Monthly Digger - October 2007 Cash is not King
#1
Posted 28 September 2007 - 10:46 PM
I also commented about currencies and how gold was back to 740 or better and the response I got was that gold was unstable. Sure, stocks are at highs but cash is not king and the dollar is stable?
If cash is not king, then maybe they're believing that stocks must go higher. It will be interesting to see just when the pigmen orchestrate the next attack.
750?
Mr. Widget is my Guide http://wallstreetexa...or-day-traders/
#2
Posted 28 September 2007 - 11:11 PM
Gold for December delivery surged $10.10, or 1.5%, to end at $750 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
The contract earlier hit an intraday high of $752.50, a new 27-year high. The record intraday all-time high for a benchmark gold futures contract on Nymex stands at $875 from Jan. 21, 1980.
Mr. Widget is my Guide http://wallstreetexa...or-day-traders/
#3
Posted 28 September 2007 - 11:41 PM
I don't keep track of the COT's.
But the Commercials are massively short.
Numerically, they are short 296,412 contracts to 88,400 longs.
Their short interest at 296,412 contracts to an open interest of 440,945 ( a ratio of 67.2% ), is as large as I've ever seen in the last 3 years.
Does anyone have any long term statistics?
http://news.goldseek.../1191008035.php
http://www.softwaren...t/charts/GC.png
#4
Posted 29 September 2007 - 12:19 AM
#5
Posted 29 September 2007 - 12:46 AM
Whadda I Do Whadda I Do, on Sep 29 2007, 12:19 AM, said:
I'm looking for a pullback in a huge bull market.
When I look back to December, 2005, there was a nasty and swift 10% correction.
#6
Posted 29 September 2007 - 12:53 AM
I've gone over all the charts for the miners, the indices, and gold itself off the October 2006 lows.
I was looking for the cleanest technical and Elliott pattern.
The $GPX has the easiest pattern.
It's very bullish in the longer term, but it indicates that the rally may be due for a short pullback---likely a minor 4th wave.
Typically, a 4th wave retraces only 38 to 50% of the 3rd wave and a natural stopping point is at the 4th wave of the prior 3rd.
Thus, I'm looking for a pullback to between 965 to 980, and closer to 970.
#7
Posted 29 September 2007 - 02:26 AM
So far most miners haven't reacted to Friday's gold price.
The next correction in the regular markets is going to be very telling while watching the miners react.
#8
Posted 29 September 2007 - 05:20 PM
bearvest, on Sep 28 2007, 08:53 PM, said:
I've gone over all the charts for the miners, the indices, and gold itself off the October 2006 lows.
I was looking for the cleanest technical and Elliott pattern.
The $GPX has the easiest pattern.
It's very bullish in the longer term, but it indicates that the rally may be due for a short pullback---likely a minor 4th wave.
Typically, a 4th wave retraces only 38 to 50% of the 3rd wave and a natural stopping point is at the 4th wave of the prior 3rd.
Thus, I'm looking for a pullback to between 965 to 980, and closer to 970.
A revisit of the breakout would be quite a gift. Buy the dips.

71.04 is support and that is about the 20dEMA.
#9
Posted 29 September 2007 - 05:27 PM

The haha Heckler has resistance directly above, but should be good after that...

In general, XAU 172 is major resistance.
#10
Posted 30 September 2007 - 12:29 AM
I've been pondering this chart.
A few things caught my eye.
Most important is the lower trendline. Impulses move in a channel. With a possible 5 wave count, the trendline takes on very important significance.
Second, there's a very pronounced support/resistance zone at about 358-368. It seems very likely it will be tested. Right now, a 38.2% retrace would hold at 357.42.
The rally has been 25 days in duration. Thursday would be the (Fib) 34th trading day off the August 16th lows. It could be a pivot. It would tend to resolve the ambiguity between my incomplete impulse on the $GPX chart posted above and this chart.
Right now the retracement zone is from 329.70 to 357.42.
Like Meta says, if the chance to get on board this long-term rocket ride presents itself, it will be a "gift".
The Fed has decided to re-flate the ecomony and "inflation and the dollar can be damned."
Someday, I'll tell my grandson how I bought into the gold-rush of 2007.
#12
Posted 30 September 2007 - 02:11 PM
bearvest, on Sep 29 2007, 08:29 PM, said:
I've been pondering this chart.
A few things caught my eye.
Most important is the lower trendline. Impulses move in a channel. With a possible 5 wave count, the trendline takes on very important significance.
Second, there's a very pronounced support/resistance zone at about 358-368. It seems very likely it will be tested. Right now, a 38.2% retrace would hold at 357.42.
The rally has been 25 days in duration. Thursday would be the (Fib) 34th trading day off the August 16th lows. It could be a pivot. It would tend to resolve the ambiguity between my incomplete impulse on the $GPX chart posted above and this chart.
Right now the retracement zone is from 329.70 to 357.42.
Like Meta says, if the chance to get on board this long-term rocket ride presents itself, it will be a "gift".
The Fed has decided to re-flate the ecomony and "inflation and the dollar can be damned."
Someday, I'll tell my grandson how I bought into the gold-rush of 2007.
BV,
HUI 398.19 is resistance.
372 and 357.52 are strong supports below.....agreeing with one of your numbers, but derived differently.
We'll soon know if this apparent reversal is merely a b of an abc, by watching 398.19?

I'm just holding and adding more to dips.
#14
Posted 01 October 2007 - 08:03 PM
Everyone already seems to be waiting for that so either it doesnt come yet or it goes much lower here than most expect.
I like BV's count: we will see a c down of an abc correction to the impulse we just had up.
#15
Posted 01 October 2007 - 08:19 PM
"You trade physical gold with balls, not with a ruler, until your balls get pressed into ball oil and you're forced to obtain your meals from the dumpster behind the local Krispy Kreme. And then the sun comes out again." - Skidmark
"If you can't stand the heat, break the thermometer in the kitchen." - Benjamin S. Bernanke upon ceasing publication of M3 data
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