TTC members were told Thursday morning we could be "hours or days" from a
top in gold. The top actually printed two trading days later on Monday, when
front month gold futures moved briefly above 1030 and sold off, producing a
bearish reversal candle on the daily chart below.

It took until the nasty selloff Wednesday for most the rest of the world to
see the situation for what it was. Silver had a silver setup, closing below
$19 Wednesday afternoon. These sharp downward corrections in metals are exactly
why this update never simply assumes the most bullish possible count and exercised
due caution earlier in the year when bearish charts presented themselves.
The key to understanding the selloff is knowing the market, what moved gold
so high in the first place. Certainly it was not natural buyers of physical
metal - these tend to curb their buying as prices enter parabolic phases. Earlier
in March it was reported that in India, where much of the world's retail demand
for gold originates, owners were rushing to sell their gold to take advantage
of the record prices.
No, it was hot money taking shelter against the sinking dollar, which was
getting bashed by the Fed's bailout of the housing and credit markets. Sentiment
had become overly bullish as gold approached and penetrated $1000/oz. Ironically
the reversal comes on a .75 bps cut in the overnight rate, but such are market
tops, and TTC members anticipated this as well. With the Street expecting as
high as a 1.25% cut the actual cut with heightened anti-inflation rhetoric
was actually a bit of a return to sanity from the Federal Reserve. This boosted
the dollar and forced the liquidation of a whole lot of dollar hedges in precious
metals.

Of course spotting a top can be very lucrative, but should only be done with
extreme caution and confirmation from several different methods. One useful
indicator in catching this reversal in gold was the proprietary TTC trend cycle
charts. Notice the 60-min chart above on the left finally rolled on the Tuesday,
catching a fair majority of the decline to date. The faster moving 15-min chart
on the right completed a low to high cycle during the choppy trading, providing
a temporary short-covering or long scalping opportunity for the fastest traders.

From Monday to Wednesday a single futures contract sold short netted $11,890.
That's $118,900 for ten contracts! It's little wonder TTC members find it easy
to make back the $129 monthly fee.

But just in case you were buying gold last week or on Monday, all is not necessarily
lost. Those who bought the top in May 2006, if they had held on, would have
been up over 35% on Monday. The question becomes whether this is the end of
the bull market, or could another similar recovery happen again?
Answer the question for yourself. When the Fed announced last week it would
accept mortgage-back paper as collateral, it essentially threw down the gauntlet
and made a commitment to engage the credit crisis. This game changer alone
was enough to have me limit my target in gold to roughly the $1000 range. Should
the European economy falter relative to the U.S. economy, and especially if
the ECB is compelled to cut interest rates, the intermediate term prospects
of dollar-denominated gold will diminish. But, recent history tells us that
last time the Fed funds rate was this low gold didn't start rising rapidly
until after signs of recession were gone and the waves of inflation started
by the low interest rates began to wash up in global markets. It's unlikely
the ECB will begin anything like the dramatic rate slashing regime of the Fed,
or that the rest of the world will decouple from the U.S. market.

Make no mistake, the current trend now is clearly down as confirmed by violation
of the 5-week sma on Tuesday and it should be expected that rallies will be
used as an opportunity to further liquidate long positions. And because gold
has moved so far so fast a substantial decline will likely ensue. But it would
take a move below $750, that's over 25% from Monday's high, before there's
serious damage to the bull market. It may not look pretty between now and then,
but until conditions change, the 50-week moving average serves as support for
the bull market. If that level holds again, it's quite likely we'll be looking
at this week's top in the same way we recently saw the May 2006 highs.
If you feel the resources at TTC could help make you a better trader, don't
forget that TTC will be closing its doors to new retail members this year.
Institutional traders have become a major part of our membership and we're
looking forward to making them our focus.
TTC is not like other forums, and if you're a retail trader/investor looking
to improve your trading, you've never seen anything like our proprietary targets,
indicators, real-time chat, and open educational discussions. But the only
way to get in is to join before the lockout starts - once the doors close to
retail members, we'll use a waiting list to accept new members from time to
time, perhaps as often as quarterly, but only as often as we're able to accommodate
them. Don't get locked out later, join
now.
Have a profitable and safe week trading, and remember:
"Unbiased Elliott Wave works!"