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Additional resources for earning interest in gold

7 responses to “Gettin’ High on Bubbles, Report 15 Apr 2018”

  1. Dear team,

    Thanks for your work. Could I please ask you what you think of people who keep incurring debt to buy more and more flats, and charge rents to somebody else? They make 8% a year and pay 1.5% to the bank, while it lasts. What do you think could happen to those people when the music stops?

    Thank you.

  2. Great article; thanks Keith. As a technical trader I must say, both gold AND silver both are in very bullish setups that put odds of a bullish break firmly with the bulls. The lower highs in silver since Feb of last year you speak of also has a trend of generallly higher lows; a tightening pennant. Looking for a break above resistance for both within 3 months.

  3. I’m not looking for $5,000 or $10,000 gold. I don’t think I would enjoy living under conditions where that might happen. I spend less than I earn and save the balance. I just want to preserve those savings and slowly grow them over time by adding to them. Over the long-term I think gold is a better medium for that then the U.S. Dollar. That’s why I hold it, nothing more.

  4. Looking at the gold fundamental price chart, it seems to run consistently above the actual gold price, at least for the past few years.
    Have you written about this, and can you point me to the analysis? Should we expect this trend to continue?

  5. Dang it, Keith… where were you when I was debating (and failing the classes) of my college profs? My beloved Profs were always shifting this damn curve to the right, and that damn curve to the right in perfect proportion… and all is well. OMG how stupid. Nobody pays a price.

    It’s true enough, isn’t it?

    America has never paid a price — right? So maybe our good (or not so good) professors are correct. In fact, given the lack of negative consequences I’m sure they would argue they are correct.

    But the price we’re talking about isn’t simply A price but THE price, one where the consequences are both immediate and devastating, to the extent after which there can be no debate. But such convincing consequences have been illusive, haven’t they?

    And therein lies the problem. To date, there is never a direct connection from the mis-informed bubble and its devastating effects.

    And there may never be, at least in our lives. Which means millions upon millions never get the education they so richly deserve. As the saying goes… we “rinse and repeat” …time and time again.

    It’s probably the Russians fault anyway. Or Wall Street. Or the NRA. Who knows…
    _______________________

  6. “We do not work harder today than they worked during the stone age (probably a lot less hard)” : depending on your definition of “harder”. Anyway a swiss engineer is working longer than anybody in the stone age or living under the european feudalism…

  7. It looks like we have a loose (but slowly tightening) market in physical gold, and a tight (but slowly loosening) market in physical silver.

    That notion gets a nice sanity check from the “COT report”: in gold, the Commercials are medium-heavy short and the specs are medium-heavy long which indicates high confidence in future delivery and a warehouseman who is paid to carry. In silver, the Commercials are just barely short and the specs are barely long, which indicates a warehouseman who is paid to decarry.

    My question is, why is MM’s Fundamental gold price up around 1500? In a loose physical gold market with speculators buying/holding a lot of future delivery, I would expect the MM Fundamental price to be lower. It tries to show a price that removes speculator influence from the market, and right now, specs are inflating the gold market a bit. So, why is the Fundamental price up there?

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