DeanStockwell wrote:The fed meeting tomorrow will probably indicate an end to "QE2" thus pushing silver lower. However I think we will still see bond buying, though it may be through banks which the Fed funds, such as Goldman Sachs. Still don't believe silver is a buying opportunity yet.
68Camaro wrote:DeanStockwell wrote:The fed meeting tomorrow will probably indicate an end to "QE2" thus pushing silver lower. However I think we will still see bond buying, though it may be through banks which the Fed funds, such as Goldman Sachs. Still don't believe silver is a buying opportunity yet.
There will be a faux public "end" to QE, for the moment, but it has to continue in the background. No one else is buying the bonds, and the government officially goes broke without the continued borrowing of money via the T-bond sales.
whatsnext wrote:America may have an ace in the hole with India. We are a better ally than china, china supports pakistan over there land dispute. Plus we are currently bringing them up out of 3rd world status.
Treetop wrote:does it even matter if we end the QE stuff at this point?
DeanStockwell wrote:Don't really know if this drop alone would constitute a correction. We could have a bit way down to go from here. Not backed by any research because I'm out of silver positions for now, though.
68Camaro wrote:I do think we're at a period of unusual uncertainty, of uncertain duration (maybe a month or two), during which both silver and gold may pause or slow a bit and go more sideways in the midst of more significant volatility. Reality is the weirdness at the Fed, continued massive debt, continued money printing (no matter what it is called), weakness in congress that is unable to make significant progress toward a reasonable budget, weakening dollar (though it may get temporarily propped up again), growing awareness that inflation is real, 3 wars, etc, etc. But there are so many people desperate for positive signs that the media is literally salivating, manufacturing "positive" feel-good stories while ignoring the massive icebergs around us. That and unknown forces behind the scenes could prop things up for a few more weeks. But at the moment (and predicting the timing of things is always a danger) I'm anticipating a good chance of a major meltdown by the end of June.
Treetop wrote:i disagree, I dont see it going sideways for more then a few days. Up or down it will start moving soon, imo. this is a global market...
68Camaro wrote:Treetop wrote:i disagree, I dont see it going sideways for more then a few days. Up or down it will start moving soon, imo. this is a global market...
OK. We'll see. I would be happy with that. But even in a global market, and even though the US influence is diminshing quickly, the world is still driven by the US/UK/Euro market and related financials. If this was a free market I would agree with you, but it's not.
Treetop wrote:the fundamentals didnt change. we didnt convince a soul outside of our own country we are even considering fixing our economy or dollar in any meaningful way. With lots of info just in the last week or two that literally signaled the end of an era.
Look up the BRICS story I keep linking. Its barely mentioned in american news, but its in hordes of international sources. same with people in china calling for a reduction in their dollar reserves by 2 trillion.
To me the market is just WAY to charged to stay going sideways for to long. If it does i feel lots of folks will either think the correction is over and jump back in, or take some profit intending to jump back in in a month or whatever....
Country wrote:SILVER looking stronger this evening, up 57c to $46.17. If $47 is soon regained, momentum will resume in a decisive manner. The correction has spanned 10.5% from top to bottom, perhaps that might do. The dollar is looking weaker once again, DXY= 73.61. If GOLD maintains resolutely above $1500 and does not correct below, SILVER will regain it's composure and move higher. This evening Geitner made a pitch that it was the Treasury's policy to maintain a stronger dollar. Perhaps tomorrow, the Bernank will intimate just the opposite with a stay the course no change in policy message that will lead to a further weaking of the dollar and a concommitant resumption of higher PM and commodity prices. We shall see....
Country wrote:Country wrote:SILVER looking stronger this evening, up 57c to $46.17. If $47 is soon regained, momentum will resume in a decisive manner. The correction has spanned 10.5% from top to bottom, perhaps that might do. The dollar is looking weaker once again, DXY= 73.61. If GOLD maintains resolutely above $1500 and does not correct below, SILVER will regain it's composure and move higher. This evening Geitner made a pitch that it was the Treasury's policy to maintain a stronger dollar. Perhaps tomorrow, the Bernank will intimate just the opposite with a stay the course no change in policy message that will lead to a further weaking of the dollar and a concommitant resumption of higher PM and commodity prices. We shall see....
It looks like it's playing out as I thought. SILVER is regaining $47 right now at $46.79. This correction could be over and the strong upward momentum soon regained.
68Camaro wrote:Treetop wrote:the fundamentals didnt change. we didnt convince a soul outside of our own country we are even considering fixing our economy or dollar in any meaningful way. With lots of info just in the last week or two that literally signaled the end of an era.
Look up the BRICS story I keep linking. Its barely mentioned in american news, but its in hordes of international sources. same with people in china calling for a reduction in their dollar reserves by 2 trillion.
To me the market is just WAY to charged to stay going sideways for to long. If it does i feel lots of folks will either think the correction is over and jump back in, or take some profit intending to jump back in in a month or whatever....
Well aware of what the BRICS countries are doing. And I suspect we don't even have a clue what else is going on behind the scenes in other countries. They would be fools to just let this ride, and I think they are not fools. Nature abhors a vacuum, and the US is leaving behind one that others are jostling to fill, to their benefit. So I think we violently agree. I just allow the possibility that the Wizard of Oz can keep up the show for a few more weeks, before the curtain is pulled open...
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