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

    • Offizieller Beitrag
    Zitat

    Original von ghost_god
    Waere mal interessant, das Thema "Kursmanipulation" auf den Tisch zu bringen.


    Das sah doch sehr stark nach geplanter Kursmanipulation aus, die nach geltendem Recht strafbar ist. ....... Ermittlungen gegen Unbekannt einleiten zu lassen, doch vielleicht gibt es andere im Forum, die Spass an sowas faenden.


    Sehe ich auch so.
    Spaß an der Verfolgung hätte der eine oder andere hier sicher schon,
    aber gegen die Cabal sind schon ganz andere Kaliber leergelaufen. X(


    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

    Bei alledem ist der HUI recht stabil.
    M.E.(noch) relative Stärke der PM Stocks.

  • Sehe ich auch so.
    Spaß an der Verfolgung hätte der eine oder andere hier sicher schon,
    aber gegen die Cabal sind schon ganz andere Kaliber leergelaufen.


    Edel Man & ghost_god


    Kann mich da nur anschliessen.
    Wurde ja von der GATA auch offengelegt, aber...
    Auf dieser Ebene gilt das Recht des Stärkeren.
    Das war schon immer so und wird so bleiben.
    Es wird sich erst was ändern, wenn es die TPTB auch wollen.
    Daher gibt es nur:
    Follow the trend.
    Ist nicht oportunistisch, sondern schlicht pragmatisch X(

    Es ist noch kein Verschwörungstheoretiker vom Himmel gefallen.
    - Altes Sprichwort, neu übersetzt

  • Gold and Silver are Topping


    Bob Moriarty
    Archives
    December 13, 2005


    When everyone wants to sell a commodity, you should buy. When everyone wants to buy a commodity you should sell. There is no more reliable indicator of tops or bottoms than sentiment. And the bullish sentiment on gold is a near record 89% with gold up a record-tying 8 days in a row.


    Actually there is one indicator slightly more accurate than the Bullish Sentiment and that is the Bill Murphymeter. On December 3 of 2003 he said, "*We have remained above $400 for three days in a row. If my hunch about a gold derivatives neutron bomb is correct, it should go off within days to a week."


    Bill's at it again which means another top :D - at least for the near future - when he said Monday, "*A Gold derivatives neutron bomb will go off. Could happen at any time." [Blockierte Grafik: http://www.smiliemania.de/smilie132/00000285.gif]


    For the last three years, if you had bought minging shares at the April/May lows and sold at the November/December highs, you could have doubled your money every year. This year is no different. Gold is in a bull market and in a bull market prices go up and they go down.


    Come back and buy next April/May and you will do just fine.


    Bob Moriarty
    President: 321gold
    Archives

  • Habe heute nochmals 10% in Cash gewechselt, bin damit auf rd. 70%
    runter. - Winterheu ist erst Winterheu, wenn es trocken in der
    Scheune liegt -


    Ich nehme - bis jetzt nur an, dass wir ca. bis zum 16. bis 20. schwächeln,
    und dann hin zum Jahresende eher wieder neue Höchstkurse bekommen könnten, aber die Kommentare aus 'Big Money' betreff Gold sind mir einfach zu positiv geworden. Ein Schelm der Arges dabei denkt. Nun, dann bin ich sicherlich ein ganz schlimmer Schelm.



    Kaufrausch re.: "aber ich hab jetzt 75% verkauft" - heute "Ver-Kaufrausch"?


    hmmm, ich bin selbst jemand, der eher zur Skepsis neigt, wenn viele eher
    optimistisch sind. Aber gleich runter auf 25%? - Bold action, indeed. Mein
    bisheriges Minimum war runter auf 35%, aber da war der Optimismus von vielen anderen stärker als jetzt.


    Anyway, good luck to your decision.



    Hier noch ein Chart, der mir einfach nicht gefällt, welche
    andere vielleicht mit den Worten 'goes parabolic' beschreiben
    würden. Ich sehe es eher vom mathematischen - tangential oder
    asymptotisch - ich mag es in der Mathematik, aber nicht in den
    Märkten, denn dort ist danach der Rückschlag in aller Regel nicht
    fern.


    Gruss


    Germoney

  • Zusätzlich:


    http://www.financialsense.com/…ls/barbera/2005/1212.html


    .. soweit ich mich erinnere, war Frank Barbera's Skepsis im Jahr '04
    zwar ein eher 'frühzeitiger Samenerguss', aber ich bin über das
    vergangene Wochenende zu ähnlichen Einschätzungen -
    unabhängig von ihm - gekommen.


    Gruss


    Germoney

    As a general rule, it is foolish to do just what other people are doing,
    because there are almost sure to be too many people doing the same thing.
    William Stanley Jevons (1835-1882)

  • Hallo germoney,


    Du darfst nicht vergessen, dass ich gerade mal seit 3 Wochen im Rohstoffsektor mitmische (und dank Eurer Infos hier doch wahrscheinlich schon etwas wissend bin). Da sind mir 10% realer Gewinn doch erstmal ein guter Anfang. :)


    Außerdem war das nur mein cool down von Zertis in Gold. Hab' zwar gestern auch ein paar Minen mit kleinem Gewinn verkauft, aber noch eine Menge davon im Depot zu liegen. So habe ich etwas Luft, notfalls ein paar Bären zu finanzieren, falls mir die fiktiven Verluste zu groß werden. :D


    Und wenn es weiter bullish bleibt, dann hab ich fiktive UND reale Gewinne. Ist doch auch schön! :)) Und nachkaufen kann ich ja auch jederzeit. Wollte eh mal ein paar echte Goldatome besorgen. Und die Zertis über mehrere Banken verstreuen. :D


    Auf jeden Fall vielen Dank für die vielen Infos hier (auch an die anderen, Eldo, Edel, Tschonko, schuldenblase, ...)! Ich versteh' zwar noch nicht alles so hundertprozentig, aber es ist schon eine große Hilfe! :)


    Für Euch hatte ich ja nicht so viele Infos. Einzig die, sich mal RHAT (Technik-Aktie) länger anzugucken. Da hält M$ durch sein OS die Finger drauf und wenn die Finger erst mal weg sind, dürfte es steil nach oben gehen. Und falls sie wieder fällt (worauf ich warte), dann kaufe ich neu ein. Die Aktie hat mir dieses Jahr 70% Rendite beschert. Ach ja, Dell finde ich auch interessant. IMHO klar unterbewertet!

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

  • Zitat

    Original von schuldenblase


    Dein Wort in Gottes Ohr.


    Habe nach Verstärkung gesucht und bei Bill Cara gefunden:


    Now that is an attitude adjustment.


    Do I think that gold and copper will trade higher? The answer is yes. The prices will likely be choppy through into Wednesday, but by the end of the week I think they will be higher.


    I suspect that the FOMC may infer they are nearing the end of the 13 rate hikes. That will take equity prices higher, in particular, the metal miners like PD and NEM. So I think any pull-back here is a buying opportunity. Should the USD go into a bear phase any time now (it may already have started), then the metals will boom.


    Sector rotation students are aware that the typical ending of secular bull markets in equities is when metal prices collapse. After that, interest rates will fall, and then the financials, consumers, and techs, will typically lead the market back higher in the next bull market.


    Und das trotz dem ominösen 16. Dezember (dreifacher Hexensabbat 8o oder triple witching day)

    Es ist noch kein Verschwörungstheoretiker vom Himmel gefallen.
    - Altes Sprichwort, neu übersetzt

  • Gold Crosses the Rhine



    By Dan Denning


    When Allied soldiers charged the beaches of Normandy on
    June 6, 1944, victory seemed very uncertain and, at best,
    very distant. Nine months later, the Allies crossed the
    Rhine into Germany. Gold's recent charge through $500 an
    ounce will lead to a similarly decisive and shocking
    victory in the monetary realm.


    Last summer, I suggested that the crude oil/gold was
    establishing an important low. So far, so good. With gold's
    move to $533 an ounce, the ratio has jumped sharply since
    summertime. So let's revisit this ratio and consider what
    it might imply for oil, gold, and gold stocks.


    In late August I observed:


    "The age of peak oil has arrived, but its investment and
    economic consequences are just beginning to filter down to
    the consumer level. Individual standards of living will be
    affected as permanently higher energy costs make their way
    into your daily life...Oil's move up to $65 and above
    signals a bottom in the crude oil/gold ratio.


    "That means two things: First, it takes fewer barrels of
    oil than ever to buy an ounce of gold. So far, this has
    been evidence of oil strength, and not of gold weakness.
    Gold futures are in the $450 range as we go to press. The
    ratio, then, can't be explained away as gold weakness. The
    second thing the ratio indicates is coming gold strength.
    This will happen even as oil prices climb higher.


    "Obviously, that means gold prices have to climb faster
    than oil prices. In the inflationary scenario I describe
    below, you'll see just how that happens. If you don't yet
    have a position in physical gold or gold stocks, now is the
    time to take one.


    "Since then, spot gold prices have moved up another 20%.
    And oil, despite coming off all-time highs is trading
    around $60 a barrel. And if, as I suspect, the gold bull
    market will accelerate over the coming months, merger and
    acquisition activity in the gold sector will also
    accelerate, just like it has in the oil sector.


    The oil/ratio bottomed last summer at 6.17, meaning it took
    6.17 barrels of oil to buy an ounce of gold. Today—with oil
    at $59.94 and gold at $538—the ratio is at 8.9 and
    climbing. The good news is, the ratio could double from
    here and still have plenty of room to grow.




    If the ratio continues to rise, to say, twelve, while the
    oil price remains around $60, you'd get a gold price of
    $720 an ounce ($60 x 12). But twelve is just an arbitrary
    number. The all-time high for the ratio occurred back in
    1988, at 33. If the ratio soared that high again, while the
    oil price stayed near $60, you'd have gold at around $1,980
    per ounce, which sounds about right to me. I don't expect
    that to happen tomorrow, however.


    Gold will visit $2,000 an ounce sometime over the next few
    years, but not while oil languishes at $60 a barrel. Most
    likely, both commodities will rally together to some
    extent.


    The ratio skyrocketed in 1988 because the world was awash
    in cheap oil, while gold rallied. In other words, the
    ratio was high not because gold was "back" but because oil
    was historically cheap.


    Today, the situation is entirely different. The age of
    cheap oil is over. And it is ending at exactly the same
    time that gold is emerging from its two-decade long
    slumber. In other words, we're headed to a place where the
    oil/gold ratio doesn't make a new high, but where gold and
    oil both make new highs in absolute and inflation-adjusted
    terms. We're headed to a place where gold hits $2,000 an
    ounce and oil hits $100 a barrel, in the process sending
    the oil/gold ratio to around 20.


    "Nonsense!" you say. "The top is in!"


    Maybe, but gold's recent spurt above $500 closely resembles
    oil's "breakout" above $40 in the middle of last year. At
    that time, most investors believed oil to be putting in a
    major top. OPEC, Wall Street and the major oil companies
    all considered $30 to be the "normal" price of oil. Few
    imagined a world where $60 would become the new "normal"
    price of oil. Likewise, most investors seem to consider
    gold's latest rally a "fake-out breakout," rather than the
    beginnings of an enduring gold rally.


    Gold, from both a technical and psychological perspective,
    has been engaged in a war of attrition against public
    opinion and the belief in the dollar.


    The move about $500 is like the Normandy invasion. And
    above $525, the July, 1944 break of German lines in
    Operation Cobra. This advance turned the war from a
    creeping reenactment of World War I into a war of movement
    again, the way it had begun with the German blitzkrieg of
    France.


    Only this time it was American and British tanks moving
    east, not German tanks moving west. Of course, it's worth
    nothing that the Allied drive to the Rhine stalled in the
    Ardennes forest in December of 1944. In fact, on December
    16th, 1944, the 101st Airborne Division was surrounded at
    Bastogne during a surprise German winter offensive. (The
    battle at Bastogne is described well in the mini-series
    "Band of Brothers," which makes a nice Christmas gift).


    Eventually, of course, the Allies broke out at Bastogne and
    on March 7th of 1945, crossed the Ludendorf railway bridge
    at Remagen, across the Rhine and into Germany. Of the 22
    road bridges and 25 rail bridges across the Rhine, the
    bridge at Remagen, taken by the 9th Armored Division, was
    the only bridge the Germans had not destroyed, although
    they tried to demolish it twice.


    "This bridge is worth its weight in gold," Eisenhower, is
    claimed to have said.


    Simply stated, gold has crossed the Rhine...and now begins
    its inevitable conquest of paper currencies and its
    inexorable advance toward monetary hegemony. The move gold
    is making now argues for bigger and stronger gains ahead in
    2006.


    And both moves in oil and gold make perfect fundamental AND
    geopolitical sense.

    Oil is moving on increased global demand. Even $44 billion
    of new investment planned in Kuwait--which would boost
    current production from 2.5 million bpd to four million--is
    not going to bring enough supply on line to meet the
    growing demand of India and China.


    And this assumes the Kuwaitis (or the Saudis, or the
    Iraqis) can actually produce what they target. And, even if
    they can, for how long? Oil wells don't deplete as fast as
    natural gas wells. But when you have to start pumping
    seawater in to a well to boost production, you're simply
    hastening the rate at which you exhaust all the cheap, high
    quality petroleum from the ground.


    Also, note that the Kuwaitis are not boosting money spent
    on exploration, but production. Perhaps they are hoping to
    get top dollar for the 100 million barrels of oil they
    claim to have in the ground. Geopolitically, oil is at the
    center of many national grand strategies. It's going to
    stay there for awhile. And the price will go higher.

    Gold is rising because of the fundamental mismanagement of
    the dollar by Alan Greenspan. And to be fair, in the club
    of central bankers who destroy the purchasing power of
    their currency, Alan Greenspan has a lot of company. Their
    respective tactics and strategies might differ, but the
    result is the same: decreased confidence in paper money and
    an increased appetite for gold.


    In the meantime, you probably won't see Congress hauling
    the gold miners in front of the TV lights to ask abou t huge
    mining profits. But that doesn't mean the insiders at the
    gold majors haven't already done what their colleagues in
    the oil industry did: make a list of acquisition targets.

    Gold production CAN be increased, but you've got to find
    the gold first. That means you have to explore for it. And
    with higher gold prices on the horizon, the incentive for
    finding it is definitely there. Gold majors, looking to add
    new assets to the balance sheet, are going to be in an
    acquiring mood.


    Fortunately, I think there's a simple way for investors to
    profit from this Christmas shopping by the gold majors -
    without having to speculate in junior exploration stocks.
    I've recommended how in the Jan issue of Strategic
    Investment, which I hope to have in your hands by the end
    of the week.

  • 9:11p ET Monday, December 12, 2005

    Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:

    Gold market analyst Reginald H. Howe, partner
    in Golden Sextant Advisors and consultant to
    GATA, has analyzed the sharp reduction in gold
    derivatives just reported by the Bank for
    International Settlements and has concluded
    that central banks now are working to reduce
    the gold short positions of their clients, the
    bullion banks, thus allowing the gold price to
    rise.




    December 12 – Gold $528.10 up $1.80 - Silver $8.77 down 21 cents


    "Deep Throat", Hung Fat, Dr. No., Jim Sinclair, And The Trapped Gold Cartel


    "Hell is truth seen too late"


    (Hobbes)


    What a night! What a day! It used to be I could write the MIDAS early on because so little would change. Not any more.


    I have mentioned a couple of times of late that Café members will need to get used to an entirely new price action routine and market volatility. This is what I was referring to. Gold shot up as much as $14 last evening, was sold off on the Comex as usual, rallied back up to nearly $14 and was then mauled.


    The London AM Fix was $537.50. The market went down for the usual Comex opening drill, came up back due to the firm physical market for the PM Fix of $536.50 and then the battered Gold Cartel and other shorts went to work. As has been the case for so many years, they do their damage thing on the paper Comex market, usually after one of the Fixes.


    Silver broke first. Houston’s Dan Norcini believes it was unwinding of long silver/short gold spreads, which makes a lot of sense. Silver also has a far different open interest configuration than gold does, as there are many more spec longs percentage-wise than in gold from a recent historical perspective. It is a bit more vulnerable in the very short term.


    A highly respected Comex floor gold trader died the other day and half the Comex traders were not present. Many of the bank gold traders were absent also. Not sure how it affected the trading except that volume was much thinner than it would have normally been and probably contributed to today’s wild action and volatility.


    The gold open interest fell again, an astonishing 4311 contracts to 336,549 (on the $7 rally Friday), as the heinous/trapped Gold Cartel and allies try to cover some of their shorts. Once again we have more confirmation of the recent MIDAS technical analysis of the gold market.


    When you hear of excessive speculation moving the price up, it is an outright fabrication and typical of the nonsense and disinformation emanating from many in the mainstream gold world. If it were the specs moving up the gold price, the open interest would have taken off. That sort of gibberish confirms MIDAS’ long standing comment that gold is the worst reported on, and least understood market, in the history of markets. That is because The Gold Cartel and other so-called experts continue to dish out commentary that is disingenuous at best, and mostly of marginal value.


    Observations:


    *Gold closed higher for the 8th trading session in a row, and managed to do so with silver in the tank.


    *No matter how bullish any market is, it will ebb and flow in the very short-term, like we saw today.


    *A market rest could be in order, however, I don’t think it will last long. Perhaps $510 worst case, though hard for me seeing it getting close to that number. Cash market buyers and spec longs out of the market will be all over dips of any decent amount. Market surprises are far more likely to be on the upside for some time, not the downside.


    *The Gold Cartel knows the jig is up, however, think of them as a retreating army. They will still counterattack, as it appears they did today, in order to make their retreat more manageable AND to do what they can to trigger the specs to dump so they can cover more shorts.


    *They most likely will go after some Japanese specs this evening (spec margins were doubled).


    *For my esteemed colleagues who constantly love to link gold with other financial markets: The dollar was hit hard today, falling .90 to 90.31. The DEC euro rose 1.28 to 119.58. Meanwhile, oil rose $1.91 per barrel to $61.30. The CRB SOARED 6.01 to 333.82 and is not far from its many decade high of 337 and change.


    *For many, many years the gold market has been nothing more than the Gold Cartel artificially holding down the price many hundreds of dollars per ounce below where it should have been. That scheme is falling apart. Surely, the movement in other financial markets today (like the dollar, oil and CRB) had them nervous, as to how those moves, in conjunction with a soaring gold price, might affect the US bond and stock markets.


    *The Gold Cartel’s and other short positions are so enormous, they will have to cover whenever they can, which is why I believe market corrections will be very brief and why we will take out $540 (today’s double top) to the upside fairly soon.


    ***** The always astute John Brimelow came up with another insightful goodie for us (like he has for so many years). He strongly believes (as I do) there are problems with various option books with certain bullion dealers and companies. Many of the derivatives strategies were put on with the notion gold could never take out $500. This means staggering losses in some cases.


    In addition the big no-no for The Gold Cartel and friends is VOLATILITY, which is kicking in. The increasing market volatility increases the option volatilities greatly. It was this sudden huge increase in option volatilities following the dramatic price increase upon the Washington Agreement announcement on September 26, 1999 which caused the BOE chairman Eddie George to say privately, "We were staring at the abyss."


    Back then The Gold Cartel could muster enough gold to calm the market down and rescue the building fiasco. They had the central bank gold in those days. Now they are sucking wind with some central banks wanting to build their gold reserves and other central banks wanting their leased gold back.


    *Silver the mule remains explosive. It will ROCKET in the near future on its own terms when IT feels like it.


    The silver open interest fell 1323 contracts to 138,305.


    ***


    The theme for the past couple of weeks continues. Most of the mainstream gold world remains clueless about what is occurring in the gold market. They are scrambling to come up with reasons for gold soaring like it is. The dollar has done nothing of consequence of late; oil was retreating until today; there are no safe-haven crises propelling investors into gold; bond yields are comatose; and, the US stock market is not far from its highs. All the historical reasons assigned to gold when it rallies are just not present.


    Yet, the price of gold is exploding. The answer to what is really happening is the one brought to your attention all last week: The Gold Cartel and other shorts are trapped and a few of them, and their allies, are trying to cover their positions. When a market is in deficit like gold, THAT is impossible to do without driving the price sharply higher.


    What is so intriguing is no matter how much GATA pounds away at this explanation, no one else in the mainstream gold world, or on Planet Wall Street, will give it the time of day. Why? Because they cannot bear to admit GATA was right all along, or bear to explain what The Gold Cartel did all these years via their price-suppression scheme.


    Since Gold Rush 21, gold has risen more than $100 now in 4 months, while the dollar rose from 87 to over 90 and the price of crude oil fell from $68 per barrel to $60. Did our historic conference trigger this incredible gold rally? I surely think so, yet, we might never know. What is a fact is little else visibly has happened to effect such a move … except our conference with the Russians making a notable appearance.


    One more time. Increased gold demand from numerous types of buyers has overwhelmed The Gold Cartel’s ability to manage the price. Yet, the reason for the latest surge has more to do lately with the major shorts trying to get out. I have a fun one in that regard to bring your way and it has to do with a highlight MIDAS brought to your attention months ago. Remember DEEP THROAT. Retro time:


    In early March of last year with gold around $423, MIDAS wrote:


    In time past, MIDAS has referred to some of these buyers as Dr. No and Hung FAT (borrowed from Jim Sinclair). These kind of gold buyers have been eating the lunch of the crooked Gold Cartel for well over a year and are laughing at them now, for they know where the gold price HAS to go to achieve any kind of equilibrium. Unfortunately, these physical market buyers care little to nothing about the gold shares. :(


    -END-

  • Role of gold as a safe haven becomes stronger by the day


    Special to Gulf News


    Going by the pronouncements of Governor Sultan Bin Nasser Al Suwaidi, the UAE Central Bank has been waiting for more than a year to buy gold at favourable prices to build up its reserves.


    The Central Bank approach to gold, according to him, was one of a shrewd trader: buying low and selling high. While there is nothing wrong with the approach, it looks increasingly doubtful that the UAE regulator would get a chance to execute its plan any time in the near future.


    For, ever since the Central Bank made its intention of getting back into the market known, gold prices have been on the upswing. Not because the UAE plan has made a difference to the market, but because of gold's own fundamental reasons.


    Today, gold is hovering about 25-year highs and market watchers say all conditions have been fulfilled for a further rally towards the yellow metal's record prices of the 70s.


    And the favourable factors include moves by some Asian central banks to acquire more gold stocks from the market, not to trade it for the margins, but to add to their reserves as an insurance against uncertainties; a role that gold has played eminently throughout history.


    Rumours


    The gold market has been awash with rumours that China may start to diversify its reserves in a big way by adding more gold. China already holds 600 tonnes. Similarly, the Russian central bank recently announced it plans to double its gold reserves. Central banks in South Africa, Iran, Argentina and Venezuela have also been mentioned as probable buyers.


    World gold reserves total about 31,000 tonnes, but the share of gold in the reserves of countries such as China and India is less than 4 per cent while some of the European countries have about 50 per cent of their reserves in gold. The biggest holder of gold bullion is of course the United States, where gold account for 64 per cent of the total reserves. :D


    While holding of gold reserves became less fashionable for some central banks, including that in the UAE in recent times, the role of gold as a hedge against inflation and insecurity is getting more and more reinforced.


    But even from a trader's point of view, offloading of the gold reserves by the UAE Central Bank was ill-timed, if nothing else, as things have turned out. The average price of gold when the central bank offloaded half of its holdings in 2003 was $315 (Dh1,157) per ounce; the remaining lot was sold as the price was approaching $400 as the metal breached a seven-year high in the wake of persistent weakness in dollar and other problems with the US economy. Even at that price, the bank could have gained at least Dh50 million more on its holdings, although it can be pointed out that such loss is only notional.


    But today gold prices are hovering near $530 per ounce, which means that if the central bank had held on to its gold assets, it would have been worth almost double its value compared to the income earned by offloading it. Gold prices have gained more than 25 per cent this year itself.


    On top of this, gold enthusiasts are betting on the metal going back to the historic peaks of $800 plus as it happened in the 1970s. They see a growing institutional disenchantment with financial assets and a preference to more tangible possessions such as gold and real estate.


    In the backdrop of a global currency devaluation scenario as well as the move by Gulf countries for a unified currency, total dependence on dollar, or any single currency for that matter, is the subject of keen discussion among economists. They are also drawing the attention of Gulf authorities to the 15 per cent mandatory gold reserves stipulated by the European Central Bank.


    With a gold rush currently on, such calls sound much more compelling than ever before.


    The writer is a journalist based in the UAE.

  • @ ghost_god


    Zitat

    Das sah doch sehr stark nach geplanter Kursmanipulation aus, die nach geltendem Recht strafbar ist.


    Ohne Sarkasmus - ich finde es interessant, wie Du auf die Linie derjenigen einschwenkst, welche hier schon lange von Kursmanipulation sprechen. Ich erinnere mich noch an Diskussionen vor etwa einem Jahr, wo Du heftig gegen diese These argumentiert und sie als Verschwörungstheorie abgetan hattest.


    Zitat

    Ich stehe selber unter der Aufsicht der FSA und habe kein Interesse daran, bei der SEC Ermittlungen gegen Unbekannt einleiten zu lassen


    Was stört Dich die Aufsicht der FSA, wenn Du bei der SEC Ermittlungen einleiten lässt? ?(


    Gruss,
    Bob


    P.S. Wenn ich an meine Frage an Dich in Deinem COT-Thread erinnern dürfte... :)

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Respekt!
    Hier sind echte "Könner" am Werk. X(

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Denke mal,weder noch,Osterhase.

    Abgesehen davon,daß Silber schon übergekauft war,
    sind derartig heftige Bewegungen recht ärgerlich.
    Weil bei dem relativ engen Markt eben Spitzen aufgebaut werden,
    und bei deren Abbruch Gewinnmitnahmen schwierig sind.


    Also auf den nächsten Aufschwung warten: der kommt. :)


    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

  • Wir dürfen natürlich auch nicht vergessen, wie atemberaubend schnell wir letzte Woche durch den 8$ Bereich nach oben marschiert sind. Da hatte sich von uns auch niemand beschwert. Ich warte noch mal zwei Tage ab, dann kaufe ich eventuell physisch nach.


    Viele Grüße


    liberty

    Es kommt nicht darauf an, die Zukunft vorauszusagen, sondern darauf auf die Zukunft vorbereitet zu sein. - Perikles

  • Zitat

    Wir dürfen natürlich auch nicht vergessen, wie atemberaubend schnell wir letzte Woche durch den 8$ Bereich nach oben marschiert sind. Da hatte sich von uns auch niemand beschwert.


    Genau so ist es. Der Markt war schlicht und einfach überhitzt, das sahen auch einige Silberbullen. Da ist eine Korrektur unvermeidlich und gesund; am langfristigen Trend (nordwärts natürlich!) ändert sich dadurch nichts.


    Da der Silbermarkt so eng ist, fallen halt Preissteigerungen und Korrekturen meist sehr heftig aus.


    Gruss,
    Bob

  • Zitat

    Original von liberty
    Also, ich überlege mir bei einem kleinem Rücksetzer Silber-Zertifikate und - OS nachzukaufen.


    Ich bin mir ziemlich sicher, daß viele Anleger ungeduldig auf eine Chance warten, (physisch) in den Markt einzusteigen. Diese Woche haben mich meine Eltern (sehr, sehr konservativ, was Geldanlage angeht) angerufen und wir sind gemeinsam Gold kaufen gegangen. Gestern haben mich zwei Arbeitskollegen, um Adressen gebeten, wo man Gold kaufen kann. Heute hat einer nach einer website gefragt, wo er sich informieren kann. Mein Chef, den ich monatelang mit dem thema in den Ohren gelegen hat, hat letzte Woche gekauft. Würde mich nicht wundern, wenn er nachkaufen würde. Die Medienberichterstattung steigt, die Besucherzahlen in den Foren auch.


    Will sagen, "fresh money" ist von Privatanlegerseite da.


    liberty :
    darf ich fragen wie die reaktionen sind bei deinen verwandten/kollegen auf den preisverfall seit 2 tagen? stelle mir das nicht spassig vor......

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