Pascal
12-20-2012, 03:45 PM
I performed an analysis of similar take down of gold in the past few years, since June 2008.
The selling strength of the past few days is one of the strongest.
I recorded 20 such events and the Figure below shows the average returns of Gold and GDX if you buy a the close of such a day (today is such a day).
The benchmark is defined as the average return for one day, two days, etc, independently of the selling/buying strength.
This figure shows that after 10 days, the returns are much better than the benchmark, but also that after a "take-down", gold stays in a trading range for three to four days, before bouncing.
I will post a more complete study on the subject in tomorrow's daily comment.
Pascal
16714
The selling strength of the past few days is one of the strongest.
I recorded 20 such events and the Figure below shows the average returns of Gold and GDX if you buy a the close of such a day (today is such a day).
The benchmark is defined as the average return for one day, two days, etc, independently of the selling/buying strength.
This figure shows that after 10 days, the returns are much better than the benchmark, but also that after a "take-down", gold stays in a trading range for three to four days, before bouncing.
I will post a more complete study on the subject in tomorrow's daily comment.
Pascal
16714