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

  • Hi,


    der Montag-Abendhüpfer beim Silber hat sich auf Dienstag früh verspätet, auch nicht schlecht. :]


    Eldo muß im Flieger sein, anders ist es nicht zu erklären.
    Kurz vor dem Urlaub schließt er wahrscheinlich immer seine riesigen S-Positionen der Schlingel, wuste doch gleich daß hier ein Spion an Bord ist. ;)


    Dauerurlaub für Eldo darauf hat der POG richtig Bock.


    Yust wait and we will see !


    O-Hase

    Ende gut alles gut.

    • Offizieller Beitrag
    Zitat

    Original von bobelle21
    ob Eldo gerade im Flieger sitzt und abhebt? ;)


    Nee,der fliegt erst 8.03.m.W..
    War aber gerade am Flughafen,Akkus für seine Laptops einkaufen. :D

  • grüß gott genossen,


    ich hab jetzt neue socken mit silberfäden bestimmt hat das den hupferl ausgemacht :D


    mal schauen obs auch gegen schweissfüsse hilft

  • Hmmmm?


    ....werden die Socken nach Gebrauch auch recycelt....oder ist das dann Sondermüll (würde den Silberverbrauch natürlich mehr anheizen! :P)


    Stelle mir grade Gitterboxen voller gebrauchter Socken und Unzterwäsche in ner Scheideanstalt vor...... =)

    Gold wirft auch nach[s]18[/s] 26 Jahren noch immer keine Strafzinsen ab! :thumbsup:
    Hobbyimker (Honig via Boardnachricht)
    Alchemist


    Meine Bewertung: Knallsilber

    • Offizieller Beitrag
    Zitat

    Original von Eldorado
    Naechste Hochzeit Newmont / Miramar ? :rolleyes:


    Denkbar.
    NEM hat vor Monaten Option auf 100% Übernahme mit MAE/MNG vereinbart.
    MAE heute +12,4% auf Historisches Hoch. :]

  • Moin Edel und Eldo,


    die Europäer machen das, was sie immer machen, wenn Dritte sich freuen. Und Miramar, bzw. meine Restbestände im Depot, gehen ja ab wie eine Rakete. War ein guter Tipp von Dir, Edel. Danke! :]


    Viele Grüße


    KR

    Zeit ist der Freund von wunderbaren Unternehmen und der Feind von mittelmäßigen Unternehmen. Warren Buffett

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Nichts könnte zu der Gold- und Silberhausse besser passen als Fusionen.
    Die Grossen positionieren sich und bringen Leben in die Szene.


    Und uns freuts,wir profitieren doppelt. :]


    Grüsse

  • Le Metropole Members,


    Gold Bugs vs. Gartman
    By John Partridge
    Globe and Mail, Toronto
    Wednesday evening, March 1, 2006

    http://www.theglobeandmail.com…301/BNStory/Business/home


    Video: ;)


    http://www.theglobeandmail.com…1.00037000-00037379-clip2




    They agreed that the price of gold will continue to rise.

    But as for how far, how fast and why, forget it.

    On these and many other issues, two leading gold bugs and a well-known U.S. investment newsletter publisher begged to differ, as they matched wits in Toronto Wednesday during a televised debate.

    The gold bugs were John Embry, precious metals specialist and chief investment strategist at Sprott Asset Management in Toronto, and ally Bill Murphy of Dallas, chairman of the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee. Both believe the metal's price has for years been manipulated by a cartel of central banks, dominated by the U.S. Federal Reserve Board, that have used their extensive gold reserves to suppress the price in an effort to prop up the value of their currencies. They contend the central banks now retain far less gold than the 31,000 tonnes they claim to have.

    They also figure that the price of gold, which has risen more than 120 percent in the past five years -- and closed in New York yesterday at US$565.80 an ounce, for April delivery, up $1.90 -- is going to hit $1,000 or $2,000 and more in fairly short order because supply will not keep up with investor demand.

    "I basically think that paper money has a distinct problem and that gold will reassert itself for a considerable period of time," Mr. Embry said. "So, yeah, I'm really bullish on gold. I can see $1,000 gold quite easily."

    "In essence, there's a major short position out there because the central banks don't have the gold they had," Mr. Murphy said. "They have about half of it. The rest has been used to suppress the price and now that demand is kicking in, the price is taking off." And that short position, he added, will at some point have to be covered, which will drive gold prices rapidly skyward.

    Their opponent in the debate, hosted by Report on Business Television, was Dennis Gartman, editor and publisher of The Gartman Letter, a daily investment commentary published from Suffolk, Va. He would not forecast a specific price for gold but allowed that he could perhaps see it hitting $1,000 an ounce maybe 20 years from now, but certainly not in the next two years -- and he dismissed the cartel and conspiracy theories as a waste of time.

    "Quite honestly, I couldn't care less," Mr. Gartman declared. "It is not important to me if there has been a manipulation to keep the price of gold down, because the price of gold has been going up. Whether they have deceptively kept it down is inconsequential to those of us who trade in it. The trend is up and is continuing to be."

    In Mr. Gartman's view, the key driver of stronger gold prices, especially in the past year, is that what he described as "second- and third-tier" European central banks have been buying it to diversify their reserves, which for years had been concentrated in U.S. dollars and, more recently, in euros.

    Gold hit a record high of $872 an ounce in January 1980. To match that in today's dollars, the price would have to top $2,100.

    Also Wednesday, Bank of Nova Scotia said that investors have driven the price of gold up so sharply that for now they have also run the most important traditional buyers, jewellery makers, out of the market.

    Gold has climbed from $500 since the beginning of last December, but although this is usually a period of heavy jewellery demand, most of the upward pressure has come from professional and retail investors buying exchange-traded hold funds, according to a quarterly report by the bank's ScotiaMocatta Precious Metals division. "Contrasting buoyant investment demand, jewellers and manufacturers from the jewellery-centric markets of India and the Middle East continue to report lacklustre trading conditions with buyers sidelined by high prices," the report said.

    In an interview following the debate, Mr. Murphy described this as "sticker shock," and said the jewellers' absence will be only temporary. "Because there is such a supply-demand deficit, the sticker shock will end and at some point they will be forced to go back in," he said.

    There were plenty of other issues on which the gold bugs and the publisher disagreed during the debate.

    Mr. Embry, for instance, said he figures the U.S. economy is in far worse shape than official statistics suggest and, indeed, that the United States is "unfortunately" heading for a depression that will "destroy" the value of its currency.

    Not Mr. Gartman. In his view, the economy is in fact "much stronger than the data would show us," and he does not see a depression in the cards, at least not in his lifetime.

    -END-

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