michael_selway
Coal & Phosphate, thats it!
- Joined
- 20 October 2005
- Posts
- 2,397
- Reactions
- 2
Well it doesn't look good for gold bulls right now. Price is now drifting down in a current downtrend. Next strong support is at 750. Buyers will try and come and try and hold that price. I dunno what will happen if prices don't hold up there. I'd be shorting it now definitely.
Gold is bought by money. It is not money. When China crashes we'll see if they want dollars or Gold. I'm thinking they will trade their gold for dollars.
T
If there was no demand for the metal, spot prices would have dried up and gold would now be in the sub-$500 range - on par with price falls amongst the base metals.
GOLDLet's take a one year time frame and revisit this thread from time to time. Where would you rather be? Greenback or Gold?
Yes, the word inflation technically refers only to monetary inflation. I was referring to consumer price inflation.Let's not get too caught up in money supply arguments either.
So what makes gold go up? When banks and markets are actually functioning (unlike now) -- gold goes up when inflation rates exceed interest rates.
This is a contradiction. Inflation is purely monetary. Increase in money supply is inflationary. Decrease in money supply is deflationary. Nothing more, nothing less. It's all about money supply.
There is a mad rush for dollars right now and there just aren't enough to go around. The printing is no where near enough to cover the destruction of credit, even if the money was reaching the credit markets - which it isn't. Right now, I'd rather be in cash than anything else. Greenbacks in particular.
Let's take a one year time frame and revisit this thread from time to time. Where would you rather be? Greenback or Gold?
I agree with that, but is that '73-'75 period really a good example? The price of gold was effectively fixed up until Bretton Woods collapsed in 1971, and according to this article (PDF), the price was so low that many gold miners had shut up shop.My point is that consumer price inflation exceeding the interest rate available on bank deposits naturally causes people to seek a store of value that does not pay a negative yield.
In that extract "both prior cycles" refers to pre-1935 and 1935-1971. "Today" means around 2000.In both prior cycles, gold prices were held at unrealistically low levels during the peak years to hide inflation and make governments look good. In each case, much higher gold prices were subsequently a necessary part of the adjustment process. By the end of the last cycle, gold prices were so low relative to mining costs that much of the gold mining industry had closed down amidst a level of devastation not since approached until today.
Here is a graph of the Dow Jones during 1973 and 1974.
It fell from 1075 down to 575 - so it nearly halved in two years - one of the worst developed economy bear markets in history. Over the same period gold went from $65/oz to $195/oz. Indie, I agree with your general assertion that a serious credit contraction is likely to be bearish for all asset prices - but prices of hard assets (like gold) and paper assets (like stocks) can also go in quite different directions.
The way US gold stocks are behaving, down 10% night on night, and silver falling to $9.20, I'm looking to hedge with a short around 825 if possible. The initial target would be the pennant support at around 750. Happier if I'm wrong though!
Gold is bought by money. It is not money. When China crashes we'll see if they want dollars or Gold. I'm thinking they will trade their gold for dollars.
As for China, they already have $1.7t of USD paper and very little gold reserves (1-2%). Various officials have already publicly stated they need to diversify from USD and increase gold holdings.
gold gets the collateral damage as well as some well timed technical selling.
Lol.However there is a MASSIVE disconnect with physical markets. Physical silver is already at a 40-50% premium over the paper price. Physical gold is at a 10-25% premium. He intends to rebuy on COMEX, standing for delivery, to make money on the arbitrage.
5,000 years of human history says you are wrong.
Wrong about what? Everyone knows all fiats end the same way. I'm not arguing any different. I'm betting gold takes a big hit from deflationary pressures over the next 12 months, maybe more. There have been plenty of periods throughout history where fiat has out-performed gold.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?