GOLD PLUMMETS
I wrote a series on why the average investor should never use stop losses. Stop losses in theory protect you, but in reality, they are a way to ensure that with every severe drop in the market, stop losses are triggered and make a dramatic temporary loss, a permanent irrecoverable loss. Usually a steep drop is followed by a recovery of some amount. Triggering a stop loss removes this possibility.
Today, GOLD plummeted because of stop losses. A short term drop, precipitated stop losses being triggered across the board, and everyone who had a stop loss protection got killed. Gold also suffered a precipitous drop as a result.
Kitco Article This Morning – Stop Losses Trigger Gold’s Fall
Gold Update: Comex Gold Falls Below $1,500/Oz On Heavy Stop-Loss Selling, Long Liquidation
By Allen Sykora of Kitco News Friday April 12, 2013 11:20 AM
(Kitco News) – Most-active U.S. gold futures fell below $1,500 an ounce for the first time in nearly two years Friday in a move that traders are describing as largely technical in nature, with sell stops hit as the market slipped first through last week’s longtime lows and then support at the lows that had held since September 2011.
Otherwise, the decline does not appear to be fueled by any major breaking news, observers said. In fact, the slide is coming on a day when U.S. economic data has been soft and equities are on the defensive.
“It’s a liquidation event,” said Frank Lesh, broker and futures analyst with FuturePath Trading. “The market is forcing people out.”Several traders reported that sell stops have been triggered. These are pre-placed orders activated when certain chart points are hit, often to kick traders out of positions to limit losses or book a profit, although market participants can also use stops to establish fresh positions based on the technical picture of a market.
Just after 11 a.m. EDT, gold for June delivery was down $70.30 to $1,494.60 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The metal hit a low of $1,491.40 that was the contract’s lowest level since April 2011. May silver was down $1.612 to $26.085 an ounce.
Bottom Line
If you are a pro and trading futures, it is ok to use Stop Losses. Otherwise,beware and avoid.
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