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Gold’s Downtrend: Is This Just The Beginning?

Published 02/18/2021, 12:49 PM
Updated 05/14/2017, 06:45 AM

With the yellow metal just posting its lowest close since June and a bearish pattern forming, how vulnerable is gold to a further decline?

Gold and mining stocks just broke to new yearly lows – as I warned you in my previous analyses. And that’s only the beginning.

Let’s jump right into the charts, starting with gold.

Gold Futures Chart.

Figure 1 - COMEX Gold Futures

In early February, gold broke below the rising red support line and it then verified it by rallying back to it and then declining once again. It topped almost exactly right at its triangle-vertex-based reversal, which was yet another time when this technique proved to be very useful.

Gold has just closed not only at new yearly lows, but also below the late-November lows (in terms of the closing prices, there was no breakdown in intraday terms). This means that yesterday’s (Feb. 17) closing price was the lowest daily close since late June 2020. At the moment of writing these words, gold is also trading below the April 2020 intraday high.

Gold was likely to slide based on myriads of technical and cyclical factors, while the fundamental factors remain very positive – especially considering that we are about to enter the Kondratiev winter, or we are already there. As a reminder, Kondratiev cycles are one of the longest cycles and the stages of the cycle take names after seasons. “Winter” tends to start with a stock market top that is caused by excessive credit. In this stage gold is likely to perform exceptionally well. But not right at its start. Even the aftermath of the 1929 top (“Winter” started then as well), gold stocks declined for about three months before soaring. In the first part of the cycle, cash is likely to be king. And it seems that the performance of the USD Index is already telling investors to buckle up.

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US Dollar, Gold, Silver Combined Chart.

Figure 2

If the fact that gold invalidated its breakout above its 2011 high, despite the ridiculously positive fundamental situation, doesn’t convince you that gold does not really “want” to move higher before declining profoundly first, then the above chart might.

As I wrote above, gold is currently more or less when it was trading at the April 2020 top. Where was the USD Index trading back then? It was moving back and forth around the 100 level.

100!

The USD Index closed a little below 91, and gold is at the same price level! That’s a massive 9 index-point decline in the USDX that gold shrugged off just like that.

There’s no way that gold could “ignore” this kind of movement and be “strong” at the same time. No. It’s been very weak in the previous months, which is a strong sign (not a fundamental one, but a critical one nonetheless) that gold is going to move much lower once the USD Index finally rallies back up.

Right now, waiting for gold to rally is like waiting for the light to turn green, arguing that eventually it has to turn green, while not realizing that the light is broken (gold just didn’t rally despite the huge decline in the USDX). Yes, someone will fix it and eventually it will turn green, but it doesn’t mean that it makes much sense to wait for that to happen, instead of looking around and crossing the street if it’s safe to do so.

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Yes, gold is likely to rally to new highs in the coming years. And silver is likely to skyrocket. But in light of just two of the above-mentioned factors (gold’s extreme underperformance relative to the USD Index and the invalidation of a critical breakdown) doesn’t it make sense not to purchase gold right now (except for the insurance capital that is) in order to buy it after several weeks/few months when it’s likely to be trading at much lower levels?

We live in very specific times. Getting a “like” on a post or picture becomes a necessary daily activity and means of self-validation. Not “liking” something that others posted or that is massively “liked” may be frowned upon or even viewed as being disrespectful. Plus, it seems that no matter what you do, everyone gets offended very easily. When did honesty, independence and common-sense stop being virtues?

When it comes to gold investment analysis, it’s surprisingly similar. You either like gold and think that it’s going higher right away or you’re “one of them.” “Them” can be anyone who tries to manipulate gold or silver prices, “banksters,” or some kind of unknown enemy. Analysts' goal is often no longer to be as objective as possible and to provide as good and as unbiased an analysis as possible, but to simply be cheering for gold and provide as many bullish signals as possible regardless of what one really thinks about them. The above may seem pleasant to readers, but it’s not really in their best interest. In order to make the most of any upswing, it’s best to enter the market as low as possible and to exit relatively close to the top. What happens before a price is as low as possible? It declines. Why would something like that (along with those describing it) be hated by gold investors? It makes no sense, but yet, it’s often the case.

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Ok, but why on Earth would the USD Index rally back up? The Fed is printing so much dollars – why would they be worth more?!

Because the currencies are valued with relation to each other and whether or not the USD Index moves higher or lower doesn’t depend only on what the Fed is doing.

Figure 3

What other monetary authorities do matters as well and right now the ECB is outprinting the Fed (that’s what the decline in the green line above means), which means that the euro is likely to fall more than the U.S. dollar. Therefore, the EUR/USD currency exchange rate would be likely to decline, and since this exchange rate is the biggest (over 50%) component of the USD Index, it makes perfect sense – from the fundamental point of view – to expect the USD Index to move higher.

Can gold rally despite higher USD Index values? Absolutely. However, it would first have to start to behave “normally” relative to the USD Index, and before that happens it would have to stop being extremely weak relative to it. And the fact that gold is at the same price level despite a 9-index-point decline in the USDX is extreme weakness.

The size and shape of the 2017-2018 analogue continues to mirror the current price action . However, today, it’s taken 118 less days for the USD Index to move from peak to trough.

Also, it took 82 days for the USDX to bottom in 2017-2018 (the number of days between the initial bottom and the final bottom) and the number amounts to 21.19% of the overall duration. If we apply a similar timeframe to today’s move, it implies that a final bottom may have formed on Feb. 12. As a result, the USDX’s long-term upswing could begin as soon as this week.

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Also noteworthy, as the USDX approached its final bottom in 2017-2018, gold traded sideways. Today, however, gold is already in a downtrend. From a medium-term perspective, the yellow metal’s behavior is actually more bearish than it was in 2017-2018.

Also supporting the historical analogue, the USD Index’s current breakout above its 50-day moving average is exactly what added gasoline to the USDX’s 2018 fire. Case in point? After the 2018 breakout, the USDX surged back to its previous high. Today, that level is roughly 94.5.

Based on this week’s rally it seems that the final bottom formed on Tuesday (Feb. 16) – just two trading days away from the analogy-based target, and in perfect tune with what I wrote back then. The breakout above both: the declining blue line, and the 50-day moving average was verified, and the short-term outlook here is clearly bullish.

But isn’t the current situation similar to what happened in mid-2020? The correction that was followed by another decline?

In a way, it is. In both cases, the USD Index moved higher after a big decline, but that’s about it as far as important similarities are concerned.

What is different is the entire context. Even a single look at the above chart provides an instant answer. The mid-2020 correction was like the mid-2017 correction, and what we see right now is the post-bottom breakout, just as we saw in the first half of 2018.

There are multiple details on the above chart that confirm it, including the sizes of the medium-term declines, the position of the price relative to the declining support/resistance lines, as well as relative to the 50-day moving average, and even the green arrows in the RSI indicator show how similar the preceding action was in case of this indicator. The vertical dashed line shows “where we are right now” in case of the analogy.

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Also, the fact that the general stock market has not yet declined in any substantial way only makes the short-term outlook worse (particularly for silver and miners). When stocks do slide, they would be likely to impact the prices of miners and silver particularly strongly.

And please remember, we’re looking for the bottom in the precious metals sector not because we’re the enemy of gold or the precious metals investor. On the contrary, we’re that true friend that tells you if something’s not right, even if it may be unpleasant to hear. We want to buy more and at better prices close to the bottom, and we’ll continue to strive to assist you with that as well.

Latest comments

Where is update about strong dollar
I was waiting for your response about my post 20feb, u did not
Here we are - what a powerful gold and silver upswing. Today again, I've laid out a detailed analytical case - soon here... Great day!
Thanks Jan for an evergreen idea. In the meantime, both gold and silver are running higher just as I predicted = we're indeed much closer to the bottom in PMs than quite a few think. Full details in my upcoming analysis.
Suggestion: create a $1000 account. Publish all your buy / sell. That way we can see how good an analyst you are. Do you dare? I doubt it... If you would have done this one year ago, and followed your own advices you 'd be left with like $100. Time to measure, no more blabla. sorry
I just have one questionHow in the world dxy is recovering? Are we looking here USA economy locally, or globally,???Dollar a global currency from my point of viewAnd I would never look at it from a microscopeLet us look from a wider view as it should be from 1 standard which is the most important for us economy as itsUSA_ China decoupling which I believe took place and moved very fast it trump presidency time The US-China trade war is not really about trade it's about technology transfer and decoupling. The levying of punitive tariffs by the US has led to higher prices for consumers and producers, both in America and abroad. Global trade benefits both sides. No one benefits from the tariffs.USA triffes and decoupling from China will cost usa hundreds of billions and even bigger deficit I wonder how usa would keep investors interested as long as dollar high?????? Yet it will give a bigger opportunity to move to China or anywhere else from USA and dxy
Dxy performance telling investors to buckel up,Maybe for microscopic investors yes the would buy itBut generally there is nothing promising about dxy globally in fact the smart decision that the Fed and USA should make is to devalue dollar is very great for usa economy in the long run
SUMMARY: mine remains quite different given the realities within my latest free analysis here at investing.com, latest update below, silver leading again, commodities mostly positive, and gold shaking off Friday's TLT fall while the dollar keeps predictably going down. PMs outlook is NOT very bearish over the coming weeks and months. Great weekend!
Thx for bringing in some reality here.
Thank you - my duty and responsibility to the people.
Summary: the trading week is now over and GDX and GDXJ have both confirm their breakdowns below the neck levels of their broad head-and-shoulders patterns. This happened in terms of three consecutive closing prices and in terms of a weekly closing price. At the same time gold failed to rally in any visible manner despite a quite visible daily decline. The implications for the precious metals sector are very berish for the next several weeks/months (even though, the very short term is a bit unclear).
How you succeed in ALWAYS hitting the ball wrong, I don't know. But for 1 year long all you predicted turned out the other way... price move today again overrules what you predict here...
UPDATE: Viewed from the GDX:GLD perspective, there is no breakdown yet. While GDX and GDXJ remain weak, SIL is showing strength. GLD is showing relative daily strength vs. TLT. USDX going down, alleviating part of the pressure on gold. The very short-term outlook remains undecided while the intermediate- and long-term one is bullish.
You dont have to take what he writes seriously and respond to it too !,, theres a decade worth of the same nonsense copy/paste material in his history , just check it .
Public service to the people, given how much I have to say on the topic... Enjoy your weekend, Dwain!
Indeed. He is always so convinced that he is right while all he preficts turns out the opposite way.. incredible!
UPDATE: The week is almost over and GDX and GDXJ are now both almost certain to confirm their breakdowns below the neck levels of their broad head-and-shoulders patterns. If that happens, the implications will be VERY bearish for the next weeks for the entire precious metals market, not only for mining stocks.
He says down , it immediately shoots up ,, best contrarian indicator this guy !
 The point is that the dollar isn't what matters the most at the very moment, besides us not being in a dollar bull market really. Gold is ignoring another fall in TLT = bullish. Silver has been up by as much as 1.75% intraday. Gold is still on razor's edge, not broken.
indeed... you nailed it perfectly!
 Check out who I am  - plenty to say on many subjects. And thanks.
Thanks for the article. I am not aligned in the only data that I had time to verify. If with "FED/ECB Ratio" are you referring to a ratio in Broad Money Supply? I have that in the last 12 months, Fed outpaced ECB by ca. 15% while in the last 3M still Fed outpaced ECB by 1.3%. I.e. In the last year, Fed printed 37% more than ECB; while in the last 3M Fed printed 50% more. I still believe that this setup looks similar to a bullish flag as we saw in March 2008, which will be the lunch pad to bring gold well above 2k.
 "I also think that this Crypto Fanzy might have had some form of responsibility in the gold decline. But, let's just do some quick math." Yeah, however the simple math may be misleading in case of those one asset to another asset capital flows. For example an inflow of x may increase market value of an asset ten times or so of an x (or 0.1 of an x if there' s more balanced supply/demand situation). Right now there is a very low liquidity on the sell side of cryptos, hence vertical run-up. We may be on a verge of some tulip mania style crypto phase where that market is pannically draining capital from the other assets like stocks, precious metals, bonds, commodities. I wonder when is Fed going to take actions, and what actions would they take. Interesting story unfolding..
I accounted a good tranche of an hypothetical 20% move that could be leveraged to crypto (that could also be leveraged by a smaller extent). But, of course, that was just to give a rough idea. I agree that this crypto fancy is now looking very interesting, with companies stepping in. E.g. Microstrategy moved its liquidity into BTC, they now issued some debt to get other BTC (basically on margin). That company has negative earnings, and yet in 1y he grew the market cap by 5.5 folds. That's crazy stuff, and if this keeps going it will incentives companies to hold cash in a form of crypto rather than invest it to create more jobs and finally produce more stuff. The more I see this stuff along with the gold/money supply ratio, the more I think make sense to buy PMs that are out of favour.
And I understand that you guys are trying to time the market, but, there are so many factors and some of them are now moving in the weekend as well.
Gold is still down despite USD index' decline, Precious metals remain very weak indeed.. btw gold is the lowest since June last year.
Again, the USD optics isn't the key one to look at right now really. Very weak - after record breaking run? This is just a prolonged consolidation that I nailed on Aug 07 in my article here, including the target...
UPDATE: Today's decline of full $3 in gold futures, is best viewed through the TLT optics really. Gold remains on razor's edge - unbroken yet. We're closer to the local bottom than many might think. But if you took me up on the silver-gold spread trade idea, you needn't be worried about the yellow metal now...
Thank you so - this is my service to the world - I'll remain always truthful and truly objective.
UPDATE: Today's decline in gold DESPITE the move lower in the USD Index further confirms points made above. The above analysis remains up-to-date, and so does the outlook.
Let me restate for I can't see it anymore - death crosses (MAs crossovers) aren't the most precise techniques - a la Hindenburg omens. We're not yet in Kondratieff winter in my view in these credit and spending easy times. Look at gold miners, gold's relative resilience to rising yields & you'll conclude the local gold bottom isn't that far...
...well, let' s take it as a perspective that might be considere as partnof risk Management.
Yes, that's what I mean when I'm writing about owning physical gold and silver in case of one's "insurance capital". Precious metals are the ultimate hedge against the systemic risk, after all.
Read his aryicles of the last year. He was wrong in each and every one of them. He predicted $9 silver and $900 gold in April 2020.. LOL!
There's only one way to never make a prediction that isn't fulfilled - and that is to not make any predictions at all. Silver did slide below its 2015 low, though. And as far as 2020 is concerned... Here's a link to the article from 2020 in which I wrote about going long GDX on March 13 https://www.sunshineprofits.com/gold-silver/gold-trading/gold--silver-trading-alert-3-2020-03-13/ - I haven't heard about anyone, who was closer to this buying opportunity. This was right after taking profits from the previous short position in the PMs and miners.
Later, I've been correct about the declines in the precious metals prices since August 2020. So, I'm not sure what did you base your observation on.
I tend to agree with Jan Buyle, and I am in favor of reasonably long assessment of trading success that consists not only of isolated buying decision (I am not trumpeting own single great decisions), but ask when was the trade actually closed, how much of the upside has been missed or possibly even value subsequently destroyed in calling for another deflationary bust. Ditto those gold targets - I seek to set the record straight and truly objective. Constructive. Now, we have a very bearish sentiment in gold, yet the metal isn't dropping like a stone, and USD link's strength and correlation is a different story. Relative resiliency vs Treasury yields remains. Switch perspective, and miners aren't looking as weak - H&S aren't as reliable as many think (I replied to one such comment on my site recently). Bitcoin is biting, diverting attention to cryptos which I called on Jan 25. Yet, gold isn't dropping without end in sight despite all the multiyear calls and arguments for it to...
I think it was in 2016, when Gold and the USD were raising at the same time. It run like this for about a 5-6  months period of time, so why could not happen again even if the USD is stronger like other currencies? Finally, as you wrote it is only a "ratio" USD and other currencies, but if the whole world is printing money as crazy than the whole world currencies are losing value and Gold is still the ultimate safety (I don't think that BTC is better than gold)
I can't say "why this could not happen again", because I'm quite convinced that this actually WILL happen again. In fact, I think that one of the most important signals that we'll get as a confirmation that the bottom is finally in will come from gold acting very strong despite USD's continuous strength.  "The whole world is printing money like crazy" and this is likely to contribute to much higher gold prices (just like what one would expect to see during the Kondratieff winter). However, that's a reason for gold to rally in the long run; it doesn't tell one anything with regard to the short run. And in the short run and also over the medium term, we see that gold is still very weak relative to the USD Index, which means that it's still likely to fall lower.
All this time when USD dropping, Gold drops along with it! Don't be a turkey! Fed act too slow, Gold is doomed forever ! The bitcoin is going to destroy Fed and the deep state, the one behind all those stolen gold from US citizen in 911 case!
haha u can join alice in wonderland.
Well... I'm quite convinced that gold is not doomed forever and that it will be important in the future monetary systems in one way or the other, and I have thousands of years of history to back me up on this theory. On the other hand, given the pace at which the technology is developing, I'm also quite convinced that some form of electronic payments will be growing in popularity. But will that be the crypto market as we currently know it? The jury remains out.
Inflation is eating the market, go and read the price patterns of; cotton, lumber and copper. Fundamentals all go with gold, fundamentals eventually prevail over technicals, dollar is very weak, it has declined very sharply when it reached 91, now it’s under this level. In 2008 gold declined sharply before it started its long term bull run, as I do believe history repeats itself, we are not more away than March for gold to start its super cycle, just get prepared for it :)
 Once again, I agree that we are not in a free market. No market is truly free if the interest rates are not fixed by the monetary authorities instead of being allowed to float freely. But this doesn't mean that all price movements (including relative valuations) are random. As for additional angles for the USDX situation - you will likely find my Feb 5 analysis interesting: https://www.sunshineprofits.com/gold-silver/gold-trading/how-europes-underperformance-may-hurt-gold/
(typo: "rates are not fixed by" => "rates are fixed by")
We are not indeed in a free market, and the Fed's reponse that I laid bare yesterday, is approaching... Very positive for gold.
Gold will go higher while us prints moe money
Agreed... It's very likely to happen in the following years, especially as we're entering the Kondratieff winter. BUT it's not likely to happen before another short- or medium-term slide, because of technical/cyclical factors and the fact that the USD Index has already verified its breakdown after being very oversold from the medium-term point of view.
Mr. Radomski thank you so much for this analysis 🙏👏👏👏
Thanks :) I'm very happy to see that you enjoyed this free article. I hope that you'll enjoy my other work as well, which you'll find on my website.
gold is moving down but gold stocks have stopped falling. do sell gold and buy gold stocks now.
I wouldn't say that gold stocks have stopped falling... The GDX and GDXJ are currently confirming breakdowns below their head and shoulder patterns (broad pattern that started approximately in May 2020) and if we see also the weekly close below the neck level of this pattern, it will be fully confirmed. The implications would be VERY bearish, especially given that practically all huge declines in mining stocks started with broad head-and-shoulders patterns (2013, 2008, and even the 2000 decline).
I think Barrick management is the best at targeting gold prices. And they just forecasted better revenue than this Q and a slighty lower EPS. The interesting part is that they EPS forecast is the better since 1Q2014.
Bearishness on the dollar is well placed, and the upcoming stimulus isn't justifiably priced in by the markets, including precious metals ones. Market analysis though isn't a contest in popularity, but in the objective presentation of reality - across a long enough time. Have the positions been consistent, based on what has each analyst changed opinion? Whenever I see one rather consistent position overwhelmingly prevailing through the years, and look at the price chart doing mostly the opposite of prognostications, I get wary. Especially when a steep decline shortly arriving, based on whatever or no reason, is mentioned all so often, and just doesn't happen...
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