|
Originally published March 13th, 2008.
About a week ago we called a short-term top in gold and silver, and although
we got one, the subsequent reaction has turned out to be very muted. Meanwhile,
oil has powered relentlessly higher and the dollar has continued to crumble
as the Fed's increasingly desperate and frequent measures to arrest or at least
postpone the gathering financial maelstrom are seen to be impotent.
Since the last update a very important technical pattern has been discovered
first on the silver chart and then on the gold chart, which suggests an early
end to the corrective phase in gold and silver and implies that the advance
in both may be about to accelerate dramatically.
On the 1-year gold chart we can see the trend channel that we had earlier
identified, which is still valid, but in this update a parabolic bowl pattern
has been added. Note that this bowl does not have such a perfect fit as the
spectacular example on the silver chart in the Silver
Market update, to which readers are referred. This bowl has some important
implications. In the first place it suggests that gold is unlikely to correct
back to the lower channel line, instead it should find support at or above
the bowl, and if this is the case it means that there is little or no downside
from here - it could take off again immediately. Secondly, the bowl points
to the uptrend continuing to accelerate, which means that gold should go on
to break out above the upper channel return lines shown on this chart, and
if this happens it will open up the possibility of a spectacular vertical ascent
- which is not far-fetched considering the depth of the impending financial
crisis.
Our tactics are therefore as clear as crystal here. We go long and stay long
whilst the price remains above the bowl boundary. We know that gold is overbought
here, but given the extraordinary circumstances prevailing at this time that
won't stop it powering higher. However, we stand ready to close out and possibly
reverse positions in the event of the bowl support line failing, which could
lead to a plunge.
|