As a technician that looks at multiple asset classes and stock
markets all over the world, I treat them all the same. For us it’s just
math. Whether we are looking at shares of MSFT, US Dollar Index,
Malaysian Stock Market, Treasury Bonds, etc to us they are all the same.
For most market participants this is not the case and people tend to be
more interested in certain stocks or markets.That’s understandable.
AAPL is a good example, precious metals, Oil lately for obvious reasons,
etc etc. These days, I’ve been getting a lot of questions about the
price of Gold since the yellow metal has gotten the year off started on
such a strong note.
So if you want to know where Gold prices are headed, I think your
best bet is to watch Silver. They generally move together, although
Silver tends to me the more volatile of the two. Nevertheless, I think
if you want to know where precious metals are going as a group, Silver
is the cleanest one and that’s our tell.
First of all, you guys know I don’t like to assume correlations like
we see some other do so often. I want to responsibly make sure that the
math adds up. So after running the numbers, the correlation coefficient
between Gold & Silver over the past month is +0.9, over the past
quarter it is +0.9 and it is also +0.9 over the past year. They move
together.
Now, here is a weekly candlestick chart of Silver going back a few
years where we can see that key support near 18.50 throughout the second
half of 2013 and into 2014 until it broke last September. Our polarity
principles tell us that former support should turn into resistance. This
is precisely what occurred over the last couple of weeks. This
resistance, or “overhead supply”, is what we want to watch going
forward.
As you can see on this chart, not only does this former support now
represent resistance, but this is also where we run into a downtrend
line from the highs in late 2012. In addition, the 18.35 level is
exactly the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement from the entire August 2013 –
November 2014 Decline. There is a big cluster of resistance levels here
that we simply cannot ignore.
Until prices are above all of that resistance, I don’t see any reason
to be long precious metals, particularly from a structural perspective.
Sure, there will be some volatility and plenty of ups and downs for
short-term traders to take advantage of. Therefore, I think it is more
important than ever to define your time horizon. To simply ask, “Where
is gold going?”, is a bad question. You mean, in the next 10 minutes?
Tomorrow? Next month? Next year? Time horizons have to be defined.
As far as I’m concerned, I generally use weekly and daily charts to
first get a structural bigger picture perspective, and then break it
down to a shorter time frame for executions. Right now, I do not see any
reason to be long precious metals, for my time horizon. I think if
Silver can break out and stay above the cluster of resistance levels
mentioned above, then we can look to put money on the long side. Until
then, I don’t see anything to do here.
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