According to Maguire, the manipulation of the paper gold market is coming to an end soon, as the physical market emerges. I remain a skeptic, because central banks and their bullion bank agents will whipsaw speculators as long as they continue the illusion of existing physical inventory. We shall see.
http://kingworldnews.com/andrew-maguire-smashed-gold-today-hsbc-shocks-clients-closing-london-gold-vaults/
Showing posts with label Smashed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Smashed. Show all posts
Saturday, March 7, 2015
Monday, November 3, 2014
Gold and Silver Smashed: Is the Bottom In?
My recent comments on the smash in gold and silver.
3) silver appears to have bottomed out late last week and is rising today, despite a flat gold price. This decoupling usually indicates inflection points (in this case, a bottoming). Perhaps markets are discounting that the economy is recovering (since silver is not only a monetary metal, but also an industrial metal).
4) silver has been beaten up more since the 2011 peak (down 70% from $49), so if it is rebounding, it is bullish for gold also, and its recovery will be more amplified than gold's recovery. In other words, if a bull market in precious metals resumes, or returns (depending on your time frame), silver will appreciate more and faster (i.e., the gold/silver ratio will narrow).
5) last week's capitulation in silver may indicate exhaustive selling, which means a bottom may have formed. Having said that, this brutal bear market in silver has experienced many lower lows since the 2011 peak, so catching a falling knife is inherently perilous for short-term traders.
6) for long-term accumulators, these price declines are gifts. BTFD.
7)
we know the precious metals paper markets are manipulated because
during these price downdrafts, physical supply dries up. In normal,
functioning markets, price declines are accompanied by a glut of
supply. In this price drop, supply has dried up, as deliveries are
pushed out. This isn't the first time this has happened, but it does
indicate the scale of manipulation. Price discovery mechanisms are
completely distorted. The most money made in any market is when an investor identifies a distortion in price that the market hasn't yet factored in.
It
could be an ebola-related stock, a solar company who's fundamentals are
flawed (Solyndra), or a company who's about to release a breakthrough
product (Apple's Ipod).
8) right now, the fundamentals for
gold and silver have never been better. The cost of extraction keeps
rising, to a point where it is no longer profitable to mine gold or
silver. Marginal miners will either shut down or go out of business,
further exacerbating future supply shortages. This occurs with any
commodity, whether it's crude oil, DRAM chips, or gold. Of course,
other markets can adapt to supply shortages quicker. But with energy
and mineral resources, re-starting up wells or mining sites takes
years. Supply won't be able to catch up to demand overnight. This is
when moon shots in price will occur.
9) So if you have
enough gold and silver (5-10% of net worth), hang on and wait this out.
But if you're still in accumulation mode, these price dips present
"golden" opportunities to add to your hoard, and lower your average cost
basis.
Happy stacking!
1) gold broke thru
major support at $1180, and is stabilizing around $1164. This is
bearish, if you're a short-term trader. In other words, it could go
lower.
2) However, what's positive is the gold mining
shares appreciated today, which is bullish for gold, as mining
equities--while more volatile, are often leading indicators for the
future direction of gold (and silver).3) silver appears to have bottomed out late last week and is rising today, despite a flat gold price. This decoupling usually indicates inflection points (in this case, a bottoming). Perhaps markets are discounting that the economy is recovering (since silver is not only a monetary metal, but also an industrial metal).
4) silver has been beaten up more since the 2011 peak (down 70% from $49), so if it is rebounding, it is bullish for gold also, and its recovery will be more amplified than gold's recovery. In other words, if a bull market in precious metals resumes, or returns (depending on your time frame), silver will appreciate more and faster (i.e., the gold/silver ratio will narrow).
5) last week's capitulation in silver may indicate exhaustive selling, which means a bottom may have formed. Having said that, this brutal bear market in silver has experienced many lower lows since the 2011 peak, so catching a falling knife is inherently perilous for short-term traders.
6) for long-term accumulators, these price declines are gifts. BTFD.
Friday, October 31, 2014
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