It’s Too Soon to Trust Bullion’s Encouraging Bounce

Gold and Silver  have caught a nice bounce from last weeks lows – up 7.8% and 14.9% respectively — but we’d suggest postponing the celebration until the rally has had a week or two to develop legs, assuming it does.  Although our initial reaction was that the correction would be over quickly, there are some reasons to be very cautious nonetheless. For one, the U.S. dollar is showing signs of life, a development that could put pressure on bullion prices if it continues. And for two, because a misguided phalanx of amateurs evidently got trapped in Silver at its recent, fleeting summit, it could take a while for the metal to base for the next big rally.  How misguided were they?  Egregiously, it would appear. Volume in ETFs and call options spiked to record highs, no doubt driven by visions of Silver doubling or tripling in price. It is not the lofty expectations of these star-gazing speculators that we would quibble with, however, but rather their timing. And, bad as it was, long-term investors will simply have to be patient, however long it takes for confidence to return to the precious-metals market. In the meantime, more than a few of those who have ridden out the storm so far will undoubtedly be praying for a good rally so they can lighten up.  In our experience, however, and unfortunately, no force is more powerful in driving stock and commodity prices lower than an effusion of prayer seeking the opposite.

Regarding the Dollar Index (DXY), it has surged 3.4% since last week and need only rally a further 1.6% to turn the daily chart bullish via the creation of an “impulse leg.” This is shown in the chart above.  DXY has generated two such signals in the last 18 months, and although both were later negated we continue to treat each new impulsive move as a prospective bull market a-borning. We’ll want to verify this each and every step of the way, however, especially since we can think of no good reason for a dollar bull market to emerge at this time. That doesn’t mean there are not some strong technical reasons for a strong bear rally to commence, as indeed there are. For one, dollar sentiment is about as negative as we can recall, implying that everyone is on the same side of the trade. And there is also the “euro factor” mentioned here yesterday.  It’s one thing for Geithner, Bernanke and DaBoyz to gin up occasional rallies in the dollar by seizing on Europe’s financial troubles at regular intervals, but one of these days those troubles are going take a fatal turn for the worse when Spain flames out. If and when this occurs, it is not hard to imagine a short squeeze on the dollar that will recoup months’ worth of bear-market declines in mere days.  To get the jump on that move will require close attention to subtle details on the intraday charts. We used them yesterday to project the top of June Gold’s $22 rally within a dime.  If you’d like to learn how to do this trick yourself, joining hundreds of traders who have taken the Hidden Pivot Webinar, click here for further details.  The next is scheduled for May 25-26, and seats are filling up fast.

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  • Chris T. May 10, 2011, 8:23 pm

    Rick, two questions:

    “…when Spain flames out. If and when this occurs…”
    Is the “if” necessary here, is there any doubt?

    “…a short squeeze on the dollar … To get the jump on that move will require close attention to subtle details on the intraday charts.”

    For technical analysis to be possible, this event (flame out) would have to be known to some in the market, or the market would have no predictive value.
    Is that always the case for stuff like that?

    If so, why is that, because these are human issues, not non-anthropogenic things?
    On that note, do real accidents/disasters ever have preceeding market information for a tech. analysis to work? One would think not–tsunami, Three Mile Island. Unlike 9/11 which undoubtedly did have market action in the days before

    • Rick Ackerman May 10, 2011, 10:41 pm

      I made Spain’s demise an ‘if’ proposition because in the editorial world, certitude is a no-no. Regarding the US dollar — and all other trading vehicles — I see those in the supposed know as actually being the unwitting dupes of larger forces that move the markets. You can see these forces develop thrust on the charts, but it is not always easy to figure them out, even when you ‘know’ they are coming.

      From a technical standpoint, I’d be more inclined to believe a dollar short squeeze is truly upon us if the NYBOT Dollar Index were to bottom near a major downside target of mine at 68.36. The rally currently unfolding from 74.72 therefore seems premature, although I’m giving it every possible benefit of the doubt.

      Although I alluded to “everyone” being on the wrong side of the dollar right now, that is an exaggeration. In fact, the best technicians I know have recently turned very bullish on the dollar. I remain skeptical myself, so I’ll simply heed my charts mechanically. That said, the minor, impulsive rallies in the dollar over the last week or so have been less impressive than we might expect if the dollar is indeed about to embark on a major bull run. August 1982 is how great bull markets are supposed to begin.

  • Rich May 10, 2011, 8:09 pm
  • warren May 10, 2011, 5:11 pm

    Banking was conceived in iniquity and born in sin. Bankers own the earth; take it away from them but leave them with the power to create credit; and, with a flick of a pen, they will create enough money to buy it back again. Take this power away from them and all great fortunes like mine will disappear, and they ought to disappear, for this would be a happier and better world to live in. But if you want to be slaves of bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery, then let the bankers control money and control credit…………….. Sir Josiah Stamp…..Director of the Bank of England…..1940

    • roger erickson May 10, 2011, 5:37 pm

      Was ol’ Josiah bumped off as a class traitor?

      However, it’s not that bad. Every new tool invented by mankind goes through a spectrum of mis-uses before being (primarily) used productively.

      Back to the $US index … unless something drastic changes, it will simply follow the oil index. The two are indelibly correlated at present.

  • Chemical May 10, 2011, 3:30 pm

    Yeah? So what do you do when you own gold juniors that you’re expecting good news out of in the coming weeks? Ditch them? Sit tight and be right? What a mindscrew.

  • Radek May 10, 2011, 3:25 pm

    Whew! Glad to see that even you have some reservations regarding the PM uptrend resuming so quickly. I had a hard time jumping on board when you wrote that this correction will be over in a week. I think it will take a bit longer, because:
    1) even amateurs “sell in May and go away”
    2) general summer weakness seasonals will have an effect (finally some warm weather in Ontario!)
    3) crazy run-up over the course of many months generally needs more than a week to correct, regardless of sector
    4) these corrections seem to plummet aggressively like last week, then surge back up for a few days, then drop again a good bit before hitting bottom (market “noise”?), trying to sucker in people too early..

    But I could be wrong, so i’ll be watching closely.

    On another note…
    I just got back from a week’s vacation in Cape Hatteras, NC. A group of us annually rents a sound-front home in one of the towns in Hatteras for a week’s worth of windsurfing and kiteboarding, and eating seafood.
    On a non-windy day we decided to go to the ocean side (a 5-minute walk from the sound side) to hang out on the beach, and we got talking to a local retired couple that owns 2 beach houses there. They bought their second house there this year, after owning one “down the beach” for 20 years. They said houses that were going for $800k there a few years ago can now be purchased for $300k. Amazing!

    Interestingly… the weekly rental rates haven’t plummeted to that degree. And the waters seem to be filled with sailors and kiters, so the demand (at least during spring/fall, when the winds are there) seems to be there.

    On yet another note: we stopped in Norfolk, VA for some shopping, and I “forced” everyone in our van to visit a local gun shop. Boy, was it busy. People buying pistols and assault rifles like candy. Is everyone arming themselves for something, or do people just have no other hobbies than shooting stuff all day? Oh…the people buying the guns…they didn’t seem that well dressed or educated, but that was just my initial observation. Scary.

    • Larry D May 10, 2011, 5:06 pm

      Did you expect to see tuxedos in the gun shop? One wonders what Mr. Spielberg wears when he’s picking up his latest hogleg.

      The lumpen all have to pass the FBI check, so don’t be too alarmed. It was busy because it’s tax refund time, dontcha know.

    • Chris T. May 10, 2011, 7:45 pm

      Why be afraid of the armed local-yokelry?
      The only ones that ought to be scared of them are not your friends.
      And they know they still have a long time before they need to be scared…

    • Radek May 11, 2011, 9:00 pm

      Alright…let me clear this up:
      The people buying the guns looked like drug-dealing gang members who would not hesitate for a second to kill and rob you on the spot.

      Most seemed to be well under 30, baseball caps on sideways, pants well below the standard belt-line, gold chains, etc.. Get the picture now?

  • Aussie Mick May 10, 2011, 3:10 pm

    Talk of a US$ gaining strength is garbage…while ever the American people put up with The Federal Reserve raping their economy..it is impossible. They will MANIPULATE up and down to help make money for their owners, just as they are doing with gold and silver. You are OWNED by the lowest form of life on the planet…The Rockerfellers, The Rothschilds…their companies, trusts and tentacles are sucking the guts out of your families futures. Track every major bank, corporation, political party and Wall St…all the ‘tentacles’ will lead you back to the abovementioned criminals. Don’t worry…it is not favouritism…they are doing the same to almost country in the world. Those countries that reject their “economic” raping…get the “humanitarian” help of the UN and the Nato armies. When they have finished bankrupting the USA…you will have the pleasure of NATO style “humanitarian help”. Don’t worry..Homeland Security and FEMA will look after you…free accommodation has been built. You can’t move in just yet…a lot more financial raping to do …keep putting the rest of your $$$ into stocks/shares/bonds/futures etc…but you better learn how to eat paper..it’s ok if you wet it and use a bit of flavouring…it will be good for nothing else. Aussie Mick

    • Buster May 10, 2011, 5:01 pm

      Don’t forget this is more than a financial organisation we’re looking at here. Dig deep enough and what we seem to unearth is a financial/industrial-military/religious organisation founded on three independant city (tax free) states, all linked by historical contractual ties. The three states are: The City of London, Washington DC & Vatican City.
      This organisation is allowed their power and control due to the support of the G7 countries mainly.
      The aim seems to be total world dominance, with no concern for humanity at all, whatever the nationality.
      Anyone recognising this should withdraw support for their game as a matter of principle. As someone here said, how can we realise the corruption of the Banskers and still leave money in these banks, or put our trust in their paper promises at all. Most people realise that the real reasons for wars are not honorable ones. It’s all about the money, so we shouldn’t be fighting out of some misguided belief that it’s a patriotic duty.Also, their religious ‘departments’ historical record is enough to turn anyone atheist. How many wars have been blessed on both sides by the same religion,- just like the Bankster ‘department’ financed both sides, too. Not to mention the torture and corruption carried out throughout the ages in the name of religion.
      This organisation is responsible for more death & suffering than most of us can imagine.
      Check the history, it stinks!!
      Vote with your feet.

  • HRUSTY May 10, 2011, 11:49 am

    By definition a futures contract is a credible instrument but the garbage they are peddling at the Crimex is pure fiction. They can only rollover contracts. There is not enough metal to go around. So by default the price discovery mechanism it portends to be is also a fiction. The the soon to be defunct US dollar and the underlying financial system has been hijacked by a criminal enterprise.
    “Once we squeeze all we can out of the United States, it can dry up and blow away. “A comment made by Netanyahu, the prime minister of “Israel” to Jonathan Pollard(convicted traitor and spy) upon exiting Pollard’s jail cell.

    • ben May 10, 2011, 7:44 pm

      And you are quoting Netanyahu becuase you were there in the cell when this transpired? Or did you hear the audio of the conversation? I’m sure you can provide the link to it. Or perhaps you are just an imbecile telling lies, or at the very least telling falsehoods.

      Pollard has spent the past 25 years in jail for sharing information on hostile Muslim countries with our ally…or at the least a country that considers America its ally. Meanwhile Russian spies with blood on their hands are sent back to to the motherland within hours of capture. If Pollard was so well connected that Netanyahu would share details with him on the big Jewish conspiracy to destroy America, I’m sure he also would have been well connected enough to get out of jail a couple decades ago.