"As a technician, I feel that there are few analysts that offer value for me, but you do. Your work on Gold ratios has helped my analysis greatly." --Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT (The Daily Gold) 4.9.10

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Bearish divergence to broad rally: GSR

The gold-silver ratio has barely budged during Relief '11.  The SPX has already pulled a 50% retrace of the late July plunge and yet GSR has merely consolidated well above support.  Weird.

For the duration of the rally, sit quietly and we will control all that you see and hear.

















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USA post debt downgrade: Sit quietly and we will control all that you see and hear

With the DemoPublican debt squabblers now moving on from brinksmanship to pre-election gamesmanhip and S&P punished for its debt rating transgressions, we are back in control and we will now proceed with our regularly scheduled programming.

We know you may have been scared out of the asset markets due to these highly charged events, but we want you back because our industry is after all, selling equity.  Sit right there and make yourself comfortable.  That is right, settle back and relax... we have a nice equity rally for you and a nice flag pole on the M2 money supply as well.  It is all good.  Rest.

There is nothing wrong with your television set. Do not attempt to adjust the picture. We are controlling transmission. If we wish to make it louder, we will bring up the volume. If we wish to make it softer, we will tune it to a whisper. We will control the horizontal. We will control the vertical. We can roll the image, make it flutter. We can change the focus to a soft blur or sharpen it to crystal clarity. For the next hour, sit quietly and we will control all that you see and hear. We repeat: there is nothing wrong with your television set. You are about to participate in a great adventure. You are about to experience the awe and mystery which reaches from the inner mind to... The Outer Limits.

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Emerging Markets (EEM) weekly updated & screed

The EM's are one of NFTRH's favored themes in the biggest of pictures.  But I want nothing to do with them in their current status.  EEM has bounced from logical long term support and has a lot of long term and very dense resistance overhead.

If all remains 'normal' technically, EEM will top out at that thick resistance area that is in essence the neckline of a topping pattern.  For good measure, there is moving average resistance and a bad MACD signal as well.

But so many people (first and foremost one of this chart guy's bestest financial market buddies) say charts don't work, so feel free to go with their view.  After all, the fundamentals told these guys to be bearish copper in 2009, while the charty said 'errr... bull'.  It was all there in black, white and a bunch of squiggles (and divergences... and sentiment... and monetary policy data - like yesterday's money supply graph).

I will just keeping finding low risk PH type situations, future risk EEM type situations, low risk gold miner situations and yes, and even high risk gold situations like last week's very profitable extravaganza.

Sometimes I want to say it's like shooting fish in a barrel (I wouldn't tempt fate like that) but in reality, charting is just a very important tool for measuring probabilities.  Usually the methods I use end up being proved out with respect to the probabilities.  To hell with what the geek haters say.  We move forward with our simple 'if/then' statements and always limit or take on risk as appropriate.

So let's see what EEM ends up saying (and PH too, for that matter).  Sentiment got so over bearish that the rebound could persist and float a good chunk of the remainder of 2011, but technical damage has been done to global stocks, and it is not likely to be undone by one last chance power drive rally born of way too much bearish sentiment and fear.

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http://www.biiwii.com


Parker Hannifin (PH) Updated

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Whack-A-Mole

Market smacked down, money supply pops up.  Stock market pops up, money supply... well, it levels off.  With all the funny munny sloshing around out there it appears to be a game of musical chairs or hide and seek.  When will the intelligent sounding drones in the financial services industry just publicly admit that the system that enriches them is a Keynesian Ponzi Scheme for which the devaluing of paper claims to money is a key component?  i.e.  Savers are systematically and willfully blown to bits at the pleasure of asset owners and those that pitch assets.

"Arrrrr, well, PE ratios have never been more compelling... errr, the American economy is the envy of the world and you should avoid gold and buy large cap stocks... a 60% allocation in equities and a 40% allocation in bonds is prudent... fuck it just buy stocks and don't ask questions, will you?"

They never seem to admit that they are gaming a rigged system.  "I deserve the estate in the Hamptons I tell you.  I have helped many people keep pace with inflation, while keeping risk to just below something bordering on extreme."  Oooh, yeh give the man a $ Million salary.

Yes, good job Sparky.  In fairness, writing a newsletter has shown me that there are more sincere financial advisers out there (and a couple crazy ones... hi Michael! ;-)) than I thought as there are several in the NFTRH subscriber base who just want to be right for their clients as opposed to pitching whatever will best line their pockets like what I am guessing is the majority of FA's.

This is helpful in the effort to avoid a stock crash












What do you know? SPX magically finds its footing













Thus ends a weird little post that comes as I prepare to wind down a really nice day.  Sometimes I tend to kick financial advisers because I believe they are charged with sacred responsibility to protect peoples' futures and too many of them use their clients as food and nothing more.  I am actually in a good mood today and am not sure where this post came from.  I think it was a stream of consciousness after reviewing some money supply data.

This post feels ever more awkward the longer it goes, kind of like when you go to leave a voice mail, start rambling and then 3 minutes later wonder "how the hell am I going to extricate myself from this and exactly just how crazy is the recipient going to think I am, anyway?"

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http://www.biiwii.com


Parker (PH)

I booked 70% on the calls and may look to buy back if PH backs off and fills yesterday's gap.  Meanwhile, I continue to hold the stock.  Target remains loaded.












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http://www.biiwii.com


More From Bloomy: "Gold is now a bubble compared to US Blue Chip stocks"

So says Mirae Asset Securities who I would take a wild guess pitches stocks to its clients. It is hard to tell because a review of the website - if indeed that is them - gives few clues as to what the heck they do.  Kind of a cheesy looking operation if you ask me.

U.S. stocks are cheap and will outperform gold as bullion prices are poised to fall from “absurd” levels, according to Mirae Asset Securities Co.

It looks like the MSM is just throwing up any old garbage for mass consumption, while people who actually know what they are doing - like Jonathan a few posts ago - realize that boy the MSM was quick to launch 'gold bubble' into great wide open as soon as it had a minor - and I do mean minor - blow off.

Gold's 'Absurd' Price Makes Stocks Look Cheap: Chart of Day  (LOL)

Blog readers, you are all adults.  Make your own decisions.  For me, I will consider shorting gold once again for hedging purposes ONLY, if I feel the need.  But nothing I have seen over the last several weeks tells me there is a bubble that is anywhere near bursting.  Gartman or no Gartman... Soros or no Soros... Mirae Asset Securities (LOL) or no Mirae Asset Securities. 

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http://www.biiwii.com


Hilarity from Bloomberg: NXG Takeover Proving Cheapest for Gold

Northgate Takeover Proving Cheapest for Gold

Well, the premise seems at odds with the views of our resident fundamentals guy, but then again this is the MSFN (mainstream financial media).  What I am interested in however, is the other goofy stuff in the article compliments of the kind of people who hate gold because it got out of the barn a decade ago without them.

So on the one hand you have stock pumpers pimping out the Northgate / AuRico combo, and on the other you have this kind of gold hating.  A truly multi-tasking article from Bloomy:

Edit (10:43) Okay, pardon me.  I thought the highlighted quote below said "drops to $300 an ounce" in a Prechterian feat of bear bravado.  I stand corrected and should probably just slow down... breathe... ohhhhmmm.  FWIW, I agree that gold could lose 300/oz. on an intermediate correction, although that is not the most likely scenario.

“Ultimately, people think gold can’t go up forever,” Baltimore-based de los Reyes said in a telephone interview. “As the price goes higher, you’re going to be less willing to price it in because you think it’s in a bubble.” 

While Thomas Caldwell, chief executive officer of Toronto- based Caldwell Securities Ltd., says that bullion may have already peaked, the relative underperformance of gold stocks means that AuRico’s purchase may make sense even if the metal drops by $300 an ounce, he said.

“Bullion itself may have a pullback here and it could be pretty brutal,” Caldwell, whose firm oversees about C$1 billion, said in a telephone interview. “That does not necessarily mean that this is a bad deal. The stocks are not quite as vulnerable, and they have not built in these high prices. That’s why it makes more sense for companies to take over each other.”

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Gold This Morning (a cameo appearance from Jonathan)

Good to have you back - however temporarily - my friend!

Don't get excited, we are not resuming our daily comments, but I cannot resist bashing some choice comments the past couple of days from forecasters, economists, and well-subscribed market sages. Most of whom, by the way, have never met a bottom-line or walked in the gold pit at COMEX. Commodity windbag-in-chief D. Gartman said, "The public is involved in gold, and the cab drivers of the world have bought into it. Now they are being taken out, at high cost." Barron's commentators this weekend spoke of "Gold's Brief Reign" and "The price of gold could fall a third from its recent high." Ok kids, put away your crayons and coloring books and deal with facts. Open interest on the COMEX in the past 12 months has dropped from 606,000 contracts to 505,00 contracts (last Friday) while the price has risen from $1296 to $1796. By the way the nominal value of even 504,000 COMEX 'paper' contracts far exceeds the value of GLD, the ETF that all media pundits flog as the evidence of the parabolic public bubble. So let's question how a 15% drop in open paper interest on the COMEX over the past 12 months has seen the price of gold rise ~38% ....there can only be one answer and that is significant accumulation of physical gold. The same barbaric metal sold by all the clever Central Bankers and Finance Ministers for the past 10+ years. The same clever clowns responsible for credit markets and fiat currencies. Need more reinforcement? Every Friday evening under cover of darkness the CFTC releases Commitments of Traders (COT), as of the prior Tuesday close, on the panoply of commodities. For the past couple of months the gold commercial component which typically is significantly short future contracts (as in why not sell your future production at higher prices to the speculators?) has shown occasional, particularly last week (at all-time highs), short covering and increased long positions. I know, what do these gritty fast-talking miners know compared to our knowledgeable and highly educated media pundits. I rest my case. Ben Graham wrote many years a go that day-to-day the markets are a voting machine, but long-term, they are a weighing machine. Use the scales.

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http://www.biiwii.com


Monday, August 29, 2011

Parker: Another view

The daily chart has all kinds of fun stuff going on.  PH has filled a gap from nearly a year ago, ID'd in NFTRH back when the topping pattern was forming.  It completed a beautiful top, along with the broad markets and then tanked hard in and around a pretty good earnings call.

I recently questioned whether PH was in a bearish Symmetrical Triangle 'continuation' pattern (again, along w/ the broad markets) but today is apparently answering this question.  It's a 'W' (with higher right side and MACD trigger) and it targets 79.  My call options are screaming my common stock is in gear as well.

I get so into the newsletter and the macro economics, that sometimes I forget to trade and just have some fun with the markets.  And if I can do so with a company I know intimately, so much the better.  I really do not trust, respect or sit in awe of most of these doofuses running public corporations.  But at least I have met several Parker management types and can say I like the culture.

So far as the macro work tells me however, this is all counter trend stuff.  I'll likely sell just below target if given such an opportunity.












http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com


And the battle rages on...

...between the calm, level-headed chart guy and the surly, prickly fundamentals guy.

Chart guy buys support, hears funda guy start ranting and decides "okay, I'll take profit".  But the key to the trade was the refusal to chase and buy up other people's profits and wait for the decline to support on NXG (he of the promising Young-Davidson hole in the ground).









http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com


PH - So far, so good

Parker continues to keep its eye on the gap and I continue to play bull for a while with common stock and call options.  Dear NFTRH subscribers:  With reference to the 2 scenarios on the broad markets, today they are choosing the bullish option, reloading the upside retest play.















http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com


AUQ tecnicals

Well, first things first... the technicals on AuRico Gold show an inverted H&S-like bottoming pattern.  A break of the neckline targets 23+.  I hope the fundamentals of the business combination on this thing look as good as they sound, because that's a hell of a target.  Otto?  Calling Otto...

Edit (10:05) Oops, he already weighed in.  Evidently, this market watcher thinks it's the same old Gammon.  He has watched  AuRico all along I believe.  And I agree, AuRico really is a stupid name.  Maybe it is time to harvest the profits and further evaluate later.














http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com


Nice way to start the week...

With a merger in the gold sector. I had brought NXG aboard the portfolio along with several other small to intermediate gold producers as the explorers went into liquidity-driven under performance mode.

I had not gotten around to highlighting NXG, but its Young-Davidson property was the reason for initiating the position; well that and the technicals at the time. As for this AuRico, it is the former Gammon Gold, a company that I did not think highly of but in fairness, have not even looked at in years.

I will have to look into this, but starting the week with a nice 45% premium bump up is pretty cool. Beyond that, it is time to evaluate whether I want the whole entity in my portfolio. Again, maybe the bad stuff was buried with the name 'Gammon Gold'.

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com


NFTRH150 Out Now

NFTRH150 is out now (yesterday morning, just before we lost internet access). 150 presents a lot of charts, including several on individual precious metals stocks. This will be a theme going forward, especially as some very important parameters get sorted out on the macro. The gold stocks are 'bullish', but my definition of bullish includes a downside parameter that most bulls would not like. It's no big shakes, but you know the momo's... so impatient.

Anyway, I am relagated to blogging via an iPad for the moment and not able to upload files until Comcast comes back on line (power just came back). So blogging will be light until this is sorted out.

Dear subscribers, there will likely be no email updates until I can get squared away because Gmail accessed by iPad is not showing the distribution list. Why this is, I have no clue. We do however, have our parameter range on the HUI and also the question as to what that pattern is on the broad markets.

If I absolutely feel the need to, I will hedge PM long positions again. But that is only because I carry a significant amount of them. A sensible general plan for most people is to have cash and await buying opportunities as they present.

 

Friday, August 26, 2011

1-800-GOT-GOLD

The shady 800 number is back in business (hey look, I have no clue if that's a real phone number, it is just a prop for some silly blog posts), though there's a 62% Fib retrace level right there.  Is gold's correction done?  Dunno.  Don't really care either.










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http://www.biiwii.com


Ben in his own words

Excerpts from Bernanke via MarketWatch

On why the recovery has been slow: “ Historically, recessions have typically sowed the seeds of their own recoveries as reduced spending on investment, housing, and consumer durables generates pent-up demand. As the business cycle bottoms out and confidence returns, this pent-up demand, often augmented by the effects of stimulative monetary and fiscal policies, is met through increased production and hiring. Increased production in turn boosts business revenues and household incomes and provides further impetus to business and household spending. Improving income prospects and balance sheets also make households and businesses more creditworthy, and financial institutions become more willing to lend. Normally, these developments create a virtuous circle of rising incomes and profits, more supportive financial and credit conditions, and lower uncertainty, allowing the process of recovery to develop momentum.

These restorative forces are at work today, and they will continue to promote recovery over time. Unfortunately, the recession, besides being extraordinarily severe as well as global in scope, was also unusual in being associated with both a very deep slump in the housing market and a historic financial crisis. These two features of the downturn, individually and in combination, have acted to slow the natural recovery process.”

And increased prices of valuable resources and services due to these 'stimulative' policies.

On what actions the Fed could take: “ In addition to refining our forward guidance, the Federal Reserve has a range of tools that could be used to provide additional monetary stimulus. We discussed the relative merits and costs of such tools at our August meeting. We will continue to consider those and other pertinent issues, including of course economic and financial developments, at our meeting in September, which has been scheduled for two days (the 20th and the 21st) instead of one to allow a fuller discussion. The Committee will continue to assess the economic outlook in light of incoming information and is prepared to employ its tools as appropriate to promote a stronger economic recovery in a context of price stability.”

In other words, you don't get your candy today because the milieu of the moment demands that I hold firm for a while yet.  I mean really, would my 'tools' not work much better if unveiled without these cameras in my face and play by play announcers ready to parse every word for crack addicted market players the world over?

On the long-term potential of the U.S. economy: “This economic healing will take a while, and there may be setbacks along the way. Moreover, we will need to remain alert to risks to the recovery, including financial risks. However, with one possible exception on which I will elaborate in a moment, the healing process should not leave major scars. Notwithstanding the trauma of the crisis and the recession, the U.S. economy remains the largest in the world, with a highly diverse mix of industries and a degree of international competitiveness that, if anything, has improved in recent years. Our economy retains its traditional advantages of a strong market orientation, a robust entrepreneurial culture, and flexible capital and labor markets. And our country remains a technological leader, with many of the world’s leading research universities and the highest spending on research and development of any nation.”

"Economic healing" I like that one.  Err, "economic healing?", wow.  How do you heal from decapitation?  If any 'major scars' develop?  Like the next time corporate titans like AIG try to seek out their intrinsic value of ZERO?  Here the god of finance prepareth us for future policy.  We are America and we do not do major scars so well. The rest is robo drivel heard a million times over.  So why Ben do you not just commit to let the natural cycles do their thing and stop meddling in the economy?  I mean, "the US economy remains the largest in the world, with a highly diverse mix of industries and a degree of..." blah blah blah.  Why not let this highly diverse economy fend for itself.

On the recent debt-ceiling negotiations: “The country would be well served by a better process for making fiscal decisions. The negotiations that took place over the summer disrupted financial markets and probably the economy as well, and similar events in the future could, over time, seriously jeopardize the willingness of investors around the world to hold U.S. financial assets or to make direct investments in jobcreating U.S. businesses. Although details would have to be negotiated, fiscal policymakers could consider developing a more effective process that sets clear and transparent budget goals, together with budget mechanisms to establish the credibility of those goals. Of course, formal budget goals and mechanisms do not replace the need for fiscal policymakers to make the difficult choices that are needed to put the country’s fiscal house in order, which means that public understanding of and support for the goals of fiscal policy are crucial.

Like 'don't spend what you don't have'?  Or failing that, keeping debt to GDP somewhere in the realm of the real world instead of Wonderland, where anything is possible?  Look dad, we appreciate the firm kick in the butt on your last statement, but the public is on balance dumb as a stump and their politicians are not much brighter.  They are gonna play politics as long as the public lets them, right up until election season.  The media is gonna bury people who speak with any level of maturity about what needs to be done, so I have to conclude that your words are hollow.  

To be continued I guess.  When's the next FOMC?

http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com
http://www.biiwii.com



SPX alternate scenario [& screed -ed.]

As we await the Jackson Hole Jawbone, I wonder if maybe I am incorrect about the odds of a significant market rally that would test the H&S breakdown.  SPX 'fulfilled its downside obligation' off of the topping pattern and has looked to be 'W' bottoming for what I thought would be an ill fated test of the breakdown.

But what if this is a Symmetrical Triangle (continuation) pattern in the making?  Best to get this most powerful policy clerk behind us before leaning too heavily one way or the other.  Have you seen the business news channels with their economists and analysts handicapping what Bernanke is likely to say or do?  They treat it like an NFL pre-game segment.

Silly MSM, giving you the play by play on futility while burying Ron Paul, someone I actually learned valuable things from many years ago.  We really are a cartoon you know.  A late stage, hubris addled cartoon.  But then, this is just a simple stock market TA post...

















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http://www.biiwii.com


REITerating bearishness

While I think the markets can rise higher (hopefully to a classic retest of the H&S/topping pattern breakdowns), here is a sub-index that is looking ripe, by weekly chart at least. 

This chart was done for a reader looking to short the REITS about a year ago.  I just found it in the chart list and thought the current situation looked pretty good.

A year ago the resistance did not hold, shorts cursed Bernanke and his funny munny policy and went into hiding.  Now?

I believe IYR is filled with REITS, is it not?  The daily chart of $DJR looks a lot like the IYR.  Does one dare take a position in the 'Widow Maker' (Tim Knight's term for SRS)? 










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http://www.biiwii.com




Wednesday, August 24, 2011

T bonds "drop like a stone" right along w/ gold

US Treasuries being dumped as stocks rally.  Snippet from NFTRH149:

30 yr T bond w/ S&P 500 (shaded area)
Broad Market - US

The S&P 500 (purple area) has more than fulfilled its downside obligation in service to the Head & Shoulders top. Technically, it can bottom for the expected short-term rally back to the (red) neckline (1260 +/-). While last week was disconcerting for the bulls, it may actually be setting the stage for a more sustained (yet ultimately ill-fated) rally toward the neckline.

The other feature of this chart is the 30 year Treasury bond price. The July break above former resistance (now ‘green’ support) was the knee, and everything that has happened since is the jerk. It is similar to what is going on in gold, except that gold carries real, obligation-free monetary value and is launching from a consistent technical uptrend in all currencies, implying that globally speaking, people have been systematically buying the metal. The bond is on an impulsive and panic-fueled rise as players jerk out of stocks and seek reputed safety from the degrading stock market situation.

If and when SPX finds a bottom and rallies, the long bond is going to drop like a stone. But during times of stress the great inflator still has no problem pitching its wares to the masses. All it takes is a good scare in the stock market. UST’s are loaded on the port side of the boat and certainly can correct when things stabilize, at least down to one of the Fib retrace levels noted on the chart.

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We are getting there...

Gold Tumbles Most Since December 2008

“This is just pure panic selling,” Frank McGhee, the head dealer at Integrated Brokerage Services in Chicago, said in a telephone interview. Before today, gold’s 14-day relative strength had been above 70 since Aug. 8, a signal to technical traders that prices are poised to fall. 

Yes Frank, pure panic selling to unwind pure panic buying, which never, repeat never ends well.   Rationalizations (like Bernanke, the world's not ending, the stock market needed to puff up its plumage for a while) don't matter.  The only reason that matters is that gold got too frothy with too many stoopids knee jerking with the momo.

Here's how the sentiment structure looked as of yesterday before the reversal.  Wanna bet it is heading in the other direction now?

Courtesy Sentimentrader.com















Wash, rinse nice and clean and... repeat.

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http://www.biiwii.blogspot.com


Tuesday, August 23, 2011

2 Updates, Silver & Gold

Yesterday [Monday] afternoon an NFTRH email update went out on silver and this morning [Tuesday] in pre-market, one was sent out about gold.  NFTRH is much more than a weekly letter, which I feel stands with any of its competitors.  Aside from timely updates about broad and specific markets, technical setups are highlighted on what I consider quality stock situations, and sometimes informal 'speaking' as letter writer to readers, happens as well.  I am just another lowly market participant, after all.

I notice guys giving stuff away out there in a routine manner and increasingly, I am backing away from that.  But here for you dear blog reader is free stuff, and it's pretty recent, too.  Do with it as you will but understand that this writer cares deeply about getting the markets right and also the financial well being of his subscribers.  He also cares deeply about not getting caught up with scared, greedy and stupid money knee jerking around out of emotion.

I think everyone who reads this blog consistently should be a subscriber but then, I am biased I guess.  I don't tell people what to do but rather, what is brewing in the markets so that they can decide for themselves.  Often these exercises work to my advantage, as writing it all out with the weight of knowing that real people read and depend on these opinions, helps me get my own head in order.  I shorted both silver and gold against 'long and strong' precious metals positions.

NFTRH Update (August 22): Silver at target, etc.

I make no bones about the fact that I am a risk manager first, and risk taker second. Silver has come, for all intents and purposes, to our target at around 44. Therefore, I am cautious on it.

I have not yet decided whether to take some put or short position insurance out on this caution (against PM stocks and metals) and I am not going to send out a 'flash update' type of thing if I do. That is because shorting a favored asset class is a very personal - and dangerous thing. If you too are at all concerned or feel you are too heavily involved from the bull side, there is always the 'profit taking' option.

Silver can certainly go higher, but a target is a target and if the current rebound is just a reactionary rise off of the April crash, the equivalent of SLV 42-44 (see chart attached) could be as good as it gets for a while.

I know that sounds like crazy talk in the midst of a precious metals upside hysteria, but I would rather crazy talk now than be sorry I didn't, later.

Regardless, silver has retraced 62% of the crash and it will be interesting to see what develops now. HUI has kissed our upside parameter near 610, but not crossed above. Gold is accelerating and continuing to scare me. I am benefiting by what is happening there, but I am a bottom feeder and raw momentum makes me nervous. So I look on in dull fascination.

Price-wise, the gold miners are a value compared to the 'price' of the metal. We await information as to whether continued buying opportunity will come at a confirmed HUI 610+ or on some kind of a reaction downside.

Really, all I can definitively state is that silver has come to an upside target we have had open for many weeks now and HUI has come to our upside pivot point.

Regards,

Gary

NFTRH Update (August 23, pre-market): Gold

The talk is everywhere, even as the gold dealer ads on Fox become more densely rotated, the talk of a gold bubble does so as well (including at my own blog http://biiwii.blogspot.com/2011/08/gold-channel-buster-up-now-going.html).

I have marked up the chart from that post and attached it here. It shows gold proxy GLD's channel buster up and a likely path for correction and resumed bullishness. If gold is in a bubble - and I have long felt the precious metals bull market may end in bubble dynamics, with people chasing out of fear as opposed to the raw greed of the tech bubble for example - it, in my opinion, has significantly higher to go before anything resembling terminal activity comes about. In other words, a correction now would be a good and healthy thing - and it would alleviate my nervousness. ;-)

Back to the chart, using silver as a guide, it is likely that gold will take a correction to punish all the new and unhealthy holders; the 'knee jerks'. This could happen in conjunction with the expected stock market relief ('okay, everybody back in the pool!') as markets simply do their thing and wash and rinse the herds. If gold stocks are held within the HUI 610 limit, I would expect them to decline less than gold, if indeed gold is about to start a correction. A separate update or spotlight in NFTRH150 will highlight what I think are the likely scenarios in gold stocks on the basis of most to least probable.

So, back to the attached chart yet again, I would like to see gold correct back toward the channel and one or both of the moving averages (the weekly EMA 20 is currently at 1610, EMA 10 is 1697). If the silver chart is any kind of a reliable template, gold would go much higher after this correction. This would of course inversely fit with a scenario calling for broad market recovery, failure and decline to new lows.

So much is conjecture at this point, but the main point of the update is to illustrate that even if gold is adopting bubble dynamics, it likely has not nearly expressed the upside required for this to be a terminal bubble blow off and a decline now, would make the technical situation more healthy and potentially set up major upside to come.

I can only tell what I see. Things are really only just getting started (bubble dynamics-wise) in my opinion. But the ride will not be [a] smooth one from here on. It is up to individuals to decide how to handle the situation. I have added some silver put exposure after financially soul searching yesterday and deciding to take insurance. Personal insurance may extend to gold as well, via bearish positions on GLD for the short term. I think I will be less weak on such a position as I was a couple weeks ago when the ill fated GLD puts were unwound quickly and unceremoniously.

But as of now, I expect any short term corrective activity to be ultimately healthy for gold. Right along with the herd being too bullish on gold, are the wise guys trying to call a gold bubble. These, I have to believe, are most often people who never were bullish (and never aboard the bull) to begin with and have been waiting for years to be able to call 'BUBBLE!' This is a bullish indicator for continued upside beyond near term correction.

Regards,

Gary

http://www.biiwii.com
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If you feel that a methodical weekly newsletter using unique technical tools and interim email updates such as those above would be helpful in navigating increasingly volatile - and potentially rewarding - financial markets, give the NFTRH service a try.  See current Subscriber testimonials.


1-800-GOT-GOLD

But but but... they told me the world was ending so I called 1-800-GOT-GOLD... I am protected I tell you!  What the eff is going on here??  I GOT gold!  Oh my god, what have I done?

Answer:  You herded... and fell victim to emotion.  That always sucks in the markets.  Okay, time to swing to the other pole.  Bye!

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Gold stock reminder...

Gold miners (lower panel) are not bearish... In fact, the H&S that gold bears have been fantasizing about has been pretty well negated in favor of the 'Handle' consolidation that NFTRH has been tracking all along.  A consolidation is very different from a top, eh?  The top panel gives the fundamental reasoning and if you do not understand that, get on it.  Don't obsess on the nominal price of gold.  It only causes greed and fear to get stoked.

















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Taking Parker for another ride

The chart tells where I think PH is going (at minimum) if the market continues on with Relief '11.















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Is this what happens when you have the nerve to downgrade the USA?

CEO steps down and activist hedgie shareholder seeks split up of S&P.  Nice, this ought to teach the other ratings companies to just shut up, go along and get along.  How dare you assail the great and powerful OZ??  Especially when OZ is getting ready for more wasteful spending and inflation to try to stimulate jobs.

S&P Chief Resigns...

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Relax, it's all part of the process

Gold is obsessed upon far and wide, as the herd consistently becomes emotional at the wrong times.  Current analysis calls for punishment but not termination.

Think about all the bubble callers climbing out of the woodwork right now, telling us about the punishment that will come to those jumping aboard gold.  Well, something tells me most of these geniuses are not, and have not been aboard from the beginning of the bull market.  A correction here would be their finest hour... probably for about as long as it takes the expected stock rally to express itself and fail.

Really, if gold is in a bubble - and I believe that a bubble in fear and anxiety is probably the way this ends one day - the tame rise with impulsive up-blip of late is just a primer.  The herd needs to get flushed and dumped back into stocks in the short term.

Then when the investor base is somewhat purified, we can get back about the business of bubble making, if that is indeed what is happening.  But folks, if we correct $50, $100 or $200 an oz. any time soon, and as expected, that is not the end of a bubble.  Nope, not yet.


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Attn: Subscriber Angela P. (cwgsy.net)!

An important email update was sent out on gold this morning.  It was kicked back by your email provider.  I then forwarded the update from my regular email account.  Hopefully you have received.  On occasion, your provider kicks back NFTRH updates as 'bulk'.  You may want to look into this.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Gold channel buster up, now going parabolic up

Gold proxy GLD is in the top panel, silver proxy SLV is in the bottom one.  A tale of two parabolas.  Mark at IKN informs readers this week that yes, gold is in a bubble (I agree) and no, he does not know where it will end (me neither).

If silver is any guide, gold can take a hit at any time now (remember the sentiment chart shown last week?) but it is not likely to be terminal.  Yet, being a bottom feeder, I am uncomfortable with upside turbo momentum, but I will try to deal with it. ;-)

Actually, inflation adjusted targets for gold remain well higher in the mid 2000's.  But anyone in their right mind is not buying bullion today with all the other knee jerks and thinking they are setting themselves up for grand profits in some kind of play.  Anyone chasing this thing here is setting up for heartbreak if they are falling victim to the shear momo that is in effect.

But again, as to the comparison with silver, gold looks to have only just begun what promises to be an exiting ride filled with jaw dropping ups and neck snapping downs.  To think, NFTRH had been managing a nice comfy journey through the nice comfy up channel until a weekly MACD signal (not shown on this chart) we had been watching triggered the hysterics currently in play.

It was another of those 'if/then' statements as in "if gold does not correct at the upper line of the channel... then the 1.5 year long MACD 'platform' will have proven to be a launch pad to a channel buster up and much higher levels."

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HUI... tic tock

610 is errr, kind of important.  This is one of NFTRH's parameters and while I will not play swami and predict what it will do here, I'll simply use the 'if/then' statements I always use.  If HUI breaks above 610 and holds, then... and if HUI gets knocked down here, then...

It's the 'thens' that are important, because they are the actions (or non-actions) taken based on ongoing research and game planning.

What I do know is that there is a compelling and multifaceted case in play for quality gold mining, regardless of what happens in the casino's short term gyrations.















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Sunday, August 21, 2011

NFTRH149 Out Now

I try to make sure readers not only know what I think, but why I think it.  NFTRH149 continues the theme, explicitly stating what I think is in play while offering up evidence as to why this is not just the wishful thinking of a biased analyst.

Blog readers - and certainly NFTRH subscribers - know that I am not a pitch man.  When I am bearish I say so and state why.  Well, I can be bullish too and in one counter-cyclical area I am bullish in service to an ongoing plan that is becoming increasingly actionable.

This is due to what I see as a beautiful marriage of sector fundamentals, technicals and valuation in the premium gold stocks.  People can moan all they want about the depressed valuation to bullion.  NFTRH will just plan to capitalize, based on intense work that keeps us on the right track.  Ups and downs are expected in the near term, but a track is becoming clear.

NFTRH149 is out now, and it is another good one.

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Friday, August 19, 2011

Gold & Silver CoT reports hot off the presses

GOLD - COMMODITY EXCHANGE INC.                                       Code-088691
OPTION AND FUTURES COMBINED POSITIONS AS OF 08/16/11          |
--------------------------------------------------------------| NONREPORTABLE
      NON-COMMERCIAL      |   COMMERCIAL    |      TOTAL      |   POSITIONS
--------------------------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------
  Long  | Short  |Spreads |  Long  | Short  |  Long  | Short  |  Long  | Short
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(CONTRACTS OF 100 TROY OUNCES)                       OPEN INTEREST:      952,078
COMMITMENTS
 289,390   31,476  274,289  303,231  609,736  866,911  915,501   85,166   36,576

CHANGES FROM 08/09/11 (CHANGE IN OPEN INTEREST:     45,659)
    -951      317   35,536   12,603   15,371   47,188   51,224   -1,529   -5,565

PERCENT OF OPEN INTEREST FOR EACH CATEGORY OF TRADER
    30.4      3.3     28.8     31.8     64.0     91.1     96.2      8.9      3.8

NUMBER OF TRADERS IN EACH CATEGORY (TOTAL TRADERS:      416)
     249       91      162       57       58      362      260 
 
SILVER - COMMODITY EXCHANGE INC.                                     Code-084691
OPTION AND FUTURES COMBINED POSITIONS AS OF 08/16/11          |
--------------------------------------------------------------| NONREPORTABLE
      NON-COMMERCIAL      |   COMMERCIAL    |      TOTAL      |   POSITIONS
--------------------------|-----------------|-----------------|-----------------
  Long  | Short  |Spreads |  Long  | Short  |  Long  | Short  |  Long  | Short
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(CONTRACTS OF 5,000 TROY OUNCES)                     OPEN INTEREST:      176,077
COMMITMENTS
  32,950    3,696   60,477   47,338   97,213  140,765  161,386   35,311   14,690

CHANGES FROM 08/09/11 (CHANGE IN OPEN INTEREST:        552)
     925   -2,526      863   -1,477    3,842      311    2,180      241   -1,628

PERCENT OF OPEN INTEREST FOR EACH CATEGORY OF TRADER
    18.7      2.1     34.3     26.9     55.2     79.9     91.7     20.1      8.3

NUMBER OF TRADERS IN EACH CATEGORY (TOTAL TRADERS:      186)
      98       32       80       38       45      164      133
 
 

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Huey caught in the battle between gold and the stock market

Although HUI has out performed, it gets dragged down during the most intense phases of market correction and gold up thrusts.  HUI actually prefers it when gold is steady (not frothy) and the stock market is not in free fall.  This is another view of Huey's (60 min. vs. yesterday's monthly big picture) out performance.  Tic Tock...

HUI & SPX top panel, Au bottom













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Gold Public Opinion

As of 8/16, per the highly recommended Sentimentrader.com:

Au Public Opinion from SentimenTrader


It is safe to say that it is least stressful to be a buyer of value when the public hates it, as they did just a very short while ago.

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Thursday, August 18, 2011

'Bad Cop' Richard Fisher on Kudlow in a moment

And I for one look forward to hearing this relatively right minded bad cop.

Edit (7:27)  Outstanding interview.  I'll post it when available.   This 'bad cop' is someone I respect, closet Keynesian though he may be.

Edit (8/19 @ 8:39)  Here's the video. 'People that played by the rules have really been hammered here... it's hurting the poor, the savers and the middle class... I'm concerned about how tolerant they will be...'



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HUI vs. SPX

AKA relative strength and relative weakness.  There is so much more going on technically with the nominal HUI (and all the sub-indicators used in NFTRH) that I would like to go on about.  But in the words of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, I just can't give it away... give it away... give it away now.

So for the blog's purposes, let's just realize that there is a relative strength play going on here.  It should provide a good hint for down the road.


















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To the newly minted gold bugs

It is obvious that during the summer of 2011, as the European debt situation unravels, the solvency of the United States is questioned and inflated economies the world over show signs of deceleration, the public has taken an incremental step toward acknowledging gold as a viable asset in a sensible portfolio.

This article will not discuss the obvious contrarian signals that are implied by the public's entry into the realm of gold, as the barbarous relic is now 'channel busting' up, but shows no signs of waning momentum.  We will just warn that at some point, momentum always slows and the market in question, always corrects; at some point.  For reference, see silver earlier this year.

What is the 'Price' of Value?

Okay, so you are a newly minted gold bug.  You understand that policy makers are under extreme pressure to "do something!" in accordance with the implied confidence that the public continues to show in their ability to centrally manage economies and markets.  Interest rate manipulation, currency manipulation and a host of other tools are employed to get things on the right track again.

The idea of gold ownership stems from the fact that the currencies of the realm are routinely and competitively debased in the name of growth, which the stock market demands.  Unfortunately, around 10 years ago, under the stewardship of Alan Greenspan, the idea of productive growth was abandoned in favor inflationary growth, by policy.  Enter the secular gold bull market, that is now in its 11th year.

But understand that a bull market in gold is really a bear market in paper, or more precisely, confidence in official paper, and confidence in official power, which has been slowly declining for years.  So it is helpful to understand concepts like 'value' and 'insurance' as opposed to 'price' and money making 'plays'.  Gold is not going to make you money.  It is acting as if it is money; the only money capable of retaining value in current conditions.  Buying it in hopes of scoring a big hit is sure to end in heartbreak, because the buyer would not be strong enough of will and mindset to endure what is sure to lay ahead in volatility.  We are talking swings of 100's of points within days.

I was taught years ago that "gold is not about price... gold is about value".  Be measured, be balanced and don't make more of it than it is.  Gold is just a tool, an anchor to sound money; to value. 

Storage 

'Okay, I want to be a gold bug and I understand that I am simply insuring myself and my family against worst case monetary scenarios.  I get it, but how do I buy the stuff and where do I put it?'

Hey, I cannot give that advice.  But if it were me, I would resist the urge to keep it at home and I might even resist the urge to keep it in country.  What I would do is get to researching the varied options pronto, because there are many viable ones.  There are also services from which you can buy bullion and have it stored globally.  These include BullionVault, GoldMoney and Perth Mint.  And the first two at least, are also handy for bullion trading and/or commerce using gold.  There are many other reputable sources out there.

But it would probably be best to resist the urge to hold up in a cabin (or your home) with a gold, guns and ammo mentality.  I personally adopted 'guns and ammo' several years ago, but only because I was a Boy Scout and they taught me to 'be prepared'.  In this case, I want to be prepared against social discord, or worse.  I have tried to prepare in several areas, including alternative heating, food supply... the whole schtick.  But do me a favor and keep your moorings.  Wearing a tin foil hat accomplishes nothing.

The Touts

Gold, an ancient monetary metal and store of value is and should be a positive thing.  Unfortunately, its reputation has been tarnished by a 20 year secular bear market (ended 2000) and the associated public mentality that went with it.  Early adopters of gold in the current secular bull market were subject to ridicule, and why not?  The public has been managed by the vast financial services industry into a mentality of something like 'Should I have a 60% stocks, 40% bonds allocation or the other way around?'

If this were not bad enough, all you have to do is watch or read some of the sleazy gold ads, especially those pitching 'rare' coins or those trying to scare you into buying.  When things start going wrong in the macro, primal instincts can rise to the surface; like survival for instance.  But a knee jerk approach seldom succeeds in the financial world.

So it is advised that you take a balanced approach and realize that buying opportunities in the precious metals tend to be best when everybody hates them, not loves them.  So try to at least filter the touts during times of emotion.  There are reputable services and there is much reputable analysis that explains the rational case for gold.  Go find them.

Have an Overall Plan

My own father recently asked me "So Ga, how's your gold letter going?" before he caught himself.

When I finished cringing I said "it's not a gold letter, Dad".  But there is something about the power of gold... it is more dynamic for instance than "how's your macro fundamental and technical analysis newsletter going?"

Today's events are not about gold.  Please, if you have not done so, drop this mentality right away.  Gold is one tool for the tool box.  But its historical and religious connotations are undeniable.  Yet for our purposes, we are managing the realm of financial survival and prosperity.  This is not a Richard Burton / Elizabeth Taylor movie.

Debt is a big issue.  Get rid of it if at all possible.  When the system finally belches and keels over, it is probably wise not to be tied to it with too many obligations denominated in a failing currency.  Inflationists say 'the more debt the better, the government will just inflate it away'.  But they forget that there is the deflationary Yang in play to inflation's Yin.  Gold and debt elimination, that's a start.

How about property of value... like open space, farmland or the like, as opposed to McMansions clustered tightly with so many others?  I know, these subdivisions can have some good cook outs, block parties and holiday gatherings, but...  How about productive enterprise?

There is a new world being formed here and I am convinced that it will be a better one than that which is ending.  It will be a painful transition, but what will be needed going forward?  That's a good question to ask.  Millions of people squatting over bags of gold and silver in cabins with rifles pointed out the front window is not a good answer.

Gold Stocks

Let's get one thing straight right off the bat... gold stocks are not gold.  They are plays on gold, companies run by often faulty people in often remote and threatening environments.  Insofar as one speculates, they also happen to be lining up for what I believe is an epic capital appreciation opportunity for very rational reasons I focus on each week in the newsletter, Notes From the Rabbit Hole (NFTRH).

But they are not gold.  They are all about price and leverage, when the time is right.  Some may wish to think about a 'play' on the currently under valued miners with a plan to cycle gains into something of... you guessed it, value, down the road.

Summary

The mainstream media are finally on the job, scaring the $*#% out of you about all that is wrong in the global construct.  Early adopters became aware that gold was entering a bull market many years ago.  They also sought to de leverage from the system in myriad sensible ways.  Now, the enchilada is unwinding for all to see.  Gold is becoming a crowded trade that I suspect is going to become much more crowded in the years ahead.

But volatility can visit with a simple meeting of international ministers in high places and a resolution with some official sounding words on it.  Gold is the tattle tale that cannot resist ratting out the futility of these macro managers.  Gold is simply a store of value, and its Value Proposition has not changed in the years and centuries of ups and downs in its nominal price.  Just remember the old saw about how an ounce of gold will always be able to buy a nice mens' suit.  It still can.

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The "old windbag" sells gold

"That old windbag" (not my words... they are the words of a wise Wall Street veteran I deeply respect) Dennis Gartman had a cliched moment when his cabbie told him he had sold all his stocks and was buying gold.  A classic, yes I know.

I would not have thought Dennis owned gold to begin with.  His bearish and/or cautious views have been cited to me over months and years by people who want gold to go down.  Well Dennis, we've all had our cabbie moments, but I think you have been gnawing at the bit to play gold contrarian for some years now.

I guess what I am saying is that I don't think this is an interview with a gold bull or even a neutral party.  As I have noted repeatedly, I would love to live in a world where gold is going down too, because that would mean the system is not dysfunctional.   But we do not live in that world, eh Dennis?  And it appears Gartman is another of those obsessing on the USD.  That in my opinion is as bad as the commodity bulls set on a robotic loop of "buy resources... protect yourself!!"

All this said, gold probably should correct... shouldn't it?


Dennis Gartman Reveals Why He Just Sold Gold

"A cab driver told me he had sold all of his stocks and he was buying gold. I thought, 'My God,' it reminded me of when Joseph Kennedy said he got out of the stock market in 1929, when his boot black began touting stocks to him," Gartman said Monday morning.

The cabbie was another sign that the general public had jumped on the gold bandwagon, and it was time for him to jump off.

"What motivated me to do it? Oh, a number of things, not the least of which was the number of commercials on television extolling the virtues of buying gold. When there are TV commercials touting metal detectors as a means to find gold, I thought that was hysterical," Gartman said.


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Motley Crew updated

Turns out the NDX resistance was significant.  Final tally on my bull trades, all now closed:

URG: +20%
TBT: +4%
PH: -2.5%














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Short base metals? It's Da Bom

A lot of stuff gets stuck in my filter.  This is a characteristic that my wife (among others?) finds annoying.  I just can't let some things go easily. 

For instance, here in the financial 3 ring circus there are (commodity, 'inflation') gurus that talk about "the metals" in a 'just be an inflation bull and buy copper, tin, moly gold and silver' sort of way.  It pisses me off, actually;  'The metals'?  Really?  'The metals' are a good hedge against inflation?  What about inflation's evil twin brother?  What about deflation, the opposing force against which inflation gurus ply their trade?

How about maybe you are a lazy thinker set on auto pilot and your herds lap you up until you are fatally wrong and you can then blame the entire market?  'See, everything's going down.  We all share the misery.'  Just wait it out.

Anyway, one metal is gaining the bid as not only economic contraction is in play, but existential questioning of the entire interconnected global monetary system.  In that context, 'the metals' are likely to be separated into the monetary and well, the bull humped, go-go, rah rah inflation... plays.

I don't like the look of the industrial metal complex.  And the chart of base metals 2x short BOM can be interpreted as being just above support.

As for another commodity bull superstar, the chart of WTI crude oil sucks too.  Taking it a step further, we again ponder the day the market realizes what the operational results will be of mining a product that is continually rising in an environment where costs are continually declining.  It's gonna be like printing money... real money.

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Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Here's the rest of the motley crew, headed by the Tranny

Those red dotted lines used to be last ditch support, as we charted the decline.  Now Bueller, what do you suppose they are as we chart the upside reaction?  Resistance that's right, the red lines are resistance.

Interestingly, big tech - which MSM outlet MarketWatch blames for today's weakness - is already bumping up against resistance.  If NDX gets through there, the MSM gets to continue the pied piper routine.














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Dow Weekly

Some room for newly emboldened bulls to become braver still.  Where's that Altucher character?  The Dow needs some pom pom waving.  12K or bust.
















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Gold - Weekly chart from NFTRH 134

Au Weekly, updated
This is from the NFTRH chart list and was part of NFTRH134 (predating the NFTRH144 specimen shown previously by 10 weeks).  I really do get into looking at these markets from as many angles as I can think of.

It is interesting to go back and see the previous targets which, at the time seemed no sure thing.  Yet the chart said, be steady my son.  Ever since Armageddon '08, a series of 'Cups' aimed the gold price higher.  Each was an opportunity to claim some insurance for those who had resisted (I don't reco what individuals should do; this is a personal matter when it comes to insurance.  But for our purposes, the old saying 'buy right and sit tight' was applicable since 2000-2004).  Now, would-be owners are chasing a system coming apart at the seams.

Meanwhile, back on May 1st when the chart was produced and the below written, the herds slept soundly, with their beloved stocks at new recovery highs and all was well.  Gold, in its upward march - it ain't no bubble, not yet - just ground forward very quietly.

What I found most compelling was the extended MACD 'platform':

"The 1569 target off of the most recent ‘Cup’ is now in the books. So what does that mean? It means that a target was hit and nothing more.

In fact, with the objectives of the two most recent and smaller Cups filled, it is now appropriate to reintroduce an old target from the massive Cup that was formed during the ‘fear and misperceptions’ extravaganza that was Armageddon ’08. The next target is a Sinclairian 1642. We have had this (+ or – a few points depending on how I measured it at a given time) on radar for at least the last year.

MACD tells a story of why I think it could come sooner, rather than later. This all important momentum indicator has not been on an impetuous drive higher as it has been into previous significant corrections from over bought levels. Look at that beautiful lateral activity highlighted in yellow. It looks more like a platform than an over bought peak.

Weekly RSI however, is to over bought levels that have terminated rallies and yet the ADX (black line, lower panel) indicates a strong uptrend that has periodically corrected to clear the unhealthy holders, before resuming the trend. The black line most recently has dipped to meet the rising green (+DI), which indicates the trend is healthy and may not yet be over done.

Inflation and deflation are in play and there is only one asset in my view that is right for the ongoing struggle between these conditions, which should lead to the ultimate destruction of the current debt-fueled paper system.

Specifically, last week’s GDP report and Retail Sales revisions showed signs that the economy is beginning to decelerate, even as the mainstream media spin this as the result of geopolitical angst, natural (and unnatural) disasters and bad weather. NFTRH continues to fully expect economic problems as a result of one thing that matters most, destructive inflationary policy.

To review, the boom-bust play goes like this: Deflationary impulse (a need to correct the ongoing excesses) is met with heroic monetary policy, as clerks in high places meet the dreaded deflation with debt creation and money printing. Do they actually believe this can work, or are they just myopic little administrators that only see or care about the next election cycle? A real and organic economy cannot be created from exponentially increasing debt.

Gold, in my view, is the only real monetary protection for the process, which involves deflation impulses and ongoing inflationary structure. This kind of makes the idea of drawing charts like the one above a silly concept since the assigned price of gold is not the main issue here. It’s just that I do so enjoy doing these charts and plotting targets, etc."

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Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Ha ha ha...

I like Apple and Google too (hugely), but this guy looks no further than 'the Fed is gonna go QE3 so stocks are gonna go up.  Gold is just a rock.'  Ah yuh crack head, gold is just a rock; a rock solid anchor to monetary sanity.



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http://www.biiwii.com





Monday, August 15, 2011

Au-Oil Ratio: More than just a story about gold mining fundamentals

Au-WTIC Ratio (GOR)
As a speculator, gold's ratio to crude oil (GOR) is important to me as it, and several other ratios pertain to the unique gold mining industry. 

But as a macro big picture observer managing intermediate turns the GOR, along with so many other gold ratios is important in telling me what is in play with respect to the ever entertaining inflation/deflation debate. 

Masses of debaters ceaselessly argue their points because both are right; there is inflation and there is deflation, all contained within a beautiful continuum of deflationary impulse met by inflationary response, enabled by the decades long trend in Treasury bonds, whether real or ginned up.

But I digress.  The GOR shows us how clearly screwed up we are in that every time gold gains the upper hand on oil (and industrial metals, food prices, etc... the necessities of modern life) policy changes to asset market appreciation at all CO$T$.  This includes the things that absolutely croak the non investor classes like food and fuel. 

If I were a political sort, I would take it further and write that maybe this is the dynamic that creates socialism, because the world of high finance - and its associated official policy making (including, but certainly not limited to those of the current administration) has for so long now (most intensely and dangerously since the age of inflation onDemand began in 2000) been in a mode of fighting declining asset prices, AKA the inevitable result of deflation.

So, some day out in the future, if we have another QE-inspired revival of the inflation game and everybody's bitching and moaning about fuel and food prices, remember where it was promoted and how we were all on board the inflation express, cheering for commodities and markets to be rescued from phase 1 of what I believe is a new bear market.  We get what we deserve, and what we would probably then deserve is the next lurch toward socialism as the middle class drops down yet another inflationary notch.

Back to the chart, as gold maintains the recent breakout vs. oil and so many other things of positive economic correlation, gold stock players should be on high alert.  But in a more macro sense, we should all be on alert as to what this potential 'next leg up' means and the policy that is likely to follow.

That's what this simple picture says to me.

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