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On August 15 of this year I sent out a special bulletin to my subscribers
recommending the purchase of gold stocks. I believed at the time that gold
had bottomed and would rally into the end of the year.
When I bought I had a plan to sell - I either would sell if gold and the stocks
made a climactic exhaustion top or if the stocks began to lag the price of
gold. The latter began to happen this past week. Although gold and the XAU
both went higher on Friday, the fact that the stocks are now lagging gold tells
me that a top is likely being formed.
The chart below shows you the price of the XAU divided by the price of gold.
When it is rising the stocks are outperforming the gold price and when it is
falling the gold price is leading the stocks. As you can see the stocks began
to lead gold in August and started to lag gold last week.
The Relative Strength Relationship Between the XAU and Gold Has Been Consistent
The relative strength of the XAU and gold is in the bottom section of this
chart. Notice that important bull runs in gold began when the stocks asserted
leadership against the metal.
This happened in April of 2003 and in August of 2004. It is one of the reasons
I got bullish again in gold this past August.
You also should notice that the bull runs came to an end when this leadership
position switched. This happened in December of 2003 right before gold stocks
corrected and is starting to happen again.
I think we are likely to see some sort of correction in gold stocks before
we see them make new highs and begin another big run. A drop of 10-15% from
here in the XAU would not surprise me.
There is a precedent for this. In November and December of 2002 we saw the
gold market put on the same type of rally it has now: Gold made a new 52-week
high and broke out while the gold indexes rallied but failed to break their
52-week highs.
This happened back then and is happening now. If the pattern continues, then
gold and mining stocks will correct into January and next year the XAU and
HUI will recover and go to new highs before gold does. Such a scenario would
lead to a monster gold rally, larger than we have seen so far in this gold
bull market.
We're still in a secular bull market in gold. Phase II is only beginning.
But all bull markets have temporarily dips and pullbacks. Remember the wall
of worry. A correction will build it back up again and cause many gold bugs
to lose their resolve, but prudent investors must take advantage of any dips.
A correction in the near future will take a lot of people by surprise, but
it will likely prove to be the final dip before the next big leg up in the
XAU.
To find out what gold stocks Mike Swanson holds and plans on buying subscribe
to his free Weekly Gold Report at http://wallstreetwindow.com/weeklygold.htm.
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Michael Swanson,
WallStreetWindow.com
Disclaimer: Michael Swanson is the President of USA Capital, Inc.,
which provides management, support, and research for institutional investors,
hedge funds, and mutual funds. The ChartWizard is also an employee of USA,
Capital, Inc. Both Swanson and employees and associates of USA Capital, Inc.
may have a position in securities which they mention on WallStreetWindow or
any of its services. In such cases, appropriate disclosure is made. Under no
circumstances should the information received from WallStreetWindow represent
a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security. WallStreetWindow contains
the opinions of Swanson and the ChartWizard and is provided for informational
purposes only. Neither Swanson, the ChartWizard, nor TimingWallstreet, Inc.,
which owns WallStreetWindow, provide individual investment advice and will
not advise you personally concerning the nature, potential, value, or of any
particular stock or investment strategy. To the extent that any of the information
contained on WallSteetWindow may be deemed investment advice, such information
is impersonal and not tailored to the investment needs of any specific person.
Past results of WallStreetWindow, the ChartWizard, or Michael Swanson are not
necessarily indicative of future performance.
WallStreetWindow does not represent the accuracy nor does it warranty the
accuracy, completeness or timeliness of the statements made on its web site
or in its email alerts. The information provided should therefore be used as
a basis for continued, independent research into a security referenced on WallStreetWindow
so that the Subscriber forms his or her own opinion regarding any investment
in a security mentioned by WallStreetWindow. The Subscriber therefore agrees
that he or she alone bears complete responsibility for their own investment
research and decisions. We are not and do not represent ourselves to be a registered
investment adviser or advisory firm or company. You should consult a qualified
financial advisor or stock broker before making any investment decision and
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Consequently, the Subscriber understands and agrees that by using any of the
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Inc. shall not be liable to anyone for any loss, injury or damage resulting
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Copyright © 2004-2008 Michael Swanson
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