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Caution ContinuesFor the past month, the Optimist has viewed both silver and gold as being in the yellow zones. An abundance of caution has prevented him from buying too much too soon, and from selling prematurely. Although brokers who work for trade commissions are not likely to endorse this approach, the Optimist can assure all that it helps to reduce the stress that flows from feeling forced to make too many decisions. Defining the green and red zones is more art than science, since it takes into account not only prices relative to the long term channels, but also other factors of significance. As an example of two of those factors, here is a message I posted 10/08/05 on a few stock boards: Although the chart of gold looks spectacular, it may be too much too soon. The MoreAU index (gold X US$) is substantially above the top of its rising channel, and the MoreAG index (silver X US$) is approaching the top of its channel. The MoreAU and MoreAG indexes show changes in the value of gold and silver against all fiat currency. With the MoreAU index well above its top channel line and the MoreAG index close to its top of channel, my interpretation is that gold may be temporarily overbought in the world markets, and silver is closing in on its expected near term highs when viewed from a perspective of all fiat currency. Unless the US$ weakens against other currencies, gold and silver priced in US dollars will have increasing difficulty pushing higher than current levels. You can find more information about the MoreAU and MoreAG indexes by clicking the Gold & Silver tab at the top of the Optimist site. I am also concerned that silver has only risen to the major downtrend line, but has not yet pushed through that barrier. Also, with copper prices still increasing at a faster rate than silver, a continuing high level of silver supply can be expected as a byproduct from base metal mining. The updated chart of the MoreCu index (silver / copper) can be found by clicking the link to When will the price of silver explode? at the Optimist site. This Optimist expects much higher prices for gold and silver in the months ahead, so I am not yet taking any profits. At the same time, however, the potential for both markets to be overbought in the near term keeps me from committing any new funds to the long side of metals stocks right now. Any time, of course, is a good time to purchase more physical metal! Cheers! Jim In response to a question, I added the following on 10/09/05: A chart of the product of gold times the U.S. $ (which I call the MoreAU index because it shows whether a rise in the dollar price of gold is due more to gold rising or the dollar falling) is the equivalent of charting the value of gold versus all fiat currencies which can be converted to the U.S. dollar. This is more clearly explained in the Gold & Silver tab at the top of my Optimist pages. That explanation is accompanied by a chart over the last two decades of the product of monthly closes of gold and the U.S. dollar. These links show charts of the weekly data for gold and silver, and the current high reading is substantially overbought. Whether or not anyone wants to use this as one input in their buy-hold-sell decisions is up to them. I am only highlighting an unusual data point which I view as a good reason to be cautious with committing new funds to the long side of gold now. When the dollar resumes its downtrend, or when gold corrects from its recent sharp rise, then the imbalance indicated by the high level of the MoreAU index will be corrected, and I will be an eager buyer again. Cheers! Jim Although silver and gold have pulled back significantly from their highs of four weeks ago, the dollar has also increased sharply. The net effect is that the MoreAG and the MoreAU indexes are little changed from four weeks ago, and are still at significantly oversold levels. The MoreCu index has dropped to new lows, and that shows copper is more highly in demand than silver. The continued high levels of copper production will produce more byproduct silver, and that will also dampen the physical silver market. Significant pullbacks in silver, gold, the dollar, and copper will be needed to correct the overbought imbalances indicated in the MoreAG, MoreAU, and MoreCu charts. This does NOT tell you when to buy or sell.
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