Gold, Silver, HUI Technicals
By Adam Hamilton
After an exceptionally turbulent month in the precious-metals
complex, many traders are trying to make sense out of all the chaos. Did the recent violent retreats in gold,
silver, and the HUI gold-stock index likely mark the ends of their respective
uplegs? Or do these strong uplegs probably
remain intact?
Obviously this question is crucial as the prudent tactical
trading strategy going forward varies radically based on its answer. If these PM uplegs have
given up their ghosts, then it makes sense for traders to unload their
remaining long positions and maybe even get short. But if these PM uplegs
persist, then the gains to come will still be reaped on the long side.
As mere mortals, none of us can see the future. So only time will solve this conundrum with
certainty. But as speculators, we have
to game the probabilities now before
the outcome is clear. Technical
analysis, analyzing the PM price charts, is one tool
that can help put all the recent volatility into perspective. Seeing a lot of trading days’ results in
context offers a valuable read on the odds going forward.
Often technical analysis is viewed with suspicion, like some
form of superstitious divination. But it
does have great merits. Charts offer
perspectives on trends that are not apparent by just watching one trading day
at a time. Market prices are the
aggregate result of all buying and
selling decisions for an asset, regardless of the motives behind them. So theoretically, charted prices reflect all available
information.
But even if you still think technical analysis is like
slaughtering chickens and “interpreting” the resulting bloody mess, realize that
the majority of traders believe it is valid and useful. In the financial markets, often popular
belief becomes reality. If a significant
fraction of the capital trading any asset believes a certain chart level is
important, and it enters or exits the asset accordingly, it becomes a
self-fulfilling prophecy.
To make a crass analogy, if a suicide bomber kills you it
really doesn’t matter whether you share his faith or not. Your own beliefs are irrelevant. If he is willing to act on his beliefs in a
way that affects you, then you better learn about his beliefs. Technical analysis is similar. If many market participants believe in trend
lines, and their trades affect the prices of your trades, then you have to pay attention to charts.
Thus these gold, silver, and HUI technical charts offer
insights valuable to all traders. They
are all upleg-to-date charts, running from a month before the mid-August births
of these uplegs to today. Prices, moving
averages, and standard-deviation
bands are tied to the right axes. Relative prices, or
prices as multiples of their 200-day moving averages, are rendered in red on
the left axes.

Gold drives the entire PM complex,
it is the key to everything. Ultimately
the gold stocks and even silver and the silver stocks follow gold in the end. They are effectively gold sentiment plays
that amplify gold’s own volatility. If
gold heads higher, sooner or later silver and PM stocks will follow. If gold gets weaker, silver and PM stocks usually
mirror this behavior right away. So we’ll
start with gold.
Gold bottomed in mid-August right at its 200-day moving
average. Then it started surging higher
in the magnificent uptrend rendered above.
It remained within this trend channel, carving higher highs and higher
lows, until late February. Then it
started heading above its upper resistance line on its way to a new all-time
high. By mid-March, gold had rallied an impressive
54% in just 7 months!
PM traders were pretty excited about this, as gold closed
slightly above $1000 for the first time ever.
But soon after, the metal started plunging. In just 3 trading days it lost 9.3%! It bounced at its uptrend’s support line
initially and rallied, but on April 1st gold plunged again. That day alone it shed 3.8%, its biggest
daily loss in nearly two years. These steep retreats have wrought considerable
sentiment damage.
The 3-day plunge ending March 20th drove gold under its
50dma. The precipitating event was the
Fed’s less-than-expected rate cut. This
month’s issue of our Zeal Intelligence newsletter discusses this episode in
depth. And then the subsequent April 1st
plunge drove gold below its uptrend support line. Together these ominous technical tidings have
led many traders to conclude that this gold upleg has to be finished.
It is certainly true that gold’s uptrend was broken, but not necessarily its upleg. A trend is an
ever-evolving beast, a human attempt to shoehorn a price progression into a
linear path. Thus trends constantly
adjust as new price data streams in. An
uptrend drawn 6 months into an upleg can change significantly from an uptrend
drawn 3 months in. Since they are constantly
in flux, broken uptrends rarely bother me.
As the silver and HUI charts below illustrate, uplegs don’t
need to stay in a neat uptrend. They
usually don’t prove so accommodating. So
gold’s upleg, its major bull-market move higher, can certainly remain intact
even if its path higher is chaotic.
Uplegs are driven by sentiment, they are born
in extreme fear and die in extreme greed.
And there are plenty of clues above indicating we haven’t seen serious
greed yet.
Leading into its high in mid-March, gold did not shoot parabolic. It only rallied 2.2% total over the 10
trading days leading to its peak. At
upleg tops, greed and enthusiasm tend to wax ecstatic which drives a climaxing
vertical surge. At the top of gold’s
last major upleg in May 2006, for example, this metal soared 13.6% across that
upleg’s final 10 trading days! Without
similar euphoria now, a major top is pretty unlikely.
Relative gold, gold divided by its 200dma, also reflects
this lack of upleg-ending euphoria. Note
above that gold only hit 1.296x its 200dma in mid-March. This isn’t much higher than the 1.273x seen
in late January or the 1.222x seen in early November. At its May 2006 top, gold soared to 1.389x
its 200dma. And much higher levels (up
to 1.670x) were seen in the last Stage Two uplegs of
the 1970s.
Without similar stretches over its 200dma today to reflect
widespread greed, the odds that this latest Stage Two (driven by global investment demand) upleg
is over are not high. At +54% so far, it
is even still modest by Stage Two standards.
We saw +108% and +94% uplegs at this stage in the 1970s bull, and the upleg
that ended in May 2006 ultimately witnessed gains exceeding 73%! Today’s upleg isn’t anywhere close yet.
But if the sharp retreat over the past month is not an
upleg-ending correction, then what else could it be? A mid-upleg pullback. Periodically during in-progress uplegs, greed
gets a bit excessive but nowhere near upleg-ending levels. So a sentiment rebalance is necessary. This can happen via a high consolidation like
that witnessed in gold last November and December. Or it can be via a sharp pullback to scare
traders.
For all the sound and fury of gold’s plunge, it merely hit a
49-day low in early April. As recently
as January, this gold pullback low
had never before been witnessed in history.
So it is not like gold ever got low despite its sharp pullback. It could simply be consolidating high to
build a base for its next surge in this upleg.
In late November analysts swore gold was correcting too, but look at its
surge since then!
Another interesting gold technical is its 200dma. In its entire 293% run higher since April
2001, gold has never spent much time
under its 200dma. In fact, anytime gold
is driven under its 200dma due to excessive fear it quickly rebounds back. In any ongoing secular bull, the 200dma forms
some of the most important support.
Today gold’s 200dma is already above $800 and still continues to rise.
So as long as gold consolidates high, its 200dma is catching
up with its price. Since this 200dma is
the most likely sustained downside target even in a full-blown upleg-ending
correction, gold’s downside risk from here seems minimal compared to its upside
potential. All kinds of factors remain
very bullish for gold, from exploding inflationary expectations to massively negative real interest rates
in the US.
So yes, gold did break its uptrend earlier this month. But this does not necessarily mean its upleg
is failing too. Trends evolve along with
uplegs, constantly changing. And sharp
extra-trend moves like the spike lower in early April can certainly happen from
time to time. Despite all the angst it
caused, there is still plenty of technical evidence suggesting we probably
haven’t seen the top of this particular gold upleg yet.

Silver’s upleg, as usual, has been more extreme than
gold’s. It was up over 80% at best as of
early March, quite a gain for a relatively short 7-month timespan! Silver’s behavior is very interesting as it
is illustrative of the kind of chaos seen within uplegs that doesn’t
necessarily portend their ends. Silver’s
consolidation lower in November and December nicely demonstrates these
technical principles.
Silver wasn’t looking good technically then. It was grinding lower in a new downtrend,
carving lower highs and lower lows during November. By mid-December, silver had fallen under both
its 50dma and its major uptrend support line.
The technical damage was considerable so many silver analysts were
calling for a sharp correction. This
reminds me a lot of how gold’s 50dma and support breaks are perceived today.
Yet was silver’s upleg over in mid-December because it was
beaten up technically? Hardly! The metal soon started surging out of those
irrational fears from under $14 to nearly $21!
While silver does ultimately follow gold’s lead and gold happened to
head higher then, this is still an interesting episode. Technical breakdowns in an ongoing upleg
don’t necessarily mean it is over. They
happen periodically mid-upleg.
Silver was climbing nicely, at a sustainable pace, until
late February. Once it went over $18 though,
speculators started flooding in. The
surge of buying interest made it shoot parabolic in a vertical ascent. Such sharp moves are seldom sustainable, but
silver tried hard to hold its gains. In
early March it consolidated high near $20, reflecting the high gold prices,
rather than collapsing under its own technical weight.
But when gold plunged on the Fed decision in mid-March,
silver plummeted in sympathy. There was
a lot more greed in silver then, a lot more new speculators who had bought in
high, compared to gold. And they sold
with a vengeance. Silver fell 16.9% in 3
days and sliced through its 50dma like a hot knife through butter. As always, this 50dma failure made traders
really nervous. Was silver’s upleg over?
While 50dmas are generally
good support within ongoing uplegs, this isn’t always the case as December
illustrated. Sometimes short-term
fear-driven events can rip through these lines.
But as long as bullish fundamentals remain intact, and sentiment didn’t
get too greedy prior to the pullback, the upleg can still continue higher. So far, this certainly looks like the case
with silver.
While its 50dma failed in March, its uptrend support
held. At worst, it merely fell to a 37
trading-day low. The $17 to $18 range
where silver has been consolidating since is still quite high. These levels haven’t been witnessed since the early 1980s and
they are very impressive. Back in
December when silver was struggling in the $14s traders wouldn’t have believed
that a sharp pullback down to $17
would scare them!
While silver did shoot parabolic unlike gold, it didn’t go
parabolic enough to mark the probable end of an upleg. In its 10 trading days prior to its March
peak, silver rallied 16.8%. This
compares to 19.8% in the final 10 days of its upleg ending in May 2006. And silver only hit 1.465x its 200dma in
March 2008, compared to 1.651x in May 2006 and 1.704x
in April 2006. By silver’s wild
standards, we didn’t just see typical upleg-ending levels of euphoria. It isn’t known as “the restless metal” for
nothing.
At any rate, silver will ultimately follow gold’s lead. So if gold’s upleg is over, silver’s is
too. But since I really doubt the
former, the latter is unlikely as well. Silver
started to see some greed in late February and grew short-term overbought. When gold retreated on the Fed, silver seized
the excuse to vent some greed and it plummeted sharply. But it still remains very high relative to
this upleg and certainly to its bull to date.

I really don’t think gold and silver are the problem for
most traders. Anyone who has been
watching these precious metals for longer than three months has to be impressed with their prices
today even post-pullbacks. The real
source of irritation is the PM stocks.
Never a sector for the faint of heart, its recent extreme volatility has
really tested traders’ resolves. In
March the HUI plummeted 16.5% in 5 trading days!
This sharp plunge easily knifed through the index’s 50dma
and through the line most traders were viewing as support. There is no doubt it was an ugly
selloff. But as with gold and silver,
the HUI technicals aren’t quite as bearish as they might appear at first
glance. This is a high-risk
high-potential sector and extreme volatility is par for the course. I recently explored the HUI’s probabilities of seeing
big daily moves.
Starting back in August, the HUI surged sharply off of those
irrational lows. This happened to be the
best early massive upleg of this bull and spawned very high expectations for
continuing fast gains. But the HUI’s
ascent soon moderated and marched higher in the uptrend rendered above. Its first major support line that PM-stock
traders were following is labeled as “midline” above. This held for several months.
But after surging into early November to an all-time high,
the HUI retreated sharply. This pullback
bounced at the support at the time and looked fine, although widespread calls
for a major correction remained. By mid-December,
fear seized PM-stock traders’ hearts and they sold gold and silver stocks
aggressively. This ugly fear-driven
anomaly drove the HUI well under both its 50dma and support at the time.
But not only is no emotional extreme ever sustainable,
ultimately the HUI follows gold. When
gold started rallying again in mid-December after its high consolidation, gold
stocks surged to catch up. Soon the HUI
was back above both its 50dma and prevailing support. It went on to hit new all-time highs in
January, February, and March. The key
point here is technical failures don’t have to kill in-progress uplegs.
Actually the HUI had already pulled back sharply from its
upper resistance line twice before
the latest such episode in mid-March.
Sharp pullbacks from resistance are not at all uncommon in uplegs. After trading this gold-stock bull since its
birth over 7 years ago, I have seen more sharp pullbacks during in-progress
uplegs than I can count. March’s
pullback may have been abnormally fast, but it wasn’t abnormally deep.
Provocatively, this March pullback ultimately took the HUI
to a point parallel with its December low.
This is making me suspect that support is really at the lower support
line in this chart, not the higher midline traders have been watching. Remember that trend channels are constantly
in flux and their slopes and widths often change over time. If this lower support line is indeed valid, then
the HUI never left its uptrend channel!
And like gold and silver, the HUI’s interim high in March
didn’t look like historical upleg-ending tops.
It only rallied 5.9% over its final 10 days, no euphoria was seen. The relative HUI only traded up to 1.302x
this index’s 200dma. And this was also about
as high as the HUI got relative to its 200dma in both early January and early
November. Historically in massive uplegs
in this bull, the HUI has always stretched more than 1.50x
above its 200dma before they ended.
And while the HUI’s 71%+ gain since mid-August was nice, it was small relative to bull precedent. The average gain of all 7 HUI uplegs in this
bull before our current one is +94%. And
the average HUI gain in its massive uplegs, every other upleg when it hits new
highs, is a whopping +136%! And with
gold looking very comfortable in the $900s, it is hard to imagine this PM-stock
upleg not proving massive.
So technically, the HUI certainly didn’t look like it hit a
major upleg top in mid-March. Nor did its characteristic sharp pullback from resistance to
support look like a post-upleg correction. Technically it merely looked like a sharp
mid-upleg pullback. The HUI never left its
uptrend channel if the new lower support line above proves valid. And mid-upleg 50dma failures in this index
are not uncommon at all.
In light of these gold, silver, and HUI technicals, the
evidence seems to support a couple key theses.
First, none of these metrics became euphoric enough by their own bull-to-date
standards to suggest major upleg-ending tops.
There was no universal extreme greed driving the PM complex as a whole
vertical. And without these kinds of
technical signs evident at major upleg tops, the odds favor the subsequent
carnage merely being sentiment-rebalancing mid-upleg
pullbacks.
And sharp pullbacks can easily pierce technical lines
traders hold dear, like 50dmas and current uptrends’
support. Yet as long as pre-retreat sentiment
wasn’t too greedy and the underlying fundamental drivers of the upleg remain
intact, it won’t end regardless of short-term technical damage. In precious metals, extreme volatility within
uplegs is just an expected part of the game.
If you enjoy this kind of technical analysis, I do a lot of
it in our monthly Zeal
Intelligence newsletter and especially our weekly Zeal Speculator alert service. We maintain extensive custom charts on our
website exclusively for our subscribers as well. Today we continue to add trades in elite gold
and silver stocks since these precious-metals uplegs look intact. Subscribe
today and join us in the probable run higher!
The bottom line is all uplegs can be chaotic, especially in
the volatile precious metals. As any
upleg evolves, its best-fit technical uptrend channel is constantly adjusting
to reflect all the latest price information.
Thus mid-upleg failures of uptrend support lines and even
50-day moving averages is not uncommon.
From time to time excessive fear can spawn sharp mid-upleg pullbacks.
So to this point, nothing technically alarming has happened
in gold, silver, and the HUI. Sure they
fell sharply, and it was a quick
plunge, but it was from above resistance to down near or under support. Prior to these sharp pullbacks, neither gold, silver, nor the HUI exhibited technical
behavior like that seen in their own respective past major upleg tops within
their bulls. So odds are these uplegs
remain intact.
Adam Hamilton, CPA
April 18, 2008
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