Thursday last week was a momentous day for the Precious Metals sector with gold, GDX and other ?ndices, and giant gold ETF, GLD all breaking out on impressive volume, and this development was all the more extraordinary because it happened when the broad stockmarket was crashing. This is viewed as a strong sign that instead of being dragged lower still by a crashing stockmarket, the PM sector will soar. Silver hasn't broken out yet, but it should soon follow suit.
In recent weeks we have been wary that, despite highly favorable COTs and Hedgers charts and rotten sentiment indicators etc, a general asset liquidation might drag the PM sector even further down, but Thursday's extraordinarily positive action by the sector serves to allay those fears. Of course, it's not hard to see why the PM sector might do the opposite to what it did back in 2008 when the market crashed, and it nosedived too. There are two very big differences this time. One is that, before the 2008 crash, the PM sector was actually quite elevated. That is in marked contrast to now where it is beaten into the ground with sentiment in the basement - basically it is so unloved and neglected that the only way is up. The other big difference between now and 2008 is that while a major asset liquidation cycle will result in a flight to cash that could drive the dollar significantly higher, beyond that the longer-term outlook for the dollar is grim, with much of the rest of the world, tired of US bullying in the form of sanctions, military threats, and now trade wars, and its unquestioning support of rogue states like Saudi Arabia and Israel, committed to freeing themselves from dollar hegemony - and plans in this direction are now well advanced, with countries like China and Russia having built up big gold reserves that can at some point be used to back their currencies, and workable substitutes for the SWIFT payments system at the trial run phase. Subjected to continuous provocation, China may at some point decide to go for the "nuclear option" and dump its huge Treasury hoard, sending the Treasury market reeling and interest rates skyrocketing, which will cause the US economy to buckle and implode - the US appears to be overlooking that China has this power. Let's now review the charts to assess the significance of Thursday's breakout. We start with gold where we see on its 6-month chart that it staged an impressive high-volume breakout from a rectangular trading range that formed following the low in mid-August. Right up until the breakout the pattern was ambiguous with the price being pressured by the falling 50-day moving average, so that it could easily have broken down again. Thus this big up day, with the price breaking clear above not just this average but also the resistance at the top of the pattern, was certainly an event of significance. The minor reaction on Friday is normal and provided us with an opportunity to pounce on the sector, having grasped the magnitude of Thursday's action.How does what is going on in gold's chart fit into the larger picture? To get a handle on that we will now take an updated look at gold's 10-year chart. You may recall that when gold crept up to the resistance at the top of the presumed giant base pattern earlier this year, we did not expect it to drop back again, or at least, not by as much as it did, but having dropped back more than we expected - and lambasted PM stocks in the process - it has arrived back in the broad zone of quite strong support shown. Now what appears to be going on is that it has just marked out another "shoulder" low of a complex Head-and-Shoulders bottom with multiple shoulders. Certainly, the now powerfully bullish COTs and Hedgers charts strongly suggest that it isn't going any lower, and it was heartening to see that it was not perturbed at all by the broad market cratering last week - on the contrary, it loved it! - this is the strongest indication we could hope to see that this time, gold and the PM sector are going to go contra-cyclical and rally when the broad stockmarket drops, or during a general asset liquidation.
A very important point for would be investors in the sector to grasp is that you shouldn't be put off by missing Thursday's breakout and having to pay higher prices for most larger gold stocks. They may in some cases be about 5% higher in price than they were last Tuesday or Wednesday, but that is NOTHING compared to the massive gains that these stocks are capable of making from here - don't forget that this sector has been ground into the dirt by a 7-year bearmarket and has huge ground to make up, and the great news is that more the broad stockmarket gets clobbered, the higher the PM sector will go. Buyers now have the assurance of knowing not just that the sector has broken out, but also that it has the capacity to rally strongly when the rest of the market is cratering, as it has just demonstrated.