…The rally in both gold and silver has seen a significant change in market behavior, and these changes are telling the world that the decline from 2011 may have ended.
A guest post by Michael Noonan, (EdgeTraderPlus.com) which has been slightly edited ([ ]) and abridged (…) to provide a faster and easier read.
Gold Analysis
We note the ending action at 1, on the monthly chart below (there is only one more trading day in May, next Tuesday, so we are using ending data from Friday, the 27th). Besides the obvious support and resistance areas, what stands out are the two high volume months when price closed lower each time, once in March, and now for May.
Volume is the energy behind every move. Without it, no trend can be sustained. Always remember, exceptionally large volume is when smart money movers are in action either covering old, or taking new, positions in the market. It is during these high volume events that one can see the “footprints” left behind by smart money movers. We define “smart money” as those who move and influence market direction, to keep it simple.
To put bars 2 and 3 into context, when bars overlap, especially moving sideways, it is the struggle/battle between buyers and sellers for control. The volume for bar 2 was the highest since the 2011 all time high for gold. It was interesting when there was no further downside movement in April. When price stops on a dime, as it were, under heavy selling pressure, it can only mean one thing. The apparent selling pressure was overwhelmed by opposing buyers in numbers great enough to halt any further decline. That means what looks like a selling month, for March, was actually net buying.
What is interesting about the lack of downside follow-through, after March, was that the low at the end of the month was where buyers took total control, and that specific low should now become important support on any subsequent retest because it was at the point where sellers could not move the market even a penny lower.
In the process of ending, May’s volume was even higher, so the battle between buyers and sellers was at an even greater pitch than in March. Yet, when one views that action, May was nothing more than another overlapping bar, and the exceptionally high selling effort did nothing to carry price lower, at least up to that point…
When we talk about changes in market behavior, March and May exemplify the significance of that change. Gold is not selling off to lower swing lows, as occurred in the past. In the present rally/decline, the decline portion has not even approached the half-way retracement level, an indication of relative underlying market strength.
We see March and May as “messages from the market,” advertising its intent. Some little skirmishes designed to take one’s attention off that intent may yet follow, and that is when weak-handed players get lost in the shuffle.
This is the developing “story” as we see it, and it pays to lock onto further developments in order to take advantage of potential new upside trends that leads to greater probability for being profitable by harmonizing with the trend. Because of the high volume that stopped at the March low, discussed above, that stopping area should now become support. Chart comments explain it further. We will instead add to the observation of volume increasing as price declined.
Smart money sells high and buys low. When smart money is active, volume increases. If smart money were selling gold, the highest volume would occur near the swing highs, and not after a $90 decline. The highest volume is at the low, (so far), so smart money is trying to hide its hand as it buys into the decline. Also, smart money has deep pockets, very deep, so they are not concerned with day-to-day price action even when price moves against them. They know price is going higher because they are the ones behind the move. A $20, $30, $40 move, even more, against them is no big deal. Most often, it is smart money moving price against their position to shake out weak hands, and they keep buying whatever is sold from those who cannot afford such a move against them. Smart money does not like company. It is their purpose to create as many situations as possible to shake people out of the market. The current reaction is one such effort.
We often mention synergy between the various time frames. Right now, there is a consistent synergy from the monthly, [weekly and daily charts]… as price moves into a reaction area of support. As you look at the daily chart below, [for example,] what has been the net move from early February to the end of May? Zero, practically speaking, but look at all the “noise” – the “distraction” – in between. It appears that smart money is preparing for the advance almost everyone else has been waiting for.
If we are on target with this assessment, gold should start exhibiting stopping activity to end the current down trend from the May high, and price should start showing evidence that an uptrend continues to develop.
Silver Analysis
Second verse, nearly the same as the first. The details vary, but a developing “story” of support that keeps ostensible selling activity at bay is unfolding…
Observing new developments pertaining to volume is important because it is a market changer and driver. April saw evidence of sharply increased volume in silver while price rallied. That is a market “message” of which to be aware.
The “story” continues evidenced by the significantly smallest range bar at the end of the current decline from the May swing high [as seen in the chart below]. Why is the range so much smaller? Sellers are ineffectual, and buyers are stepping in to take control. If one does not pay attention to these “market messages,” it is easy to not maintain a focus on this larger picture, and instead, just look at the somewhat random day-to-day “noise” activity designed to keep people confused and bogged down in more meaningless details.
Silver has declined somewhat more grudgingly than has gold. It is more compact in the charts, which makes sense due to the considerably lower prices per ounce for silver as opposed to gold. The gold:silver ratio has been wavering in the 74.5 – 76+ to 1 area, recently, but that is still lower than the previous readings at 84:1, several weeks ago.
We see a new “story” developing (changes in developing market activity that create a change in direction). There can be a little chaos during the transition, but a steady focus and careful price selection should begin to pay off.
The 4 hour chart below shows a close-up picture of when price “took off to the upside” in April starting with the left-hand side activity. Now on the right side, price has returned to retest that April rally. During this correction, you can see how the level of price direction slowed considerably, starting on the 19th with its sharply higher volume.
The down-sloping channel defines the near-term trend, down, and price is struggling at the lower channel line. This tells us buyers have been unable to successfully counter the efforts of sellers, and until that changes, the shorter term trend will remain down. Should a change begin, at or near these levels, it will be a buying opportunity.