again. Regardless risks for longs have diminished somewhat.



Friday, February 27, 2009

Where will it end?

We could see the selling intensify in the next few weeks. Sure the market has been selling off for awhile, but we still lack that capitulation spike that signals a temporary end to the pain. Here is one indication from the DOW chart:




This is no final bottom though. Sure "The news is always the worst at the bottom". However, I think the worst is yet to come. The credit market, which is 10x as large as the stock market, has only just started contracting.

We have yet to clear the world's debt off the table. Just in the U.S. the aggregate of national, corporate and consumer debt is near 400% of GDP. Prior to 1929 it got as high as 270%. Western European countries are likewise awash in debt. Britain, Ireland, Spain, Greece, Italy are all seeing leveraged bets into emerging markets unwind. Austria alone lent 70% of it's GDP to the Eastern European real estate bubble. This is no mere recession. The post-1929 chart shows the tenacity and ferocity of a full blown credit contraction. In that period the stock market corrected a full 89% of it's former high. The only difference between now and then is the causative measures this time are much worse.

Friday, February 6, 2009

Rolling on the floor.

A couple of charts this morning to show what may be a new leg down.

S&P 500
DOW
In the case of both the DOW and the S&P we see the market is more and more comfortable at their former floor levels. For the DOW, 8000 is violated with regularity and ventures above the 50DMA are quickly squashed. The S&P 500 is a bit more resilient but still digging away at its floor.

Indications are we will test the November lows before long. If history is any guide this next leg will be less a violent plunge and more of a slow bleed. The Fibonacci Fan illuminates some possibilities should a new leg commence. A touch of 560 seems plausible, however I suspect this is too much too soon. 765 looks more reasonable.



Key to this theory is the 50DMA for the big three. The Dow and the S&P haven't sustained more than a quick peek above their 50 DMA . The Nasdaq (not shown), while stronger, looks tenuous and lends little credence to a sustainable rally. More bleeding seems inevitable.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Gold update - significant development

It's time for a little self promotion here. At the end of 2008 we told readers to wait for a pullback in Gold before entering - Link . In the post "Gold, here" just a few days ago this blog then alerted our readers to a favorable entry in Gold when it was then trading at $807. Gold has since moved up to over $880, a nice gain in a commodity market. By doing so an old trend is threatening to end and a new one emerging. This is significant folks.

TRADE UPDATE 2/17: Gold break out above $950 - bullish sign
TRADE UPDATE 2/3: Gold needs a rest. Look for a retracement to $860
TRADE UPDATE 1/30: $925 reached overnight, avoiding new buys. Chart



For those not familiar, deflation is the contraction of both money supply and credit. I invite you to view the video: Fractional Reserve Lending - The mother of all Ponzi schemes to better understand how money supply and credit are linked. Popular media refers to our financial crisis as a "credit crunch" as if it were a mere inconvenience. This "credit crunch" is actually an outright destruction of money supply caused primarily by credit defaults, deleveraging and a refusal to lend and due to rapid asset depreciation. The purchasing power of remaining money becomes more valuable. Witness the sharp rise in the US Dollar since July 2008. If the US Dollar has more purchasing power, then by definition the assets it can buy become cheaper. Witness the plunge in all commodity classes in the past 6 months.

Deflation caused the Great Depression. Governments fear deflation and are doing all they can to prevent it. They are buying bad assets, providing stimulus and reducing interest rates - all in a vain attempt to prevent the awesome power of deflation. They will ultimately win this battle. Fiat money can (and is) be created out of thin air. Right now that money is staying within banks who are merely trying to stay afloat. The Trillions (yes Trillions) of Dollars being extended to banks in various forms now are being used to preserve their leveraged balance sheets. Here's the catch....it's still not working. So how can governments, and particularly the US Federal Reserve ultimately win the battle against Deflation? If all else fails they can use the "nuclear option".

In 2002 speech Ben Bernanke outlined clearly the options the Federal Reserve has at its disposal to fight deflation. The speech highlighted the challenges faced by the US in the 1930's as well as Japan in the 1990's. Ironically 6 years later Mr. Bernanke is having to implement almost all those deflation fighting measures. Just as he stated in 2002, the Fed is buying bad assets, buying Treasuries, reducing interest rates to zero. So what else can be done when these measures are not winning? Two excepts provide an answer:

"But the U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost. By increasing the number of U.S. dollars in circulation, or even by credibly threatening to do so, the U.S. government can also reduce the value of a dollar in terms of goods and services, which is equivalent to raising the prices in dollars of those goods and services. We conclude that, under a paper-money system, a determined government can always generate higher spending and hence positive inflation."
"Although a policy of intervening to affect the exchange value of the dollar is nowhere on the horizon today, it's worth noting that there have been times when exchange rate policy has been an effective weapon against deflation. A striking example from U.S. history is Franklin Roosevelt's 40 percent devaluation of the dollar against gold in 1933-34, enforced by a program of gold purchases and domestic money creation. The devaluation and the rapid increase in money supply it permitted ended the U.S. deflation remarkably quickly. Indeed, consumer price inflation in the United States, year on year, went from -10.3 percent in 1932 to -5.1 percent in 1933 to 3.4 percent in 1934.17 The economy grew strongly, and by the way, 1934 was one of the best years of the century for the stock market. If nothing else, the episode illustrates that monetary actions can have powerful effects on the economy, even when the nominal interest rate is at or near zero, as was the case at the time of Roosevelt's devaluation." - Ben Bernanke, 2002 Deflation: Making Sure "It" Doesn't Happen Here
"intervening to affect the exchange value" means purposeful devaluation of the currency in order to keep prices and wages from falling. If lowering interest rates, the overnight rate and buying Treasuries fail, a remaining option is to devalue the Dollar either through massive printing, a one time devaluation or a combination of these. In 1934 FDR devalued the Dollar against Gold by 41%. Notice how highly Bernanke speaks of this remedy.

The bottom line is Gold has been acting as a commodity. Gold retreated from it's $1000 high and succumbed (albeit mildly) to deleveraging and deflation along with the rest of commodities. However, now Gold is beginning to act like money. Financial Sense has also picked up on a recent divergence in Gold's behavior - Link. As currencies like the Icelandic Krone, the Russion Ruble, the British Pound and others fall under the force of deflation and deleveraging investors seek somewhere safe to put their money. So far that has been the worlds reserve currency - US Dollar. However, as the future of the Dollar and the fiat money system becomes questionable, more people are again looking to civilizations oldest and most reliable store of value - Gold. Savers in Iceland, Russia, Eastern Europe and now Great Britain who held their savings in Gold instead of the Krone's, Ruble's, or Pounds were/are unaffected by their currency plunge.

Is the Dollar the next shoe to drop? That is the question the world's wealthy are now asking, and you should too. For many it's not a question of if, but when. Thus the interest in Gold.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Weekend Update

There are indications that the market is prepared to rally once again. We had yet another bounce off support in the DOW 8000 range along with two consecutive "positive reversals" last week. To help understand which stocks are likely to benefit the most from a rally it is helpful to see what is happening with the dollar. The dollar has been trading inversely with equities, particularly commodity related stocks. A weakening dollar will almost certainly benefit commodities. With that in mind I give you the dollar chart:

US Dollar



As you can see it's recent rally appears to be waning. Many important indicators point to a near term Dollar weakening. This of course makes perfect sense if the market is threatening a rally. So how should you take advantage of this? Ideally you want to identify stocks that are 1) not inflated, 2) near support, and 3) poised to make 100-200% gains in a weak dollar/strong market environment.


UPDATE 1/20: No love from the Dollar today, The Dollar index opened this morning at 85.5 which is a push above it's recent 85.3 high, thereby negating any entry attempts into commodity stocks.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Gold, here

GOLD:


Readers recall we resisted buying Gold, predicting a retracement from the $890 high of a few weeks ago. Since then Gold has behaved exactly as expected and we have seen our retracement. It's a busy chart, but there are 4 key elements which make a Gold position favorable here. Gold now presents a favorable entry point for the patient trader.

The convergance of primary indicators in order of importance are:

#1 A bounce off the upward trending 50 DMA
#2 Trendline support
#3 Multiple Fibonacci support

Secondary indicators (#4) also point to a favorable risk entry.

GG



Following on the Gold theme, non commodity traders will appreciate the Goldcorp chart. Like the Gold chart above, it too is displaying multiple indications. A convergence of a trend line and Moving average privide primary clues with oscillators showing stong agreement. From these we can derive 2 targets and one stop.
TRADE UPDATE 1/24: GG trade up 18% with more room to grow.

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Trade Notes 1/10/09

Crude Oil - Watch for inverted H&S formation Chart
TRADE UPDATE: Inverted H&S negated, still no opportunity at present.

Platinum - Due to retrace Chart
TRADE UPDATE 1/17: The chart is still indecisive - avoid.

DECK - Short, a break of the 50 DMA (now at $70) should take it down to $60. Chart
TRADE UPDATE 1/15: Target met, position closed. 18% gain New Chart

AZO - Now at $133, short to $120 looks reasonable. Chart

COH - Breakdown to $16 likely - Chart
TRADE UPDATE: $16 Target met, 15% gain.

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