A Trading Pattern For Gold
Source: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/ContrarianProfits/~3/505462899/10990Posted on Wednesday, January 7th, 2009 | In Market Commentary
The currencies rally back! … The risk takers are back! … Mixed bag of economic reports… A “cross thing” for sterling… And Now… Today’s Pfennig!
Well, front and center this morning is a rally in the currencies that began yesterday mid-morning, and has carried through the Asian and European markets. I’d tell you why the euro is 2.5 figures above yesterday morning’s level, but you’d laugh at me… No wait! That’s what you’re supposed to do, Chuck, tell the people what’s going on! HA! Seriously though… I don’t think you’d laugh at me, maybe the dolts that run trading floors around the world, or the pundits that write stories about the markets, but not me!
Here’s the skinny… Yesterday, I told you about how the markets were convinced the European Central Bank (ECB) was going to follow the Fed and reduce interest rates this week on Thursday. I also told you that I DID NOT believe the ECB would cut rates, right? OK… Well, yesterday, and I don’t believe for one minute that these guys read the Pfennig and said, “Hey, that Chuck Butler says the ECB won’t cut rates, we had better change gears”… But, yesterday, the thought that the ECB would lag the Fed with interest rate cuts began a whispering campaign, and before you know, there’s a headline story on the Bloomberg, say just that!
Fickle dudes, eh? One day they think this, the next day they think that. To think it is one thing but to spew it all out for everyone to read, is another! I know, I know, I change my mind sometimes, and I’m always reminded of the saying by John Maynard Keynes…”When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?”
So… Anyway, back at the ranch, the euro is rising again, and the Aussie dollar is trading above 72-cents for the first time in three months! I’ve explained why this is going on, but in case you missed class that day… The Obama bounce, is giving a warm and fuzzy to the risk takers, and when risk comes back on board, the high yielders get a huge boost… Aussie, kiwi, reals, rands, they, even though their interest rates have been cut off at the knees, are still considered “high yielders”, and therefore, get all the love and attention, when the risk takers come on board…
U.S. stimulus spending is all the rage in the high yielders and the emerging markets, who have been beaten about the head and shoulders for far too long now! Yes, stimulus spending could be the key master to all that ails the world’s economic engine here in the U.S…. But at what cost?
I know, I know, you don’t want me getting on my soapbox and carrying on about the rising debt in the U.S. and our national debt going into the stratosphere, so I won’t… Not today…
There’s been a particular pattern going on in Gold that I think is worthy of mention. You see, yesterday a saw a story about Gold, and I decided to run a graph on what I thought had been happening, and the chart confirmed my thoughts… You see, Gold has been in a pattern of rising to fresh highs, and then falling back, but the falling back sees the lows at higher levels each time… A stair step if you will… Here’s a look at what I’m talking about…
In the past 3 months… Gold hit a low of $712.30 on Nov. 12, and rose to $821 to Nov 25
Then fell to $$756 on Dec 5, and rose to $852 on Dec 18.
Then fell to $846 on Dec 25, and rose to $882 on Dec 31.
The fell to $859 on Jan 5…
Where will it rise to this time? $900? Difficult to call, but this type of pattern usually indicates that each fall back in price (but to a higher low) creates a new base from which an asset can move higher. So, with that in mind, the outlook for a higher price in Gold in this pattern is possible.
Of course, $900, is a far cry from those that believe that Gold will get to $2500. But, I like small steps in assets, that way, it allows investors to still jump in without the asset getting away from them and then they chase the price higher and higher. Again, though, I shiver at $2500 Gold, because, if Gold is $2500, I can’t imagine the condition of the U.S. economy and the dollar…
The data yesterday in the U.S. was a mixed bag of bad stuff for the economy… The most important print was the ISM (non-manufacturing) Index. Recall yesterday I told you that the most important component of this report is the Employment component, which is my “secret” indicator of the National Jobs report (Jobs Jamboree). So… A quick look at the employment component indicates that the Jobs Jamboree, on Friday, will be close to negative -500K… This is what the “experts” are forecasting right now, and for once in a Blue Moon, I agree with them… Although, to me, I want to see the color of the November revision, which I explained all about the other day… Will it be -600K?
Factory Orders printed worse than expected yesterday… Factory Orders for November, collapsed 4.6% (remember the “experts” forecast -2.3%), and the prior was revised lower from -5.1% to -6.0%. I think that the back to back decline represents the biggest since data began in 1992.
The mixed bag part came in the form of the ISM (non-manufacturing) Index which measures the pulse of the Services industry, and for the first time in 4 months it did not contract. The index rose to 40.6… However, this is the 3rd month of below 45, which I’ve explained in the manufacturing side of this report indicates recession…
The Labor picture in Germany took a hit this morning, as the unemployment rate ticked up to 7.6% in December. You see, the Germans don’t have the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) to help them out each month with “cooked books”… If the U.S. unemployment rate was accurately calculated it would be much higher than the 6.7% the BLS gives us, and wants us to believe…
Anyway… I didn’t mean to have that turn into a discussion about the BLS, I wanted to point out that even with a sour report like that in Germany this morning, the euro is rallying…
Speaking of unemployment… Did you see that ALCOA announced that they would cut its work force by about 15,000, or roughly 14.5% of its current employees and contractors. It also plans salary and hiring freezes, more plant closures and production cuts, and a 50% cut in capital expenditures? I did, and if that right there doesn’t illustrate the dark clouds over the global economic picture, nothing does!
One currency in Europe that rallied like there was no tomorrow, yesterday was the British pound… Before I knew it, the pound was taking names and pushing higher. This has to be a “cross thing”, because there’s nothing, nada, zero, zilch, in the way of good news from the U.K. economic and financial problems… So, when I talk about a “cross thing” I’m simply talking about how the currency “pairs” get crossed against other currencies, and in the end, a particular currency, which is a part of a lot of “pairs” gets marked up… Or down… It can go both ways… But in the pound’s circle, it got marked up yesterday… But, I just don’t think the pound can hold these gains… The Bank of England (BOE) WILL cut rates tomorrow, and before you know it… Voila! A weaker pound once again.
Here lately, it seems that I’ve highlighted a “Currency of the day”… I don’t want to keep going with that, because it could become a real pain to come up with a “currency of the day”… For now, I’m highlighting currencies that have BIG moves in a day… If I carried on with a “Currency of the day” I could be stuck highlighting a currency that moved .1%! UGH! So, I’ll steer clear of that one…
So, the latest on the Madoff scandal as reported by the Wall Street Journal… “Ten days before his arrest, Bernard Madoff received $250 million from a man who helped give him his start on Wall Street, a move that shows how the investment manager tried to raise cash to stave off his firm’s collapse.”
Geez Louise, how’d you like to be the guy that gave Madoff $250 Million and watch it go away, and the guy get carted off to jail? (well not yet) I guess if you have $250 Million to “give away” there’s more where that came from, eh?
Currencies today 1/7/08: A$ .7210, kiwi .5965, C$ .8455, euro 1.3630, sterling 1.4955, Swiss .9090, rand 9.40, krone 6.9350, SEK 7.7975, forint 195.50, zloty 2.9120, koruna 19.25, yen 93.20, sing 1.4715, HKD 7.7525, INR 48.76, China 6.8335, pesos 13.35, BRL 2.2070, dollar index 82.29, Oil $48.29, Silver $11.38, and Gold… $864.25
Source: A Trading Pattern For Gold
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