Gold
is nearing a major technical breakout from a massive chart
formation. This classic pennant is a type of continuation pattern,
a long high consolidation which gold climbed into from below. Thus
odds heavily favor this tightening pennant resolving to the upside,
gold surging above upper resistance. That breakout will work
wonders for battered gold sentiment, quickly reversing herd
psychology from bearish back to bullish.
Technical analysis, or studying price-chart patterns, is something
of a self-fulfilling prophecy. It works a lot of the time simply
because enough traders believe it works. When a price breaks
out from widely-watched technical lines, traders are quick to pile
on to ride that momentum accelerating and amplifying it.
Technically-oriented traders are more prevalent in some markets than
others, and they utterly infest gold.
This
leading alternative asset has two primary trading constituencies
that drive its price action. Investors are the biggest and
most-important, commanding vast pools of capital. They only migrate
back into gold when it has enough upside momentum to attract them.
As that has been sorely lacking lately,
apathy has
reigned among investors. When they aren’t interested,
gold-futures speculators dominate gold’s price action.
While their capital firepower is far smaller than investors’, these
specs trade with extreme leverage. Each gold-futures contract
controls 100 ounces, worth $180,000 at $1,800 gold. Yet margin
requirements this week only required traders to keep $6,500 cash in
their accounts for each open contract. Thus the gold-futures
speculators can run leverage as high as 27.7x! That dwarfs
stock markets’ legal limit of 2.0x since 1974.
At
27.7x amplification of gold-price moves, these speculators can’t
afford to be wrong for long. They face losing 100% of their capital
risked if gold merely trends 3.6% against their bets! Those extreme
risks force their trading time horizons into the ultra-short-term,
days to weeks on the outside. As fundamentals usually don’t drive
prices much over such myopic spans, gold-futures traders live and
die by technical analysis.
So
when investors are away so futures guys can play and dominate gold,
it is one of the most-technically-oriented major markets in
existence. And that extends to the entire precious-metals realm,
since gold’s fortunes overwhelmingly drive silver and their miners’
stocks. So big gold breakouts quickly amplified by super-leveraged
gold-futures trading are very impactful in precious-metals land.
And the next one is imminent.
This
chart looks at gold’s technicals over the past few years or so.
Highlighted in red is gold’s colossal pennant formation, a
triangular flag billowing out like at a renaissance festival. The
flagpole initiating this classic pattern was formed by gold’s pair
of massive 42.7% and 40.0% uplegs that crested in 2020. This
high-consolidation pennant since is winding ever-tighter with its
triangle point looming, which will force a breakout.
This
huge pennant’s flagpole peaked at $2,062 gold in early August 2020.
While that was a nominal all-time-record close, in real
inflation-adjusted terms gold was relatively-much-lower. When
adjusted by the intentionally-lowballed and heavily-flawed US
Consumer Price Index, gold’s real apogee was $3,037 way back in
January 1980. So the gold prices initiating this pattern weren’t
extreme, just
extraordinarily-overbought.
Gold
shooting parabolic on colossal
gold-exchange-traded-fund buying to form that flagpole
necessitated a normal healthy bull correction to rebalance
excessively-greedy sentiment. That grind lower in late 2020 and
early 2021 started forming the upper resistance line of gold’s giant
long-term pennant. Investors and speculators alike were digesting
gold’s enormous gains following March 2020’s pandemic-lockdown stock
panic.
Enough selling to push the herd-psychology pendulum back to fear
finally accrued by early March 2021, extending gold’s correction to
18.5% over 7.0 months. Its double-bottoming on gold-futures
speculators capitulating began defining this pennant’s lower support
line. Gold has mostly stayed bound within this constricting
triangular high-consolidation ever since, largely thanks to specs’
leveraged gold-futures trading.
That
makes this pennant 17.0 months old, secular as far as chart
formations go! After rallying into this big technical pattern from
below, gold has consolidated high for the better part of a
year-and-a-half. That has left gold running out of flag to meander
sideways in, which guarantees a forced breakout sometime in the next
few months. A type of continuation pattern, pennants usually
resolve by continuing their entering trend.
That
portends an imminent major upside breakout for gold, which
gold-futures speculators will quickly pile into accelerating and
amplifying that price move. That should fuel sufficient upside
momentum to begin enticing indifferent investors back. Once they
start migrating significant capital back into gold, it will be off
to the races in this bull’s next major upleg. But this bullish
outlook for gold is highly-contrarian these days.
That’s certainly understandable after gold’s weaker price action
since last summer. Gold was powering higher in a solid young upleg
after that last correction, up 13.5% over 2.8 months by early June.
Then the FOMC threw a monkey wrench into the works, derailing that
strengthening upward move. Top Fed officials started hinting at
distant-future rate hikes, which unleashed extreme gold-futures
selling slaying that upleg.
Several more bouts of heavy-to-extreme gold-futures selling erupted
since, all fueled by Fed-tightening fears. These flared from
economic data supporting more-hawkish monetary policies, statements
from FOMC meetings, and comments by top Fed officials. I detailed
and analyzed all these specific episodes in a mid-December essay on
gold weathering
this hawkish Fed. So if you aren’t up to speed, check that out.
For
our purposes today, those periodic gold-futures pukings on Fed
hawkishness wound gold ever-tighter in this massive pennant
pattern. Between those episodes gold usually mean-reverted higher
erasing much of those gold-futures-selling-driven losses. That
ping-ponging around extended this pennant flag for another half-year
or so, greatly solidifying it. Most of gold’s price action
ground higher along lower support.
That
happened again this week, after yet-another hawkish revelation from
the FOMC. Back in mid-June, Fed officials’ individual unofficial
rate-hike outlooks implied the first two hikes way out into year-end
2023. In late September the FOMC pre-announced the upcoming slowing
of its epic fourth quantitative-easing money-printing campaign,
which started in early November. Fed hawkishness skyrocketed again
in mid-December.
At
that last FOMC meeting, the QE4 taper’s pace was doubled enabling
that process to end a few months earlier in March 2022. In addition
to that turbo-taper, the dot-plot rate-hike expectations from Fed
officials fully tripled from seeing two hikes total in 2022
and 2023 to six! And the minutes from that meeting just released
this week included talk of actually starting to shrink the Fed’s
grotesque QE-bloated balance sheet.
Since that quantitative-tightening runoff hadn’t been discussed yet
as potential Fed tightening, that shook loose more leveraged
gold-futures selling. With gold sentiment so bearish from those
gold-futures-selling bouts, virtually no one believes
gold’s turn to
shine is returning. Thus this
huge-pennant-nearing-upside-breakout thesis is almost heretical.
But the FOMC’s coming monetary policies shouldn’t prove much of a
threat.
Modern central bankers’ most-used strategy is simple jawboning,
talking tough while actually doing very little! They are “all hat
and no cattle” to borrow a great American idiom, describing people
who act like cowboys but aren’t actual ranchers. While Fed
officials are rightfully scared of the terrible inflation their
out-of-control money printing has unleashed, they aren’t likely to
have the courage to go beyond token actions.
Since March 2020’s stock panic fueled by pandemic-lockdown fears,
this profligate Fed has ballooned its balance sheet an insane 110.6%
or $4,599b higher! In just 22.1 months, this monetary base
underlying the US-dollar supply has effectively more than doubled.
That radically-unprecedented monetary deluge is why inflation is
raging out of control, far more dollars are bidding up prices on
relatively-less goods and services.
While the Fed’s new QE turbo-taper certainly caught traders’
attention, that acceleration of the slowing in QE4 money printing
is immaterial. Before that, QE4’s total size was set to
challenge $5.2t by June. Now it is on track to still exceed $5.0t
by March. And merely slowing QE money printing leaves those many
trillions of dollars of recently-conjured QE4 money in the system,
which will keep forcing general prices higher.
Yes,
the latest FOMC minutes just hinted at quantitative-tightening bond
runoffs this week. But QT is just talk, far from the action stage.
The last time the Fed tried QT to unwind QE, the
resulting
near-bear stock-market plunge panicked the FOMC to prematurely
kill that bond runoff years ahead of schedule. That truncated QT
unwound less than a quarter of the preceding QE! This Fed is
big on talk but light on action.
Fed
officials rightfully fear tightening driving major stock-market
selloffs. Once those grow large enough, the Fed reverses course
hard because it doesn’t want to risk spawning a
negative-wealth-effect-induced recession or even depression. When
stocks fall far enough for long enough, consumers feel poorer and
pull in their horns on spending. That slows the entire economy,
cutting into corporate profits forcing layoffs.
Thanks to that $5.0t of QE4 since October 2019, the US stock markets
have levitated up to
dangerous bubble
valuations. That makes them even more susceptible to a major
bear market than normal, which tend to ultimately slash stock
prices in half. So the FOMC is super-unlikely to follow through
on all of its hawkish talk, both on the QT and rate-hike side.
Stock markets will tumble until the Fed Put’s strike price is found.
While Fed officials are hawkishly flexing on rate hikes, that
jawboning is unlikely to actually be executed. The latest dot
plot’s three federal-funds-rate hikes projected in 2022 followed by
another three in 2023 are an all-hat-no-cattle type of thing. These
outlooks are notoriously-inaccurate at predicting the FOMC’s
later actions. The Fed chair himself warned about this after that
mid-June FOMC meeting
first implied
rate hikes.
Jerome Powell said, “First of all, not for the first time about the
dot plot. These are, of course, individual projections. They’re
not a Committee forecast, they’re not a plan. … the dots are not a
great forecaster of future rate moves. And that’s not because –
it’s just because it’s so highly uncertain. There is no great
forecaster of future [rates]. So, dots to be taken with a big grain
of salt.” That’s straight from the horse’s mouth!
Examples are legion, even during the Fed’s last rate-hike cycle. As
it launched in mid-December 2015, that dot plot forecast four rate
hikes in 2016. But only a single one came to pass, fully one year
later. The December-2018 dot plot coinciding with the FOMC’s ninth
hike of that cycle predicted three more hikes in 2019 and 2020.
Zero of those actually happened. Fed officials’ rate outlooks turn
on a dime with stock fortunes.
But
what if this cowardly FOMC actually musters the courage to grind out
an entire rate-hike cycle?
Gold tends to
thrive in those historically. Since 1971 there have been twelve
rate-hike cycles, this next one will be the modern era’s 13th. Gold
averaged absolute gains of 26.1% across the exact spans of
all dozen! In seven it rallied a huge average 54.7%, then in the
other five it fell 13.9%. Two factors mostly governed this.
Gold
performed the best during Fed-rate-hike cycles when it entered
them relatively-low and they proved gradual, no more than one
quarter-point hike per regularly-scheduled FOMC meeting. After
consolidating high in its gigantic pennant, gold is far from
overbought and very out of favor entering this next cycle. And
there is no way this FOMC will risk hiking faster than once per
meeting with these fragile bubble stock markets.
So
while a long-Fed-delayed stock bear will almost certainly slay any
actual QT or rate hikes well before they run their courses, even if
they do gold tends to fare really well during tightenings. That’s
mostly because they are so damaging to stock markets, eroding
corporate profits which forces valuations even higher. That helps
gold return to favor as the leading portfolio diversifier that
usually rallies when stocks sell off.
Thus
gold’s massive secular pennant is still likely to follow
continuation-pattern precedent and break out to the upside in
coming months. Fed officials have really been talking tough, but
that is easy when stock markets are near record highs. They’ll
change their tunes fast when these bubble markets roll over. And
hawkish jawboning almost never plays out in proportional actions,
these guys talk a big game before folding.
That’s even more true in a key election year, with November’s
midterm elections critical for the future direction of the United
States. Ruling political parties despise rate hikes because they
weaken stock markets, and stock-market fortunes really affect
Americans’ personal economic outlooks
swaying their
voting. So to avoid getting embroiled in political fighting,
the FOMC will likely abstain from hiking after summer.
With
that $5.0t of QE4 money printing more than doubling the monetary
base staying in the system, gold prices are inevitably heading way
higher to reflect that. The Fed’s balance sheet is now $8.8t,
2.2x higher than the $3.9t in the year before QE4 was born!
Gold averaged $1,337 back then. To catch up with this
wildly-unprecedented monetary deluge, it would have to soar up
around $2,980 nearly regaining real highs.
The
biggest beneficiaries of much-higher gold prices ahead are the
fundamentally-superior
mid-tier and
junior gold stocks. They rallied sharply with gold into
mid-November, but were dragged back down to their stop losses by
another bout of heavy gold-futures selling. Our stoppings averaged
out to neutral, fully recovering our capital. So we’ve been
aggressively redeploying buying back in low in our
newsletters.
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The
bottom line is a major gold breakout is nearing, with a massive
pennant formation converging. Gold climbed into this big
continuation pattern from below in powerful uplegs, and has been
consolidating high ever since. Prices usually break out of big
pennants in the same direction they entered, implying gold’s
imminent breakout will be to the upside. That will ignite strong
gold-futures momentum buying from specs.
The
resulting acceleration and amplification of gold’s breakout rally
will start enticing investors to return, fueling a major upleg. Fed
tightening shouldn’t matter, as Fed officials talk tough but rarely
follow through with all threatened actions. The FOMC surrenders
after stock markets fall sufficiently on rate hikes and
balance-sheet runoffs. And gold has tended to power strongly higher
during past Fed-rate-hike cycles anyway. |