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Gold price | The Gold Price Lost $10.70 Today Closing at $1245.60

Gold price | The <b>Gold Price</b> Lost $10.70 Today Closing at $1245.60


The <b>Gold Price</b> Lost $10.70 Today Closing at $1245.60

Posted: 30 May 2014 05:02 PM PDT

23-May-1430-May-14Change% Change
Gold Price, $/oz.1,291.701,245.60-46.10-3.6
Silver Price, $/oz.19.38818.653-0.735-3.8
Gold/silver ratio66.62466.7770.1540.2
Silver/gold ratio0.01500.0150-0.0000-0.2
Dow in Gold Dollars (DIG$)265.76277.4411.684.4
Dow in gold ounces12.8613.420.564.4
Dow in Silver ounces856.52896.2239.704.6
Dow Industrials16,606.2716,717.17110.900.7
S&P5001,900.531,923.5723.041.2
US dollar index80.4380.430.000.0
Platinum Price1,475.201,454.70-20.50-1.4
Palladium Price831.45835.654.200.5

The GOLD PRICE mislaid another $10.70 (0.85%) today and closed Comex at $1,245.60. Silver slumped 33 cents (1.74%) to 1,865.30.
Are the silver and gold prices destined to hit last June's lows ($1,180 and 1817c) again? Durned if I know, but if they don't stop here soon, they must suffer further humiliation.

The SILVER PRICE low today at 1864c matched the 1 May intraday low at 1868.5c. This is it, the bottom of the support range. Excuses don't count here, you either hold or die.

The GOLD PRICE low today at $1,241.80 lies not far from where a rough target measurement from the preceding triangle's height ought to take it (about $1,216). Besides that is the January low at $1,237.50.

Meanwhile, volume in silver is drying up, and in gold has fallen so low you wonder why any traders bother going to work any more. Normally declining volume signals that the trend is running out of steam.

There 'tis. I'm just like a fool at a tennis match who's following the instructions of that fellow who told him to watch the ball. I'm watching amazed as values move further and further from agreement with price, but this is the best thing that could happen to gold and silver investors, better than free donuts for life. Y'all ought to hanging over this market like hungry buzzards, jumping on every fresh decline.

I reckon I'm going to have to work on my metaphors and similes. Sometimes they're a little less than tasty. Bottom line is that markets are not rational, and when the more outrageously irrational they become, the greater our opportunity to take advantage and profit. Remember my Tennessee proverb: Sooner or later, reality revenges itself.

'Twas an up-week for stocks but pitiless for metals -- owch. US dollar index spun wheels and went nowhere, didn't even throw up much mud. White metals moved sideways, while central banks around the globe continued to suck the blood out of their victim populations.
When markets DON'T react to news as they logically ought, something's up. Yesterday despite economist's rosy forecasts, first Quarter GDP came out contracting at a 1% annual rate. Mmmmm. Two quarters contracting running makes it a recession, yet the S&P500 rose to a new all time high despite this news. Complacency and optimism have reached narcotic levels.

Now y'all think: if GDP is contracting, economic activity is contracting, and that can't be good for stocks. Yet they rose anyway. Metastatic optimism.

And the economists forecasting, almost as accurate as Nordic rune-casters, found all sorts of excuses why GDP ought to have been down, mostly centering on bad weather. There are excuses, bad excuses, and plumb sorry excuses, and that one is plumb sorry and has more holes than a sweater at a moth farm.

But what do I know? I'm only a suspicious durned fool from Tennessee who only knows a little Latin: Timeo economistes et dona ferentes.

Dow confirmed the Dow transports' new high as well as the S&P500's new highs, while the SP500 clocked another new high today. By golly, we've got a proverbial Mexican cat ranch by the tail here, a perpetual money-making scheme. (Y'all know about the Mexican cat ranch? You raise rats to feed the cats and skin the cats, sell the hides, and feed the carcasses back to the rats. It's a never ending money-making mo-sheen.")

Get serious, Moneychanger.

Okay, Dow added 18.43 (0.11%) to climb to 16,717.17, although it remained underwater the whole day until the last 15 minutes. That's as convenient as finding a $100 bill -- in somebody else's pocket. Never mind, it got onto the scoreboard. In America, that's all that counts. Previous high was 13 May 2014 at 16,715.44. S&P inched up 3.54 (0.18%) to end at 1,923.57, against yesterday's new high at 1,920.53.

That bumps the Dow smack up against the top boundary of the megaphone of death that has been forming since 1998. S&P500 already crossed above ("overthrew") its analogous upper boundary earlier this year. Time to fish or cut bait. Either stocks will make a lasting top here and crumple for years to come, taking the economy with them, or there is a Santa Claus, who, with the Easter Bunny and the Money Fairy, works for the Federal Reserve.

Throwovers and tops feed on themselves, and are unpredictable. This can last several more weeks, but the end is sure.

Dow in silver gained 1.23% to close 888.27 oz (S$1,148.47 silver dollars). This approaches my target of 912 oz (S$1,179.15). In the last twelvemonth the Dow in silver has formed a rising wedge, which can be expected to break out to the downside. Chart is at http://scharts.co/1wC0dtz Interesting -- even with a Dow at 17,000, 912 oz works out to silver at 1864 cents. By the way, that 888.27 oz is a new high for the move.

Dow in Gold only inched up 0.44% to 13.37 oz (G$276.38 gold dollars. You can view a chart at http://scharts.co/1hH52br Dow in gold is trading in a channel about 2.8 oz wide. By mid-June the top boundary will be around 15.1 oz. No sign of turning down yet, although the RSI and Full Stochastics are reaching overbought levels (silver, too.)

Currencies are spending days in a coma, only to wake up and sprint a mile. US dollar fell below its 200 DMA (80.46) to 80.43, down ten basis points or 0.12%. Daily chart shows no direction but erosion lower, but if the US dollar index can struggle above that 200 DMA it should rise to 81.50. Every time I think the dollar is about to rise, it slumps.

The euro rose 0.23% to $1.3634, smack on its 200 DMA, but other than a little oversold reaction rally, there's no hope in this chart. If the European Central Bank criminals announce new easing measures next week, it should accelerate its plunge.

Yen is barely moving. Lost 0.3% to close today at 98.27. Technically in an uptrend, but trapped beneath its 200 DMA. Congestion will break soon, probably upward.

Ten year US treasury not yield rose 0.41% to 2.457%. This brings it back to the upper channel line it overthrew a year ago. Must turn here or drop much further. Chart is at http://scharts.co/1wC6UM8

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.

Why Today&#39;s <b>Gold Price</b> Is Going Down - Money Morning

Posted: 28 May 2014 12:07 PM PDT

Today's gold price was modestly lower Wednesday after Tuesday's rout left the yellow metal at its lowest level in 15 weeks.

In morning trading, the most active contract, August Comex gold, slipped $8.40, or 0.67%, at $1,257.10. Spot gold was lower by $6.90, or 0.55%, at $1,256.40.

today's gold priceTraders are treading cautiously after gold futures for June ended Tuesday's session at its lowest level since Feb. 7, down 2%, or $26.20, to settle at $1,265.50. Spot gold also slipped 2%, to end yesterday's session at $1,265.76 an ounce, its lowest level since Feb.10.

Gold prices have been stuck in a tight trading range for weeks, struggling to consistently trade above the key $1,300 an ounce level.

Signs of economic improvement in the United States and hopes of a more politically stable Ukraine have both taken some of the shine off safe-haven asset gold. Indeed, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index logged its second straight record Tuesday. The index added 11.38, or 0.6%, to 1911.91. Year to date, the broad-based benchmark has enjoyed 12 record-high closes.

But there are multiple forces at play weighing down today's gold price, according to Money Morning Resource Specialist Peter Krauth.

Here's what's behind the yellow metal's recent struggles...

The Three Forces Driving Today's Gold Price Down

First, the U.S. Dollar Index (USDX) is strengthening.

"Keep in mind that the Index is made up of 57% euro. Right now, the euro is weakening because it's widely expected the European Central Bank will soon take measures to weaken its currency," Krauth said. "That will, in turn, strengthen the U.S. dollar, which we are now seeing priced in."

A stronger dollar weighs on gold, because it is priced in dollars.

Krauth attributed the second reason driving today's gold price down to technical trading and sentiment.

"The $1,280 support level was breached to the downside, which encourages traders to short the metal, while fostering negative sentiment," Krauth explained. "The next support level appears to be $1,240, and then around the $1,200 level."

The third major reason why gold is down today:

demand.

You see, the World Gold Council (WGC) recently reported that Q1 demand was stable at 1,074 tonnes in Q1 2014, versus 1,077 tonnes the same quarter a year earlier. But Bloomberg pointed out yesterday that April imports to China from Hong Kong were down to 65.4 tonnes, compared to 80.6 tonnes in March and 75.9 tonnes a year ago.

"It's thought that Chinese consumers have slowed their buying somewhat due to higher prices than last year," Krauth said. "The country's overall gold demand was down 18% in Q1 over last year."

But, things are beginning to look a bit brighter for gold...

Despite the import drop, China is committed to becoming the number one global gold hub. Already the world's top producer and importer of the yellow metal, China has approached foreign banks and gold producers to participate in a global gold exchange in Shanghai.

Meanwhile, in India - the world's second-largest gold consumer - investors are hopeful the country's new government will lift heavy tax levies imposed last year on gold imports. Such a move would make it cheaper for Indian investors and jewelers to buy gold and is likely to spark pent-up demand. It would also likely support prices globally.

"I think [gold] could show a huge comeback, depending on how the [new Indian government] policy shapes up," P.R. Somasundaram, managing director at the WGC's India office, told The Wall Street Journal.

The WGC currently projects India's 2014 gold demand will be between 900 and 1,000 metric tons, compared with 975 tons in 2013. That could be revised sharply higher if the situation in India changes.

NEXT: According to Barron's, a whopping 85% of all investor "sell" or "exchange" decisions are wrong. But you can beat the 85% with these simple steps...

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<b>Gold price</b> slides again despite largest ETF inflows since 2012 <b>...</b>

Posted: 28 May 2014 04:32 PM PDT

The gold price extended Tuesday's losses on Wednesday falling to a near 4-month low as negative sentiment sweeps the market.

On the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold futures for August delivery last traded at $1,259.35 an ounce, near the lows of the day and down some $7 from yesterday's close.

Gold remains 5% to the upside for 2014 but is down $120 an ounce from highs reached mid-March as the rally on the back of safe haven demand and bargain hunting loses steam.

Gold's annus horribilis in 2013 when the value of the metal dropped 28%, the worst performance in more than three decades, was characterized by the movement of massive amounts of gold from West to East.

Last year the world's physical gold trusts or gold-backed ETFs experienced net redemptions of more than 800 tonnes collectively.

Most of that sold gold ended up in China and India and other growing gold consuming nations in Asia led by Vietnam and Indonesia.

But in the first quarter that demand tanked. Mainland China's demand for gold fell 18% in the first quarter of the year as investors bought fewer bars and coins, offsetting record demand for jewellery.

India's bars and coins buying also showed a huge drop-off of 54% to 98 tonnes and with jewellery consumption also sliding overall gold demand on the subcontinent slid 26%.

Hopes for the en masse return of the gold ETF investors peaked in March, but the holdings of industry benchmark SPDR Gold Shares (NYSEARCA: GLD) has once again slipped into negative territory for 2014.

There may be some spark returning to the market however, yesterday GLD holdings – which represent about 40% of physical gold-backed ETF holdings – shot up the most since October 2012.

Investors bought a net 8.4 tonnes on Tuesday bringing holdings back to 785.3 tonnes or 25.2 million ounces compared to 794.6 tonnes at the start of the year.

The last time ETF investors were this bullish was on October 4, 2012 when GLD recorded 9 tonnes of inflows. At the time gold was trading just under $1,800 an ounce.

GLD was a one way bet in 2013: the fund recorded only 17 days of inflows all of last year and almost 540 tonnes left the fund.

Perhaps the latest buying spurt is a signal of a turnaround in sentiment, especially in the face of continuing negativity on futures markets.

In a video interview at the Wall Street Journal, Barron's Brendan Conway argues the forces crimping gold's rally is not going to go away, namely the disappearance of the ETF investors and developments in China and India.

Photo by Bartlomiej Magierowski

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