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Additional resources for earning interest in gold

2 responses to “The Fake Economy, Report 21 Jul”

  1. A month ago user comments in this space were negative when discussing silver and the GSR. In other comments some even questioned whether a fundamental change in the value of silver had occurred, and had been completely missed. But these were not isolated comments. These sentiments simply echoed those throughout the investment community.

    That Supply/Demand Report is here:
    https://www.monetary-metals.com/the-elephant-in-the-gold-room-report-16-june/

    Of course, my comments in support of silver can be found there as well. Yes, it’s been in a bear market since 2011. But with the GSR close to the upper end of its historic range, why be so negative? That’s precisely the time to be turning positive on a long term basis. I explained my reasoning in that post, reproduced here:

    Agreed, the larger trend has been away from silver. Question is, has there been a meaningful break in historical parameters? And I would answer there has not been — at least not yet.

    Longer term parameters are well established — generally 30:1 on the low side and 100:1 on the high side. Long gone are the 70’s/80’s when silver was almost trapped in a 40:1 to 30:1 range, back and forth, back and forth. Since then silver has effectively been a huge bear market relative to gold. That is what most of us see and feel. Silver is a has-been.

    But the longstanding parameters of 30:1 – 100:1 remain reliable reference points until proven otherwise.

    In fact, the ratio traded at 32:1 as recently as 2011 (just 8 years ago?) in the midst of that year’s speculative blow off. Of course, such a feat (32:1) required a massive influx of speculative and leveraged money, which more typical of market tops than bottoms. So I find today’s ratio –being just 10 pts from the 100:1 extreme — to be a ‘low-risk’ proposition compared to gold.

    More importantly, the high ratio — especially in the midst of gold breaking out of its large consolidation pattern — is very encouraging on its technical merits. Why? Because it shows an complete lack of speculative interest in silver, which is called “the poor man’s gold” for good reason, as it’s the go-to investment vehicle for those who cannot afford gold. And where I come from a market devoid of leverage and speculation — especially when a bullish position is somewhat warranted — is a bullish sign.

    In a very real way it’s the flip side of 2011. Gold is breaking out and nobody cares. If they did care, the ratio would moving back down, at least some. But it’s not.

    There’s an old saying that “Markets make opinions”. People don’t get bullish and wait for prices to rise. Prices rise and investors then get more and more bullish until there is a widespread plurality of opinion… which is the top.

    No doubt a long bear market in silver has pushed many-a-bull to the breaking point, even to the point of discarding silver altogether. But as silver prices rise we will see opinions change once again, just a day follows night.

  2. A month ago user comments in this space were negative when discussing silver and the GSR. In other comments some even questioned whether a fundamental change in the value of silver had occurred, and had been completely missed. But these were not isolated comments. These sentiments simply echoed those throughout the investment community.

    That Supply/Demand Report is here:
    https://www.monetary-metals.com/the-elephant-in-the-gold-room-report-16-june/

    Of course, my comments in support of silver can be found there as well. Yes, it’s been in a bear market since 2011. But with the GSR close to the upper end of its historic range, why be so negative? That’s precisely the time to be turning positive on a long term basis. I explained my reasoning in that post, reproduced here:

    Agreed, the larger trend has been away from silver. Question is, has there been a meaningful break in historical parameters? And I would answer there has not been — at least not yet.

    Longer term parameters are well established — generally 30:1 on the low side and 100:1 on the high side. Long gone are the 70’s/80’s when silver was almost trapped in a 40:1 to 30:1 range, back and forth, back and forth. Since then silver has effectively been a huge bear market relative to gold. That is what most of us see and feel. Silver is a has-been.

    But the longstanding parameters of 30:1 – 100:1 remain reliable reference points until proven otherwise.

    In fact, the ratio traded at 32:1 as recently as 2011 (just 8 years ago?) in the midst of that year’s speculative blow off. Of course, such a feat (32:1) required a massive influx of speculative and leveraged money, which more typical of market tops than bottoms. So I find today’s ratio –being just 10 pts from the 100:1 extreme — to be a ‘low-risk’ proposition compared to gold.

    More importantly, the high ratio — especially in the midst of gold breaking out of its large consolidation pattern — is very encouraging on its technical merits. Why? Because it shows an complete lack of speculative interest in silver, which is called “the poor man’s gold” for good reason, as it’s the go-to investment vehicle for those who cannot afford gold. And where I come from a market devoid of leverage and speculation — especially when a bullish position is somewhat warranted — is a bullish sign.

    In a very real way it’s the flip side of 2011. Gold is breaking out and nobody cares. If they did care, the ratio would moving back down, at least some. But it’s not.

    There’s an old saying that “Markets make opinions”. People don’t get bullish and wait for prices to rise. Prices rise and investors then get more and more bullish until there is a widespread plurality of opinion… which is the top.

    No doubt a long bear market in silver has pushed many-a-bull to the breaking point, even to the point of discarding silver altogether. But as silver prices rise we will see opinions change once again, just a day follows night.

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