History will probably show me to be wrong as it often does, but I do not think we are through the woods yet. Technicals don't really matter.
When looking at things like total market leverage and debt saturation, we are in worse position than we were prior to the 2008 crash which should have caused people to wise up, but QE afforded the luxury of repeating the same mistakes.
Stocks and bonds have yet to take a hit since then. If and when they do, metals are typically the bellwhether since the less essential paper positions are unwound first to cover the more essential.
The Fed may still be tapering, but China is not. Their QE dwarves ours. They are printing up tons of money, buying our zero % interest debt, repackaging it for a higher interest rate, taking the arbitrage and shorting paper commodities so they can buy physical commodities for a better deal.
The last few months however, they've slowed their physical gold purchases after many years of continually growing imports.
If they are approaching the amount of gold they are willing to buy at these prices, then they may also be approaching a time where they do not need to short it, in which case they will not need our ZIRP as a means to their ends, in which case the Fed will have one less person at the party drinking their punch, someone who happens to drink a lot of it currently.
Whether that is occurring now or not, I feel it is an eventuality of their plan to acquire physical commodities in preparation for a global economy no longer dominated by the USD. Meetings taking place in China this week with Putin seem to indicate that process is accelerating.
If and when this reaches fruition the Fed will either have to go with massive QE to meet the shortfall, or else concede to default on US debt obligations. China holds the cards (see golden rule). I do not know whether it is in their longterm interests to enable us or not, but as a Russian ally I would imagine they are only doing so as long as it benefits them in some way.
Whether due to this or by other means, if the USD is not the world reserve currency we will no longer be in a position to export our debt to nations that are no longer using dollars to transact with, and the inflation genie will come home to roost on QE at that point. This is the point where I would see metals returning to prominence.
Until then, or until the current exchanges are no longer in charge, the paper price can be anything. Maybe the exchanges will let the price rise back to $30 or $40 to bring more to market in the meantime. I don't know what their price target is.
P.S.
Stand at 17. Let the dealer bust
Unless you have a sense for how many face cards have come and gone...