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I have several times shown through posted charts that this is untrue.What I said was that currently they are not confirming one another
1. I have several times shown through posted charts that this is untrue.
2. I won't be responding to your other points.
3. What is happening to gold is wholly consistent with a well-based bull market trend.
Perhaps you can find somewhere that suggests gold increasing by 9% in 2 weeks is "weak" given that would be a nice earner for 12 months!1. So here is your chart:
View attachment 102280
This is your evidence for demonstrating that Silver and Gold are correlated currently and even...that silver is outperforming gold currently.
So here are some more charts in the same time frame:
View attachment 102281 View attachment 102282 View attachment 102284
They are all (in this timeframe) indistinguishable. They are Gold v SLV, XLF, XLY.
This timeframe is meaningless, hence why I discount your chart.
2. Of course you won't.
3. Well I disagree. I think the bull move is extremely weak and suspect, for all the previously stated reasons.
jog on
duc
1. Perhaps you can find somewhere that suggests gold increasing by 9% in 2 weeks is "weak" given that would be a nice earner for 12 months!
2. Or should we consider an increase of 36% in 12 months a better time frame and equally weak?
My definition of "currently" would be now, but given we need a time frame to show the trend unfolding in recent days, I have provided the comparative metal's performance for April:
3. Despite what is evident, you still want to insist that silver is not yet confirming gold's bull market.
I am not interested in what silver is doing because I cannot see that it is important to gold's bull trend.
However, if we were to use pattern analysis, then in 2 years silver will significantly outshine gold's performance.
Well, that is your idea, but I doubt it fits most investors understanding of what a bull market entails.1800 is the test. If it breaks through and runs, then the argument is far stronger for a 'bull market'.
1. Well, that is your idea, but I doubt it fits most investors understanding of what a bull market entails.
2. The genesis of this bull market goes back to 2016 where a long-term market bottom occurred and was followed through to May 2019 with a rolling series of higher lows. A month later POG broke above a previous high from 5 years ago. Then 3 months later it had added another 10% to its price, and continued from there to peak almost $200 higher again just over 6 months later. This bull run has been in play for a long time.
3. You will only find more confirmations in a Church.
Well this kind of explains, why there was a dive in Gold and Silver as the markets tanked. People sold down Gold jewelry and even the family Silver ware to raise cash or in technical terms to ensure liquidity in difficult times.When the Hunt brothers tried to corner the market in silver, the high price brought out all the sellers, breaking the corner: currently https://www.barchart.com/story/news...gh-thais-with-dwindling-incomes-sell-off-gold
BANGKOK (AP) — With gold prices rising to a seven-year high, many Thais have been flocking to gold shops to trade in their necklaces, bracelets, rings and gold bars for cash, eager to reap profits during an economic downturn.
They are unable to carry out their normal practice of quickly reselling the gold abroad because of the greatly reduced number of flights to ship the gold and a shortage of buyers in other countries, who are restricted by lockdown orders and market closures.
Jitti Tangsithpakdi, chairman of the Gold Traders Association and owner of Chin Hua Heng Goldsmith Co, told The Associated Press that more than 90% of recent gold shop customers are sellers.
Many Asians hold gold as savings and investments. In Bangkok, gold shops are clustered in Chinatown, where long lines were stretched even further by social distancing. Jitti said he believes the current wave of sellers mostly are seeking to profit from the high price.
However, some of those waiting said they were selling their gold to get cash to support their families since many have lost their jobs.
Saranya Prasert, a fruit exporter, said the COVID-19 crisis has halted her business and her family is struggling for money. They are selling gold jewelry that they had kept for more than 10 years as savings.
What think ye?
jog on
duc
Well this kind of explains, why there was a dive in Gold and Silver as the markets tanked. People sold down Gold jewelry and even the family Silver ware to raise cash or in technical terms to ensure liquidity in difficult times.
Silver has outperformed gold for the past month, but you refuse to acknowledge this or, instead, indulge in what you seem to think offers meaning.If the commodity markets start to signal inflation, then silver is the trade.
1. Silver has outperformed gold for the past month, but you refuse to acknowledge this or, instead, indulge in what you seem to think offers meaning.
As this thread is about where gold is heading, not silver, I try to stay focused.
Perhaps you should open a new thread and see who wants to discuss your specific interests.
2. I post charts that show a range of features and describe their significance, if any.
In a trending bull market a simple reality is that price action is constrained within "boundaries" or channels. When this pattern fails then we play a new ball game.
3. I reckon next week is prime time for picking up good gold producers, given a big dip in POG overnight. I posted elsewhere on EVN to show the disparity between equity prices and spot gold. A similar disparity exists across many of our producers and, with luck to date, few have been impacted to any degree by COVID-19 that I am aware.
4. As a general comment, there will be elements of the US market that latch on to Trump's attempt to reopen States for business over the next week. I see that as likely to hold gold back in the immediate term. However, in the longer term it is even better for gold because COVID-19 needs to be under a semblance of control, otherwise it will linger a lot longer. Modelling data show that each day a nation holds back on a lockdown it adds a week to recovery. The problem in the USA is that there are no border controls and this virus will keep multiplying when States let their guard down.
1. Silver is considered more of a speculative play as it is also considered an industrial metal as well as an investment vehicle. Gold is the primary gauge of precious metal investing sentiment. But I have noticed a theme in the past that may play out once again. That is Silver will follow Gold price with a lag. i.e. plays catch up.
2. Like rob, I like the leveraged plays of mining companies that are exposed to Silver and Gold. Plenty of Gold stocks on the ASX and all are rallying with POG at the moment except a few that are left behind or smashed like DCN
3. However, you have to search under every rock to find a good Silver play on the ASX. I have done that over the years and there are a few stocks with base metal mining exposure that has a Silver exposure but almost no pure Silver mining plays, except just a couple. Probably the pick of the bunch is Silver Mines Limited (SVL) which has the largest undeveloped Silver deposit called 'Paris' which I have discussed in the past in Speculative Stock Portfolio.
4. A good pure play Silver stock if searching the entire world would be the Canadian Silver miner First Majestic Silver Corp (AG), appropriately with Symbol Ag which is also the code for Silver in the Periodic Table
5. These guys will provide leveraged bang for buck if Gold has another multi-year bull market and Silver follows eventually...
Except that for a comparison to be valid it needs to index each metal from the exact same starting point, and you did not do that. Moreover, ETFs are not spot prices.So here is Gold as against Silver in the last month:
Good chart, I remember the Silver lag in GFC quite well. At the moment it is also lagging by a fair bit and the USD Gold/Silver Ratio is quite high historically speaking:1. Agreed re. industrial/speculative. As to lagging gold:
(a) In the 1970 Silver leads gold;
(b) In 1983 Silver lagged;
(c) Lagged 2008;
(d) Currently lagging (significantly)
View attachment 102427
In 2008, there was a lag, but the lag currently would concern me as it is materially different type of lagging.
3. Paradoxically, the best plays are the most leveraged (debt) companies. There is a definite fundamental reason for this, but it is a bit long winded.
4. I'll have to take your word on that.
5. I don't see any debt on the Balance Sheet (quick look).
jog on
duc
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