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"B waves can extend considerably and even appear impulsive, and ... short
term traders may very well try to continue their luck on the long side this
week. We seem to have completed the minimum requirements for a 3-wave correction,
but as shown in the chart, may need to see the wave subdivide further as drama
in the currency and credit markets plays out." ~ Precious Points: Fool's
Gold, May 10, 2008
Last update's daily chart in gold depicted the likely path of a B wave rally
in gold that was realized quite accurately in the price action unfolding last
week. The initial 3-wave move to just below $890 was followed by a brief correction
to about $860 and culminated on Friday with a push above $900, quite in line
with expectations.
We've made no secret of viewing the current bullishness as a "sucker's rally" until
proven otherwise, and will continue to seek verification for this view, with
an open mind towards changing our outlook if dictated by price action. With
technical indicators turning positive on the daily chart, and with gold finally
moving above the 5-week sma, all signs would seem to suggest a return to the
bull run in precious metals. But such was also the case in mid-April, when
gold last peaked in a b wave before cascading to new lows in a five-wave decline.

At Friday's closing levels, the minimum requirements for the 5-wave c of B
appear to have been satisfied, but some room higher is allowable as fifth waves
are liable to subdivide and extend. As you can see above, the first target
for the current advance has been met, but could easily extend to the 5-week
sma, at about $920. Strong resistance also exists at $955 and, in fairness
to those concerned the correction in gold ended earlier this month with the
dip below $850, a move in gold above $940 could signal a flat where the C wave
decline will fail to put in significant new lows and might even find support
at a somewhat higher low. As counted above, gold could even approach new highs
without technically precluding at least a test of the $850 low. Crucial to
interpreting the advance, should it extend in that fashion, will be an analysis
of the wave structure which, as it currently stands, appears to be a textbook
3-wave correction.
A lot seems to be staked on the expectations for a second half improvement
in the U.S. economy, but low long term interest rates suggest a bond market
that is still more worried of deflation than inflation. The most likely catalyst
to create further strength in gold will be acute movement lower in the dollar,
mirrored in another run to new highs in the euro against the dollar. With the
Fed unable to raise interest rates and the ECB even less likely to cut rates
in the face of improved economic data last week, dollar strength seems technical
and artificial, rather than based on strong fundamentals. Rumors that the recent
G7 meeting succeeded in slowing the transfer of foreign dollar reserves into
euros seem to corroborate this version of events, but with such powerful forces
behind it, the trend in dollar strength may yet last just long enough to provide
the best gold buying opportunity in months.
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