Gold Nears Apex Of Triangle Pattern
By Corey Rosenbloom on August 31, 2009 | More Posts By Corey Rosenbloom | Author's Website
For anyone who has been following gold prices lately, you’re probably aware of the dominant triangle pattern that is reflecting a lengthy consolidation in price. Let’s take a quick look at that pattern and what the potential upside and downside targets will be with a solid break of the pattern.

The symmetrical triangle pattern began in early 2009 and will likely still be the dominant pattern as we enter September.
Traditionally, we would expect a break-out move as price nears the apex, or point where the two converging trendlines intersect. On any price breakout of this range - beneath $940 or above $970 - then we would add or subtract the height of the triangle from the breakout zone.
Should price break to the upside - which seems to be the dominant opinion - then the upside target would be near $1,200 ($1,170).
On a downside break, price would have more support levels (from higher timeframe moving averages and Fibonacci retracements), but an eventual target would be expected to be the $750 range.
Take a quick look at the 3/10 Momentum Oscillator to note a momentum consolidation (or range consolidation) in the oscillator - watch for a break here to indicate a likely range expansion move as well.
Under the principle “Price Alternates Between Periods of Range Expansion and Contraction,” we would expect some sort of impulse or sustained move to form out of this consolidation pattern upon any confirmed break.

