
The 2-year chart for gold continues to look positive, but because of the growing importance of the strong resistance approaching the highs, those looking to go long or add to positions should wait for a clear breakout above $1430 before doing so, or otherwise wait for a favorable setup following a reaction. On the downside this chart makes clear the importance of the support at and above $1300—for if this level should fail it would mean that gold would have to break below its supporting long-term trendline, the support level at the January low and the 200-day moving average. For these reasons a closing break below $1300 would be regarded as a negative development.

A worrying background influence for gold and silver bulls is the continuing marked weakness in the PM stock index charts. They barely made any progress at all last week on gold's breakout and silver's continued rally, and bearish price/volume action continued. On the 8-month chart for the Market Vectors Gold Miners Index we can see that the bearish "shooting star" candlestick that we observed in the last update has been followed by a pair of "bearish engulfing patterns" both of which were characterized by higher volume on the down days, and the continuing abysmally weak volume pattern has resulted in a sick looking On-balance Volume line—it would thus appear that astute traders have been dumping onto this rally. As pointed out before there is thus the danger that the latest rally in the PM stock indices constitutes the Right Shoulder of a Head-and-Shoulders top. This is definitely not what the doctor ordered and the contradiction between the seemingly bullish gold chart and the frail looking PM stock index charts is stark and something we would be unwise to ignore. The large stock XAU index looks horribly weak and like it is now completing a bear market rally, also the potential Right Shoulder of a Head-and-Shoulders top. This is the reason that we dumped some of our PM stocks for a good profit over the past week or two as they rose to hit resistance.

Fundamentally of course much depends on whether the "Mexican Wave" of revolutions in the Arab world continues and engulfs big important countries like Saudi Arabia and Iran. Oil prices spiked last week on fears of a worst case scenario, but the fact that the Rydex Funds, who perform very well as a contrary indicator, have ramped up their holdings in the energy sector close to the levels they were at just before the 2008 crash, and that Large Spec long positions in oil as revealed by the latest COT charts have risen to what is believed to be record levels, suggests that if the "revolutions crisis" in the Arab world starts to ease, the oil sector could go down like the Hindenburg. In this situation gold and silver could also suffer from an easing of the fear factor which is largely what generated last week's gains.

