Gold's Resilience: Extreme Shorting Sparks Imminent Bullish Surge

 | Sep 01, 2023 03:17PM ET

Gold's recent pullback sure overstayed its welcome, increasingly vexing as August marched on. That festering weakness really did a number on sentiment, leaving mounting bearishness in its wake. Flaring gold-futures short selling was the dominant reason gold faltered so last month. But such shorting spikes have proven very bullish for gold historically, guaranteed to soon reverse into big proportional buying. With all the apathy and fear reigning in gold land lately, you’d think gold prices must have collapsed. That certainly isn’t true. Gold did suffer a 7.9% pullback over 3.5 months from early May to mid-August, fueling widespread pessimism. But that followed a powerful upleg that catapulted the yellow metal up 26.3% in the preceding 7.2 months. Its $2,050 crest was within spitting distance of a new nominal all-time-record high!

Pullbacks are natural and healthy in bull-market uplegs, serving to rebalance sentiment to prolong their lives. Uplegs take two steps forward before retreating one step back, with the latter necessary to eradicate excessive herd greed near interim highs. This latest gold upleg weathered an earlier 7.2% pullback in February, then quickly surged 13.2% to major new highs. Pullbacks offer mid-upleg buying opportunities.

Although normal-sized, gold’s latest pullback has lingered longer than usual. It looked finished in late June after gold had dropped 6.9% in 1.8 months to bottom near $1,908. I wrote an essay right after analyzing gold’s bullish technicals. Indeed the yellow metal’s strong upleg resumed, surging 3.6% into mid-July to regain $1,977. Gold achieved some confirming technical breakouts and consolidated high. Exiting July at $1,966, gold was well positioned to surge again in August. Last month is normally when gold’s traditional autumn rally seriously gathers steam. During modern gold-bull years, August has enjoyed the third-best calendar-month gains up 1.7% on average! But that sure didn’t happen this time around, August greatly deviated from its seasonal script. Gold was pounded lower by unusual selling pressure.

At worst the yellow metal dropped a steep 3.9% month-to-date in mid-August! That included a super-rare ten-trading-day losing streak where gold broke down below late June’s original pullback low. At worst last month gold closed at $1,889, extending that pullback to 7.9%. That technical relapse certainly wrought a lot of sentimental damage, despite gold only slumping to a marginal new low. Why did all this happen? As usual when gold behaves oddly, the gold-futures speculators are to blame. These guys run extreme leverage that enables them to punch way above their weights in bullying around gold prices. Each gold-futures contract controlling 100 ounces of gold worth $194,000 at $1,940 only requires traders to maintain $8,300 cash margins in their accounts. That enables incredible maximum leverage running up to 23.4x!

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Way up near 23x, each dollar traded in gold futures has fully 23x the gold-price impact of a dollar invested outright. So gold-futures specs wield greatly outsized influence over short-term gold prices. And that is amplified even further by the US gold-futures price being gold’s world reference one. Investors carefully watch that gold-futures-dominated price action, which can heavily sway their collective psychology on the metal.

Back in mid-July when gold’s resuming upleg regained $1,977, spec gold-futures positioning remained very bullish. Since longs way outnumber shorts, they are proportionally more important for gold’s near-term direction. The total spec longs were just 3/8ths up into their probable gold-upleg trading range!  Its lower end was defined in late September 2022 when gold bottomed at stock-panic-level 2.5-year secular lows. Its upper resistance has run around 413k longs in recent years, where spec buying exhausted itself and slayed gold uplegs. This is readily evident in this chart, which superimposes gold prices over total spec longs and shorts since 2021. Speculators’ gold-futures positioning is only published once a week in the famous Commitments of Traders reports. That data is released late Fridays, current to preceding Tuesdays.