by Michael Noonan
We cannot control the markets, but we can control how to respond to
what they are saying. The paper market has been turned into a circus,
thanks to JP Morgan, and abetted by the exchanges, COMEX and LME. Focus
has to remain on the physical market, for it is where one can expect to
find true value for price. What everyone has learned is that as price
has declined, demand has disproportionately skyrocketed.
We have written extensively on the acquisition of physical gold and
silver, regardless of price, because no one can know when the central
bankers will lose control and price will erupt like Eyjafjallajökull.
The world is in the middle of a huge central bank bubble, of which there
are many sub-bubbles, as it were. [Anyone who pretends to believe
whatever information is being disseminated by NWO-owned mainstream
media, none of which makes any economic sense, and those who do not
fully believe, (or at all), what is being said but do not know where
else to turn, stay away from all central banks and central planners news
or information.]
In addition to creating bubbles that will fail, the Western central
bankers, and their puppet governments, are also doing battle with
Eastern countries, mostly BRICS, but more and more countries are
aligning with them and against the impending demise of fiat regimes. Western
central banks are on the losing end, as their fraudulent
rehypothecation of gold, several times over, and the virtually depleted
reserves now rest comfortably in the hands of Russia, China, India,
Turkey, et al, none of which will tolerate any more of the reckless
mismanagement of the West. It will not end well for those of us in the Western sphere of influence.
The most coveted of all assets around the world has been gold, on a
grand scale, and silver, on a smaller scale, but grand relative to
diminishing supply. As we asserted last time, it does not matter what
the fundamental picture says, for now, the moving forces are those in
control of the paper market, and the populations of Western countries.
The power will not be ceded willingly nor readily, so one cannot rely
upon the known demand factors, no matter how bullishly presented. That
information is already in the market, and it has not created the large
mark-up most have been anticipating. It ain’t happening, yet.
The paper markets, however much manipulated or disconnected from the
physical, are the only barometer available, for now. Under normal
circumstances charts, which reflect the market forces, are the most
reliable source of information. Here is what they are saying, at this
point in time.
In our last article, we said that time was on the side of those
currently in control, and it would take longer than most expect before
gold and silver will reach previous highs and yet higher, after that, The True Story Is About Time.
In another previous article, we explained how wide range bars can lead
to range control for several more bars to follow, and longer, It Could Get Uglier And Take Longer, and we will give more examples of why any recovery will take more time.
The one caveat would be a V-type bottom, when price takes off from a
low. Because Anything Can Happen, and no one knows in advance how a
market will unfold, it is mentioned as a possibility.
Trading Range, [TR], – A, shows the wide range bar from April, and
the close is mid-range the bar. Very often, that bar’s range will
contain price behavior for several bars into the future. TR – B is
pointed out to demonstrate that an ensuing TR can take quite some time.
Going into the last week of May, the range has been under the close of
April, telling us the attempt to rally has been weak.
Even with the sharp decline from last month, and the overall decline
since September of 2011, there is still bullish spacing. It occurs when
the current swing low is above the last swing high, from 2008. It tells
us that buyers have been willing to buy into the market without waiting
to see how the last swing high will be tested, an overall bullish
condition.
The importance of a wide range bar is that it tells us of the
likelihood of a trading range. One can either sell the top of the range
and buy the bottom of the range, or wait, knowing that the market is
unlikely to rally higher or break lower, for an unknown period of time
and then follow the breakout.
You can see how price has already spent five weeks within the wide
range bar with a close in the middle. The high of the range has provided
resistance, and the lower portion has been support. Last week’s close
was in the upper portion of that range, telling us buyers were in
control at lower price levels.
Keep in mind, however, that the trend remains down, and the onus is
on buyers to show a change in strength. We do not see that, yet, but
this is the paper market. Buyers have amply demonstrated demand in the
physical market, but it is no avail, for now.
The wide range bar scenario is uniformly persistent over all three
time frames. The daily activity looks weakest of all, but still within
the range parameters described. Using the “knowledge of the market,”
from the low of the range, we did use it to advantage to make a
short-term trade off the lows, with success. It was an
against-the-trend-trade, but we used the smaller time frames and the
knowledge that the lower end of the TR would be support, as a basis for
it.
Silver tells a more interesting story. It has been weaker than gold,
but the current developing market activity shows promise within a
weakened environment. Bullish spacing has been eliminated, and the swing
high from 2008 has proven to be support, at least for now.
We drew down sloping channel lines, and interestingly, silver is
holding above the 50% of the channel range, not going to the bottom
demand line. The underlying implications are bullish, within the context
of a prevailing downtrend. It does not mean one should be buying
futures, based on this, just that price is holding relatively well in a
bear market.
Entering the last trading week for the month, at this late date, the
range is relatively small, which tells us that buyers are meeting the
efforts of sellers, preventing sellers from moving price lower. It does
not mean price will not go lower before month’s end, but based on the
facts available, it is a positive sign. It could take more time for
buyers to turn the futures market around, but it has to start from
somewhere.
Wide range bars are not inviolate, evidence by the weekly chart.
Price did go under the low of the wide range bar, but note the location
of the close, at the high of the bar and just above the last week’s
low-end close of a selloff week.
The chart comments relate the current daily activity. Just like TRs
reveal important high/low information, failed probes also provide clues
about the character of the market. The 3 points made explain what the
clues are. The lack of continuation higher speaks to the overall trend
being down, weighing on attempts to rally.
We continue to recommend buying the physical, regardless of price, and be very selective if/when trading the futures.
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