Hoye's 12/13/09 Gold Chartworks
posted on
Dec 20, 2009 07:26PM
Edit this title from the Fast Facts Section
Gold – First Good Oversold Reading in Months
In methodical uptrends we tend to see pullbacks to the 20 and 50-period moving averages. A
series of minor corrections to the 20-period average are generally followed by a test of the 50-
period average. As of Friday’s low ($1,110) prices have reached the 50-day average.
Once a market moves exponentially higher the inevitable correction can be expected to bounce
off the 50-day average and then make a lower low. An overall decline of 15% or greater is
common in gold when the daily ‘strength of trend’ reading (ADX) peaks over fifty. A weekly
reading over 45 brings about declines of 25% of more. The daily ‘strength of trend’ in gold
recently became excessive (ADX > 50) as seen in 2006, 1999, 1993, 1992, 1986, 1986, 1980,
1979, 1973 and 1972, however the weekly reading was only up to thirty so a 15% decline to
major support at $1,042 is possible, but a 25% decline appears doubtful.
The break into December 11th has generated a rare daily Stage II Capitulation Alert ‘within a
rising trend’. This occurs when our Exhaustion and Summation Indices simultaneously generate
oversold readings while above a rising 233-day moving average. The current capitulation alert is
occurring only six days from the high. This is unusually early in a correction. Gold corrections
tend to last a number of weeks. . . except in the most bullish of circumstances (following the breakouts in 01/74, 07/78, 07/79, 08/86 & 11/05). The ten other Capitulation Alerts in the past
forty years produced interim lows on or within no more than two days of the signal. We’ll look
for a bottom now and a six to ten day consolidation as it holds the 50-day ema and 20-day
Bollinger Band coupled with the US Dollar Index (76.52) testing its declining 20-week
exponential moving average (76.96). If the bounce retraces more than 40% of the decline
from $1,226 it will imply that the ‘bottom is in’ and new all-time highs should be seen in the
first quarter of 2010.
Based upon the multi-year breakout in 2007 and consolidation above $700 through last summer
the most severe pullback we can envision will be to the 20-week simple moving average
($1,047). The comparisons to major breakouts in the past four decades in the copper market at
$1.50, crude oil at $40, the Dow Industrials at $1,000, gold at $250