Taylor On US Markets & Gold
ROG'S CORNER 2/25/05
PRECIOUS METALS AND OIL CONTINUE RALLY

"Today was good. Today was fun. Tomorrow is another one." -Dr. Seuss

Kids for many years loved old Dr. Seuss. Everybody enjoys a day when all lights are green and markets are headed our way. Today, in spite of up stock markets, gold showed us it is not going weak or will backslide. It has proven it will only get stronger in the face of a sideways dollar and positive stocks reports. This is the Goldilocks scenario for precious metals, energy, grains, and other commodities. Sir Alan's next problem is how to walk the thin wire between introducing higher rates to tap the brakes without flipping over our housing markets. You've got to hand it to him. While the trip wires multiply, he is jumping and dancing over and around them, delaying and avoiding the finality we know is coming. The Ides of March is looking quite ominous to me.

Dow Jones Industrial Average: Closed at 10,841.60 +92.81. Dow rallied today on good news and strong upward movement in housing stocks after Pulte Homes issued a glowing report. Confusion in housing markets is created by regionalization. Some areas are flat to down, while others on both coasts and some Sunbelt states continue to expand in the bubble. Trader Tracks had a good week with trades going into the green while gold and silver continued to rally. Silver finished on a sell-off note after some profit taking, which was expected. Dow chart formed a double top in late December and this February. Prices today have produced another double top just for the month of February. The Nasdaq made a triple top as well, but with three tops in row, tightly grouped together. Today's Dow triple top completion finishes the group and delayed the selling only a little. Upward channel lines are squeezing together in bear flag. Price was over all moving averages. PMO lines have closed together, indicating a side to down movement. Volume was lower indicating lack of buying power in spite of price moving +92.81 points. Short trend is up; intermediate trend is up; long trend is down. Fund managers talk of being stock pickers. This is lingo for "We can't find anything with value to buy, as most is overpriced." Warren Buffet said this long ago, as did we. This is one scary market preparing to dive while trying to hang on. Sell.

S&P 500 Index: Closed at 1211.37 +11.17. Price closed above all moving averages. Chart has a small double top at the lower end of December high in 2004. PMO lines have crossed and are bending up. Daily bar close at top end tells us more buying power for next Monday. Main support remains at 1165. Waves show today's up bar might be a last topping indicator before down pressure begins next week. Short and intermediate trends are up; long trend is down. Sell.

S&P 100 Index: Closed at 578.57 +4.80. Chart pattern is copy of S&P 500 chart. New triple top is being formed and PMO lines are crossing and turning down. Price is over all moving averages and closed on an up bar, showing more buying coming on Monday. This chart group will be the last to tumble after the Nasdaq, S&P, and Dow. Sick markets cause safety buying in this top group. It has the same problems the others have but they are not quite as apparent as yet. Short and intermediate trends are up, and long trend is down. I view this last rally as a set-up for large sellers to escape with profits while Sheeple get left holding an empty bag. Sell.

Nasdaq 100 Index: Closed at 1526.90 +9.19. Chart formed a large triple top in December. Price sold down to 1500 support and now we have a small head and shoulders pattern between 1500 and 1550. This shows a more advanced sell off position than Dow and S&P. I see a weaker chart than the other two, which should lead the three markets in selling off first. PMO is bending up and crossing over to side. Main support is 200-day price at 1490.72. Once broken it should accelerate in selling. Price is over the 20-day, but under the 50-and 200-day. Short trend is up; intermediate and long trends are down. Sell.

30-Year Bond Price: Closed at 113.75 -0.09. Price remains in a bear flag formation but is supporting above the lower channel line. PMO has crossed over and is down. Price is over the 200-day average but under the 20-and 50-day. Main support is the 200-day at 110.90. Federal Reserve has a meeting on 3-22-05 and is expected to raise rates ¼ point. Fed governors intend to keep the housing market rolling as it's the last leg holding up the consumer who is 70% of all buying power. Inflation and deflation exist causing stagflation. Corporate bonds offer little return with plenty of risk. Junk bonds provide high risk and lower than average return. France is preparing to sell 50-year bonds next week, which are expected to receive a good buyer reception including from Americans. Pressure is building to begin selling our 30's once again. Fed says no. Short trend is sideways; intermediate trend is down; long trend remains up. Confusion dominates. Stay out.

Gold: Closed at 434.70 +0.50. Price remains over key resistance and support level of 429. PMO lines are moving up and spreading showing strength. Price is over all three moving averages and broke through overhead channel line last week. All indicators are up and if the current wave is a continuation of a long wave one, this portends to be a powerful up thrust for the market. We forecast 455 minimum in this cycle and possibly 476. We have three to four weeks left in the gold up cycle. Short, intermediate, and long trends are all up. Buy.

Gold & Silver Index XAU: Closed at 98.88 +0.35. Five-step down wave selling pattern is completed and the second wave up is underway. Presidents' Day news shocked this market creating a gap up at 95-96, which must be filled. Question is do we go back and fill it now or will this come later at the end of the gold rally cycle? I think it comes at the end with selling after we peak out on gold and silver stocks prices in this current rally. Short trend is side; intermediate trend is up; and long trend is up. Buy.

U.S. Dollar Index: Closed at 82.87 +0.10. As we expected, dollar formed a solid head and shoulder pattern with a 30-day left shoulder and probably a right shoulder to come and match it in width and size. Dollar should stay between .8200 and .8400 through March, barring any major upsets. Price is under the 200- and 50-day averages and above the 20-day. PMO is down and price has found the + or - Fibonacci retracement level of -50% from the top. Short and intermediate trends are down while long trend is side to down. Stay out.

Light Sweet Crude Oil: Closed at 51.39 +0.22. Price remains in a bullish up channel in a powerful third wave expected to go to $55 resistance and possibly $60. PMO is up. Price is significantly above all moving averages and resides at the inside top of channel lines trying to go higher. Price gapped at $49, which must be filled, probably on selling, profit taking much later on. I expect this three wave up to continue for another four to six weeks. Topping and early selling will occur when definite prices are settled on the April unleaded gasoline contract at the end of March. Short, intermediate, and long trends are all up. This is the market leader now. Buy.

CRB Index: Closed at 298.04 -1.12. Price has powered through top main trend line. This was primarily driven by oil and grain rallies this week. Price over all moving averages and the PMO lines are apart and moving almost straight up which is inflationary. Bull pennant channel lines will close together way out in time, probably 1-2 years. Price has topped and hit main resistance at the magic 300 price marker. After a brief rest here, we expect more power buying with the push coming mostly from grains and oil and with more from gold and silver. Inflation is going to hit hard for now and later on be overcome with deflation. All trends are up. Buy on a small setback in prices. -Trader Rog

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SUBSCRIBER CHALLENGE TO DEFLATION VIEWS

QUESTION: Jay, Appreciate your analyses of gold stocks in your monthly and weekly newsletters but totally disagree with Professor Fekete's and Bob Hoye's deflation scenarios.

Best regards,

Larry

ANSWER: Larry there is almost nothing you said here that I agree with so I hardly know where to start. But I will try:

  1. There is no reason in the world why the yen carry-speculator would not borrow short-term yen and then simply roll that loan over for the amount he needs to borrow to refinance a fixed amount of dollars he laid out to purchase the U.S. Treasuries. I don't know where you get the notion that the funding side of this transaction has to be exactly in sync with the assets side. In fact borrowing short term and lending long term is so common, especially among major financial institutions such as those who engage in the yen carry trade, that it would be shocking if they did match maturities in the trade. Since this is a basic argument that Antal Fekete advances, if you disagree with this, then there isn't much reason to continue the discussion. And of course he does simultaneously purchase forward contract to swap yen for dollars to match the short-term maturity of his yen loan.


  2. I don't think the Japanese investors are unaware of the desire to inflate the dollar away because they have been doing the same thing to their own currency. In fact, both countries (and in fact the entire world) have been engaging in a beggar-thy-neighbor competitive devaluation scheme that is so reminiscent of the 1930s.


  3. Your assumption that the dollar will be "toast" is much more widely accepted than my view that there is going to be a dollar short squeeze that will be triggered by the enormous indebtedness of Americans if called by the "margin clerks" (as Hoye calls them). But that is what will happen I believe because as is so clearly true, the amount of new debt money the U.S. has to create to try to become GDP-positive is growing exponentially. Once again, I can't help but show the following chart that so clearly makes the point. Sooner or later, the U.S. becomes insolvent and a process of liquidation will be underway that will cause stocks, corporate bonds-especially junk bonds, commodities, real estate, art objects, you name it-to collapse to values that are a tiny portion of their current inflated values.


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March 4, 2005

Jay Taylor, Editor of J Taylor's Gold & Technology Stocks
www.miningstocks.com