March 12, 2010
Gold Trading Like A Currency?
Remember
when $25, 000 was a success? Now it is a garbage
collector.
Frank Dane
At one point on Monday the
Dollar was trading in the red and Gold which should have
shot up was actually trading roughly 10 dollars lower. As
the Day progressed both the Dollar and the Euro were
trending upwards together while Gold continued to
slide. The story below attempts to provide a reason for
this phenomenon.
March 8 (Bloomberg) --
Gold prices in New York fell the most in a month on
speculation that Greece’s fiscal crisis will be resolved,
reducing demand for the metal as a haven. French President
Nicolas Sarkozy said that euro-region nations are ready to
help Greece. The cost to protect against corporate-bond
defaults fell to the lowest rate in seven weeks on
mounting optimism that Greece will rein in its budget
gaps.
“If the Greek situation
calms down, people may not be as interested in owning hard
assets,” said Matt Zeman, a metals trader at LaSalle
Futures Group in Chicago. “Gold is losing its momentum.”
Gold futures for April delivery dropped $11.20, or 1
percent, to $1,124 an ounce on the New York Mercantile
Exchange’s Comex unit, the biggest decline for a
most-active contract since Feb. 4. The price climbed 1.5
percent last week.
Investment in the SPDR
Gold Trust, the biggest exchange- traded fund backed by
bullion, was down 1.5 percent in 2010 to 1,116.12 metric
ton by March 5. Assets rose 45 percent in 2009.
“Gold is just
listless,” said Frank McGhee, the head dealer at
Integrated Brokerage Services LLC in Chicago. “It’s
running into some resistance.” Investors also sold the
metal after prices failed to top $1,140, analysts said.
Gold’s intraday maximums have been lower for three
sessions since touching a six-week high on March 3.
‘Jump Ship’
Full Story
One almost wants to laugh
at the reasoning behind this story. In the past, the main
reason for Gold’s upward or downward move was always
related to the dollar, but not because a small country
like Greece was in trouble. We propose an alternative
theory. The fact that the Euro and the dollar were at one
point trading higher in tandem suggests that Gold is now
being treated as a currency. Traders normally jump from
one currency to another as they try to determine which
ones are overvalued and which ones are undervalued. This
is normal in currencies; we see this almost on a daily
basis in the Yen, US dollar, Australian dollar, etc.
If this trend continues
then in the short to intermediate time frames Gold could
suddenly mount a rather strong correction because traders
might decide that there are other currencies that could
provide a better rate of return in the short term time
frames. However, this possible short term negative pales
in comparison to the long term benefit; if this is a new
trend then Gold has just passed a significant mile
stone in that it is now being treated as a currency. Up
to now Gold has been viewed as a hedge against the evil
effects of inflation and only those schooled in Austrian
Economics or those who follow the hard money movement have
up to this point viewed Gold as the ultimate currency out
there. This new development suggests that the idea is now
possibly becoming more main stream.
On Friday (march 12), we
noticed the trend again. The dollar traded lower, the Euro
higher and for the most part, Gold was either trending
lower or treading water. Normally, it would have shot
upwards the moment the dollar started to pull back. The
longer term implications of this development if it is
indeed a new trend are profound. The next time the world
experiences a currency crisis, and it’s just a matter of
time before it experiences one (potentially with
devastating consequences this time round) there will be a
flood into Gold because it will now be competing with all
the other currencies out there. Thus the demand for Gold
could increase exponentially for it now will serve not
only as a hedge against inflation, but it will also
compete with all the other currencies. It could, in fact
finally re take its position as the ultimate currency of
all time.
Conclusion
Gold has run into strong
resistance every single time it has tried to trade past
the 1140 mark. Secondly, it behaved very strangely on
Monday and today (Friday, 12th march 2010) by dropping in
the face of a lower dollar and this at least in the short
term suggests that Gold is more likely to correct than
trade to new highs. The weekly sell signal has been
neutralized but not invalidated, and once it is activated
again it should lead to a rather sharp pull back.
The most important
development to pay attention to is that Gold might finally
be trading as currency; if this turns out to be true then
it has to be viewed as extremely powerful and bullish long
term development. If Gold should pull back strongly, view
it as blessings from heaven and add to your positions for
it might be the last chance you get to purchase bullion
below $1000.
People who
live in glass houses should take out insurance.
Source Unknown
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