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The rocketing five-wave advance
forms a nearly perfect wave, with the fifth terminating well
against the upper boundary of the trend channel. The Fibonacci
target projection method typical of commodities is fulfilled, in
that the $90 rise to the peak of wave [3] provides the basis for
measuring the distance to the orthodox top. $90 x .618 = $55.62,
which when added to the peak of wave III at $125, gives $180.62.
The actual price at wave V's peak was $179.50, quite close
indeed. Also noteworthy is that at $179.50, the price of gold
had multiplied by just over five (a Fibonacci number) times its
price at $35.
Then in December 1974, after the
initial wave [A] decline, the price of gold rose to an all-time
high of nearly $200 an ounce. This wave was wave [B] of an
expanded flat correction, which crawled upward along the lower
channel line, as corrective wave advances often do. As befits
the personality of a "B" wave, the phoniness of the
advance was unmistakable. First, the news background, as everyone
knew, appeared to be bullish for gold, with American
legalization of ownership due on January 1, 1975. Wave [B], in a
seemingly perverse but market-logical manner, peaked precisely
on the last day of 1974. Secondly, gold mining stocks, both
North American and South African, were noticeably
under-performing on the advance, forewarning of trouble by
refusing to confirm the assumed bullish picture.
Wave
[C], a devastating collapse,
accompanied a severe decline in the valuation of gold stocks,
carrying some back to where they had begun their advances in
1970. In terms of the bullion price, the authors computed in
early 1976 by the usual relationship that the low should occur
at about $98, since the length of wave [A] at $51, times 1.618,
equals $82, which when subtracted from the orthodox high at
$180, gives a target at $98. The low for the correction was well
within the zone of the previous fourth wave of lesser degree and
quite near the target, hitting a closing London price of $103.50
on August 25, 1976, the month just between the Dow Theory stock
market peak in July and the nominal DJIA peak in September. The
[A]-[B]-[C] expanded flat correction implies great thrust in the
next wave into new high ground.
Gold, historically speaking, is
one of the disciplines of economic life, with a sound record of
achievement. It has nothing more to offer the world than
discipline. Perhaps that is the reason politicians work
tirelessly to ignore it, denounce it, and attempt to demonetize
it. Somehow, though, governments always seem to manage to have a
supply on hand "just in case." Today, gold stands in
the wings of international finance as a relic of the old days,
but nevertheless also as a harbinger of the future. The
disciplined life is the productive life, and that concept
applies to all levels of endeavor, from dirt farming to
international finance.
Gold is the time honored store of
value, and although the price of gold may flatten for a long
period, it is always good insurance to own some until the
world's monetary system is intelligently restructured, a
development that seems inevitable, whether it happens by design
or through natural economic forces. That paper is no substitute
for gold as a store of value is probably another of nature's
laws.
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