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Gold enters the early stages of a parabolic upswing

Posted on 20 August 2011 with 4 comments from readers

Observers are dumbfounded by the strength of the gold price last week, with a new record high of $1,876 but many are very keen to jump in to predict it will not last. Even some senior gold bugs and famous chartists are too wound-up in their own analysis of the too recent past.

To be fair lengendary gold trader Jim Sinclair absolutely hit the nail on the head with his prediction that once gold past the $1,764 mark it would head to the moon (click here). That still leaves plenty of room for volatility on the way up, and that may still be misinterpreted as confirming the skeptics, until they are proven wrong yet again.

Parabolic base only

You only have to look at the 10-year gold chart to see that the recent price action looks like the base of a parabolic price spike. It does not appear anything like the actual thing which would surely stretch much higher:

Some gold analysts have jumped on the recent sudden price movement and said it represents unsustainable levels of buying in the gold market. They reason that the gold market is simply too big for this buying to be sustained.

However, they are too focused on what lies in front of their nose. For if the equity and twice-as-big bond markets are in trouble then it is the gold market that is very small, and liable to a huge inflation as money pours away from these other very, very much larger asset classes.

True bond markets are pulling in cash and going to record highs, so precious metals are not soaking up all the cash leaving equities. That leaves room for a further spike in gold and silver when the bond markets get into trouble later.

In explaining his $1,764 tipping point for a gold parabolic upturn Jim Sinclair says this is just mathematics from observing what happens as money pours into an individual stock, namely you get a point where it heads to the sky.

And what is causing money to flood into gold – and let us not forget silver which rose three times as fast as gold on Friday? (click here) It is the fear of holding paper money in a eurozone banking crisis.

That is hardly a minor concern, and one that can quickly shift from a warning signal to a full-blown avalanche or tsunami within a very short time frame.

One very large eurozone bank last week was short of dollars because other banks will not deal with it and went to the Fed for $500 million, the first time that has happened since the freezing of inter-bank credit in the last global financial crisis. That does not sound good.

Banking crisis

A panic to exit fiat money and the European banking system would indeed drive up the price of gold and silver to parabolic levels. Some distinguished gold analysts are confused by the precedent of late 2008 when the reverse happened and the price of gold and silver collapsed (click here).

Well that happened in the 1970s too. There was a 50 per cent collapse in the gold price in 1975-6. But that did not stop the 800 per cent rise by 1980. If you obeyed the precedent of the first collapse you largely missed the second rise because you tried to be too clever with your trading analysis.

The problem is not that this time is different, it is that the times are different. The 1970s are the era that is being repeated, so this time is not different at all, but we are not following the more recent trend of the 2000s because the market has actually just started to go parabolic.

Sadly many of those who think they know a lot about gold and silver are being completely wrong-footed. Follow our actionable investment advice available only in our monthly newsletter (subscribe here). We have some original ideas on how to make money from these market predictions.

Posted on 20 August 2011 Categories: Gold & Silver

4 Comments posted by readers:

Comment by The Old Man - 20 August 2011

Yes I totally agree with this article – The new Gold rush has only just begun.

The collapse of the rigged precious metals market towards the end of 2011 (or the beginning of 2012 at the latest) and the subsequent price explosion of ‘physical’ precious metals will be etched into the history books.

We have seen nothing yet. Gold (and Silver) are set to take off. Hold on tight and enjoy the ride of a lifetime……………

Comment by Bill in the near tropics - 21 August 2011

Banking expert, Sean Egan, was on CNBC TV Squawk Box Friday morning saying that the big European banks will need a TARP type bailout in the amount of about 3 TRILLION euros “soon”. The Europeans will also need to print euros. He said that the problem with European debt is so large, that the USA will have to loan them money “like at the end of World War II.” That ought to go over great in Congress.

Comment by obewon - 21 August 2011

@ The Old Man:

Gotta agree with your assessment here. But as we’ve been discussing for the past 2 weeks on this website, price instability and volatility are gonna be here for a long time.

Possible Inflection Points:
Several of us here on this website, including the Ed., predicted that silver would be smashed as soon as it approached the $50 handle. I suspect that this time around, silver will push through $50 and head for $55; I’m only guessing here, but I think JPM et al (including the CME with their margin hikes!) will drive the silver price back down at $55.

Gold continues to look very strong, and could easily go to $2000 before a correction is engineered by HSBC and JPM.

Comment by derek - 25 August 2011

I heard some time ago that Gold was to rise to $3,000.But unfortunately what goes up MUST come DOWN.And how does one buy when one has no money ?? Borrow I suppose.

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