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

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    March 25 - Gold $416.90 down 20 cents - Silver $7.58 down 3 cents


    Morgan Stanley Fails To Break Gold And Silver Markets


    Zitat

    Assiduus usus uni rei deditus et ingenium et artem saepe vincit (Constant practice devoted to one subject often outdoes both intelligence and skill)... Marcus Tullius Cicero


    GO GATA!!!


    An early MIDAS today as I am heading out to San Diego to watch my nieces play on their college tennis team.


    Gold came in steady while silver was bombed early by HSBC, a major silver short, and to a lesser extent by silver price manager Morgan Stanley. HSBC offered 400 lots on the opening and all they could get filled was 30 lots. That meant there was an air hole and the silver price was bombed down 16 cents on the opening. Clearly the trade was doing all it could to take silver below $7.50 so the April calls would expire worthless.


    Speaking of bombs, the world is going to have to deal with the creepy terrorists for the foreseeable future. Yesterday there were rumors of a bomb in a French train station and today we got this:


    "Dutch officials have sealed off part of Amsterdam's central train station due to bomb threat, reports Reuters 7:55 ET"


    "Traffic was stopped around 7:30 ET. A spokesman acknowledged that there was a threat that is being taken seriously."


    While no one wants this to be a reason for the gold price to go up, it is a new fact of life this sort of tension will continue to be market supportive.


    Hawkish inflation remarks by the British sent the pound sharply lower. Meanwhile, remember yesterday’s euro trashing and the "donkey" European rate cut story which was the impetus for its move? Well today the story has changed, as usual, now that the gold price rally was curtailed.


    ECB's Welteke, Tumpel-Gugerell Say Stable Prices Best Boost for Consumers


    March 25 (Bloomberg) -- European Central Bank council members Ernst Welteke and Gertrude Tumpel-Gugerell said controlling inflation is the best the bank can do to boost consumer spending, the part of the economy policy makers are most concerned about.


    Zitat

    ``A central bank has few means'' to spur private consumption, Welteke said in an interview at the Bundesbank in Frankfurt, which he heads. ``Consumer demand could benefit from the increase in purchasing power that stems from price stability.'' ….


    ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet said in a Handelsblatt interview published yesterday that the bank may lower its economic growth forecasts unless consumer demand in the euro region picks up. Trichet blamed unemployment, cuts in welfare and fear of future inflation for consumers' reluctance to spend, suggesting lower borrowing costs may not solve the problem.


    Zitat

    ``I can't imagine that there are consumers who link their decision about savings and consumption to the central bank interest rate,'' said Welteke, 61.


    Rate Cut Expectations


    Europe's shoppers are less likely to respond to lower rates than their U.S. counterparts because they borrow less to fund purchases and buy homes, says Trevor Williams, head of economic research at Lloyds TSB Group Plc in London.


    A one-percentage-point reduction in interest rates would raise economic growth by about 0.6 percentage point in the U.S. the following year, compared with 0.3 percent in the euro region, according to Lloyds TSB.


    ``Trichet says perceived inflation is to blame for weak consumption. That would contradict a rate cut,'' said Daniela Etschberger, an economist at Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein in Frankfurt. Still, "a rate cut would help companies and investment, and that would ultimately benefit consumption.''


    Expectations for a reduction in interest rates rose after Trichet's comments.


    -END-


    Whatever happened to the Egyptian (Bin Laden’s right hand man) who was surrounded on the Afghanistan/Pakistan border? That was worth $4 on the downside for gold. You have to wonder how long the investment world is going to fall for these kinds of planted stories.


    After a steady opening, gold tanked almost $2 in sympathy with the silver sell-off, but came back as the funds took on the trade who were protecting their shorts and option exposure. It wasn’t long before gold went positive. The rest of the day was a see-saw affair. Late, Morgan Stanley went ballistic offering gold and silver, trying to break both. They were met by resolute buying.


    Their effort to break silver and "give it a lousy close" failed miserably.


    The gold open interest gained another 2054 contracts on the break yesterday to 283,893. Once again we see evidence of the investment world’s willingness to take on The Gold Cartel. The silver open interest fell 544 contracts to 119,435 with the March dropping 23 contracts to 248.


    There were no deliveries. MIDAS is still waiting for a short to deliver my 5,000 ounces of silver. Two trading days left for the March contract.


    Considering the effort The Gold Cartel is making to contain gold, its price performance after the recent run-up is quite admirable. The bad guys have their hands full as a swarm of new buyers is willing to take them on. As far as silver goes, it is normal once a market breaks through key resistance like silver did at $7.50 to go back and test that area. The testing can last days or weeks. Once the test is passed, silver is likely to blow through $8 very quickly.

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    The John Brimelow Report


    Huge Unsung buying; Acute Bianco


    Thursday, March 25, 2004


    Indian ex-duty premiums: AM $3.74, PM $1.67, with world gold at $415.65 and $416.50. Below legal import point. The rupee did narrowly make a fresh 44-month gold-import facilitating high.


    TOCOM had to deal with a firmer yen as well as a softer $US gold price this morning. Mitsui-HK says:


    Gold eased post-Comex …Low gold price attracted a flurry of bargain buying as soon as Asian market started. However the rally to 416.50 was short-lived as traders began to batter bids down to 415.75. 415 proved to be good support and gold bounced a dollar near the close.
    (JB emphasis)


    A bit of this ‘bargain buying’ was apparently Japanese. Volume rose 17% to equal 21,838 Comex lots and open interest was up the equivalent of 920 lots. The active contract went out down 19 yen and world gold was $1.15 below the NY close at the end. (Yesterday NY traded a huge 108,379 contracts of which 19,618 were switches. Open interest rose 2,054 lots – making a 20,000 rise for the week to Wednesday, almost exactly the entire increase last week.)


    A couple of commentaries take note of gold’s better performance of late in non- $US terms, for instance N M Rothschild:


    Zitat

    "It is interesting to note that the last time the euro was at this level, gold was trading at $396, indicating the recent rally in the gold price has been to the increase of geopolitical concerns and the attachment of a safe-haven premium to gold,"


    What is attracting a resounding silence is the huge volumes trading on Comex this week. With spot gold moving into the $415-20 zone quite promptly after Monday’s Comex opening, almost 400,000 contracts have traded by the 12 Noon estimate this morning, compared to 285,000 all last week. Even if one adjusts for 45,000 switches this is very heavy, especially for so little price progress.


    Clearly it has not gone unnoticed. Standard London, notes of yesterday:


    Zitat

    "good physical selling capped the market and the price fell back to $417.60 by the morning fixing in London …The price has fallen back below $416 in Asia this morning…. On the charts while the third successive close above $416 was positive, the mood of the market is mixed and technical traders will be wary of a dip back to support pegged at $410"


    Refco Research was sufficiently intimidated to close out its (profitable) long gold trade this morning, and of course the gold shares have been fearing the capping of gold all week.


    In fact, gold shares have usually exhibited vertigo whenever the possibility of gold making a new multi-year high has appeared (and gold is not so far from that achievement at present). September, while bullion was considering the $380s, is a memorable example. The past week’s action presents a half full/half empty conundrum. But in the end, the appearance of heavy selling on any important rise is not new. (Neither is a German government growling about gold sales – this morning’s specimen, from the Chancellor, appeared right on cue). What might be new is the appearance of large scale professional accumulation, which has to be aware of what it is facing.


    While waiting for this struggle to resolve, it is refreshing to find Bianco Research continuing in its’ acidic critique of the authorities. Discussing the flood of Fed speeches today they say:


    Zitat

    "According to the Federal Reserve… (the CRB) …is no longer a measure of inflation. Further, any relationship to the …(10-year Tips inflation breakeven rate) is misguided. Just because the correlation between these series has been 65%, they will stress that "correlation does not imply causation." And since this causation doesn't fit their story, they would recommend that both of these measures should be ignored."


    "According to the Fed, inflation is what they say it is. They say it is not a problem. They will tell us when it's a problem."


    "In fact, there is really no need to release February PPI. It's not necessary. Lastly, since they fixed the NAICS categories and released January PPI, what's the delay with releasing February PPI? Is it another bad report like January?"


    JB


    Bianco Research, a very highly regarded firm, sounds like one of us.

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    CARTEL CAPITULATION WATCH


    GATA’s Mike Bolser:


    Hi Bill:


    The Federal Reserve added today, March 25th 2004, $16.5 Billion in temporary repurchase agreements. This action elevated the repo pool to $31.8 Billion and moved the pool's 30-day moving average up nicely into a firm, DOW-supporting pattern. At this hour the DOW tracks up a bit at 10,100.


    Zoom in for clarity


    Look back at the first week in December 2003 and we will see the repo pool's 30-day ma suddenly drop (red trace). Look also at the DOWs 30-day ma (green trace) and we see just BEFORE the repo pool's ma fall, the DOWs ma moved upward from its long (June 2003) trend line. This is an excellent example of how the repo pool's moving average can view into the Fed's market interventional war room.


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.lemetropolecafe.com/img2004/repos032504.jpg]


    Unlike preemptive selling of gold where the players can move offshore to hide their selling, the controlled size of the repo pool can't be altered or hidden so we have (For the moment) a durable tool to predict not only the DOWs coming direction but also the DEGREE of Fed pressure to support it. We will know when the Fed begins to panic because a sharply rising repo pool will tell us. Meanwhile the DOW will head back up shortly, under the whip of the Fed.


    Nothing on silver from the LBMA


    A thoughtful GATA stalwart Ed Steer suggested last night that the LBMA may be waiting for options expiry today before releasing what may be dreadful (for them) February silver volume numbers. A spike above 200 million ounces per day in volume (should it be that high) will be the death knell for the gold cartel's metals manipulation scheme as it will most certainly bleed into gold and possibly...oil. China has been on an oil buying tear of late and the public exhaustion of any major commodities market inventory will only spur them on.


    Those who cautiously wait for the last bar to be sold simply won't get any.


    Mike



    Gold demand:


    TOKYO, March 25 (Reuters) - Japan's gold imports surged 319 percent in February from a year earlier to 6,086 kg, posting sharp gains for a third consecutive month, preliminary data from the Ministry of Finance showed on Thursday. A ministry official said the reason for the rise was unclear, but it was partly a reflection of import volume being smaller than usual in the comparable month last year. Gold imports have risen more than 200 percent year-on-year since December.


    -END-


    From a Café member on silver:


    Author: Solomon Weaver
    Subject: Silver Catalyst facts.


    Number: 2302 :: Date/Time: 03-23-2004 :: 20:05


    This week, Ted Butler highlighted an interview with the President of a silver processor in New York State called Ames Goldsmith, which claims to process about 50 million ounces of silver per year.


    At that site, they indicate that they recover silver from about 2000 tons per year of silver catalyst used in the manufacture of ethylene oxide ..EO.. (mainly a precursor to ethylene glycol used in anti-freeze).


    I have done some quick patent hunting and web searching tonight and come up with the expectation that such catalysts will probably have an average of 5% silver content, so Ames might recover about 3 million ounces of silver from this material.


    Given that Ames seems to handle silver quantities comprising about 5% of total global silver usage, and probably close to 10% of all industrial usage, it is possible they almost have a monopoly on the recovery of silver from EO catalysts in the USA.


    The USA annual production (capacity) of EO is about 9 BILLION pounds and the general market value of EO is about $0.50 per pound. This would imply that the family of EO and EO downstream products add up to about $5 billion per year.


    http://www.marketresearch.com/researchindex/835234.html


    "World consumption of ethylene oxide is 14 million tonnes (US$11 billion) and is growing over 3% a year. The USA is the largest producer of ethylene oxide, with production of almost 4 million tonnes a year. Asia is the largest consuming region of ethylene oxide, accounting for 37% of world consumption, while demand is growing fastest in Europe, which is experiencing, on average, a 4% growth per year. Germany and the Netherlands are the major exporters."


    As a very uneducated ballpark estimate, I might expect that the global EO catalyst (standing in reactors and in recycling) might be in the range of about 15-20 million silver ounces, with the average life of the catalyst being about 2 years. It is also noteworthy that since most of the silver can be recovered, this use of silver should only have a very small NET NEW DEMAND on silver....perhaps about 2 million ounces.


    I think this is a very interesting example of how about $10 million of new silver might be consumed each year to support a very solid global EO industry producing about $10 billion worth of revenue.


    If silver went to $100, then it might begin to make up about 1% of the costs in global EO.......still far under the other major costs of capital for such huge plants.


    On the other hand, it might increase the "capital allocation of silver value in the reactor" to a global value of about $2 billion...now....imagine how painful it would be for companies who have been creative and are "leasing" the silver in their reactors....rather than "owning it".


    We all know how much managers of the last couple decades have been forced to "work their capital" and that "leasing" of capital assets has been a good trick to take assets off the book....and goose "ROI". I suspect that there are many uses of silver (chemical catalysis, electrical generation, etc. which have large amounts (several hundred million ounces) of silver essentially in place. As these components wear out, they may often be replaced with components having equal amounts of silver. But, if silver rises in a grand way, the "owners" of these assets will experience a capital value increase concordant with the number of silver ounces in the object....but are obligated to show return on that capital....especially if they are a leasing agency themselves.


    By the way.....the names of the companies producing EO look like some of the who's who in the Silver Users Association.


    http://www.the-innovation-grou…iles/Ethylene%20Oxide.htm


    Ethylene Oxide
    PRODUCER CAPACITY*


    BASF, Geismar, La. 630 thousands of pounds per annum
    Dow, Seadrift, Tex. 930
    Dow, Taft, La. 1,460
    Dow, Plaquemine, La. 620
    Eastman, Longview, Tex. 230
    Equistar, Bayport, Tex. 750
    Formosa, Point Comfort, Tex. 550
    Huntsman, Port Neches, Tex. 1,200
    Old World Industries, Clear Lake, Tex. 700
    PD Glycol, Beaumont, Tex. 640
    Shell, Geismar, La. 1,260
    Sunoco, Brandenburg, Ky. 110
    Sunoco, Claymont, Del. 110


    -END-


    Ted Butler’s latest entitled "Testing Your Brain" can be read at:


    http://www.investmentrarities.com


    -END-


    My friend Marshall Auerbach commenting at http://www.PrudentBear.com:


    So what has become the safe haven of choice? One week does not a bull market make, but it is noteworthy that during a time when the paper currencies essentially treaded water, spot future Comex Gold has had its best weekly rise for five months, rising from $US 395.60 to $412.70. Although we expect further central bank action to discourage its rise, gold still looks set to challenge its recent peak of $433.


    Until recently, the yellow metal was seen as nothing more than a variant of the "anti-dollar" – i.e., its strength was seen as nothing more than a corollary of dollar weakness.


    More recently, this has changed. In fact, the persistent strength of commodities, including gold, in the face of recent dollar strength has been one of the unremarked features of the markets in recent weeks. If one looks particularly at the "barbarous relic", it has been strong as the bond market has crashed. It has done well when the bond market has recovered. Recently, it has even been strong whilst the dollar has recovered marginally.


    What message is this conveying? The U.S. has a massive net external debt and an unsustainable current account deficit. Why has the dollar not crashed?


    The usual answer is that the world’s other major currencies – the euro and yen- have their own very serious drawbacks, to which recent events, such as those in Spain, Kosovo or Taiwan, have drawn greater attention. Many have remarked that, if all of the world’s currencies are unattractive, gold might regain some luster as a reserve currency and a store of value. It helps that nominal interest rates everywhere are negligible. It also helps that, in a world of ubiquitous excessive debt, gold is the one asset that is no one’s liability. Could gold’s recent strength finally be signaling its re-emergence as a viable safe haven of choice? The next few weeks in the markets could be very telling indeed.


    -END-


    But, there is no inflation, from Sarge:


    Also!! I don’t know how much you watch pork bellies or OSB lumber etc., but lumber has been limit up for two days now (at $371 today). But there’s NO inflation.


    And bellies!! I made $65,000 on one bellies trade back in 1998. In modern history, I have RARELY seen bellies over 95. They are limit up today at 110!! Sheesh! No inflation coming to your breakfast table huh?? NOT!


    –END-


    Can’t miss this great read:


    Storm Watch Update from Jim Puplava


    March 22, 2004


    http://www.kitco.com/ind/Puplava/mar242004.html


    -END-


    For newer Café members it is important to keep in mind the advantage Café members/GATA supporters have over everyone else following the gold and silver markets. We know what was done to the gold and silver prices over the past many years and why. We also know the central banks are out of half of their reported reserves and only have about 16,000 tonnes left. The silver price managers are fast running out of any sort of supply to continue their fraud, which is the main reason silver is finally taking off.


    This is why we have cleaned up the past couple of years with our gold/silver and share investments. We understand the big picture and what is going to happen to prices and why. Therefore, we don’t get bumped out of the game on setbacks which are only natural in any bull market. Our focus and vision, supported by over 5 years worth of facts, is an incredible bolster for us. The more you do your homework about what the GATA ARMY has uncovered over the years, the more excited you will be about what is to come.


    At Post Time (2 hours left to go for US stock market trading), the gold shares are finally catching a bid and appear to have a small wind at their back. The XAU is up over a point and the HUI is up over 2 1/2 points. MUCH MORE OF THAT TO COME.

    GATA BE IN IT TO WIN IT!


    MIDAS


    Appendix


    Businesses Urged to Plan For Higher Interest Rates Fed Bank Chiefs Raise Issue in Speeches


    By Nell Henderson


    Washington Post Staff Writer


    Thursday, March 25, 2004; Page E04


    With the U.S. economic recovery gaining steam, businesses should start planning for the day when the Federal Reserve will have to start raising short-term interest rates from their current low levels, Jack Guynn, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, warned yesterday.


    Businesses should not assume "in their long-term plans that this extraordinary period will continue indefinitely," Guynn said, according to the text of a speech he delivered in Johnson City, Tenn.


    Several Fed officials, including Chairman Alan Greenspan, have noted in recent speeches that they do not plan to leave their target for a key overnight interest rate, the Federal funds rate, at a 46-year low of 1 percent forever. But they also have repeatedly stressed that they can be "patient" in deciding when to start raising rates because inflation is so low, businesses have ample unused production capacity and hiring remains sluggish.


    Guynn, however, went further than others have publicly in warning businesses about the potential dangers of low interest rates, which can encourage speculative investments or temporary booms in certain pockets of the economy. Some Fed critics have said rock-bottom rates have already pumped up the prices of houses, stocks, bonds and other assets to possibly unsustainable levels.


    Guynn said he had warned his son, who works in residential real estate, "about the seductive lures of such an extraordinary period," particularly that "some part of his business may be vulnerable -- that part induced by temporarily low rates alone."


    He compared the Fed's policy of very low rates to "a strong dose of medication" prescribed for a sick economy, but he warned that "as the patient begins to recover, however, there is a need to recalibrate the dosage or to stop prescribing it entirely to avoid potential side effects."


    Guynn is a non-voting member of the Fed committee that decides where to set the overnight rate target, which influences many other interest rates throughout the economy. The 12 voting members unanimously decided last week to leave the target at 1 percent to encourage continued growth in household and business spending, and they repeated their promise to be "patient" about deciding when to raise it. But Guynn's remarks hint that some participants in the policymaking debate may be less patient than others.


    Michael H. Moskow, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, said in a speech Monday that the Fed cannot keep rates so low "indefinitely," but he echoed others in emphasizing that "inflation is still extremely low" because the economy is producing less than it can, as is evident in the weak labor market and excess production capacity.


    Guynn's speech was delivered as the Commerce Department reported that new orders for manufactured durable goods rose 2.5 percent in February after falling 2.7 percent in January. The February gain reflected a surge in the volatile transportation equipment category, which includes autos and aircraft. However, after excluding transportation equipment, new orders dropped 0.3 percent.


    "Today's durable goods report indicates a tentative softening in the pace of business equipment spending in [the first quarter of this year] following rapid growth in the second half of 2003," Peter E. Kretzmer, senior economist with Bank of America Corp., wrote in a note to clients yesterday.


    In his speech, Guynn agreed that the Fed has "good reason" to leave the rate so low "at least for now," adding, "But if my forecast for more robust economic growth materializes, then at some point a Fed funds rate of 1 percent will no longer be the best policy."


    He added,


    Zitat

    "It is indeed a luxury to have an inflation environment in which policymakers can be patient. . . . That said, luxury comes with a price tag, and patience is not unlimited."


    -END-


    NY Fed Warns of Potential Deficit Fallout


    By Pedro Nicolaci da Costa


    NEW YORK (Reuters) - A ballooning budget deficit and low
    savings rate pose risks to the U.S. economy and the financial
    system, New York Federal Reserve President Timothy Geithner
    said on Thursday.


    Zitat

    "The current deterioration in the U.S. fiscal position and
    the acute decline in the net national savings rate represent
    risks to the financial system and the economy as a whole,"

    Geithner told the New York Banker's Association.


    Geithner said such looming risks were made all the more
    worrying by the size of the U.S. current account deficit and
    the unprecedented scale of financing needed to fund it.


    The central banker urged the United States to strengthen
    risk management in an increasingly complex financial
    environment to guard against any eventualities.


    He also noted that U.S. inflation was very low and the
    outlook was for only very modest prices rises ahead, but
    offered little in the way of hints on monetary policy in his
    first major speech since becoming NY Fed President.


    GREENSPAN ON FARMS


    Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan also refrained from using any
    language that might suggest the future direction of interest
    rates.


    In a separate speech on Thursday, Greenspan said open
    global markets are needed to ensure that consumers worldwide
    enjoy the benefits of rapid gains in agricultural productivity.


    Greenspan noted advances in farm productivity had brought
    wrenching changes over the years in the U.S. economy, as
    workers first migrated to manufacturing and more recently into
    service industries.


    But he told the conference, sponsored by the Kansas City
    Federal Reserve Bank and the Organization for Economic
    Cooperation and Development, that such "dislocations" were a
    worthwhile price to pay for the increases in living standards
    productivity brings.


    Financial markets are awaiting speeches from Fed Board
    Governor Donald Kohn and St Louis Fed President William Poole
    for any clues regarding the timing of an eventual interest rate
    hike from the central bank.


    On Wednesday, two Federal Reserve officials warned investors that loose monetary policy conditions will not last
    forever, particularly in light of robust U.S. economic growth.


    Job creation has been the missing component in the U.S.
    economic recovery, and until it picks up in breadth and speed,
    the Fed has suggested, borrowing costs are likely to remain at
    1 percent, their lowest level in 46 years.

  • The Wallace Street Journal


    Kodak's Nickel's Worth (and mine), beer, and haberdashery


    By David Bond


    The Provincially-set price of beer in 1970 where I grew up was fixed at 20 cents for a 12-ounce (Imperial ounces, mind you, not them wimpy American ounces) schooner. We returned to Vancouver, B.C. this January, and the best we could do was $2 for the same quantity of suds.


    The price of oil was $3 per barrel in 1970. It is well past $30, closer to $40, per bbl, today.


    Don't care for beer? OK, the Wayback Machine takes us back to 1970 to hunt for coffee beans, which low and behold, were selling for the magical bean price of 75 cents a pound. Run-of-the-mill whole-bean coffee nowadays fetches $7.50 an elbow.


    The average price of a new single-family home in 1970 was $23,000; it is now nearly $200,000, according to the federal HUD agency.


    Are we beginning to see a pattern here? That whatever cost X in 1970 now costs 10 times X in 2004.


    So where was silver in 1980? No, you don't have to look it up. We do these things in our Sleep here in the Silver Valley. The 1970 price of silver - just two years after LBJ and the United Snakes Government reneged on their promise to redeem silver certificates for silver - hovered at $2 per troy ounce.


    So I listen to these guys and gurus at these silver and gold shows around the country who are prognosticating $8 or even $9 silver and can only wonder, Are they nuts?


    For silver to merely catch up to the price of beer, coffee, shelter and gas, it would have to be 10 times its 1970 price, or $20 per troy ozzie. Then, at $20, and only at $20, would we be legally qualified to categorize and continued rise in price as a "bull market."


    Hang with me whilst I digress into gold for a moment - not my cuppa but playing with numbers, like playing with scissors or plastic explosives, is a great way to while away the time with any commodity - and you come up with pretty much the same values. However, in this context, $440 gold is one hell of a lot saner than $7-whatever silver.


    What LBJ did to silver, Nixon did to gold. By "floating" the dollar in 1971 (What else floats, students? Pond scum? Merdre?) Tricky Dick and his cabinet of criminals had to chase around the markets periodically "fixing" the price of gold in Federal Reserve "Nots" until the entire endeavour was abandoned for the folly that it was, the Fed folded, and we traded Fort Knox in for Sri Lankan rupees and Saigon scrip. But for mindless consistency's sake let's play this out.


    Nixon set the "official" gold price at $38/oz in 1972, then had to boost it to $42.22/oz a year later. The first official fix, coming on the heels of 1971's flotation creation, sucked 8 percent of the value of the US dollar out overnight.


    Paul Van Eeeden is thrashing about with the question of what the "real" price of gold should be in true market terms - I commend him for his long-suffering. But at minimum, gold's price should be 10x-plus the phony Nixonian fix of $42.22, or $420, which is about where it's hovering these days.


    Let's digress further. The USGS gives an interesting analogy, not relevant to us dungaree- and sandal-suited Silver Valley Sleepless style-slugs but germane perhaps to city slickers, oft repeated in the inner circles these days but hung here on the clothes-line for the first time, comparing the price of gold to the price of a decent set of threads:


    From Shakespearean times through the late 1980s, reflects USGS at:


    http://minerals.usgs.gov/miner…commodity/gold/300798.pdf


    An ounce of gold could buy a decently tailored man's business suit.
    Imagine that! An economic indicator that withstood the test of four centuries' time. And there were no dips and valleys in this half-millennial straight-line. The Shakespearean ounce-per-suit equation stood still during Beethoven's times, during the Jefferson Administration, through the Great Depression, into the 1980s, when suddenly ingots and Armanis parted company. Now, in 2004, a decent off-the-rack set of threads will set you back 1 large or two - in other words 3 to 5 ounces of gold, and the bastards don't even throw in a vest anymore!


    So is two large too much to expect of gold? If you think $400 gold is rational, better go back to your nickel comic books and candy bars. Well, I have digressed and you have hung with me for long enough. Now onto the essence of this rant. David Morgan of silver-investor.com was up here to visit last Saturday - always a delightful time. Other than me he is the only bright guy writing about silver these days, and one of these days after the charlatans have moved into silver, we'll tote up our collective "I told-ya sos," sell 'em on eBay and retire to Belize or Papua with our guns, families and hangers-on.


    We took a putt up to Mullan in Morgan's Dodge pickup to have a look-see at the Lucky Friday and swap war stories. Back in Wallace, we stopped by an eccentric storefront called "Indelible Tidbits" wherein the proprietress archives black and white historical photos (and makes her own) of this mining district, and will also swap a roll of your exposed color Fuji or Kodak film out for fine prints inside of an hour through some unimaginably expensive gadget called a Noritsu for half a sawbuck.
    Morgan, being far more intelligent than me, is still capable of asking obvious dumb questions with grace.


    "How much silver do you get out of this thing?" he asked her.


    The question of course presupposed a knowledge of the chemistry and metallurgy of silver-halide photographic film. You see, you can't buy a photo-processing machine without getting the recycling gadget with it. Silver is useful in film in its halide form because it is light-sensitive. Once the silver has worked its magic on the film in the developing stage,
    you get rid of it - 100 percent of it - in the fixer stage. If you don't, the film remains light-senstive and your negatives gradually fade to nothing. So recovery is the game. She sells the silver-rich sludge recovered from her machine back to our friends at Rochester.


    "I get about a nickel's worth a day," she replied. Five cents worth of $5 silver recovered from an average day's load of 20 rolls of film. You could see the smoke coming out of Morgan's ears. Mine as well. Out came the pencils and the calculators.


    We double-checked each others' math. Five cents of $5/oz over 20 rolls of Fuji or Kodachrome works out to be one-fourth of one penny's worth of silver contained in a roll of film.


    Which means if that silver doubled its $5/oz price to $10/oz, there would be one-half-cent's worth of silver in a roll of colour film. At $100/oz silver, there would be 5 cents' worth of silver in a roll of colour film. At $1,000/oz silver there would be 50 cents' worth of silver in a roll of colour film.


    Are you catching my drift here? That the treacle and drivel issuing from Rochester about the need to find a substitute for silver 'cuz the price is rising is just bollocks. Caveat emptor! When silver finds its $20 finger-hold, the cost to Eastman-Kodak will have increased by exactly one penny per roll of colour film. But watch 'em jack the price $5 a roll and blame it on the greedy silver miners.


    Kodak follows the same greed-head folly as the fabricators of sterling silver tableware. They quintupled their prices during the course of the Hunt debacle, but neglected to readjust them when the price came back down. Priced themselves right out of business.


    Kodak's silver-shorting greed led to the development of the far-inferior digital photography boom, which is neither archival nor very good, nor, if you're a serious shooter, very handy. And in doing so, they dealt themselves into a tidy little double-bind.


    Folks with kilobuck-costing digital cameras are watching their ink-jet prints of the family brood off their fancy CDs and memory sticks fade and fall apart in 6 months - this on the finest ink-jet printer paper - hardly a suitable gift for Grandma. So they come back to places like this little photo shop in Wallace to un-ring the bell that technology hath rung. And the only answer this digitized photo industry can offer is, "Run out your
    digital images on silver-halide photo paper, and be amazed." And they are.


    And their pictures will last.


    As will silver last.


    As will gold last.


    As will the fools who think that the bargain-basement prices of $400 gold and $7 silver are unsustainable peaks.


    These fools are our lawful prey. See you after school in my new two-piece suit, back behind the church, down by the marketplace. Next week, I will tell you where I place my bets, and they all end with .PK. or .OB. Keyword Silver Valley, and you will find them all.

  • Leon der Profi


    Ja Du sagst es, ein wirklich freudiger Tag für Gold und Silber Bugs!


    Auch wenn die Aktien sich heute noch nicht so richtig an die gestiegenen Gold und Silber Preise angepasst haben.


    Die heutige Silberpreisentwicklung ist doch schon ganz gewaltig.


    Vom Tief auf`s Hoch gewaltige 39.5 Cents, oder 5% Plus!
    Dabei noch gegen alle Anstrengungen der Silber Shorties.


    Die (Gold Cabal) Analysten können den heutigen Anstieg vermutlich wieder nicht richtig erklären. Wo sie doch so von einer Preis Korrektur geträumt haben.


    Gruss


    ThaiGuru

  • [Blockierte Grafik: http://csl.finanznachrichten.d…boerse-nachrichten-s1.gif]


    http://www.finanznachrichten.d…04-03/artikel-3205523.asp


    Freitag, 26. März 2004


    Goldpreis steigt auf 10-Wochen-Hoch


    Die Gold-Futures steigen heute an der Rohstoffbörse New York Mercantile Exchange auf ein 10-Wochenhoch an. Das Intraday-Hoch lag bisher bei $424 - das ist der höchste Stand seit dem 14. Januar. Zuletzt verteuert sich Gold je Feinunze um $4.90 auf $421.80. Der Philadelphia Gold and Silver Index gewinnt indessen um 1.71%.


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.finanzbuchverlag.de/bilder/gold17042004.gif]

  • [Blockierte Grafik: http://eur.i1.yimg.com/eur.yimg.com/i/de/fi/fi6.gif]


    http://de.biz.yahoo.com/040326/71/3yil6.html


    Reuters


    Goldpreis schafft Hürde von 420 Dollar

    Freitag 26. März 2004, 17:19 Uhr

    London, 26. Mär (Reuters) - Ein nachgebender Dollar und anhaltende Anschlagsängste haben Gold zum Wochenschluss Auftrieb verliehen und den Feinunzenpreis in der Spitze bis auf leicht über 422 Dollar je Feinunze steigen lassen. Auch Silber war fester.
    Gold notierte zum europäischen Handelsschluss bei 420,50/421/10 (Vorabend 417,60/418,10) Dollar. Das zweite Londoner Fixing lautete auf 421,50 Dollar nach 417,50 Dollar am Morgen und 416,10 Dollar am Vortag.


    Der Kilopreis wurde von einer Schweizer Grossbank mit 17.224/17.474 (16.988/17.238) sfr angegeben.


    Silber stand bei 7,65/7,67 Dollar. (Jetzt bereits bei 7.71 Dollar, TG)


    ajs/och

  • [Blockierte Grafik: http://gfx.finanztreff.de/vwd_…l/kopfleiste/vwd_logo.jpg]


    http://www.vwd.de/vwd/news.htm?id=22423435


    Zimmermann (DIW): Mit Goldverkauf lieber Schulden tilgen


    Berlin (vwd) - Der Präsident des Deutschen Instituts für Wirtschaftsforschung (DIW), Klaus F. Zimmermann, hat dafür plädiert, mit dem Erlös aus Goldverkäufen Schulden abzubauen. Zimmermann sprach sich am Freitag in Berlin gegen den erst am Vortag von Bundeskanzler Gerhard Schröder in seiner Regierungserklärung ausdrücklich unterstützten Plan von Bundesbank-Präsident Ernst Welteke aus, aus dem Verkauf eines Teil der Goldreserven der Bundesbank einen Anlage für Zukunftsinvestitionen zu speisen.


    Generell seien Goldverkäufe zu begrüßen. ?( "Wir brauchen nur einen Teil dessen, was wir momentan vorhalten", sagte Zimmermann. "Ich würde die Mittel wegen der langfristigen Wirkung aber eher für den Schuldenabau verwenden",hob er hervor. "Man verpulvert nicht Tafelsilber, um einmal Essen zu gehen",meinte der DIW-Präsident und zeigte sich skeptisch über die tatsächliche Verwendung der Mittel im Rahmen des vorgeschlagenen Planes. Invesitionen in die Bildung seien zwar schon Investitionen in die Zukunft, und man könne auch Infrastrukturmaßnahmen als solche ansehen.


    Die Regierungserklärung Schröders bewertete Zimmermann insgesamt als eine "zu wenig konkrete" Bestandsaufnahme. "Es war nichts Überraschendes dabei",sagte Zimmermann. Andererseits stelle sich die Frage, was man konkret tun könne, denn alle wüssten, dass vor der Bundestagswahl 2006 nicht mehr viel passieren werde. Schröders Aussagen seien eine Bekräftigung dessen gewesen, was man bereits zuvor habe ablesen können, also ein Festhalten am Reformkurs mit dem Versuch, die Zukunftsvision einer stärkeren Investition in Innovation, Forschung und Bildung näher zu bringen.


    Die von Schröder vorgeschlagene Streichung der Eigenheimzulage begrüßte der DIW-Präsident hingegen ausdrücklich. "Das haben wir seit langem gefordert", sagte er. Wofür dies allerdings im konkreten Fall gerade herhalten müsse, sei eine ganz andere Frage. +++ Andreas Kißler


    vwd/26.3.2004/ak/hab


    26.03.2004, 12:19

  • [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.fondscheck.de/images/fondscheck_1.gif]


    http://www.fondscheck.de/Analy…etype=5&AnalysenID=401429


    Analysen - Fonds

    26.03.2004


    MLIIF World Gold Fund kaufen


    Der Fonds Analyst


    Die Experten von "Der Fonds Analyst" raten auf dem aktuellen Niveau weiterhin zu Käufen des MLIIF World Gold Fund (ISIN LU0055631609/ WKN 974119).


    Die neu aufflammenden Krisen und Verunsicherungen würden Anleger derzeit wieder mehr und mehr in sichere Häfen drängen. Und dazu zähle eindeutig auch Gold. Wie immer gebe dabei die Richtung, der in Philadelphia gehandelte Gold & Silver Sector-Index, an. Die technische Lage habe sich seit Jahresbeginn wesentlich gebessert.


    Immerhin habe die Konsolidierung zu einer deutlichen Abkühlung der Überhitzungen geführt, was sehr schön an den auskonsolidierten Indikatoren zu erkennen sei. Diese hätten auf tiefen Niveaus nach oben gedreht und damit Kaufsignale in der kurzfristigen Zeitschiene gegeben. Bei Gold reiche das Potenzial von aktuell rund 413 USD auf bis 480 USD. Gut gemanagte Goldminenfonds könnten somit durchaus ein Potenzial von gut 30% bis 40% erreichen.


    Vor diesem Hintergrund empfehlen die Experten von "Der Fonds Analyst" bestehende Positionen im MLIIF World Gold Fund bis auf 10% des Fondsdepots aufzustocken bzw. Neukäufe bitte umgehend vorzunehmen.

  • [Blockierte Grafik: http://gfx.finanztreff.de/vwd_…l/kopfleiste/vwd_logo.jpg]


    http://www.vwd.de/vwd/news.htm?id=22423735


    Goldpreis durch Euro/Dollar getrieben


    Frankfurt (vwd) - Der Goldpreis ist am Freitagnachmittag überraschend stark gestiegen. Händler führen diese Entwicklung auf Stopp-Loss-Käufe zurück. "Die meisten Teilnehmer haben mit einem weiter sinkenden Euro zum Dollar gerechnet und sind durch die Intraday-Erholung der Gemeinschaftswährung auf dem falschen Fuß erwischt worden", sagt ein Händler. Unterstützend sei hinzugekommen, dass sich keine technischen Widerstände dem Gold-Anstieg entgegengestellt hätten. Das feste Silber und die latenten Ängste vor neuen Anschlägen leisteten dem Gold ebenfalls "Schützenhilfe". +++


    Michael Fuchs

    vwd/26.3.2004/fm/reh


    26.03.2004, 15:23

  • [Blockierte Grafik: http://csl.finanznachrichten.d…boerse-nachrichten-s1.gif]


    Freitag, 26. März 2004


    http://www.finanznachrichten.d…04-03/artikel-3206131.asp


    Goldindex ($XAU) hebelt nach oben


    Gold & Silver Index ($XAU): 103,x Punkte(+1,59%)


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.finanzbuchverlag.de/bilder/gold17042004.gif]


    Aktueller Tageschart (log) seit September 2003 (1 Kerze = 1 Tag).


    Diagnose: Heute hat der Index mit einem Gap Up eröffnet. In dem beigefügten Chart haben wir Gaps gekennzeichnet. Der Index hat die Gewohnheit offene Gaps mindestens innerhalb eines Zeitraums von 2 Wochen wieder zu schließen. Insofern kann man davon ausgehen, daß das heutige Gap in den kommenden Handelstagen ebenfalls geschlossen werden dürfte; und zwar in diesem Falle nach unten. Das charttechnische Setup vom $XAU hat sich während der letzten 9 Wochen stabilisieren können. Der Index schickt sich an, die Doppeltopformation (bzw. M-Formation) von Dezember 2003 bis Januar 2004 nach oben aufzuhebeln. Ein Wochenschluß über 102,6 Punkte ist erreicht.


    Prognose: Kurz/mittelfristig ergeben sich folgende charttechnische Zielmarken: 105,42 Punkte und 130 Punkte. WENN anschließend der Anstieg über 114 Punkte gelingen sollte, würden sich weitere Ziel bei 130 und 150 Punkten ergeben.


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.godmode-charts.de/c…ortical/tonin/tgo5542.gif]


    Chart erstellt mit Qcharts


    Aktuelle Kursliste der Aktien aus dem $XAU)


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.godmode-charts.de/c…ortical/tonin/tgo5543.gif]

  • [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.de.tradesignal.com/img/logo/logo-1.gif]


    http://www.de.tradesignal.com/…l/analyse.asp&id=5960


    GOLD: NEWMONT Mining - Die Party geht weiter


    von Harald Weygand, Godmode-Trader.de , BörseGo GmbH, 26. März 2004 20:32


    NEWMONT MINING (NEM): 46,4 $ (+2,63%)


    "Goldaktie" - Gelistet im Gold & Silver Index ($XAU) und im Amex Gold BUGS Sectorindex ($HUI).


    Aktueller Tageschart (log) seit September 2003 (1 Kerze = 1 Tag).


    Diagnose: Vom 26.11.2003 bis zum 14.01.2004 bildete die Aktie eine Doppeltopformation (bzw. M-Formation) als obere Trendwende aus. SELL Trigger dieser Formation ist die 44,5 $ Marke. Am 15.01.04 durchschlug die Aktie diesen SELL Trigger. Im Tief der Konsolidierung wurden 40,5 $ erreicht. Das reguläre charttechnische Kursziel von 39,0 $ aus dem Doppeltop wurde also erst gar nicht vollständig abgefahren. Seit dem 14.01.04 hat sich eine steigende bullishe Dreiecksformation ausgebildet, die den Kurs kurz/mittelfristig wieder nach oben hebelt. Das Doppeltop wird durch die heutige Ausbruchbewegung über die BUY Triggermarke bei 45,65 $ aufgebrochen.


    Prognose: KAUFMARKE ist die 54,65 $ Marke. Wird sie auf Tagesschlußkurs überwunden, ergeben sich charttechnische Ziele bei 47,1-47,8 $ und 50,3 $. Bei 50,3 $ dürfte das Papier kurzfristig nach unten abprallen. Anschließend ist mit einem erneuten Anstieg gegen die 50,3 $ zu rechnen. Über 50,3 $ ergeben sich recht schenll 52,0 $.


    http://www.godmode-trader.de


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.godmode-charts.de/c…ortical/tonin/tgo5546.gif]

  • [Blockierte Grafik: http://csl.finanznachrichten.d…boerse-nachrichten-s1.gif]


    http://www.finanznachrichten.d…04-03/artikel-3206429.asp


    Freitag, 26. März 2004


    GOLD: FREEPORT - Kurzfristig nicht "sexy"


    FREEPORT McMoran B (FCX): 39,0 $(+1,77%)


    "Goldaktie" - Gelistet im Gold & Silver Index ($XAU) und im Amex Gold BUGS Sectorindex ($HUI).


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.finanzbuchverlag.de/bilder/gold17042004.gif]


    Aktueller Tageschart (log) seit April 2002 (1 Kerze = 1 Tag) als Übersichtsdarstellung.


    Diagnose (1): Mai 2002 bis Mai 2003 entwickelte sich eine komplexe charttechnische Bodenformation. Dieser einjährige Bodenbildungsprozeß war denn auch Basis dür eine gewaltige steile und charttechnisch reguläre Ausbruchbewegung von Mai 2003 bis Dezember 2003. Seit dem 09.12.03 befindet sich die Aktie von Freeport in einer Korrektur.


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.godmode-charts.de/c…ortical/tonin/tgo5549.gif]


    Aktueller Tageschart (log) seit September 2003 (1 Kerze = 1 Tag).


    Diagnose (2): Vom 15.01.-06.02.04 konnte sich eine kleine relative Doppelbodenformation ausbilden; deren BUY Triggerlinie verläuft bei 40,16 $. Wie Sie sehen, konnte der Doppelboden nicht gehalten werden. Auf der 40,16er BUY Triggerlinie bildete sich eine S-K-S Wendeformation aus. Die Aktie hat anscheinend ein problem mit dem noch offenen Gap Up vom 06.02.04 in Höhe der 37,48 $ Marke.


    Prognose: Kurzfristig dürfte die Aktie weiter abfallen und das Gap bei 37,48 $ zu machen. Bei 35,0 $ liegt eine sehr massive charttechnische Kreuzunterstützung. Spätestens bei 35,0 $ dürfte das Papier wieder deutlich in Richtung 40,0 $ anziehen können. Alternativscenario: Wird die 35,0 $ aufgeben, würde dies eine Ausweitung der Korrektur bedeuten und zudem ein Ende der übergeordneten Aufwärtsbewegung einleiten.


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.godmode-charts.de/c…ortical/tonin/tgo5550.gif]


    Chart erstellt mit Qcharts

  • The Silver Lining
    Sol Palha
    First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.
    --Mahatma Gandhi


    Silver in Argentinean Pesos
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.gold-eagle.com/edit…/images/tacinv032704a.gif]
    Botswana Pula
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.gold-eagle.com/edit…/images/tacinv032704b.gif]
    British Pound
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.gold-eagle.com/edit…/images/tacinv032704d.gif]
    Cayman Island Dollar
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.gold-eagle.com/edit…/images/tacinv032704e.gif]
    Costa Rica Colon
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.gold-eagle.com/edit…/images/tacinv032704f.gif]
    Czech Koruna
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.gold-eagle.com/edit…/images/tacinv032704h.gif]
    Danish Krone
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.gold-eagle.com/edit…/images/tacinv032704h.gif]
    Iceland Krona
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.gold-eagle.com/edit…/images/tacinv032704i.gif]
    Latvian Lat
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.gold-eagle.com/edit…/images/tacinv032704j.gif]
    Lesotho Loti
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.gold-eagle.com/edit…/images/tacinv032704k.gif]
    Mozambique Metical
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.gold-eagle.com/edit…/images/tacinv032704m.gif]
    Swiss Franc
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.gold-eagle.com/edit…/images/tacinv032704n.gif]
    Zambian Kwacha
    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.gold-eagle.com/edit…/images/tacinv032704o.gif]
    Conclusion


    I will leave it to my esteemed colleagues to put up some of very thought provoking numbers that will back what the charts are showing above. Unlike Gold, which is still not doing much in multiple currencies, Silver is breaking through all of them, indicating that it is in a true bull market. Its ironical that the poor mans gold is yielding better results than the rich mans gold. Now if that's not contrarian I don't know what is? It looks like being a contrarian in every aspect of your life can be highly rewarding. Silver is going to be the truly wild card play and that is why since the middle of 2003 we became extremely bullish on this Metal and stated that it would out perform Gold. At that point in time we had no Idea that it would blast Gold into the dust so badly. Silver is currently the number one sector and has been so for the last 6 weeks and counting. The super trend has been set in motion and unlike Gold; Silver has reared its head in all almost all the major currencies. This is what is defined as true raging bull and any major pull backs should be seen as a gift from heaven to buy even more of this incredibly useful metal.


    We will soon look at the final two other metals, Palladium and Platinum. As always take time to enjoy the Good things in life, for money cannot buy happiness it can only help you find new ways to extend your happiness. So make sure you know how to smile and enjoy the things that have no cost whatsoever attached to them.


    A candle loses nothing by lighting another candle.
    --Erin Majors



    © 2004 Sol Palha
    http://www.tacticalinvestor.com
    Email



    Alan Lunt
    Contributor
    Tactical Investor


    Well!!! What can I say? This is truly a bull market in silver. I had recently done the silver stocks to currency ratios and come to a similar conclusion to Sol. However what interests me more is that it looks like silver may have taken gold's place as a reserve currency. While the Central Banks and the Bullion Banks have been busy busting gold, silver has slowly but surely stolen the march. My gains in gold , up until the past two weeks, were negative in New Zealand dollar terms. But silver has been like a sleeping monolith, quietly stalking then overtaking all currencies. As much as the charts indicate real power up, I do suspect that the opposition is watching it carefully. Whether we get a short squeeze coming into the next contracts delivery I'm not sure. It will depend on the demand for delivery. Remember the shorts have access to huge pools of money, and it is that fiat money they will be trying to guard. They just cannot allow their brand of money to loose the battle to a "commodity". Be ready to man the trenches, the battle is on.


    Alan Lunt


    © 2004 Alan Lunt
    http://www.tacticalinvestor.com

  • [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.silive.com/images/toprail/logo.gif]


    http://www.silive.com/newsflas…ess-1/108031976886370.xml


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.silive.com/images/business/business_masthead.gif]


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.silive.com/images/newsflash/newsflash_small.gif]


    Friday World Gold Prices


    The Associated Press

    3/26/2004, 11:44 a.m. ET


    Selected world gold prices, Friday.

    Hong Kong late: $415.35 up $0.10.
    London morning fixing: $417.50 unchanged.
    London afternoon fixing: $421.50 up $4.00.
    London late: $420.90 up $3.40.
    Paris afternoon fixing: $410.80 up $1.38.
    Zurich late afternoon: $420.25 up $2.77.
    NY Handy & Harman: $421.50 up $5.40.
    NY Handy & Harman fabricated: $455.22 up $5.83.
    NY Engelhard: $422.87 up $5.41.
    NY Engelhard fabricated: $444.01 up $5.68.
    NY Merc. gold spot month Thu: $416.70 off $0.50.
    NY HSBC Bank USA 4 p.m. Thu: $416.60 off $0.40.

  • wasserzeichen


    Deinen Charts verschiedener Währungen nach zu urteilen, sollten eigentlich ALLE potentiellen Investoren langsam aber sicher merken, dass es richtig aufwärts geht mit dem Silber Preis!


    Nach dem heutigen Erfolg des Silbers, dürfte ab nächster Woche das bis heute noch praktisch überall, und weltweit ausgeübte Stillschweigen zum Silber Preis Geschehen in der Wirtschaftspresse schlagartig zu ende gehen.


    Ab nächster Woche sollte der Silber Tanz erstmals in die 2. Runde gehen.


    Uns wird`s sicher freuen!


    Gruss


    ThaiGuru

  • [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.goldseek.com/images/gslogo.jpg]


    http://news.goldseek.com/COT/1080333278.php


    COT Gold Report - March 26, 2004


    Gold Cot Report - Futures

    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.goldseek.com/news/COT/images/2004/26.03.2004.PNG]


    Gold Cot Report - Futures & Options Combined


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.goldseek.com/news/COT/images/2004/26.03.2004a.PNG]

  • [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.silverseek.com/images/logo.PNG]


    [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.goldseek.com/news/FinancialInsights/FI.gif]


    Beware of a Rule Change for Silver


    By: Dr. Richard S. Appel, Financial Insights


    "I believe that a year from now we will all look back at today’s silver price and wish we had owned more!!


    weiter....


    http://news.silverseek.com/FinancialInsights/1080252243.php

Schriftgröße:  A A A A A