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“The
US dollar is still doomed and the price of gold is still in an
uptrend. However, ominous COT configurations and seasonal forces
suggest that another gold price wipeout will come to pass before
the price of gold tries to gear up for its fourth late-year
rally in a row.”
April
13, 2005
The price of
gold has fallen by more than 4% since April 29 and open interest
has declined in each of the last four weeks. Although hardly a
‘wipeout’, this is still enough evidence to conclude that
seasonal forces are again at work, and that everything is going
according to the summer gold plan (or the previous speculation
that the best time to accumulate (more) gold might arrive in
late August before the expected historical uptick in open
interest arrives in September).
But before
getting too excited it should be noted that the COT statistics
are no longer warning of a gold price decline. Rather, with a
sharp decline in tech fund long interest and commercial short
interest over the last month COT suggests that gold is closer to
a near term bottom than it is a top. This action suggests that
the price of gold may work through its 2005 lows well before
August comes round.


It goes without
saying that the above charts reflect gold bull market trends.
Should the Euro disintegrate and/or a financial crisis grip say
China, it is certainly possible that the US dollar will become a
temporary safe haven destination for capital and the gold bull
will take a break. Any serious pause in the gold bull could
render the above points of interest useless.
Commercials Double Down On The Dollar
The commercials
carry the same type of investment approach when playing the USD
as they do with gold. In other words, should the dollar move
against their position the commercials simply acquire a much
larger position and wait for prices to turn the other way. Such
was the case in 2004 when the commercials went long the USD
index on June 1, 2004 and continued to add to their position
religiously for nearly the rest of the year. By the time the
dollar bottomed in late 2004 the commercials had amassed a
record long position, and were ready to reap the benefits of a
dollar rebound.

f the above
chart was for gold the investor would be wise to sell all of
their gold immediately and await the usual fallout. However,
with the dollar – a larger and much more
sophisticated/complicated market – the commercials have not
proven to be all-powerful.
With this
caveat out of the way, there is really only speculation to be
made: as the commercials continue to increase their record net
DX short position a correction in the dollar index looms. Why is
this the case? Because the deep pocketed commercials are not
likely to be coerced out of their position by an unagreeable
market. Instead, the commercials have shown a penchant to double
down when things do no immediately go their way.
Conclusions
With the Fed
tightening up the faucet it is certainly possible that the price
of gold will continue dripping lower. With an uncertain
investment world drawn to the growth attributes of the credit
crazed US economy, it is possible that the dollar bear will stay
in hibernation for some time.
Forgetting what
is possible, it is likely that so long as the commercials are
covering their gold shorts and adding to their dollar shorts
that a long gold/short dollar outlook will remain firmly in
place.
Brady
Willett


© 2005 Brady
Willett
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