–The instability of the financial system can now be measured in hours and minutes instead of weeks and days. Corrections that used to play out over days or even a few weeks are now happening in a matter of hours. The price for being in this market right now is volatility.

–But if you let the volatility panic you, you’re likely to make a big mistake and sell when everyone else is selling – exactly the worst moment to do so. So let’s take a step back from yesterday’s manic market and look at the big picture. Literally.


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–What you’re seeing now is the de-correlation of asset classes. Everyone is scrambling to get to cash out of fear. Europe’s slow-motion currency collapse is the immediate fear. But you could add plenty of things to the list. In the race to cash – mostly US dollar cash – everything is being sold at the same time (except US bonds, which are, perverse as it is to say, being bought as a kind of short-term substitute for dollars).

–That selling hit a peak in the gold market yesterday afternoon. Gold fell nearly $100 at one point, and traded as low as $1535. It’s down around 9% in the last month and off 16% from its high. We’ll show you three charts that should put that decline in perspective.

–First, check out the “V” pattern on the charts below. The charts show the gold price in US and Australian dollars and the silver price in US dollars. We’ve seen this V chart most recently in March 2009. It’s an intra-day pattern that shows up when markets make a capitulation low. What does that mean? Read on…

–This will be cold comfort to you if you’re new to gold and staring with horror at the charts above. But it’s important. This is how markets work psychologically. They test you. They go from oversold to overbought and back again. Rising prices attract new buyers who then get smashed in corrections. These corrections test your resolve.

–We should have known something was up with gold when the Australian Financial Review published an advertisement promising “60 pieces of gold” to a contest winner. Any time it’s safe enough to run a bullish ad in a mainstream paper, an investment idea is probably short-term overbought. But this is just a trading observation. We’ll make a more fundamental observation in a moment.


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–We’re not suggesting gold is about to rocket right back up where it was a few weeks ago – although on a Greek default we wouldn’t rule that out. But we ARE suggesting that precious metals are your best refuge against monetary instability. We see a lot more of that coming down the pike. The next stage in this crisis – after widespread asset deflation – is humongous central bank stimulus. Trillions in Fed and ECB asset purchases are now on the horizon. Cramming into “safe havens” like financial stocks or AAA rated bonds before a massive central bank intervention is taking your financial life in your own hands.

–The chart below shows gold’s performance over the course of its 11-year bull market. The last time gold traded so far above its 50-day and 200-day moving averages was in 2008. Between March of 2008 and November of 2008, the gold price shed nearly 30%. When the monetary experimenting began with Quantitative Easing, you can see what happened. The decline was an ideal place to enter into a position for those that hadn’t already.


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“Let me be clear: in a systemic crisis, it’s unlikely any asset allocation strategy will prevent you suffering losses to your real wealth. The world we live in was made possible by an energy revolution (cheap oil) that began in the late 19th century and a central banking revolution (cheap credit) that began in the early 20th.

“Both those developments have made incredible global economic growth possible. But the financial system is now so overloaded with unproductive debt, and so many assets are linked to the value of this debt, that a crisis is bound to be global in scope and unavoidably destructive.

–Stay tuned for more on this tomorrow.

Dan Denning
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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