Gold Technicals
By: Adam Hamilton, CPA
Gold has much to
celebrate. Not only did it just hit new all-time nominal highs, its
secular bull was born exactly 10 years ago this week! It’s
enough to bring a tear to the eye of the bold contrarian investors
who’ve been riding this mighty bull market for an entire decade.
Much has changed since I first started recommending physical gold
coins as long-term investments in May 2001, when gold traded at
$264.
A decade later and
we’re on the verge of $1500, a once-unimaginable number. During a
horrendous secular-bear decade in the general stock markets where
the flagship S&P 500 stock index only gained 16.6%, gold soared
469.3%! Never having a single down year, the Ancient Metal of Kings
has no doubt been the best investment of the past decade. And its
global supply-and-demand
fundamentals
remain very bullish today, its secular bull is far from over.
But all bull
markets, including gold’s, flow and ebb. Massive uplegs are
followed by sharp corrections. These short-term trend changes
create great opportunities for speculators and investors alike.
Upleg tops offer ideal times for speculators to realize short-term
gains, and the subsequent correction bottoms generate the best
buying opportunities for both speculators and investors to deploy
more capital. So how are gold’s near-term technicals looking
today?
The short answer
is pretty good, although there are mixed bullish and bearish factors
that will probably influence gold in the coming months. Gold is
neither oversold nor overbought today, not too low and not too
high. It is just advancing nicely within a strong uptrend that has
persisted since the end of late 2008’s crazy stock panic. Gold’s
chart, which distills all relevant technical price action, continues
to look healthy.
In this gold chart
I built this week, the usual gold technicals including moving
averages and standard-deviation bands are slaved to the right axis.
The left axis shows how gold looks in terms of my
Relativity
trading system, which has been essential for helping us and our
subscribers ride this gold bull to massive trading gains. It
expresses gold as a multiple of its baseline 200-day moving average,
a construct that meanders in a horizontal trading range over time.

Ever since the
stock panic climaxed, gold has been powering higher in this strong
post-panic uptrend. It has rarely exceeded its upper resistance and
never fallen materially under its support line. This is a
textbook-perfect uptrend, with gold advancing well beyond its 200dma
in uplegs and correcting back down to its 200dma in corrections.
Gold’s behavior has been similar for its entire decade-long secular
bull.
If you divide the
blue gold-price line by its black 200dma line, the light-red
Relative Gold (rGold) line is the result. It is like flattening
gold’s 200dma line to horizontal, and then rendering where gold is
trading relative to it in perfectly-comparable percentage
terms. This rGold indicator has formed a horizontal trading range
running between 1.00x on the low side to 1.25x on the high side. In
other words, gold almost always meanders between its 200dma (1.00x)
and 25% above it (1.25x).
Trading gold is
simple, buy when it is near its 200dma and then sell when it
stretches too far above it. Back in early December 2009 gold
rallied too far too fast and thus became overbought, hitting 1.25x
on a relative basis. This sparked enough greed to suck in all
traders interested in buying gold at the time, which left only
sellers. So gold soon corrected sharply after being so overbought.
Prudent traders sell when rGold balloons to overbought extremes.
Conversely, in
late July 2010 gold fell to within 2% of its 200dma in the usual
summer doldrums. This was a fantastic time to buy technically.
Largely due to this 200dma approach, not long after that I predicted
a big autumn gold
rally in the coming months. And indeed as expected, gold surged
dramatically. When gold nears its 200dma, all the traders
interested in selling anytime soon have already been driven out.
Excessive fear leaves only buyers, so gold soon rallies in its next
upleg.
Even simpler, gold
can be bought when it is near its uptrend’s support line and sold
near resistance. Note that gold was above resistance at its
late-2009 topping and slightly below support at its mid-2010
bottoming. Later last year gold’s autumn rally carried it back up
near resistance where its advance soon slowed. After once again
topping in early December 2010, gold actually started correcting in
January 2011.
And this is where
gold’s technicals start getting really relevant to today and the
next couple months’ outlook. In 7 weeks leading into its
late-January low, gold had corrected 7.8% in a nice healthy
bull-market correction. Yet this correction wasn’t quite mature yet
when gold bounced, this metal was still well above its 200dma and
uptrend support lines. Gold had been approaching oversold levels,
but hadn’t hit them yet.
That late-January
bounce was driven by an extraordinary geopolitical event. After the
US markets closed the afternoon before, Egypt’s government severed
Internet access for its 79m people. The next morning, CNBC started
running extensive riot footage out of Egypt. This led to intense
anxiety that drove the biggest stock-market down day since
mid-August. Gold surged 1.8% on these geopolitical fears.
And ever since
that prematurely-interrupted correction, gold has been climbing
higher and seldom looking back. Unfortunately since it never got
truly oversold before this catalyst sparked its latest rally, its
sentiment wasn’t fully rebalanced. Not enough traders were
frightened away, fear didn’t get high enough. This left a weaker
sentimental foundation for today’s rally, reducing its ultimate
potential.
Just like gold
never really grew oversold in late January, it has yet to grow
overbought in this rally. Measured especially in terms of its
relationship to its 200dma, as well as within its simple uptrend
channel, gold is not overbought or excessively high today.
This means technicals and sentiment don’t yet stand in the way of
gold’s advance continuing. And indeed seasonal factors argue for
gold buying persisting.
Due to large
fluctuations in gold demand that follow the calendar year, this
metal actually exhibits strong seasonal tendencies. My latest essay
on gold
seasonals illustrates all of this in depth. Seasonally, April
and May are strong months for gold. On average in this secular
bull, gold has rallied 4.1% between late March and late May. If
these seasonals hold true again this year, gold has another 6 or 7
weeks to extend this rally. This probable outcome wouldn’t surprise
me one bit.
After it typically
peaks in late May though, gold enters the brutal
summer doldrums.
June and July, and sometimes August, are always the weakest time of
the year for precious metals. There are no cultural factors like
Asian festivals to drive gold demand spikes in summer, and many
traders are vacationing and not particularly interested in the
markets. So like usual in early April, the best we can hope for
seasonally is for gold to rally into late May before it starts
drifting lower again into early August.
While we have
capital deployed in gold stocks because of this seasonal-rally
tendency and the fact gold isn’t overbought yet, other factors are
near-term bearish for gold. This metal is nowhere near its
200dma and support, so it would be foolish to be unreservedly
short-term bullish. The biggest risks for gold in the next couple
months actually come from the overbought general stock markets!
The stock markets
have been very overextended for a couple months, riddled with
extreme complacency and greed and very overbought technically. A
real full-blown
correction is overdue to rebalance sentiment, far beyond the
recent minor 6.4% pullback that bounced in mid-March. Falling stock
markets create problems for gold on a couple key fronts.
First,
stock-market corrections (and even major pullbacks) spark a
worldwide surge in anxiety and fear. This leads foreign stock
traders to not only sell their local stocks, but then sell their
local currencies to park capital in US dollars. This safe-haven
currency demand drives big US dollar rallies coinciding with the
stock-market weakness. Stock selloffs
igniting dollar
rallies have been seen every time since the panic that falling
stock markets generated any meaningful fear. And when the US dollar
surges, futures traders dump gold.
As the ultimate
currency for six millennia of human history, gold is and always has
been money. Thus it tends to trade like a currency when the
foreign-exchange markets are experiencing big moves. All the
biggest and fastest US dollar rallies of the last few years have
coincided exactly with stock-market selloffs, and thus
indirectly the stock-market selling has really weighed on gold. A
new stock correction today would almost certainly lead to similar
selling pressure hammering this metal.
Falling stock
markets also have a universal bearish psychological impact.
The fear and anxiety they spark lead traders to sell all risky
assets, which is known as the “risk-off trade”. And somewhat
surprisingly given its long safe-haven history, gold is considered a
risky asset today. While I don’t agree with this, the fact is
traders are still lumping it in with other commodities and selling
them all when stocks are weak. So gold faces heavy psychological
splash damage, and selling pressure, during stock-market
corrections.
This sentimental
link is greatly exacerbated by the gigantic
GLD gold ETF.
This immensely-successful trading vehicle enables stock traders to
get direct exposure to the gold price. It acts as a conduit for the
vast pools of stock-market capital to flow into and out of
physical gold. So when falling stock markets weigh on universal
sentiment and traders start selling risky assets to reduce their
capital at risk, GLD can be sold as well. And if this ETF’s shares
are sold at a faster rate than gold, it drags down gold with it.
This next chart
looks at GLD’s physical-gold-bullion holdings compared to the gold
price. In order for any tracking ETF to work, its custodians have
to shunt excess buying and selling pressure directly into the
underlying asset. So when GLD’s holdings are rising, demand for GLD
shares exceeds demand for gold. In order to keep GLD from
decoupling to the upside and failing its tracking mission, its
custodians issue new shares and use the proceeds to buy gold
bullion. Stock demand is shunted into physical gold.
But this conduit
is a double-edged sword. When GLD experiences differential selling
pressure compared to what gold itself faces, this ETF will decouple
to the downside. To prevent this, GLD’s custodians have to sop up
the excess GLD share supply. They raise the funds to buy back
shares by selling some of this ETF’s gold bullion. Thus excess
selling pressure in this ETF is shunted into gold itself, driving
down its price. With this critical dynamic in mind, take a look at
GLD’s holdings lately.

GLD’s gold bullion
held in trust for its shareholders offers a window into how stock
traders feel about gold. Rising GLD holdings mean stock-market
capital is flowing into GLD and thus into gold. Falling GLD
holdings reveal capital flowing out of GLD, money raised by this ETF
selling bullion. These flows are great for gold at times like early
2009 when major hedge funds bought aggressively. But when stock
traders want to exit gold for any reason, like being worried about
risk, GLD selling weighs on gold prices.
In 2009 and early
2010, GLD holdings generally rose when gold was rallying. This
makes sense, as everyone gets more excited and enthusiastic about an
asset with a rising price. And then when gold corrected after these
advances, stock traders generally held onto GLD anyway. There
wasn’t significant selling pressure, this ETF’s holdings were
“sticky” as stock-market traders believed in gold’s long-term
potential.
Unfortunately
though, in mid-2010 this bullish model started to break. Despite
the big autumn gold rally last year, GLD’s holdings drifted lower.
This means stock traders were buying GLD at a slower rate than gold
was being bought, forcing it to gradually liquidate holdings to
equalize the differential demand. And then when gold started
correcting in January, GLD’s holdings fell rather sharply. Stock
traders sold GLD shares much faster than gold was being sold,
which has been very rare in GLD’s 6-year history.
On top of this,
GLD’s holdings continued drifting lower despite gold’s recent
rallying since late January! This is very odd, stock traders either
aren’t interested in gold or don’t believe its current rally has
staying power. Together all these developments since last summer
have led to the weakest trend we’ve seen in GLD holdings since this
ETF was born. This can’t be a good omen.
Given the fading
stock-trader enthusiasm for gold exposure, the probabilities are as
high as they’ve ever been that GLD shares will be sold aggressively
in any stock-market correction. It has been so long since any real
fear was seen in the stock markets (last summer) that it ought to
flare quickly when the next correction accelerates. This will lead
to very bearish universal psychology and put tremendous pressure on
traders to de-risk their portfolios by selling commodities,
including gold.
So between the
likely US dollar rally and deteriorating GLD holdings, the bearish
sentiment spawned by a stock-market selloff has a much greater
chance than usual of spilling into gold. If this stock-market
correction continues to tarry, gold’s bullish seasonals should exert
themselves in the coming weeks. But if the S&P 500 finally starts
falling, I suspect gold will be hard-pressed to avoid getting sucked
in.
While gold
certainly isn’t overbought in a technical sense today, the interplay
between its seasonals and the increasingly-likely stock-market
correction’s impact can’t be dismissed. This metal looks bullish in
the near term, but guardedly so. Its last correction was cut short
so sentiment wasn’t properly rebalanced, which leaves this rally
with less potential than usual. Still, on average gold tends to
perform quite well in April and May.
At Zeal we’re
playing gold cautiously today. We have some gold-stock trading
positions outstanding, but nowhere close to a full deployment. That
will come after gold weathers this year’s summer doldrums and is
driven back down to its 200dma. But nevertheless we are continuing
our fundamental research as always, trying to discover the
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The bottom line is
gold’s technicals look pretty good today. Despite its recent rally,
this metal isn’t anywhere close to being overbought yet. And
heading into one of its seasonally-strong periods of the year, it
has plenty of potential to continue advancing. But the big wildcard
is the stock markets, which themselves are very overbought and due
to start correcting any day. This would weigh on gold.
Stock-market
corrections drive sharp US dollar rallies, leading futures traders
to dump gold. And thanks to the direct conduit for stock-market
capital the GLD ETF created, a correction’s risk-off psychology can
now spill directly into gold. And given what GLD’s recently
declining holdings signal about waning stock-trader interest in
gold, today’s stock-correction spillover risk is much higher than
usual for this metal.
Adam Hamilton
www.ZealLLC.com
Posted Friday, April 08 2011
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