Sunday, June 21, 2009

Kondratieff Wave

from :www.angelfire.com/or/truthfinder/index22.html

chart

The Kondratieff Cycle is a theory based on a study of nineteenth century price behavior which included wages, interest rates, raw material prices, foreign trade, bank deposits, and other data. He, like R.N. Elliott, Kondratieff was convinced that his studies of economic, social, and cultural life proved that a long term order of economic behavior existed and could be used for the purpose of anticipating future economic developments.

He observed certain characteristics about the growth and contractionary phase of the long wave. Among them, he detailed the number of years that the economy expanded and contracted during each part of the half-century long cycle, which industries suffer the most during the downwave, and how technology plays a role in leading the way out of the contraction into the next upwave.

The fifty to fifty-four year cycle of catastrophe and renewal had been known and observed by the Mayans of Central America and independently by the ancient Israelites. Kondratieff's observations represent the modern expression of this cycle, which postulates that capitalist countries tend to follow the long rhythmic pattern of approximately half a century.

In the idealized long wave model, which is illustrated in the diagram above, the cycle (which averages 54 years in length) begins with the "upwave" during which prices start to rise slowly along with a new economic expansion. By the end of a 25-30 year upwave period, inflation is running very high. Its peak sets the stage for a deep recession that jolts the economy. The recession, which begins about the time commodity prices break from their highs, is longer and deeper than any that took place during the upwave.

Eventually, though, prices stabilize and the economy recovers, beginning a period of selective expansion that normally lasts nearly a decade. Referred to as the secondary plateau, the expansion persists, giving the impression that "things are like they used to be," but its anemic nature eventually takes its toll as conditions within the economy never reach the dynamic state that occurred during the upwave. The secondary plateau ends with a sudden shock (financial panic/stock market crash) and the economy rolls over into the next contractionary phase, which is characterized by deflation and the start of an economic depression.

The current revolution of the Kondratieff Wave began after the global economy pulled out of a deflationary depression in the 1930s. Prices began to accelerate upward after World War II, and reached the commodity price blowoff stage in 1980. Since that time, and then after the recession of 1990-1991 (much longer in some locations such as California and Japan, the latter of which has never really recovered from economic contraction), the global economy has been treading the secondary plateau. During this period, consumers and investors become aware that inflation is not accelerating Kondratieff Wave upward, and disinflation becomes the buzz word. Paper assets such as stocks and bonds do well since neither inflation nor deflation-both of which are damaging to stock investment returns-hurts the marketplace.

But during the secondary plateau, the first signs of problems-the seeds of the deflationary contraction soon to follow-become known. Isolated economies fall into deflationary contraction, and telltale signs such as declining gold prices begin to take hold. During the 1990s, it has been the Japanese economy that slid first into deflationary contraction. Gold has already reached new 11-year lows and as yet shows no sign of a bottom.

The stock market crash of 1997 is the signal that the period of economic growth along the secondary plateau is ending. Additional economies collapse and plunge into deflationary contraction, as characterized during this revolution of the Kondratieff cycle by the domino effect coming from Thailand, Indonesia, Asia, and South America. Stronger economies such as those of Europe and North America are likely to hang on until the last moment, then fall off into deflationary contraction.

We can theorize at this time that these stronger economies, due to their superior handling of monetary policy during the secondary plateau relative to the countries that made serious enough mistakes to cause a plunge into serious financial collapse, will not be affected as gravely as these other countries with collapsing economies. However, no economy is exempt from the effects of the contraction, which is felt worldwide.

Much controversy exists on whether the Kondratieff wave is valid for the post WWII economy. Many have rejected it on the basis that the 54-year mark was reached a decade ago, and should have been the trough. It can be argued, however, that the start of the "up" cycle began in 1940 or 1945, rather than 1930. Also, life expectancy has increased in the 20th century. If the 54-60 year cycle is based on generation aspects, then it would naturaly be 'stretched' beyond 60 years. Since these cycles of wars and economic birth and renewal occur every 2-3rd generation, we can say that when the generation to last see a depression dies off, it's time for another cycle to begin.

The message of this revolution of the Kondratieff cycle, which is a cycle of debt repudiation and not just of commodity price deflation (the deflation is caused in part by defaulting debt and a contracting global monetary base, as we have described in this report), is that humanity is much more aware of the effects of the cycle than, say, in the 1930s, and that the contraction can be handled. Although we have indicated that the masses have been in a state of denial as to the likelihood that this type of economic collapse can actually occur in this "new era," as it always seems to be considered when the masses fear the change from prosperity to economic contraction, awareness of the problems that are becoming apparent and a recognition of the mistakes that were made can serve to mitigate the contraction. When the y2k bug is factored in, we can see that this collapse matches the Kodratieff trough. The great credit bubble of the last 60 years will be washed away at the very trough predicted by the Kondratieff wave.

However, two factors complicate the picture until this revolution of the Kondratieff Cycle bottoms in 2003 when it can be expected that the collapsing mound of debt will finally be cleaned out (enter y2k). First, European Union, which takes its next step in 1999, represents a similar situation to that of China's assimilation of Hong Kong in that it represents a union of different governments. Both the Western and Eastern worlds participated in the excess speculation in Hong Kong leading up to the Crash of 1997. Falling government constructs cause the masses to put too much faith in the free market, and excess speculation results in a collapse. With European Union upcoming, changing government structure to allow for a coordinated European economy has resulted in too much investor confidence in the financial markets there, too. Thus, with the Union coming right at the end of the Kondratieff Cycle, another financial market collapse is likely to lead to a situation that gets worse before it gets better there. In fact, precious resources required for y2k conversion are being diverted to the 'Euro'.

Second, Canada's commodity-dependent economy presents an additional variable to North America's ability to withstand the forces of the deflationary contraction now spreading across the globe. Although there will be periods of rising commodity prices-perhaps the saving grace for economies such as Canada's (commodity and gold prices typically bottom right in the midst of the deflationary contraction, as they did in 1932 at the depths of the Great Depression)-this does complicate the picture with respect to anticipating Canada and North America's ability to "ride it out" with relatively little damage. In fact, because we are so technologically dependant, we may suffer even more.

The Mayans were known for there intricate tracking of cycles such as this one. By embracing the inevitability of the cycle, but not as a destiny but as a tendency, they were able to mitigate its effects and emerge from the cycle bottom in better condition that otherwise would have been possible. Will modern humanity entering the 21st century take heed to the lessons of the past? We certainly pray they do since a simple reality check is all that's needed to prevent the catastrophes now being seen in Asia and other countries. Futher analysis on the Kondratieff Wave

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Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Gold had rallied during CNY, hitting as high as 900++ before moving south. A pivot as been formed around 912. From Elliot Wave point of view, Wave 1 is now completed, we should see price to move between 858 - 912. I believe the next entry point should be around 835-858.

Commodities and futures pivot points

Last updated with closing prices on Wednesday, 28 January 2009

BrentGoldSilverGas OilHeating OilRbob BlendstockWTI Crude Oil
Open44.20900.212.060434.751.38101.205642.21
High46.19903.112.060459.001.44321.205643.60
Low43.76882.011.959434.751.38101.205640.60
Close44.90888.311.959443.751.41161.205642.16

Standard Pivots

BrentGoldSilverGas OilHeating OilRbob BlendstockWTI Crude Oil
R348.62924.212.161483.251.50541.205646.60
R247.38912.212.094470.081.47411.205645.12
R146.14900.312.026456.921.44291.205643.64
PIVOT44.95891.111.993445.831.41191.205642.12
S143.71879.211.925432.671.38071.205640.64
S242.52870.011.892421.581.34971.205639.12
S341.28858.111.824408.421.31851.205637.64

Fib Pivots

BrentGoldSilverGas OilHeating OilRbob BlendstockWTI Crude Oil
FIB R347.36912.012.093469.841.47351.205645.09
FIB R246.46904.212.055460.871.45051.205643.98
FIB R145.87899.212.031455.051.43561.205643.26
FIB PIVOT44.95891.111.993445.831.41191.205642.12
FIB S144.03883.111.954436.621.38831.205640.98
FIB S243.44878.111.930430.801.37341.205640.26
FIB S342.54870.211.893421.831.35041.205639.15

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

article from : Gold: Volatility 2009 (freelist@goldforecaster.com)
...................
..........1. Is the world going to experience deflation from here onwards? Or, do we believe that deflation will be defeated by inflation? This conclusion is the foundation of our investment policy for 2009 / 2010. Whatever our course on this is, will take us to success or failure.
2. In deflation cash is king and asset values decline. However, this leaves a twilight zone for gold, which in deflation is a haven from uncertainty and is a form of extreme-times cash. Its performance in the recent months has testified to this, as it dropped back somewhat but nowhere nearly as much as equities or commodities. Indeed, in currencies that experienced weakness against the U.S.$ gold has hardly fallen at all and in some has risen soundly.
3. In inflation asset values rise and cash value declines taking the value of savings with it. Debt loses its sting and the velocity of money accelerates as people run from cash into assets as fast as they can. Again, gold has to be separated from paper cash as it sits in its twilight zone again, as an asset that is unprintable, has no counterparty, while remaining a form of cash? As we watched the consumer bubble rise and house prices seemingly sailing up unstoppably, gold rose as if to warn of the coming credit crunch. It thus served as an excellent haven from the unreality of the seemingly endless rosy future that house prices had discounted.
4. These two points show us that our investment decisions need not be one or the other, but that desirable place of both, taking us to a safe place. How much better the helm feels when one can be sure of this direction. How much firmer our grip on our investments when we be certain of preserving and increasing real wealth this way?

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Commodities and futures

Commodities and futures pivot points

Last updated with closing prices on Wednesday, 14 January 2009

BrentGoldSilverGas OilHeating OilRbob BlendstockWTI Crude Oil
Open47.62821.910.446479.251.44601.167738.85
High48.58829.410.527484.751.46311.167739.39
Low46.19806.510.424452.251.43701.167735.50
Close47.62808.510.446463.251.46311.167737.28

Standard Pivots

BrentGoldSilverGas OilHeating OilRbob BlendstockWTI Crude Oil
R350.97852.310.630517.251.48921.167743.28
R249.85837.710.569499.251.48051.167741.28
R148.74823.110.507481.251.47181.167739.28
PIVOT47.46814.810.466466.751.45441.167737.39
S146.35800.210.404448.751.44571.167735.39
S245.07791.910.363434.251.42831.167733.50
S343.96777.310.301416.251.41961.167731.50

Fib Pivots

BrentGoldSilverGas OilHeating OilRbob BlendstockWTI Crude Oil
FIB R349.83837.510.568498.931.48021.167741.24
FIB R248.95829.010.530486.901.47061.167739.80
FIB R148.37823.510.505479.101.46431.167738.87
FIB PIVOT47.46814.810.466466.751.45441.167737.39
FIB S146.56806.110.427454.401.44451.167735.91
FIB S245.98800.610.402446.601.43821.167734.98
FIB S345.10792.110.364434.581.42861.167733.54

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Elliott Wave Theory

http://www.acrotec.com/ewt.htm

Elliott Wave Theory interprets market actions in terms of recurrent price structures obedient to the Fibonacci sequence. Basically, Market cycles are composed of two major types of Wave : Impulse Wave and Corrective Wave. For every impulse wave, it can be sub-divided into 5 - wave structure (1-2-3-4-5), while for corrective wave, it can be sub-divided into 3 - wave structures (a-b-c).


Surfer's Waves within Wave

An important feature of Elliott Wave is that they are fractal in nature. 'Fractal' means market structure are built from similar patterns on a larger or smaller scales. Therefore, we can count the wave on a long-term yearly market chart as well as short-term hourly market chart.

See waves within wave:

Rules for Wave Count

Based on the market pattern, we can identify ' where we are' in term of wave count. Nevertheless, as the market pattern is relatively simplistic, there are several rules for valid counts:
  1. Wave 2 should not break below the beginning of Wave 1;
  2. Wave 3 should not be the shortest wave among Wave 1, 3 and 5;
  3. Wave 4 should not overlap with Wave 1, except for wave 1, 5, a or c of a higher degree.
  4. Rule of Alternation : Wave 2 and 4 should unfold in two different wave forms.

Wave forms in Impulse Wave

There are three major types of wave form in Impulse Wave:

(a) Extended Wave

Among Wave 1, 3 and 5, only one should unfolded into extended wave. 'Extension' means the wave is elongated in nature and sub-waves are conspicuous in relation to waves of higher degree.

See extension pattern:

(b) Diagonal Triangle at Wave 5

Sometimes, the momentum at Wave 5 is so weak that the 2nd and 4th sub-waves overlap with each other and evolved into diagonal triangle.

(c) 5th Wave Failure

In some other circumstances, the Wave 5 is so weak than it even cannot surpass the top of the wave 3, causing a double top at the end of the trend.

See diagonal triangle and failure fifth pattern:

Wave Forms in Corrective Wave

Corrective Wave forms are rather complicated, but basically we can categorize them into six major wave forms:
  1. Zig-Zag : abc pattern composed of 5-3-5 sub-wave structure.
  2. Flat : abc pattern composed of 3-3-5 sub-wave structure, with b equals a.
  3. Irregular : abc pattern composed of 3-3-5 sub-wave structure, with b longer than a.
  4. Horizontal Triangle : 5-wave triangular pattern composed of 3-3-3-3-3 sub-wave structure.
  5. Double Three : abcxabc pattern composed of any two from above, linked by x wave.
  6. Triple Three : abcxabcxabc pattern composed of any three from above, linked by two x waves.
See Six Corrective patterns:

Conclusion

The attractiveness of Elliott Wave Analysis is : Three impulse wave forms and six corrective wave forms are conclusive. All we have to do is to identify which wave form is going to unfold in order to predict future market actions. This is a bold statement, needless to say, knowledge of market historical wave patterns and experiences in wave count are of paramount importance.

Monday, January 12, 2009

a letter written to editor of

http://news.goldseek.com/GoldSeeker/1231822800.php


Dear CIGAs,

With crude oil getting whacked and the Dollar having another one of those “let’s get out of risky trades” rallies, gold had as much chance as a snowball at one of Al Gore’s global warming symposiums (Note to Al – look out the window every now and then if you want to learn something – that white stuff that is everywhere is called ‘snow’). It collapsed through downside support near $840 and continued lower driven by sell stops until it breached the $830-$828 support level. If gold cannot recapture that $830 level and hold above it, technically-related selling pressure will increase. Support now emerges near the 40 day moving average at $814 with the 100 day moving average just beneath that at $810. Should gold move down into that region, it will be critical from a technical standpoint for the market to attract quality buying or face a much greater exodus of longs that could bring the market down to $800 or below. First resistance is back near $840 and then at today’s high. Above that is $880 which is the level capped by the bullion banks. Last Friday’s release of the Commitment of Traders data proved that it was that same crowd which once again stymied gold’s forward advance, much to the chagrin of the newsletter writers and hedge fund ninnies who were again made fools of as they chased prices higher only to have their pockets summarily picked by these vultures.

Note to the fund managers – this is not the soybean market – if you wish to make money playing the paper gold game against the bullion banks then have the good sense to alter your losing strategy and begin accumulating gold on weakness instead of the brain-dead and discredited method of chasing momentum higher. That will not work for gold. It has not worked for 8 years – why should things be any different in 2009?

Judging from the open interest readings, there are a large number of new speculative short positions being placed in this market. The bullion banks use this selling to cover existing shorts as the markets moves lower in addition to that of exiting longs. Over the last eight years, spec selling into weakness has not proved to be a profitable strategy either. The only way to have consistently made money in the gold market has to buy into weakness and sell into strength – the EXACT OPPOSITE of what these tech driven funds practice.

As a further point of note – the index funds spent the entire portion of their day today running out of all the various commodity markets that they had just run into over the past week as they rebalanced their portfolios. The commodity circus continues…. Corn went limit down, soybeans were beaten back and wheat puked – deflation is back in vogue where last week it was inflation. Copper in particular was mauled which it should have been after the stupid index fund buying of last week. Don’t like the current psyche – stick around another week or so; next week it will probably be hyperinflation only to be followed by a return to the barter system the week after that, and then a round circle back to deflation once again. Don’t feel bad if you cannot understand what the markets are saying right now – the market itself has no idea what it is saying – maybe it is attempting to get in touch with its inner child or some other sort of nonsense. Thanks fund managers for clearing things up for us all….

The impetus for knocking the grains lower was the USDA report this morning which came in with a bearish slant to it. Even at limit down corn is still 75 cents above its low made late last year and it still appears to me that prices went as low as they are going to go in that particular pit. Let’s continue to monitor both the grains and the crude oil to get some clues as to gold’s performance. Crude could not hold above $40 so a test of the low near $35 is right around the corner. What it does with that level will tell us whether a bottom is in this market as well or we are going to try for $30 before bottoming. Stay tuned.”-

Dan Norcini
, More at JSMineset.com

Thursday, January 08, 2009

Fibonanci Support & Resistence

Fib Pivots

BrentGoldSilverGas OilHeating OilRbob BlendstockWTI Crude Oil
FIB R353.32879.911.204543.711.66521.076451.28
FIB R251.20868.111.148529.831.63111.076448.82
FIB R149.82860.411.112520.831.60891.076447.23
FIB PIVOT47.64848.311.055506.581.57391.076444.70
FIB S145.47836.110.997492.331.53881.076442.17
FIB S244.09828.410.961483.331.51661.076440.58
FIB S341.97816.610.905469.461.48251.076438.12

Wednesday, January 07, 2009

Where will gold be heading next??
Before we can predict where gold price will be going, lets look at the current Gold chart/ Crude Oil & Currency Trade.
1) Gold has been making some new higher highs and higher lows since 24 Nov, gold is once again entering some consolidation phase. (trading between 840-880)
2) Negative Divergence spotted for MACD histogram even though price movement make a new high between 17-22 Dec. (the MACD histogram is unable to exceed its previous high of 10++)
3) a cross-over of MACD indicates a price reversal is happening now. This could bring to a further price drop as indicated by the cross over in EMA20 days. However 10 min tick data is showing a strong support 840 level.
4) The drop in gold price (Aug) happened at the same time when Crude Oil starts its steep descent
5) The drop in gold price (Aug) happened a few day after the drop in EURO$ vs US$

With this informations, can we summarise price movement in gold is due to impact from Crude oil & currency trade (especially EURO vs USD) ??
.Resistance at price of 48....


Another resistance for EURO vs USD currency trade....


Gold dropped to 840 level at NYMEX trading. What is next?
The next few days will be crucial as it will reveal my entry price, either 840 or 820.

Happy trading.