
On the 5-year chart we can further observe how gold has succeeded in breaking out upside from its long-term uptrend channel, an event that quite frequently leads to a vertical blowoff move, that is followed by an abrupt reversal, especially if, as is the case here, the price is already way above its long-term moving average, signalling that the intermediate uptrend is mature. Not only is the price way above the 200-day moving average, but this indicator is now rising at a very steep rate - a rate that is regarded as unsustainable.

In conclusion, although further short-term upside potential exists for gold, and the current uptrend from the fall of last year may end with a vertical spike, this uptrend is believed to be getting close to terminating. This fits with silver which is getting close to burnout and is likely to go into sudden reverse.

On the 6-month chart we can see the strong gains by silver over the past month, but it should be clear that although we might see a brief period of even steeper advance before this uptrend exhausts itself, silver is now extremely overbought as indicated by short-term oscillators and moving averages gaps. This is now an increasingly high-stakes game and is regarded as the province of the brave - or the foolish. In order to avoid sleepless nights two alternative strategies are suggesting for handling this situation. One is take the big profits on offer immediately, and although we obviously don’t like to do this as we are not operating as a charitable institution, adopt the philosophy of “leaving a little for the next man (or woman)”. The other is to automatically exit on a closing break of the 10-day moving average, which although it involves loss of some profits, avoids one getting caught in a potential serious downdraught that such a break might lead to.

The 5-year chart puts recent gains into a broader perspective, and on this chart silver’s overbought extreme is even more obvious. Admittedly, "it might be different this time round", but we are happy to let others run the risk of finding out whether this is true. Given that markets tend to go down twice as fast as they go up, can you imagine the speed of the descent if this breaks down? - to get some idea try looking at April 2004.
Clive Maund, Diploma Technical Analysis
support@clivemaund.com
www.clivemaund.com
Kaufbeuren, Germany, 10 April 2006
No responsibility can be accepted for losses that may result as a consequence of trading on the basis of this analysis.