Wednesday, 17 July 2019

Silver to break to the upside soon?

Watching the trading over the past few days, silver has been outperforming gold. Yesterday (Tues 16 July) in particular, gold was flat to down, whist silver was up around 35 cents. The 3-day charts on www.kitco.com clearly showed the trading for silver was stepping higher over the past three days whilst gold was within a tight trading range.

Now, today, there are up-moves in both metals, gold +1.26%, silver +2.58% about a 2x out-performance on the upside move.

There has therefore been a down-move in the gold:silver ratio from its extreme levels of late around 95:1. A gap in fact. Will this gap be "filled" as many like to predict in these instances? Is a gap in a ratio like this as valid as a gap on the open in a stock and how about in commodities like these where there is nearly 24 hour trading - although I guess stock futures trade out of hours too? I cannot tell.



Tuesday, 25 June 2019

Gold green in all currencies often.

It's always nice to look at Kitco's gold in currencies table and see all green.
Bitcoin is strategically placed just underneath this table to make goldbugs envious:


Saturday, 22 June 2019

Gold in Euros touches 2016 high @ €1245.

Gold in Euros this week has touched the 2016 at €1245.

I now see that I had not been watching this chart for some time - I just went to look and there it is. Coincidental with $1400 gold.


Gold breaks out from long term resistance levels - at last!

After giving very little to write about for several months, gold has made a most unusual move for the period around the start of summer.

The rarity of this move should not be lost on market watchers or participants because the period May to August is usually the time that the gold price wallows or even slumps into a lower trading range. However this is the time that the market has chosen to break out decisively from a 5+ year trading range.

Almost undoubtedly, the announcements from the Federal Reserve regarding the potential of interest rate cuts and at least the ceasing of interest rate rises for the time being have played into this, although a rally was already underway. Geopolitical factors such as the Iran/US conflict brewing in the Straits of Hormuz have also played a part.

The two charts below show the various resistance lines in play in gold priced in US dollars and GB Pounds Sterling.

Red line = resistance from 2016 bull market high at $1377
Green Line = Resistance from 2014 high external peak at $1392
Blue line =Resistance from 2013 rally after the crash at $1434
Black lines = resistance zone from the topping pattern in 2011-2012 above $1520:


In British Pounds, he chart is more perky.The resistance zone at £960-£1005 has already been cleared. In fact, all of the trading since the gold price jump on the Brexit vote on 23 June 2016 has been around that very zone. The peaks from the bear market region (where the price dipped as low as £693) have long been taken out and left behind as gold has been trading around £1000 for three years:


Taking a look at a 20 year chart, I have marked some times when decent up-moves have occurred in gold priced in US dollars.
The only times when decent rallies have occurred in the summer were 2000, a bounce in 2008, (2011, 2012 and 2013 rallies were later in summer), and 2016. There has been little positive early summer action in gold during the entire bull and bear market cycle since 1999. This illustrates the "outside the norm" nature of this current move: