Posts Tagged ‘etf trading gold’

Gold : A Minor Pullback or a Major Correction?

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

By Donald W. Pendergast Jr. – Market Analyst – www.ETFTradingPartner.com

12.5.09
Wow – what a week it was in the world of Gold! After charging above $1,200 on the front-month futures contract earlier in the week, Gold finally finished the week on a very weak note, closing below $1,150, which was right above the low established a week earlier in the wake of the Dubai debt debacle. Clearly, Gold is beginning a trend reversal on a daily-based time frame, but the technical picture is less clear over the long-term. Let’s examine a weekly chart for GLD (one of the financial instruments that holds actual Gold) to get a better fix on what might be expected in this volatile market over the next month or so.

GLD ETF Trading

GLD ETF Trading


Graphic credit: Metastock v.11

Before going any further, I must admit to being a Gold Bug, having been afflicted with this wonderful malady for many years – including the time period prior to the recent bull run in Gold from 2001-present. Long-term, and given the abysmal long-term outlook for the US Dollar (and all fiat currencies for that matter), declining mine production (most of the high-quality, easier to mine deposits are used up already) and greater awareness among investors regarding the inclusion of Gold in their portfolios, I believe that Gold will easily make it to $2,500 to $3,000 at some point in the next five years, despite several massive sell-offs along the way to the eventual summit. However, in the here and now, we need to also rely on our charts, technical indicators and COT futures market data (Commitment of Traders report, published weekly by the CFTC) in order to minimize losses and maximize gains by waiting for more opportune times to add to long-term holdings of Gold and/or to capitalize on high probability, short-term moves (up and down) that will likely commence from solid support/resistance (S/R) levels in the weeks ahead.
OK, now on to what the weekly chart of GLD is telegraphing to astute traders and investors here:

1. $1,200 was a key Fibonacci extension/Keltner Band resistance area on both a weekly and monthly time frame; major turbulence was expected well in advance – thus the recent tumble came as no surprise to experienced technical traders.

2. Note this week’s wide-range weekly reversal candle, one that printed on extremely heavy volume (see circle at bottom of chart); this is a major reversal signal, especially for daily-based traders, coming in the wake of such a high profile resistance barrier($1,200).

3. Look now at the short-term and long-term money flows (lower portion of the chart); both of the Chaikin money flow indicators (CMF)(34) and (CMF)(144) are revealing pronounced negative divergences with the actual price trends of GLD, which means that the raw fuel (money flowing into GLD and Gold) needed to drive Gold higher is beginning to dry up – for the time being.

OK, so what? What’s a trader and/or investor to do now, given this information? Well, if you’re a long-term Gold Bug, simply hold your core investment positions for the long-haul; that $100+ trillion US national debt/unfunded liability problem ain’t paid off just yet (and likely will never be), so the future for Gold has never looked better, especially for those wishing to diversify out of the Greenback. Let this corrective move play out and trhen consider adding more at lower price levels – $1,050 might be one such a price zone, which happens to be the current 21-week exponential moving average (EMA) price for cash Gold. For those investing via shares in GLD, the area near $104 also coincides with its own 21-week EMA. More cautious investors might wait for a move lower toward the 50-week EMA, which comes in at about $96 for GLD and $975 for cash Gold. The 21- and 50-week EMA’s acts as strong S/R barriers in nearly every kind of market, and Gold is no exception, so you may wish to do further analysis to see if adding on at those particular price areas makes sense for your financial situation.

Traders can be a bit more aggressive; expect to see some sort of a reaction move higher once GLD/Gold hit their 21-week EMA (green box on the chart shows the likely time/price zone in which to anticipate a reversal higher)– this will most likely be a high-probability swing trade play, one that also needs to have a logical stop loss and profit target as well. Daily-based traders can do the same thing – plan on on the 21-day EMA offering some sort of a floor from which a short-term tradable bounce will commence. But be very nimble, with firm stop-loss and profit targets in place before you enter the trade.

Yes, this is a real correction in Gold, but no one really knows how far the price might fall. Even the strongest bull markets need to pause and correct before moving higher, and perhaps this is the case with the Gold market right now. We should know more as the weeks ahead play out; as always, use common sense, be patient and learn to focus on what the charts and long-term fundamental factors are saying, rather than giving in to fear, doubt or the opinions of those who may not have your best interests in mind.

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By Donald W. Pendergast Jr.
Market Analyst
www.ETFTradingPartner.com

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Gold: On the Fast Track Toward $1,200?

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

By Mark Brown
November 17, 2009

Well, the long-expected retest and subsequent breakout of ‘$1,000 Gold’ has finally occurred, with the rally taking the cash price of the metal to the north side of the $1,100 per ounce level in relatively short order. The big question now, of course, is this – does Gold have enough investor interest behind it to push it to the next significant price level, $1,200? Let’s examine a long-term chart for cash Gold to see if we can find out if Gold can reach that price target before correcting again.

Spot Gold Trading

Spot Gold Trading


Graphic credit: Metastock v.11

All told, there isn’t much on this chart that a Goldbug wouldn’t like to see; the trend is moving higher (as in a series of higher highs and higher lows), price is accelerating up and away from the 12-month exponential moving average (EMA), the spread between the 12-month and 50-month EMA’s is rising and the 50-month EMA is also rising. A trend that is exhibiting such upward momentum should be given every benefit of the doubt, meaning that those who are naive enough to attempt to call a ‘top’ in the Gold market at this juncture should re-examine their assumptions regarding the nature of strongly trending markets. Not that we can’t make an estimated guess at to where Gold might want to reverse and correct (a perfectly normal occurrence in every bull market), but to make weighty pronouncements that Gold must go so high and no higher, might be a bit absurd, given the moves that this metal can and does make from time to time.

However, there are various technical tools that we can employ to see just where statistical overhead resistance may reside. One simple tool is called a Fibonacci extension ratio; market technicians long ago observed that many markets will reverse/correct at the 127%, 162%, 200% and 262% extension level of any significant prior A-B swing move. For example, in the case of Gold, it made a high in March 2008 at $1,011 and then corrected lower in one major swing move down to $713 in October 2008. If we label the March 2008 swing high as ‘A’ and the October 2008 swing low as ‘B’, we simply measure the size of that A-B swing to project where the terminus of the current swing (‘C’) may eventually be. All major charting packages offer this useful tool, and, when we plot it on our chart (omitted here for the sake of clarity) we see that the Fib 127% extension of swing A-B has already been exceeded by a price of more than $16 per ounce. That’s a pretty good indication that we should expect to see Gold power up to the next significant Fib extension ratio of 162%, which happens to be near $1,200 per ounce. Interestingly, the extreme upper Keltner band (not shown) is also near $1,200 at the time of this writing, and it will be fascinating to see how Gold reacts if and when it reaches $1,200 on this particular trend thrust. I have seen multiple cases in which Fib extension/Keltner band confluence act as powerful support or resistance barriers in any number of stocks and commodities, and Gold may also react strongly should it hit both of these powerful resistance areas at about the same time.

Finally, there is another way to measure the statistical likelihood that a trend move is ready to exhaust itself; at the top of the chart, the ‘EmaRat’ (short for EMA Ratio) indicator offers a way to measure the spread between two key EMA’s – the short-term 12-period EMA and the intermediate-term 50-period EMA. When the spread rises to (or exceeds) historically high levels, traders are advised to either run much closer stops on long positions or to prepare for a corrective move lower in which to initiate short counter-trend positions. Presently, the spread has a ways to go before it can rise to historically high levels; the horizontal blue lines indicate the high level reached by the EmaRat indicator on each of the last two price spikes in Gold; even using conservative estimates, if the indicator makes it to the lower blue line (a 1.27 to 1 ratio between the 12 and 50-period EMA’s), Gold should be very close to $1,200 per ounce. And if the upper blue line (a 1.32 to 1 ratio between the 12 and 50-period EMA’s) is reached and/or exceeded, Gold could rise to an even higher price, perhaps to $1,250 or even $1,300 per ounce.

A parting thought for Gold bugs:

All of us truly believe that Gold is destined for much higher prices in the years to come, of that there can be little or no doubt. However, don’t let your long-term belief system cause you to freeze up, unable to take some logical profits off the table, should this thrust in Gold actually reach $1,200 or even $1,300 an ounce. Be aware that commercial interests are holding extremely large short positions in the Gold futures market right now, and be sure to use stops just in case a sudden round of selling begins to overwhelm the current uptrend in Gold. We all remember what happened in 2008, and I doubt that any of us want to get sideswiped like that again. A word to the wise should be sufficient.

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Mark Brown

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