|
This time we've decided to take an interesting look at more charts, focusing
on the big picture for the metals. A picture is worth a thousand words and
we think these pictures tell a good story.
Gold rising in all currencies
To
begin, Chart 1 tells a great story because it shows gold's been rising
around the world since 1999. Gold shot up in euro terms early on and even though
the euro and yen have been strong this past year, gold in euro, yen or dollar
terms has risen about the same compared to where it started in 1999.
This is important because this is the basis for a sustained rise in gold.
Gold is the ultimate currency and we believe it's just a matter of time before
gold clearly breaks to new highs in all of the major currencies. When that
happens, gold will begin attracting a lot of attention internationally, which
will help fuel gold's bull market and drive the price even higher.
Gold's Big Picture
Moving
along, you can see gold since 1967 on Chart 2. Ever since gold's been
trading in the free market, it's formed an important bottom about every eight
years. And each low was followed by a rise lasting 3 to 5 years. The last major
low occurred in February 2001, and gold's been rising since then, breaking
clearly above a 22 year downtrend, which was very bullish.
This rise has proven to have more power than the rises in the 1980s and 1990s,
as it's broken above two previous peaks, which is something gold hasn't done
since the surging 1970s. Granted, the rise to date has risen about the same
distance as the 1985-87 rise. But the power behind the rise, the complex world
we live in today, together with growing demand far surpass even the inflationary
1970s.
This means the current bull market is poised to last longer, closer to the
five year mark and 2006 could be the likely year we see a peak similar to the
peak in 1974. Then a decline could occur, like the one in 1976, in say 2008-09,
which would coincide with the eight year cyclical bottom pattern. And after
that, a renewed super bull market could take place.
Silver Better than Gold
Silver has the characteristic of being a sleeper, but when it wakes up, it
quickly makes up for lost time. This has again proven to be the case.
Silver
has been quietly bottoming since 2001. It popped up last November, gaining
34% in about two months. Chart 3A shows silver, as well as silver compared
to gold below since 1982. Silver's been moving in a gradually rising upchannel
since 1990, breaking fanlines along the way. Fanline 3 was broken in recent
months as silver shot up to near the top of the channel. This is very bullish
action...
More impressive, silver is now outperforming gold for the first time since
1997, as the ratio surged above its moving average (see Chart 3B). This
is important because the ratio has now confirmed a massive upchannel since
1987. This tell us silver is poised to outperform gold this year and the percentage
gains will likely be greater in silver. Once the ratio rises into the "silver
surge zone," silver could explode upward since it would also be breaking out
of a bigger trend.
Platinum & Palladium: Changing places
Platinum and palladium have been moving in opposite directions for the last
three years, but that's no longer the case.
Palladium is now turning bullish for the first time since 2001 (see Chart
4A). Its leading (long-term) indicator is also bottoming in an extreme
low area, last seen in 1982 (see Chart 4B). This strongly suggests
palladium is at a major bottom, which precedes strong price rises. The bottom
line is, palladium is a unique "screaming buy" opportunity. It'll now stay
bullish above $210 and it could rise to its first target level at the $300
to $400 level.
Palladium is very rare and industrial demand is expected to increase, especially
considering the extreme price difference compared to platinum. Palladium was
nearly double the price of platinum in 2000 while it's only about one fourth
of platinum's price today.
What To Do
We recommend buying all of these metals, as well as gold and silver shares.
So far, the downward corrections in these markets have been mild and they're
again showing renewed strength, or at least holding firm, which is a good sign.
The U.S. dollar is hitting new lows and this alone should continue to give
these markets a boost.
Plus, the industrialization of China is having an enormous impact on gold,
oil and many commodities. We believe this mega global trend will continue
and it'll keep upward pressure on these markets.
As the charts show, these are major trends currently underway and it looks
like they have much further to go on the upside. So stay with your positions
and enjoy the ride for as long as it lasts.
|