There can easily still be a higher high before this move is done. Silver could
also easily see an extension of this move, probably as high as $14.20... if
investor sentiment and underlying economic conditions continue to drive money
toward inflation safe havens. Caution requires we not ignore ... the certainty
of increased housing defaults, the ongoing uncertainty of toxic asset ownership,
the (un)health of the American consumer as assessed based on outstanding credit
instead of retail sales, and now the pessimism of the Fed. Blowoffs end ugly
for everyone except those who are forearmed with the knowledge they are taking
short term positions and choose their trade vehicles appropriately. ~ Precious
Points: Is This the Big One, September 23, 2007
As anticipated by last week's update, precious metals flexed their muscle
again this week even as economic data came in mixed and a Fed president tried
to put the genie back in the bottle by saying additional rate cuts are not
guaranteed. Though for months this space has lauded the policy of the Bernanke
Fed and the likelihood that it would preside over record high metals prices,
it's important to remember the 50 basis point cut in the overnight target rate
simply reset the 100 basis point penalty for discount window borrowing and
doesn't represent a commitment to further accommodation - though it's fair
to say the outlook would have been downright pessimistic without it. That the
heralded repo injections last Thursday didn't even total the amount maturing
that day may appear to signal that the Fed is trying to scale back from its
liquidity pumping, but for the week total sloshing funds increased by about
$10 billion. So, with money supply in fact expanding at a rapid pace, we're
now approaching the moment of truth when we'll finally learn whether the economy
rebounds in the fourth quarter or if Bernanke will have to cut again.
In the meantime, new highs appeared in gold again last week as the European
Central Bank is expected it would stay on hold at their October 4 meeting and
not follow the Fed down the path of rate cuts... yet. Of course, this propelled
the dollar index to all time lows, as the Euro whooshed to record highs, with
gold also a primary beneficiary. And without giving away the target for this
move, available only to TTC
members, it's clear this now parabolic move in precious metals can have
further upside next week. With the RSI now reaching overbought levels, though,
it would irresponsible to dispense with the caution preached here for the last
few weeks as bullish investors looking for sustainable gains would be better
served with either a stratospheric leap to almost $800 in the short term, or
else some consolidation and base-building.

Silver finally had all the right moves this week, successfully retesting the
5-day simple moving average early in the week and vibrating around it before
breaking higher to end close to psychological resistance at $14.

The weekly chart looks even more optimistic for silver, with an RSI still
not reaching overbought levels and a positive crossover in the 5- and 50-week
moving averages now looking inevitable. Last week's target at $14.20 is still
operative and, now that gold has convincingly taken out its May 2006 highs,
silver could be looking to do the same - meaning a potential move over $15
in the front month futures contract that would be powerfully bullish for all
precious metals if it occurs.

The biggest threat to metals right now is still the May 2006 highs and the
perception that we could still be in a corrective pattern from those levels.
If so, the summer's lows in gold would have to be taken out, though probably
not by much given the strength of the underlying fundamentals and the beginning
of positive seasonality. A move through $15 in silver could be the nail in
the coffin of that analysis, but it would be unwise to ignore it without confirmation.
Either way, precious metals themselves are approaching a moment of truth.
Metals were able to move higher despite tame inflation readings last week
on the back of a sinking dollar. But even members of the dollar-going-to-zero
camp probably don't expect complete annihilation of the greenback to occur
this week, this month, or even this year. And now that the market may have
priced in a further domestic rate cut while the ECB holds steady, any change
in this perception (not to mention technical factors) could have the Euro topping
and the dollar finding support. In fact, Deutsche Bank added its name this
week to the growing list of firms expecting cuts from the ECB in 2008 as signs
of subprime contagion continue to appear in Europe and London. And, if the
dollar rallies on Euro weakness as global money supply continues to swell,
this only further supports the idea that any selloff in metals will still retain
historically high prices with the next sustainable bull leg in metals still
around the corner, only after a bit more weakness first.
There should now be little if any doubt the Bernanke Fed will cut if economic
or financial conditions deteriorate. Though spending and income data bought
a little more time and again staved off the notion that the American consumer
is completely spent, at least for now, the smart money still seems to think
the wolf may be at the door. If the Fed is forced to cut October, it's hard
to imagine precious metals getting stuck in any sort of serious decline. But
though it's too soon to predict what horrors may emerge from the Halloween
meeting, betting on another cut now is risky to say the least. Therefore, the
note of caution should continue to play, meaning tight stops for the traders
and only small, tentative purchases for the physical buyers. The market's response
to a busy week for economic data, including ISM figures, auto and truck sales,
and employment reports, and the ECB meeting, will give a clearer picture by
next weekend.