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How to Trade Gold, Silver & Precious Metal Miners

 

Guest Post from Chris Vermeulen at TheGoldAndOilGuy.com

How to trade Gold and other precious metals related investments is not that complex. But you must be willing to wait for price to provide low risk entry points before getting involved. Precious metals are like any other investment in respect to trading and investing in them. There are times when you should be long, times to be in cash and times to be short (benefit from falling prices).

Since 2011 when gold and silver started another major bull market correction the best position has been to move to cash or sell/write options against your positions to protect your investment until the next trend resumes.

If you take a look at the chart below of gold you will notice that in 2008 we had a similar breakdown in price which purged the market of investors who where long gold. And if you compare the last two breakdowns they look very much the same. If price holds true then much higher prices are likely to unfold at the end of 2013.

The key here is for the price to move and hold above the major resistance line. If it can do that then we are looking at a possible breakout to $2600 – $3500 gold. With that being said gold and silver may just be starting a bear market. Depending what the price of gold does when my resistance level is touched, my outlook may change from bullish to bearish.

Also with last weeks economic numbers getting better in the USA I do have concerns that gold may be starting a bear market but we will not know for several more months yet.

 

How to Trade Gold Daily Technical Chart:

Major technical damage has been done to the chart of gold. This can be seen as bullish or bearish price action but until price and volume pattern unfolds which puts the odds on the bullish or bearish side I remain neutral.

 

How to Trade Silver Daily Technical Chart:

Silver is in the same position as gold. The question is if this is a shakeout or breakdown…

 

How to Trade Gold Mining Stocks Monthly Chart:

Gold mining stocks broke down a couple months ago and continue to sell off. If precious metals continue to move lower then mining stocks will continue their journey down. The chart below made in February and it has in most part played out as expected. While I do not try to pick bottoms (catch falling knives) I do like to watch for them so I am prepared for a new position when the time and chart become bullish.

 

How to Trade Gold, Silver and Mining Stocks Conclusion:

In short, precious metals continue to be in a down trend. While they look to be trying to bottom it is important to remember that the largest moves take place in the last 10% of a trend. So we may be close to a bottom but there could be sharply lower prices yet.



Posted in Markets, Technical Analysis.


Noteworthy News – May 6, 2013

Economy:

The cost of hand-to-mouth living – Financial Times

Is It Crazy to Think We Can Eradicate Poverty? – New York Times

Jobs Data Ease Fears of Economic Slowdown in U.S. – New York Times

Markets:

EL-ERIAN: Unhedged Stock Market Investors Will Pay A High Price For Taking Excessive Risk – Business Insider

Is the Fed Blowing Bubbles? – Slate

German bond yields hit record low after ECB rate cut falls short – Telegraph

Speed traders eyed after Twitter hack attack, U.S. regulator says – Reuters

Europe’s Cap-and-Trade Scheme Failing Spectacularly –  RealClearWorld

Politics:

Portugal aims to cut 30,000 civil service jobs – BBC

After austerity, what? – Economist

Reinhart, Rogoff Backing Furiously Away From Austerity Movement – HuffingtonPost

Fed’s Plosser Makes Case Against More Money Printing – Reuters

Banks:

A New Fed Thought for ‘Too Big to Fail’ Banks: Shrink Them – DealBook

 

Posted in Economics, Markets, Media, Politics.


Noteworthy News – April 29, 2013

Economy:

Work and the young: Generation jobless – Economist

Job Picture Looks Bleak for 2013 College Grads – CNBC

Reinhart and Rogoff: Responding to Our Critics – New York Times

Debt, Growth and the Austerity Debate – New York Times (Reinhart and Rogoff)

The Underground Recovery – New Yorker

Markets:

How trends in search predict the rise and fall of the stock market – Digital Horticulture

Lessons from America’s long history of property booms – Economist

Japanese Seek Refuge in Bullion as Yen Slumps, Inflation Looms – Bloomberg

A Psychological Perspective of Financial Panic – Federal Reserve Bank of Boston

Politics:

Public vs. Private Sector Compensation: A Case of Curious Controversy – Library of Economics and Liberty

Bank of Cyprus executes depositor bail-in – Telegraph

Banks:

Everything Is Rigged: The Biggest Price-Fixing Scandal Ever – Rolling Stone (Taibbi)

How The Government Set Up A Fake Bank To Launder Drug Money – NPR Planet Money


Posted in Economics, Markets, Media, Politics.


This Time is Slightly Different?

Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff hit the presses with “This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly” at nearly the perfect time in 2009.  With their extensive set of data, they seemed to empirically prove that all of the countries with high levels of debt would experience negative growth going forward just as countries have experienced historically.  The problem came when a PhD student pointed out that their excel spreadsheet was miscalculating the results.  Just how radically different are the results?  Quite a bit:

The more interesting question is just how much damage the eroneous data has hurt certain economies.  We have seen strong austerity measures in European countries that were heavily influenced by this and other research.  As the Guardian points out:

This is a big deal because politicians around the world have used this finding from R&R to justify austerity measures that have slowed growth and raised unemployment.

In the United States, many politicians have pointed to R&R’s work as justification for deficit reduction even though the economy is far below full employment by any reasonable measure. In Europe, R&R’s work and its derivatives have been used to justify austerity policies that have pushed the unemployment rate over 10% for the eurozone as a whole and above 20% in Greece and Spain. In other words, this is a mistake that has had enormous consequences.

 

Posted in Economics.


Taxpayer Dollars at “Use”

You can find many government expenditures that you do not agree with, but it is more noteworthy to find government expenditures that literally provide nothing.  According to the Washington Post:

This year, the government will spend at least $890,000 on service fees for bank accounts that are empty. At last count, Uncle Sam has 13,712 such accounts with a balance of zero.

They are supposed to be closed. But nobody has done the paperwork yet.

So even as the sequester budget cuts have begun idling workers and frustrating travelers, the government is required to pay $65 per year, per account to keep them on the books.

Maybe we can hope the service fees are going from one government entity to the other.  At the very least we can hope that the fees are going to a US based financial institution.

Posted in Politics.




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