Beiträge von Aladin

    Habe mir am Wochenende wieder Bob Hopper angehoert mir seiner rauen Stimme und David Bond der auch ueber Peru und Fortuna berichtete.
    David war in Peru fuer einige Zeit,da immer noch kein Strom im Haus in Florida war. :D


    Die sprachen auch davon das New Jersey Mining die Mill auf 2000t anfahren wollen unsw.


    Hab mir ein paar nachgekauft heute.


    Der Kurs und Volumen bei den Silbervalleys ist ganz verrueckt.


    Bei Timberline, Shoshone, Merger, Metropolitan, ist es das selbe.


    Ein raetselhaftes Tal und Kursschwankungen mit wenig Volumen am Pink sheet.


    Gruss


    XAX

    Gold haelt sich gut zum starken Dollar, Hey der steigt und steigt. 8o
    Eure neue Koalition ??? :D



    By Peter Brimelow
    CBSMarketWatch.com
    Monday, November 14, 2005

    http://www.marketwatch.com/new…AADEB%7D&siteid=mktw&dist

    NEW YORK -- Even gold's friends seemed surprised by its
    strength last week, rallying by 2.5% on the New York
    Mercantile Exchange. The gold game may not be over yet.


    Australia's Privateer, which bills itself as "the private
    market letter for the individual capitalist," summarized the recent action:
    "This was a 'recovery' week for the ... gold correction. ...
    On the daily chart, last week's $16.90 gold fall pushed gold well below both its 10- and 20-day moving averages. The $11.50 rise this week has reversed the process."

    The previous week's pummeling was severe. And this last week
    saw a rampage by the dollar. Oil -- which many presume sets
    the tone for gold -- was soft, world equities were strong.
    If that were not enough, Germany's fledgling government has started talking about selling part of the country's gold reserves.
    Yet gold did well -- better, in fact, than the simple dollar-denominated price suggests.


    As The Privateer says in its omniscient way:
    "By November 11, gold was at new bull market highs in terms
    of almost every other major currency in the world. And this time, that includes at least one of the 'commodity
    currencies,' the Aussie dollar ... all in the face of a
    U.S. dollar index which has set new 2005 highs almost every
    day this week."

    Gold in euros was particularly impressive. It closed on
    Friday at an all-time high -- actually above 400 euros per ounce, based on the Nymex close.

    This is important, because on both occasions this year when
    euro gold has broken into new high ground, considerable
    follow-through buying appeared.

    Equally impressive was that fact that the gold shares noticed. They've rudely ignored gold's strength this year, but maybe
    not this time.

    Chartist Martin Pring, a believer in the predictive powers of the sector's equities, assessed the Amex Gold Bugs Index on Thursday in his InterMarket Update as follows:

    "The shares typically lead the metal at bottoms, and the Chart shows that they have diverged positively with it in recent weeks. ... If the shares can now rally above the 230 level
    on a daily close basis, the odds would favor a successful assault on September's high. In that event, we would expect
    the metal to be close on its heels."

    (Pring's price point was pinged -- Friday's close was 234.26!)

    Gold's friends have dark theories about why gold went down
    the previous week. As Bob Bishop of Gold Mining Stock Report
    put it:

    "Q: What's the best time to rob a house? A: When nobody's
    home. This was the same rationale behind last week's short
    raid on the gold market, timed to coincide with the holiday closure of the Indian markets."

    Why gold went back up, though, divides the letters.

    The Gartman Letter, for one, has suggested there's been
    some purchasing by smaller central banks. And Bill Murphy (LeMetropoleCafe.com) has a correspondent identifying South Korea's central bank.

    Those who incline to a macro view, however, had an arresting fact to consider. It was well put by gold veteran James
    Turk of the Free Market Gold & Money Report. Turk wants to "berate the Fed for an unbelievable announcement made
    this past week. Without explanation, the Fed disclosed:
    'On March 23, 2006, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System will cease publication of the M3 monetary aggregate.' "

    Not unreasonably, Turk concludes:

    "Why does the Fed no longer want to report the total quantity
    of dollars in circulation? They know what's coming --
    massive amounts of dollar creation to fund the worsening
    trade and federal government budget deficits. The Fed is
    just doing what other government agencies already do when
    they don't like the result of their statistical calculations. Like children, they play 'make believe.' "

    The Fed might have been more discreet. But is gold watching?

    -END-

    Tambok,


    Wer nicht rudert wir gepeitscht, zum Glueck bin ich nicht am Thistle Schiff oder in der President Steyn Mine in RSA.


    Die haben ganz eine wilde die zuhaut....Brrrr das tut ja weh !


    Loss of $9.9 million ($0.22 per share) for the third quarter of 2005 8o


    Wenn es gut tut bleibt an Board, wer weiss welchen Kurs sie noch einschlaegt.

    Edel Man, an mir soll es nicht liegen, wer Superman spielen will kann Pech haben beim falschen Anflug.


    Man endet im Dies und Das.


    Hoffentlich ist jetzt Ruhe im Forum.


    Leider kann man hier kostenlos streiten, wo anders muss man zahlen um dieses zu tun, wer es braucht.


    Leben und Leben lassen heisst die Devise.


    Ich koennt mich mehr aergern das ich den Zug von SGV.TO versaeumt habe.


    Die hatte ich vor wenigen Wochen angeraten bekommen und hab sie ignoriert. Was solls, irgendeine andere wird auch anziehen, es sind genug im Depot.


    Mfg


    XAX