Fundamentals pretty much drive gold anyway but I dont pay attention to that stuff.
And charts are more fun than politics.
And charts are more fun than politics.
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Simon Hunt predicted this 2 years ago.
A very high possibility of the universal income being introduced during this time.
Hmm. I'm not sure about all of it. There is a lot going on that hasn't happened before:
Debt reaching unserviceable levels in the West (especially US, look at the US Treasury auctions, bond market rates, etc...), Gold now a tier 1 reserve currency, countries pulling gold stores out of US, Petro-dollar decoupling, silver futures contracts taking (dangerously) longer to deliver.
Couple that with the increase in war between states with nukes: Russia/Ukraine, India/Pakistan and Israel/Iran.
Then throw in a US adminstration that is wholly incapable of meeting the moment through shear lack of intelligence/ability/desire/etc... so we lose super power leadership.
Kinda feel like selling everything and going into severe debt to buy gold. lol.
Anyway, just keep stacking.
Debt reaching unserviceable levels in the West (especially US, look at the US Treasury auctions, bond market rates, etc...), Gold now a tier 1 reserve currency, countries pulling gold stores out of US, Petro-dollar decoupling, silver futures contracts taking (dangerously) longer to deliver.
The "severe debt to buy gold" comment would sound crazy to most, but to a serious investor it would be "leverage".
Ive thought about that one before too.
Gold now bouncing around $3,490 + ATM. Still a lot of trading day yet to comeYep gold went above US$3530 to a new intraday all time high overnight. Our American stacker friends are celebrating no doubt @JohnnyBravo300
Aussie dollar strength is preventing gold in AUD doing the same, but our purchasing power is increasing relevant to other currencies - this as a good thing.
Speaking of inflation, I was in the US earlier this year and was shocked at the price of standard grocery store items. In short, if a price of 1L juice in Aus is $6, it was US$6 + tax at checkout thereThe same comparison could be made for most items. I travelled to CA, TX and AZ....no different.
Had a great time though![]()
maybe the difference was in quality...
Maybe the difference is " Ability To Pay " ?
Speaking of inflation, I was in the US earlier this year and was shocked at the price of standard grocery store items. In short, if a price of 1L juice in Aus is $6, it was US$6 + tax at checkout thereThe same comparison could be made for most items. I travelled to CA, TX and AZ....no different.
Had a great time though![]()