22 June 2010

Gold Daily Chart: Déjà Vu All Over Again


A glance at the chatboards and the technical analysts last night cast quite a bit of gloom over the precious metals and the gold chart in particular after the smackdown in price it received after hitting another new all time high. Even some normally steadfast analysts seemed to lose their nerve at that big red 'engulfing candle.'

It didn't help apparently to have noted last week that gold almost always gets hit in an option expiration week, to a great or lesser degree depending on the underlying contract's popularity and the distribution of puts and calls. (Note 1) And of course this is an FOMC two day meeting week as well. Benjy and his mutts are all about the confidence game these days, and Larry Summers is the hairy-knuckled persuader who can move markets and destroy wealth, at least in the short term.

Some of it is disinformation from traders at hedge funds who spread rumours to support their own positions. Some of it is the natural exuberance of those who are hopeful but long suffering from being on the wrong side of a bull market. Even worse are those who simply ignore the markets and pursue some misplaced theory or belief for which they are willing to sacrifice themselves, and hopefully you, if they can manage it.

If you look at this chart below, as gold climbs within 'the handle,' it tends to get hit at the top of the channel with bear raids and profit taking, and then finds a footing near the bottom as the shorts cover and the hot money moves back in. It has done this twice now most recently. Why it comes as such a surprise that it is doing the same thing again is tied perhaps to the memory span of the markets now, which is about a day. This is a day traders market overall, and this is not a good thing.

This does not mean that the price of gold cannot drop from here and go lower, or even break down through support and change its trend. But it does mean that it has not done so yet.

It appears highly probable, to the point that I will be happily surprised if it does not, that the price of gold will go back down to test that trendline support, and set a firmer low, shaking out more weak hands. But anticipating the market too much to the upside or the downside is how speculators lose their nerve, or their money, which is consumed by losses, fees, and commissions through over-trading. They overleverage, overextend, and then throw their positions away at highs or lows.

And as for all these hysterical 'forecasters,' so certain of what will come next, and most often repeating the same, tired memes at every opportunity, keep in mind the old saying, "The words of the wise considered in quiet are better heeded than the shouts of a ruler among his fools." Ecclesiastes 8:17

Listen to all worth hearing, especially inviting a diversity of informed opinion, but allow the market and your own calm reason to instruct your actions. There is nothing more powerfully wrong and corrosively dangerous to your money than self-reinforcing group thought. I have seen the evolution of this condition on many chatboards as moderators and powerful and persistent posters start suppressing, first through peer pressure and then through outright bans and censorship, even fact based dissenting thought, contrary judgements, and evidence not supporting their assumptions.

I do not know which way this market will go, up or down. I like to think that I know what to look for by now, and how to listen to what the evidence of the markets is saying to us. All the rest is discipline, perseverance, and money management. Most professional traders find their niche in some market inefficiency or informational asymmetry, and leverage it with their deep pockets, certainly deeper and better connected than yours. As an amateur you cannot hope to compete against them in their short term games. But pride and greed have a siren's song.

If you cannot make decisions and reason calmly when trading, then you are trading to lose, and should just stop it, now. This HFT-driven trading is THE worst market for cheap tricks and outright scams that I have ever seen. Even though they are stealing pennies, it is over millions of transactions, and it debilitates the trade. The silver market in particular is a shame, although we have seen similar manipulation in the energy markets by the likes of Enron for example, that brought one of the US' largest states literally to its knees. And still there is no reform.

Find some safe harbor and stay there, and stop venturing out in dangerous and unfamiliar waters. Better to take an adequate, modest gain than to suffer an immodest loss. You are just feeding the sharks, and they do not need the encouragement.



Note 1: On the Comex / Nymex, the metals options for the GC contract expire on the fourth business days prior to the underlying contract's delivery month. If that day is a Friday or the day before an exchange holiday, then it is the day before that. This is the 24th of June for the July contracts. There is something known as 'Asia Gold' and 'Asia Silver' that have a different expiry, but they seem to be an odd product designed to capture Asian business and has a metric specification and no volumes. For the US contract based options it is the 24th.