The gold market is still under pressure because the dollar is up another 50 points. In the stock indices, we woke up and saw that Moody's had downgraded as many as 10 banks.
We are getting a little bit of a bounce in the gold. Gold had a reasonable range but under pressure most of the day. Bonds and notes continue to add yield.
Long term gold will rise as the greenback sees sustained value erosion in Asian trade. Short term corrections up to ten percent will be part and parcel of the long term rally.
Gold edged up as Fitch Ratings’ move to strip the U.S. of its top-tier sovereign credit grade triggered risk-off sentiment, sending global stocks falling.
With global debt at well over $300 trillion and the U.S. owning a third of that, the next crisis could be one of confidence in government. That in turn is quite bullish for gold.
We had a bearish reversal Friday after the jobs report and that's not a very good sign: the market can't hold the rally and gets rejected from the 10-day moving average.
Intraday volatility will be high before the release of US July inflation numbers this week. Traders are confused on the short term trend of the US dollar index and bond yield. Incoming news will be the key.
Market extremes never last long, stock bubbles inevitably pop and roll over into serious selloffs. Investment capital inflows will accelerate gold’s strong upleg to new record highs.
In the gold market, you're staying above the 18-month moving average of closes. As long as you stay above 1855.80, you have a bullish bias and a long, firm chart.