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Gold Bugs Ready for Revelry
The Street ^
| 28 December 2006
| Simon Constable
Posted on 12/28/2006 10:28:20 AM PST by shrinkermd
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Remainder of article gives positions and recommendations of some stock market pundits.
To: shrinkermd; Tijeras_Slim; Petronski
To: shrinkermd
Gold, copper, and silver are tightly coiled springs fully compressed ready to spring to new heights overnight or to slink back down the stairs.
3
posted on
12/28/2006 10:32:40 AM PST
by
RightWhale
(RTRA DLQS GSCW)
To: RightWhale
"New heights" as in topping the late '70's? If only.
4
posted on
12/28/2006 10:34:59 AM PST
by
Melinda
To: shrinkermd
I always get worried when the analysts start cheering. Saw a program the other day where about a half dozen stock cheerleaders said "Everything was coming up roses, Dow to 14 or 15k, we're all going to get rich." Granted, I'm not going to sell everything and stuff it in my mattress, but I am going to get a little less agressive.
Goldbugs are right about once every 20 years. Gold went through the roof in the past 18-24 months, I'd guess that it will be awhile before they're right again. Not that I have any spectacular insight, or anything, though.
5
posted on
12/28/2006 10:35:22 AM PST
by
wbill
To: shrinkermd
The biggest problem for gold (and I am a fan, not a fanatic) is: When do you sell it and get the crap you wanted out of, which got you into gold in the first place?
To: Melinda
Or new lows. Or simply sit tightly coiled while futures contract after futures contract expires at zero value.
7
posted on
12/28/2006 10:37:25 AM PST
by
RightWhale
(RTRA DLQS GSCW)
To: shrinkermd
I am glad this guy knows what's going to happen in the future.
He must make a lot of money investing.
But why does he tell everyone else?
To: proxy_user
LOL! If today's Market Comentators were right all of the time, then they'd be called 'Retired, former Market Commentators" instead.
9
posted on
12/28/2006 10:45:42 AM PST
by
wbill
To: shrinkermd
Lets everyone get our picks ready for the first of the year so we can then come back in 6 months or so and see who was the best investors : )
I predict the gold bugs are going to lose.
I just love how the doom and gloomers look back and then make prediction on the last year or so :)
10
posted on
12/28/2006 10:49:22 AM PST
by
LeGrande
To: LeGrande
I predict that stocks will continue to flucuate
11
posted on
12/28/2006 11:10:59 AM PST
by
Former MSM Viewer
("We will hunt the terrorists in every dark corner of the earth. We will be relentless." W 2001)
To: shrinkermd
Must be time to short gold.
12
posted on
12/28/2006 11:15:50 AM PST
by
mlo
To: shrinkermd
I bet the FED manufactures more Gold, just to piss off the gold bugs. :)
To: shrinkermd
P.S. If I had one paper fiat dollar, for every time the gold bugs said the dollar was going to collapse or world wide economic disaster was at hand, I'd be a multimillionaire, even adjusting for inflation.
To: RightWhale
Or simply sit tightly coiled while futures contract after futures contract expires at zero value. Options contracts can expire at zero. Futures contracts usually wouldn't, unless the commodity went to zero.
15
posted on
12/28/2006 11:54:29 AM PST
by
Toddsterpatriot
(If you agree with EPI, you're not a conservative!)
To: Toddsterpatriot
Options contracts can expire at zero. Well, I have no particular use for gold, so I wouldn't need a futures contract either. Don't options contracts usually expire at zero value unless they are part of the executive compensation package?
16
posted on
12/28/2006 12:00:25 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(RTRA DLQS GSCW)
To: RightWhale
Don't options contracts usually expire at zero value unless they are part of the executive compensation package? Exchange traded options expire worthless about 70% (IIRC) of the time. For instance, if you think IBM ($97.12) is going to rise, you buy an IBM January 100 call for $0.95.
If IBM closes below 100 on January 19, 2007, the option expires worthless.
If you think gold will rise, you might buy a gold futures contract (gold is about $630). When the contract expires, let's say at $625, your loss is the difference between what you paid for the contract and where gold closed.
17
posted on
12/28/2006 12:07:02 PM PST
by
Toddsterpatriot
(If you agree with EPI, you're not a conservative!)
To: Toddsterpatriot
expire worthless about 70% (IIRC) of the time But the ones you own expire worthless about 97% of the time. That is a law.
18
posted on
12/28/2006 12:10:07 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(RTRA DLQS GSCW)
To: martin_fierro
"If you'll excuse me, Mr. Bond, I have to tend to separating my gold from the late Mr. Solo."
19
posted on
12/28/2006 12:10:17 PM PST
by
abb
(The Dinosaur Media: A One-Way Medium in a Two-Way World)
To: RightWhale
But the ones you own expire worthless about 97% of the time. That is a law. That's why I stopped trading them. LOL!
Also, the ones I want to buy are too expensive and the ones I want to sell short are too cheap.
20
posted on
12/28/2006 12:14:02 PM PST
by
Toddsterpatriot
(If you agree with EPI, you're not a conservative!)
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