The Freethinker
Member
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2010
- Messages
- 467
Silver is at $17.87 and gold is at $1189.
Probably because investors know that the soon-to-be-signed financial reform bill will fix everything so our economy is safe once again.
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Probably because investors know that the soon-to-be-signed financial reform bill will fix everything so our economy is safe once again.
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Found on GIM2 forums. Thought you might like this.
It's down on Monday, July 19 2010 again. As of 1:23PM EST silver is at $17.56/oz, and gold is about $1182/oz.
Sweet! Buying op.
The 10 year is rallying down to near 2.9% again...
Cash is king!!! - Ok I B trollin, but seriously, as long as there is that kind of demand for debt, don't expect PMs to do anything too amazing...
If you'd have told me last year that we'd be talking about 2.9 on the 10 year in summer 2010, I would have scoffed at your sillyness:o
I expect silver and gold to break out near the end of the summer to mid fall. Summer is always a down period for PM's. This is a normal cyclical market correction. The prices will continue to rise in the long term.
I.e. this is a fantastic buy opportunity.
It takes a lot to spook the solid old gold market. But when it emerged last week that one or more banks had lent 380 tonnes of gold to the Bank of International Settlements in return for foreign currencies, there was widespread surprise and confusion
At first it looked like the BIS was swapping gold with a troubled central bank. After all, the institution is the central bankers' bank and its purpose to conduct transactions with national monetary authorities.
This led to musings that the counterparty was the IMF, making sense because the lender of last resort is historically prone to cash shortages and has been quietly selling off gold in the first half of the year.
This would add an extra layer of anonymity. "So the BIS swaps look like a tripartite transaction," writes Adrian Douglas of the Gold Anti-Trust Association. "The commercial bank or banks made a swap with a central bank or banks and then the commercial bank or banks made a swap with the BIS."
wow, talk about deja vu.
still not low enough for me to buy though (damn, this is supposed to be summer!)