Gold Rejoins The Battle

 | May 23, 2016 01:06AM ET

During the years 2012 through 2015, the Gold Forces were essentially on wholesale retreat from much higher zones such as "The Northern Front" (1750-1800) and "on maneuvers..." (1579-1750), prior to falling through "The Floor" (1579-1466), et alia. But enter 2016 and gold bolted right out of the chute, rising as much as 23% so far this year, indeed clearing the 1240-1280 resistance zone in settling above it in six of these last 13 trading days, and moreover closing up into The Whiny 1290s on two of those days. Whence we then started dishing out phrases portending price pullback, with such modifiers as "expected" or "not unexpected" or "ought not be surprised". And now provenly so, the combination of the 1240-1280 resistance zone and Whiny 1290s has since become evermore identifiable as a huge hurdle for gold to overcome ... which it obviously will, given, if for no other reason, the massive amount of monetary accommodation that will be needed from the Federal Reserve Bank in having to sop up all the SHBs ("Senior Housing Bonds") we think the U.S. Treasury shall have to invent and sell, the proceeds in turn being distributed to millions of seasoned citizens unable to pay their rent and buy food, the inadequacy of their meager life savings, plus Social Security just not filling the bill, (aka "America's Next Great Financial Trainwreck"). Such unavoidable event shall naturally be a gold positive, along with all the other stimulators of currency debasement here, there and everywhere.

And thus, instead of giving it all up yet again as has been the case in recent years, gold day-by-day is fighting away, in full rejoindre of the battle. Throughout these last three consecutive down weeks for gold, price has not slipped a single pip under the 1240-1280 resistance zone, the low therein being 1245. To be sure, as we below turn to gold's weekly bars, the parabolic trend finally has flipped to Short. But consider this: the duration thus far of the Third Millennium A.D. is 726 trading weeks; Gold's just-completed parabolic Long run of 17 weeks was only the seventh such mutually-exclusive occurrence 2001-to-date and the most sustained one since the 21-week run ending almost seven years ago on 19 June 2009. The worst parabolic patch was the 31-week Short run culminating on 31 May 2013, during which time the Gold Forces retreated from 1678 to 1388. Yet given the way this year is unfolding, surely gold's momentum has shifted to the upside, and all-in-all, fairly impressively so, one has to say: