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Did Gold and Silver Just Invalidate Their Short-Term Breakdown?

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Gold, silver and miners all closed higher, so this question naturally follows – what can we make of their upswing? Let’s explore how the short- and long-term are affected exactly.

Let’s start with the update on the short-term moves. The timely question is just how much did the latest upswing change.

Gold, Silver and Miners on Friday

The timely reply is that even though gold moved visibly higher on Friday, it didn’t really change anything. Since the support line that gold broke previously is a rising line, it is now higher than it was during the breakdown. Friday’s upswing didn’t take gold above the line, which means that the breakdown wasn’t invalidated. This in turn means that nothing really changed from the short-term point of view in gold.

The same was the case with regard to silver. The white metal moved up just a little on Friday and it definitely didn’t invalidate the previous breakdown on that day. Silver moved visibly higher in today’s pre-market trading, but it didn’t rally above the rising support line – only moved back to it. This means that both:

  1. The breakdown is being verified.

  2. The white metal is outperforming gold on a very short-term basis.

Both are bearish, not bullish, factors.

The gold stocks (HUI Index) closed relatively high, but still very far from their previously broken uptrend.

Please note that the current moves in gold and the HUI Index are relatively similar to what happened in the first half of August. Gold is moving back and forth at similar levels and so is the HUI Index. The miners’ very short-term moves are bigger but the volume is lower this time, though. While the implications are not yet clear, the odds are that the current back and forth movement (a slight rally) is actually the right shoulder of the bearish head and shoulders formation. The volume should be relatively small during the right shoulder, and this has been the case recently. The implications are not clear yet, because the formation is not yet completed. Once gold confirms its breakdown below $1,490 and the HUI confirms its breakdown below (approximately) 200, the next big slide will follow. Given what is happening in the USD Index, the start of this slide is likely just around the corner.

The USD Index Reversal

What our Friday’s comments as well as the ones from Tuesday remain up-to-date (and if you haven’t read Tuesday’s analysis yet, we strongly encourage you to do so today for the long-term details):

It was yet another higher low. The ultimate low this year formed in early January. Then, we saw a higher low in late January. Then a higher low in March, then a higher low in June, then a higher low in mid-July, then two higher lows in August and finally the higher low that we saw this week. Higher lows mean uptrend. Trendlines are useful to detect the turnarounds and Fibonacci retracements tell us if the move in the opposite direction is significant enough to be viewed as a trend change. However, the underlying rule is simple. If the price is on average moving up, then the market is an uptrend. Looking at the relative placement of lows and highs tells us the same thing. By the way, the highs in the USD Index have also been increasing this year.