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As an investor, what matters to you more than anything, what is of paramount
importance, is determining whether what you have invested in, or are thinking
of investing in, is going to go up, down or sideways. If you are long you want
the market to go up, if you are short you want it to go down, and if you have
written both Call and Put options, you want it to move sideways. All consideration
of fundamentals is subordinate to this Prime Objective.
Gold, Silver and Precious Metals stocks have been trading sideways for about
9 months now, following their strong advance to the April - May peak of last
year, with many smaller stocks having slithered down a "slope of hope" to plumb
low levels in the recent past. Understandably, many investors in the sector
are growing increasingly fed up and frustrated with this situation, especially
as every time the sector looks set to break higher it has suffered a smackdown.
The purpose of this essay is to assess the current situation and to discuss
effective tactics for dealing with it.
We are going to look at a broad range of charts in this article, because the
Precious Metals sector does not exist in a vacuum - its fortunes are linked
to the performance of other commodities, such as base metals and oil, and to
trends in financial instruments such as T-bills and T-bonds, and of course
to the mighty US dollar.

We will start by looking at the 1-year chart for Gold, which enables us to
examine the entire sideways pattern from the peak last May in detail, and to
put recent action into context. On this chart we can see how early this year
gold broke down from a small Head-and-Shoulders top that started to develop
from early November, an event that was predicted on www.clivemaund.com as
the price went into the Right Shoulder of the pattern, only to abort the pattern
last Friday by breaking back strongly above the neckline, which we sidestepped
by closing out short positions on Thursday. Due to this action gold finds itself
once more rangebound between support at and above $600 and resistance at $650
- $655. So how does this recent action fit within the larger picture going
back many months? Some other writers have advanced the notion that what is
known as a "High Level Head-and-Shoulders Bottom" may have formed between the
middle of last July and the present, and this has been tentatively marked on
the chart. This pattern is so called because, unlike a normal Head-and-Shoulders
bottom, it is not preceded by a drop of any significance. This theory is credible
because the drop this month stopped EXACTLY at the low of last July so that
the low of the Left Shoulder is at exactly the same level as the low of the
Right Shoulder. The Head-and-Shoulders is a variant of a rounding turn and
is thus related to formations such as Cups and Saucers. The curved line on
our chart shows the gradual change of trend from down to up, and reveals that
this Head-and-Shoulders can be said to have followed the decline from the peak
last May, despite the intervening crevasse, although this does not mean that
it cannot break down from here.

Having considered recent action on the 1-year chart, we will now look at a
6-year chart that shows the bullmarket in gold from its inception, and as we
will see this chart provides a completely different perspective from the 1-year
chart. An arithmetic scale has been selected for this chart for two reasons;
one is that we get a better trendline fit - the 2004 low touches the trendline
on the arithmetic chart, but doesn't on the log chart, and the second reason
is that the arithmetic chart makes it clearer that the high of last May was
a "blow off" top that called for a lengthy period of consolidation at the least,
which we have had, and may mean we are in for a deeper reaction back towards
the trendline, which would make the entire period from the May high through
to the present one long top area. Note that on this long-term gold chart we
have switched from our customary 200-day moving average to a 300-day, for as
we can see, this provides a better fit. The price has rallied from the vicinity
of the 300-day moving average throughout the bull market, and therefore the
current position of gold just above this average does put it in position to
break higher, going on the basis of this factor alone.
So, on the one hand, we have gold completing what looks like a High Level
Head-and-Shoulders Bottom, with the price in a favorable position relative
to its 300-day moving average, from which it has rallied throughout its bull
market, and on the other hand it is still way above its long-term uptrend line
on the long-term chart, and this is the case whether you use an arithmetic
or log scaling, so that the pattern that has formed since the blowoff top last
May could be a large top area projecting the price back to the trendline, which
would involve a huge drop back to the $480 - $500 area. In attempting to arrive
at a conclusion about which way it is likely to break, there is fortunately
additional evidence available first from the Silver chart and then from the
commodity sector as a whole that can help throw light on the situation.

Starting with silver, we will look at a long-term arithmetic 6-year chart,
to enable direct comparison with gold. As we can see, Silver looks toppy on
this chart, but is in with a chance as long as it can hold above the upper
blue trendline drawn on the chart. It is of course a short with a close overhead
stop on any approach to the highs of last May just above $15, where there is
strong resistance, and any open long positions should be exited in the event
that the upper blue trendline, currently approaching $12, fails. If that happens,
a plunge back towards the lower support zone is to be expected. It has to be
said that the picture in silver does not auger well for gold. We will be having
a look at the chart for Silver Wheaton (SLW) on www.clivemaund.com which
was recommended on the site early in 2005 at $3.50 and has risen almost 100-fold
in just over 3-years, to see what it portends for silver itself.
Gold and silver are not, of course, as mentioned above, insulated from what
is going on in the rest of the financial markets. The major trends in base
metals and oil in particular are loosely related to the major trends in Precious
Metals.
Some readers may recall that the writer was recently the subject of a thinly
veiled personal attack in an article posted on public websites. This attacker
boldly proclaimed that readers should do what the pros do and buy when something
drops back to its rising 200-day moving average, as if he had discovered the
Holy Grail. Let's just see where this would have got you with Copper by looking
at its 6-year chart.

That's right, precisely nowhere. The irony is that we did "do as the pros
do" by buying Copper on its first contact with its 200-day moving average,
when it was just above 300, but quickly exited when our stop at 290 was triggered
just before the collapse. A calculated risk and that time it didn't work and
we escaped with a small loss. The chief reason for looking at Cooper is to
weigh up how its movements may influence Precious Metals prices going forward.
Certainly it does not look like Gold and Silver are going to get much support
from Copper in the near future, for Copper looks like it is on its way to test
support at its long-term trendline. If it can hold that and stabilize and then
turn up again, it will then perhaps be a supporting influence for the Precious
Metals. Over the short-term, however, if it should rally back into the resistance
in the 290 - 300 zone it will be regarded as a candidate for shorting.

The rapidly deteriorating pattern in oil was highlighted in the Oil Market
update of 2nd January on www.clivemaund.com and
immediately afterwards the long-term uptrend in oil that had been in force
for 5 years failed, and this was followed by failure of important support at
and above $54. Oil must now be classified as a bear market at least it until
it can stabilize above important support and form a base for renewed advance.
In the absence of some dramatic development such as an attack on Iran, it will
likely head back towards strong support in the $40 area. In the short-term
it is oversold and likely to rally, which would be viewed as an opportunity
to short it.
One fundamental analyst whose opinion I normally respect opined that the drop
in the price of base metals such as Copper and in the price of oil would be
beneficial to the prices of Precious Metals stocks, because these materials
are a key cost factor in the construction of mines. When I had recovered sufficiently
from laughing I pointed out that if this were the case then why were Precious
Metals stocks and base metals and oil all rising in tandem over the past 5
years and during the great commodities bull market of the 70's? As an example
of clutching at straws this takes some beating.
We will end with another look at the long-term dollar chart showing the wave
count and projected target for a countertrend rally that we looked at a week
or two ago. In the event that T-bonds rally to the 49.50 - 49.80 area, and
then back off to form a Right Shoulder, probably involving a retreat to the
47 - 47.50 area, then the dollar can be expected to back off towards the 82
area, perhaps lower, which would likely be the occasion for a "sucker rally" in
commodities generally, and Precious Metals in particular.

In conclusion, gold and silver will retain the potential to break out upside
to begin new uptrends whilst the support for gold at $600 remains unbroken
and silver remains above the upsloping trendline in force from its June low,
and the breakouts will be signaled by gold rising above $660 and silver above
$15.20. As many readers will no doubt be aware, there have been a lot of false
breakouts over the past year thought to be due to market manipulators deliberately
targeting chart followers. This means that a greater margin of error must be
allowed to avoid being the victim of engineered whipsaw moves such as we saw
in September when the HUI index staged a false breakout at the opening of the
Las Vegas Gold Conference, before going on to plunge, and again with the false
upside breakout at the very start of this year that was followed by a dramatic
reversal. On the downside, failure of gold's support at $600 and Silver's up
sloping trendline will open up the risk of a plunge back to their respective
long-term uptrend support lines, which could be dramatic. As things stand,
this is considered the more likely scenario, due to the deterioration in commodities
as a whole, and the strengthening of the US dollar, which is thought likely
to confound its many bears by rising off of its long-term key support level.
Those wishing to take advantage of such a plunge are referred back to the subscriber
only article that appeared on 6th January on www.clivemaund.com -- Profiting
from the Collapse - 10 stocks to sell short.
Before closing, I wish to make one thing absolutely clear to readers. As the
proprietor of a website specializing in trading the Oil and Precious Metals
sectors, it should be obvious that I derive no benefit from a bear market in
these commodities, it is much better for my business when they are rising.
However, I do not believe this consideration should color my thinking or prognostications
on these markets, and I strive to remain objective - if I think they are going
down I say so. Over the past several weeks I have come under attack from some
Gold and Silver "cheerleaders" for "failing to keep my end up". What these
people don't realize is that you can't talk these markets up - they are going
to do what they are going to do, regardless of who likes it or doesn't. You
might be able to stir something up for a short while by hyping it, but it always
ends up returning to where it would have been without the hype. I therefore
intend to continue working to serve my readers' best interests by telling it
like I see it.
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