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Lately, gold has been a disappointment to many
investors while it has been mostly treading water. Gold has traded well
beneath its all-time high of $1,924 an ounce on September 6th and well above
its subsequent low near $1,520 which took place in late December. Many
anticipated higher prices this year, but the year isn’t over yet, and neither
is gold's long-term spectacular, secular bull market. We are now in one of
those periods of consolidation that tries the souls of gold investors, tests
their resolve and challenges their staying power. This is when the market
takes a breather and adjusts to prepare for the next major move.
If you need some encouraging news, according to the
latest IMF statistics, at least 12 countries are known to have increased
their gold reserves in March continuing a trend that goes back more than two
years. Overall Central Banks appear to have purchased about 58 tons in the
month, which suggests acceleration in their gold accumulation. The
significant purchases were by Mexico, which increased its holdings by 16.81
tons; Russia with purchases of 16.55 tons and Turkey with 11.48 tons. The
statistics only show the figures for those nations which are transparent in
their reporting. In the past there have been some sharp ‘upwards
adjustments,' to gold reserves notably from China, which seems to like to
accumulate its gold on the quiet. Last year Central Banks that do report
their statistics bought 439.7 tons of gold and many gold analysts are
predicting similar levels of purchases in 2012. And to think that years ago investors feared that the bull market will
end a long time ago because of massive sales of gold by governments and
monetary authorities over the world…
Analyzing the fundamental situation and news is
important, but the analysis would be incomplete without referring to charts.
In today’s essay, we will focus on the long-term charts of USD Index
and S&P 500 and then briefly discuss the impact that they can have on the
gold market.
Let’s begin with the analysis of the US Dollar
Index (charts courtesy by http://stockcharts.com.)
 
On the above chart we see that
the sideways trading patterns continue between the two levels which are quite
important from a technical perspective. These are the declining long-term
support line and the horizontal support line based on the early 2011 high. At
this point, the very-long term chart remains mixed with a bearish bias (after
all, the prevailing trend is down).
To illustrate how small the trading
range has been for the USD Index recently, the past six Premium Updates have found the change from the previous week to
be as follows: down .41, down .61, up .95, down .79, up .25, and down .39. So
nearly every week saw a change of less than 1% for the index value of a week
earlier, and with the good mix of ups and downs, this is a prime example of
true sideways trading.
Still, with the main trend being
down, the odds are that the next significant move will take the USD Index
lower, not higher.
Having said that, let’s take a look at the
general stock market.
 
From the long-term perspective, the bottom in the
S&P 500 Index appears to be in. The support line based on previous highs
has been reached and crossed but the breakdown failed. Prices bounced higher
soon after reaching this line (based on 2011 high), and the long-term picture
is bullish based on this development.
The Correlation
Matrix is a tool, which we have
developed to analyze the impact of the currency markets and the general stock
market upon the precious metals sector. Let’s see how the above can
translate into future price moves of gold.
 
Since we are discussing the long-term impact, please
focus on the 1500-trading-day column. The values of correlation coefficients
are negative in terms of the relationship between precious metals (gold,
silver, mining stocks) and the USD Index and they are mixed as far as
metals-stocks link is concerned. Consequently, the rather negative long-term
situation in the USD Index is what we should focus on and since its
relationship is inverse, we can infer that the
long-term picture for gold is indeed bullish.
Summing up, both:
fundamental and (indirect) technical factors provides with a bullish
long-term outlook for the gold market. As far as short-term is concerned and whether the consolidation is
over or not is a different matter and other factors (not mentioned above)
must be taken into account.
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Thank you for reading. Have a great and profitable week!
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