Why I'm still looking to short gold

Feb 06, 2012, 02:13

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When I last covered gold on 23 January, I made a case for the rally off the 29 December low at $1,520 to be ending at the $1,670 area. That was where the market was trading at the time.

Since I wrote that, the rally has blithely ignored my careful analysis – and sailed upwards to last week’s high at $1,762. That’s almost a full $100 above my target. Ouch!

But this brings up a very important point. It starkly illustrates why I use and highly recommend to all traders a tight money-management (or risk-control) strategy, just in case you are wrong.

Always listen to what the market is telling you

One of the biggest weaknesses of traders is to convince yourself that your stance is the right one. You hang on to losing positions, even though the market is telling you that something is wrong with it.

In certain areas of life, stubbornness can sometimes be an advantage. But not in trading – unless you have very deep pockets. Even then you risk huge losses if the markets never recover.

I trade market swings, which are the short to intermediate time frame market moves. I expect to be holding winning trades typically for a few days to a few weeks, and losing trades for a few minutes to a few days.

In a losing trade, I am taken out by my previously-set stop loss using my 3% rule. In a winning trade, I will adjust my stop loss to break-even  when conditions allow, and exit the trade at a pre-defined target price.

OK, so I have had a losing trade. What now?

The charts still point to a bear market in gold

I am still bearish on the gold market. The technical picture remains bearish. But if the market can push above the double top at $1,920 formed last summer, then I may change my stance.

So I am still looking for short trades. Let’s look at the daily chart for perspective:

 Gold price spread betting chart

(Click on the chart for a larger version)

In the blue box, I have highlighted two important Elliott wave formations. The rally off the September plunge low to the November high is an A-B-C, which is corrective to the main trend (down).

Then, the decline off the November high to the 29 December low is a five-wave formation, complete with a 'long and strong' third wave.

This combination of waves is solid evidence that we are still in a bear market. I believe that $200 rally since 29 December is a bear market rally, albeit a very deep one.

Also note that the rally has taken the market to the 62% Fibonacci retracement of the maximum decline off the $1,920 high – an important potential line of resistance. So, this level could represent the rally top.


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But can I find more evidence for a top? I shall need more than this Fibonacci clue in order to take a view. So now let’s look at the shorter-term picture:

 Gold price spread betting chart

(Click on the chart for a larger version)

This is the hourly chart showing the $200 uninterrupted rally, and I can show four tramlines. The first tramline I drew was the top one, which takes in the all-important pivot low marked by the red arrow, as well as the recent highs.

The other tramlines, although not perfectly 'clean', are serviceable, so far. On Friday’s $35 drop, the market broke below the second tramline – the first sign of weakness.

Also, note the potential negative momentum divergence as marked by the green arrows. As the market climbed last week following the Fed interest rate announcement, each new high was made on progressively weaker momentum – a sign of an impending reversal.

Fundamentalists would now be asking – am I crazy to look for a top here? The Fed has made plain its continuing zero interest rate policy. That’s seen as very bullish for gold.

I’m looking for a good entry for a short trade

I can only say that the charts are telling me something very different, and it rarely pays to be part of a herd.

But here is a chart that has me excited:

 Gold price spread betting chart

(Click on the chart for a larger version)

This is the 15-minute close-up of Friday’s action. I can spot a very clear 5-wave Elliott pattern, complete with a 'long and strong' third wave – and a positive momentum divergence between waves 5 and 3. This is textbook stuff.

The five-wave pattern down is impulsive and indicates the larger trend is now down.

Also, note the decline stopped right on my tramline, also as per the textbook.

I was watching the market closely on Friday for these signs and reckoned that if the market broke below the purple bar, it would indicate a short sale. 

This morning, the market is staging a small relief rally, which could form an A-B-C pattern, so this rally may not be yet complete.

If we do get a C wave, that would be an excellent point for me to put out some short trades.

But breaking below Friday’s low would confirm my analysis and indicate a much more severe decline lies directly ahead. My first major target is the $1,660 area, with $1,710 as a minor stopping-point (these are Fibonacci levels).

I have a feeling that action this week will be fast and furious.

• If you’re a new reader, or need a reminder about some of the methods I refer to in my trades, then do have a look at my introductory videos:

The essentials of tramline trading
Advanced tramline trading
An introduction to Elliott wave theory
Advanced trading with Elliott waves
Trading with Fibonacci levels
Trading with 'momentum'
Putting it all together

• Don't miss my next trading insight. To receive all my spread betting blog posts by email, as soon as I've written them, just sign up here .

Comments (7)

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  • 1. Jamie

    (06 February 2012, 02:45PM)  Complain about this comment

    I'm currently using BullionVault to trade gold. It doesn't allow you to set stop loss orders to limit losses. In this situation, what do you recommend traders do in order to reduce risk?

  • 2. ricardo

    (06 February 2012, 03:09PM)  Complain about this comment

    At the moment you bullish on the Euro against the dollar.
    To be bullish euro is the same as being bearish on the dollar.
    There is a clear relationship between dollar and gold , when dollar goes up gold goes down and dollar down pushes gold up.
    So we can look at it this way.

    EURO UP = DOLLAR DOWN = GOLD UP
    OR
    EURO DOWN= DOLLAR UP = GOLD DOWN

    So to be bullish euro and bearish gold at the same time does not make sense. The euro and gold move up and down together.
    So you must be dead wrong on either the euro or gold.

  • 3. Thomas Winstanley

    (06 February 2012, 03:19PM)  Complain about this comment

    My own indicators suggest that gold is over bought. However, in my experience falling momentum does not necessarily indicate a dramatic fall. It might instead presage a period of price consolidation withing a relatively well defined range. I suspect this might be what are seeing here. The latest indications I have read are that demand for physical gold shows absolutely no sign of weaknening, especially in India and China where so much of it goes. Now might not be a good time to buy but I think it would be bad time to sell except on the sort of trading basis John uses.

  • 4. Rob

    (07 February 2012, 01:38AM)  Complain about this comment

    Took a short in your purple zone. Currently up 6 points looking for the big third wave etc.

    @Jaime, you can't short gold in a bullion vault account unless like me your account is denominated in USD's (that's assuming the inverse correlation holds true). So if you're long, to set a stop loss just put an order in to sell at the price where you would want your stop loss to be. After all a stop loss order when you're long is simply and order to sell.

  • 5. Gordon Freeman

    (09 February 2012, 12:32AM)  Complain about this comment

    No, you can't do that. Because if you do, the order would go straight thru! What happens is, they match your order up with another client, so obviously the client would be delighted to accept your offer at a bargain basement price! And you would be fleeced. BV have a comment about stop losses which they believe can be detrimental, so they don't use them.
    The only option on there is to stagger your purchases on weakness, and then sell higher up. And NEVER BUY ON STRENGTH (unless of course they announce a huge blast of QE or something). There are manipulative forces that don't want gold to rise too high, so expect corrections on any significant increase (like January just gone for example).

  • 6. Gordon Freeman

    (09 February 2012, 12:33AM)  Complain about this comment

    I also don't understand John's piece above, if the euro rallies it should take gold and silver higher too shouldn't it (risk assets vs the dollar)? Or will the lack of QE in USA disappoint the speculators (because of stronger jobs figures)? Will the low interest rates be enough to continue rally higher? Lots of uncertainty to be sure.

  • 7. Rob

    (10 February 2012, 12:34PM)  Complain about this comment

    @Gordon Freeman, yes you're right Gordon, silly me !

    Sorry Jamie did n't mean to mislead. If you want to trade gold and not use margin then your best bet is probably an ETF like LON:BULL in a cheap execution only broker like Selftrade. You can also trade it inside a S&S ISA .

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