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A
critical juncture is upon us. The USD has firmed relative to its
sad performance closing out 2004, many large American firms (AIG,
FNM, F, GM & IBM to name but a few) are showing stress
fractures, with potentially devastating consequences as noted in
Amron.
The markets are doing their best to convince everyone who is
paying attention to stand aside or in the case of our fine furry
friends, the perma-bears, short 'til Dow 6000.
So
it comes down to this: "To be or not to be, that is
the question" for Sir Alan. Lately the paper gold (miners)
market has been saying it is not to be. That we are heading into
an extended period of "disinflation" (what a nice
sanitized word that is). I'll de-sanitize it; the markets for
gold stocks, energy stocks, financial stocks and most other
non-dollar forms of paper are hinting at DEFLATION, whereby the
masses scramble to pull in their horns, take liquidity out of
the system and try to do sensible things like repair bottom
lines grossly overextended by a historic credit orgy that, as
long as the illusion holds up, has made many feel rich beyond
their dreams (and means).
While
miner-centric goldbugs feel the heat and top gurus begin to give
in to the deflation scenario, the physical metal is trying to
flash some bullish signs. Whether or not it makes good on these
signs will go a long way toward identifying the Fed's next
moves, along with those of central banks around the world. The
global financial system is an interconnected daisy chain of
paper IOU's. A real deflation can not be allowed to take root
because when it would finish its job of unwinding the
speculative bubbles in stocks, bonds, real estate, commodities
(I realize this one is debatable) and heck, even that old
favorite, derivative gambling, there would be nothing left.
So
we are left with the question to inflate or not to inflate?
Below are two of the many gold charts to ponder when
looking for clues. Both have bullish possibilities in the face
of all the bearishness currently pervading most non-dollar
markets.
Gold
sports what may be a bullish inverted head & shoulders
pattern vs. the all important S&P 500 broad market index. It
broke above the neck line, only to be instantly repelled:

Gold
has been inching up vs. the Euro for all of 2005. A sustained
break out from this symmetrical triangle would bode well for the
idea that a global reflation was under way:

Contrary
indications abound. Broad indexes are bearish and gold stock
indexes are über bearish. Gold would try to lead to the upside,
but it certainly has not led to the downside to this point. It
is simply a critical juncture for the markets.

© 2005 Gary Tanashian
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