Chart Of The Day: Has Gold’s Breakout Killed Animal Spirits?

 | Aug 30, 2017 10:03

By Pinchas Cohen

Stock valuations have only been this high twice historically—in 1929 and in 2000—right before the markets crashed. This week, a ballistic missile invaded Japan’s airspace, yet Japanese traders resumed their work with a sense of business-as-usual, trading up stocks. Some might consider that an obvious sign of complacency.

Gold has broken out of the range in which it has been trading this year. What does this technical event suggest about investor understanding of market fundamentals? The end of 2016 was marked by the animal spirits that ravaged through the herd, in which even grass-eaters turned carnivorous when gold fell 14.5 percent.

Since the beginning of the year, 2017 has been defined by investor indecision between risk-on and risk-off sentiment, with gold ranging between $1,200 and $1,300. Perhaps the upside breakout of the yellow metal suggests investors have decided in favor of risk-off with the death of animal spirits.