Gold’s Price Decline Below $2,000 and its Implications

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Gold’s Price Decline Below $2,000 and its Implications

I wrote in number of occasions that gold price was unlikely to hold the breakout above the $2,000 level. Last week provided the final confirmation.

Gold price not only declined below $2,000 in a decisive manner. It not only closed the day below this level. It even closed the week below it.

And that’s big news.

Weekly price moves tend to be much more important than the daily ones as they are better for filtering out the “price noise” caused by events and triggers that are important only at the first sight.

Based on my analysis of gold prices over the past decades, weekly closing prices tend to be particularly important, and thus the fact that gold managed to move below those levels has particularly bearish implications.

And it’s not just a breakout above $2,000 that was just invalidated in this important manner.

It was also the breakout above the April 2022 high that was just cancelled. The fact that it all happened similarly to what we saw last year at the same time of the year only adds to the bearish mix.

Yes, last year, gold price didn’t manage to move to short-term highs in April, but when looking at volume levels and how they changed over time, the similarity becomes more apparent. Namely, gold soared on huge volume at first, then the volume declined while gold consolidated / declined, and the final upswing in gold price caused an upswing in volume – but a barely visible one. And the final top formed in April.

Well, here we go again. The forecast for gold price is currently very bearish based on the above alone, but there are many other factors pointing to lower gold prices as well.

Silver prices, for example, soared significantly recently, and they even showed strength on a very short-term basis, by not declining below their previous highs even though gold did.

I’ve emphasized it numerous times in the past, but it’s worth repeating once more. The fact that silver outperformed its yellow counterpart is not a bullish indication. Conversely, that’s something that we’ve seen many times in the past.

Remember the early-2021 when silver soared, but gold hasn’t? That was not just the start of a short-term decline in silver. It was the beginning of a 2+ year decline that is still taking place.

Silver price breakouts are not to be taken at their face value as well. The white precious metal is known for its tendency to break out above its previous highs, exciting those who are new to the silver market and/or investing/trading in general, and then sliding profoundly to the said investors’ / traders’ surprise (and disappointment.