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Market Wrap

Week Ending 1/23/09
Gold
Gold was up $40.82 for the week, to close at $899.62 for a +4.75% gain. Perhaps
more impressive than what gold did is what it didn't do.
Earlier in the week the dollar rallied, yet gold held its ground. It had every
excuse to go down, but it didn't. This was good market action that foretold
of the move to come.
Gold broke above overhead resistance and put in a positive MACD crossover.
Histograms and RSI have turned up as well. There is a slight RSI - divergence
so this needs to be watched closely.
Last week we added DGP, SLV, CEF, and SLW as discussed Thursday and Friday
on the website bulletin board. The trades were filled Friday morning. Silver
is looking very promising here, as is platinum.

Last week's report mentioned that there were several positive divergences
on GLD's chart that might be hinting at a forthcoming move up. That move higher
occurred on Friday.
Follow through confirmation is now needed. The next targets to the upside
are the Oct. highs and then the July highs. Last week I wrote:
"The weekly GLD chart shows that a possible inverse head and shoulders
bottom may be forming, with the right shoulder presently under construction."
If GLD continues to move up and through the 90 level on expanding volume and
holds that level, turning resistance into support, this would confirm the head & shoulders
formation. Upside targets of 107 are possible.

Remember: inverse head & shoulder breakouts are not valid until the neckline
is broken above with significant expanding volume.
Volume is very important. False breakouts can easily occur. Watch the volume
figures for clues.
GLD's point & figure chart shows a double top breakout occurring on Friday
with a price projection of 107 possible (87-67=20 - 87+20=107).
Below is gold's price in U.S. dollars, followed by prices in Euros and Pounds.
These charts show a bull market in several different currencies, illustrating
that gold is the one and only sound currency.
It is a good sign when gold is performing well in more than one currency.
Remember, all currencies are paper fiat debt-money: they all are losing purchasing
power through debasement by excess credit (money) creation.
This is the root cause of the financial crisis - the money is debt-money and
you can't pay off debt with debt. Anything else is a crock.

Gold is priced in Euros above; below it is priced in British Pounds. Notice
how both charts are much stronger than gold priced in U.S. dollars.
This is especially true of the bottom chart that moves from the bottom left
corner to the upper right hand corner - an unquestionable bullish signature.

Platinum
During the recent commodity bashing platinum got whacked pretty hard. It fell
from a high of $2229 dollars, which was more than twice the then going rate
for gold, to a low of $752.10.
It closed the week out at $958.00, while gold closed at $899.00. The platinum
to gold ratio has come in a huge amount, suggesting that it is undervalued.



Platinum priced in Euros and Pounds looks much different than when priced
in U.S. dollars.

Invitation
The latest full-length version of this week's market wrap is available on
the Honest Money Gold & Silver
Report website. All major markets are covered with the emphasis on the
precious metals.
Recently made available on the site is an audio version of the book Honest
Money. Stop by and check out our stock watch list and new precious metal
buys executed this week.
Good luck. Good trading. Good health, and that's a wrap.

Come visit our website: Honest
Money Gold & Silver Report
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