It is clear that we are now in the first stages of a Wave 5 rally that will take us to new highs next year.
Today's video looks at our targets for this intiial rally phase and looks at Friday's price action in a bit more detail.
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Gold shot higher after Ben Bernanke's speech at Jackson Hole and has held onto all of Friday's gains overnight and this morning. The gold price is currently trading around 1690, within a few points of our initial target of 1700.
It is clear that we are now in the first stages of a Wave 5 rally that will take us to new highs next year. Today's video looks at our targets for this intiial rally phase and looks at Friday's price action in a bit more detail.
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Whilst Ben Bernanke didn’t make an outright announcement that QE3 is around the corner in his much anticipated speech at the Jackson Hole monetary policy symposium, his words did enough to light a fire under gold and send it to a 5 month high at the close. Gold currently stands at $1691 – up $36 on the day and over $45 from the low it created immediately after Bernanke’s speech. The initial reaction to his comments were negative – many were expecting a full-on announcement that a round of stimulus initiatives were imminent, much like he did back in 2010 at this summit, and so the gold price fell away at first. It was no massive surprise that he stopped short of making any firm commitments. Whilst many of the economic indicators are similar between 2010 and 2012, this year is an election year – and the economy is the big issue. Over the next couple of months the US economy will be in the spotlight and so to announce new measures right now would only intensify the heat. It is much more likely that the Fed will keep their options open until after the election and then implement a new range of measures if the sluggish growth and high unemployment continues. Only if things get noticeably worse will they act before then. That said, there was enough in his speech to give a clear indication that the Fed are ready to act and that they believe the economy needs the shot in the arm. Statements such as persistently high US unemployment being a “grave concern”, that economic recovery is “far from satisfactory” and that the Fed “should not rule out” new policies tell us that they are ready and willing – but history tells us that the Fed doesn’t like to intervene in the run up to an election and risk becoming a political football. As technical traders we were most pleased to see how the market reacted to such a “non” statement. We saw the typical knee-jerk reaction with a sell off – speculators anticipating strong words thought it wise to jump ship. After that the technical trading kicked in with investors buying the dip around $1645 (which was the 38.2% fib support level from the previous move) and very quickly pushing the price higher. Our daily video, released to our subscribers prior to Bernanke’s speech, predicted this was most likely. Once gold took out the previous high at $1676 it encountered resistance around $1690 – this is a key level created from previous highs back in March and also represents the 61.8% fib retracement from the high at the end of February to the low in May. When gold breaks beyond $1690-$1700 the next target is $1715 followed by $1730-$1735 after which there isn’t much in the way back up to $1800.
We’ve been saying for the past few weeks that we believe this to be the return to the bull market – higher highs and higher lows since the end of June told us that the market had turned, but it was range-bound and trudging its way through the extra-low trading volumes of the summer doldrums. The reaction to today’s news firms up this belief – obviously there are always going to be pull backs along the way, but we now see this as a bull market and are trading accordingly. |
Old Posts
August 2021
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