explod
explod
- Joined
- 4 March 2007
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Nice charting Sinner, thanks.
The post from InTheMoneyStocks on the 'Commodity Stocks Get Rocked' thread is interesting, explaining the negative effects on increasing interest rates in Asia. Thread at: https://www.aussiestockforums.com/forums/showthread.php?t=21690
Investing Insights from Top Newsletter Writers!
We turn now to Augustus Yellowgleam of the Super Gold Boom Quarterly Letter...
TRB: Hi Augustus, what's your favorite investment here for people worried about deflation?
Yellowgleam: We would be buying gold here to protect against deflation.
TRB: Ah. And for those concerned with the dollar plummeting and a nasty bout of inflation, your recommendation?
Yellowgleam: That's easy, we would tell investors to up their allocations toward gold here.
TRB: And if the troubles in Europe ameliorate and the US deficit is cut in half, where would you be positioned?
Yellowgleam: We'd be positioned in gold in that scenario.
TRB: At 1300?
Yellowgleam: Yes.
TRB: How about at 900 or 2900?
Yellowgleam: Yes, we'd be buyers.
TRB: I see, and in a hypothetical environment of disinflation, or some sort of alternate reality that involved a perfect Utopian harmony between supply of money and cost of goods?
Yellowgleam: Yeah, so in that scenario, we'd be recommending gold.
TRB: Gotcha. And if gold broke into your house and killed your family?
Yellowgleam: Gold is a hedge against both breaking and entering and it also works well in a homicidal environment, so yes, we'd be buying gold under those circumstances absolutely - silver too.
TRB: OK, thanks Augustus.
Yellowgleam: Gold.
TRB: What?
Yellowgleam: I meant Thanks.
Explod, John Embry seems to know his stuff. His 'drivel' points 1.) to 5.) on page one are instructive. Doubt that many would disagree with his overall LT secular trend comments, and '..QE to infinity..'.... the following article on the recent manfactured correction sums up some good points in my view:- http://www.sprott.com/Docs/InvestorsDigest/2011/MPLID_012811_pg003Emb.pdf
Interesting move up in gold and silver in the last hour.
However the following article on the recent manfactured correction sums up some good points in my view
Having trouble deciding which chart is more interesting, decided to post them all.
Gold bounced last night at technical support
View attachment 41049
".... the anti-gold cartel unleashed a vicious paper driven attack......"
(will post the ASX:XGD reaction to last night's action this arvo after the ASX close I guess)
Gold taking a bit of a beating the last hour again (daily chart), testing support.
It's gonna break soon. EUR/USD starting to weaken also, so is the last gasp surge in the USD imminent ?
Yeah, 1240 seems a reasonable start. But I reckon we've got a bit bigger correction on our hands than that.
If I'm right, the USD will rally a bit starting the rebalanceing currency dance and probably start a bit of a panic sell-off in USD terms, but the AUD POG graph curve should kick up a bit and maybe overlap the USD for a bit before this correction is over... maybe close to 1,000 USD.
Based on Fibonacci Analysis, I have the closest support "within walking distance" to your 1240. But based on the Bearish MACD Divergence on the yearly scale, I'd be prepared for a much deeper fall. see attached chart.A healthy correction to US $1240 is the target IMO. This is not financial advice. I make my own money without government guarantees or printing presses.
DYOR
Dude, please revisit your previous gold calls for us. You often seem to post the same call without ever revisiting your thoughts.
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/meet-man-behind-liquidating-hedge-fund-blew-gold-marketOver the past several weeks there had been rumors that the reason for the precipitous drop in gold was primarily driven by a hedge fund liquidating its futures positions. This has now been confirmed: "Yeah, that was just me liquidating my spread position," Mr. Daniel Shak, [of SHK Asset Management] 51 years old, said in an interview. "I had a significant, fully margined position. The dollar amount of the gold liquidation was very small, it was just a lot of contracts."
Everyone is happily touting this story to explain the 81,000 OI cratering on Monday which was the biggest one day drop of OI in history. http://www.gata.org/node/9540 . NOT SO FAST. This is baloney in my opinion.
The last COT report shows total spreads in managed money were 63,507 contracts. This "Shak" dude is a money manager so how did he liquidate 81,000 contracts? The total reported spreads were 103,947…are we meant to believe that this one dufus from Las Vegas had 80% of all spread contracts!!??
The WSJ article just stinks. For example people don't say things like "Yeah, that was just me liquidating my spread position," Mr. Shak, 51, said in an interview. In the article it says he was down 70% but quotes him as follows: "I just chose to close, I didn't like my positions so I chose to liquidate, I wasn't forced. I was in the process of closing anyway."...You have to be kidding me!...70% down "he didn’t like his positions"!! That’s just the sort of thing an average Joe will say!
The Commodity Exchange Act provides anonymity for traders …we are still waiting for the investigation from 2008 in what happened in silver and who did what yet WSJ in a matter of days gets the name and all the trading info about the "Shak Attack". This is an early April Fool’s spoof and very conveniently put out to kill everyone’s curiosity…move along nothing to see here just one guy liquidating 81,000 spread contracts!
Let’s hear it for the CFTC and the gold cartel and Obama’s goal of more transparency!
Cheers
Adrian
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