Trade the Cycles

Saturday, January 31, 2009

.......Gold Hit a 5% Major Buy Signal This Week!

Gold hit a 5% major buy signal this week, see annotated chart two at http://www.joefrocks.com/GoldStockCharts.html, which indicates that
gold very likely entered a Wave 3 Cyclical Bull Market in late October 2008.


Note that gold did an inverse Elliott Wave 12345 down up down up down pattern, from the 3-17-08 Wave 1 Cyclical Bull Market cycle high at $1033.90, to the likely Wave 2 Cyclical Bear Market cycle low at $681 in late October 2008.

Gold tends to lag GDX/HUI/XAU and NEM, so, it didn't peak on 1-26-09, when GDX/HUI/XAU and NEM did (Wave 1 minor intermediate term cycle high). Also, gold didn't hit a 5% major buy signal until this week, versus GDX/HUI/XAU doing so on 12-10-08, see annotated chart one at http://www.joefrocks.com/GoldStockCharts.html.

The savvy non contrarian gold Commercial Traders expect gold to soon peak/put in a Wave 1 minor intermediate term cycle high, lagging GDX/HUI/XAU and NEM, which did so on 1-26-09 (see http://stockcharts.com/charts/gallery.html?nem and http://stockcharts.com/charts/gallery.html?%24hui), since they traded aggressively short in the five day period ending 1-27-09, see the third/last data at http://www.cftc.gov/dea/options/deacmxsof.htm.

Nothing discussed on this Blog is a recommendation, or, should be construed as investment advice.

.......http://www.JoeFRocks.com/

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1 Comments:

  • Felix Zulauf, from the Barron's 2009 Roundtable:

    "Zulauf: Investors should keep their powder dry. Sit in fixed income. Buy five-year investment-grade corporate bonds in less-risky industries that service daily necessities, such as telecoms, oil and food, and blend them with medium-term government bonds. Check company balance sheets. I wouldn't buy long-term government bonds, except maybe German bonds.

    My one recommendation for the longer term is physical gold. Consider the basic set-up: World economies are so weak that we are seeing government stimulation of historic proportions. At first this is deflationary, but it will become inflationary. Gold is the only currency that won't get devalued. It will be revalued.

    If the Fed's liabilities had to be covered in gold, it would sell for more than $6,000 an ounce. We aren't going back to the gold standard, but the markets won't trust the central banks anymore. Gold is in a very slow bull market. The year-end price has been higher each year since 2001. The gold market could have a shakeout in the next six months, and the price could fall back to $700 an ounce or below from today's $850. But two years from now it will be a lot higher. It is one of the few commodities that held up during the forced liquidation of almost everything else. We have talked about the risk of currency devaluation. If you were a citizen of Iceland and your currency went down by 50%, consider how gold performed in your currency. Gold functions as a protection against your central bank doing stupid things.

    Schafer: Did gold hold up because it wasn't a part of leveraged structures?

    Zulauf: To some degree. You don't own it in a leveraged way. It was helped by the forced liquidation of other things. There was some forced liquidation of Comex futures contracts, but at the same time there was a massive move into physical gold. Gold will stay in a bull market. It can't be manipulated like a currency you can keep printing.

    Q: What about central-bank sales of gold?

    Zulauf: You can sell it, but unlike a currency, you can't make it out of thin air. You have to dig hard to get it out of the ground, and there is a limited quantity available. Historically, jewelry accounted for about 70% of the demand for gold. That will decline as hoarding increases.

    Gross: How many years will it take for gold to double?

    Zulauf: Two, but don't blame me if it takes three. If you're a little more adventurous, you can buy gold stocks, but put the core of your holding in physical gold. Gold-mining stocks have underperformed physical gold for more than a year, due to rising production costs. Production costs should decline slightly because of lower energy prices.

    Q: Fred recommended the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF. Do you like it, too?

    Zulauf: Yes. It is a diversified portfolio of major mining stocks. The total market capitalization of the industry is only $150 billion."

    By Blogger Joe Ferrazzano, at 2:56 PM  

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