Gold Still "Ultimate Insurance"
Brian Bloom
Summary and Conclusions

Chart sources:

It appears that the Yen price of gold has tentatively broken up to a new high out of an ascending Right Angled Triangle

Not so exciting on the monthly chart below, but apparently confirming a bottoming out

It is also looking strong vs the US Dollar Index but yet to break out of equilateral (continuation?) triangle. Note the long saucer formation, the break out and the subsequent "handle" formation. Classic stuff.

Monthly chart below shows strong resistance at current level. Breakout could take it $500. Failure could see reaction to $350

Objectively, except for 1998 - 2001, the Dollar Price of Gold has been travelling sideways relative to the US Dollar for 20 years, and there is no technical reason to believe that $500 - $550 will be penetrated on the upside

But it has broken up out of what might be described as a fan formation relative to the A$ (also bullish, but less so than relative to the Yen)

Nevertheless, monthly chart has been stronger than US$ price of Gold, but with similar strong (24 year) resistance at A$600

A bit iffy relative to the Euro

Similarly iffy - but still bullish - relative to the G5 Basket

Consolidating relative to the Euro/DM chart on a monthly basis, with the possibility of a break up

The answer to what all of the above means may lie in the Japanese Yen.

Savings rate in Japan has fallen to around 5% from around 14%

Source: www.oecd.org/dataoecd/53/48/32023442.pdf

Note how savings rates in Europe have been rising modestly since the equity markets peaked, and also how US Savings rate seems to have bottomed.

There is an inverse relationship between savings rate and multiplier effect. If savings rate in US is rising, multiplier will fall - which is probably one reason why M3 growth rate is falling. This will ultimately have a negative "capping" impact on US GDP. Conversely, a falling savings rate in Japan will have a positive "driving" impact on Japanese multiplier and GDP. The divergence in savings rates might be why Japanese Yen is softer than Euro.

Here's a hypothetical situation arising from all of the above:

Problem is the short term Dollar chart is looking VERY vulnerable based on oscillators.

Which raises a question: How close are we to an accident?

Conclusion

There's many a slip twixt cup and lip. Whilst I can see a hypothetical pathway through the jungle, Gold remains the ultimate "Insurance Policy"


Brian Bloom

Australia, September 29th 2004.