Nyden
G.E. Money Genie
- Joined
- 23 May 2007
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Since 1970 gold has gone up 33 times to 1 or US$35 to US$1,250 today. In 1970 you could buy the average good home for $35,000, to day $500,000 or 14 times to 1, looks like gold has been the winner by a long way and history has told this same story for over 2000 years. And I have family who have held gold for that period too and no way will they sell.
And of course later in the week as it did last week it will be rising again.
Sorry for coming into your rampfest thread Sinner. I now realise that only comments involving gold going to the moon are welcome here. ... Oh, and do not assume I am simply anti-gold. I have traded it, on a short-term basis. However, I have done this without even a lick of a concern for the fundamentals - and with successI simply believe that gold is a terrible performer over any long period.
This is the exact idiocy I am talking about ^^
To explod, I am a Central Bank loving, pro manipulation deflationista who will stop at nothing to see gold in the ground.
(simply because I pointed out his view has no basis in reality)
To you, I am rampfest goldbug who will stop at nothing to see "anti golds" in the ground.
(simply because I pointed out your view has no basis in reality)
If you had bothered to check this thread instead of towing your stupid line, you could have noticed I posted charts highlighting the inflation adjusted gold price more than a few times already in November.
This is the exact idiocy I am talking about ^^
To explod, I am a Central Bank loving, pro manipulation deflationista who will stop at nothing to see gold in the ground.
(simply because I pointed out his view has no basis in reality)
To you, I am rampfest goldbug who will stop at nothing to see "anti golds" in the ground.
(simply because I pointed out your view has no basis in reality)
If you had bothered to check this thread instead of towing your stupid line, you could have noticed I posted charts highlighting the inflation adjusted gold price more than a few times already in November.
May I request that you explain how my view has no basis in reality? My view is that gold has been a very volatile and poor performer, and that perfect timing seems to be required in order to take advantage of its apparent purpose.
Please, do elaborate on how that view has no basis in reality.
Sure, if you bought gold 40 years ago, and - so long as you didn't sell before 2002 - you'd have come out a winner. However, any sort of stop loss or rational would have gotten an investor out long before then, and into better assets.
1. You say that gold does not "perform". Incorrect. As a currency, gold debases at a slower rate than any fiat currency (it debases at the rate of production - which is declining - minus the rate of consumption).
2. You say that gold is not productive. Incorrect. Gold has many industrial/scientific/medical applications. Gold is at least as productive as silicon and more productive than silver.
3. You say that gold is volatile. Based on which volatility measurement? In comparison to what? Other commodities? Equities? Treasury bills? Commodities are volatile by nature. Gold is probably the least volatile commodity I've traded. I've even included charts from a randomly selected commodity future below if you can find me a gold chart that looks even vaguely similar I will eat my hat.
London Wheat (trades same hours as gold): Looks nothing like a gold chart
View attachment 34849
4. You say that gold is a poor performer. As I mentioned in my previous posts today, gold is not an asset class like stocks or real estate and to treat it as such is stupid. If you don't understand this, or don't understand why, then what are you doing in this thread? This point also covers your "claim" that gold is a poor performer.
5. You say that perfect timing is required: guess what I have been buying gold or silver pretty much every payday since I was 15 and I'm pretty sure my payday isn't perfect timing yet I seem to be doing pretty well on my precious metals holdings. I trade gold all the time and have posted calls and charts in this thread, which had nothing to do with "perfect timing" "to take advantage of its apparent purpose".
6. You say Central Banks buy gold because they can't buy anything else. This is blatantly rediculous. Gold is in fact the SMALLEST market cap of all the currencies which central banks buy and sell.
7. You spout rubbish like this:
Err yeah right, so Warren Buffett bought one fifth of the world entire silver supply in the late 80s early 90s and any "rational" should have seen him out long before now, and into better assets? Then why the hell is he still sitting on that pile of silver mate? You telling me Buffett is irrational or his "stop loss" on a giant pile of silver got hit?
8. You have been spouting the SAME junk for over 6 months now (I just went and checked to confirm). You were bagging the gold bugs because the "rise hadn't eventuated", and saying crap like "what happens when the recovery starts and gold loses its lustre", well guess what the recovery started and people piled into gold. I believe your call was gold to $300 instead of rocketing. Guess what, it rocketed.
9. You also claim that the current gold price is pure speculation when COT reports clearly show central bank interest in selling USD to buy gold. If CB purchasing of a currency is speculation, then what isn't?
10. You say good economic figures result in people flooding to the gold exits, but gold has been rising steadily on the back of a steadily rising NFP curve for almost 12 months now.
As far as I'm concerned, the rules of investing in one asset class apply to another. One must always be prepared to accept a loss, and to be prepared that one may be wrong. I am not Buffet. I do not have 100s of millions of dollars to play around with, nor to lose. If a position is losing, or not performing - I would sell it - despite the class.
Really don't care what you would do, but it's not like you haven't told us at least four times today already.
Sell away, I will happily add to my pile from whatever you or any other gold denier want to sell (if they ever held even a grain of gold in the first place). I am following the same plan I've been following for almost a decade:
USD cheap? Buy USD.
USD expensive? Sell USD, use profits to buy cheap gold @ 10%.
Hasn't failed me yet.
apologies for interrupting the discussion of fundamentals for holding gold long term or otherwise, but appears we've taken out the previous low. Change of trend anyone?
apologies for interrupting the discussion of fundamentals for holding gold long term or otherwise, but appears we've taken out the previous low. Change of trend anyone?
May last post was just the big picture and perhaps to some degree directed at Beej to show that over the very long term, property and gold is a great long term investment but at this stage gold in the long term is ahead.
apologies for interrupting the discussion of fundamentals for holding gold long term or otherwise, but appears we've taken out the previous low. Change of trend anyone?
Even if so, CBs will be looking to squeeze out shorts on the way down, so be cautious.
Suppose, for example, that you have 50 billion dollars, and you use this stash to buy the entire 2008 and 2009 peanut crops. You triple the price of peanut contracts. Congratulations! Your position is now valued at $150 billion. You've made a 200% profit. You've made money just by marking to market. You should be a spammer.
This is called "market manipulation," or more specifically "cornering the market," and it happens to be illegal. But even if it was not illegal, it would be unprofitable, because you cannot generally profit with this strategy - as you sell, you are driving the price back down. Your peanut contracts are valued at $150 billion - but can you get $150 billion for them? You can't buy lunch with peanut contracts.
This is called the burying-the-corpse problem, the corpse being the vast quantity of peanuts that you have bought but don't intend to eat. The accounting profit is indeed a mirage. Unless of course you can bury the corpse - ie, get some other fool to take all those peanuts off your hands, at anything like the inflated price you have created.
. Of course there are other reasons you may still have wanted a portion of your investments in physical gold through that period anyway - but that's a bit more like insurance I would say.
Cheers,
Beej
Wondrful Beej, the sun has come up, physical is only 20% percent of my own portfolio. It is indeed a hedge and no matter how you look at it it has proven to outperform property. I have since 1970 made most of my money out of property as most of us have, starting with our family homes.
Whereas you earn no income from your physical gold and in fact it costs you to store it.
Just to clarify and most people dont understand this but if you look hard enough there are a few places that actually pay you interest on your gold.
Something to consider when holding physical long term
apologies for interrupting the discussion of fundamentals for holding gold long term or otherwise, but appears we've taken out the previous low. Change of trend anyone?
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