http://www.monex.com/prods/gold_chart.htmlhttp://www.goldprice.org/gold-price.htmlIt's $1567 per ounce right now.It's down $7 from $1574 a couple days agoIt's down $300 from $1900 since September 2011It's up $1000 per ounce since July 2007I know gold is overpriced based on the current value of the dollar.However gold is way underpriced if the dollar collapses.Is the bubble bursting until the next president is decided?If obama is re-elected, will the price of gold skyrocket again??
5/24/2012 12:12:18 PM
The price of gold will probably stay somewhat stable unless the Fed announces another round of QE. QE will be necessary at some point, but the timing is unknown. Monetary policy in this country will change based on stimulus. For instance, a chaotic exit from the euro by Greece could initiate a domino effect, which may actually be a benefit to the dollar -at least until the focus shifts to the insolvent U.S.
5/24/2012 12:19:44 PM
There is no such thing as overpriced or underpriced gold because the use purchases of gold are not motivated by consumer value. Unlike other investments, after you invest in it, it does not turn into consumption today or in 1000 years from now. Once you're done investing in it... you keep investing in it. There is no analytical objective price for gold unless you use the niche industrial uses as a basis, which would not give anything anywhere close to the prices gold is now or has ever been.Currencies themselves can be underpriced or overpriced relative to each other, but not to the goods and services traded in the economy. There is no predictable natural level of cash in circulation. The vast majority of cash holdings could be eliminated by converting to equity or debt holdings for a short to medium store of capital. The same applies for gold.[Edited on May 24, 2012 at 3:01 PM. Reason : ]
5/24/2012 3:01:20 PM
Specifically talking about the gold/silver ratioWhen the ratio is HIGH, it's a good time to big silver.When the ratio is LOW, it's a good time to buy gold.Does this work (a) in all cases?or(b) depends on their individual velocity?
6/5/2012 11:06:56 AM
Nothing in investing "works in all cases" if there was a magical way to always get investment returns we'd all be rich.
6/5/2012 11:45:25 AM
6/5/2012 11:47:00 AM
Silver is crashingReach $26 territory for the first time
6/21/2012 1:26:35 PM
The first time? What are you talking about?From 1985 to Dec 2010 it never came close to as high as $26... I don't have full data back past that.[Edited on June 21, 2012 at 3:06 PM. Reason : X]
6/21/2012 3:04:51 PM
LOL... I'm talking about first time it's reached that level since the peak. (It's really the second time now that I look at it since January)[Edited on June 21, 2012 at 10:49 PM. Reason : .]
6/21/2012 10:46:56 PM
6/22/2012 1:26:23 AM
6/22/2012 8:32:44 AM
6/23/2012 4:36:19 AM
Gas is going down because demand is slipping due to the global slowdown and because the dollar is strengthening.The dollar is strengthening because its the only currency large enough to absorb the flight from the euro. It's a classic jumping out of the frying pan into the fire mentality. The dollar is the safest haven until its not. We are only a few years away from not.
6/23/2012 12:45:27 PM
Gas going down has nothing to do with demand at the current moment of time. Found a good article from 2011 whose catalysts still linger in 2012
6/23/2012 1:04:48 PM
^ the above quoted passages are REALLY basic info.I applaud your quest for knowledge, but if you really want to understand things you need to increase the quality of the sources you follow. You're ahead of 93% of the country, but based on your posts you seem serious and you can do better.
6/24/2012 12:22:38 AM
6/24/2012 1:23:07 AM
Seriously? No. Obviously the Federal Reserve is one of the worst "sources" you can use for information. Unless you are a member of Congress or a prominent hedge fund manager who finds out what they are going to say a few minutes before their announcement. (Remember, inside trading is not illegal for members of Congress and congressional portfolios always generate outsized returns . Why do you think so many rich kids line up to be lowly congressional aides? It's for the information, clearly not the salary.)The sources you want to follow are people who know what they are talking about. People who know markets and more importantly history. People who form opinions based strictly on the market events they have seen in their careers (nearly every sell sider out there) are not credible sources. What happened in 1985 may not be relevant to what will happen in 2013. But 1860 sure as hell may be.Here's an example of a good source. Read this opinion on the Greek default scenarios from John Hempton of Bronte Capital. Note how the author actually knows what he's talking about, doesn't push an agenda or talk his book, and doesn't try to summarize everything as being unimportant.
6/24/2012 10:46:16 PM
Don't bother trying to learn from or educate the people on this messageboard. It's rare that you'll find anyone who knows what they're talking about here and they'll mostly just dismiss correct ideas as bunk because it wasn't taught in their Econ 201 class or Paul Krugman and Dick Bove disagree. Here's a piece he wrote this week on Gold & China that is also quite insightful.
6/24/2012 10:58:10 PM
Face. No offense, but you didn't read my post very well.
6/24/2012 11:14:56 PM
He hasn't realized how stupid you are quite yet. Give him time.
6/24/2012 11:26:30 PM
A troll post, nice.
6/24/2012 11:30:19 PM
i dont have time to respond to 100 questions, im just trying to help.What specifically do you want to know?
6/24/2012 11:55:25 PM
:shrugs: I have all my questions answered as of right now.USDEUROUSDEURO
6/25/2012 1:18:40 AM
i've got about $45k in gold/silver at the moment. I may buy more soon, but i like holding USD right now.The oil markets have entered contango for the first time in a long while and now just doesn't seem to be the time to pour money into commodities based on how it typically trades in these scenarios.But I'm still not sure what you're trying to convey with those charts?
6/25/2012 1:22:36 AM
I only have $1000 in gold right now. I can't justify buying at these prices when the price has been regressing for over a year. I really can't explain why it's receding unless people know something I don't about the economy getting better?
6/25/2012 1:34:18 AM
Dollar is strengthening, QE3 was priced in but hasn't occured yet, banks are deleveraging, margin rates have been hiked numerous times, lease rates were temporarily negative.Look at 2008. When the economy was collapsing gold got nuked. It doesn't matter what you think of an investment class when you HAVE to raise cash.That's why I'd never recommend buying gold on margin. If they shake the tree really hard all the monkeys fall out. Don't be a monkey. Buy gold that you aren't going to want or need to sell regardless of the current price. The current price doesn't really matter to me. Of course if there was a magic way to know where it'd bottom/top I'd trade it more actively. But that's not really possible. It's one of the asset classes where buy/hold makes a lot of sense.
6/25/2012 2:24:14 AM
Since selling gold and siliver is not recommended in almost all conditions, what conditions do you believe you should sell gold and silver?
6/25/2012 11:17:44 AM
I'd sell gold/silver if I'd already eaten my canned good stock, drank all my water supply, etc. Otherwise not going to happen. I don't speculate on gold, I don't like to take risks with my financial security and safety.Great day for gold, up huge relative to the market.
6/25/2012 5:21:55 PM
Just buy a shitload of water and canned goods and sell it for gold to people like face whenever his Road Warrior thing happens.Or load up on guns and gasoline and take it by force while roaming the post-apocalyptic wasteland with the gyro-captain.
6/25/2012 10:31:27 PM
^ best post in the thread so far
6/25/2012 10:45:12 PM
I made a G today. Well 1.3 G's.
6/29/2012 10:22:21 AM
If you didn't do it with gold/silver, how did you do it?And was is the initial investment?
6/29/2012 12:24:52 PM
^^ Make another 2Gs today and you'll break even for the quarter!
6/29/2012 2:09:22 PM
It is gold and silver. Predominately IAU. Some gdx though
6/29/2012 2:19:42 PM
You can't make money unless you sell it and rebuy it.
6/29/2012 2:26:17 PM
Since inflation simultaneously raises the value of gold, and reduces the value of debt, wouldn't it make the most sense to buy as much gold on credit as possible? That is, so when the US goes Zimbabwe you have way, way more gold than you would otherwise, and the debt incurred to buy it is suddenly trivial? Alternatively, taking out mortgages on property you could never afford with your (currently non-inflated) salary/wage would seem incredibly wise as well.[Edited on July 13, 2012 at 12:00 PM. Reason : .]
7/13/2012 11:59:48 AM
gold prices are also affected by demand, man.
7/14/2012 2:15:31 PM
That's nice now could you try to comment on the actual meat and potatoes of my post? That is, how the devaluation of debt as a side-effect of inflation might influence investment decisions that hedge against it?[Edited on July 17, 2012 at 3:23 PM. Reason : .]
7/17/2012 3:22:31 PM
9/13/2012 2:33:10 PM
9/13/2012 3:06:15 PM
^Holy fuck. The system has been hacked.
10/24/2012 3:54:54 AM
Stop posting
10/24/2012 8:57:19 AM
some day the world will realize gold is worthless beyond a few technical uses and the price will collapse overnight. Kind of like those big stone "coins" the polynesians used to have. You know, like the one that fell in the ocean but they still counted it as being owned by such and such.don't buy things that don't have intrinsic worth.
10/27/2012 5:15:37 PM
^ very misinformed. Dollars have no intrinsic worth. Gold is a store of value.
10/30/2012 1:26:03 AM
The Incas refered to these as "Sweat of the Sun, Tears of the Moon"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Xx_5PuLIzc
10/30/2012 4:21:46 PM
What on this planet has actual intrinsic worth?Food?Corn and wheat will be worth more than gold and dollars?
11/1/2012 8:17:51 AM
Any intrinsic value of gold aside from uses in electrical components is basically due not to any special property it has but to flaws in human psychology that assign value to things because they're shiny. In other words, a perceived or extrinsic value. In either event, exchange value is a strictly social phenomenon and gold could be worthless in the future just as easily as Rai stones are to us in the present.[Edited on November 1, 2012 at 10:17 AM. Reason : .]
11/1/2012 10:14:36 AM
Gold has far less intrinsic value than other things such as tools, resources, electricity, or labor. Gold's value is as intrinsic as paper money's minus the sliver of industrial uses. In other words, if society collapsed, and I had no faith in anything being worth any more than I could use it for, I wouldn't trade you a blanket for a wheelbarrow full of gold.
11/1/2012 10:40:06 AM
If society collapses, you want guns and a whole lot of food and fresh water.I don't think society will collapse, though. Certainly not on a global scale. Gold and silver being valuable isn't going away any time soon.
11/1/2012 10:44:26 AM
http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/german-politicians-demand-to-see-gold-in-us-federal-reserve-a-864068.htmlIt's there, guys. No, you can't see it. Just trust us, k?
11/1/2012 11:41:55 AM