Beware of false breaks in gold

Kitco Media
By Jordan Roy-Byrne
Published:
Updated:
Kitco Commentaries
Opinions, Ideas and Markets Talk

Featuring views and opinions written by market professionals, not staff journalists.

Last week I wrote that the stock market had veered away from the course of a mega-bear market.

The rebound in the stock market has triggered several breadth thrusts, which (usually after a correction or bear market) signal more upside in the immediate future. It is not a coincidence that Gold and Silver formed nasty reversals around the same time.

Nevertheless, the risk of a recession remains in place, and the Federal Reserve will not be able to tighten, if any more, much longer.

For Gold, this setup implies potential for immediate headwinds but a turn to clear bullish skies if the economy weakens further, which is a question of if, not when.

The nature of Gold is one of quite a few false breaks before a big move in the opposite direction. Let me return to that point in a moment.

Gold remains in a very bullish cup and handle pattern. It could trade down to $1600 and remain in this long-term bullish consolidation.

The key level in the medium term is $1800. Numerous moving averages and Fibonacci retracements are filling in around $1800. Holding above $1800 would imply that a move to a breakout is very close.

A sustained move below $1800 would not necessarily be a false breakdown, but we have to be careful about over-emphasizing bearish chart moves in the context of looming bullish fundamentals.

The two major bottoms in the past 15 years (October 2008 and August 2018) occurred soon after technical breakdowns. In addition, note what happened after Gold broke trendline support and $1675.

Gold could struggle in the short term. It could break $1800 and perhaps break another important support level.

But the history of Gold includes many breaks that did not pan out. I showed you three, and another was the breakout to an all-time high in the summer of 2020.

The bird's eye view shows Gold can break lower while the handle channel (on the cup and handle pattern) remains intact. Gold would remain in position to launch to a breakout when the prevailing narrative changes to a weakening economy and lower interest rates.

The threats of lower prices and more time until a breakout move allow us another chance to buy the highest quality juniors with the most potential. In recent weeks I have introduced a larger watch list of these types of companies for my subscribers.

I continue to focus on finding high-quality juniors with 500% upside potential over the next few years. To learn the stocks we own and intend to buy, with at least 5x upside potential in the coming bull market, consider learning about our premium service.

Kitco Media

Jordan Roy-Byrne

Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT is a Chartered Market Technician and member of the Market Technicians Association.. He is the publisher and editor of TheDailyGold Premium, a publication which emphasizes market timing and stock selection for the sophisticated investor, as well as TheDailyGold Global, an add-on service for subscribers which covers global capital markets.

Jordan's work has been featured in CNBC, Barrons, Financial Times Alphaville, Kitco and Yahoo Finance. He is quoted regularly in Barrons. Jordan has been a speaker at PDAC, Cambridge House and Hard Assets conferences. TheDailyGold.com was recently named one of the top 50 Investment Blogs byDailyReckoning. Jordan earned a degree in General Studies from the University of Washington with a concentration in International Economic Development. He also lived and worked in Southeast Asia for 3 years in order to study economic development from an emerging market perspective. In his spare time he enjoys spending time with his wife, fitness, football and travel.

Mdi Earth Logo
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Kitco Metals Inc. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Kitco Metals Inc. nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Kitco Metals Inc. and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.