The gold price is set to keep falling - for now

By Dominic Frisby Dec 09, 2009

Dominic Frisby

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We finally have our shake-out in gold.

After peaking last Wednesday at about $1,220 an ounce, the price has fallen almost $100 in just four trading days. Friday's capitulation - some $60 - was particularly ugly. It shows just how much speculative, hot money there is in the sector.

So what now?

Now is not the best time to buy gold

In the week to last Wednesday 7 December, almost $300m of call options (options betting the market will rise) were traded in the largest gold exchange-traded fund (ETF), GLD.

That is more than the entire call volume of the second and third quarters of this year – in just five trading days. On Wednesday alone, trading volume in GLD calls amounted to almost 50% of what the market traded in the entire second quarter. That is a sign of extreme speculative excess. It is not the time for short-term investors to buy. At such extremes, you have to ask – where are the next buyers going to come from?

The time to buy is when the put volume (bets that the market will fall) is at record highs. Or, as the Wall Street proverb puts it: 'When there is blood on the streets'. I daresay there will be just such opportunities again.

As gold plummeted on Friday, we saw around 80 million shares traded in GLD. That is the highest daily volume ever. Nor is a market falling on such high volume something to buy into.

The clues that a correction was coming were there. Gold stocks had lagged badly on gold's last move higher. Silver had also lagged. It had been many weeks since we'd seen any meaningful pullback. There was too much bullish sentiment and the position taken by the Comex futures traders (the 'smart' money) was also very negative.

What's driving gold's fall?

But what is driving the falls? Surely everyone can see the fundamentals behind gold? That may be, but short-term speculative capital does not care about long-term fundamentals. It is looking for quick gains and it appears to have driven gold into some kind of short-term, blow-off top.

As we head into year end, there are a lot of fund managers who will want to lock in their profits for the year. I'm afraid that means they will sell their gold – and anything else they own that has done well – at the slightest hint of a turn in the markets, because they will want to secure their gains (and their bonuses) on what will have been an excellent year. That's what we saw on Friday and why the market fell so hard, so fast.

In the short term, this does not bode well for any market – except one. It may be that we are finally seeing the end of the 'Great Reflation Trade', this astonishing rally out of the crash. For the large majority, locking in profits will mean locking in US dollars. And we have repeatedly said that it's the US dollar vs everything else. If it rises, stocks will fall, commodities will fall – even corporate bonds and UK house prices may start to fall.


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Keep your eyes on the dollar

Of course, the US dollar is being debased into oblivion by its issuer the Federal Reserve, of course it is undermined by America's gargantuan debt levels, but it is still the currency in which Mr Margin Call and just about everyone else demands settlement.

Despite the falls we have seen in the dollar since the spring, the longer-term channel up has held – for now at least. This chart shows the US dollar index – the dollar vs a basket of other currencies – over the last four years.

If the dollar rallies back to the top side of the channel, we will see a level north of 90 – and, correspondingly, we will see the proverbial blood on the streets in just about every other market.

Looking at the shorter-term chart of the dollar, we can also see it has broken out of its downtrend.

Remember the excessively bullish sentiment I described in the GLD options trading in the opening paragraphs? There has been just such extreme sentiment about the US dollar – only in reverse, and for much longer.

Not only have there been extreme levels of pessimism - 95%, 97%, 98% bears, according to which survey you read - this negativity has been ongoing since the summer. In the four or five months since then, the bearish sentiment has increased, yet we are just three or four points lower on the index. The downside momentum, so forceful between March and June, has petered out, even although the negative sentiment hasn't. I would suggest that is bullish.

I remain of the mind that we are going are going to see gold at silly numbers one day. Even gold exploration stocks run by incompetent geologists who can't add up and have repeatedly diluted their stock after taking bad advice from unscrupulous investment bankers will trade like the tech stocks of the late 90s. But we are still several years from such a scenario. For now, we must keep our eyes on the dollar, which is due a rally.

This might be our healthy 10% shake-out in gold en route to a higher spring high (reaching my $1,400 spring target) – or last week's huge call option position may mark an intermediate term top in gold. We shall see. Either way, I think this correction in gold has further to go.

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Comments (16)

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  • 1. shlaptop

    (09 December 2009, 11:25AM)  Complain about this comment

    I'm not really into the charts side of things, you can make them say what you want to hear, but the massive call option rush has got to be a huge indicator of momentum. still gold in £ could hold up fine, the dollar may strengthen but I don't see sterling following for one minute.
    I think it's time to watch for the big buying opportunity in the next 3 months.

  • 2. cooldude

    (09 December 2009, 11:59AM)  Complain about this comment

    Congrats to Dominic on the timing of last weeks article warning of this drop in price in gold. These very sharp 5-10% movements in daily gold prices are going to become a feature of this next, second stage, in gold's bull run. We are going to see extreme volatility with a pronounced shift towards higher prices. This is because Obama and Gordon Brown are going to increase their monetisation of their respective depts. This will be the begining of the inflationary depression stage of the cycle which is the natural successor to the deflationary recession stage which is now over. The key to this was gold taking out its old high after 19 months in November. The same situation occurred in the Weimar Republic where gold, after initially increasing, actually fell against the DM from 03-1920 to 08-1921 and then began its ascent to 10 trillion DM. This monetisation of dept is a disaster waiting to happen and will be reflected in the price of gold.

  • 3. rifraf

    (09 December 2009, 12:03PM)  Complain about this comment

    I think Dominic Frisby is an excellent analyst. I read his writeups with great interest.

    It is difficult to tell whether the dollar has broken out of the down trend - as the Feds still need the dollar to fall substantially.

    Gold is rallying a little now - so it would have been useful to get an idea of support and resistance levels.

    I look forward to Doms next writeup on Gold and the Precious Metals market.

  • 4. Michael ewis

    (09 December 2009, 12:15PM)  Complain about this comment

    The analysis has been spot-on thus far. I think there may be more upside in other commodities. But the fundamental case for Gold has to be good from a UK perspective. The simple facts at the moment are: we're heavily in debt, government is printing money, there could be a hung parliament and a ratings downgrade. In Sterling terms, some gold, even at the price it is now, would be worth it purely as an insurance policy, let alone an investment you expect a return on.

  • 5. Cingene

    (09 December 2009, 12:40PM)  Complain about this comment

    Almost my sentiments exactly. Having followed gold since late 2006 and US$620 or so I am comfortable staying in. I read many investment related essays every day concerning shares generally; oil (another essential commodity and US$ hedge that I believe will do very well) and gold. The popular press seem unaware of the long term bull market in energy and gold and whilst this remains so, I shall remain invested. When the Sun recommends investing in gold, I shall be out.

  • 6. Noisie

    (09 December 2009, 03:27PM)  Complain about this comment

    I heard a BBC Radio 1 article on the 'rip off' prices being offered by 'sell your scrap gold' postal companies yesterday. The advice was: "don't accept the first offer... hold out for a better price".

    Perhaps the start of an awakening from the main stream media?

  • 7. JJ

    (09 December 2009, 04:24PM)  Complain about this comment

    I'm seeing a lot of inflation in food prices at my local supermarkets.Wonder if this will ever show up in govt inflation statistics?

  • 8. truth is

    (09 December 2009, 05:22PM)  Complain about this comment

    falling...OK...still in a 5-8 yr at elast bull market...at least..I'm all in...
    love buying on the dips and no dips at all...
    even at 3500 gold is a bargain......this fall is nothing...we wont see a top of PMs for a long while years to go...

    its real money..

  • 9. Goldragon

    (09 December 2009, 07:36PM)  Complain about this comment

    This author has a good tech for timing the market. I also agree with these holding gold positions. In long run, getting in and out may not be the best way to invst in bull markets.
    The big money is not made by in and out, but by sitting tight!

  • 10. Exiled Tyke

    (09 December 2009, 07:41PM)  Complain about this comment

    Reaction in gold will be short - bottom will be reached by 15 Dec 2009 - closing London pm fix in area of 1110.

    Then off to 1500.

  • 11. Rado

    (09 December 2009, 10:24PM)  Complain about this comment

    I agree with E-Tyke. Gold will go over 1500 in an upcoming weeks.

  • 12. goldonomic.com

    (10 December 2009, 03:01AM)  Complain about this comment

    The analysis makes a lot of sence. However, it is too early to call the Dollar has reversed and it would be extraordinary to see Gold reverse course during a C-upwave and what is normally the strongest time of the year for Gold.
    Having said this, one must absolutely STOP to consider Gold 'only' in US-Dollar. Checking on the charts of Gold expressed in other currencies we surely don't see a bearish market. Add to this that historically Gold often saw its biggest rise when the dollar was also up.

  • 13. TaxHaven

    (10 December 2009, 07:25AM)  Complain about this comment

    This analysis is likely spot-on as far as it goes. But not much of it will hold true if there is another serious credit event, a geo-political happening or a currency crisis/crises.

    None of this margin call or speculative activity is actually happening in the real, physical gold market. It's all dollar-driven; any 'profits' accruing are denominated in paper dollars.

    What we need to see is a divergence between GLD, gold bank accounts and gold stocks on the one hand and contracts being settled in the physical bullion on the other. Signs we can hopefully look for will include an ongoing slight backwardation, shortages of bullion bars and coins together with the continuing elimination of miners' hedge books and mined supply shortfalls.

    Truly, what Marc Faber and Jim Rogers have to say ~ buy the physical metal ~ should make sense soon.

  • 14. Duffminster

    (10 December 2009, 07:32AM)  Complain about this comment

    Gold is appreciating in all major fiat currencies, not just the US dollar. It would be nice to see a very long term dollar chart like this one: http://jessescrossroadscafe.blogspot.com/2009/11/us-dollar-very-long-term-chart.html

    The chart takes us back to the "Plaza Accords" in 1985 and tells me that the dollar is a much larger long term down trend and shows the dollar to be in a much bigger and longer term down trend.

    Gold is about incorruptibility in the face of broken promises and tens of trillions of IOUs that can not be repaid and how a half a trillion or so in OTC derivatives to go unregulated.

    While all other major commodities have passed their inflation adjusted highs in the last commodity run up, silver remains at less than 1/6th of its inflation adjusted high and gold well below ½ of its non inflation adjusted high. While gold is in the neighborhood of ½ of its inflation adjusted high.

    Duffminster
    http://www.duffminster.com/SilverandGold

  • 15. Colin

    (10 December 2009, 10:09AM)  Complain about this comment

    Another interesting, informative article - the graphs do really supplement the article. Please continue to keep us all informed.

  • 16. Aahe18

    (13 December 2009, 03:56AM)  Complain about this comment

    With all this in mind, how will the price os silver be affected?

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