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More Evidence Gold Stocks Have Bottomed Relative to Gold

Author, CMT, and Editor @ The Daily Gold
May 1, 2015

As we pen this article Gold is trading below $1180/oz and set to close at its lowest level in six weeks. Gold is less than 2% from its weekly low of $1158. It is fairly close to another technical breakdown. However, the gold mining stocks appear to be bucking the trend and showing increasing relative strength. It appears likely that the stocks have bottomed relative to the metal and maybe so in nominal terms.

Below we plot various gold miner indices against Gold. We essentially plot the juniors and large caps from both the US and Canada against GLD. Not only have these ratios increased in recent months but they have increased in the past few weeks as Gold has declined from $1220 down below $1180. That is a very important signal of relative strength.

The price action in nominal terms would have been far more encouraging if the miners had closed near their weekly highs. The weekly candle charts for GDX and GDXJ are below. The miners are up for the week but failed to hold the majority of the gains. GDX touched $20.90, which is 7% from its 80-week moving average. If it could reach that resistance it would mark the third test in the past ten months (after previously no tests in two years). That would be a strong signal of a transition from a bear market to a bull market.

The reasons for the gold miners’ relative strength are unlikely to be temporary. Sure Oil has rebounded but its price remains well below the $100/barrel it averaged throughout 2011 to 2014. That is helping miners. In addition, local currency weakness has been a boon. Even though the US$ index has stalled out, the Gold price against foreign currencies is 20% above its December 2013 low. That helps miners operating outside of the US with some costs denominated in local currencies. Other factors to consider include the strength in the two largest gold miners Newmont and Barrick and the fact that gold stocks recently were potentially the cheapest in history.

The gold miners can continue to show relative strength but they may not rip to the upside until Gold cooperates. A weekly close below $1150/oz could accelerate Gold’s final breakdown. On the other hand, a weekly close above $1220 would be bullish. I would actually prefer the former as it would give us real clarity to the end of the bear market and it would give us a final chance to buy miners before they explode to the upside. Consider learning more about our premium service including our current favorite junior miners which we expect to outperform in the second half of 2015.

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Courtesy of [email protected]

Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT is a Chartered Market Technician and member of the Market Technicians Association. He is the publisher and editor of TheDailyGold Premiuma publication which emphasizes market timing and stock selection, as well as TheDailyGold Global, an add-on service for subscribers which covers global capital markets. He is also the author of the 2015 book, The Coming Renewal of Gold’s Secular Bull Market which is available for free. TheDailyGold.com was recently named one of the top 50 Investment Blogs by DailyReckoning and WalletHub.


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