gold: showdown time

pausing is not stopping... only bubble thats going to burst is china, whatever the trigger, staggering level of NPLs most likely, a local enron / worldcom type, as soon as growth abates... as for commodities just look at the charts to see where they might be headed...
 
Quote from polpolik:

The next leg is coming very soon, I believe. maybe a dip to 580 then off we go, back to 700.

Silver on the other hand and base metals, I don't know...


I think the $580 / $550 price band is a reasonable expectation. Unlike other metal markets, which I think are/were running on momentum , gold has a higher % of fundamental buyers. In the meantime the rising USD will lessen the % of fundamental buyers and the on going liquidity mop up by BOJ will pretty much wipe out the momentum players.
 
in my opinion the lines in the sand have been drawn late this week

$11 in july silver + $605 in August Gold Futures

problem of course is every rally has been sold by those unwinding their old longs ... or bailing out of new ones

yet the rallies have been fast and furious ... for those nimble enough and not looking for long term holds

:p
 
Quote from SethArb:

wow ... someone decided to "puke" out their position

post comex close ... drove August down to $605

now August is back to where it settled on comex in the

$612 area

:eek:

Have not followed gold closely but it looks like a parabolic blowoff. A bit of a lukewarm attempt to go up again by the "Johnny come lately's" and then gold goes to rest for another twenty years.

Maria
 
With everyone and their mother predicting $580 as the support, I'm not sure that's the best level.

IMHO a better support point is 540-550.

Would love to see it go to sleep for a few years. Don't think we will be that lucky, but G8 meeting undoubtedly will focus on global financial stability. If a US & emerging market bear equity market is what is required to cool down the global economy and restore faith in currencies, so be it. I don't think the CB's will have any objection, particularly now that speculation on hards is sending quite a bit more wealth towards 3rd world economies - more than I think is desired.

Central planners will take these considerations into play and try to control these factors as best they can. The big question on everyone's mind is - can they be controlled?

I, for one, have absolutely no idea.
 
Quote from drsteph:

If a US & emerging market bear equity market is what is required to cool down the global economy and restore faith in currencies, so be it. I don't think the CB's will have any objection...
and they shouldn't, however there is no reason it shld come to that really... even if equity mkts suffer a bit while commodities move back to the bottom of the value chain where they belong, and while the industry / sectoral portfolio rebalancing action picks up steam, medium-term with rates remaining in a moderate range equities shld be doing ok to ok+ imo... but i'm an optimist...
 
I read this morning that

gold stocks are now pricing in a $550 to $570 per ounce target

well then .. if in the next 24 hours gold cannot rally more than $4

from late friday levels then it surely will test late last week lows

and perhaps $600 area just below that

the latest COT report showed alot of small specs bailing out of longs in both gold and silver ... thats good news in a sense that the weak hands are getting out ...
 
gold under pressure... investor demand 10% down on quarter... investors shifting to equities according to world gold council today (bloomberg news)... beware of the upcoming puke...
 
the only puke ... was to the upside ...

however seeing this headline makes me a little cautious to the upside this week

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=adBzIdSVEjvo&refer=home

execerpted from Bloomberg

-Eighty-three percent of the 30 traders, investors and analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News from Sydney to Chicago on Nov. 30 and Dec. 1 advised buying gold, which rose 2.4 percent last week to $650.60 an ounce in New York. The percentage predicting a gain was the highest since the survey began in April 2004. Three respondents said to sell. Two were neutral. -
 
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