Name: Toby Connor

Web Site: http://goldscents.blogspot.com/

Bio: Toby Connor is the author of Gold Scents, a financial blog with a special emphasis on the gold secular bull market. Mr. Connor's analysis skill of the markets is largely self-taught, though he admits to being an avid reader of Richard Russell and Jim Rogers, among several others. Toby is an avid rock climber and world class weight lifter (for his age). Toby's premium service includes daily reports and an extensive weekend report.


Posts by Toby Connor:

    Bears Beware, II

    Written by Toby Connor
    July 13th, 2010 at 8:18 pm

    In my last article Bear’s Beware I warned that shorts were running the risk of getting caught in an explosive rally as the intermediate cycle was due to bottom. Well, it did bottom and bears have watched their profits quickly evaporate as the market has surged out of the intermediate cycle low.

    The initial thrust out of one of these major cycle bottoms will usually gain 6-10% in the first 8-13 days. We are now 5 days in and up 6.6% so far. I expect we will see a test of the 200 day moving average before we see any significant pull back. These initial moves out of intermediate bottoms don’t tend to wait around as smart money smelling blood in the street pile in quickly.

    It’s only the little guy, who doesn’t understand what has just happened, that continues to fight the trend change. This is usually about the time that I see the technicians start calling for this or that resistance level or trend line to put a halt to the rally. They are, of course, assuming this is a bear market rally and it will soon be over.

    First off, let me say I’m not convinced yet that the cyclical bull is dead. I would need to see the market come back down and break the recent lows first. If both the transports and industrials do that then yes, we will have a Dow Theory sell signal and at that point I would have to assume that the market has begun the third leg down in the secular bear market that started in March of 2000.

    Now let me say this, bear markets don’t begin because of lines on a chart. They begin because something fundamental is broken in the economy or financial system. Now we certainly do have a broken financial system, no doubt about it, but then again this cyclical bull was never built on the foundation that we had fixed anything in the financial sector. We certainly haven’t fixed anything in the economy with unemployment remaining above 15% if one counts everyone out of work. No this cyclical bull was built on a foundation of massive liquidity. I’m not convinced yet that that fundamental base is broken. Only time will tell.

    But even if this is a bear market rally let me assure you that bear market rallies don’t end because of lines on a chart. If you think you are going to spot a top in a bear market rally by drawing a few trend lines or some meaningless resistance level you are just kidding yourself. It ain’t gonna happen. It never has and it never will. Lines on a chart don’t halt bear market rallies anymore than they initiate bear markets.

    I’ll tell you exactly what halts a bear market rally. Sentiment! Sentiment, at every single one of those rallies during the `07-`09 market, reached bullish extremes. Not one single rally was halted by a pivot point or resistance level prior to sentiment reaching extreme bullish levels.

    S&P500

    Even after the recent surge, sentiment is still so depressed that it’s at levels lower than most of the intermediate bottoms during the last bear market. So let me tell you, if you think the market is going to turn tail and run because it hits the pivot at 1130 or the 200 day moving average, or because you think earnings aren’t going to be rosy, you are going to be sorely disappointed.

    If this truly is a bear market then before you even begin to look for a technical turning point you first have to wait until sentiment does a 180 degree turnaround. That just doesn’t happen quickly after the kind of beating we just got.

    Trust me, it’s going to take a while for investors to forget a 17% correction and dare to become bullish again. If I had to guess I would say at least 8 to 11 weeks. Even longer if the next half cycle (due around day 15-20 of the rally) and full daily cycle correction (due around day 35-45 of the rally) are strong enough to scare investors again.

    The problem with the move out of February bottom was that we got no corrections and it quickly turned into a runaway move. Those kind of rallies tend to end with some kind of mini-crash. I started telling subscribers there was a high possibility of that back in late March and early April. It happened in Feb. of ’07 with the China crash and sure enough, it happened again in May with the flash crash.

    Traders become extremely complacent during one of these runaway moves. At the April top sentiment had reached levels more bullish than at the top of the last bull market. As usual, we paid a heavy price for that complacency. But now we’ve swung 180 degrees back in the other direction, with sentiment so depressed it even makes the `09 bottom look positively giddy. That my friends is the base for another powerful rally.

    Actually I won’t be at all surprised if the market rallies back to new highs … even if we have begun the initial topping process of this cyclical bull. Remember the bear market had already begun in the summer of `07 but that didn’t stop it from rallying back up to marginal new highs in Oct. before finally rolling over into the second worst bear market in history.

    This idea that the markets can somehow magically look into the future is just ludicrous. I can assure you no one can see the future, and that includes the millions and millions of investors that make up the global markets.

    Now let me say this – we already know where the cancer is. Does that mean the stock market will now start to discount the next bear market? In the summer of `07 we knew the cancer was in the credit markets, initially beginning in the subprime mortgage market. Did the market look into the future and discount the unraveling of the global credit markets at that time? No it did not. The stock market rallied to new highs.

    Well, we already know what will eventually bring this house of cards down, it’s already started just like it had already started in the summer of `07. We are going to have one sovereign debt implosion after another and that is going to lead to the cancer spreading through the global currency markets eventually infecting the world’s reserve currency.

    But don’t expect the market to look ahead and begin discounting the unraveling of the global currency markets. Markets don’t do that. What they do is slowly recognize the fact that the fundamentals are broken. Once enough traders realize that, the markets begin to roll over, usually in an extended process taking many months.

    I doubt this time will be any different, especially since the central banks of the world are going to fight the bear with a blizzard of paper. Don’t make the mistake of thinking the markets have to act rationally. They don’t and won’t. If the Fed prints enough money markets are going to rise even though the global economy is crumbling all around us.

    If you are bearish and determined to pit your stash against Ben’s printing press I’m afraid you are signing up for one very difficult time ahead. I seriously doubt we are going to see another credit market implosion like we saw in `08. Without a severe dislocation like that there will be no market crash this time. When the bear does return (and he will eventually) the next leg down is going to be a long drawn out process with multiple violent bear market rallies. Selling short in that kind of market isn’t going to be easy. As a matter of fact I doubt 1 bear in 10 will even manage to make money in that kind of environment.

    Bear’s should be careful what they wish for. I suspect the next leg of the secular bear will manage to destroy both bulls and bears alike.

    If you would like to be added to the email list that receives notice of new posts to GoldScents, or have questions, email Toby.

    Bears Should Beware

    Written by Toby Connor
    July 3rd, 2010 at 4:36 pm

    I’m going to go through some signs that rabid bears might do well to pay attention to because I think the market is very close to a major bottom. (That doesn’t mean we are guaranteed to make new highs, although we might. Just that we can probably expect an explosive rally soon, even if it ultimately turns out to be a counter trend rally in an ongoing bear market).

    First off, way too many people are counting on the head and shoulders pattern taking the market directly down to 850. Folks, historically these head and shoulder patterns have a success rate of about 50%. A coin toss, in other words. Didn’t we learn that lesson last July?

    Let’s go now to the charts. We have a large momentum divergence that has developed on the daily charts.

    $SPX (S&P 500 Large Cap Index)

    Also, notice that the market dropped down to the 75 week moving average yesterday and bounced strongly. You can see this same support during the prior bull. The 75 week moving average acted as final support during the entire bull market. That level also happens to be the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement of the entire cyclical bull move. Not an unusual correction in an ongoing bull, on both counts.

    $SPX (S&P 500 Large Cap Index)

    Next, we are now right in the timing band for a major intermediate cycle low.

    $SPX (S&P 500 Large Cap Index)

    At 21 weeks it’s just way too late to press the short side. You risk getting caught as the intermediate cycle bottoms initiating a violent short covering rally.

    And finally, breadth is diverging massively during this final move down. As you can see the NYMO often diverges at these intermediate cycle bottoms. The divergence at this point is the largest in years.

    $NYMO (NYSE McClellan Oscillator

    Finally, I’ll point out that the February cycle bottomed on a reversal off the jobs report. I think it’s safe to say the market has already discounted a bad number so we could see shorts begin covering in a buy the news type trade, even if the number is bad. And if the number is good, we will see the market gap higher huge, trapping shorts and throwing gasoline on the fire of a short covering rally.

    It’s just too dangerous to continue pressing the short side at this point. Better to just step aside and not risk getting caught in the intermediate bottom that WILL happen sometime soon, maybe even on today’s employment report.

    Still Just A Baby Bull

    Written by Toby Connor
    June 7th, 2010 at 2:34 pm

    It’s sad to say but I’m afraid 90/95% of all retail traders/investors are not going to successfully ride the gold bull. The reason of course is that they are deathly afraid of draw downs. It’s glaringly apparent every time gold pulls back or suffers the slightest correction. Immediately a slew of traders come on the blog and warned of impending doom. “Gold is going to $600″ (think Elliot wave). Some are even brave (maybe I should say ‘foolish’) enough to short. Here is one we hear a lot lately, “miners are going to get crushed if the stock market enters a new leg down in the secular bear market”.

    Pure nonsense!

    Let me show you what happened to gold and miners during the 2000-2003 bear market.

    HUI Gold Bugs Index

    During one of the worst bear markets in history gold rallied over 50% and miners well over 200%. So this notion that the precious metals sector has to get hit during a bear market is simply ludicrous.

    Now I know what you are going to say, “Just look at what happened in ’08″.

    The reality is that the crash in ’08 was a very special set of circumstances that aren’t likely to repeat. Up until September the bear market was following the normal path most bear markets follow. Slow grinding declines followed by explosive counter trend rallies. Gold was holding up amazingly well during this period as were miners. Both were actually up significantly during the first 5 months of the stock market bear. It wasn’t until gold entered a normal D-wave correction in March of ’08 that either corrected at all.

    S&P500

    In September a rare event happened that drastically changed the entire fundamental picture of the bear market. At that time roughly $700 billion in debt came due. The financial system needed to roll that debt over but couldn’t as the credit bubble was in the process of imploding. That led to one of the few true stock market crashes in history.

    The ensuing panic led to a selling climax in every asset class even including, to some extent, gold. The actual price of physical gold never even came close to dropping to the levels of the paper market. Smart money investors were taking advantage of the irrational selling by buying up every single available oz. of physical gold on the market. At the time premiums on physical were over $100 above the paper price.

    The point I’m trying to get across is it took a very special set of circumstances to create the kind of selling climax that could take down the precious metals sector. Those circumstances are not present today. The EU has already gone to the printing press to halt their debt problems. The US has done away with the mark to market rules and Ben stands ready to print so we have no looming debt crisis in our future.

    So if we are about to enter another leg down in the secular stock market bear the odds are it will be another slow grinding affair, very similar to the 2000-2003 bear. There will be plenty of sharp counter trend rallies and one can bank on the Fed throwing more and more trillions of freshly printed dollars at the problem all along the way.

    And that, my friends, is the fundamental bedrock of the gold bull.

    Now let me show you a long term chart of the last great secular bull market.

    Oil - Light Crude

    This is just about text book for a big secular bull market. We see a very extended period of consolidation below a key resistance level. Eventually that resistance level gets broken. Once it does it’s like a damn breaking, the force then becomes unstoppable, ultimately reaching heights far beyond what anyone can foresee at the original break out.

    In oil’s case the secular bull rallied almost 300% above the $40 breakout level, topping out with a massive parabolic move lasting about a year and a half (remember me saying bubbles tend to last about 1 to 1 1/2 years as the final phase tops out?).

    I want to point out this happened in oil, a commodity that was virtually impossible for the average Joe to invest in. This was a bubble driven purely by the the investing community. Remember this because it’s important.

    Now let’s take a look at the next secular bull, one that’s still in the baby stage.

    Gold

    Gold has just recently broken out above the old 1980 high of $850. It hasn’t even doubled yet much less rallied 300%. Now if you think gold rallying to $3500 is ridiculous you are absolutely correct. There is no way gold is going to stop at a mere 300%.

    Unlike oil, gold is readily available to the public and ultimately that is what drives the final stages of a secular bull market/bubble. When the public comes into the market their panic buying drives the final parabolic move to unbelievable heights. We saw perfect examples with both the tech and housing bubbles. The public was deeply involved in both.

    And now, for the topping on the cake. The precious metals markets are infinitely smaller than the stock market, real estate markets or energy market. That means it won’t take anywhere near as much money to drive these markets to incredible heights.

    Look at that chart of oil again. A 300% gain in a very large liquid market without ever drawing in any perceptible buying from the general public.

    Now look at that chart of gold again, only this time with fresh eyes. The possibilities are simply staggering. I wasn’t kidding when I said this will be the greatest bull market any of us will ever see in our lifetime.

    If, and this is a big if, you can ignore the nonsense from the Nervous Nellies or the gold Bears (a breed destined for extinction) and just hold on to your positions you will ultimately reap unimaginable rewards as this bull progresses.

    Now I will say that yes, there are times to take profits in bull markets. You take profits when gold and miners are stretched far above the 200 day moving average. Everything eventually regresses to the mean. So when we see the HUI 40-55% above the 200 DMA then yes, you should think about selling at least some portion of your positions. But to sell positions with the miners 3% above the 200 DMA is … well, it’s just plain dumb. This isn’t the time to sell it’s time to buy, buy, buy.

    Let me say this as plain as possible. If you want to get rich from this, the largest bull market you are ever going to see, you don’t listen to the traders and you certainly don’t adopt their flawed strategies. You simply can’t think like that if you want to ride this bull. You need to think like a value investor. When you see value you scoop it up no questions asked. And if the market is foolish enough to give you an even better bargain down the road you buy more.

    Unfortunately here is what happens. Retail investors are unable to buy value. For the average retail investor to buy he needs emotional confirmation. I see this all the time. “Wait till the breakout for confirmation before buying.” The problem with that approach is that most breakouts soon fail. If one waited for the recent breakout above $1225 to buy they then had to weather an immediate draw down.

    I saw this in spades at the December top. Retail traders entered in droves during that time. They were getting the emotional confirmation they needed. Then when gold corrected they either got knocked out for a loss or they held on just long enough to get out even. Most simply don’t have the patience to ride the bull on his terms. They want the bull to do what they want, when they want. I suspect more investors have been lost to boredom that draw downs.

    The best strategy right now is to just sit tight. Remember this is still just a baby bull and it has a long long way to go yet.

    GoldScents is a financial blog focused on the analysis of the stock market and the secular gold bull market. Subscriptions to the premium service includes a daily and weekend market update emailed to subscribers. If you would like to be added to the email list that receives notice of new posts to GoldScents, or have questions,email Toby.

    Is This the Ending Phase?

    Written by Toby Connor
    June 4th, 2010 at 11:18 am

    I have to wonder, are we entering the ending phase of this cyclical bull?

    For some time now I’ve noticed the similarities between the ’02-’07 cyclical bull and what we’ve experienced since March of last year. The one difference is that this time we’ve truncated the middle phase of the bull. I suspect that was a direct result of the massive liquidity Bernanke … and all central banks have pumped into the system.

    SPX 8-Year Chart

    Both bulls exhibited powerful moves out of the bottom followed by a 9% correction separating the second leg from the third. In the ’02 – ’07 bull we then entered a 2 year phase were the market ground higher. That phase is missing from the current bull.

    What followed the ’06 correction was a powerful runaway move into the February ’07 top. That persistent rally skewed sentiment extremely bullish at the time. We saw the exact same thing develop as the market entered the runaway move out of the February 5th bottom. At its peak sentiment had reached bullish levels exceeding what we saw at the top of the last bull market in the fall of ’07.

    In ’07 the runaway move led to investor complacency and severely depressed put buying. The same thing happened at the recent top in April. Investors became terribly complacent. Protective put purchase fell off the chart. The market had no safety net under it. In that condition it was at risk for a crash if investors all tried to head for the door at the same time. They did, and we suffered a mini-crash in the spring of ’07 and again in May.

    In ’07 the initial crash low was tested and broken followed by a 2b reversal.

    SPX 3-Year Chart

    Recently the S&P also broke to lower lows and bottomed with a 2b reversal.

    SPX 6-Month Chart

    Both markets experienced volatile swings as the market put in the intermediate term bottom.

    Both crashes quickly moved sentiment back to extreme levels of bearishness. In ’07 sentiment turned sourer than at any other time during that cyclical bull. At the recent bottom sentiment was blacker than at any time in the last 10 years as measured by a basket of intermediate term sentiment indicators.

    These kind of extreme sentiment levels are the building blocks for powerful moves. In ’07 the extreme bearish sentiment drove the market into a final double top that capped the cyclical bull.

    If sentiment levels are any indication we should now be set up for at least one more explosive move higher before the fundamentals final overcome this market and drag it back down into the next leg of the secular bear.

    SPX 2-Year Chart

    The similarities are piling up:

    Initial runaway move drives sentiment to extreme bullish levels? Check!

    Protective put buying dries up leaving the market with no safety net and vulnerable to crash conditions? Check!

    Mini-crash? Check!

    Test and 2b reversal of the initial crash low? Check!

    Sentiment depressed to extreme levels of bearishness? Check!

    Volatile swings back and forth during bottoming process? Check!

    If history is any indication we should now be on the verge of one more explosive move higher before this cyclical bull expires and heads back down into the next leg of the secular bear.

    Stock Market Break of S&P 1044 Implications

    Written by Toby Connor
    May 27th, 2010 at 1:27 am

    Let me start off by pointing out that we did indeed break below the yearly cycle low yesterday.

    SPX

    I’ve been saying for a couple of weeks now that a break of 1044 would change the pattern of higher lows. That would be the first warning shot across the bow that the cyclical bull might be in the process of expiring.

    Does that mean I want to short stocks? Are you crazy? No way I want to fight with a bear market and the Fed’s printing press. For one Ben has already aborted a left translated 4 year cycle.

    SPX

    Never in a million years would I have believed that was possible, but happen it did. Print enough money and the Fed could just as easily negate a broken yearly cycle low. And if you think he won’t do it I have some ocean front property here in Las Vegas I’d like to sell ya? Sell short? No way no how. Not even with your money.

    Let’s face it the mathematics on the short side are just not conducive to getting rich. It took a year and a half for the market to drop 58% in the second worst bear market in history. Sure one can leverage up but if you happen to get hit with a vicious bear market rally or the rules are changed (ban on short selling) you run the risk of losing everything. Need I remind everyone that leverage is what is bringing down the global financial system. Leverage is like walking through a dynamite factory with an open flame. Sure you might survive but you’re still an idiot.

    Trading bear markets is tough to do even if the bear is allowed to run its course undisturbed. But I guarantee the powers that be will throw everything they can at the bear. I just don’t need those kind of odds stacked against me, especially when there is easy money to be had.

    Now that I’ve made my position clear (just so there won’t be any misunderstanding later. There will be none of this “hey you said the bear is back and we should short stocks. How come the market went up and I lost all my money”).

    I’m emphatically telling you that by selling short you are taking your life into your own hands. If you are bound and determined to fight the Fed, Wall Street, Washington and an angry and tricky bear, you are going to do it all on your own. Leave me out of it. I’m going to be over in the corner picking up gold coins, you can join me if you want to.

    Whenever the market doesn’t do what it’s supposed to do it’s probably a good idea to pay attention. Yesterday markets all over the world were down and down hard. Some by over 3%. The futures were signaling a big gap down. By all rights the S&P should have followed the rest of the globe lower today. It didn’t. We ended the day positive.

    I’ve been warning for over a week now that sentiment has reached severe bearish extremes. Quite a few sentiment indicators are now at levels lower than the `09 bear market bottom. When these kind of extremes are reached the market runs the risk of running out of sellers. Yesterdays reversal may be a signal of selling exhaustion. When that happens, even in bear markets, we can look for a violent 1 to 3 month short covering rally. (In bull markets we can expect a 3 to 5 month new leg up.)

    Lately we are hearing the D word (deflation) thrown around quite a bit. Let’s face it we are going to hear this every time assets start to drop. However let me remind everyone that Ben halted the worst deflationary spiral in 80 years in just a little over 7 months. Ben has clearly proven that a determined government, in a purely fiat monetary system, can reverse deflation. The question isn’t whether or not we are going to experience deflation. The question is simply how long will the powers that be allow it to last before they crank up the presses and flood the world with paper again.

    The cold hard reality is that the USA has now gone down the path of no return. We are piling on trillions upon trillions of debt in a futile attempt to spend & stimulate our way out of bankruptcy. I don’t know about you but generally speaking isn’t it counterproductive to go deeper in debt if one is already broke?

    This debt can’t possibly be serviced … ever. So we have two choices. One we can eventually just default on our massive mountain of debt. At some point we just throw up our hands and cry uncle. Folks if the United States of America chooses to default on its debt then yes we are going to see a deflationary storm cover the world in ruin and despair.

    The second choice is to inflate away the debt by printing trillions and trillions of federal reserve notes out of thin air. This course will buy us some time. It may even briefly appear that we’ve cured our problems (it has seemed that way until recently hasn’t it?). If we choose this path, then unless someone like Volker comes along and forces us to take our medicine, the inflationary spiral will continue until a final hyperinflationary storm destroys the country.

    Now each of you has to ask themselves which you think is more likely. Will the US all of a sudden come to its senses, default on its obligations to halt the exponential growth of debt, thus unleashing a deflationary holocaust upon the world…or will we just continue to kick the can down the road like we’ve been doing for the past 10 years, thus making the debt burden bigger and bigger and rendering it serviceable only by hyperinflating the money supply?

    How you answer that question will dictate how you want to invest for the next 5-10 years.

    If you think like I do that we will continue to kick the can down the road then the easy investment is to just get on board the secular gold bull and hold on.

    Gold: Focus On What Matters

    Written by Toby Connor
    May 20th, 2010 at 1:21 pm

    I know this is hard to do, especially when one is weathering draw downs. And of course a liberal dose of gloating from the bears during these times doesn’t help either. But let’s not get sidetracked by the little things and let’s face it, the haters are going to show up every time gold corrects. We really should be used to that by now. They’ve been doing it for 10 years.

    The cold hard reality is that gold is still in a secular bull market and the naysayers have to ply their trade from ever higher levels.

    So let’s take a look at what’s really happening shall we.

    Gold 10-Year Chart

    The single most important point everyone should keep in mind is the breakout above the 1980 high of $850. If it wasn’t for a once in a generation stock and credit market collapse I don’t think gold would have ever dropped back below that level. Even so the move was very brief and has now been tested at the last B-wave bottom.

    Gold 4½-Year Chart

    Folks I seriously doubt the world will ever see sub $850 gold again. Just like we’ve never seen sub $250 gold after the breakout in the 70′s. So anyone forecasting $700 gold just doesn’t understand how bull markets work. It just ain’t gonna happen.

    Next came the breakout above the last C-wave high at $1025.

    Gold 4½-Year Chart Breakout

    That breakout was also tested during the February yearly cycle low. I doubt we will see gold back below $1000 for the remainder of this bull market.

    Now gold is trying to breakout and hold above the next big resistance level of $1200. The initial break in December was repulsed. Now we have a second break that is in the process of testing the breakout.

    Gold 2½-Year Chart

    Now I have no idea whether this breakout will be the one that holds or whether gold will have to consolidate a bit more. But sooner or later gold is going to break above this level and never look back.

    I think we probably have enough time left in the current intermediate cycle for it to happen soon. But if it doesn’t, I’m confident it will happen and I’m on board and ready for the ride when it does.

    My suggestion is when you start to get sidetracked by the daily wiggles or the intermittent draw downs you come back and look at these charts and stay focused on what really matters.

    If you would like to be added to the email list that receives notice of new posts to GoldScents, or have questions, email Toby.

    Golden Breakout

    Written by Toby Connor
    May 12th, 2010 at 4:17 pm

    Gold’s break out to new highs has very bullish connotations going forward. It puts the odds squarely in favor of a C-wave continuation.

    Gold

    I will go over expectations and cyclical structure for a second leg of the C-wave in tonight’s report for subscribers.

    For those of you thinking about getting side tracked by a meaningless daily cycle low that is coming due, let me tell you from bitter experience the one thing you don’t want to do is lose your position at the beginning of a C-wave or C-wave second leg.

    At this point the daily cycle corrections aren’t profit taking opportunities. That will come as we near the end of the C-wave.

    At this time a daily cycle low is a last chance opportunity to get invested.

    Don’t forget in bull markets and especially during aggressive C-wave advances the surprises come on the upside. Daily cycles can and often do run exceptionally long as a C-wave starts to gain momentum so losing one’s position in an attempt to “time” a short term correction can potentially cost one many percentage points. It’s just not worth the risk. It’s time to heed “OldTurkey’s” advice.

    I have no doubt this will be the greatest bull market that any of us will ever see in our lifetime. Since November of `08 the precious metal sector has been doing everything but hit investors over the head with a pipe to let us know this is the leading sector of this bull.

    Miners are the only sector exhibiting massive accumulation.

    GDX

    Compare the above chart to other sectors during this bull and you will see where the smart money has been positioning.

    QQQ

    XLF

    XLE

    RTF

    These are just a few sectors, but the picture is the same no matter where you look. Steadily declining volume. Only miners are showing heavy accumulation.

    I’m even seeing analysts touting the energy sector as the place to be. It’s not unusual to see traders flock back into the leading sector of the prior bull, but if history is any indication energy will not lead this bull. You can see from the chart of XLE that energy, just like every other sector, is showing no signs of accumulation. Let’s face it the supply and demand fundamentals for the energy sector are now impaired and will be for years as the world cycles through multiple on again off a gain recessions and stubbornly high unemployment levels.

    The only sector with improving fundamentals is the precious metal sector, which will benefit from governments ongoing attempts to “print” prosperity. It will not work, but the blizzard of paper will drive the secular gold bull to amazing heights before it’s finished.

    Once the HUI & silver join gold, platinum and palladium at new highs the entire precious metal sector will move into a vacuum with no overhead resistance.

    That is going to be incredibly bullish for the sector.

    On the Verge of an Inflationary Surge

    Written by Toby Connor
    May 2nd, 2010 at 3:50 pm

    I’m going to start off by stating that I don’t think Bernanke is going to ”get away” with the insane monetary policy he’s chosen. Printing trillions of dollars, cutting rates to zero, trying to manipulate the bond market and generally tampering with the natural market forces is going to have consequences.

    It now looks like we’ve probably seen the cycle low in oil.

    If oil follows the gasoline and heating oil markets to new highs (and I think it will) I’m afraid we are going to get a strong surge higher.  And if we did just see the cycle low a few days ago this push could last some time as the average cycle in oil has been running roughly 50 days trough to trough.

    Gold has also broken above the recent resistance level with follow through this time.

    Gold is also early in its daily cycle so we could see a strong push higher here also. I’m expecting gold to at least test the highs during this minor cycle advance.  And I’m leaning fairly strongly in the direction of a C-wave continuation for the reasons I outlined in the weekend report for subscribers.

    Keep in mind that all this is progressing despite a strong dollar.  Of course that is just an illusion.  It really isn’t possible to print trillions of dollars out of thin air and have a strong currency.  The dollar just appears strong because the currencies it’s measured against are exceptionally weak right now.  The relentless rise in most commodity prices reveals the truth about the dollar’s value.

    We are now on the verge of a surge (maybe a huge spike) in inflation.

    I think Bernanke is about to get served notice that he didn’t fix anything.  All he did was create a much bigger problem. Unfortunately you and I are the ones that are going to pay for his mistakes with higher taxes and much higher inflation.

    Toby Connor

    GoldScents

    A financial blog primarily focused on the analysis of the secular gold bull market.

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    To Trade of Not to Trade

    Written by Toby Connor
    May 2nd, 2010 at 10:06 am

    I’m going to throw out a few ideas for those of you who aren’t emotionally suited to be investors and have to take the traders path. First off realize that miners are volatile. That means position sizes will necessarily have to be small. As a trader you never want to lose more than 1-2% of your total portfolio on any one trade. So you probably aren’t going to be able to trade more than 20% of your account in any precious metal position. Even the ETF GDX can easily swing 10% in the blink of an eye. If you have a 20% position and it goes against you by 10% you have hit your -2% maximum loss on your portfolio. Also be aware that taking 10 mining positions isn’t really diversifying as the sector tends to move in concert.

    What you absolutely can not do is take a 100% position with the intent of trading. Locking in 10% losses in a bull market just isn’t going to be a profitable way to make long term money. If you are going to trade then your main concern, actually your only concern will have to be limiting losses (risk control). Let the profits take care of themselves all you care about as a trader is limiting losses.

    Next I want to point out something that is or should be obvious but probably isn’t for most traders. Trading isn’t about getting the direction right. Hell that is easy. No trader has any business trading against the cyclical trend. It just doesn’t make any sense to handicap oneself to that extent. This business is tough enough even with all the odds in your favor. Trading against the trend is like playing poker and having to show your hand to your opponents. Sure you might win a few hands now and then but the odds are really high you are going home to tell your spouse you lost the mortgage.

    If you are going to be a short seller in a bull market then you better be digging into the fundamentals of the companies you are shorting. If you are shorting in a bull you had better be selling sick or broken companies. Let’s face it that is the only way you are going to get any kind of advantage and even then the pull of the bull can still mask the disease in many unhealthy companies. The financials are an excellent example. Most of them are for all intents and purposes insolvent but because of accounting changes and free money from the government along with implied protection one would have to be crazy to sell short any bank stock.

    There were only 10 new lows on the NYSE yesterday. Trying to short high flyers in a bull market is a fools game and as you can see there aren’t a heck of a lot of potential short candidates in bull markets. So unless you are willing to do the due diligence needed to find cancer patients one really should bypass shorting selling. Wait till the bear returns. That is the time to sell short.

    No, trading isn’t about getting the direction right, like I said that one is easy. Trading is about getting the timing right. What a trader wants is to time a swing and then get out. If a trade goes against him it’s not because he’s picked the wrong direction it’s because he mistimed the trade. If the trader is willing to be patient the bull or bear will eventually correct the timing error. When a trader stops out he is admitting his timing was wrong not direction, and he thinks he can exit the trade for a small loss and enter another trade where he hopes his timing will be better.

    So if one is going to trade understand what you are doing. You aren’t trying to pick direction you are trying to guess timing. Know that history has shown this is very hard to do on a consistent basis and you certainly don’t want to handicap yourself by trading against the large trend unless you have intimate information about the companies you are trading counter trend.

    The Problem with Trading

    Written by Toby Connor
    April 29th, 2010 at 8:25 am

    Here is the problem with trading. Most of the time any market will be in consolidation mode. Gold is a good example.

    For the last 5 months gold has done nothing but trade back and forth with no defined trend. It’s very tough to make money in those conditions.

    Now don’t get me wrong somewhere someone will have traded this perfectly. They will have stumbled upon the perfect system to catch each little wiggle. Often they will proclaim their superiority loudly for all the world to hear.

    Unfortunately there really is no holy grail of investing and the system that happened to work this time will almost always fail during the next period. It’s just how the markets work, conditions change. So unless one is lucky enough to guess what will work before each new period in the market what invariably happens is one ends up giving back all of the gains they made when their system breaks down.

    The answer of course is to just stay aligned with the secular trend and accept that there are going to be periods when one will just have to sit and watch other people make money. The last five months have been a perfect example as the stock market has gone up while precious metals and miners have gone nowhere.

    Know full well that eventually this too will end as gold is in a secular bull market with a long way to go and the general stock market is in a secular bear market with limited upside potential.

    So at some point gold and miners will make another big move up and all the waiting will have been worth it. And at some point the stock market will come grinding back down and all those who held on expecting conditions never to change will lose all of their profits.

    So one can trade if they must, but do so knowing that the market is going to take away any and every profitable system at some point whether it be a technical system, patterns, cycles, indicators, sentiment, COT or just intuition.

    I’ve watched it happen to countless “traders” over the years. The really good traders survive these periods because they practice excellent risk management. Unfortunately most retail traders when they get on a hot streak believe they have found the secret to the market and risk management goes out the window. That’s just about the time the market starts throwing curve balls.

    Toby Connor
    GoldScents

    A financial website dedicated to analyzing the stock market and the secular gold bull market.