Gold Technicals Bullish: Latest Selloff Is Running out of Steam.

 | Jul 07, 2023 01:03PM ET

Gold's latest pullback has left traders really down on it, fueling mounting bearishness and apathy. But that healthy selloff accomplished its mission of rebalancing sentiment, eradicating early May’s greed and overboughtness. That has reset gold’s technicals, leaving them very bullish. Hammered back down near major support zones, the yellow metal is nicely set up to start rallying soon and resume its interrupted upleg.

Today’s pessimistic gold psychology has been fueled by recent price action. Gold’s surged into early May, extending its latest upleg’s gains to a strong 26.3% over 7.2 months. But ever since then, gold has ground lower to sideways on balance. At worst last week, gold’s total pullback since its latest interim high grew to 6.9% over 1.8 months. Gold dropped from $2,050 to $1,908 in that span, really damaging sentiment.

That pullback was necessary, as gold was getting seriously overbought while greed ran rampant in early May. Gold blasted higher so fast that it soared 13.2% above its baseline 200-day moving average. That wasn’t quite to the extreme 16%+ upleg-slaying danger zone, but starting to threaten it. Nearly everyone was quite bullish on the yellow metal, expecting its strong gains to continue. That was really unbalanced.

Major uplegs can be prematurely burned out by excessive herd greed and overboughtness. They attract in too much buying too soon, exhausting the near-term capital firepower available to keep feeding uplegs. That forces them to peak, fail, and roll over into larger corrections. With a few more days of surging back in early May, gold could’ve hit that tipping point. But selling returned earlier, preserving this upleg’s longevity.

h2 What Drove Gold's Pullback/h2

A confluence of several factors drove gold’s latest pullback. The primary one was speculators selling gold futures on higher odds for more Fed rate hikes. Those flared with better-than-expected economic data and hawkish Fedspeak from top officials. That also often goosed the US dollar, which is the main trading cue for gold-futures speculators. The stronger dollar unleashed more selling, exacerbating gold’s pullback.

The resulting retreating gold prices increasingly discouraged investors, who have pulled more capital out of gold as its selloff festered on. Gold’s price momentum drives their herd psychology, and most of that has been to the downside in the last couple months. That forms vicious circles of self-feeding capital outflows. The more investors sell, the faster gold falls, the more bearish they get, so the more selling they do.

Gold’s mounting pessimism has intensified with stock markets surging in this artificial-intelligence bubble. When general stocks are excitingly blasting higher, investors forget the wisdom of prudently diversifying their stock-heavy portfolios with counter-moving gold. Further aggravating psychology, June is gold’s weakest time of the year seasonally in the heart of its summer doldrums. That all made for a bearish conflux.

h2 Summer Doldrums/h2
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Yet despite those stiff headwinds buffeting gold, it has held its own this summer. This chart is updated from my latest gold-summer-doldrums research thread I analyzed a month ago. Gold’s June, July, and August performances in modern bull years are individually indexed to May’s final close and then charted together. Gold generally drifts sideways to lower in June, as the red line’s averaged indexed seasonals show.