The heat I took last week over my "Back up the
Truck" call was somewhat comedic in that every guru out there was urging
"extreme caution." Meantime, what was I telling you that I was
doing? I was buying every gold/silver share and call option that I could
afford in the last two weeks of August.
Here it is: This graphic was called "Back up the
truck!" Gold was $1,315 when I created it and now it is $1,354. The
blogosphere went berserk with comments like "Kiss of Death," and
"Top Talk," and "Wrongway Corrigan," but a funny thing
happened on the way to the pillory post-everything reversed to the upside and
the miners and the metals have now completely worked off their oversold
conditions and have reclaimed their respective 50-daily-moving-averages
(which chart gurus LOVE to talk about). The blogosphere is now eerily quiet,
and my inbox is strangely devoid of snarky emails. Go figure. . .
Back Up the Truck
The newsletter gurus were all slamming me for my total
and unequivocal rejection of the art of "technical analysis" when
it comes to gold and silver. "Let's go to the charts!" opined one
very popular guru as he told his listeners, "Don't blame me!" if
the U.S. employment report comes in "gold and silver hostile."
Well-it did come in hostile, because the algobots had to
juice the S&P 500 up several dozen points in order to offset the massive
selling in the futures. Gold and silver were seriously oversold based on a 26
RSI (relative strength index) for gold. With the RSI for the GDXJ at 31 (see
the chart at the top of the story), I decided to go "ALL-IN" on
Friday morning, right after the (lack of) jobs report came out, and it was
NOT because of some technical "buy signal." It was because of this
famous line from the pits of the old Chicago Board of Trade: "When
they're yellin' you should be sellin', and when they're cryin', you should be
buyin'!" Well, "THEY" were cryin' big time last Friday. End of
story.
You all know me well enough that after 40 years trying to
decipher markets and the psychology driving them, I rarely back away from an
important call, and when the opportunity arises, I usually LUNGE at it. I
don't tiptoe at it for fear that I might lose "subscribers" (because
I have none), and I don't try to hedge my comments with a multiple of
"If this or that, then that or this" disclaimers. I simply email
out missives with graphics like the one you see posted above.
If I'm right in my assessment of the global financial landscape,
the intermediate trend for gold and silver has now kicked in and should draw
gold toward that big downtrend line drawn off tops made in late 2011 and late
2013. However, back in Q1, when I penned the missive "Patiently Climbing
Aboard the New Golden Bull" with gold slightly north of $1,100 and the
HUI at 115, that overhead resistance was up at around $1,450. With the
passage of time, today it is right at $1,400 and explains why the Cretins
were pulling out all of the stops to cap the rallies back in July and August.
As for silver, between now and the end of the year I see
the gold-to-silver-ratio under 60, and if I get $1,400 gold, I should get
silver at $23.33. However, once we see the intermediate-term trend kick in
with a breakout through that dastardly downtrend line at $1,400, gold should
head in a beeline to the April 2014 breakdown level at $1,525, and the GTSR
(gold-to-silver ratio) should be plunging, with silver outperforming gold and
junior silver companies on fire.
With the 2016 boating season now winding down and with
kiddies all back to school, I see the metals dominating the financial
landscape and volatility escalating. The "long gold/short stocks"
trade was the one I had on in late 2015, and it worked magically until this
summer when the post-Brexit panic was contained by the global central banks.
The stock markets have not been on a tear because they reacted to some
technical "buy signal" and they didn't "stair-step" up
the "Wall of Worry" to record highs on the S&P and Dow because
of some "technical pattern." They moved to new highs because a
directive was handed down from the U.S. Treasury (Working Group on Capital
Markets) to 33 Liberty (NY Fed), ordering them to levitate stocks while the
Bank of Japan, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank all followed
along with similar orders.
For these reasons, I'll be doubly diligent in trying to
detect another capping exercise up around $1,380, but I think the bullion
bank behemoths will be too concerned with the deteriorating global macro
environment to concern themselves with the gold market. So the dips should be
bought in gold and silver and the miners, with the best timing tool seeming
to be RSI. Forget about podcasts and "the charts," and just hold
onto your positions and add with RSI under 35 and reduce when it is north of
70. It will save you money.