Metals: Mini Gold

Per molti esperti è cominciato il rally di natale che vedrà l'oro crescere sempre di più :eek: ......!


The 'Golden Christmas Rally' is the seasonal rise in gold, starting on November 17 and ending on January 21 of the following year. The increase was observed in 17 of 31 years, resulting in an average profit of +13.13%. But there were also 14 years, where the price of gold fell during this period of the year. The average loss then was -4.65%. The overall rise during all 31 years was +4.72% p.a..

The 'Golden Christmas Rally' lasts 65 calendar days. It took place in only 55% of all years. Thus this seasonal pattern is (nearly) as often profitable as it is lossy, but it has a good profit/loss-ratio. It is necessary to take steps to minimize losses (e.g. through stopp loss).

The following table shows all 'Gold: Second Half Increases' since 1985:


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un occhio al cambio...... :) analisi tatte dal sito www.euroforex.com

EUR/USD
La settimana sui mercati valutari è stata caratterizzata da un ulteriore indebolimento del biglietto verde nei confronti di tutte le valute internazionali e la valuta unica ne ha approfittato toccando un nuovo massimo storico a 1.3070. Nella situazione attuale sembrerebbe essere sempre più probabile una ulteriore estensione del movimento rialzista dopo un consolidamento al di sopra del supporto a 1.3000 ponendo un nuovo target in area 1.3200 area in cui il presidente della BCE Trichet ha più volte dichiarato di non voler vedere superata. Di riflesso solo il ritorno al di sotto di 1.2750 e la decisa rottura del supporto di medio periodo da evidenziarsi in area 1.2500, consentirebbe un 'inversione del trend a favore del dollaro. Rimangono sempre possibili brevi ritracciamenti a favore del dollaro in questa fase ma il trend al momento rimane rialzista.



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NEWS

Finalmente gli investitori hanno la possibilità di agire in profondità nel settore aurifero senza dover necessariamente comprare il metallo. Giovedì sono ufficialmente partite le contrattazioni sullo streetTRACKS Gold Trust (GLD), il nuovo ETF sull’Oro: uno strumento atteso da coloro che cercavano un mezzo per partecipare più facilmente al mercato delle azioni aurifere.
Primo nel suo genere perlomeno negli Stati Uniti, GLD è sponsorizzato dal World Gold Council ed è disegnato per riflettere il prezzo dell’Oro detenuto dal trust, al netto dei costi di transazione. Ogni azione rappresenta circa un decimo di oncia di metallo.
GLD ha preceduto di poco il rilascio del Barclays iShares COMEX Gold Trust, in attesa di approvazione da parte della SEC. Il trust di Barclays sarà negoziato sull’Amex.
L’introduzione degli ETF sull’Oro fornisce un’eccellente opportunità per investire in un settore scottante in cui è difficile entrare. Prima di giovedì, gli investitori erano costretti a comprare e detenere il metallo fisico, oppure a comprare il contratto future, o a comprare azioni di società quotate o fondi comuni specializzati.
Con il prezzo del metallo ai massimi degli ultimi 16 anni, non sorprende che gli investitori abbiano colto al volo questa possibilità. Alle 13.30 di giovedì pomeriggio, i volumi di GLD avevano già superato quelli del QQQ (l’ETF sul Nasdaq100). E inoltre, GLD ha realizzato una delle migliori performance nell’ambito dei primi giorni di contrattazione degli ETF.
Inoltre, GLD è stato il quinto ETF più scambiato a Wall Street giovedì.
E venerdì GLD è stato ancora rovente, con i volumi che alla fine della seduta sono stati il doppio di quelli di giovedì. Alla fine, nei primi due giorni di contrattazioni i volumi sono equivalsi a 55 tonnellate di oro. Alla luce di una domanda annuale di circa 2500 tonnellate, è facile immaginare come l’introduzione di ETF sull’Oro possa avere un impatto significativo sui prezzi.

Dal punto di vista tecnico, il prezzo del metallo giallo continua a muoversi verso l’alto, raggiungendo il massimo degli ultimi 16 anni praticamente ogni giorno. Nel momento in cui gli investitori diversificheranno il loro portafoglio usano questo nuovo ETF, il prezzo dell’Oro potrebbe ricevere un’ulteriore spinta verso l’alto. In aggiunta, la continua debolezza del dollaro e la minaccia di rigurgiti inflazionistici potrebbero rappresentare un nuovo fattore di domanda per il metallo prezioso.
 
Nella seduta del 22 novembre 2004 il future sull'oro con scadenza dicembre si è avvicinato alla soglia di 450$ l'oncia toccando un nuovo high a 449,3$ e chiudendo la seduta a 448,8$. Il trend è forte, ricordiamo che il giorno 17 è cominciata una nuova fase di inversione per i prezzi dell'oro ( bisogna però capirne la direzione)! Il target primario resta 452$ che rappresenta anche la squadratura di 360° dal top di 371,30$ (minimo del 2004); arrivati a quel target è possibile un ritracciamento verso area 440$ con allunghi in area 431$, solo il superamento dei 430$ può confermare un cambio di trend forte. Viceversa una tenuta dei 450$ può rappresentare un nuovo punto di lancio verso area 470$/496$ per dare inizio a quelli che molti chiamano Rally di Natale con crescita del prezzo fino all'ultima settimana di Gennaio.

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NEWS

Gold Could Hit 17-Year High In 2005 - ANZ Bank
By Nicholas Sinclan Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES

SYDNEY (Dow Jones)--The potent combination of a feeble U.S. dollar and strong internal fundamentals should keep gold well above US$400 a troy ounce in 2005, and could even catapult the yellow metal to a 17-year high, said Daniel Hynes, natural resources analyst at Australia's ANZ Institutional Banking.
For a short period next year, a spot price above "US$500/oz wouldn't be out of the question if...(trade and budget) deficits in the U.S. grow more," Hynes told Dow Jones Newswires in a recent interview.
Gold, which has been surging since May, hasn't traded above US$500/oz since December of 1987, in the months following the last major stock market crash.
At 0606 GMT, spot gold was quoted at US$447.50/oz.
With bullion viewed by many investors as an alternative store of value to U.S. dollar-denominated assets, Hynes and other analysts have pointed to the slumping greenback as the main factor behind the ongoing rally in gold prices.
Only a few days ago, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan lent credence to gold bulls with comments in Germany that were widely interpreted as bearish for the U.S. dollar.
"It seems persuasive that, given the size of the U.S. current account deficit, a diminished appetite for adding to dollar balances must occur at some point," Greenspan said.
But ANZ's Hynes said he believes there will be more to gold's performance in 2005 than U.S. dollar weakness.
"If that was the only thing I probably wouldn't be as bullish," he said. "But we certainly are seeing other factors support it, and obviously the fundamentals of the market are positive.
"Demand is relatively strong even at these higher prices, and we aren't seeing a lot of growth in supply," said the analyst.
In many respects, the dynamics are similar to those affecting base metals, where demand is strong and limited supply growth is creating large deficits, Hynes said.
The big difference with gold is the massive overhang of stocks, in the form of huge central bank reserves, notwithstanding large sales in recent years by European and other banks, he said.
But even on this score, Hynes is encouraged.
"From what I have seen or heard of the (European) central banks' intentions for their sales, they're actually less than the (limits of the) recently signed agreement," he said, referring to the renewal earlier this year of the European central banks sales accord.
The new five-year deal, which went into effect in September, caps aggregate gold sales among the 15 signatories at 500 tons per year.

"It seems that a lot of the banks are now comfortable with the (gold reserve) levels they have gotten to, so it's not a particularly pressing issue for them as it was a few years ago," Hynes said.
The supply-and-demand picture therefore is such that gold could also rise, albeit more modestly, in non-U.S. dollar terms in 2005, he said.
This would benefit gold miners in South Africa, Australia and Canada, among the top-four producing nations along with the U.S., where domestic currency gains have offset the effect of the rising U.S.-dollar gold price.
Hynes said country-specific circumstances in the four big producers need to be taken into account.
"But I do believe gold will increase more than the Aussie dollar does appreciate," he said. Canadian and South African producers also should benefit from a small increase in prices, albeit nothing on the order of what U.S.-dollar operators have seen recently.
Among the potential downside risks for gold, Hynes cited the possibility of a sustained fall in oil prices and a turnaround in the U.S. dollar's fortunes.

Although less of an immediate concern, high gold prices could spur increased exploration that might eventually boost supply, which is currently static, he said.
"The oil price was a significant driver of gold earlier in the year, as gold became a hedge against possible inflation in the U.S., so that is one possible negative," the analyst said of a hypothetical retreat in oil prices.
Nevertheless, Hynes said there is a good chance he may have to boost ANZ's official average price forecast for next year, which currently sits at US$415/oz.
"Oh, absolutely," he said. "I'll (re-examine it) closer to Christmas to really see how gold has held up through this spurt," Hynes said, adding that "it will be... a critical month or two leading into 2005."
 
Alcuni dubbi sull'investimento nell'ETF legato all'andamento del Gold (GLD) di cui abbiamo parlato sopra.....

Where Is the ETF's Gold?
by James Turk


This past Thursday trading began on the NYSE for what is being called a 'gold ETF'. Here's how CBSMarketWatch described it just before the launch: "The first exchange-traded fund investing in gold bullion will begin trading on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday, said sources familiar with the situation. Called StreetTracks Gold Shares, the ETF will trade under the symbol 'GLD' with the World Gold Council as the sponsor." After the launch Reuters reported: "The ETF...offers investors the ability to access the gold bullion market, with each share representing one-tenth of an ounce of gold." [Emphasis added]

From these and other news reports it would appear that anyone buying this new ETF is buying gold bullion. But a different picture emerges from a careful reading of GLD's prospectus and accompanying advertising material.

By way of background, I have been following very closely the development of the gold ETF because I wanted to see if it would have a high level of governance over its bullion assets that was comparable to what my colleagues and I have achieved in GoldMoney. A product launched by the World Gold Council could have some competitive impact. Additionally, GoldMoney is exploring the possibility of creating its own ETF using goldgrams as the underlying asset.

Last year after analyzing the WGC's proposed ETF, I concluded that its custodial controls were inadequate. In December 2003 I wrote: "The risks of the WGC's funds appear too great. Until more questions are answered and/or the fund's structure is changed to eliminate its loose custodial controls, I do not recommend that these funds be purchased." To understand this conclusion, I recommend reading that article in full.

Shortly after my article appeared, representatives of the WGC contacted me and threatened me with a lawsuit, unless I retracted the article. Needless to say, I was shocked, because I knew my work to be accurate, based as it was on publicly available information (i.e., the draft prospectus of the proposed US fund and the actual prospectus for similar funds in London and Australia). Also, it was clear from my article that I was focusing upon the importance of owning physical gold bullion, rather than just paper promises to deliver gold. Given that the stated mission of the WGC is to encourage ownership of physical gold bullion and to educate consumers about gold, why were they menacing me? But the threat of litigation does cause one to focus their mind, so I hired a top NYC attorney specializing in SEC law, just in case the WGC followed through on its threats.

Fortunately, they didn't. I assume that the WGC in the end recognized my work to be accurate, and that they didn't have a case. My attorney came to the same conclusion. What's more, he advised that the WGC was interfering with the work of an analyst, which is something the SEC seriously frowns upon. Remember the hot water Donald Trump got into when he intervened to have a brokerage firm analyst fired after writing a negative story on Trump's casinos?

Anyway, because of discussions with my attorney and some additional study, I learned a lot about SEC procedures. And one of the foremost requirements established by the SEC is that mutual funds must have absolute control over their assets.

In other words, this requirement exists to make sure that retail investors purchasing shares in a mutual fund are in effect buying the assets the fund is supposed to own, and not just some promise to deliver those assets. I understand that this safeguard is required because of past instances in which certain funds never really owned the assets they purported to own, and collapsed with losses to the fund's shareholders. Thus, by enforcing this requirement, the SEC is doing its job of protecting the 'little guy'. The conclusion of my December 2003 article was that the WGC's proposed ETF did not meet this requirement, which I took to be the reason the SEC had not registered at that time the WGC's proposed fund despite the many months it had been under review.

Given GLD's recent launch, I was therefore interested to learn from its prospectus how GLD had been changed to provide the necessary assurances of integrity that the fund's gold bullion assets really exist. More specifically, I was interested to learn how the WGC had improved the custodial controls so that GLD met the same standard that the SEC applies to other mutual funds. The answer came quickly. It didn't.

Even before starting the prospectus, I downloaded the 2-page fact sheet from http://www.streettracksgoldshares.com, and there on the first line was an eye-opener laying out the essential nature of GLD: "Objective: Designed to track the price of gold".

Its objective is not to provide investors with the opportunity to own gold bullion by investing in the shares of an ETF. Rather, GLD is designed to track the price of gold. That objective is no different than what is accomplished by a gold futures contract or any of the dozens of numerous gold derivatives available these days. More to the point, futures and derivatives are sold even if the seller does not own the underlying gold bullion needed to deliver on its obligation. They are in practice fractional reserve systems, which allow liabilities for gold to far exceed the quantity of gold owned by the seller of that liability.

Notwithstanding the numerous news accounts that described GLD as a means of investing in gold bullion, GLD cannot be accused of false advertising. Based just on their 2-page fact sheet, the WGC has by its own description created a security which has been designed to bet on the price of gold, not to enable investors to own physical gold bullion. My subsequent reading of the prospectus confirmed this conclusion because on the face of it, the weaknesses I identified in my December 2003 article have not been corrected. GLD has the same loose custodial controls described in the early draft prospectus.

To explain this point, the London bullion market operates on a 'trust-me' basis. Rather than move gold bars around when they are bought and sold - which is a costly process - the various participants accept the word of their counter-party that the bar they just bought really exists, and that it is safely stored in the counterparty's vault or the vault of another market participant.

Thus, for example, when GLD adds a gold bar, there is no assurance that the gold bar really exists unless it is in the vault of the custodian, HSBC. But the prospectus discloses that HSBC uses subcustodians and even sub-subcustodians, and what's worse, "the Custodian is not liable for the acts or omissions of its subcustodians". In other words, if the subcustodian does not have the gold, GLD "Shareholders cannot be assured that the Trustee will be able to recover damages from subcustodians...for any losses relating to the safekeeping of gold by such subcustodian". This means that "Because neither the Trustee nor the Custodian oversees or monitors the activities of subcustodians who may hold the Trust's gold, failure by the subcustodians to exercise due care in the safekeeping of the Trust's gold could result in a loss to the Trust." To be blunt, these disclosures mean that there is no certainty that the gold supposedly owned by GLD really exists. After all, if there was complete certainty that the gold did exist, the objective of GLD would be to provide investors with the opportunity to own gold bullion by investing in shares of an ETF, rather than its stated objective to just track the price of gold.

To explain this gold storage risk in greater detail, it is necessary to describe how the London bullion market functions. There are several vaults in London used by the various market participants, but I want to draw attention to only one - the vault owned and operated by the Bank of England. The BoE plays a central role in the operation of the London bullion market, as its vault is actively used as a clearing agent. In other words, the various bullion banks keep storage accounts with the BoE, and here's an example of how the clearing process works.

Say, Morgan Bank buys a gold bar from HSBC. Rather than incurring the cost of shipping the bar from HSBC's vault to Morgan's, HSBC says that Morgan can have one of HSBC's bars held on account with the BoE. The BoE makes a bookkeeping entry ('clearing' HSBC's obligation to Morgan), while enabling HSBC and Morgan to save the expense of shipping the bar between different vaults. Morgan now owns the gold bar in the BoE vault that was previously owned by HSBC. The BoE is reputed to store more gold than any other participant in the London bullion market, and here is where the problem arises.

The BoE does not allow the gold in its vault to be audited. In fact, there is no way of substantiating that the gold stored there is not owned by multiple parties, or for that matter, that the gold supposedly stored there even exists. Like the gold reportedly stored in Ft Knox, there is no verification of its existence by independent (i.e., non-government) auditors.

This reality is surprisingly not acknowledged by the GLD prospectus, which states: "The Trust's independent auditors may...visit the Custodian's premises in connection with their audit of the financial statements of the Trust." In what appears to be a glaring omission, the prospectus fails to disclose the important risk that the independent auditors will not visit the vaults of the subcustodians and sub-subcustodians, and more to the point, that the BoE does not allow auditors into its vault, even though the prospectus allows for the possibility that all of the fund's gold may be stored in the BoE.

Hence, by accepting the loose custodial controls of GLD, the SEC has thrown caution to the wind. It has inexplicably accepted for registration a fund that does not meet the same custodial standards required of other retail-oriented mutual funds. The question is why? For what reason has the SEC established this dangerous precedent with these nebulous custodial arrangements that could be exploited in GLD or in the future by unscrupulous operators who mimic the custodial structure, but have no intention of delivering the underlying assets to the fund? And after sitting on the WGC's filing for 18 months, why was GLD finally registered and launched this week?

Readers who are familiar with www.GATA.org and its research will no doubt recognize the subtle coincidence of surprising occurrences. For those not familiar with its work, GATA is an informal association of analysts (I am a card-carrying GATA member and proud of it) who contend that the gold price is being managed by central banks. For several years GATA's analysts have been providing ongoing evidence to support this conclusion.

For example, in an article published last week, John Brimelow states: "It was interesting to find in Paul Volker's memoirs the following comments about the aftermath of the successful American effort in 1973 to force a 10% currency revaluation on Europe and a 20% revaluation on Japan: 'The key was the yen currency of Japan, which had an enormous trade surplus. Appreciating the yen 10% against gold, and devaluing the dollar 10% against gold would mean that the yen would have appreciated by 20% against the dollar. European currencies would remain stable against gold and appreciate 10% against the dollar. On the condition that Japan agreed to revalue the yen, the European countries agreed to the realignment of exchange rates and the U.S. announced that the dollar would be devalued by 10%. By switching the yen to a floating exchange rate, the Japanese currency appreciated, and a sufficient realignment in exchange rates was realized. Joint intervention in gold sales to prevent a steep rise in the price of gold, however, was not undertaken. That was a mistake. Through March, the price of gold rose rapidly, and that knocked the psychological props out from under the dollar.' One can infer that the mistake of allowing gold an unrestrained voice at times of policy shifts was subsequently guarded against." In other words, the gold price is being thwarted by active central bank intervention, so that central banks do not repeat the 1973 experience described by Mr. Volcker - or more broadly, today as in 1973, gold and the dollar are competitors, and gold is being managed to make the dollar look better than it really is.

Therefore, is it just coincidence that British exchequer Gordon Brown was recently trotted out again as the gold price was climbing to raise that old canard about the IMF selling some gold? When his statement had no effect and the gold price continued to rise, it was clear that gold's price managers needed stronger medicine.

So on Friday the Banque de France said it would dishoard 500 tonnes of gold over the next five years, a conspicuously timed announcement given the quiet accompanying the 2nd Washington Agreement on Gold after the IMF meeting in early October. As John Brimelow astutely remarked: "Experienced observers of the gold market will have been amused to see the French gold sale announcement, sustaining the long tradition of this type of thing happening during interesting phases of gold price activity." But in contrast to past anti-gold announcements by central banks, recent jawboning has had little visible effect in talking down the gold price, which continues to rise.

Thus, jawboning by central banks is no longer enough. And given the ongoing decline in hedging by gold miners, the central banks need new tools in their attempts to suppress the gold price. One of these tools is apparently now being delivered by GLD. Because of its loose custodial controls and the opaque cloak thrown over vaulting at the Bank of England, GLD can deflect demand for physical gold into the paper market. Mineweb.com neatly explained this outcome in a recent article, the title of which makes clear the essential nature of a new security launched in South Africa with WGC support, "Paper gold for Johannesburg".

People who might have otherwise bought physical gold coins or bars, but wanted the same thing with more convenience, could be misled into thinking that they are buying physical gold by investing in the shares of GLD. But given GLD's loose custodial controls, there is no certainty that the investor is actually buying gold bullion in the form of an exchange-traded security. They may instead only be buying paper (i.e., a promise to deliver physical metal, rather than the metal itself) because there is no possibility by independent auditing or other means to substantiate that the gold supposedly owned by GLD and stored in the BoE and other vaults (other than HSBC's vault) really exists. This mechanism thus provides the central banks managing gold's price with a tool to divert into paper promises the money coming from investors who otherwise think they are buying physical metal, thereby enabling these central banks to relieve the upward pressure we have been seeing on the gold price. Therefore, if you are intending to buy physical gold bullion, do not buy GLD.

I would like to thank the many members of the GATA army who supplied information and ideas for this article, particularly Ron Lutka. But I would like to call on the army for another task. A lot of important questions need to be answered.

We need to find out why the SEC registered GLD. What's more, why did it happen just as gold's price managers are starting to lose control of the gold market and need new tools to bolster their efforts to keep a lid on the gold price?

The SEC has broken with precedent. Like the bucket-shops of the 1920's that allowed investors to bet on price changes without owning the underlying security, GLD enables investors to bet on the price of gold, without GLD being required to meet the same custodial standards required of other retail-oriented mutual funds. Why? Did central banks force the SEC to register the WGC's fund? Did the SEC cave-in under central bank pressure, even though GLD's loose custodial controls conflict with longstanding SEC requirements and establish a dangerous precedent? Why did the SEC register GLD in a week when anti-gold jawboning by central banks wasn't working, making clear they need new tools to keep a lid on the gold price? And why doesn't the prospectus disclose the big risk that there are serious restrictions on auditing the gold supposedly owned by the fund?

The SEC needs to be called 'on the carpet'. And I call on the GATA army to do it.

In conclusion, as gold climbs higher, the nefarious scheme to manage its price comes closer to collapsing. When it does, many ill-fated and uninformed investors will come to understand that the promises they hold to deliver gold to them aren't worth the paper they are printed on. Don't fall for that trap. Don't take risks with your bedrock asset - gold. Demand physical bullion. Don't take paper.



James Turk,
The Freemarket Gold & Money Report
 
A Golden Wall of Worry

Mike Swanson

Gold is hopping and the gold stocks are on fire! Gold hit a new 16-year high last week.

This past Wednesday also marked the launch of the much anticipated StreetTracks Gold Shares (NYSE: GLD).

The World Gold Council is the sponsor of the Gold Shares, an exchange traded fund that allows American investors to make a play on gold in much the same way they use QQQ's to trade the entire Nasdaq.

Barclay Global Investors also has a gold exchange traded fund in the works, the Ishares COMEX Gold Trust, which is expected to trade on the AMEX before the end of the year.

Both funds are expected to attract over $2 billion in cash from investors over the next 6 months. That's a large enough figure to provide ample fuel to the gold bull market, just like mutual fund investors helped turn technology stocks into momentum vehicles in the 1990's.

Going forward, I see any dips in gold as temporary. I am convinced that gold is beginning wave 2 of its bull market and should continue to rise appreciably higher as the year goes on. However, it is clear that gold and gold stocks are climbing a steep wall of worry right now.

I'm getting this sense from reading other newsletter writers and from emails that I am receiving from subscribers and non-subscribers alike. Here are excerpts from two insightful emails I received:

"Hi Mike. It is looking like you and Dave were correct on your break out call. I read a fair bit of stuff during the day and especially in the evening. It is astonishing to me that when I got into gold last year the price was in the $375 range and people were so bullish! At $400 it was excitement and at $430 it was flat our euphoric. To me it was incredible that when gold hit $430 and closed over it, bearish commentators were calling for tops and the gold community was still in the doldrums. Even at the Toronto gold show with gold well over $400 there was little excitement and positive sentiment among the attendees. Even now at $440 I would venture to guess that excitement was greater last year at $370! Incredible."

"I have an opinion why gold is not taking off much faster. The Dow is also climbing and while we have guys like Kudlow and Crammer pounding the table on CNBC that we have a renewed Bull Market in general equities, gold will still be flying in under most peoples radar. It is in stealth mode. When this Dow and Nasdaq rally fails it could get even more exciting." WL

You are right the masses are certainly ignorant of the gold trend. But I am confident that will change over the course of the year. As the dollar continues to break down and inflation continues to grow people will recognize gold as a store of value. At one time during the 1970's it wasn't unusual for an investment advisor to recommend putting 5-10% of your assets into gold as protection against inflation. You have to remember inflation was running on average over 5% a year during the 1970's and at one point hit over 10% a year. People in bonds and fixed income instruments without exposure to precious metals suffered.

Bull markets climb walls of worry. As they go up people are skeptical and weak hands get shaken out. It takes continual buying to fuel a market higher and some people simply have to buy at higher prices than others. When you reach a point though when everyone is in who can be, that's when a bull run comes to an end. Consequently that is also the moment at which bullish sentiment is at a peak.

Understanding how sentiment works is important, but reading it is more of an art than a science.

I believe we aren't near the top of the wall of worry for gold. I don't even know if we can even see the top from here.

"Dear Mike,
The gold/gold shares markets didn't really go down yesterday...operators were just chumming for shorts.
Your piece yesterday was timely. I think, over the passage of time, it has become amateur hour for technical analysts: everybody who trades now watches the marginal indicators (obscure ratios, MACD's, stochastics, etc.), which are good in trading-range markets and can alert you concerning possible exhaustion, but really only tend to confuse you when you are in the middle of a strong trend. Hence, there are WAY too many bulls on the sidelines, waiting for the "perfect" correction, allowing them to buy while all of us other "buy-and-hold" idiots get what's coming to us. It seldom happens, this "perfect" reentry point, and the sideliners end up buying the tops just like everyone else." - GC

Being someone who makes most of his investment decisions based on charts I'm well aware of the limitations of technical analysis and indicators. Ratios and stochastics are some of the tools I use. I think you are correct in your analysis of the situation. I think there are two things going on that is contributing to a powerful wall of worry in the gold market.

First the nature of technical indicators is that none of them work 100% of the time and there are so many indicators that you can always find one that will tell you what you want to hear at any given time. You have to really know what you are doing, and that probably takes the experience gained by learning from mistakes.

Most indicators only work in certain market conditions. For instance stochastics only give accurate buy and sell signals when a market is going sideways. When a market is bullish and trending up the stochastics will repeatedly give you false sell signals. I know, because between 2000 and 2003 I used them with repeated success to short tech stocks when they gave me sell signals on the Nasdaq. But since March of 2003, they're no longer giving reliable short selling signals.

One of the most reliable patterns in the gold market is the relative strength of the gold stocks to gold. When gold stocks act stronger than gold both tend to go higher. However, if both have been going up and the stocks falter while gold continues to go higher a major reversal has always been imminent. This happened last year and in July of 2002 before large corrections in gold stocks took place.

Over the past few weeks I have seen several technical analysts, who I have a lot of respect for and don't consider to be amateurs, say that there is no way gold can keep going higher because the stocks are lagging. These people believe that a big gold correction is right around the corner. I heard one of them say that gold should go through the lows of May and totally crash.

I think they are seeing things wrong.

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What these people are doing is noticing that gold broke out to a new 52-week high last week while the XAU and HUI have failed to do that and then are concluding that gold is leading the stocks - which is bearish if that were correct.

In reality the gold stocks have been leading gold since August. They have been rising at a much faster pace. In fact some stocks rose 15-20% earlier this week when gold broke above $440.

The reason why the XAU and HUI did not make a new 52-week high while gold did is because they fell so much more when gold had its correction in the first quarter. The XAU made a high of 113.41 in January and a low of 81.21 in May. That was a loss over 29% while gold fell only 14%. In order to just get back to par the stocks had to go up much more than gold did.

The price ratio between the XAU and gold is actually bullish and as long as the stocks continue to go up at a faster pace than gold I will remain bullish and hold the gold shares that I have.

The second big wall of worry is the simple volatile price action in the gold stocks themselves. In the past two weeks they have had a pattern of going up over 10% in just a few days and then falling 5-7% in one day. Those down days simply put the worry into people who hold gold stocks - often forcing them to sell in fear of losing profits - and has caused people to stay on the sidelines and remain skeptical while even baiting some short sellers into the market.

I believe this volatile price action is going to continue for some time and will prevent many people from getting into the gold market. The action should not be a surprise. Although the stocks and the metal have been breaking out, neither of them broke out of long bases. They bottomed earlier this year and rose straight up to their highs. They only paused for a short period of time in October and November before beginning wave 2 of the gold market.

This is important. Back in the winter of 2002 when gold stocks broke out and began a big bull run - and last year too - they did so by coming out of a long base. A long consolidation phase has the effect of transferring stock from weak hands to strong hands. The fact that we have not seen such a long consolidation process near the highs this year means that there are a lot of weak hands in gold stocks - who will sell on dips out of fear and help create the volatility in the gold market.

They are an important component of the wall of worry.

To find out what gold stocks Mike Swanson holds and plans on buying subscribe to his free Weekly Gold Report at http://wallstreetwindow.com/weeklygold.htm



November 22, 2004

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23rd November 2004
Gold has backed off in US trade so far today after posting a fresh multi-year high of $449.50 towards the end of European trade. Gold was initially pressured lower in European trade, slipping to $446 as the Euro and Yen consolidated against the dollar. Comments from Russian officials quickly changed market sentiment after indicating the Russian central bank may increase its holding of Euro’s within its foreign-exchange reserves stating that the dollar’s decline had been a “cause for concern.” The Euro quickly ran to a fresh lifetime high of 1.3091 which gold trader latched on to, lifting the yellow metal to a fresh high of $449.50. Gold has backed off to consolidate around the $447-8.50 level since and with the Euro capped by options protection in front of 1.31 and COMEX option expiration later I think $450 will be the high for the moment although with the markets in their current state I wouldn’t rule out a quick blip higher. The build up to the US Thanksgiving holiday at the end of the week led to a generally orderly day yesterday but gold still managed to eke out an extension of the current bull-run as the background concerns of reduced global economic growth, rising oil prices and geo-political tension prompted further safe-haven interest. Trade over the day was slow, initially confined between $446-48 before slipping slightly lower on the US open as fund liquidation pushed gold to a low for the day at $445.75. Bid’s, predominantly local, returned once the funds had finished selling taking gold back to $448 and eventually on to a high of $448.70 by the close. Trading volumes remain thin this morning with TOCOM closed but gold has eased slightly after concerns of intervention primarily in the Yen have triggered light gains in the dollar. Overall gold remains within easy reach of the $450 level and despite the scale of long positions held within the market the current geo-political and economical climate is prompting the vast majority to hold their longs as safe-haven protection.
 
Analisi invariata: :)



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GOLD: While the overnight Asian action didn't show much in the way of definitive direction, it should be noted that the currencies pulsed up against the Dollar around 4:40 cst and therefore the Asian trade might have missed the majority of the overnight Dollar slide. We are not sure why the Asian trade was pausing ahead of the US numbers, because expectations call for a mixed set of readings today on the US economy. Given the trend in the Dollar, we doubt that mixed numbers will do anything to alter the pattern and therefore we doubt the numbers will upset the up trend in gold. Chinese spot gold prices surged to yet another high and apparently did so off physical buying interest. Late yesterday a US Fed member once again played down the Dollar threat and the threat of high oil prices on the US economy and that seems to have calmed concerns slightly.
However, given the magnitude of the Dollar slide overnight, it is always possible that some intervention talk surfaces, as Central Bankers don't like big concentrated aggressive moves in exchange rates. In any regard, we have to expect more talk of a Dollar crisis and that is supportive of gold. The top of the up trend channel in February gold comes in at $453 and the bottom of the channel comes in today at $449. The trend is up and prices look to continue to grind higher.
 
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ed un omaggio al dollaro: :)

'TWAS THE DEATH OF THE DOLLAR

‘Twas the death of the dollar and all through the land

Not a greenback was traded for more than a Rand.

The paper was shoveled with nary a care

With hopes that inflation would not soon be there.



My children sit quiet and await the sad tale

Of the day that the Dollar Standard had failed.

In the quaint days of old when money was good

We bought nothing with debt and saved as we should.

But Lord Father Keynes had preached to the crowd

That paper was good and honest and proud!



We’ve no need for metal like silver or gold

Such thinking and bias is foolish and old.

We’ll print all we need and make not a fuss

The lessons of history apply not to us.

Reserve Notes were hailed as safe from the fate

That befell all nations both humble and great.

Then oceans of ink and forests of trees

Were forged into money by sovereign decrees.

The world emerged from her shackles of rust

The barbarous relics were tossed in the dust!



Dreaming we had beaten the liquidity trap

We all settled down for the Kondratieff nap.

When straight from the East there arose such a stink

The unmistakable scent of paper and ink.

We’ve seen these before, we sent them to you,

How terribly rude to refuse I.O.U.’s!



With credit for you and credit for me

There’s no cause to work for the things that we need.

Our friends in the East are happy to loan

Their savings back West, but it’s us they shall own.

Their factories were built by the sweat of the brow

And their people were fed from the fruit of the plow.

The things that we bought they shipped them all here

Prices are low, so there’s nothing to fear!

Our presses of print glowed white from the heat

Once cut loose from gold there is no retreat.



So the banks of the world stacked them twenty feet high

Locked safe in their vaults away from the eye.

Its funny, you know, that they guard them with care

They sold out their gold to make room for them there.

Protected by buzzers and bells that alarm

Believing that this made them safe from all harm

While so far away to the debtors delight

A fresh batch just like them appeared in the night!



While in the short term the sad joke was on them

They planned and they plotted the payback of men.

They graciously smiled when we handed them more

Knowing full well they’d be back on our shore.

At first they bought Treasury Debt by the ton

It kept the game going; it’s all in good fun!

But the more that they loaned the more they got back

Their grand plan had failed, it’s time to attack!

We know what we’ll do, well dump them en masse

We’ll buy all the gold and the silver and brass.

Right at the mine with our briefcase of bills

We’ll buy it all up then head for the hills.

Whatever is left we will dump on the floor

With metal in hand we’ll need them no more.



I remember the fear in the pits on that day

The index had tumbled, all support went away.

She opened no bid and was down for the count

No one was buying in any amount.

The bottom had fallen below the last floor

The traders and hedgers all rushed for the door.

Where was the fabled Japanese boost

When the chickens aplenty had come home to roost?

Elliott’s disciples who worshipped the waves

Were blinded by graphs and so they behaved

By dumping their gold when reading twin peaks

They regretted their choice at the end of the week!



A six-pack of Joes arose from the din

They wondered whatever had done the buck in?

With her intaglio portraits of leaders of yore

And shifty black ink that seemed green just before.

“Its counterfeit proof” was the Treasury song

It only requires that the world play along.



The sheeple did bleat with their handfuls of cash,

Shell-shocked and seeing their wealth was now trash.

The Maestro who had turned his back on his youth

Could no longer hide from the rod of the truth.

Our masters are cruel and their judgment is right

It’s very dismal for all, and to all a cold night!
 

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