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The Gold Price Rose $6 This Week, Needs to Clear $1315 Next Week

The <b>Gold Price</b> Rose $6 This Week, Needs to Clear $1315 Next Week


The <b>Gold Price</b> Rose $6 This Week, Needs to Clear $1315 Next Week

Posted: 16 May 2014 05:59 PM PDT

9-May-1416-Jun-14Change% Change
Gold Price, $/oz.1,287.301,293.306.000.5
Silver Price, $/oz.19.07719.2920.2151.1
Gold/Silver Ratio67.47967.038-0.441-0.7
Silver/gold ratio0.01480.01490.00010.7
Dow in Gold Dollars (DIG$)266.30263.59-2.71-1.0
Dow in gold ounces12.8812.75-0.13-1.0
Dow in Silver ounces869.28854.83-14.46-1.7
Dow Industrials16,583.3416,491.31-92.03-0.6
S&P5001,878.481,877.86-0.62-0.0
US dollar index79.9380.110.180.2
Platinum Price1,428.901,465.3036.402.5
Palladium Price799.80814.8015.001.9

The week's scoreboard says it all. New all time highs in the Dow and S&P500? Yes, but they ended the week lower. Silver and GOLD PRICES slapped in mid-week? Yes, but closed the week higher. White metals higher, and all this in the teeth of a higher dollar that clearly reversed upward.

Today the GOLD PRICE closed down 20 cents at $1,293.30. Silver backed up 15.5 cents to 1929.2c. For the week both metals rose, silver 1.1%, gold 0.5%.

Something stinks in all markets. They simply aren't behaving as markets do. They show hardly any trading range. They jump on the open, then do nothing. In the last 30 days silver and gold prices have both made three dramatic key reversals, confirmed with higher closes the next day, but then fallen back. 'Tain't natural. Markets just don't keep acting that way. They break out or they break down. This points to "management" by the Nice Government Men, but I hate to be forever pulling that out as the explanation for everything.

Behold, this much is sure! No matter how much the NGM manipulate, they can only do it at the margin, and not for long. As proof I point to the gold price rise from $252 and silver's from $4.01 since 2001. Soon, probably this month, silver and gold will stage a big rally that soars past the straggling highs of the last two years. And they are both out of their usual seasonal sync, so they should rise into June and July. Morale in the silver and gold markets has been so beaten down and bloodied that it's hard for most folks to see that THE LOWS ARE BEHIND US.

Then I look at the lunatic monetary and financial system. Give a roomful of teenage boys cases of gin, car keys, and free passes to a stripper club. That's about what central banking and finance looks like today: the adults have disappeared. The Fed has had a long string of good luck and breaks that have made its money creation and lies look valid. "Luck" is not a firm foundation for an economy or a currency.

Technically both the SILVER PRICE and the gold price are barely above the downtrend lines on their weekly charts. On daily charts they are in three week uptrends, and pushing the upper boundaries. Momentum indicators are generally positive.

Look for the gold price clearing $1,315 next week, which will be the bell starting the race. Silver still needs to clear 2000c, then 2060c.

I know y'all probably think I'm Johnny One Note, but I can't sing any note but the one I see in front of me. Now is the time to buy while prices are low and before silver and gold begin rallying.

Mathematically the stock market does not have to tank for the Dow in Gold (or Silver) to fall. Gold only needs to outperform stocks, so both might be rising, but gold rising faster. During the 1920-1923 German hyperinflation, stocks soared, but in the end they fell far behind the hyperinflation, which brings me to my point. In an age of inflation when evaluating any asset becomes like trying to shoot skeet off the back of a bass boat in a thunderstorm: the only thing that counts is purchasing power. Nominal gains mean nothing, only purchasing power gains.

Stocks today tried without success to climb to positive territory until about 3:00 as closing time drew near and suddenly buyers appeared out of nowhere. Yeah, sure. Dow rose 44.5 (0.27%) to 16,491.31, no more than a dead cat bounce after losing 268.63 the previous two days. S&P500 clawed back 7.03 (0.38%) to 1,877.86. Since end-December stocks have tried and failed three times to break through 16,500-16,600. This week they collapsed and fell back to the 50 DMA. Can they rally from here? I tend to picture the top as behind us, but that's possible.

Dow and S&P500 weekly charts show markets that have traded up to overhead trend line and bounced back, too.

Dow in gold and Dow in silver are a little confused. At its 12.75 oz close today (G$263.57 gold dollars) the Dow in gold remains below its 12.77 oz 20 DMA, and right atop its rising uptrend line. Dow in silver rose 1.13% to 853.19 oz (S$1,103.11 silver dollars), above its 20 DMA (849.67 oz or S$1,098.56). Both are trying to break down but haven't yet.

Mercy, the 10 year treasury note yield took a beating this week, from 2.656% on 12 May to 2.518% today. Sounds insignificant, but smashed the support line and gapped down. This and the likewise tumbling yield on 30 year bonds imply investors are crowding into bonds as they flee from stocks. (Bond prices rise when bond yields fall.) Doesn't bode bouquets for stocks.

US dollar index showed unaccustomed gumption since its turn upwards a week ago Thursday. Shot straight up of 78.93 low but could not pierce its overhead downtrend line and stopped cold at 80.40 and fell back. Today rose two (minute) basis points to 80.11. Must yet validate last week's upward reversal by closing over 80.40, really, over the 200 DMA at 80.53. Likely will.

Euro is a wreck. Closed today down 0.11% at $1.3695, and soon will fall below its 200 DMA ($1.3617). Yen is seeking to break out, and has broken out above its downtrending range upper boundary, but above stands the 200 DMA at 99.04. Can it punch through that? Good chance, but the yen must prove it next week. Yen closed today up 0.04% at 98.50.

But what do I know? I'm just a nacheral born durn fool from Tennessee who only wears shoes when he has to show up in church. I ain't got no more sense than to believe that gravity always works.

I have been nudging everyone here at the Top of the World Farm toward Holistic Management for a number of years. Usually you have to travel to New Mexico or Canada to attend the training sessions, but one was offered a couple of years ago at Summertown, about half an hour from us. I sent my sons Justin and Wright and it changed the way they thought and farmed. Holistic Management (see the book by Alan Savory) is a management technique that takes the whole-under-management into account for every decision. The results have astounded even me, in animals, costs, and quality of life. In 25 years, all agriculture will be conducted this way, and nobody will be able to believe that anybody in America ever used pesticides, herbicides, and high cost inputs and debt.

On 17-19 June 2014 they're offering another Introduction to Holistic Management Whole Farm/Ranch Planning and Holistic Planned Grazing. Owen Hablutzel is the teacher. You'll find full description and registration at Spiral Ridge Permaculture, http://bit.ly/1iucANl

On 20-22 June they're offering Keyline Design: Whole Farm/Ranch Planning for Water Abundance and Soil Fertility all about Keyline Plowing. Keylining slices deep into the earth to capture water flowing off the contour and creates drought resilience and maximum water harvest. Read about it and register here, http://bit.ly/1mB9VHV

Yes, I eat my own cooking. We use Holistic Management on our own Farm and have extensively used Keyline Plowing. If you apply these techniques you will recoup the cost of the courses many times over and bring more order and peace into your life and operation.

Y'all enjoy your weekend!

Aurum et argentum comparenda sunt -- -- Gold and silver must be bought.

- Franklin Sanders, The Moneychanger
The-MoneyChanger.com

© 2014, The Moneychanger. May not be republished in any form, including electronically, without our express permission. To avoid confusion, please remember that the comments above have a very short time horizon. Always invest with the primary trend. Gold's primary trend is up, targeting at least $3,130.00; silver's primary is up targeting 16:1 gold/silver ratio or $195.66; stocks' primary trend is down, targeting Dow under 2,900 and worth only one ounce of gold or 18 ounces of silver. or 18 ounces of silver. US $ and US$-denominated assets, primary trend down; real estate bubble has burst, primary trend down.

WARNING AND DISCLAIMER. Be advised and warned:

Do NOT use these commentaries to trade futures contracts. I don't intend them for that or write them with that short term trading outlook. I write them for long-term investors in physical metals. Take them as entertainment, but not as a timing service for futures.

NOR do I recommend investing in gold or silver Exchange Trade Funds (ETFs). Those are NOT physical metal and I fear one day one or another may go up in smoke. Unless you can breathe smoke, stay away. Call me paranoid, but the surviving rabbit is wary of traps.

NOR do I recommend trading futures options or other leveraged paper gold and silver products. These are not for the inexperienced.

NOR do I recommend buying gold and silver on margin or with debt.

What DO I recommend? Physical gold and silver coins and bars in your own hands.

One final warning: NEVER insert a 747 Jumbo Jet up your nose.

<b>Gold price</b>: Europe rushing in where even Fed fears to tread <b>...</b>

Posted: 13 May 2014 03:25 PM PDT

Recently gold hasn't attracted much buying as an inflation hedge – the European Central Bank's unprecedented new plan to boost inflation and weaken the euro may change that

The gold price continued to trade in narrow band around the $1,300 an ounce level on Tuesday as a lack of fresh news saw another lacklustre New York session.

Gold is still up some 8% in 2014, but down nearly $100 an ounce from its year-to-date high struck mid-March.

And the usual drivers of the price no longer seems to spark interest in the metal.

The ongoing standoff between the West and Russia over the conflict in Ukraine has done little for gold's status as a hard asset and safe-haven during times of turmoil.

At the same time continued money printing in developed economies has not translated into investors seeking out gold as part of an inflation hedging strategy or storer of wealth.

Last week the Federal Reserve maintained the US economy still needs "high degree of monetary accommodation" while the European Central Bank is now readying its own version of quantitative easing to be launched in June.

When the ECB moves to fight "unacceptably low inflation" in the Eurozone – and with Germany finally on board that now seems likely – trillions more will be added to all the easy money already sloshing around on global financial markets:

"The Bundesbank is open to supporting aggressive—and in some cases, for the ECB, unprecedented—steps including a negative rate on bank deposits, long-term loans to banks at capped interest rates and purchases of packaged bank loans, a person familiar with the matter told The Wall Street Journal."

The ECB currently pays zero interest on the money parked in its vaults, but forcing banks to pay for the privilege would take European monetary policy into uncharted territory. (Denmark experimented with a negative rate but dropped the measure in April.)

The Fed has also played around with the idea to alter the interest rate it pays on reserves held on behalf of commercial banks in an efforts to minimize the impact of the taper.

But US financial institutions warned that a reduction in the 0.25% rate would be passed onto consumers who would have to pay for the privilege of having banks look after their deposits.

US banks warned that cuts would be passed onto consumers who would have to pay for the privilege of having banks look after their deposits.

While asset purchases under the Fed's quantitative easing program is expected to be wound down by end-2014 after pumping $4.2 trillion into the US economy, a rise in interest rates is at least a year away.

For its part, Japan is far from throttling back its massive stimulus program under the Abenomics doctrine and may be hitting the gas again.

Monetary expansion in the US and around the globe, particularly since the financial crisis, has been a massive boon for the gold price.

Gold was trading around $830 an ounce before Chairman Ben Bernanke announced Q1 in November 2008.

<b>Gold Price</b> About To Break Higher Or Lower | Gold Silver Worlds

Posted: 12 May 2014 02:48 PM PDT

The price of gold started today's night session with one of those typical sell orders, bringing the yellow metal to its critical support level of $1,280. Shortly after the New York trading session begun, gold spiked higher and touched $1,305 an ounce. That is a 2% spread on the day, from low to high.

The daily chart (see below) shows a strong support level around $1,270 – $1,280, which we indicated with the blue horizontal line. Since the peak of mid-March, gold has made lower highs, which should be a reason for concern, at least from a chart point of view. However, the potentially good news for bulls is that, after touching three times the descending support line (indicated in blue as well), it seems that the gold price has moved outside that trading pattern. Since mid-April, gold has made a first higher high.

Note how the moving averages are flattening at this point in time, a sign of consolidation.

It is critical though, as the chart pattern indicates, that $1,270 – $1,280 is NOT breached. Otherwise the bulls are in trouble.

gold price 12 may 2014 price

gold price – 12 May 2014

The chart learns also that gold is ripe for a trending move. The coming days will show whether the move will be higher or lower; both directions are still open in our opinion.

On the flip side, we should note that the metals are not really favored by two factors. First, the miners are not bullish in terms of price action and volume. Second, from a seasonal point of view, we are entering the most quiet period of the year. Both factors would support the bearish case, at least on the short run. A retest of the December lows should not be excluded till July/August.

Interactive <b>gold price</b> chart | Gold Market Price | World Gold Council

Posted: 14 Mar 2014 05:11 AM PDT

Notes

The gold prices used in this interactive chart are supplied by BullionDesk. This price is quoted in US dollars. Where the gold price is presented in currencies other than the US dollar, it is converted into the local currency unit using the foreign exchange rate at the time (or as close to as possible). For example, the London PM fix on 30th October 2013 was USD 1,354.75 and the price for one USD was EUR 0.726. The gold price in euro (EUR) would therefore be calculated as €984.10.1 Like all prices, the gold price reflects not only the inherent value of gold, but also the relative strength of the currency in which it is quoted. For example, the dollar price of gold may increase more in percentage terms than the sterling price of gold, to the extent that the change in price is a reflection of dollar weakness (in this case, against the euro) rather than an intrinsic change in gold market fundamentals. For this reason, our Investment Gold market statistics contain charts showing an index of the gold price in US dollars and local currency units as well as the relevant US dollar / local currency unit exchange rate for countries other than the United States. Public holidays in different countries do not always coincide and therefore the time series that are downloaded from our data providers may contain missing values for trading days in other countries. The approach taken in this regard is to replace the missing value with the most recent value. 1 You may not be able to replicate this calculation due to rounding.

Interactive chart help

This interactive chart provides price data in several currencies, frequencies and weight units. The first price series selected will be displayed in currency units on the primary vertical axis (left). The second series added will be displayed in currency units on the secondary vertical axis (right). Thereafter, price series will be zero-indexed to the first displayed date with the axis values displayed as cumulative % changes.

Currencies:

  • USD = US dollar
  • GBP = pound sterling
  • EUR = euro
  • AUD = Australian dollar
  • CAD = Canadian dollar
  • CHF = Swiss franc
  • JPY = Japanese yen
  • ZAR = South African rand
  • INR = Indian rupee
  • CNY = Chinese renmimbi
  • HKD = Hong Kong dollar
  • MXN = Mexican peso

Weights:

  • Oz = 1 troy ounce
  • Grammes = 0.032151 troy ounces
  • Kg = 32.150747 troy ounces
  • Tonnes = 32,150,7466 troy ounces
  • Tael = 1.203370 troy ounces
  • Tola = 0.374878 troy ounces

Data frequency

  • Optimised data at the following frequencies:
    • Between now and 5 years ago - daily
    • 5 years ago and 15 years ago - weekly
    • 15 years ago and 25 years ago - monthly
    • more than 25 years ago - quarterly
  • Quarterly
  • Monthly
  • Weekly
  • Daily, please note loading daily data will slow down the chart system.
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