stateofmind wrote:I'm going to try to not get into a debate with anyone this time...
During this roughly three month runup, the support for the trend has been at the 20 day moving average. (Blue Line) It's honestly almost a perfect line of support, as illustrated by the chart below. The RSI is approaching 70, and the force index is growing positive, yet not as high as the other two corrections were. This tells me that we will experience new highs before correcting again. Possibly to $32, $33? Anyways, I'm out of the market for now, as I have more luck calling corrections than riding the market upwards. I'll begin buying puts in AGQ when the RSI is around ~73 and the force index grows to be more positive.
I'd hold off buying for now, though, especially physical, until we get another correction. Miners including CDE, HL, EXK, and SLW will be good speculative buys after the correction, buy them when we start to approach the 20 day moving average. Have fun and good luck!
agmoose wrote:Yeah, regarding ebay - deals are few and far between these days. War nickels even go for over spot sometimes. Once in a while there is an auction or two that slip through the cracks, but not many. Even the foreign stuff is a tougher battle these days.
aristobolus wrote:Its there!
.02FYI wrote:The 200 moving day average says overbought .
http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?c=$silver
DYODD
Jonflyfish wrote:.02FYI wrote:The 200 moving day average says overbought .
http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?c=$silver
DYODD
I've been trading for quite a long time and have yet to find how a floating average price means anything about the future price since the moving average is simply a derivative of historical prices.
Would you care to share how the average historical price determines the future price? TIA
Jonflyfish wrote:.02FYI wrote:The 200 moving day average says overbought .
http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?c=$silver
DYODD
I've been trading for quite a long time and have yet to find how a floating average price means anything about the future price since the moving average is simply a derivative of historical prices.
Would you care to share how the average historical price determines the future price? TIA
So with the insight as to why it came to mind I'm looking at the 200 mda Ag as a point of reference to see percentage wise how far it is from its 200 mda Currently http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?c=$silver 30.67 close / 21.98 200 mda = 1.3953 over the 200mda. To compare you look at au http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui 1414.50 with 200mda /1269.54 = 1.1137 which is closer to the mean. I appreciate and possiblly lack your understanding / opinion of future price. As I have alot to learn about charts, technicals and other fundamentals etc.. My focus would not just be on the price moving forward of Ag priced in FRN's but Ag priced in Au. My thinking is that if the the ratio of Ag/ Au has dropped from say high 60's to high 40's for the sake of discussion. That this 200 day moving average Silver being overbought at 1.3953 versus Gold at only 1.1137. So I know I'm looking at a snapshot and not willing to bet the barn. It seems when Ag was nearer it's 200 mda at say high 18's low 19's buying then in bulk if you had the powder then you have done well. I'm not saying that Ag will go down in price. Nor am I saying that Ag is going to be long term loser . Possibly short term just that Au might be a better buy. I appreciate your question and would be happy to entertain additional thoughts questions as I understand you have over 900 oz of Silver for sale.
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