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"If the rotation trade fizzles and such a rally in gold materializes, while
it would tend to discredit an impulse down, it may trap many longs into thinking
the larger correction is over, whereas the chart shows we've likely only reached
an intermediate term bottom after reaching previous resistance and oversold
levels in the RSI. While silver can easily drop into it's 200-day sma near
$15.35, it's also reaching oversold levels and should be due for a relief rally
soon, in which case resistance at $17 and at the broken trendline will be crucial." ~
Precious Points: All That Glitters, May 03, 2008
Everything last week pointed to a relief rally in precious metals, but it
continues to look like a sucker's rally, fool's gold. That said, B waves can
extend considerably and even appear impulsive, and with gold seeming to have
broken RSI trendline resistance and completing a bullish MACD crossover, short
term traders may very well try to continue their luck on the long side this
week, though last week's price action, including the erratic movements on Friday,
provide no particular insight as to the immediate direction. We seem to have
completed the minimum requirements for a 3-wave correction, but as shown in
the chart below, may need to see the wave subdivide further as drama in the
currency and credit markets plays out.

On the other hand, this gold rally still has yet to take out the 5-week simple
moving average on the weekly chart below. With buyers eyeing the critical $800
support level, could this price begin acting as a magnet pulling gold lower?
And will determined sellers pile on to push gold lower and seemingly put the
final nail in the coffin, so to speak?

Much attention has also focused on the oil/gold ratio of late, the historically
low price of gold compared to oil a fact reflecting current perceptions of
relative value. Simply put, oil is perceived by today's market as a far more
useful and desirable asset in today's global economy than gold, which has momentarily
fallen out of favor.
In time, precious metal will be reaffirmed as a superior store of wealth,
but failing a real supply threat, such as the rebel attacks in Nigeria that
seem to jack up crude every week, or the African power outages that jeopardized
platinum production, trading on a return to the historical mean in the gold/oil
ratio is ill advised. Though some movement against the recent trend could unfold,
it's unlikely gold will even come close to filling the gap to historical norms
without a return to crisis that creates an even broader loss of confidence
in paper currencies and the governments that issue them. Or, alternatively,
petroleum could be replaced as the world's primary source of energy, also something
that's probably inevitable but, as a short term catalyst, falls, well, short.
But if making comparisons is too tempting, a better place to look might be
within the metals complex itself. Despite having corrected more sharply than
gold, silver continues to outperform on the back of industrial demand for physical
metal and short term supply bottlenecks that will likely see the white metal
continue its outperformance in either second half scenario, crisis or recovery.
Better yet, silver continues to react well to immediate support and resistance
levels, with last week's action testing the trendline mentioned in the previous
update and closing just below $17. Breaking north of this line, which also
coincides with the 5-week sma currently, should see silver trading up to $18
and possibly higher in the short term. Failure at $16, however, could slip
down to $15 very rapidly.

And finally copper has outperformed both gold and silver year-to-date, taking
its cues from global economic strength and infrastructure building while largely
avoiding deleterious effects of currency headwinds. A prolonged consolidation
above $4.50 will leave copper primed for a breakout to new record highs by
year end.

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