Engineer wrote:Get ready for another smackdown, or if you're the betting sort you can wager your life savings that its already baked in...Bernacke is scheduled to speak today at 2:15.
(I'm expecting a bit of a pop, but that's just based on my gut feelings)
Engineer wrote:Get ready for another smackdown, or if you're the betting sort you can wager your life savings that its already baked in...Bernacke is scheduled to speak today at 2:15.
(I'm expecting a bit of a pop, but that's just based on my gut feelings)
beauanderos wrote:Engineer wrote:Get ready for another smackdown, or if you're the betting sort you can wager your life savings that its already baked in...Bernacke is scheduled to speak today at 2:15.
(I'm expecting a bit of a pop, but that's just based on my gut feelings)
If they feel the "news" would be "gold positive" they will pull the market down first, so that it has a lower base to launch from, if they think the news will be gold negative, they will let the precious metals rise until the announcement, at which time they will crush the prices, telegraphing to the media that "the public" perceives the news to be negative.
beauanderos wrote:Engineer wrote:Get ready for another smackdown, or if you're the betting sort you can wager your life savings that its already baked in...Bernacke is scheduled to speak today at 2:15.
(I'm expecting a bit of a pop, but that's just based on my gut feelings)
If they feel the "news" would be "gold positive" they will pull the market down first, so that it has a lower base to launch from, if they think the news will be gold negative, they will let the precious metals rise until the announcement, at which time they will crush the prices, telegraphing to the media that "the public" perceives the news to be negative.
68Camaro wrote:More power to you Jon. I had mild success (up 20%-ish) last year at working the larger oscillations, until the fall, when I lost the thread and stopped. The smaller ones I can't personally deal with - it's beyond both my available time as well as talent. And I'm increasingly skittish about the market. So hats off to you. I'm largely back to just stockpiling physical.
Jonflyfish wrote:Conspiracy, no conspiracy, who cares? The chart doesn't demonstrate that there is or isn't any conspiracy, which is the problem for those who say it can't be traded becasue of the seemingly invisible presence of such.
That's my point. Some use it as a punchline and others use it for an excuse.
I ignore the noise and rhetoric. None of that matters. I just trade the tape.
To answer-
1. I don't care. It is only speculation and none of the rumors are corroborated or tradeable.
2. I don't care. You don't know any bank's position, even though you may think you do because a blog told you so etc. If JPM was short a gazillion ounces, as has been spewed for almost two years in the blogosphere, when would they have been able to roll these positions without getting killed and if so visible why wouldn't they have been squeezed into oblivion as so many predicted they would be? I'm sure there are new excuses and reasons as to why this never happeend. All of which would have done zippo for trading and/or stacking.
3. What opportunity? Do you know in advance about margin increases or decreases and how you think speculators will react?
The simple truth is price. Price is all you need to know. Anything else is unknowable.
Or, if you think you know something the banks don't know, becasue most here seem to believe that they are stupid (LOL guess again), beware of dis and mis information and always DYOD.
Cheers!
theo wrote:Jonflyfish wrote:Conspiracy, no conspiracy, who cares? The chart doesn't demonstrate that there is or isn't any conspiracy, which is the problem for those who say it can't be traded becasue of the seemingly invisible presence of such.
That's my point. Some use it as a punchline and others use it for an excuse.
I ignore the noise and rhetoric. None of that matters. I just trade the tape.
To answer-
1. I don't care. It is only speculation and none of the rumors are corroborated or tradeable.
2. I don't care. You don't know any bank's position, even though you may think you do because a blog told you so etc. If JPM was short a gazillion ounces, as has been spewed for almost two years in the blogosphere, when would they have been able to roll these positions without getting killed and if so visible why wouldn't they have been squeezed into oblivion as so many predicted they would be? I'm sure there are new excuses and reasons as to why this never happeend. All of which would have done zippo for trading and/or stacking.
3. What opportunity? Do you know in advance about margin increases or decreases and how you think speculators will react?
The simple truth is price. Price is all you need to know. Anything else is unknowable.
Or, if you think you know something the banks don't know, becasue most here seem to believe that they are stupid (LOL guess again), beware of dis and mis information and always DYOD.
Cheers!
1. I disagree. Speculation or not; it is clear, logical motive. No viable argument can be made for banks wanting (or even being neutral towards) higher PM prices. As you say it is not completely "knowable" but if the probable motives of large players in any market isn't "tradable", then nothing is. Afterall business is a social discipline.
2. Clearly, I'm out of my depth here, but when has that stopped me? However, multiple sources including (I believe) one Bloomberg article have discussed JPM's short-position. If its wrong, its wrong. But "you pays your and you takes your chance". How can they maintain this position without getting squeezed? No idea. But, I'm sure last year's collapse was very helpful (or perhaps even life-saving) to them. Given the secretive nature of the Fed, can you guarantee that JPM and others were not the beneficiaries of a surruptitious bailout? That too is unknowable. Right?
3. Any idea why regulators would impose five margin increases on the heals of a severe price decline? I've always had the impression that margin level adjustments were adjusted to reduce volatility not add to it.
theo wrote:"Trying to determine and describe price movements after they hapen is for the bobbleheads on bubblevision."
Umm. . . isn't that the point of technical analysis using charts, like the one you posted earlier?
So if the previous considerations are irrelevant, what types of information drives your trades? Are you a TA guy or do you go with plain future supply and demand?
I've enjoyed this
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