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I showed that over the past fortnight (not the past 2 hours), silver has actually outperformed gold.You are seriously trying to prove your point using a 2hr chart?
Yet at post #12182 there is a marked divergence from 2010, as shown below:1. Silver mirrored Gold all the way from 1973 through 2018. From 2018, Silver has diverged from Gold.
"Currently" means the present, yet you posted a chart going back almost 6 months, while I posted a comparison for recent weeks actually showing silver's outperformance.Silver is (currently) not confirming the move in Gold.
1. With regard to your 7th point at post #12178 you are separating the issue of debt from "price."
2. These factors affect the economy in different ways. We are heading into a recession (shaded areas charted below) and gold is likely to do ok. However, it's the out-years where gold comes into its own:
I will show below that this was not true:Silver is sending a warning that all is not well in this move higher for Gold
Well, no.2. Your argument above is essentially the chart posted by myself (from a 3'rd party) is wrong. Well there are actually two arguments there:
(a) That Gold will fall; and/or
(b) Silver will rise.
1. Gold set a 12 year record high price overnight as it continues its bull run.
Had you read the link at @ducati916's post of last Thursday, you would have seen it saying this about POG's rising trend: "We have very little trust in this formation." His link had 7 charts showing why gold was destined to fall in the immediate term.
It did not happen.
2. The chart below is a continuation of the two I posted immediately above, but focuses on only the last month's price action (15-minute bars):
3. On 3 April @ducati916 posted one of the least useful contributions I have seen in this thread, and we exchanged many posts. In one he suggested:I will show below that this was not true:
4. The mistake @ducati916 continues to make is in not appreciating that divergence affects the strength of an otherwise strongly positive gold:silver correlation.
It's also important to make logical statements, and @ducati916 does not always do that. For example:
5. Well, no.
Both can rise, and that's where we are right now.
The difference is that silver remains about $3.50/oz below its Feb 20 peak this year, while gold is at a 12 year high.
Conditions were good for gold last year.With conditions absolutely perfect for gold, rising debt (credit expansion by the Fed) which you state to be the primary driver of a rising gold price and a catalyst that has created widespread uncertainty, is gold moving so slowly and is still below its all time high?
I took some time to re-read your comments.1. I provided that link for 2 reasons: (i) you asked for updates and (ii) to provide an alternative viewpoint.
2. Gold compared to currency fluctuations adds what to the argument?
3. And your chart is incorrect in relation to the discussion: viz. that Silver is not confirming the move in Gold. Why is that important, simply because for the last 40+yrs, Silver has confirmed the move.
View attachment 102246
You simply want to present a distorted view of the position. You are not really interested in actually discussing why this divergence might be happening.
4. Clearly Gold and Silver are not currently correlated. They were. They are not currently. Whether that correlation again reasserts itself, we shall see. The correlation can reassert itself if: (a) gold falls, or silver rises (faster) than gold. If they both rise at the same % rate, their divergence will be maintained.
5. See (4) above.
So my questions are:
With conditions absolutely perfect for gold, rising debt (credit expansion by the Fed) which you state to be the primary driver of a rising gold price and a catalyst that has created widespread uncertainty, is gold moving so slowly and is still below its all time high?
Why is silver divergent?
What happens to gold if yields start to rise, reflecting the inflation that you maintain is being (or going to be) created by the Central Banks? My position being that gold is more tightly correlated to the 30yr Bond than it is to your chart analysis skills.
View attachment 102247
Is gold currently still being driven by the secular trend that started +/- in 2002, or, is the secular trend ending?
jog on
duc
The equity market contradiction is that yesterday our gold producers rocketed higher. However, they are getting exactly the same returns for their output as they received a month ago. Go figure
I took some time to re-read your comments.
1. I wondered if anything else warranted comment.
2. First, you have a knack for poor analysis, and it's not helped by presenting an alternative viewpoint that gets almost everything wrong.
3. Second, I explain my charts, and sometimes there is a commentary embedded in the chart that makes a different point.
4. (a) Third, I have no interest in explaining what is happening with silver in this thread, (b) so I have instead shown why some of your points do not stack up.
5. Fourth, it is absolutely wrong to say gold and silver are not correlated. They are strongly positively correlated. However, the strength of the correlation varies and over long periods can give the appearance that their respective trends are not complementary.
6. With regard to gold and bonds there is a similar correlation. However, in none of these cases can it be shown that any one drives the other.
7. Finally, I use charts to show patterns and relationships, and I explain their context and relevance. You can read what I wrote last Wednesday as an example.
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