If silver doesn’t come to play, precious metals won’t win the day.
Gold’s resilience has been impressive lately, especially as its two main headwinds – the US dollar and real yields – catch higher.
But while all eyes are following gold as it coils just below all-time highs, I’m tracking silver. Because gold’s doggedness is all for naught if silver breaks down.
Check out the iShares Silver Trust ETF $SLV retesting a critical former support level at approximately 20.50:
Perhaps it’s not the cleanest level.
Nevertheless, plenty of price memory exists at this shelf of former lows. If SLV undercuts those former lows, precious metals will fall under increased selling pressure.
Gold futures will break down below 2,000. The Gold Miners ETF $GDX will fade below 30. And the handful of breakouts we’ve witnessed over the past few months will fail.
Plus, the silver-to-gold ratio will likely post a fresh 52-week low:
It’s another breakdown gold bugs prefer to avoid.
Silver dropping relative to gold signals a low turnout as investors are being rewarded...
Precious metal charts aren’t painting a bullish picture for investors.
Silver is underperforming gold. The Gold Miners ETF $GDX is posting new all-time lows versus the broader market. And everywhere you look, individual gold mining stocks are breaking down.
Well, not all mining stocks. One chart continues to fly high…
Check out Buenaventura S.A.A. $BVN:
BVN has gained over 70% since bouncing off last month’s lows, slicing through our initial and secondary targets.
Now, it’s coiling in a potential bullish flag just above our risk level.
The pennant or flag is a continuation pattern by nature, often resolving in the direction of the underlying trend.
My bias points higher toward 20, given the preceding rally. But I can’t hold BVN if it slips below 14.25. That’s our line in the sand.
If this potential bull flag fails, I imagine precious metals are a “no-touch” across the board.
The Harmony Gold Mining $HMY and Eldorado Gold $EGO breakouts likely fail in that environment. And the corrections in the bellwethers – Franco Nevada $FNV...
First, gold failed to hold its breakout to new all-time highs.
Then, the silver-to-gold ratio undercut a critical shelf of former lows.
Now, the Gold Miners ETF $GDX is printing a new all-time low versus the broader market!
Is there any sane reason to bet on the miners right now?
Let’s take a look…
Check out GDX relative to the S&P 500 ETF $SPY:
If precious metals are in a bull market, the stocks that benefit the most in that environment are not making new all-time relative lows versus the broader market.
And if the new all-time relative low isn’t enough, the components of the Philadelphia Gold & Silver Index cover it:
Only one – Eldorado Gold $EGO – out of the 30 stocks in the index did not print a fresh four-week low last week.
Ugly!
Yet plenty of gold mining stocks continue to carve out bullish reversal formations despite the broad near-term weakness.
Orla Mining $ORLA stands out:
ORLA is forming a potential inverted head and shoulder pattern as the 14-day RSI posts a bullish divergence.
The US dollar is marching higher, stomping gold mining stocks into dust.
Harmony $HMY, Kinross $KGC, and Eldorado Gold $EGO are hovering just above last month’s breakout levels.
And Franco Nevada $FNV – a secular leader among royalty companies – is sliding toward fresh multi-year lows!
Check out FNV undercutting a shelf of former lows:
I’m not crazy about shorting it. But you can’t own FNV below its 2022 lows at approximately 110.
The path of least resistance points toward 80 if it trades below those former lows.
A Franco-Nevada breakdown shines an unfavorable light on the current condition of the precious metals space. But FNV is taking a different course than most royalty companies.
Here’s a performance chart of FNV, Royal Gold $RGLD, Osisko Gold Royalties $OR, and the SPDR Gold Trust ETF $GLD since last March:
The returns carry less significance here than the divergence beginning last fall.
OR, RGLD, and GLD bottomed last October (when the US dollar peaked – not a coincidence) while FNV continued to fall.