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Gold reversed violently to the
downside last week, an event which has serious implications. It had been
doing well up to that point and we did not see this reversal coming, so this
is going to be "wise after the event" update - still it is considered
to be better to be wise after the event than not wise at all, particularly if
our interpretation of the meaning of this development proves to be correct.
On its 15-month chart we can see that gold reversed
after making a close approach to its highs of last November which formed
beneath the resistance at the lower boundary of the top area of last August -
September. Unable to break above these highs, it caved in last week. The
magnitude of the drop on Wednesday and the high volume that accompanied it
are a sign of an important reversal, so we can expect to see gold heading
lower in coming days and weeks. While it is true that moving averages are in
favorable alignment, this is unlikely to help much, and gold will not be
"out of the woods" until it can break above the strong resistance
towards and at $1800. The strong support shown on the chart at about $1550
must hold - if it fails gold will enter a bearmarket.
At present gold can
be considered to be rangebound.
 
On the 3-year chart we can see the recent rangebound
action of gold in the context of the long, steady uptrend that preceded it.
Despite the positive alignment of its moving averages, action last week
suggests that it is likely to head lower towards the key support over the
short to medium-term, especially given that silver has just reversed after
arriving at a major trendline. A clear break above
$1800 will turn the picture much more positive.
 
The latest chart for the Gold Miners Bullish Percent Index shows that
investors are now a lot more bullish towards gold stocks than they were at
the turn of the year, making a reaction here more likely.
 
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