Posts Tagged ‘gld’

S&P Support Remains 1120; Markets On A Bumpy Ride

Monday, August 22nd, 2011

Stocks squeezed out a small gain in light, choppy trading Monday, erasing most of the session’s earlier gains as traders were hesitant to fully jump in without any proper market conviction. Investors grappled with an uncertain economic outlook ahead of a key speech by Fed chairman Ben Bernanke on Friday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 37 points, or 0.34 percent, to finish at 10,854.65 a key support above 10,800. The S&P notched up 0.29 points, or 0.03 percent, to close at 1,123.82 above the key support of 1120. Financial institutions were among the biggest drag in the markets.

At the end of the week, all eyes will be on Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke as he makes his widely-anticipated speech at the Fed’s annual Jackson Hole, Wyoming symposium. Investors will watch for any signs of a possible round of asset purchases QE3 (also known as quantitative easing) which will likely help bolster the stock market temporarily. QE2 did not support markets permanently as we currently see.

Investors remain are also concerned about the debt problems in Europe, where policymakers have yet to propose a long-term solution. But he said business and consumer confidence in the United States may not be a weak as many investors had feared.

Meanwhile gold surged to settle at $1,891 an ounce, another all-time high, as investors fled to the commodity as a safe-haven play amid fears of another U.S. recession and the euro zone’s ongoing debt crisis.

US Markets To Continue Sell Off Friday

Friday, August 19th, 2011

U.S. stocks were headed for another day of losses Friday, as worries of a global slowdown and Europe’s debt crisis sparked a second sell-off in global markets. Dow Jones industrial Average (DJIA) down (100), S&P 500 (SPX) down (9) to 1130  futures fell more than 1% ahead of the opening bell. Many investors are concerned the world economy is on the brink of another recession. European stocks approached two-year lows in Friday morning trade after already suffering heavy losses on Thursday. Fears that euro zone leaders would not be able to contain the debt crisis weighed on stocks, as did concerns over funding for European banks. Europeans are playing with fire and delaying the inevitable. They need to gurantee the back stop from bank losses. Commodities also suffered on Friday, with oil lower amid concerns about global growth. Meanwhile gold (NYSE:GLD) continued to touch new highs at $1875.

A day after Morgan Stanley cut global growth forecasts and said the United States and Europe are “dangerously close to a recession,” Deutsche Bank downgraded its growth outlook for China. The German investment bank said a slowdown or recession in the U.S. or European economies would be “the single most important shock to the Chinese economy,” and could slow the nation’s GDP growth to 7%. In 2010, China’s economy grew at a robust rate above 10%, and is forecast to grow more than 9% in 2011.

Meanwhile, JPMorgan Chase trimmed its fourth-quarter U.S. GDP annual growth estimate to 1%, down from its previous projection of 2.5%. The bank also lowered its outook for the first quarter of 2012 to a 0.5% annual growth rate from 1.5%, warning that the risks of a recession are “are clearly elevated.

Currencies and commodities: The dollar firmed against the euro and British pound, and was flat versus the Japanese yen. Looks like the dollar may be primed for a teporary run up as the Euro has been a steady down trend. Oil for September delivery slipped $1.50 to $80.88 a barrel, having fallen as low as $79.17 earlier in the session.

Bonds: The price on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury fell slightly, pushing the yield up to 2.09% from 2.08% late Thursday.

Next Week:

MONDAY: Chicago Fed Nat’l Activity Index
TUESDAY: New home sales, Richmond Fed Business Activity Survey, 2-Yr Note Auction; Earnings from Heinz
WEDNESDAY: Weekly mortgage apps, durable goods orders, oil inventories, 5-yr note auction; Earnings from Toll Brothers, Applied Materials, TiVo
THURSDAY: Weekly jobless claims, 7-yr note auction, Medtronic shareholders mtg, USDA food prices outlook; Earnings from Hormel, Pandora
FRIDAY: GDP, corproate profits, consumer sentiment, Bernanke speaks, short-sale bans expire; Earnings from Tiffany

Is CME Hintng Gold Bulls To Bail

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

U.S. exchange operator CME Group said late Wednesday it is raising the margin requirements for trade in a wide range of gold products, effective Thursday. The speculative margin requirement for a new position in Comex 100 gold futures will rise to $7,425 from $6,075, or to $5,500 from $4,500 for existing “current maintenance” margins. That increases the margin requirement by 22.2 percent. The sharp rally in gold futures, which have risen more than 9.5 percent in the past four sessions, had prompted market talk of a margin rise. A series of CME margin rises on silver in May provoked a massive sell-off in that metal and gave momentum to a slide across commodities markets. An exchange typically raises margin requirements to discourage excessive risk-taking. The CME last changed margins for COMEX 100 Gold Futures on June 16. The Shanghai Gold Exchange will also raise trading margins on three of its gold forward contracts to 11 percent from 10 percent starting Aug. 12.

Historically when margins are raised significantly it tends to cause a bit of sell-off. We’ve seen some of it now, but it’s difficult to see a great deal of selling, because we are in very, very volatile and uncertain times when markets are moving very violently. Gold has proven too much an attraction as an alternative investment and the margins may not have as much influence. The margin hike comes after the U.S. Federal Reserve’s statement to keep interest rates low failed to calm investors reeling from the news of a debt downgrade of the United States. A sharp fall in French bank stocks on Wednesday added to concern that the euro zone sovereign debt crisis could spread further.

Has the CME signaled that Bull rally is over with an early warning shot? I believe so. When the CME imposed a similar margin requirement followed by 3 additional margin restrictions, silver dropped from $50 to $38 in a matter of days. But who knows, if past history is any indicator of the future, I would take past history as a pretense.

Thrashing On Wall Street; US Markets Erase Yesterday’s Gain

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

The Dow Jones industrial average (DJIA) lost 520 points, or 4.6%, to 10,720. The index ended the day near session lows. The S&P 500 (SPX) fell 52 points, or 4.4%, to 1,121. 1120 in the S&P remains a key factor of support. Stocks were led lower by the financial sector. On Wednesday afternoon CEO of embattled Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) Brian Moynihan tried to reassure investors that conditions at the bank and in the country are much better than they were four years ago when the financial crisis hit. BofA has fallen nearly 50% so far this year. On Wednesday, shares of French bank Societe Generale tumbled 15% on the Paris stock exchange amid speculation that France, Europe’s second-largest economy after Germany, may be first to face a rating cut. European banking shares also fell sharply. Deutsche Bank’s (NYSE:DB) stock dropped 12% while Spanish bank Banco Santander (NYSE:STD) dropped 9.5%. Even though the major rating agencies have reiterated France’s AAA rating, there’s growing concern that France could get downgraded, which caused the markets to drop further. Ahead of the opening bell Wednesday, the New York Stock Exchange invoked Rule 48, which gives the exchange the right to pause trading in the event of extreme volatility. The NYSE typically invokes the rule several times each year. Wall Street’s most widely cited measure of volatility and fear in the market, the VIX, surged almost 22% to 43. A reading higher than 30 is considered a sign that investors are getting worried, but the VIX is still way below the peak level of almost 90 hit in October 2008 — after Lehman Brothers collapsed.

Gold

Gold futures kept the winning streak alive today, tagging another record high. Tuesday’s decision by the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates extremely low, coupled with uncertainty about the fate of France’s credit rating, only strengthened the commodity’s “safe haven” allure. Against this backdrop, gold for December delivery added $41.30, or 2.4%, to close at $1,784.30 an ounce. Earlier in the session, the contract topped out at an all-time best of $1,801 an ounce. Gold, which doesn’t pay dividends or interest and costs money to store, has become more attractive amid low interest rates. A rise in real interest rates is one of the drawbacks of gold investing, as it encourages investors to sell the metal rather than missing out on higher-yielding assets. Worries about weak global growth and currency debasement have also driven gold higher, especially in recent days amid turmoil following the Standard & Poor’s downgrade of U.S. debt and a string of disappointing economic data. The “opportunity costs of holding gold remain extremely low. Furthermore, there is also a risk of inflation rising further should the Fed actually loosen the monetary policy even more.

Market Massacre: DJIA Down 635, Gold $1700, VIX Up 50%

Monday, August 8th, 2011

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA – 10,809.85) swallowed its steepest loss since December 2008 today, giving up 634.8 points, or 5.6%, by the time the bell sounded. In fact, the DJIA ended south of the 11,000 level for the first time this calendar year. The S&P plummeted 79.92 points, or 6.66%, to close at 1,119.46, its lowest close since Sept. 10, 2010. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, which last week lost 698 points, nearly matched that drop in a single session, with Monday marking its worst day since late 2008. With Standard & Poor’s downgrade of U.S. credit exacting a heavy toll on already troubled investor sentiment.”Downgrade” was the word of the day on Wall Street today, as investors reacted to Standard & Poor’s late-Friday revision to the U.S. credit rating. The major market indexes headed south right out of the gate, and selling pressure intensified as the session progressed despite President Obama’s attempts to control the damage. Markets dropped another 2% after Obama’s speech.”No matter what some agency may say, we’ve always been and always will be a triple-A country,” Obama said, not long after the White House questioned S&P’s math. As traders made a mad dash for the relative safety of gold. The CBOE Volatility Index, widely considered the best gauge of fear in the market, spiked above 40 to touch its highest level since March. 2009 up 50%. 13th worst single day decline since WWII.

Volume was very heavy with the consolidated tape of the NYSE at 9.29 billion shares, while 2.54 billion shares changed hands on the floor. That exceeded last Friday’s heavy volume, which was the heaviest since the Flash Crash on May 6, 2010. According to Dow Jones, this was the 4th largest volume day in history on the NYSE.

Crude oil futures followed stocks into the red today, as the downgrade-induced decline on Wall Street amplified fears of fading demand. By the close, September-dated crude fell $5.57, or 6.4%, to end at $81.31 per barrel, black gold’s lowest settlement price since Nov. 23, 2010. Gold futures, on the other hand, skyrocketed to a new all-time best today, after S&P’s downgrade sparked a widespread flight to safety. As traders shunned riskier assets in favor of tangible safe havens, December-dated gold futures soared $61.40, or 3.7%, to end at $1,713.20 an ounce. Earlier in the session, the most active contract topped out at $1,719.09 an ounce.

Where should one invest during a Market Correction. Read here for a list short based ETF’s

What Does The S&P Downgrade Affect

1. The cost of government borrowing just went up, that includes states and munis too. This adds to your tax burden.

2. Higher government borrowing costs filter through the economy. It makes it slightly more expensive for corporations to borrow money. This is a drag on GDP.

3. Higher corporate borrowing costs filter down to consumers-the cost of some consumer loans might be slightly higher.

4. Puts a lot of political pressure on elected officials to actually cut the budget. We need to get back to a more traditional GDP/debt ratio. Once that’s done, why wouldn’t S&P take us back up to AAA?

S&P Technicals

Is today’s 6.66% drop in the S&P strike a similar resemblance of March 9, 2009 low of 666? Some traders made a note of this key number. Does this mean, we’re bound for a rally? Is this a buy signal that will lead to a market capitulation. There was broad selling across the board.Its very hard to believe we’ll get a strong bounce similar to 2009. Lets put the VIX in the spotlight. October 2008 the VIX hit a striking high of 89.53. It doesn’t look like it’s stopping any time soon. It’s as if the markets are experiencing a slow steady “flash crash”. Read my initial call from May 23rd 2011. I hate to say this, but we may be heading to a double-dip recession if we close firmly below 1100. We’re 19 points away. Will the Fed safe the day tomorrow? Are we in a Correction or a Crash?

S&P Marks to keep in mind

6 Month 300 day Moving Average/61.8% retracement- 1220-1225 -BROKEN 8/4/2011

2nd support – 1195 -BROKEN 8/8/2011

50% Retracement – 1120-1150- Holding 1120- will this hold last line of defense.

10 year 200 day Moving Average/Ultimate Support/50% retracement – 1050 -1100 Double Dip Recession

Below 1070 – Double-Dip Recession – Growing increasingly Possible

May – August 2010 Neckline Low – 1050

Will the Fed announce QE3 Tomorrow

The Federal Open Market Committee meeting on Tuesday, which just two weeks ago was expected to be an almost throwaway gathering, has suddenly morphed into a major event. The Fed will have weighed both the market’s slide as well as recent economic data, such as the deterioration in manufacturing sector sentiment and the weak gross domestic product reports for both the first and second quarter. The question for them is whether this is a soft patch or a sustained slump in activity. We don’t know and they don’t know. Markets are discounting for the uncertainty. The market’s major question is if the Federal Reserve, which will deliver its interest-rate decision at 2:15 p.m. Eastern on Tuesday, will give any hints on the initiation of a third round of quantitative easing, a so-called QE3. The August meeting won’t be followed a press conference with Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, so any information the Fed wants to convey will have to be transmitted through its written statement. Bernanke will be making his annual major policy address in Jackson Hole, Wyo., at the end of the month.

But Fed followers say there’s not much ammunition left in the central bank’s cannon. And more broadly, monetary policy isn’t really the problem.

On Tap This Week:

TUESDAY: NFIB small biz optimism index, productivity and costs, 3-yr note auction, FOMC mtg announcement; Earnings from Disney
WEDNESDAY: Weekly mortgage apps, wholesale trade, oil inventories, 10-yr note auction, treasury budget; Earnings from Macy’s, Cisco
THURSDAY: International trade, jobless claims, 30-yr bond auction, money supply; Earnings from Kohl’s, Nordstrom, Nvidia
FRIDAY: Retail sales, consumer sentiment, business inventories; Earnings from JCPenney

QE3 In Planning Phase Says Bernanke

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

Bernanke looks to keep his nickname “Helicopter Ben.” Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress Wednesday that a new stimulus program is in the works that will entail additional asset purchases, the clearest indication yet that the central bank is contemplating another round of monetary easing. Bernanke said in prepared remarks that the economy is growing more slowly than expected, and should that continue the central bank stands at the ready with more accommodative measures. “Once the temporary shocks that have been holding down economic activity pass, we expect to again see the effects of policy accommodation reflected in stronger economic activity and job creation,” he said

My question Mr. Bernanke, if QE1 & QE2 did not spur job growth, what makes you think QE3 will? This will only spur artifical wealth to the middlelclass while the rich keep on getting richer. The only bright side I see to this is that pension funds and municipalities will have more time to recoup the loses incurred during “The Great Recession”. The dollar will continue to be devalued.

“However, given the range of uncertainties about the strength of the recovery and prospects for inflation over the medium term, the Federal Reserve remains prepared to respond should economic developments indicate that an adjustment in the stance of monetary policy would be appropriate.” Markets reacted immediately to the remarks, sending stocks up sharply in a matter of minutes. Gold & Silver prices continued to surge past record levels, while Treasury yields moved higher as well.

Delivering his twice-a-year economic report to Congress, Bernanke laid out three options the central bank would consider.

One option, Bernanke said, would be for the Fed to provide more “explicit guidance” to the pledge that rates will stay low for “an extended period.” Another approach would be another round of asset purchases, or quantitative easing, or for the Fed to “increase the average maturity of our holdings.” Bernanke said the Fed could launch another round of Treasury bond buying, the third such effort since 2009. It could cut the interest paid to banks on the reserves they hold as a way to encourage them to lend more. The Fed could also be more explicit in spelling out just how long it planned to keep rates at record-low levels. That would give investors confidence about the Fed’s efforts to continue supporting the economy.

Bernanke maintained that temporary factors, such as high food and gas prices, have slowed the economy. He said those factors should ease in the second half of the year and growth should pick up. But if that forecast proves wrong, he said the Fed is prepared to do more. (More likely to be launched by 2012 just in time for the election year) Bernanke also said it was possible that inflationary pressures spurred by higher energy and food prices may end up being more persistent than the Fed anticipates. He said that the central bank would be prepared to start raising interest rates faster than currently contemplated, if prices don’t moderate. Bernanke’s comments about inflation spoke to concerns expressed by some regional bank presidents at the Fed. The have criticized the Fed’s bond-buying program, saying it has increased the risk for higher inflation. The Fed has kept its key interest rate at a record low near zero since December 2008. Most private economists believe the Fed will not start raising interest rates until next summer. And some say the Fed won’t increase rates until 2013, based on the slumping economy.

Form of QE3 without adding to the Fed balance sheet. Read here

Exit Strategy

The Fed chairman detailed the “broad consensus” among Fed officials about how the Fed plans to exit its policy stance of a target federal-funds rate between 0% and 0.25% and holding roughly $2.6 trillion of securities. This agreement was unveiled in the minutes of the Fed’s June meeting. The suggested order of an exit from the current ultra-low stance on interest rates is first to cease reinvesting principal on bonds the Fed holds. After that, policy makers would either simultaneously or soon after change the forward guidance on the federal-funds rate, followed by raising the target for the federal-funds rate, and then selling agency securities after the first rate increase.

Bernanke defended the Fed’s controversial second round of asset purchases, or QE2, saying that it lowered long-term interest rates and boosted employment.  Bernanke said Fed officials still believed the unemployment rate would decline to a range of 8.6% to 8.9% by the fourth quarter. The jobless rate has moved up to 9.2% in June from 8.8% in March.

The strength of consumer spending will be a key determinant of the pace of the recovery in coming quarters, Bernanke said. Bernanke urged lawmakers not to give up on a more historic $4 billion deficit deal involving entitlements. “I, like many other people who watch budget developments, have been very excited by the idea that a very big program might be feasible and that we might do something that would stabilize our debt over the next decade. That would be a tremendous accomplishment,” Bernanke said. Bernanke pushed Congress to increase the debt ceiling, saying failure to act would spark a “major crisis” and roil the global economy. He said that the U.S. economy would certainly shed more jobs if the debt ceiling is not increased.

Gold & Silver

Gold surged to a record of $1,588.9 an ounce Wednesday as the possibility of more Federal Reserve stimulus coupled with Europe’s deepening debt crisis gave bullion its longest winning streak in five years. Fears that the euro zone debt crisis is spreading and uncertainty over frantic U.S. talks to raise its debt limit also underpinned precious metals. The yellow metal additionally hit all-time highs when priced in euro and sterling. Gold benefits from additional U.S. monetary easing because such a move would likely weaken the dollar and stir inflation down the road. The worst thing for gold would be to have the economy doing well enough that the Federal Reserve starts to normalize monetary policy, or conditions in the European Community begin to settle down.

Gold is set for an eighth consecutive day of gains, something it has not achieved since mid-October 2006, when it rose for nine days in a row. It has gained around 12 percent so far this year and more than doubled in price in the last four years. ”Gold will keep rising for the next five years, even if it has some crests and troughs,” said Michael Widmer, an analyst at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. “Those holding gold should hold onto it, while others should probably get their hands on it as it is going to be on an upward trend. “The sovereign debt crisis is helping the gold prices rise, but even if it is addressed in the short-term, the developed countries are in so much debt that it will continue to drive gold up for the next 10 years.” European Union leaders are expected to hold an emergency meeting on Friday after finance ministers acknowledged for the first time that some form of Greek default may be needed to cut Athens’ debts and stop contagion spreading to Italy and Spain.

Which Hedge Funds Are Selling Silver & Gold

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

Silver, gold fall for third day from record highs

More pressure is likely to show up in silver futures markets in coming days after the Chicago Mercantile Exchange notified traders today that it’ll raise margin requirements for a fourth time in a little more than a week. Effective after the close of business Thursday, the CME’s initial margin requirements — the minimum amount of cash that must be deposited when borrowing from brokers to trade silver — will increase to $18,900 per futures contract, up from $16,200. About a year ago, the margin was $4,250. Gold & Silver is often considered a hedge against possible currency depreciation.

Today was the first full-day of the CME’s third recent margin hike on silver contracts. The latest round means that investors will get two days of trading in before costs go up again. Separately, billionaire Carlos Slim has been selling silver futures to hedge the production of his silver mine. Slim, recently designated the world’s richest man by Forbes magazine, has been selling futures contracts dated out two to three years.

The report comes after today’s WSJ story detailing how several big hedge fundmanagers such as George Soros have been moving out of silver and gold. Soros Fund Management, one of the biggest hedge-fund firms in the world, sold much of its gold and silver investments over the past month because there’s less chance of deflation. One hedge-fund manager who holds a big gold position said that Soros could, in theory, sell gold and silver to take profits and then build positions back up within days, or even hours. Indeed, Soros said in September that gold was the “ultimate bubble,” even as his hedge-fund firm built big positions in the precious metal. A Soros spokesman declined to comment. Soros Fund Management, a $28 billion firm now run by Keith Anderson, bought gold to protect against deflation. It now believes there’s less risk of a sustained drop in consumer prices because the Federal Reserve is still pumping money into the financial system, the Journal reported, citing unidentified people familiar with Anderson’s thinking. Soros Fund Management isn’t too worried about a surge in inflation because the Fed may signal at the end of 2011 that interest-rate increases are coming — possibly early in 2012

In contrast, Paulson sees gold as a hedge against currency devaluation, rather than something to trade. Nevertheless, gold could climb as high as $4,000 an ounce over the next three to five years, according to John Paulson, head of hedge-fund giant Paulson & Co., speaking to investors. Paulson said he still has most of his personal wealth in gold-denominated funds run by Paulson & Co.. Many hedge funds may be sticking with their gold investments because they’re worried about a medium- to long-term decline in the value of the U.S. dollar.

John Burbank of Passport Capital also remains a long-term gold bull and expects to buy more gold-mining shares when they decline.

Silver for July delivery settled lower by $3.20 an ounce, or 7.5%, at $39.388 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. That was the lowest close since April 6. Gold for June delivery dropped $25.10, or 1.6%, to settled at $1,515.30 an ounce on Comex. That represented the contract’s biggest one-day percentage drop since March 15.

Meanwhile, the iShares Silver ETF (NYSE:SLV) fell 5.7% and the Global X Silver Miners ETF (SIL) closed down 0.2%.

The SPDR Gold ETF (NYSE:GLD) finished 1.4% lower and the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX) closed up by 0.2%.

The sibling Junior Miners Gold Trust (GDXJ) also managed to finish in positive territory, closing with a 0.1% gain.

Top holdings include Silver Standard Resources (SSRI), which was up 1.6%, andSilvercorp Metals (SVM), which gained 0.8%.

Note: Barclays has sent a late note advising clients to sell their silver positions. The firm’s analysts are now projecting that the correction will deepen and that futures could fall to around the $34 an ounce level before finding technical support. Gold’s floor appears to be around $1,475 an ounce, the report added. The analysts remain bullish on both, however, over the medium- to long-term view.

Silver Bull Run Just Ended: Correction Commenced

Monday, May 2nd, 2011

A correction has certainly started in Silver. We’ve plotted silver’s distance from its 200-day MA. Note that following previous spikes, the market always tested its 200-day MA and it didn’t take long for it to happen. We also compare the current spike to the spikes in 2004 and 2006. Those spikes retraced a little bit more than 62%. The 62% retracement of this spike is nearly $30. I would target for re-entry at around the $27-$30 range. A market that makes a new all time high for the first time in decades is a market that moves even faster in the future. If Silver follows the same path as gold then we could be looking at $90-$125 silver in 2014-2016.

In the chart above, you can see how silver has exploded since early February and now is approaching what could be the last phase of an impressive bull market.

Price acceleration like this tends to bring out the day traders, speculators and a high degree of public interest, and usually these are warning signals that come with the end of most bull markets and eventually lead to the loud popping of the bubble.

On Sunday, May 1st, 2011, silver futures experienced something of a “flash crash” in Asia trading, dropping as much as 12% in just minutes before eventually recovering some of that loss.  This type of volatile action can be the signal for a blowoff top, and with the assassination of Osama Bin Laden, one can expect that a swift decline in silver could occur as the dollar strengthens in response to this historic event.

With prices now reaching thirty year highs and silver’s price acceleration running well ahead of gold’s, the market certainly seems to be reaching an overheated stage.  However, bulls will argue that China will continue to drive sliver prices higher, along with major funds and India, while the CME Group has raised their margin requirements on multiple occasions recently to dampen enthusiasm for the white metal.  Bulls would also argue that $100 silver is a likely possibility and a look back at history would suggest that silver has been even more expensive in ancient times, commanding as much as $800 per ounce in inflation adjusted dollars as early as the 15th century.

If you’re a silver bull, the most popular ETF is SLV, which recently has been trading at higher volumes than even SPY, the S&P 500 Index ETF which is usually the largest ETF by trading volume.

If you’re a silver bear and think the bubble is about to pop, you could use (NYSE:ZSL), ZSL up 16% today, the ProShares Ultra Short ETF, that offers two times negative moves against silver prices or you could buy put options on (NYSE:SLV) SLV itself.

Is Silver (NYSE:SLV) Targeting $50 Next

Monday, April 25th, 2011

Silver traded to historic highs Monday the 25th of April , taking out the $49.45 an ounce that held for more than 30 years when the infamous Hunt brothers tried to corner the market. After closely reaching $50 where do we go from here. There’s are a technical warning sign in the Relative Strength Indicator (RSI), a gauge of magnitude of advancing days versus declines on down days. The RSI, has reached 89 last week, a level not seen since 2006. A pullback or “blow off top” as more of a short term correction is near, however the ultimate run is not over!

Taking out the old high was psychological. Silver is “not trading on any kind of intrinsic or fundamental value. It’s no surprise that the rally petered out “temporarily”. Regardless, investment demand for physical silver continues with strong demand coming from India and other parts of the emerging world. Momentum continues to side with the buyers.

On the contrarian view of Silver (NYSE:SLV) below I see a rather normalized trending currency, reflecting moderate fiat (dollar) debasement, within a technical framework remarkably similar to late 1980 early 1981. And low and behold, silver has very much been acting within the technical part as it did in 1980. In 1980, it was the Hunt Brothers cornering the silver market. Today, it’s more or less the sentiment of irrationality that is expressed on places like Zero Hedge and through maverick traders like Eric Sprott. One approach is a position in (NYSE:ZSL) (See below link of Silver High Since 1980) as an option trade on the silver market, without the serious risk of time decay you are exposed to with conventional options.

On the inflation side of the trade, I only see a minor pull back with the first major support below the market, to around the $45 an ounce, and $50 is the first major resistance. $125-$150 is the price in real or inflation adjusted terms that I’m targeting in the long run. Buy on any dips. I think this is the perfect opportunity to buy in a pullback price. Ben Bernanke is set to have the Fed’s first impromptu speech of the current fiscal policies to calm the bond and Treasury markets.

Eric Sprott

Canadian asset management firm Sprott Asset Management is lifting restrictions on its popular silver closed-end fund designed to give investors exposure to physical silver, a move that has at least one market observer concerned the fund’s price could be depressed as a result. As silver prices have soared in a parabolic fashion in recent months with New York Mercantile Exchange-traded silver for May delivery nearly touching $50 an ounce earlier in today’s session, Sprott Physical Silver Trust (NYSE:PSLV) has traded at a premium to its net asset value. On Friday, that premium rose to 22%, according to Barron’s.

Last week, Sprott announced in an SEC filing that it was lifting restrictions on 26% of the fund’s total units that manager Eric Sprott and affiliates had held off the market. Those units are worth $10 each, Barron’s reported, and a Wall Street Journal column notes they can be sold at anytime, which could lead to some selling pressure in the Sprott Physical Silver Trust. While the fund currently trades at levels that are more than double $10, making the now unrestricted units all the more attractive for Sprott and its affiliates that hold those units, there are no guarantees those units will actually be sold in the near-term. Consider that Sprott himself recently called silver the “investment of the decade” and said the white metal could eventually trade to $100 an ounce. If that happens, the Sprott Physical Silver Trust would soar in value, in turn leading to an even better exit point for units purchased at just $10.

At the end of 2010, Sprott held stakes in silver miners such as First Majestic Silver (NYSE:AG)Silver Wheaton (NYSE:SLW), MAG Silver (AMEX:MVG) and gold miners Yamana Gold (NYSE:AUY) and Brigus Gold (AMEX:BRD).

Silver has stolen the spotlight among investors in recent days after surging nearly $50/oz.  Lost in all the commotion, however, are the wildly disparate rumors accompanying silver’s rally.  It’s hard to believe that it has been only a week since a widely circulated story concerning a large hedge fund which supposedly made a “gargantuan” bet against silver.  This story, which smacked of being planted by speculative interests, was circulated by some otherwise reputable financial publications.

As we’ve talked about in past commentaries, whenever extremely bearish news stories are circulated in the financial press it carries a contrarian implication in most cases.  In an established bull market like the one for silver, it’s dangerous to sell short based on a rumor since the major trend is up and a large buildup in short interest can create explosive rallies when everyone decides to short the market at the same time.  This is what apparently happened last week and temporarily today.

Here’s a quote from the story that appeared in the financial press last week:

“A gargantuan bet against silver values was placed into position [April 11] with the initiation of a one million-share-large put on the iShares Silver Trust (SLV) – at the $25 level by July. The bet constituted the largest single options trade on US exchanges and came as silver was touching the 31-year high watermark near $42 per ounce.   The (as yet) unidentified buyer of said puts is in effect counting on a 37% decline in silver prices by that timeframe and is perhaps reinforcing the UBS-originated opinion issued [April 11], that ‘it takes a brave investor to buy silver right now.’”

Assuming the above statement contains the truth, the fact that several financial news wires picked up on this and circulated it with a scary headline definitely helped generate a bearish bias in the silver market among inexperienced retail traders.  It also undoubtedly resulted in many of the bears losing their shirts. One writer for the popular Seeking Alpha web site called for a 20% correction in the silver price.  He based this forecast on the fact that the silver price was dramatically over-extended from the 200-day moving average.  The lesson here again is that’s extremely dangerous to short an established uptrend based on scanty technical evidence.  Unless there is an extremely compelling (and hopefully non-publicized) reason for doing so, the best policy is to refrain from selling short in a bull market.

Please note the increased volume spike ZLV and SLV of all time highs. This leads to suggest one yes, shorts had to cover on both ends which forced higher prices, but secondly the bears build an increased bear presence to temporarily trip the rally.

Click on links below to see prior discussions and calls on Silver. (NYSE:SLV)

Silver Hits New High Since 80′s

Short Squeeze in Silver & Gold Coming Feb. 2007

Triffin Dilemma

New Silver Margin Requirement

Food Inflation Wal-Mart

Gold and Silver: History and Stocks

Silver – Long Term Investment

October 8, 2008 on Silver and Gold

US Outlook Rated Negative By S&P

Monday, April 18th, 2011

U.S. government bond prices fell after S&P’s announcement, while US stock market extended losses down DJI 215 points  and the dollar pared gains against the euro. Standard & Poor’s on Monday downgraded the outlook for the United States to negative, saying it believes there’s a risk U.S. policymakers may not reach agreement on how to address the country’s long-term fiscal pressures.

Outstanding public U.S. debt has swelled to more than 60 percent of total output in the aftermath of the 2007-2009 financial crisis, and with a budget deficit projected at more than $1 trillion, is set to grow further. The S&P said the move signals there’s at least a one-in-three likelihood that it could lower its long-term rating on the United States within two years.

Gold prices, meanwhile, hit a new record above $1,496 an ounce. Gold is likely to rally further on renewed safe-haven demand as concerns about European sovereign debt escalate. Market speculation has intensified that Greece won’t meet its debt payment obligations despite help from the European Union and the International Monetary Fund. These worries are redoubled by talk that additional aid won’t be provided, sending investors scampering for a safe harbor from rising uncertainty. 

Meanwhile, market speculation about other financially weak Euro-zone states continues to fan these worries, with many naming Spain as the next likely bail-out candidate. Gold prices hit a record overnight as inflation concerns continued to spur buyers in Asia. Gold had set fresh records Friday after China’s stronger-than-expected inflation data brought those concerns to center stage. The yellow metal is considered a store of value and an alternative currency, with investors often buying gold as a hedge against rising inflation.