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Gold price has been falling in today’s pre-market trading, but… Given the recent (HUGE!) weekly reversal, does it really surprise anyone?Well, it might surprise those that easily forget what happened in the previous weeks and focus on just the day-to-day price swings, but the truth is that the context provided by previous weeks, months, and years (and the performance of other markets!) matters a lot.I previously wrote about some details coming from the broader perspective and some from the immediate-term analysis, and all that remains true. The recent weekly reversal was so huge that its impact on the next weeks really needs to be kept in mind at all times. It’s not likely that a daily price moves in any direction (especially that gold is lower today…) would invalidate the implications of the powerful weekly (!) reversal.In case that massive reversal seems like a distant memory, here’s a reminder of what happened.
Gold soared above $2,100 only to plunge to almost $2,000, and in happened on huge volume. This was the most profound weekly reversal in years. It was similar to the reversal that we saw in May 2023 and the one from March 2022, and they both started big declines.The same is likely this time.This means that this and last week’s moves higher were just a small rebound before the decline’s continuation.This is particularly likely given the fact that both previous weekly reversals were followed by some kind of bounce before the decline really picked up pace. In 2022, it took several weeks before the second (lower) top formed, and in May 2023, the corrective upswing was over within a week. Right now, we’re 1.5 weeks after the reversal, which means that the decline could start any day now.Also, please note that in 2022, gold corrected over 50% of the initial decline before finishing the rebound, and in May 2023, gold corrected slightly over 61.8% of the initial decline before moving south. This means that the size of the rally that we just saw is nothing extraordinary. In particular, it doesn’t mean that gold rallied so much that it invalidates the immensely bearish implications of the recent weekly reversal.On a very short-term basis – the intraday basis – we see that silver just outperformed gold, which very often precedes sizable declines.
This means that the bearish indications come not just from the long-term charts but also from the very short-term ones.
No.
Please take a look at the areas that I marked with red rectangles. They mark important tops in the GDXJ ETF. In those cases, junior miners topped by first declining somewhat, then correcting, and then sliding without looking back. In two out of three cases, the second (final) top was below the initial one, and in the remaining case (in early 2022), the second (final) top, was slightly higher than the initial one.So, is seeing the GDXJ close to the previous top (but still below it) a bullish game-changer? Absolutely not.It’s not even a game-changer when we zoom in.
The junior mining stocks simply moved to the upper border of its rising trend channel without breaking above it.The previous highs provide resistance, so it’s unlikely – especially given gold’s weekly reversal! – that a really big and sustainable rally would materialize here.Especially given what’s happening in the USD Index.
And what’s happening there is that we saw a comeback above the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement level based on this year’s rally. This serves as the final confirmation that the bottom is indeed in.The RSI at 30 indicated it, but the breakdown’s invalidation confirms it. This bullish outlook (which is bearish for the precious metals market) is also confirmed by the USD Index’s long-term chart, but I already wrote about it yesterday, so I don’t want to repeat myself here.Now, before summarizing, I’d like to touch on two markets that also provide extra context for the precious metals market: stocks and crude oil.As you know, I’m commenting on the stock market every now and then, but I’m not providing trading indications for it specifically because that’s not the area where I have the greatest experience. That’s why I’m using stock market charts and USDX charts not for trading those assets but as supportive indications of the main analysis that I’m conducting on the precious metals and mining stock charts. There are others, for example, Paul Rejczak, who specialize in this (stock market) area.Paul opened his long positions on Feb. 27, 2023 (with S&P 500 below 4,000) and is now considering closing them. I also think that stocks are extremely overbought here and, thus, likely to decline shortly, especially since they just approached their previous all-time high.A decline in stocks is likely to trigger a decline also in junior mining stocks – that’s the part of the precious metals market that is most linked with the performance of stocks. By the way, the fact that junior miners were weak relative to gold over the medium term despite the stock market’s strong performance is simply another indication that the miners don’t want to move higher, and that the recent rallies were simply counter-trend rallies, nothing more.The rest of the precious metals market is likely to decline along with stocks, too (like they all declined in 2020, for example), but junior miners are likely to be affected to the greatest extent.The above doesn’t mean that all stocks would be likely to decline, though. This is the case as far as copper stocks are concerned, for example, but the situation in oil stocks is a bit different. They have their own specific technical set-up that could take them higher regardless of stock market’s decline – Anna described it in advance in late November in her Oil Trading Alert.So, yes, while I continue to think that the biggest trading opportunity is still in junior mining stocks, naturally, there are also other opportunities out there.All in all, the outlook for the precious metals market remains strongly bearish and the potential for our current trading positions in junior mining stocks remains enormous.More By This Author:Nothing New In Gold, But Big News For Gold Tiny Reversals, Big ImplicationsDovish Changes Having Implications. But Perhaps Not the Ones Many Think.