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Likewise.Last night not a good night for gold many SL triggered for my speculative entries.
The core of my PMs will remain untouched but expecting a big hit on portfolio value today
Rsg?I deleted a 30c bid this morning....I fully expect to see some of my low ball Gold bids picked off today.
Mick
No not Reg, but ALK, CEN, STN and TCG.Rsg?I deleted a 30c bid this morning....
Approximately $4.57.Without reading through 780 add pages of posts and Search has failed to give me a result either, can anyone tell me how much, if any, Australia has in its gold vault?
I think this is an interesting case study in investor psychology. I promptly sold out of gold last week before the world had the weekend to digest the situation and decide to make a decision. Selling gold is a big decision and requires a sudden change in a long-term, fixed mindset. Shortly after the election, gold had something of a crash when the fast thinkers quickly dumped. Then a dead cat bounce then the weekend, then a brief moment on Monday while the market waited to see what would happen, then a progressive crash as people across the world woke up, started their week and saw what everyone else was doing.
We see the same thing happening on individual companies. The timing works differently depending on the size of the company and the psychology of the demographic invested in it. Gold is at the extreme end of the spectrum in terms of market cap and investor type (it's certainly not primarily held and directed by mum and dad investors), but humans are still human and need time to digest a situation, and most are still heavily influenced by herd mentality, whether they're a small retail investor or the head of a major bank or country. No matter how obvious a situation is, most people psychologically can not take action until the herd does; we are social creatures. The pause on Monday before the herd spoke was very interesting. The direction was almost certainly going to be down (easier to say now in hindsight, but I did have more than half my wealth in precious metals until selling all after the election last week) but no one wanted to be the first to act.
You can apply this same principle to trading stocks.
Everyone has been saying for a long time that gold is due for a correction even if it will then continue up. This is the pretty obvious time for that to happen. Many people for reasons which fascinate me will hold stocks or commodities even if they know with near certainty the price/value will drop considerably short term, if they are sure it will then go higher in the future, even if that process will take months or years. Watching human insanity over the road at HC has taught me a lot about investor behaviour and psychology, and the irrational movements we see on various markets make sense when you put them in the context of typical irrational human psychology.
Lol, am assuming that's in billions, so approx. 70~90 tonnes AU equivalent...Approximately $4.57.
mick
I sensed the change in sentiment the day after it was announced Trump had won the election. All the air got sucked out of the precious metals sector, which had been pumped up for a number of months previously. Had Kamala been elected it would have been a different story.
I expect that this sell off will be overdone and will present a buying opportunity for long term investors. The $US rally will peak before Trump's inauguration when reality sets in and the market realises that fundamentally not much has changed.
I think it's almost a foregone conclusion that gold will test $US2,500 because the $US rally isn't close to being done yet and precious metals won't be able to make much headway until the $US starts to decline again. A lot of money is coming out of precious metals and going into crypto, equities and the $US, but that won't last forever.
Didn't Peter Cosgrove sell all our gold?Lol, am assuming that's in billions, so approx. 70~90 tonnes AU equivalent...
Anyways, had a brain wave, did a online search and lo-and-behold, am not too far off, 80 tonnes including gold on loan according to the RBA
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