The former 2011 highs remain front and center for gold futures – and all precious metals.
These shiny rocks will experience increased selling if gold slips back below those former highs marking the prior commodity supercycle peak.
Silver, palladium, and the Gold Mining ETF $GDX are already printing fresh lows. And new multi-month lows for the silver/gold ratio indicate dwindling risk appetite.
These aren’t the type of developments that support a sustained uptrend.
Yet this action hasn’t deterred gold bugs.
Despite every reason to sleep in and shirk any and all responsibilities, they continue to show up right on time…
“This mess could turn downright ugly for the entire precious metals space if buyers don’t step in and support higher prices in palladium – and fast.”
I am many things, but “alarmist” isn't one of them. I simply find it hard to believe gold will post new all-time highs while palladium falls to fresh five-year lows.
Let's stick to the basics. Uptrends – at the core – come down to more buyers than sellers. And risk-on/risk-off intermarket ratios provide excellent tools for tracking whether bulls or bears dominate a particular market.
After the recent bout of selling pressure, one precious metal risk ratio is approaching a potential inflection point…
The bears have found a new home: gold mining stocks.
Silver’s breakdown earlier this month raised the caution flag for the entire precious metals space.
Less than two weeks later, gold futures and mining stocks are falling under the wrath of increased selling pressure. Precious metals bears are winning the battle as support levels fall to the wayside.
Meanwhile, the bulls are reluctant to leave without a fight…
Gold has been running this race for months... at least, that’s how it feels.
Perhaps it’s simply making its way to the starting line…
I believe that’s the best way to view gold and precious metals at this stage of the game. Before I get ahead of myself – marking a series of upside objectives – I want to highlight a key level that defines my intermediate- and near-term risks…
It’s still messy out there, no matter where you look.
Signs of strength are fleeting, whether we’re discussing gold, the S&P 500, or US Treasuries. It’s one of the few observations everyone agreed upon last week at the 50th annual CMTA Symposium. (I'll have more on that later this week.)
Despite failed breakouts and trading ranges ruling the market environment, one bullish data point stand out regarding precious metals…
Our precious metals index is hitting fresh 52-week highs despite the waning strength in gold and silver.
Only three markets comprise the index. That leaves only one possible culprit – platinum!
First palladium, now platinum?
It doesn’t matter whether you consider platinum or palladium true precious metals. The industrious side of the family is chipping in, supporting a new structural uptrend for the entire space.