Maybe that means that when tensions ease, gold will resume its price decline.
I would agree , if I thought tensions were ever going to ease , there will be the next , and the next , If I had to guess ....
Maybe that means that when tensions ease, gold will resume its price decline.
Good point , after the early 70's ,Interesting thought. The world is in a crisis so gold should go up in price. In that case, it should only and always go up since there is always some crisis going on someplace (usually several at once). I wonder how it managed to go down half of the time since we finally closed out the gold standard (1972- in half of the years since then, gold has declined in price)?
I wonder how it managed to go down half of the time since we finally closed out the gold standard (1972- in half of the years since then, gold has declined in price)?
Interesting thought. The world is in a crisis so gold should go up in price. In that case, it should only and always go up since there is always some crisis going on someplace (usually several at once). I wonder how it managed to go down half of the time since we finally closed out the gold standard (1972- in half of the years since then, gold has declined in price)?
"Should"? "Should"? What does that mean? You are passing value judgments on what the market "should" and "should not" have done?Good point, after the early 70's... it should not have gone down ......
You're right it has nothing to with "world tension". Like you said there's always tension in the world. It has to due with simple econ 101. Supply and demand. As the supply of dollars goes up the price goes down.
Good point , after the early 70's ,, it should not have gone down ......
There is no manipulation. The gold market is too large to effectively manipulate. This is just a ridiculous conspiracy theory trotted out by people who don't happen to like what the price of gold is doing at the time.
The strongest corelation with the price of gold since 1972 has been the rate of inflation. From 1972 to roughly 1980 (when the rate of inflation hit double digits), the rate of inflation was rising and the price of gold was also rising. When the Fed cranked up interest rates and inflation started to decline, the price of gold also declined. They both went down until about 2004. The recent gold bubble is more associated with the economic crisis than the rate of inflation- which has stayed low.
I just make my money as I go , but if you bought an ounce of gold , say 1973 , avg yearly price was probably around $100 , then sold it , say in 1976 for $125 , that was not a good play , I would have told you not to do it , if you needed the $125 , I would just loan it to you for a couple weeks , no interest . If you had bought it in 2005 for $445 , I still would have told you to hold it . I sold an 1881 Ten dollar gold pc this year , I picked it up in a poker game in London , maybe 1985 . It was about a $150 pot . I would not have put that in . Only hand I played that night . The market may decide . There are though , should and should nots in life . Choose wisely . Sound principles."Should"? "Should"? What does that mean? You are passing value judgments on what the market "should" and "should not" have done?
One can point the finger of judgment at the market I suppose and say "You're wrong! You should have done this." And one can then take satisfaction in the "fact" that he is right and the market is wrong, as he loses lots of money due to the market being "wrong."
Or one can accept that whatever the market does is whatever the market does -- there is no "should."
There's a big reason things might be different this time... there's over a trillion dollars sitting at the Fed in reserves. It's sitting there because the velocity of money is dead and the rate of interest at the fed is actually worth it since they drove the real rate of interest to near 0 for almost 6 years:
If the rate of interest rises and all this money gets unleashed onto the public then it may not be like 1980 at all.
Finally, the real reason to buy physical gold and/or silver, is to insure yourself against a worldwide rejection of the dollar. To not have at least 5% of your networth in physical PMs is to trust our monetary system and the central bankers who run it. That is so incredibly foolish. Hedge yourself against your paper assets. Never before in history has the entire world primarily used one currency and right now it's clear the government's are racing to the bottom with theirs to try to increase economic growth. This has never been tried before in the history of the world. If you aren't at least open to stacking a little bit you're setting yourself up for a real financial disaster. The fact this entire system was HOURS from collapsing financially 6 years ago (that's what the bankers told us anyway) doesn't seem to have anyone worried. All is well folks, keep buying the all-time highs in stocks and forget about the stability of your broken currency and unsustainable debt.
Never before in history has the entire world primarily used one currency and right now it's clear the government's are racing to the bottom with theirs to try to increase economic growth. This has never been tried before in the history of the world.
The strongest corelation with the price of gold since 1972 has been the rate of inflation. From 1972 to roughly 1980 (when the rate of inflation hit double digits), the rate of inflation was rising and the price of gold was also rising. When the Fed cranked up interest rates and inflation started to decline, the price of gold also declined. They both went down until about 2004. The recent gold bubble is more associated with the economic crisis than the rate of inflation- which has stayed low.
The recent gold bubble is more associated with the economic crisis than the rate of inflation- which has stayed low
Official inflation has stayed low. But real inflation is clocking in at a much higher rate. The price of groceries has rising quite a bit over the last few years, as has the price of oil, which has averaged a $100 a barrel for quite some time. These government CPI numbers (which exclude energy and food costs) you're so fond of referencing are total boloney. And the notion that there's some type of "gold bubble" is equally ridiculous.
Looks like about $21 and a nickel , but it should be more , you will not be able to buy any for that , soSilver's rebounding @ 20.83$:o