"Despite seasonality beginning to work against gold and silver, there is
no bearishness or call to short here. Copper could be set to break out of
a multi-year consolidation." ~ Precious Points: Bull Markets in Metals,
February 16, 2008
It would be easy to give the most unabashedly bullish picture for metals week
after week. The temptation to do so is very real given that I've been a believer
in the metals story since before the subprime meltdown, before the faintest
whisper of a possible crisis in exotic credit-based derivatives began appearing
on the web (but nowhere in the mainstream commercial media). But this week,
though it seems a stall in the rally may be ahead if the Fed continues to jawbone
the issue of inflation, I am compelled to revise my charts in a decidedly bullish
fashion.
Any expectations of a correction in metals have been given in the these updates
in the context of a larger bull market and it was in this spirit that recent
updates have put the burden of proof on the bulls, or on the metals themselves,
to prove the wildly bullish counts some might already have taken as a foregone
conclusion. And, as you probably know, the metals took up that challenge this
week.

Silver has been mentioned several times in this update as the most likely
to indicate the future momentum in the monetary precious metals. Given a specific
target to break, silver blasted through this week, demolishing counts calling
for a correction to $10 and reaffirming a very bullish long term case, looming
RSI resistance notwithstanding.
Inflation took center stage this week and debate circled around whether rises
in commodity prices were a reflection of inflation or global growth. While
this is somewhat of a false choice since both forces are likely at work, is
difficult to overstate the effect of an average M2 money supply increase of
$35 billion per week over the last month. In fact, this is precisely why metals
can accelerate so rapidly in the deflationary environment of credit de-leveraging.
The question of how fast the Fed can remove it's accommodation also recently
came into mainstream consideration, something first mentioned weeks ago in
this update, where it was considered unlikely the Fed will be able to raise
rate very quickly any time soon. Isn't rising interest rates what lit the dry
wood of unregulated lending and mortgage-backed debt in the first place?
And, as has been mentioned in this update over and over, the Fed isn't watching
CPI right now, they're watching TIPS and other credit spreads, and in those
terms, inflation expectations are, in fact, reasonably well anchored - at least
enough to keep the Fed cutting rates one more time at its next meeting. Of
course price inflation is a symptom of monetary inflation, and monetary inflation
is not just the swelling of the monetary base. Once the credit crisis begins
to alleviate and banks lend money, that is create money through fractional
reserve lending, the money supply will increase again by leaps and bounds… bringing
on the real inflation and the serious new highs in metals!

The two scenarios in the gold chart above reflect the strong bullish structure
of this market. The more bearish of the counts envisions a c wave decline into
the $800 to 850 area before (not necessarily in the time frame depicted) before
the real inflation picks up and carries gold well beyond $1000. But the more
immediately bullish will see a triangle breakout which could already be the
start of the thrust to $1000. If this is the case, a moderate seasonal consolidation
is still likely before year end.
Wherever there is an asset bubble there was always monetary inflation first
- it is the bubble inside all bubbles. But if there are commodities reflecting
a strong global economy right now it would probably be the base metals. Copper,
as mentioned last week has just broken from a multi-year consolidation and
is likely to soon retest its recent highs. If RSI is an indication, this one
still has quite a distance to go before reaching oversold levels. For daily
updates, proprietary indicators and much more, visit www.tradingthecharts.com.
