first majestic silver

Dirty old Tricks

March 27, 2011

All in all it was a great week. Markets rebounded nicely and shrugged off higher oil prices and put in very good performances. Bottoms seem to be in, in nearly every market I watch, Egypt's being one exception but after being closed for so long it did hold up very well in my view.

The bag of dirty old tricks was pulled out late in the week though in regards to silver, as the CME raised margin rates on futures. That exact moment has marked short-term tops in silver and gold every single time in the last six months. It appears that is the case once again.

But these are just that. Short-term tops. Gold and silver are likely to feel some more pressure but it will be very short lived. I suggest you look for technical levels which have held during short-term corrections in the recent past and look at those as buy areas.

Still, the Japanese situation is not under control and it's thought that radioactive water is leaking into the ocean. New earthquakes hit in Asia but this time they were land locked near Chang Mai and into Myanmar. They are bad no doubt, and caused widespread devastation, but they could have been worse.

Unrest is spreading throughout the Middle East in what is now an epidemic spreading very quickly from country to country. There have been some serious cases of genocide in Syria told of, and many other atrocities.

The two big questions I have are.

Where will it stop.

And, are we going to enforce no-fly zones and enforce protective military action in every country that sees similar circumstances to what is occurring in Libya.

As to where it will stop I have no idea.

As to where we draw the line on no-fly zones and the like. I used to think it was a good idea for the no-fly zone, and that we were far to slow in imposing it. Now I'm not so sure. Are we effectively going to go to war against the whole region? Can we?

And the animosity created would not be worth it in my opinion. It's a akin to poking at a hornets nest now and we're sure to be stung.

Metals Review

Gold ended the week pretty flat having risen only 0.79%. It didn't quite breakout yet, but it's very close and we should see limited downside here, perhaps to test the uptrend line around $1,410 before we power through all-time highs and beyond $1,500.

For now we remain stalled, but not for long.

Right now gold is building a reverse head and shoulders pattern which should power gold higher by about $80 to the $1,520 area before we see a setback below $1,500.

The GLD ETF saw Thursday's volume the highest for the week as the CME raised margins on silver which also knocked gold lower. So far the price is holding strong and volume was also quite strong on Friday as gold held it's ground, but recent peaks have coincided closely with margin increases so I'll have to give it a few more days to see if it is the case this time as well.

Silver rose 5.83% on the week. The dirty tricks continued as the CME increased margins Thursday and that looks like it was the top for now. Many highs have been marked by the exact moment margins are increased recently and this time looks no different.

I have a very good idea where silver will see support and then begin moving higher again back into highs, but that information has to be reserved for subscribers.

I do expect some short-term downside in the coming week.

As should be expected Thursday's margin increases sparked very high volume in the SLV ETF. This marked the highest level for the week but as silver held it's ground well Friday, we also saw quite heavy volume.

Platinum rose 1.63% for the week. Its chart is a mess though with no pattern or real solid trend as of yet. Platinum is struggling get above it's 100 day moving average for the moment and that is actually a good thing.

I hope to see a bit of a base or pattern build here over the next week or so beneath the 100 day moving average, then we could move higher with much more solid conviction.

The PPLT ETF volume was pretty low every day in the week telling me nobody is stepping in much either way for now.

Palladium rose 2.63% for the week and is working its way back up. A bottom does appear to be in. Right now we are seeing it struggle to move above the 21 day and 100 day moving averages which are at the same level.

Ideally I'd be happiest to see a stall here and a little drop to make a higher low before we break above those two moving averages and put in a higher high. I am looking for the higher high to occur at the upper Fibonacci level at $791.

PALL ETF volume was pretty tame for the week. There is no conviction yet. If we do see a higher low put it then we should begin to see volume pick back up again as a low will be much more secure.

Fundamental Review

The Canadian government fell this past week and an election will be held early May. A great waste of taxpayer money if you ask me. No party really is much different from the other in my humble opinion. I just try and steer clear of politics in general and try and focus on making money.

This comes on the same day that the lead role in the Libyan fiasco is handed to Canada. Interesting.

UK households are facing the largest income decrease since the 1970's as inflation picks up. I'm glad this isn't occurring in the US. Inflation has ticked up to 4.4%, well above the 2% target in the UK and also above the forecast of 4.2%.

Oh wait. Nearly everything you buy is going up in price. Is your wage going up to compensate? I didn't think so.

Actually it looks like things are that bad as a report was just issued stating that US household wealth has declined by 23% over the past two years. Ouch. That sure is a kick below the belt just as we are being told everything is getting better.

I know personally that following our investment strategy and our beliefs/facts we've done much better than a 23% increase over the last year alone, let alone the past two years. I won't ramble on about our investing/trading strategies as I do that often enough here, but they basically consist of physical metals, dividends, miners and swing trading.

It's all ok though now since Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is going to address the nation on a quarterly basis from here on out to fill our ears with more lies. If that makes you feel better then may god have mercy on your soul.

Iran has apparently been buying gold in secret. I bet that's the case in many, many other countries. The cable reported the Bank of England in 2006 observing Iran's buying as they were diversifying into gold "as a means of protecting its reserves from the risk of seizure".

Sure enough, later in the week it was reported that Tehran has also been buying large amounts of gold over the past decade. Good luck proving this, but I wouldn't bet against it and would actually be shocked to learn this assertion is false.

Funny enough Muammer Gaddafi has a stash of 143.8 tonnes of the gold stuff and it's in his country, not in a depository in the US like so many other countries gold. It's hard to freeze gold, but easy to freeze bank accounts.

So does this mean the boys in Iran, Tehran and Libya are smarter than US economic figureheads?

No. The US ones know what gold is and what it stands for, they just lie to the public about the virtues of gold.

I've said it a hundred times before, if you can't access your physical metals in a relatively short amount of time and without jumping through many hoops, chances are you don't actually have any physical metals.

Warren Bevan is a renowned trader who’s honed his craft over the years learning the styles and techniques of Jesse Livermore, William O’Neil and Dan Zanger and forming his own unique style. He focuses on making money and going hard when the right markets present themselves and during the rest of the time focuses on capital preservation.  He focuses on the leading fast moving stocks during the good times.  He is a proud Canadian, traveler, explorer, and consummate market geek who tells it as he sees it. Warren’s website is www.wizzentrading.com and his email address is [email protected]


The first use of gold as money occurred around 700 B.C., when Lydian merchants (western Turkey) produced the first coins
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