It seems many once notable gold and silver bugs have
abandoned the precious for what? In these uncertain
financial times selling precious metals may look
wise in the short term but what investment class is
doing better? It appears the U.S. dollar is going to
swim against the main downward forces and stage a
counter trend rally through perhaps the summer and
that may just be the opportunity that savvy precious
metals investors are looking for to accumulate.
Certainly, this writer is in the camp that all
markets go up and down and within the major trend we
can see some rather vicious sell-offs in the April
issue of
The Morgan Report (TMR) I wrote:
“Silver and gold have risen
without much pause over these past six months or
so. It would not surprise me to see a correction
beginning now that may be long and have wild swings.
That in fact would be in the normal behavior,
because the people getting in right now are somewhat
“late” to the party, and any significant weakness
might just shake them out of the market. In other
words, the people who waited to buy until just
recently will panic and sell. That's normal too.
The precious metals markets
need to have a rest, and after this final flurry of
activity, we might see more downside pressure due to
less buying and perhaps the U.S. Mint catching up
with the demand for Silver Eagles. Let's be
realistic and see how the market develops over the
next few months. There may be some good
opportunities to come, and remaining calm may be a
good strategy. I'm still focusing on the metals
markets to see how far down this correction goes and
how long it takes. It could well take the market
down by 25% and endure for six months. As
subscribers know, the “sell the first of May and go
away” adage might apply.
However, we need to be clear
that this correction could be very short. If the
gold and silver prices start to go back and then go
above $1,000 and $20, then it would be a testament
to just how astoundingly strong the metals bull
market is.”
Over the past few trading
sessions we have seen gold and silver give technical
clues that expecting lower prices on an intermediate
term basis is the most likely case. This does not
mean you should turn bearish on a long-term basis
only look at current weakness as an opportunity to
buy or add to your holdings. Be patient and ask
yourself what asset class is performing better than
the commodity sector? Housing, the Dow, Money
Markets, or antique automobiles? Knowing the sector
got over heated for a short time is far different
than thinking it was a bubble and the bubble has
burst!
Normally during a long-term
bull market, it would be completely natural for gold
and silver to be correcting after a run up like we
just experienced. With the technical picture having
been damaged to the extent we discussed, gold could
go as lower and this would not worry me, I have been
through this type of market sentiment before.
My point is that we may
experience a tough summer once again, but in a bull
market most surprises are to the upside not the
downside. As more and more former gold bugs abandon
ship, and the sentiment gets very poor you can rest
assured the bottom has arrived. Then the precious
metals continue to ascend the wall of worry.
David Morgan
E-mail:
ibtimes@silver-investor.com
Mr. Morgan has followed the
silver market daily for over thirty years. Much of
this Web site,
www.silver-investor.com, is devoted to education
about the precious metals.