It may take some time for
people to figure this out, but the problem in Europe is not liquidity. The
problem in Europe is sovereign debt. If we are over our heads with debt
because we have spent more than we make, giving us a line of credit will not
get us out of the hole. One wonders if any amount of funding support and
bailouts will be enough to restore confidence as long as there are lingering
doubts about the solvency of Italy, Spain and some of the other eurozone economies.
The EU crisis seems to have reached a worrying new
stage, with the flop of the German bond auction and the alarming rise in
short-term rates in Spain and Italy. This is a massive erosion of trust, a
veritable creeping crisis of credibility, as it spread to France, Belgium,
the Netherlands and Austria. Many took Italy’s disastrous bond auction on
November 25th as a signal that time is running out. Italy sold 6-month bills
at a rate of 6.504%, a 14-year high and nearly double
the 3.535% rate it received from a similar auction last month.
If you recall what we wrote in our last essay on
gold and the stock market on December 2nd, 2011 you’ll surely
appreciate the gravity of the situation:
(…) the Fed will be handing money to other
global central banks at a lower rate than in the past and those central
banks, in turn, will be able to lend the dollars to banks in their own
countries. The hope behind this move is that it will prevent Europe’s
financial woes from undermining the stability of the global banking system.
The importance of the EU crisis was underlined last
week when the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said the
euro crisis remained “a key risk to the world economy.” The
Paris-based research group sharply cut its forecasts for wealthy Western
countries and cautioned that growth in Europe could come to a standstill. It
warned that the problems that started in Greece almost two years ago would
start to infect even rich European countries.
Some international companies are already preparing
contingency plans both financial and legal for a possible eurozone
breakup, according to the Financial Times.
The general opinion of dozens of business executives
interviewed by the Financial Times this month is that although a eurozone break-up would be both undesirable and
fiendishly difficult to plan for, to cross one’s fingers and hope for
the best is emphatically no longer an option.
Apocalyptic visions considered in boardrooms across
Europe range from bank failures and the collapse of credit to the destruction
of the EU’s single market, mass social unrest and a recession or worse.
Even the most benign of that range of outcomes would have repercussions well
beyond the eurozone – making the issue one of
consequence to businesses and government officials worldwide.
Having considered these apocalyptic long-term
visions, let’s focus on gold in the short term (charts courtesy by
http://stockcharts.com.)
We begin with a look at the long-term gold chart (if
you’re reading this essay at www.sunshineprofits.com you may click on
the above chart to enlarge it). RSI levels have bottomed close to the 50
level and are now on the way back up. In 8 of the 9 previous times this level
was reached, it coincided with an important bottom for gold, and a
significant rally followed. The long-term implications here are bullish based
on this.
Two upside target levels appear to be valid at this
time. One is at the $1,900 level and could be reached late this year or early
in 2012. The second target level could be described as a rough estimate or
best guess at this time. It is at the $2,200 level and could be reached
sometime around May of next year. Note that the situation may change before
these targets are reached – we report what we believe is likely based
on the information available today.
In the long-term chart of gold from a non-USD
perspective, we see that prices have rallied sharply over the past few weeks
and recently corrected in a sort of flag pattern. The rally appears ready to
continue with a likely target level in the range of the previous high. This
level could be surpassed, but it’s likely that first a pause will be
seen when this trading range is reached.
Now, let’s discuss the possible action in
silver.
We begin with a look at the very long-term chart.
The five vertical grey lines represent cyclical turning points roughly 2
years apart and they correspond to major tops or bottoms. The tops were seen
in 2006 and 2008 with bottoms reached in 2004 and 2010. The cyclical turning
point in play now is more likely to coincide with another bottom. This means
that a major rally could be just ahead.
Long-term target levels for silver based on the phi
number (1.618) are at $75 and $120. These are long-term target levels,
however. Please examine how reliable were the previous tops’ estimates
based on analogous approach. Again, much can change before these levels are
approached, but right now, they appear quite probable in the coming years.
In the long-term chart for silver (if you’re
reading this essay at www.sunshineprofits.com you may click on the above
chart to enlarge it), we can see a struggle to move above the 50-day
(10-week) moving average. This level has previously provided both support and
resistance, and once it is taken out and the breakout verified, a
considerable move to the upside is likely.
We now look at silver from a non-USD perspective.
The 50-day moving average is once again in play here and has provided both
support and resistance in the past. The index level is now slightly above
this resistance line but we would prefer the move to be a bit more visible
before concluding that the breakout is verified. It seems likely that
significantly higher prices will follow such a confirmation.
In the short-term SLV ETF chart, we can see that
silver rallied sharply right at the recent cyclical turning point. The 50-day
moving average is once again in play here, and a verified move above it will
make a significant move to the upside quite probable. Target levels at this
time appear to be at the $38, which corresponds to around $40 for spot
silver.
Summing up, the situation remains
bullish for gold and silver in the short, medium and long term. At this time,
analysis of the long-term cycles for the white metal strongly supports a
bullish scenario.
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Thank you for reading. Have a great and profitable
week!
Przemyslaw
Radomski
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