Gold And Silver’s Step Sums Give The Metals A Strong Buy

 | Feb 07, 2016 05:59AM ET

Gold and its step sum are looking pretty impressive. First a short step sum review from tail end of gold’s last bear market up through today. From January 1998 through 2001 I could have placed a bull box in the chart below. Market sentiment as measured by gold’s step sum (Red Plot) was horrible, yet look how firmly the gold price clung to its $250 line (Blue Plot). Over the course of these three years, that many net down days shouldhave forced the price of gold much lower except the bulls kept coming in to buy whatever supply was offered, never allowing gold to decline below $250. Remember, the late 1990s and early 2000s were a time when the future was seen exclusively as a high-tech digital phenomenon. Oil, steel, dirty smoke stacks, and the old monetary metals were widely seen as outdated investments by most investors, if they gave them any thought at all.

By 2001, however, “liquidity” from deflating high-tech stocks had begun flowing into the price of gold and silver. In October 2008 “liquidity” from deflating stocks and bonds boosted gold and silver prices into their second advance of the bull market. In August 2011 a step sum bear box began forming, when the price of gold saw a multi-year decline as its step sum refused to follow.

The bull’s refusal to become bears was logical. The only reason gold and silver prices were declining was due to the manipulation of the paper future’s markets; the bulls and everybody else, for example the CFTC knew it. In the bear box below the red step-sum plot refused to go down for the first thirty months of the correction. This was due to the bulls lining up day after day to buy tons of fictional gold at the COMEX and LBMA paper markets. This was a waste of time and money for bulls, as well as shameful behavior by the management of the big gold and silver miners who without protest allowed their companies’ metal to be sold at prices far below where a free market would had them.