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July 31, 2009

The monthly gold continuation chart above shows our long-term working view
of price action since the 1980 cyclical peak. Excluding that momentary high
at $873, we consider that the market traded sideways between twin 1980 highs
at $729 and the 1982 low at $295 (range A - A'). The move above $729 in 2007
signaled completion of the long-term range as well as implied an initial upside
target at $1163, distance B - B' (derivation of those levels and our interpretation
of the range were originally discussed in an October 2007 special report).
The exit thrust from the broad range reached a Comex official session high
at $1,017.50 in March 2008. That level from $729 was 66% of the distance of
the broad range A - A'. The aggressive reversal from $1,017.50 accompanied
by a peak in the long-term stochastic momentum indicator implied that further
consolidation or correction would follow before prices moved above $1,017.50.
As you can see, that has happened. Corrective weakness during 2008 reached
an official session low at $696.60 in October. While that level was marginally
below the $729 area of probable support, selling pressure was not sufficient
to force values decidedly back into the 1980 - 2007 range - an event that would
have nullified the 2007 upside exit. The long-term trend in gold thus remains
up with the broad price swings of 2008 and 2009 appearing to be a classic pullback
to and consolidation on top of a previous trading range. When we consider that
the trading range spanned a 27-year period and that the uptrend phase to the
2008 high lasted either 8 years or nine and a half years, the ongoing consolidation
which has thus far lasted only 15 months could be further prolonged. We would
not be surprised at that scenario which could include another probe into the
$729 - 696 support. That would be constructive price action in that it would
both support another lengthy price advance as well as dull much of the bullish
enthusiasm that currently dominates the market. However, factors considered
below raise the prospect for an early end to the 2008 - 2009 consolidation.

In the monthly gold charts above we show 3 Elliott wave interpretations of
the cyclical advance that has developed since the 1999 - 2001 base. Alternate
1 is that of the renowned Elliott wave analyst Alf Field. We do not know
Mr. Field but consider his wave analysis of the gold market since 2001 to be
brilliant and hope that we have depicted it accurately here in this bald illustration.
Using London p.m. fixings instead of Comex daily ranges, Field's view is that
the ongoing major up sequence began at the 2001 low point and that it completed
its first leg (of 5) at the 2008 high - point I. While he may
be correct in his analysis, we have at least two objections to it that question
its validity: First is that Field identifies the 2001 low (point 0)
as the start of his upward 5-wave count instead of the 1999 low. The February
2001 low area featured daily range and daily London spot fixing prices that
were higher than those that occurred during the July-August 1999 low area (points
0 on the inset charts Alternate 2 & 3). Second, not clearly visible
on the above Alternate charts but which we will show in detail later, the deep
selloff from the 2008 high to below $700 appears to be an overlapping 5-swing
sequence. In our experience similar structured moves are either X-waves or
triangles. In this instance an X-wave immediately after an all-time high does
not make sense. Neither does a triangle formation since wave theory does not
accommodate a triangle in the wave II position. Therefore, while we consider
Mr. Field's interpretation unique we think that another interpretation would
be more coherent.
Inset chart Alternate 2 above shows our October 2008 attempt at reconciling
the 5-swing decline from the March 2008 high with preceding waves. Our conclusion
in this interpretation was that an annotated 5-wave advance started at point
0, a 1999 low at $252.50, and terminated in May 2006 (point I at
$728). Trading following that high featured an A-wave decline,
a B-wave advance to the 2008 high and then the 5-swing C-wave
decline to $696.60 (point II). The entire pattern from point
I to II is a 3-3-5 sequence that wave theorists would identify as a "flat",
specifically an "irregular failure", in which the B-wave tops above the high
point of the preceding 5-wave advance and the C-wave tops above the low point
of the A-wave. We consider that interpretation to be appealing for 2 reasons.
First it accounts for the overlapping 5-swing decline of 2008. Second, an "irregular
failure" is generally a powerful corrective pattern that often supports uptrend
acceleration (which could be typical of a major wave III that
could occur above $1,017.50). This may be a valid scenario but we want to consider
yet another, Alternate 3, shown on the above chart.
As in inset chart Alternate 2, inset Alternate 3 features the
1999 low at point 0 as being the inception of the current up
sequence. Here the 1999 - 2001 rally and retracement comprise Waves 1 & 2 (circled)
of a larger sequence that has yet to top. Following the 2001 low at point
2, uptrend development traced out a 5-swing sequence, annotated, to
form Wave 3 (circled) that topped at $1,017.50 in March 2008.
Ongoing large swing volatility since then represents a probable Wave
4 that is not yet complete. Prospects for Wave 4 are considered in
the weekly charts immediately below and in a concluding long-term historic
pattern comparison.

The above series of weekly gold charts considers a non-Elliott wave comparison
of a pattern that appears to be repeating. Pattern repetition is common in
major moves. For example, a cursory examination of the charts from the broad
commodities bull market of the early 1970s will show one that that period was
replete with pattern repetition both within markets and across the intermarket
spectrum. That we are seeing a repetitive pattern in gold's nine year advance
isn't surprising but its occurrence may take some of the guesswork out of what
the market is currently doing or may do in the future -- regardless of what
Elliott wave scenario may be operative. High level consolidations, i.e..,
patterns that followed new price highs, can be seen during 2004 - 2005, 2006
- 2007, and we think presently after the 2008 top. As annotated on the weekly
inset charts, we have used H,L,A and B to identify that pattern. The
sequence features an initial high at H followed by an aggressive
selloff to a low at L. From there a recovery move, A,
brings prices back to the area of H. Following A,
price action degenerates into a choppy lateral consolidation, B,
that forms the springboard for renewed uptrend development.
In the left inset chart on pattern development lasted from April 1, 2004 to
September 2, 2005. Point A scored a new price high and the choppy
consolidation, B, oscillated around H. Pattern
duration was 74 weeks. In the center inset chart the 2006 - 2007 pattern lasted
from May 12, 2006 to September 7, 2007. Here the recovery move A,
fell short of H but underlying trend dynamics were not compromised.
The pattern completed after 69 weeks. Note the "seasonal" time similarity:
April - September and May - September, respectively.
Our third example of this pattern began at the March 2008 high and is ongoing.
At this point we think that swings H, L and A have been completed
while B is underway. The up move to point A was
dynamic, scoring a new all-time high weekly close. That leads us to the conclusion
that the remainder of the pattern should be similar to that of the 2004 - 2005
experience where the initial selloff from point A marked the
lower boundary of the choppy B segment. From that we infer that
the April 2008 weekly lows (dotted horizontal line) just above $866 basis the
nearby Comex futures should be key support to any potential weakness that could
develop during August - September. Beginning on March 17, 2008 the current
pattern is 71 weeks old as we write. For now, the duration of the pattern falls
between that of the previous two patterns. Also worthy of note as regards similarity
is the timeframe in which all 3 patterns have evolved. As noted above, the
first two began in April and May, respectively, and concluded in the first
week of September. The current pattern began in late March so it is, in our
view, in the ballpark as regards the start/conclusion points of the previous
two.
The single most difficult problem that we currently confront in our gold market
analysis is the appearance of the 2008 decline. Our interpretation of that
move as consisting of 5 overlapping swings may be erroneous but if wave structure
is instead a 3-swing structure then we still do not see wave evidence that
the recovery from below $700 to date is the start of a new uptrend phase. Thus
we are currently stuck with the view that market action is corrective. An examination
of historical charts comes up with very few instances where a 5-swing decline
develops after an all-time high. We have come across one instance where pattern
similarity lacks consistency with current gold action in terms of the duration
of the pattern. However, we do see consistent relationships in terms of where
the move is situated (i.e.. a probable fourth wave) and relative retracement vis
a vis the preceding advance.

The weekly charts above present a comparison of silver action in the 1970s
with gold action from 2001 to present. Unfortunately, our price database for
silver only goes back to 1970 so a significant price sequence just before our
chart's inception is missing. In 1968 the U.S.. government stopped redeeming
silver certificates with silver dollars. Anticipating that event, the silver
futures market spiked from the then fixed silver price at $1.293 in 1966 to
the $2.50 area in 1967. Subsequently prices retraced to a 1971 low near $1.29.
The spike and full retracement may have been waves 1 & 2 in
a five wave sequence that ultimately topped above $50. Our top inset chart
above picks up at the 1971 low, shown as 2 circled, and continues through
1977. Our pattern interpretation is that the market made a wave 3 advance
to its 1974 peak. From there an apparent 5-swing decline (annotated a,b,c,d,e) developed.
At the c-swing low, prices bounced off a 50% retracement of wave
3. Renewed weakness saw the e-swing terminate marginally below that
retracement level. From there we interpret a choppy 12-month recovery as an
X-wave that led into a lengthy triangle, shown as another a,b,c,d,e sequence
that terminated wave 4 (circled) in the second half of 1977.
The weekly gold chart interpretation (bottom inset chart above) starts at
the 2001 low which we consider the end of Wave 2 that was nearly
a full retracement of the Wave 1 spike from the 1999 low area.
The 2008 decline following the wave 3 high is annotated a,b,c,d,e.
At the c-swing low, prices bounced off the 38.2% retracement of wave
3 ($726 area) that was coincident with the $728 high made in 2006 (an instance
of old resistance once overcome subsequently acting as support). Renewed weakness
saw the e-swing terminate at $697 marginally below the retracement level.
In our interpretation the rally from point e represents an X-wave that,
at this time we view as being completed. What happens from here on out remains
to be seen but we think that prices will remain range bound between the April
and June extremes at $866 and $991 through most of August.
In summary, price action in the gold market since its March 2008 top just
above $1,000 appears to be an ongoing consolidation. Monthly stochastic indicator
values (14-period) shown on the page 1 chart are rising and not yet to levels
associated with major price highs. Thus the long-term momentum backdrop is
positive. Weekly stochastic values (14-period), not pictured, are in a sideways
pattern but are currently slightly above the neutral 50 level and rising so
the intermediate-term backdrop is neutral. Pattern repetition identified and
discussed above implies the prospects for an impending end to the consolidation.
The ideal time for an upside resolution would be in the first week of September.
The long-term picture presented on page 1 and a long-term pattern comparison
with historical silver action, seen above, suggest that the market may not
be in a hurry to leave the broad range that is determined by the 2008 extremes
at $1,017 and $696. Our view is that trading activity so far this year has
established two key underlying support levels at approximately $904 and $866
basis the nearby Comex futures. If values, currently around $950, trade below
$904 we would expect another test of buyers at $866. On a scale of 1 - 10 we
are at a 6 as regards long exposure and would need to see prices below $904
to go flat. We would be more comfortable about major exposure on the long side
of the market if prices break to the $866 area. Depending on market conditions
in the latter part of August or early September we may revise our overall viewpoint.
Note: Some price points in the inactive front month Comex
futures may have been extrapolated from prices in the first active month and
may reflect either the official exchange session or electronic data that occurs
after normal exchange hours.
Charts constructed with Omega Research SuperCharts and Equis
MetaStock
Data Source: Commodity Systems Inc.
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