All Market Roundup Bonds, Stocks Dollar, Gold, Silver, Oil,
PM Stocks
by
Clive Maund
CliveMaund.com
Recently
by Clive Maund: Gold
Market Update 09/18/12
Never before have
we seen major indicators in such a conflicting state. Taken in isolation
many important indicators are giving clear signals, but they are in
conflict with one another to the extent that the outlook is a clouded
mess. When such situations arise it usually leads to choppy, treacherous
market conditions until such time as the indicators align in a more
unified manner.
There are
lies, damned lies and statistics, which is why we generally use
charts in preference to the latter, but as you will see as you
read through this report, using charts is not always a piece of
cake either, especially at a time like this. While you will soon
understand what I mean when I say that the indicators are conflicting,
that certainly does not mean that we can’t come to some useful
conclusions about probabilities and how to handle these markets
going forward.
Let’s start
by looking at the 5-year chart for gold. By itself the gold chart
looks bullish. Gold has been in a trading range for 18 months
now, and for most of this period it has been fluctuating between
very clearly defined support at $1500 and very clearly defined
resistance at $1800. What this means is that these support and
resistance levels are VERY IMPORTANT, and a breakout above the
resistance at $1800 or below the resistance at $1500 will signal
the next major move. What about the danger of a false breakout?
– well, there hasn’t been one so far as this range has formed.
The quite strong advance of last August – September looks like
an impulse wave, a move in the direction of the primary trend,
particularly as the subsequent reaction has the attributes of
a Flag, a type of correction.
It is thus
interesting to observe that gold’s COT chart is at its most positive
since last August right before the sizeable rally started,
with the picture improving just last week as Commercials slashed
their short positions.
So far, so
good, right? Now we look at silver. Its 5-year chart is rather
similar to that for gold, with the practical exception that the
resistance at the top of the recent trading range is not so clearly
defined. This chart too looks like it portends an upside breakout
and higher prices.
But if silver
looks set to break out upside and rally soon with gold, then why
were the Commercials piling on the shorts last week so that they
are now getting to a high level again? I have no explanation for
this as the COTs suggest that gold is going to take off higher
and silver break down, a situation which is clearly highly unlikely.
Thus, what we can probably expect to see is more choppy action
near-term until gold and silver COTs are better aligned.
If the outlook
for gold and silver is taken to be positive, then why are Precious
Metals stocks performing so terribly? – they should now be firming
up if a breakout by gold and silver is looming but instead they
have been plumbing new lows. The 5-year chart for the HUI index
looks awful – we had earlier thought that the large Head-and-Shoulders
top in this index was going to abort, but the latest weakness
is increasing the risk that it is valid. If it is valid it has
grave implications for the market as a whole as it targets the
100–150 area, and quite obviously this could only happen in circumstances
of another 2008 style deflationary wash, in which case the now
lofty broad market would turn tail and drop like a rock. In any
event PM stocks have heavy overhanging supply to contend with
in the 500–550 area on the HUI. PM sector holdings should be protected
by either a general stop below 358 on the HUI index, or by hedging
should this level be breached.
The gold
shares bullish % index charts indicates that we are getting into
normal buying territory for gold stocks, but we should remember
that this indicator can actually drop to zero, and it did in 2008,
and if that happened we could see terrible losses even from the
current depressed levels.
This is the
point to look at how the dollar is shaping up and see how it fits
into the mix. The 2-year dollar index chart continues to look
bearish with a sizeable Head-and-Shoulders top looking like it
completing. We now have a Right Shoulder to the pattern that is
almost of equal duration to the Left Shoulder, so breakdown soon
look likely. 78 is the key level to watch – if it breaks below
this, the pattern targets the low 70’s. COTs in recent weeks were
strongly bullish for the dollar and in effect precluded a breakdown.
They are still quite bullish, which means either that this pattern
many abort, or that some more time is needed for the COT structure
to change sufficiently to permit a downtrend to develop. Here’s
a contradiction we have to contend with – if the dollar looks
like it is going to break down from its Head-and-Shoulders top,
as it does, then this is clearly positive for gold and silver
– so why do PM stocks look so sick? Also, if the dollar breaks
down we would expect to see the broad market advance to accelerate
noticeably, breaking it out to clear new all-time highs, probably
leading to a parabolic ramp into the traditional “sell in May
and go away” time. However, if the H&S top in the dollar aborts,
which COTs suggest is very possible, then we may be the top in
the broad market right now and various sentiment indicators
indicate that a top is close at hand.
So how does
the broad market S&P500 index chart look right now? On its 15-year
chart we can see that after climbing a wall of worry for several
years it is now arriving at very strong resistance approaching
and at its 2000 and 2007 highs, and psychology is shifting with
market participants heading in the direction of euphoria. A Triple
Top reversal here would be a highly satisfactory technical development,
although we must bear in mind that in real terms, stock values
are way below what they were in 2000, once we factor in inflation
during the intervening years. Also, regardless of the state of
the economy, money spirited into existence by the Fed could drive
markets considerably higher.
The VIX volatility
index shows that complacency in the markets is at levels not seen
since early 2007, ahead of the major crisis, and since nothing
has been learned from that crisis, which has been simply papered
over with bailouts, created money, credit and derivative expansion
etc, the situation is potentially much more dangerous than that
which existed in 2007–2008 with a housing market bubble having
been trumped by a bond market bubble of immensely greater magnitude.
As the market
has continued to rally Dumb Money has been getting itself worked
up into a lather again, while Smart Money retreats to the shadows,
as the following chart, courtesy of www.sentimentrder.com
shows…
A study undertaken
by www.sentimentrader.com
shows that Investment Managers are at their most bullish since
2006, and for the 1st time ever are actually leveraging their
long positions, and while these are generally intelligent people
as a group they can fall victim to groupthink like anyone else,
so this is viewed as a serious warning that a top is not far away.
Finally,
oil has a good run in recent weeks, but the current intermediate
uptrend is getting long in the tooth, and the chances of a reversal
soon are growing, especially as it is now overbought as it approaches
a resistance level.
The oil COT
chart certainly suggests that we are at a good point for longs
to start taking money off the table, which is alright for us as
we got in at the start of this rally .
If, after
reading this, you feel more confused than before you started,
you have every right to be, but at least you have a clearer idea
why you are confused. The current contradictions are expected
to resolve themselves into a clearer technical picture with passing
time.
Finally we
are starting to see evidence that a breakdown and potentially
violent plunge may be imminent in the US Treasury markets. With
the shameless and relentless abuse heaped upon this market by
the Fed and the US government, it is only surprising that it has
held up as long as it has. Anyone holding these instruments at
this time, which have very little potential for capital appreciation
after their prolonged gains, yield next to nothing and carry huge
risk of heavy capital loss, is intellectually bankrupt and a moron,
although we must recognize that a lot of the buying of Treasuries
is undertaken by those who will not pick up the tab for the loss
personally if they lose value. Of all the sectors to short, this
must be the one.

February
8, 2013
Copyright
© 2013 Clive
Maund
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