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Last Wednesday morning I wrote an article titled "Gold Stocks are Near a Key
Bottom." When I put the article together I was looking for a bottom in gold
stocks to put my own money to use in. Except for a small position, I have been
out of them for awhile now and have been looking for a bottom in July/August
to mark an end of their summer long consolidation phase.
When I wrote the article I wasn't sure exactly when or where the bottom would
come. I thought it could happen that day or within a week, but by the end of
that day gold stocks put on a classic "key reversal" by falling hard on the
open and then closing in the green. I had started to average in a few days
before, but built a full position that day, but then ended up selling out on
Friday as the stocks fell back down to my Wednesday entry point. My thinking
was simple - I bought thinking that Wednesday was a bottom, but when the gold
stocks fell back down they negated that possibility and therefore the reason
for my Wednesday trade had proved to be invalid. The only thing I could do
is to sell the position I entered on Wednesday and reevaluate things.
This is the type of thing you have to do when you try to game bottoms. Last
week we saw gold stocks fall to a key support level at which they should have
bottomed. They didn't. When you make a trade or take a position you have to
have a rational and reason. If that reason turns out to be wrong then you must
sell your position and look to get back in later or reevaluate your thinking.
Few people do this and that is why most people lose tons of money in bear markets.
How many mutual funds are still holding on to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac? From
watching CNBC most mutual fund advisors are in denial of the reality of the
bear market.
Now I still believe that this current drop in gold stocks is going to lead
to a huge buying opportunity. At the moment I write this though I'm not sure
exactly where they will bottom at. I don't look for bottoms simply because
something is down. The market or stock I'm looking at needs to hold at a key
support level - which is what gold stocks appeared they were doing last week
- or else make some technical sign that they are bottoming. Buying just because
something is down and with no game plan can send you to the poorhouse.
So let's take a look at the charts for gold stocks and see what we can gleam
from them.

Gold stocks have been in a bull market since 2002. During this time the 200-day
Bollinger Bands for the XAU and HUI have tended to act as support and resistance.
The lower 200-day Bollinger Band for the HUI is now sitting at 377 so you should
consider the 375-380 zone as key support for the HUI. For the past six years
the lower 200-day Bollinger Band has only failed to hold as support for the
HUI twice. Once was in 2005 and the second time was last August when the market
went into a mini-meltdown.
During both of these times the HUI fell 11% below its 200-day Bollinger Band
and then bottomed. After that they bottomed and rallied hard, went sideways
for about a week, and then blasted higher to rally well beyond their 52-week
highs.
What is more both situations led to extreme oversold levels in the XAU/gold
and HUI/gold relative strength ratios. In fact these ratios are extremely oversold
right now, but that doesn't mean they can't go lower.
In a Monday morning WSW
Power Investor Elite members only note I wrote the following:
"This means one of two things."
"Either gold is going to fall hard and fast to catch up with the oversold
readings in these ratios, but gold stocks won't fall as much as the metal.
For instance we could see gold fall down to 850 while gold stocks actually
hold up. That would give us a powerful signal to go long gold stocks. In 2005
for instance - forget about it falling below the lower band for a second -
gold stocks lagged the metal badly for week after week. Then all of a sudden
the stocks stopped dropping and the metal continued lower. Something like that
could happen now. Last week I was looking for the stocks to hold support for
a buy point, but if they fail to do that this week then I'll have to look for
another signal to buy."
"If they don't hold support here then gold stocks will likely go through their
lower 200-day Bollinger Band and have a hard and fast sell-off like they did
in August of 2007 and May of 2005. That would lead to an extreme oversold condition
in the stocks only seen twice in the last six years. Both of those times led
to incredible buying opportunities and if it happened again it would be another
one."
Right now as I write this I can't say exactly what is going to happen or at
what point I will buy. I can't predict the future. That isn't the point of
this article. What I'm trying to show you are the thinking processes involved
in trying to play bottoms in a market. You need to have evidence that points
to a bottom and then be willing to get out if the evidence turns out to be
wrong. That is what happened to me last week when it comes to gold stocks.
Secondly I want you to know what is it I'm now looking for to try to show
me that gold stocks have probably bottomed. The bottom line is that I need
to see some sort of evidence that gold stocks have bottomed before I buy back
in to try to play a bottom again. Gold stocks tend to bottom in one of two
ways. They either start to hold up for several days - or even a week - and
then turn up or else they start to hold up while gold continues to drop to
start to show strong relative strength against the metal. Neither of these
has happened yet. It looked like gold stocks were about to turn up last week,
but that was a fake out. So I'll be watching the gold market carefully going
forward for signs of a bottom.
Once it comes I still believe it will be an incredible buy point. The bottoms
in 2005 and 2007 led to immediate huge rallies in gold stocks. There is no
reason now not to think the same thing isn't going to happen again.
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