Quote from makloda:
So what do you do if the market suddenly doesn't agree with what your "4 factor" model is saying? What if it drops 30, 40%, 50% even though all signals scream buy? Buy more? Sell all? Wait and see? Panic?
I assume most "level headed gold investors" look to add on weakness (buy low hoping to sell high, motivated by greed) rather than sell on weakness (protecting capital). That's exactly why we get distributions with fat tails in time series of returns in financial markets. Gold isn't any different.
Quote from zdreg:
above are words to the wise expressed in practical terms not in philosophical terms. they will be unfortunately ignored by most traders and investors.
Together with the Dow:Gold ratio picture, they suggest gold prices may not go anywhere fast as it did in the 1930s. Then again, if the inflation picture changes, it could go for a wild ride, as it did in the 1970s.Last Friday, the U.S. Labor Department reported that the consumer price index (CPI) rose 0.2% in January and climbed by 2.6% over the past 12 months. But after stripping out volatile food and energy prices, prices actually fell by 0.1% in January, marking the first time since 1982 that "core CPI" has declined. While the absence of any signs that runaway inflation is materializing initially soothed markets, the report also signaled that another potentially tricky economic drag, deflation, is a very real concern.
That's amazing. Sounds like one of those "too good to be true" risk/reward scenarios. Unlimited upside with limited downside. COUNT ME IN!!!!!Quote from Father Branigan:
Result is that the price of gold will rise gradually at times and sharply at times, with some small downward corrections along the way.