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November 1, 2008
Since our last analysis of gold (Fulfilling Our Reserve Scenario, October
19, 2008), the market has traded below its September 11, 2008 low at $735.70.
In so doing, it now has the structural potential, as has silver albeit of a
different configuration, for a completion of the correction that has been unfolding
since a March 2008 high just above $1,000. Our interest in this report is the
potential for both gold and silver to be near major lows but before we deal
with that, let's take a look at long-term price and momentum conditions in
both markets.

Larger Image
The monthly continuation charts above show both gold and silver with 9-month
moving averages in blue (approximate proxy for the popular 200-day and/or 40-week
long-term moving averages) as well as their 14-period stochastic indicators.
First, both markets are below their respective moving averages which are declining.
The condition where prices are below a declining moving average is generally
considered by objective technical analysts as defining a long-term downtrend
condition. Second, the respective stochastic indicators are declining and at
levels (58 in gold and 42 in silver) that are typically too high to imply prospects
for a sustained price advance. Third, as of the end of October, gold put in
the 3 largest back-to-back monthly ranges in its history (although none of
the ranges was as large as the record range made in 1980) and finished near
the low of the combined 3-month range while silver collapsed 52% during the
same time period. The three conditions consisting of price position relative
to a declining long-term moving average, a deteriorating momentum index that
is well above levels usually associated with a downtrend extreme, and outright
price action featuring high volatility weakness make a strong case in favor
of further price vulnerability. While respecting those conditions and acknowledging
the prospect for a continuation of ongoing weakness, our major market premise
with resepect to gold (based on classic technical analysis that was detailed
in our June 23, 2008 report) is that the market is pulling back to the
long-term historic resistance at $729 that was established in 1980. That plus
our assessment of the overall wave structure in both gold and silver still
leads us to anticipate an impending period of price consolidation that could
result in an intermediate-term low.
Part of our October 18 analysis focused on the unfolding gold price action
after its March high which we considered the top of a third wave. The daily
chart below minimally updates that interpretation. As you can see, the market
has completed 4 swings (labeled a3, b3, c3, d3 ) and a fifth, e3, is underway.
Our previous conclusion was that the corrective swings were a triangular fourth
wave. Note that the four completed swings further subdivide into 3-swings (annotated i,
ii, iii in blue). For us, the wave structure where 4 consecutive swings
all break down into "threes" makes a very strong case that market action is
indeed establishing a triangle. Given that structure, it is very difficult
for us to conclude otherwise and to justify any other interpretation. Therefore,
in our opinion, the only thing lacking to confirm pattern completion and therefore
the end of wave 4 is to see a 3-subswing structure in the ongoing e3 swing.
To date, price action appears to have made swings i and ii leaving
one more sub-swing down to a new low below the October 23, 2008 low at $696.60
basis the official day session. Note that prices have traded as low as $681.00
basis Comex spot October gold during the October 24 after hours electronic
session.

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However, as we noted in our last analysis triangle patterns are often confusing
to interpret and their final swings are often traps that can extend beyond
or truncate short of anticipated terminal points. In that perspective we offer
the following possible scenarios for swing iii in e3: It could
terminate around $660 where subswing iii would equal in distance 50%
of the entire distance covered in subswing i. It could be what wave
analysis calls a "failure" and terminate above $696 .60. In that case, we would
look for a low around $719 or around $703 which are, respectively, 61.8% and
78.6% retracements of the recent bounce from $696.60. Note that the October
31 official session low was $717.50. Note also that the former scenario causes
us to revise a concluding remark in our last analysis that stated, "Our downside
threshold at which we would become generally defensive about long-side exposure
is $690." Thus, our downside "abandonment" threshold now becomes $649.50.
Regarding silver, our October 12, 2008 publication made a case for price action
since the May 2006 high (labeled and circled 5) as being corrective
-- an irregular A-B-C "flat" -- as annotated on the weekly continuation
chart below. Price behavior since then has not nullified our interpretation.
As we see it, silver is in the late stages of its 5-swing C wave with
the low to date being $8.53 which was traded on October 28. If that level wasn't
the trend extreme, what might be? A 61.8% retracement of the 2001 - 2006 five
wave advance falls at $8.25 (horizontal dotted line on chart below).

Larger Image
In summary, long-term price and momentum conditions in both gold and silver
still paint a bleak picture as regards an end to current extreme downside price
action let alone a return to the uptrend conditions that prevailed during 2001
- 2008. Nonetheless, our reliance on classical technical analysis plus our
own brand of the wave interpretation of price action suggests that both markets
could be in the terminal stages of the decline that has derived a significant
part of its impetus from the ongoing collapse of the global capital markets.
While both precious metals may not be immune to further related pressure from
that segment, our focus now is on near-term price action that would suggest
that they are establishing downside extremes. Underlying levels discussed above,
if achieved, would warrant that traders focus on factors that would imply abated
selling pressure. Whether or not those levels are reached, overhead threshold
levels that we would watch are at $7.71 basis spot month Comex gold (point ii? in
swing e3 on the daily gold chart above) and $11.18 basis spot month
Comex silver (point iv in wave C on the chart immediately above).
Price recovery above those levels, in our opinion, would bolster the case that
intermediate-term lows have been made.
Charts constructed with Omega Research SuperCharts and Equis
MetaStock
Data Source: Commodity Systems Inc.
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Eidetic Research
eideticresearch@sbcglobal.net
This report is for informational purposes only and is not
intended as an offer or solicitation with respect to the purchase or sale of
any commodity, futures contract, or option contract. Although the statements
of facts in this report have been obtained from and are based upon sources
that are believed to be reliable, we do not guarantee their accuracy and any
such information may be incomplete or condensed. We do not assume responsibility
for typographical or clerical errors in this report. All opinions included
in this report are as of the date of this report and are subject to change
without notice. Employees of Eidetic Research may hold positions in futures
or cash markets that are either in accordance with, or contrary to, stated
conclusions within this report.
Copyright © 2008 Eidetic Research,
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