GLD - on buy signal.
Gold-Eagle gold and precious metal news, market analysis and editorials from world renowned gold analysts and market experts. Stay informed with the latest news and analyses on gold prices and perspectives on the economy to guide your investing decisions.
GLD - on buy signal.
No politician wants to end up with his head adorning the railings of some public building, and thus - possibly spurred into action by the video of the grisly end of Colonel Gaddafi - European leaders started to display qualities normally totally alien to them l
Much has been made of the volatility investors endure in the gold market. No doubt about it, the golden bull has a way of throwing off the faint hearted investor who hasn't studied how things are done in his rodeo.
It was another wild week in the markets with some breakouts higher which failed then breakouts lower which failed only to see massive moves higher coming into the end of the week, especially Thursday.
The Gold Report
"No one and I stress no one is able to predict with certainty how and when the whole situation will unravel.
The feverish positive sentiment has left the Gold & Silver market in the last two months.
"No matter how much money or love you've made or lost, you can still make more."
JP Morgan is the largest silver short-seller in the history of the world. JP Morgan is the "custodian" for the largest "long" silver fund in the history of the world, making this one of the largest conflicts of interest in all of history.
Technically the picture for gold now looks strongly bullish.
Once upon a time, the Chinese government forbade ownership of all precious metals.
The week was a wild one with lots of choppy action in the indices as was to be expected as bases build here nicely. We had options expiration this past Friday as well so that usually tends to throw a wrench into things.
GLD - on sell signal.
Action yesterday across markets was bearish and set alarm bells ringing - in particular the action in the PM sector, where the Head-and-Shoulders bottom pattern that we have observed in PM sector stock indices appears to be aborting.
Not even mighty gold escaped late September's commodities massacre, so gold stocks never stood a chance. They were sucked into the violent maelstrom of commodities-stock selling, plunging sharply.
"There is gold in them thar hills!"
We're in the midst of an amazing run off the recent lows in the stock market. As tempting as it is to buy some of leaders now, I think it would be a grave mistake. Nothing goes straight up so we have to be patient and wait for the proper buy points.
GLD - on sell signal.
The recent recession-fear craze hammered commodities prices, crushing the stocks of the companies that produce them. Commodities stocks were wholesale abandoned by frightened traders, left bludgeoned and bleeding.
Over the past year we have been learning more about the financial situations across the pond in Europe. With international issues on the rise, investors are panicking trying to find a safest haven for their capital.
An important reversal of focus, expectation, and direction has taken place in Europe. Put aside the sovereign debt mess that will not go away. It will not be fixed, despite all the effort and talk and deal making.
That is correct, book the funeral, because if common sense and the free market are not allowed to resurrect themselves, we are destined to fall into the hole we have created.
It was a wild week to be sure and we've hit a tentative bottom in US equity markets with the S&P500 printing a double bottom pattern as I'd hoped would occur.
GLD - on sell signal.
"A morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable."
Thomas Jefferson
The recent sharp selloffs in stocks and commodities have fueled an incessant drumbeat of pessimism plaguing the financial markets. Greece is doomed, Europe is fracturing, China is slowing, the US faces a recession, the sky is falling!
I want to correct a mistake I made on my table for the foreign central bank holdings of US Treasury debt in my last article.
Many investors pigeon-hole themselves as "inflationists" or "deflationists", where an inflationist is someone who expects more inflation over the years immediately ahead and a deflationist is someone who expects deflation.