Can Gold’s Bullish Price Beat These 5 Bearish Indicators?

 | Jun 20, 2016 00:15

We are very closely watching the trend in the gold market, and we know that readers are doing the same based on the many thousands of views on our latest gold articles.

Last week, we wrote that $1,291 is an extremely important gold price, and that at least 5 consecutive closes above that price would suggest the bull market in gold has returned. We explained why $1,291 is such an important gold price, and why June 2016 is an incredibly important month.

We took a deep dive into our gold indicators, and basically found out that all our indicators are flashing red. That is very odd, and certainly not in line with Friday’s bullish gold price action. Our gold indicators are definitely not in line with what Bloomberg is suggesting.

On Friday, gold performed extremely well, as it managed to close above $1,291 on strong volume. That’s the first day with a close above $1,291, so at least four more closes above that price level are required for a strong sign that gold has entered a new bull market.

From a chart perspective, gold looks bullish, but that as it is not in line with the leading precious metals indicators in our methodology. Our indicators look (very) bearish. In all honesty, we are also surprised about this strong divergence.

The two indicators that we consider most concerning are the Commitment of Traders (COT) data for both gold and silver. We have explained many times how we interpret the COT data: the faster the net short positions of commercials (hedgers) grow, to an extreme level, the more bearish the outlook for prices. Both gold and silver had an extremely fast run up between January and March of 2016. That is very bearish.

Chart courtesy: Sharelynx

Please take into account that the COT report is not a timing indicator. COT data have to be read against price action and other gold indicators. In other words, if the COT report is very bearish right at strong overhead resistance on a chart, it suggests that there is not much power for a rally to continue.

Our third indicator with an extremely bearish reading is gold sentiment. According to Sentimentrader, gold’s optimism index got ahead of itself. The index has moved above 75 for the first time since 2011, a troubling level. That’s especially true since “smart money” commercial hedgers have moved to a near-record net short position against the metal.