by beauanderos » Thu Sep 29, 2011 12:56 pm
Supposedly, JPMorgan and HSBC (two major banks) are responsible for the volatility (ups and downs) we see in the silver and gold prices. They would be considered the Big Boys. They "hammer the markets" meaning they drive down the price, by artificial means, by "selling" millions of ounces of futures contracts into the silver or gold futures markets, thus affecting the price. Anytime there are more sellers than buyers, the price drops. These BB are "short" the silver market. They sell something they don't have, receive the price at the time of sale, and then hope the price will drop and they can replace what they borrowed to sell. The difference, less commissions and fees, is the price drop they engineered. Whenever the price rises "too fast, too far" you can rely on them to take advantage of that "overbought" stretch and pull precious metals back down towards their 200 day moving avg. An indication that a market is overbought or oversold is when the 200 DMA is stretched more than, say, twenty percent above the avg.
The Hand of God moves Worlds