First, USD:
1. 2009 bearish trend was broken mid December, which started a bullish reversal. The fact that the dollar broke the 200d MA is significant--at least for now. It suggests a good amount of momentum. Remember around this time fears of sovereign default became more serious. The flight to safety trade gained momentum.
2. We're coming up to a test of the lower trendline and 200d MA on the dollar index. This is a key level. If we see a strong break below, odds are that the dollar safety trade is off and a resumption of the dollar bear & risk trades are back on. BUT...if it tests and resumes higher, we may see continued stagnation in the risk trades (equities, metals, commodities). Look to see what happens on the UUP (dollar proxy) around 23.00 to see if it holds.

Next, gold:
It always amazes me how long obvious destinations take to play out. Impatience is rarely rewarded in trading and investing. I think all "real money" advocates out there know that downside on gold is very limited and upside is enormous. That said, we have to let nature take it's course.
Gold had a nice breakout of $1000 up to $1224, but the rally stalled. I think everyone expected a higher move to $1300-1350 before the stall, but as always...the trend is our friend.
1. On a weekly chart, gold still looks a tad overbought and I wouldn't be surprised to see more treading or weakness for another few weeks. Trendline at 1000 looks strong. I would LOVE to see a retest of support at $1000-1050 and would be putting on a healthy position if it retests.
2. That said, sometimes the train leaves the station early. I think everyone saw the declining wedge pattern that indicated continued bullishness on the breakout. We'll need to see if that breakout holds or if it may tread water while waiting for the trendline to catch up.

3. Sometimes it's amazing how charts always look crystal clear in hindsight. The image above looked like a perfect wedge breakout in gold. What if it looks more like this?

I'm not going to attempt to predict short term patterns because the hit rate is notoriously low. But the larger trend in gold and the dollar is still intact. I think we'll see some fireworks in gold before the year is out. If we see a resumption in the dollar slide, hold onto your asses ladies and gentlemen.



