- Joined
- 17 June 2004
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- 3
Wayne, this is not what I'm trying to say. Of course there is no form of analysis that can predict the future. However, if the US is on terror alert, then I as a human being with some sort of intelligence, can take that into consideration. I will therefore go and buy gold. Simply because gold is s save heaven and tends to rise in troubled times. Charts on the other hand won't see anything like that. So you may get a sell signal based on historical data when in fact the price is about to rise considerably. Regardles of any point of resistance or trading pattern. So if you're saying that we can only make educated guesses, then that's exactly my point. An educated guess for gold has nothing to do with a chart. It has to do with the current situation on this planet rather than historical figures and trend lines.This is true Stefan, but this is also true of any form of analysis. There is no analysis that can predict the future. We can only make projection/educated guesses.
The aim is not to be right 100% of the time. The aim is to maximise gain as a % of dollars risked.
This feels like stupid question, but anyway...
When you buy or sell metals, you're dealing in ingots right? So what's the physical process at settlement? i.e. how do the ingots get from seller to buyer?
I love gold, but not in the form of ingots. We bought Newcrest at 1.90 ;D
Ghoti
We wil just have to agree to disagree here
These people/institutions have relegated gold to just another bloody commodity. However there still are a lot of people who take the same view as yourself.
Thanks Wayne,
I noticed your post about the settlement fails over on propertyinvesting. I gather that you agree, as I do, with the comment from Gary North that systems fail "at the margins" i.e. where attention is not focussed.
As a trader, your whole business would be dependent on settlements systems yes? I'd be interested in your thoughts about the probabilities and impact of failure of one or more of those systems, and what protections you have in place for yourself.
I'm happy to read about them in a website article if that's easier for you. *
Cheers,
Ghoti
still_in_school said:Hi Waynel,
Last friday, sold off all my gold positions, not due to any real technical reason, but due to seasonal change... my main real concern is that, for the last 23 years (except for last year) Gold, has always fallen from higher highs, after the first few weeks of October and some February Months, after some very nice appreciation,
though i could be wrong for this year, i've noticed already in some gold stocks, a slight selling off last friday afternoon... yet with today's market rally (its seems, my precious words have turned on me)
though if gold, does go heading south, other attractive commodities such as nickel, copper and silver, are looking attractive.
Cheers,
sis
RichKid said:Thanks a million folks for contributing to one of my pet topics!!
Gold is currently tickling 421 so it has retreated from the weekend high.
Thanks Wayne for the great chart, I'm a beginner at TA so I just use the free charts and I'm unable to show trend lines or detail so you've done a great job.
My personal view (from the charts I posted earlier) is that this attempt at piercing the next longterm resistance line (since about 1990 from memory), being the fourth upswing so far this year, will see another retreat towards 400 (to or through the boundary you show on your channel support). Without the oil spike gold would have struggled to come this far so soon.
BTW, if oil would retreat obediently this week (before attacking $60 again) then gold could retreat with it (this is just my guess) and then gold can regain the attack on the resistance afresh. I'm trying to work out a timespan by the length and duration of each go at the $430 mark (or thereabouts). The higher tops and higher bottoms are ominous for the 'gold bears'. I expect gold to go to at least $500 in the next year or two, going by the charts.
Of course all I say above could be wrong but $430 will fall sooner rather than later IMHO. Oil is high, the US economy is running into trouble and Iraq isn't getting any easier and terrorist attacks are less likely to decrease than increase. only odd thing is that the US$ to my mind is going south, that appears to lower the US$ price of gold but I've heard analysts say that they aren't as closely related as they used to be. Think I'll get some charts at somestage and compare gold to the US$ over time...
I'm only just getting the hang of TA so I can't really understand fibonacci and gann patterns but I hope to get my head around it at some stage.
BTW, do you subscribe to TradingTutors (free) Wayne? If nothing else you'll find it interesting (they use Gann methodology- David Bowden's mob) and show a lot of trades using swing charts, and they also look at US stocks. Bowden's products were too complicated and expensive for me so I just stick to basics.
wayneL said:But I'm getting more and more convinced that the Krugerands my old man gave me aren't a bad thing...may even add to them.
So why spend big bucks on a complicated style of analysis when you can learn simple momentum techniques for free, and get similar (I think better) results?
Fibonacci works because everybody is looking at the same levels...a self fulfilling prophecy to some extent. The only tricky part is guessing at which level the herd is going to tun at.
I very much like the KISS principle when trading. And that was probably the toughest thing for me to learn...complicated is not better.
When I look at my trading method, it is almost embarresingly simple. And I listen to no one when I trade. No newsletters, websites, mates...no one!
But you have to learn stuff, so in the beginning you have to listen to somebody and therein lies the trap. Most people doing the teaching aren't traders.....otherwise they would be trading not teaching.
Cheers
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