HAI

Unless otherwise indicated, the material below has not been prepared by Van Eck Associates Corporation or HardAssetsInvestor.com.
Neither assumes any liability for any content on a third party website or material prepared by a third party.

Brad's Desktop

   |
Poor Nothing special Worth watching Pretty cool Awesome! 78 Ratings
Rate this article
The Season For Gold? Not Yet
Written by Brad Zigler   
June 04, 2009 9:51 AM EST
Real-time Monetary Inflation (per annum): 8.9%

Most commodity traders have at least some passing acquaintance with seasonality - the tendency for goods' prices to strengthen or weaken at different times during the year. After all, there are times appropriate for the planting and harvest of agricultural commodities such as corn and cotton and, as a consequence, periods of relative dearth and surplus.

Seasonality isn't limited to food and fiber, though. Were you aware that gold exhibits seasonality, too?

Gold's "high season," if you will, is mid-to-late September, largely reflected as spikes in the October and December COMEX deliveries. Demand for gold traditionally peaks when Indian farmers invest their harvest profits in metal. About 40% of the subcontinent's gold demand, in fact, balloons just ahead of the October-November festival and wedding season when the market is crowded by purchasers of nuptial jewelry.

Gold has low seasons, too. For example, there's a mid-March low that sets up a rally through May. Then there's gold's weakest period, which typically runs from June through late July. These tendencies prevail even in secular bull markets.

I ask you now to regard the calendar. We're just into June. I ask you, too, to consider gold's technical weakness as examined in "Gold Left Behind By Silver").

Wednesday's COMEX trading gave strong indications that a short-term top's been posted. June gold started the day aiming for new highs, but interest fizzled as the day progressed, setting up a close near session lows. For the day, June gold's settlement at $963.40 represented an $18 retreat through near-term support.

 

NYMEX/COMEX Gold (Jun. '09)

NYMEX/COMEX Gold (June 2009)

 

 

A number of technical metrics - MACD, stochastics and RSI, in particular - also heeled over from the week's overbought levels. Put simply, gold now looks likely to start its summertime grind with sideways-to-lower trade.

If June gold breaks below yesterday's low of $964.50, the bears' first downside objective would be around the $941-$947 level. Underneath that are key retracements between $888 and $898 that are likely to be defended.

Is this the end of gold's bull run? Hardly. It's simply a manifestation of the market's pulse.

If you're a trader who likes momentum, and you're looking to buy gold, you're likely to feel a whole lot better about your purchase if you hold off ‘til September.

 



 

More on this topic (What's this?)
Bloomberg Gold Buy Signal
Inching Closer to the Gold Explosion
Why Silver Should Head Higher
Put Gold Where Your Mouth Is
Read more on Gold at Wikinvest
 
Subscribe to Our Weekly Newsletter 
First Comment

Comments (0)



Post a Comment

Comment
(Limit 2,000
characters) 
*
Name: *
E-mail: *
Home page:

(optional)

Type in the displayed characters
Email follow-up comments to my e-mail address
 


Terms of Use
The HardAssetsInvestor.com message board and comment features are designed to facilitate thoughtful discussion of the biggest issues impacting commodity investors. All comments should be respectful. Insults and profanity are not permitted. The editor reserves the right to remove comments at his/her discretion.

 

Related Articles »

Did you like this article? Then you may be interested in:

  • Monster Gold Profits Due Next Month! Honest!
    Real-time Monetary Inflation (last 12 months): 2.3% Well, we've arrived at the ides of March, a day particularly unlucky for Julius Caesar, but I'm banking on this day as the start of the 30-day countdown to monster gains in the gold mining sector.
    March 15, 2010
  • Inflation Scorecard: No Course Change This Week
    Real-time Monetary Inflation (last 12-months): 2.2%Declining commodity prices kept the pressure off the Fed this week to snug up on rates.
    March 12, 2010
  • As A Hedge, Gold’s Now A Bust
    Real-time Monetary Inflation (last 12 months): 2.3% Professional portfolio managers learn very early in their careers the fundamentals of hedging.
    March 11, 2010
  • Gold Demand: Not What You Think
    The latest news on true gold demand contains some surprising revelations.
    March 08, 2010
  • Inflation Scorecard: Market, Not Fed, Snugging Up
    Real-time Monetary Inflation (last 12-months): 2.5%This week, the short end of the yield spectrum ticked up and gold spreads widened to indicate an expectation of eventual tightening by the Federal Reserve.
    March 05, 2010
 

Commodities Data

March 17, 2010 05:31 PM EST

  Loading data ...
 

Weekly Commodities Poll

Is now a good time to buy gold?

 

Related Articles »

Did you like this article? Then you may be interested in:

  • Monster Gold Profits Due Next Month! Honest!
    Real-time Monetary Inflation (last 12 months): 2.3% Well, we've arrived at the ides of March, a day particularly unlucky for Julius Caesar, but I'm banking on this day as the start of the 30-day countdown to monster gains in the gold mining sector.
    March 15, 2010
  • Inflation Scorecard: No Course Change This Week
    Real-time Monetary Inflation (last 12-months): 2.2%Declining commodity prices kept the pressure off the Fed this week to snug up on rates.
    March 12, 2010
  • As A Hedge, Gold’s Now A Bust
    Real-time Monetary Inflation (last 12 months): 2.3% Professional portfolio managers learn very early in their careers the fundamentals of hedging.
    March 11, 2010
  • Gold Demand: Not What You Think
    The latest news on true gold demand contains some surprising revelations.
    March 08, 2010
  • Inflation Scorecard: Market, Not Fed, Snugging Up
    Real-time Monetary Inflation (last 12-months): 2.5%This week, the short end of the yield spectrum ticked up and gold spreads widened to indicate an expectation of eventual tightening by the Federal Reserve.
    March 05, 2010
 

Seminal Papers »