Gold broke-out last week on Brexit while Silver waited a week to join the
party. The miners, meanwhile cleared 2014 resistance today. There are breakouts
across the board in the precious metals space.
The weekly candle charts of Gold and Silver are plotted in the image below.
Gold appears to have digested the Brexit pop well as it gained another 1.5%
on the week to $1339. If it holds above monthly and quarterly resistance ($1330s)
then it should be on its way to $1380-$1400. Meanwhile, Silver surged 9.9%
on the week to $19.59. It has broken out from an inverse head and shoulders
pattern to nearly a 2-year high. The pattern projects to a target of $22.
The breakouts in Gold and Silver were foretold by the strength and leadership
from the mining stocks which closed the week with gusto. GDX surged 4.8% Friday
and GDXJ surged 6.5%. Both closed near the highs of the day and broke 2014
resistance in clean fashion. GDX has upside to resistance at $30 and $32. GDXJ,
which has more upside has resistance at $51 and $55.
We had been looking for weakness or at least some consolidation but yesterday
realized that was becoming unlikely. The chart below is one we sent to premium
subscribers in a flash update. The 2-hour bar chart shows that miners had formed
a reverse head and shoulders continuation pattern which because of its upward
slant indicated more strength than the typical pattern. The pattern projects
to a target of ~$51 for GDXJ and $32 for GDX. Those targets are inline with
the resistance targets above.
I am one of the biggest precious metals bulls but even I at times have underestimated
the strength of this bull market (particularly in the miners). The miners correct
less than I expect or do not correct at all. While it is tough to chase strength
and stay bullish after a huge rebound we maintain our posture as we expect
Gold to test $1400 and perhaps $1550 before a significant counter trend move.
Buy weakness and hold. That is how to make money in a bull market.