Thai Guru's Gold und Silber ... (Informationen und Vermutungen)

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Moin,Aladin et ...


    Dieser Beitrag von Alf Field ist fast ein eigenes Thema wert.
    Verfolge seine Berechnungen seit langem,wirklich beeindruckend.
    Hier seine Schlußfolgerungen:


    LONGER TERM OUTLOOK


    We can now allow ourselves a brief look at the longer term possibilities for the gold price. IF the target price for Wave 1 of $630 is achieved :]and IF the subsequent price correction in Wave 2 returns the gold price to $500, THEN we can speculate on the possible magnitude of the next big upleg in the gold bull market.


    The first major Wave 1 would be approximately 2.5 times the starting level of $256 ($630 divided by $256 = 2.46), so the minimum level that we can forecast for major Wave 3 is 2.5 x $500 = $1,250. Third waves are often the strongest in a sequence, so it is possible that Wave 3 could be as much as 4 times its starting level (2.5 x 1.618 = 4), providing a target of $2,000 :D($500 x 4) for the peak of major wave 3.


    Before we get too excited about the wave 3 forecasts, we should wait and see how the shorter term forecasts work out.
    ____________________________


    Die anderen An/aussichten sind auch nicht schlecht ! ;)


    Grüsse


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Mal eine weitere kritische Stimme
    aus PrudentBear:
    __________________
    NOTE: President Bush has decided to appoint Ben Bernanke to succeed Alan Greenspan as Federal Reserve chairman. Bernanke was a Fed governor, and he currently chairs the Council of Economic Advisors.


    Personally, I think this is a horrendous choice, although it has been widely reported that Bernanke wanted the position very badly. The fact that he got his wish may be something of a reflection that many really solid, serious candidates were, of their own choice, not in the running, since people meeting these criteria are more than aware of the "mess" (euphemism) Greenspan is leaving behind.


    Interest Rates


    * Notwithstanding Bernanke's appointment, concern about additional Federal Reserve rate increases is credited as one of the factors weighing heavily on the equity market in recent weeks. In turn, it is growing concern about inflation, voiced by several Fed officials (mostly district bank presidents) in recent weeks, that has market participants concerned about additional rate hikes.


    * The next meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee takes place next Tuesday (11/1). As of last Friday, the federal funds futures market gave strong indication the FOMC will indeed undertake another 25 basis-point hike in the funds rate next week. The November contract finished Friday at 4.00%.


    * And based on other futures quotes, this market was signaling additional rate hikes into next year. The December, January, February and March contracts ended last week at respective levels of 4.14%, 4.22%, 4.37% and 4.39%. Beyond next Tuesday's meeting, the following three meetings of the FOMC are scheduled for 12/13, 1/31 and 3/6 (there's no meeting scheduled for February).


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Bernanke – On the Road to Disaster?
    October 24, 2005


    Ben Bernanke, current chairman of the administration’s council of economic advisors, is President Bush’s nominee to succeed Alan Greenspan as chairman of the Federal Reserve. We believe will see more fine tuning of monetary policy with potentially negative implications for the dollar. We have extensively commented on Bernanke for over a year:


    * Bernanke is a support of managing the entire yield curve. See Is a Dollar Crisis Looming? (October 10, 2005); see also The Modern Command Economy: the 30-Year Bond is Returning (August 4, 2005)


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

  • Es sieht so aus das die US nur mehr Geld ins Land bringt durch Zinserhoehungen,man vermutet das unter Greenspan keine weiteren mehr kommen, erst danach auf die 5% mit Big Ben. (BB)


    Die EZB wird dann auch erhoehen muessen und man erwartet im Januar eine Erhoehung um 0.25% um den trend auf Dollar Investments zu vermindern.


    The Dollar, Gold and Stagflation - Greenspan's Conundrum :


    Federal Reserve Bank Chairman Greenspan is confused – why are long-term interest rates so low? Is it what he calls too low a risk premium courtesy of his successful policies? Inflation runs at an 18-year high. Will gold climb further, and the dollar resume its decline?.....


    http://www.merkfund.com/merk-p…nsights/2005-10-24-2.html

  • Also wenn ich mir nur mal die Nachrichten von gestern ansehe,


    - Garantiezins der Lebensversichrung sinkt weiter
    - strukt.Defizit in D bei 70 Milliarden...
    - Ben "wir drucken $ ohne ende" Bernanke neuer Fed Chef


    bin ich mehr denn je davon überzeugt, Gold wird bald die 500$oz Marke überspringen.
    Während vor knapp 3 Jahren kaum jemand etwas von Edelmetallanlagen wissen wollte, sind Sie mittlerweile in vieler Munde.
    Selbst die kleine Volksbank um die Ecke wirbt groß mit Goldanlagen als Inflationsschutz... :D

    „Die Menschen sind so einfältig und hängen so sehr vom Eindruck des Augenblickes ab, dass einer, der sie täuschen will, stets jemanden findet, der sich täuschen lässt.“ (Niccolò Machiavelli)

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Neenee,
    genau hingucken : die sind schon dabei!
    Aber vielleicht waren das noch die kleinen Chargen :]

  • Eric Fry, reporting from the city that adores Ben
    Bernanke...


    Late last week, one adoring Rude Awakening fan wrote:


    "Tell Eric to get to the point of what the good doctor
    [Richebacher] said and stop yakking about his 'good old
    days.' Do not stretch this series of articles out. Just get
    to the important points. I ain't got time to wait, for
    days, for him to get to the point or to read through a
    buncha crap. thanx."


    Dear adoring reader, we want you to know that we have heard
    your complaint. So without (much) further ado, we will "get
    to the point of what the good doctor said."


    But we should warn all readers that Dr. Kurt's insights and
    opinions are suitable for mature audiences only. The
    following material may contain scenes, depictions and
    descriptions of graphic macro-economic content that may be
    very disturbing to real estate agents, Wall Street
    employees and all other congenital optimists. Reader
    discretion is advised.


    That said, the bearer of bad tidings is often the very best
    friend or ally that one may ever have. I value, for
    example, the guy who yells "Fire!" when he smells smoke
    more than the guy who says, "It's a nice night. I think
    I'll step outside for some fresh air."


    Sometimes, you need to know there's a fire.


    Maybe that's why Dr. Richebacher's readership includes many
    of the world's most successful investors and financial
    market observers.


    Even though your editor does not number among the world's
    most successful investors, he considers the Richebacher
    Letter to be the single most important item he reads every
    month.


    Dr. Kurt is not a preacher, but he speaks like one. He
    presents his ideas with more passion, more fire, and even
    more brimstone, than any self-respecting 17th century
    Puritan minister. It is too late for America to repent of
    its economic sins, Dr. Kurt laments. But individual
    Americans may yet save themselves.


    Even if one does not agree with Dr. Kurt's dire
    conclusions, one may still benefit from his insights. No
    one tells it like Dr. Kurt, as you will now observe....



    America's Leading the World to Financial Ruin!


    So says Dr. Richebacher, the world's greatest living
    economist...


    And after seeing the REAL numbers - the ones mainstream
    "analysts" never even look at - I have to say he's
    absolutely right.


    The brutal truth is that the U.S. economy is a brittle
    house of cards.


    But you don't have to blindsided when it all comes crashing
    down - not if you've got the facts - and the expertise to
    parlay them into major profits...


    http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/RCH/WRCHFA02


    -------------------------


    NO WAY OUT
    By Eric J. Fry


    "I'm a faithful reader of your monthly newsletter," your
    editor began his recent half-day discussion with Dr.
    Richebacher in Cannes, France. "And I accept your grim
    diagnosis for the U.S. economy. But I don't want to accept
    your equally grim prognosis. I understand, for example,
    that our economic imbalances are considerable. But I don't
    want to believe that they are insurmountable. Isn't there
    some way for us Americans to tip-toe away from the
    precipice of disaster?"


    "No," Dr. Kurt answered bluntly. "That's not possible. The
    imbalances are simply too great."


    During the next six hours, your editor learned all the
    gritty details of America's economic predicament...


    Richebacher: One has to realize that all the increase in
    American consumer spending is borrowed. And it is borrowed
    against rising house prices. In 2001, Greenspan replaced
    the bursting stock market bubble with the housing bubble.
    But soon he'll be faced with a bursting housing bubble. The
    only question is when. But it comes suddenly, yah.


    Asset prices are the key to the US economy. As long as
    asset prices are high, there seems to be ample liquidity in
    the economy. But as asset prices fall, the liquidity
    disappears. Americans think they are liquid. They aren't
    liquid. Liquid is a person who has savings. We must realize
    that the appearance of great liquidity is merely the result
    of highly leveraged asset prices. And those can collapse.


    Fry: Well, let's hope that asset prices merely deflate
    gracefully, rather than collapse.


    Richebacher: I don't think that's possible. Excess credit
    is the only thing supporting asset prices...Greenspan
    recently observed that American consumers have weathered
    the energy price hikes very well. But that's only because
    they borrowed crazier and crazier. That's not the kind of
    resilience you should applaud. It's as if he said, "We
    succeeded in helping the consumer to borrow more and more."


    It would be desirable, of course, if the consumer would
    retrench a bit. Not that he would continue to increase his
    borrowing.


    Fry: Well the consumer is retrenching a little, but only
    because its costs $80 to fill up a Ford Expedition.




    Richebacher: Yah, that's right...The thing to realize, of
    course, is that the housing bubble is many times more
    dangerous than the stock market bubble, because it involves
    the whole banking system. Greenspan has replaced one bubble
    with an even bigger and more dangerous bubble. It's insane.


    American monetary policy is out of control. Greenspan has
    created a debt Colossus. This debt Colossus needs permanent
    new credit. In an economy that needs four dollars in credit
    to produce one dollar of GDP, simply reducing credit could
    be disastrous. Even a slight reduction of credit could
    create enormous negative repercussions in the asset markets
    and financial markets.


    The level of credit excess in America has reached such a
    level of absurdity that no return to normalcy is possible
    without a disastrous effect on the economy.


    Fry: Wonderful.


    Richebacher: America has become what Hyman Minsky calls a
    "Ponzi unit." In other words, there sometimes comes a point
    where an economic unit has to rely upon asset sales to
    satisfy its interest payments and debt repayment. That's
    America!


    [Editor's note: As Dr. Kurt explains in the October issue
    of his newsletter, "[The writings of Hyman P. Minksy,
    particularly his 1986 book, 'Stabilizing and Unstable
    Economy,'...identify three distinct income-debt relations
    for economic units: hedge, speculative and Ponzi finance:


    1) Hedge-financing units can fulfill all of their
    contractual payment obligations by their cash flow.
    2) Speculative units can meet the interest bill on their
    liabilities from their income, but are unable to repay the
    principal out of cash flow from operations. They need to
    roll over their liabilities.


    3) Ponzi units are unable to fulfill repayment of
    principal and to pay the interest due on outstanding debts
    by their cash flow from operations. They depend on
    borrowing or selling assets even to meet their interest
    bill.


    It is a reasonable conclusion that the U.S. economy and its
    financial system on the whole have become one huge Ponzi
    financing unit."]


    Richebacher: What the Americans have done is that they have
    simply abolished savings. And that means that more and more
    of GDP goes into consumption at the expense of investment
    and at the expense of the trade balance...


    What I often hear is that there's so much liquidity in the
    US economy and US financial markets. But this liquidity is
    not from cash. It is credit. There is huge liquidity in the
    asset markets that could turn into a savage deflation
    tomorrow. This is an illusion, this liquidity argument. It
    works as long as the system of inflating asset prices
    functions. But when it stops, liquidity is gone. If there
    is a lot of leverage in the market, it can collapse.


    But people say to me, "It has not yet happened." Yes,
    that's right it has not yet happened...But it will, as soon
    as credit becomes more expensive or difficult to obtain...


    The crucial support for the American financial
    infrastructure is the massive purchases of U.S. Treasury
    bonds by foreign central banks. The Americans think that
    this is to their advantage. But this only means that they
    have a longer rope with which to hang themselves. To have
    too much credit is never good, not for a country and not
    for an individual and not for a company.


    Fry: And not for a wife, certainly.


    Richebacher: This is the problem. America has too much
    international credit. Not from private investors, but from
    central banks. Central banks are the marginal key
    influence. And therefore, when you consider the American
    fundamentals, America is certainly the most backward
    country in the world, among industrialized nations.


    From a fundamental point of view, the American economy is
    in incomparably worst condition today than in 2000. Income
    growth for the individual is stagnating. It is negative.
    And there is no savings. America has no reserves to
    protect itself against the next recession.




    The fact is, you Americans are trapped. And worse, there
    comes a point where you're unable to sell any assets to
    raise capital, a point where the markets become completely
    illiquid...because there's no buyer left. The buyers of
    today are all leveraged buyers. They need new credit. But
    when you get declining prices, there is no buyer
    left...America's super-liquidity all comes from borrowing.
    Credit has played a major role in all U.S. financial
    markets...


    There are many who say that deficit spending by the
    government is bad. But they don't say that deficit
    spending by the consumer is equally bad, or worse. The
    American idea that everything good comes from consumer
    spending is preposterous. And that is the key fallacy in
    America today.


    But the key question is whether America has finally reached
    the inflection point where its disastrous economic policies
    will begin to undermine its prosperity. I think she has.


    Fry: It's hard to see an easy way out.


    Richebacher: There is no way out. The excesses are much too
    big to be treated with conventional methods.

    • Offizieller Beitrag
    Zitat

    Original von Aladin
    Auch eine Meinung : Es haelt nicht lange ueber 500 USD


    Aber sowas ist der Blick bis zum Tellerrand!


    Vielleicht mal ein Zwischenhoch etwa.


    Na und? ;)


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Dollar 94 ! Harrr Harrr!


    Der hilft natürlich dem Gold.


    Mahendra ist vielleicht schon mit Herzinfarkt a.D. :D

  • @ Edel Man


    Unterschaetze Mahendra nicht, der hat Weisheiten die haben wir nicht.
    In vielen Dingen hatte er Recht, in allen doch unmoeglich da er auch nur ein Mensch ist. Mich wuerde sein letzter Update interessieren aber ich bin kein Member mehr. Auf seiner Webseite gab es keinen Update seit 10.Oktober. Der neue Trend bei Gold muss sich erst bestaetigen, langsam kommen die Auswirkungen von Wilma, die BB Rally ist vorbei, back to Reality !


    Meine Strategie ist HOLD.


    Und immer kommt die Frage auf is it truth or illusion was im moment passiert.

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Tatsachen,alles Tatsachen,Aladin :]


    Aber schön heftig.
    Hatte heute in einem Special Letter/Schweiz einen schönen
    Goldchart gesehen,daraus sah ich "bullish flag".


    Alles paletti mE.
    Tut natürlich gut, wenn man als Superoptimist nicht absäuft. :D

  • Tatsachen ?


    Auf CNBC wird posound das Inflation unter Kontrolle ist, die Leute in Aktien investieren sollten und einige T-Bonds verkaufen. Es sollen noch 3-4 Zinserhoehungen geben aber das ist auch kein Problem, denn der Dollar sollte dadurch noch staerker sein nach den Hurricans.


    Wir bieten die besten Zinsen und spielen Euch eins vor. ;)

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Das ist der Punkt:
    Crying in the wind!!


    Auf zum letzten Gefecht,nun gut ,zu weiterem Medienschwachsinn.


    Die Inflation galoppiert und wird solange wie möglich verfälscht.


    Der höhere Zins würgt den Konsum ab,das Immobilienkartenhaus zerfällt.


    Hoffentlich dämmert den kleinen Lemmingen drüben jetzt etwas!


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Leider machen die Chinesen und Japaner noch mit,
    den schwindsüchtigen Greenback zu stützen.


    Dollar versus Yen auf 2-Jahreshoch!!,extrem dubios.


    "Die Märkte haben nie unrecht, die Menschen oft." Jesse Livermore, 20.Jh.


    "Die Demokratie ist das Paradies der Schreier und Schwätzer, Phraseure, Schmeichler und Schmarotzer, die jedem sachlichen Talent weit mehr den Weg verlegen, als dies in einer anderen Verfassungsform vorkommt." E.von Hartmann


    Dieser Beitrag ist eine persönliche Meinung gem. Art.5 Abs.1 GG und Urteil des BVG 1 BvR 1384/16

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