TSX Venture Exchange and Gold
The Venture Exchange appears to have found its footing after a 6.5% drop from its 2012 high February 29. The Index was off 43 points for the week, closing at 1606, but important support held mid-week when the Index slipped as low as 1585. We’re viewing the weakness during the first half of March as a normal retracement in an ongoing 2012 bull run that is still in its early stages. John’s 6-month daily chart below shows February’s overbought condition has completely unwound and there’s now a bullish “W” formation in the RSI(14). Rising 50 and 100-day moving averages, in addition to the 1,000-day SMA, continue to support this market right around the 1600 level.
Volume picked up Friday but still needs to increase more (we believe that will “kick in” over the coming weeks). Notice how the buying pressure has firmed up recently – “smart money” has been accumulating during this pullback. A breakout through the 1700 level is required for this market to really start to pick up steam and we’re confident that will occur – exact timing is the only question.
During 2012 the CDNX has been performing very well relative to both Gold and the TSX Gold Index, and this pattern is encouraging to see.
The CDNX started to under-perform against Gold and the producers in the spring of last year (as well as the broader markets), and that was a warning sign of trouble on the way. The CDNX has been on the rebound since December and should soon “overtake” the Gold Index on this chart which we would argue bodes very well for the juniors. We’ve stated this repeatedly for the last couple of months – now is the ideal time to be positioned in high quality junior mining stocks. Be patient and you will be rewarded. The last half of this year, in particular, could be very explosive.
Gold
Gold got hit again last week, selling off on the theory that the Federal Reserve is less inclined to initiate “QE3” given fresh signs of an improving U.S. economy. The truth is, the Fed and central banks around the world have embraced a very accommodating monetary position and global money supply has increased remarkably in recent months. The global economic recovery remains fragile, sovereign debt is unsustainable, and many countries are engaged in diversifying out of dollars into Gold as a means to achieve more stable reserve holdings. There are so many reasons to own Gold. Physical buying, particularly in China and other emerging markets, remains strong.
John’s new Gold chart is similar in some respects to the CDNX in that RSI(14) shows a bullish “W” formation. This is usually a very reliable pattern. Gold has solid support just above $1,600. We’re confident it will hold that support.
China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology noted in its most recent figures that China holds the title of the world’s number one Gold miner since 2007. The country has continued its dominance in world Gold production with output rising last year by 5.9% to 361 tons. Overall, world production of Gold is not that different from where it was 10 years ago, despite the price gains made over the past decade that should have stimulated more production.
The TSX Gold Index has fallen 13% in just 13 sessions from 389 February 29 to Friday’s close of 338. This sell-off is way overdone and represents a major buying opportunity with the Index below its 1,000-day SMA for the first time since early 2010 and for one of the few times over the past decade. We’ll go into some more detail on this in tomorrow’s Morning Musings with charts to support our bullish argument. The bottom line is that Gold stocks are extremely cheap historically relative to the price of Gold.
Silver was off $1.76 for the week to $32.56. Copper was unchanged at $3.86. Crude Oil fell slightly to $107.06 while the U.S. Dollar Index met resistance around 80.50 and closed down one-fifth of a point for the week at 79.78.
The “Big Picture” View Of Gold
As Frank Holmes so effectively illustrates at www.usfunds.com, Gold is being driven by both the Fear Trade and the Love Trade. The transfer of wealth from west to east, and the accumulation of wealth particularly in China and India, is having a huge impact on Gold.
The fundamental case for Gold remains incredibly strong – currency instability and an overall lack of confidence in fiat currencies, governments and world leaders in general, an environment of historically low interest rates and negative real interest rates that won’t end anytime soon (inflation is greater than the nominal interest rate even in parts of the world where rates are increasing), money supply growth, massive government debt from the United States to Europe, central bank buying, flat mine supply, physical demand, investment demand, emerging market growth, geopolitical unrest and conflicts, and inflation concerns…the list goes on. It’s hard to imagine Gold not performing well in this environment. The Middle East is being turned on its head and that could ultimately have major positive consequences for Gold.
Volume did pick up on Friday but it was deceptive and misleading for the charts. It was pathetically low until something like 14:43 when there was a 13 million trade. Without that, the trend is definitely downwards.
Comment by Andrew — March 18, 2012 @ 12:47 pm
Hi Andrew. I always value your feedback and insight but on this (the trend is definitely downwards) I profoundly disagree and here’s why:
1. Strong support levels are holding for the CDNX, and the 50 and 100 day SMA’s continue to rise;
2. The CDNX has been out-performing the TSX Gold Index which is at or near an important bottom. This will be shown in a chart we’re posting pre-market tomorrow. Based on this chart, there is no way you can draw a different conclusion;
3. The HGD (reverse Gold Index ETF), a chart for which we’ll also post tomorrow, is clearly overbought and has hit resistance with a double top.
Gold has stabilized – there’s a bullish “W” RSI formation on both Gold and the CDNX.
Conclusion: Gold Index will recover starting this coming week and expect the CDNX to continue to out-perform and resume its primary trend which is upward. Should be a solid finish to the month.
The volume will really kick in on the CDNX once it breaks past 1700 and when there is what I call a “reverse capitulation” – when the bears and nervous nellies on the sidelines throw in the towel and jump in, fearful of losing out on a major upside move.
Comment by Jon - BMR — March 18, 2012 @ 1:45 pm
Thanks Jon – I was referring solely to the volume though. 🙂
Comment by Andrew — March 18, 2012 @ 1:52 pm
Andrew
With regards to volume do not get hung up over-analysing it. In each trade there is a buyer and seller and as one old trader stated during a similar debate. “Volume is Volume…leave it at that.” That is my view too.
Comment by John - BMR — March 18, 2012 @ 2:24 pm
John – thank you for your comments. Volume is volume but is critical to trade. Buy volume shoes investor confidence, sell volume shows investor fear. When they are out of balance we either gain or lose.
Comment by Andrew — March 18, 2012 @ 3:22 pm
shows not shoes! 🙂
Comment by Andrew — March 18, 2012 @ 3:22 pm
Hi Andrew
I do not want to get into a long debate about volume but the old saying “There is one reason for buying and a thousand reasons for selling” is very true. I disagree with your statement “sell volume shows investor fear.” Only the person selling knows why he sold. His reason may have nothing to do with the stock price or the Co., he may just need the money.
Volume must always be associated with price/price pattern.For example there are volume requirements to validate consolidation patterns and with the H&S pattern.
Volume often precedes a price rise by 2-3 days.
There are times when a stock falls on heavy vol. due to a lot of sellers and it can also fall a long way on light Vol. due to a lack of buyers.
Look at Friday’s trading of RBW. The Vol. was higher than previous vol and the stock finished the day with a red candle. This candle was within the downsloping Flag so this was acceptable regardless of vol. level. Also note the CMF which is a vol. indicator was positive showing buying pressure.
Hope this helps.
Have a good day.
Comment by John - BMR — March 19, 2012 @ 2:23 am
John – I understand your comments and I agree. When I talk about sell and buy volume I mean the total volume throughout the depth on level 2. With RBW, on Thursday it was even (previously it had been weighted towards buy volume) and on Friday the sell volume outweighed buy volume and increased but stabilised during the day.
Comment by Andrew — March 19, 2012 @ 4:38 am