Gold Corrects After Major Breakout: Time to Buy?

 | Apr 11, 2024 01:13AM ET

Gold has reached the first of a handful of measured upside targets at $2350.

It has another measured upside target of $2350 and the cup and handle targets of roughly $3000 and $4000.

Many observers will naturally worry about the next correction after unexpected and sudden strength. It is almost a knee-jerk reaction after many fits and starts in recent years.

A review of history helps us to understand that post-breakout corrections in Gold are usually minor.

Let’s examine how Gold performed and corrected after similar major breakouts to new all-time highs. We use the 50-day, 100-day, and 150-day moving averages as support levels.

After President Nixon ended the Gold Standard, the price of Gold climbed from $35/oz in 1971 to nearly $200/oz at the end of 1974.

Gold enjoyed three strong legs higher and a fourth that was not as strong—during those three legs higher, Gold never lost its 50-day moving average. 

Gold surged from $35 in 1971 to $125 in 1973, with only one 13% decline and single test of the 200-day moving average in between.