Ike Iossif on Gold and the Xau
by Ike Iossif
June 22/05
At the end of March, I discussed the scenarios, strategies, and expectations I had with regards to gold, and gold stocks, specifically the XAU.
In the first report, I had stated the following:
3/27/08 If gold and gold stocks remain in a bull market, the decline down to 89-84 zone ought to represent the last buying opportunity for gold and gold stocks, prior to a spectacular bullish acceleration. If the XAU stays above 84 over the next 2-4 weeks and then it begins to accelerate to the upside, at this point in the bull market we ought to see a rise from its upcoming lows in the 89-85 zone in the next few weeks, to a high in the 155-165 zone by the end of the year, which will represent an 100% gain.
If the XAU remains in a bull market, it ought not to violate support at 84, on a weekly basis. We would allow for an intra-day move to as low as 81. However, two consecutive weekly closes below 84, or, even worse below 81, accompanied by gold closing below $400 for two consecutive weeks, would call the bull market assumption into serious question.
Now that we are in the middle of June, we can examine how things have unfolded so far, re-examine our assumptions, consider the possible scenarios going forward, adjust expectations, re-think and formulate strategies.
The first assumption that we need to examine is whether gold and gold stocks are still in a bull market. My conditions -strictly from a technical point of view- for concluding that the bull market in gold/gold stocks is still intact would be that in the worst case scenario the XAU didn't close below 81 for two consecutive weeks, and gold didn't close below $400 for two consecutive weeks. The XAU had one weekly close below 81, on 5-12-05 it closed at 80.33. Since then, it has rallied strongly, and gold itself never came close to $400.00, let alone closing below. Therefore, at the moment we must conclude that gold/gold stocks are probably still in a bull market. Why do I say "probably" and not "certainly?"
Take a look at gold/XAU/dollar from 1990 to 1997, and from 2000 to present. First all, notice that from 1990, until the beginning of 1993, gold/gold stocks, and the dollar moved in the same direction; down, then from early 1993, until very early 1994, again they moved in the same direction, up. Finally from early 1994 until late 1995, gold/gold stocks were flat, while the dollar lost almost 20% of its value. Thus, it is a myth that the two move in opposite directions, sometimes they do, but not always. Second, notice that even when gold and the dollar were moving in the same direction, turns in the dollar, preceded turns in gold/gold stocks, like in the early '90s. The dollar bottomed in mid-1992, gold stocks bottomed in late 1992, and gold bottomed in very early 1993. In the mid-90s, when they reversed directions, the US dollar bottomed in 1995, gold/gold stocks topped out in 1996. However, since the new millennium started, turns in gold stocks have have preceded turns in gold, and in the dollar. Gold stocks bottomed in October of 2000, gold bottomed in the first quarter of 2001, and the dollar topped out in the first quarter of 2002, see the sequence of events labeled 1A-2A-3A. Subsequently, gold stocks topped out in the first week of January of 2004, gold topped out in mid-November of 2004, and the dollar bottomed six weeks later, during the last week of December 2004, see the sequence of events labeled as 1B-2B-3B. In addition, it can be seen very clearly from the charts that in the last six months, the dollar is rallying and has broken above its long-term resistance line which had defined the downtrend since 2002, the XAU has broken below its long-term support line which had defined the uptrend since 2000, and gold itself, has not broken above its short-term resistance line.
Bottom line: Although the XAU didn't have two consecutive weekly closes below 81, and gold didn't close below $400.00, the charts suggest that gold/gold stocks may have topped out in the short-term, and the rally of the last few weeks is the last "gasp" before a more serious decline takes place. On the other hand, it could very well be that the break of resistance by the dollar, will turn out to be a "bull trap" in that case, if the negative correlation between gold/gold stocks and the dollar continues, then the break of support by the XAU will turn out to be a "bear trap."
I would like to believe that gold/gold stocks are still in a bull market -in my view the fundamentals favor such belief. However, the charts are providing me with sufficient evidence to suggest that my view may be wrong. As a money manager I can't afford to be an "ideologue" I can't make decisions that place capital at risk based upon how I believe things "should be" I have to make decisions based upon how things "are."
At the moment, the evidence is telling me that I must consider both the bullish, and the bearish case going forward and be prepared for either. In the rest of the report I will discuss in great detail the different scenarios that may take place, and the strategy that we will implement accordingly.

In terms of "scenarios" there are two types, please try not to get
confused, because I use the same numbering system on both. The first type
is derived off the monthly/weekly charts and it tells us what we
should expect from a "big picture" point of view. The second
type is derived off the daily charts and guides on our trading
decisions.
THREE SCENARIOS TO CONSIDER:
(MONTHLY CHARTS)

Scenario #1: The break down at point "A" was a "bear trap." The XAU will
continue its upward movement un-interrupted for the next 5-6 months. (If
and when resistance is overcome, I will issue another detailed report
discussing what we expect next. No major amount of capital will
be put at risk on the long side, until resistance at point "B" is broken)

Scenario #2: The break down at point "A" was a "bear trap." We can expect
a pullback at resistance around the 94-96 level, but ultimately the XAU
will get thru it. (If and when resistance is overcome, I will issue
another detailed report discussing what we expect next. No major amount
of capital will be put at risk on the long side, until resistance
at point "B" is broken)

Scenario #3: The break down at point "A" was valid. The current rally
will fail at resistance and it will be followed by a 25%-30% decline
to point "C" (If and when that happens, I will issue
another detailed report discussing what we expect next. No major amount
of capital will be put at risk on the short side, until support
is broken)
THE DEMARCATION POINT-QUADRUPLE RESISTANCE

The interesting thing from a money management point of view, is that regardless of which scenario ultimately plays out, the price action in the very early stages, is nearly identical in all three, thus, placing a major amount of capital at risk prior to having confirmation of which scenario is playing out, can be disastrous.
In all three scenarios, price would rally back up to resistance , the question is; what happens next. Notice that the 94-96 level represents quadruple resistance, which makes it rather significant from a bullish/bearish point of view. Not only it is where the short-term, and intermediate-term support lines intersect (green, red line) it is also the point of intersection for the 50, and 100 WMAs. If the XAU is in bull market, it ought to be above all four these benchmarks, and if it has entered a bear market, any initial rally ought to fail at any one of these benchmarks. The fact that all 4 are found within a 2 point interval, makes the 94-96 zone a the "demarcation line" between a bull, and a bear market.
In addition,
notice that in the 94-96 zone we have a 61.8% fib level for the decline
from B to C, and a 50% fib level for the decline from A to C. Therefore
even if the big picture is till bullish, we ought to get a pullback from
this area on a short-term basis.

TRADING STRATEGY
SCENARIO#1
If
scenario #1 is taking place in the big picture (see above) then,
in all likelihood this is what would take place on a daily basis (see
chart below)

We would expect a pull-back from the 94-96 zone, which in all likelihood
wouldn't even fill the gap at
90, because if the XAU is going to move straight up from here, then it
means that the gap at 90,
is a "run-away" one, which doesn't need to get filled.
If the XAU
continues to push higher up to the 94-96 zone, then it pulls back
but it stays above the gap, upon reversal to the upside we will
close the put positions we opened last week, and switch to
credit put spreads, which means we will make money on the upside, but
we won't lose if the break-out is a fake out.
SCENARIO#2

If scenario #2 is taking place in the big picture (see above) then,
in all likelihood this is what would
take place on a daily basis (see charts below)
Two possibilities based on scenario #2.

A) The XAU will pull back to fill the gap at 90, and then reverse
to the upside to attack resistance at
96 (see chart above) In that case we will sell the put options we bought
last week, and we will switch to credit put spreads, and add our
favorite gold stocks, such us ABX, PDG, AU, with stops right under
the entry point.
B) The XAU
will fill the gap at 90, but it will not arrest its
decline, it will continue lower and it will find support between 87, and
84 (see chart below) In that case we will sell the put options we
bought last week, and we will switch to credit put spreads, and add
our favorite gold stocks, such us ABX, PDG, AU, with stops right under
the entry point.

Why am I expecting the XAU to find support between 87, and 84 if
it doesn't arrest its decline after it fills the gap at 90?
Because
between 87 and 84 we have the fib retracement levels that correspond
with the decline from March to May. If the XAU falls below 84, then we
would have to consider that scenario#3 is probably playing out.

SCENARIO#3

If scenario #3 is taking place in the big picture (see above) then,
in all likelihood this is what would take place on a daily basis (see
charts below)
Two possibilities based on scenario #3

A0 The XAU will pull back to fill the gap at 90, and then it
will reverse to the upside to attack
resistance at 96. However, at 96 it will fail and it will reverse to the
downside. (see chart above)
In that case we will liquidate long positions, bullish option
spreads, and switch back to put positions.
B) The XAU
will pull back to any of the fib retracement levels I mentioned, and then
it will reverse to the upside to attack resistance at 96. However, at
96 it will fail and it will reverse to the downside. (see chart above)
In that case we will liquidate long positions, bullish option
spreads, and switch back to put positions.

ADDITIONAL POINTS:
Bull-Bear Traps
I mentioned the terms "bull trap" and "bear trap" Some of you may not know what they are. A "bull trap" occurs when we get caught in a false break out, while a "bear trap" takes place when we get caught in a false break down. In both cases investors who opened positions because of the "break" get "trapped" in them when the market quickly reverses to the opposite direction of the break.
Traps can
be simple, like the case below on the left, with only one false
break, but they can also be complicated like the chart below on
the right. In that case we have two false breaks before the actual move
takes place.
3-5 Wave Price Moves
Price never moves straight up, or straight down. It usually moves
in 3, or 5 waves.
In the case of the XAU, the low in May could represent
the end of a 3 wave decline. However, we can't exclude the possibility
of a 5 wave decline, and in that case the next reversal point is at 96.
Please note: My references to "waves" are not in connection
with Elliot Wave Theory.
Downside Target

It is worth noting that if we measure the entire advance from 2000 until
2004, we have a fib
61.8% level at 69.40. The fifth wave of five wave decline tends
to exceed in magnitude waves 1, and 3. That means, if we are dealing
with a 5 wave type of decline, the fifth wave will be approximately 25%
to 28%. Assuming the reversal takes place at 96, a 25%-27% decline, will
carry the XAU to 72-70, which is right above the 61.8% fib level.
In other words, it is possible that the XAU will experience
another decline, make a lower low, reverse to upside, and
re-enter a bull cycle. In doing so, it will have form a rather complex
"bear trap" which is not atypical of gold stocks.
Aegean
Capital Group, Inc., Marketviews.tv, and Ike Iossif are the copyright
owners of all text and graphics contained in this article, except as otherwise
indicated. Other parties' trademarks and service marks that may be referred
to herein are the property of their respective owners. You may print a
copy of the information contained herein for your personal use only, but
you may not reproduce or distribute the text or graphics to others or
substantially copy the information on your own server, or link to this
website, without prior written permission of Aegean Capital Group, Inc.,
and Ike Iossif. All rights reserved and actively enforced to the full
extend of the law.

