I always laugh at that one, even as I write this note.
That’s probably because I’ve spent the better part of the past twenty years chasing waves – but I don’t share this Hollywood version of a stoner-surfer ethos regarding life.
But I do follow this mindset when it comes to markets…
I find the general distaste for precious metals amusing.
It cracked me up when a close friend referred to gold as “hot garbage” at the start of the year. The Nasdaq 100 was trading almost 36% off its 2021 zenith. And gold was within striking distance of its former all-time highs.
Yet gold was trash in this investor’s eyes.
That’s information.
Information that got me thinking about a rally in precious metals…
The former 2011 highs remain front and center for gold futures – and all precious metals.
These shiny rocks will experience increased selling if gold slips back below those former highs marking the prior commodity supercycle peak.
Silver, palladium, and the Gold Mining ETF $GDX are already printing fresh lows. And new multi-month lows for the silver/gold ratio indicate dwindling risk appetite.
These aren’t the type of developments that support a sustained uptrend.
Yet this action hasn’t deterred gold bugs.
Despite every reason to sleep in and shirk any and all responsibilities, they continue to show up right on time…
“This mess could turn downright ugly for the entire precious metals space if buyers don’t step in and support higher prices in palladium – and fast.”
I am many things, but “alarmist” isn't one of them. I simply find it hard to believe gold will post new all-time highs while palladium falls to fresh five-year lows.
Let's stick to the basics. Uptrends – at the core – come down to more buyers than sellers. And risk-on/risk-off intermarket ratios provide excellent tools for tracking whether bulls or bears dominate a particular market.
After the recent bout of selling pressure, one precious metal risk ratio is approaching a potential inflection point…