Is Silver Likely To Decline From Here?

 | Nov 21, 2013 05:38AM ET

Looking at the chart of silver from today’s point of view, we see that at the end of the previous week, the white metal (similarly to gold) moved higher after Federal Reserve Chair Nominee Janet Yellen told that monetary stimulus tools shouldn't be removed too soon. If you recall, several days ago we wrote that gold could move higher but that that would just be a counter trend move and would likely be followed by further declines. On Monday, two top Fed officials from opposite sides of the policy spectrum, fueled expectations that the Federal Reserve could taper its bond buying program. Their comments pushed the price of silver to slightly above $20. Although yesterday Bernanke said that the Fed will maintain ultra-easy monetary policy for as long as needed, silver extended declines for a second session and hit a fresh three-month low. This, by itself, is a sign of weakness.

Please note that the price of the white metal is down approximately 33% this year, to some extent on concerns the Fed would begin cutting back its easy-money policy by trimming its $85-billion monthly bond purchasing program. To some extent, because the reasons didn’t have to be fundamental, they could have been emotional/technical (silver got ahead of itself and needed to correct before rallying once again). In other words, there could have been a catalyst that has been undetectable using traditional fundamental analysis, which is why even long-term investors shouldn’t forget to monitor the charts (or get in touch with someone who does).

Taking the above into account, today investors are turning their attention to the minutes of the Fed’s October meeting, as well as a speech by Chairman Ben Bernanke and probably wondering what’s next. What impact could the Fed minutes have on the price of silver? Let’s see what the market thinks.

In today’s commentary, we examine long- and short-term charts of silver to find out what the current outlook for the white metal is.