Gold and silver recover…. but only slightly!

December gold futures - daily chart
December gold futures – daily chart

For gold and silver bulls, yesterday’s price action brought some much-needed relief to the recent relentless trend lower, with both metals moving higher in the session. For gold, the intraday low of $1226.30 tested the strong platform of support at this level, which duly held, as the precious metal recovered to close at $1235.10 with a relatively wide-spread up candle on average volume. Not a change in trend, but welcome nevertheless! In overnight trading this mildly bullish tone has continued with gold trading at $1237.30 on Globex for the December futures contract at time of writing. Any future progress higher for gold, as with other commodities, will be heavily influenced by the FOMC and the two-day meeting which gets underway later today, with all eyes on the tone of any statements from Janet Yellan. With markets expecting the hawkish tone to develop further, and with the US dollar poised to break higher, the current recovery for gold is likely to be short-lived, and nothing more than a minor rally which we have seen many times before. Whilst the buying season in India may provide some relief, the longer term outlook for gold remains heavily bearish, and last week’s five consecutive down days on high volume, was evidence enough, if any more were needed. The key level is now the support which held firm yesterday in the $1228 per ounce region, but if this is breached, gold is likely to continue lower once again, reflecting the negative sentiment for commodities in general on the CRB index, which too has ticked lower again this morning, down 0.06 at 281.84.

December silver futures - daily chart
December silver futures – daily chart

Moving to the December futures contract for silver, yesterday’s recovery was muted, with the metal closing with a small doji candle on very low volume. The pause point of yesterday, and the minor move higher overnight, simply reflect the limited buying which appeared on Friday, as evidenced by the small lower wick to the candle body. For silver bulls as with gold bulls, the longer term outlook remains heavily bearish, and with the depth of resistance now overhead in the $19.40 per ounce area, this is adding yet more downwards pressure. As I have pointed out in previous posts, if the $18.50 per ounce level is breached, then expect to see silver move deeper still and down towards $13.80 per ounce in the longer term. What is perhaps more interesting for silver, is that despite the continued bullish momentum for stocks, the industrial metal continues to decline, and like copper, appears to be a relationship that has fallen out of correlation. Whatever the reason, the sentiment for both silver and gold remains very bearish, and until we see a buying climax, accompanied by an extended phase of price consolidation and congestion, there are no signs yet of any reversal in the short-term for either metal. By Anna Coulling

About Anna 2009 Articles
Hi – my name is Anna Coulling and I am a full time currency, commodities and equities trader. I have been involved in both trading and investing for over fifteen years and have traded many different financial instruments, from options and futures to stocks and commodities. I write and publish articles ( mostly for free ) for UK and international publications on a wide variety of financial issues, and in particular I enjoy helping others learn how to invest and trade.

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