IdahoCopper wrote:This morning's move from $27.20 to $28.60 is within the normal range of volatility. Its not a spike.
reddirtcoins wrote:The DOW just went red for the year and look what just happened to metals.
SoFa wrote:The time to get into cash was a few weeks ago when the market entered the correction. Now the indexes are about to test their 200day averages.
There has been a divergence of the dollar versus the metals the past couple of weeks (dollar keeps shooting up, metals not tanking anymore). Something is expected to happen.
68Camaro wrote:European markets are down big, but suddenly (for a moment) the Euro doesn't look quite as weak as USD, given the weakness shown today. So Euro up, USD down - relatively speaking. You can't do a quantitative correlation (the Euro is STILL down big compared to recent history), but PMs do often react to USD spikes up/down. And this is some evidence that a flight away from risk includes movement toward PMs, which I find interesting in this situation, given what has happened at other times recently.
Jonflyfish wrote:68Camaro wrote:European markets are down big, but suddenly (for a moment) the Euro doesn't look quite as weak as USD, given the weakness shown today. So Euro up, USD down - relatively speaking. You can't do a quantitative correlation (the Euro is STILL down big compared to recent history), but PMs do often react to USD spikes up/down. And this is some evidence that a flight away from risk includes movement toward PMs, which I find interesting in this situation, given what has happened at other times recently.
On a trade weighted basis, the USD also got hammered by the yen, temporarily or not, it is what it is...
Cheers!
Oakair wrote:Jonflyfish wrote:68Camaro wrote:European markets are down big, but suddenly (for a moment) the Euro doesn't look quite as weak as USD, given the weakness shown today. So Euro up, USD down - relatively speaking. You can't do a quantitative correlation (the Euro is STILL down big compared to recent history), but PMs do often react to USD spikes up/down. And this is some evidence that a flight away from risk includes movement toward PMs, which I find interesting in this situation, given what has happened at other times recently.
On a trade weighted basis, the USD also got hammered by the yen, temporarily or not, it is what it is...
Cheers!
The yen was artificially depressed by the earthquake and whatnot and has been in a steady recovery and looks set to continue its upward trend...1.30 would be a safe target I'd assume...
I'd much rather have yen than usd based on the charts
fb101 wrote:There will not be another QE until after Obama is reelected.
IdahoCopper wrote:Perhaps stock investors really do grok PMs for wealth protection.
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