errol43 said:Pray tell. What is holding up the US $???
Regards Errol 43
dccpa said:barsenault said:dccpa said:Why do you say that? Rogers has stated gold could easily go to the $900s. I don't think Rickards or Faber make short term gold price projections. Schiff and Maloney will say it doesn't matter or it's a conspiracy. I think the explanations will be easy for them. As to whether those explanations are believable is another issue.![]()
Hey dccpa, I agree with you 100%. Rogers had been calling for lower prices for the last year, and did say 900.00 would come. He's proven right once again. He's a man of patience, and is the reason he's so succcessful, and yet acts quickly when the time is right.if silver goes to 9.00, I'm buying shots for everyone. LOL
Last night an attorney friend was talking about buying ammunition and I just came from the doctor's office, please clarify what you mean by shots?![]()
darkclark said:yeah to the M
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Instead of Puking, Do This
Jeff Clark, Senior Precious Metals Analyst
The sure sign of a market in capitulation is when those who are long feel like puking.
With gold and silver prices in what certainly feels like capitulation mode, pat yourself on the back if you didn't succumb to the pressure and sell.
Actually, pat your future self on the back, because it's that person who will realize the benefits of your discipline today.
In the short-term, though, the bad news is that the decline is probably not over. Gold's low of $1,180 is likely to be tested and possibly breached. Silver's previous low was broken weeks ago.
It all seems like a huge disconnect to the realities we can all see with our own eyes. As just one example, the mainstream applauded the lower unemployment number last Fridaybut the labor participation rate fell to a 36-year low, with a record 92.6 million Americans no longer in the workforce. And the stock market soared on the news.
I don't think I'm just being stubborn because I'm sure that, at some point, disconnects in data like that will matter. We're living in a central bank-controlled world more than ever before, but the odds of central planners steering us out of the corner they've painted us all into are remote. The math just doesn't work, and history has demonstrated the outcome of such fiscal, monetary, and economic foolishness numerous times.
Cheepo said:This chart says gold is going to $850: http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/talking-numbers/this-chart-says-gold-is-going-to--850-140106065.html
finicky said:Here's an interesting take on the Dow:Gold ratio chart from sharelynx. It's updated to Sept 2014. He draws a rising channel for the ratio (shaded green) to capture most of the historical action and also a midline.
Note how in the 70's gold bull, right in the middle of that secular bull in the mid 1970's, the ratio 'faked' a rise up as far as the mid line. Today it would have to rise above a ratio of twenty (20) to do that. It is currently only about 14
There's still loads of room for US large cap stocks to rise against gold and allow the chance of a gold bull continuation by this argument.
http://www.sharelynx.com/chartstemp/free/longtermdowgoldlogtr1800.php
Source: http://www.sharelynx.com/chartstemp/DowGoldRatio.php
Sian Marie said:Why would the ratio from the 70's be transferable to today? Didn't we come off the gold standard in the 70's which left the prices of gold and silver set by fiat?
Rumor has it that Shanghai too will arbitrarily set the price of their gold in a one off revaluation, likely double the comex ask, with an invitation for arbitrage which will pull the covers off NY and London forcing them to admit they don't actually have any gold to sell in the first place.
In the meantime, until every transaction is backed by an actual physical asset such as the non-cabal trading platforms are wiring themselves up for, where does one see the value in reading charts?