Dollar Rallies as Gold and Silver
Nose-Dive
The euro fell to a yearly low on
December 14th as Italian interest rates at auction hit new highs. Collateral
damage to the EU crisis is showing up not only in stock prices, but in the
precious metals markets as well.
The euro fell below the
psychologically important 1.30 level in European trade and is testing support
from last January. If it breaks that support (and it is pretty certain that it
will), the 125 level is the next stop and 1.20 after that. The euro can be
tracked through the ETF FXE. At the same time the euro is breaking down, the
trade-weighted dollar has broken out. The dollar has been stuck at key
resistance at 80 since September. It tested this level both in September and in
November. It traded as high as 80.67 in early morning trade. There is still
strong resistance just under 82. A break above that will cause the dollar will
head toward 88. The dollar can be tracked through the ETF DXY.
As the dollar rises, gold and other
commodities fall. Spot gold was as low as $1,562 an ounce in early New York
trade. Gold plummeted after the New York open and was down as much as $68 an
ounce. Gold can be tracked through the ETF GLD. Gold decisively broke its
200-day moving average (which is very bearish) and this was the first time it
has traded below this level since early 2009. The next level of support is the
65-week moving average, which is currently in the high 1,400s.
While gold in general should go up
during a crisis, this did not happen in the fall of 2008 -- gold was down
around 30% at the time. During credit crises -- and the situation in Europe is
a second global credit crisis -- it is reasonable for gold to decline. Central
banks lease gold cheaply to banks and large hedge funds and they sell it on the
market to raise quick cash (I have explained how this is done is some detail in
my book "Inflation Investing"). This time around, there is the added
danger that the IMF will sell some of its large hoard of gold to raise money
for a eurozone bailout.
Gold's companion metal silver is much
more volatile than the yellow metal and is influenced by the economy as well as
financial market events. Silver traded as low as $28.47down $2.37 after New
York trading opened. This was more than a 7% drop. Silver can be tracked
through the ETF SLV. It has strong support around $26. If it breaks that,
expect it to head toward the $21 level.
The EU debt crisis is not over and is
likely to continue for a while longer and possibly for many more months. EU
leaders have come up with one "solution" to the crisis after that has
failed shortly after it was announced. Look to the markets to see whether or
not their future gambits will create some viable end to their problems. So far
the markets have made it very clear that the situation in Europe is continuing
to deteriorate and it is dangerous to be on the long side of almost any
investment except the U.S. dollar.
Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A
Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing Meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21
This posting is editorial opinion.
There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.