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Originally published November 7th, 2009.
Whereas gold has forged ahead to new highs in recent weeks, silver has got
bogged down working off overhanging supply, which is the price it is paying
for having dropped like a rock last year, so that even though it has risen
proportionally more than gold this year, it had so much ground to make up that
it still hasn't broken out to new highs.
The long-term chart for silver looks chaotic compared to that for gold, not
helped by the violent plunge last year which saw it drop from a high near $21
to a mere $8.50 at the low. It has spent this year to date slowly making up
the lost ground which has involved it laboriously working its way through the
overhanging supply set up by the plunge. The good news is that with the recent
break above more concentrated resistance in the $16 area, there is now not
that much more resistance to go before it breaks into the clear by advancing
above last year's highs, and with gold looking set to continue to make strong
gains, a breakout to new highs is probably not very far off.

On the 3-year chart we can see the action last year and this year in more
detail. This chart makes clear why silver has gotten bogged down in recent
weeks and made no progress - it is because it has run into the price zone where
a congestion pattern formed during the first half of last year, and buyers
from that time who were seriously rattled by the crash are taking their long
awaited chance to "get out even". Once their selling is absorbed - which shouldn't
take much longer in a situation of continued gold strength - silver will be
free to advance and challenge its highs. It was an achievement for silver to
climb above and stay above the important resistance in the $16 area, which
should now support the price near-term.

On the 6-month chart the pattern that has formed in silver since early September
certainly looks like a Head-and-Shoulders top in the making, with the price
now marking out the Right Shoulder high, but it is not thought to be a true
one and is expected to be aborted by an upside breakout, although we may first
see a reaction back to the support at $16. The latest silver COT chart shows
a significant reduction in both Commercial short positions and Large Spec long
positions, which is bullish, especially as this occurred after Tuesday's strong
gains. A paradox of Technical Analysis is that while the declining oscillators
as this pattern has formed are indicative of dwindling momentum that can lead
to a breakdown, at the same time they show an unwinding of the earlier overbought
condition that renews upside potential. Certainly a break below the support
in the $16 area would be viewed as a short-term sell signal, although this
is not considered to be likely at this point.

As with gold it is worth taking a look at the silver in euros chart, to see
if we can glean any useful hints as to what exactly is going on. The long-term
chart for silver in euros is most interesting as it is more clear than the
normal dollar chart and removes some of the ambiguity of that chart. The reason
for this is that there is a clear and definite zone of strong resistance on
the euro chart which has turned the price back no less than five times since
early 2006, although it did briefly break through it early in 2008, and silver
is struggling to overcome this resistance right now. This resistance level
is of such importance that once silver does succeed in breaking above it, it
should have little trouble breaking above the lesser resistance at the early
2008 high after which it will be free to advance unfettered by overhanging
supply. We should therefore watch this level on the silver in euros chart in
coming weeks as the trigger for an acceleration in the rate of advance, a development
that is considered to be highly likely given the very positive outlook for
gold and the recent high volume breakouts by various silver juniors.

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