Dan Norcini | Apr 13, 2015 12:45AM ET
Gold has managed to avoid a complete chart breakdown thus far, but that is due more to buying in the physical market out of the far East rather than any wholesale interest among the high-powered, deep-pocketed, Western-investment crowd. As noted many times here at this site, it is my firm opinion that while buying out of China and India can hold the price and form a floor in the gold market, it CANNOT drive the price sharply higher as so many rabid gold bugs have their hearts set on happening. That requires the momentum-based crowd which chases prices higher due to chart signals and could care less about what any perceived “value” area might be for gold, or for that matter any other market that they ply their computers in.
Take a look at two different charts indicating the lackluster Western-based demand for the metal at the current time.
The first is the chart we regular feature here, namely, that of the reported gold holdings out of the largest gold ETF, SPDR Gold Trust (ARCA:GLD).
For the week, GLD lost 3 tons of gold, dropping the total holdings down to 734 tons. Thus far this year, the ETF has added a mere 25 tons of gold, far off the torrid pace that looked as if it might mark a change in sentiment back in February when it had already managed to add a significant 64 tons. The bloom appears to already be off the rose as far as this investment vehicle is concerned.
Confirming this trend away from gold and into equities, especially European equities, is this most recent chart of the Commitment of Traders report. One can see the general decline from left to right of the line representing TOTAL OPEN INTEREST in gold futures.
Notice how the gold price tends to rise and fall with each rise and fall in the total open interest line. This serves to illustrate my view that it is large speculative interests ( “open interest”) that drive our markets. Without that speculative interest in the market, there is no driver, no thrust to push prices significantly higher. Instead, what one gets is a grinding type of choppy, often random and meaningless, back and forth, up and down, sort of price action without any sort of clearly defined trend. In almost every case in which I see this pattern of lackluster speculative interest, the result is a gradual decline in price over time. We are currently seeing that exhibited in gold.
Look at the weekly price chart of the metal and you can see what I am referring to. This is the kind of price action that bores most traders half to death. The ADX line continues to decline revealing the lack of any clear trend while the RSI is stuck in no-man’s land, moving sideways in exactly the same fashion as does the price.
If you look more closely at the Directional Movement Indicator lines, you can see them crossing back and forth above each other as each side, bulls or bears, gains a temporary—but short-lived—advantage over the other. Contrast that movement in the directional lines with their action during the strong trending phases.
Bulls cannot get a single thing going to the upside of any duration while bears, able to forge a series of LOWER HIGHS, cannot seem to break it down below support, which emerges near $1150. ( Note – no doubt that support is due to buying out of India and China).
What this tells us is that moves higher in gold are short-lived and are COUNTER to the longer term trend currently in place which is DOWN. They have most recently tended to consist MAINLY of SHORT COVERING which then burns itself out rather quickly.
You can see this from the chart above, noting the total speculative long and short positions in gold (note – these are outright positions, not net positions). Look at the area within the ellipse on the chart and you can see the sharp drop in outright short positions among the speculators. Specs have covered a whopping 40K short positions over the last two reporting weeks with a corresponding $60 rise in the gold price. If you look at the number of speculative long positions higher up on the chart, you can see that it barely moved higher over that same timeframe. Only 5000 new long positions have been added in the same speculative category!
One gets the increasing sense that gold is living on borrowed time and that were it not for what is perceived to be only a lull in the eventual first rate hike by the Fed, gold would already be trading below chart support. I should note here that as of today, the Fed futures market is predicting a 100% chance of a rate hike by December of this year. That is of course a much longer way off than the previously assumed June hike, but it is still revealing in the sense that the broad market consensus at this time is for a rate hike this year. Probability of a move higher in September is 42% as of today.
There is always some support that gold will be able to attract due to geopolitical concerns, especially in the volatile Middle East and some lingering concerns over things related to Greece, overall sluggish global economic growth, etc. but if the market concerns over such things begins to subside, so too will buying interest in gold decline that much more.
In other words, gold bugs are going to need to rely increasingly upon their “end of the world as we know it” scenarios to allow their beloved yellow metal god to soar upward in price. As I have said before, it is a particularly morbid outlook that one has to adopt in order to be perennially bullish on gold. While one can be realistic and not be a Pollyanna about current stress factors in the financial system (and there are some), that is a far cry from gleefully fawning over every piece of economic data that is not wildly bullish and spinning that into more evidence of impending economic collapse.
Just look at the price charts, try to understand what they are telling us about sentiment and thus money flows, and you will be far more informed than the gold cult devotees and a lot more balanced as a trader/investor.
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