- This topic has 125 replies, 15 voices, and was last updated 15 years ago by
equalizer.
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AuthorPosts
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March 19, 2008 at 6:53 AM #12176
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March 19, 2008 at 6:54 AM #172863
TheBreeze
ParticipantThat should be *deflation*.
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March 19, 2008 at 6:56 AM #172868
TheBreeze
ParticipantWow, gold down 50 bucks now.
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March 19, 2008 at 6:56 AM #173204
TheBreeze
ParticipantWow, gold down 50 bucks now.
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March 19, 2008 at 6:56 AM #173210
TheBreeze
ParticipantWow, gold down 50 bucks now.
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March 19, 2008 at 6:56 AM #173229
TheBreeze
ParticipantWow, gold down 50 bucks now.
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March 19, 2008 at 6:56 AM #173311
TheBreeze
ParticipantWow, gold down 50 bucks now.
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March 19, 2008 at 6:54 AM #173201
TheBreeze
ParticipantThat should be *deflation*.
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March 19, 2008 at 6:54 AM #173205
TheBreeze
ParticipantThat should be *deflation*.
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March 19, 2008 at 6:54 AM #173224
TheBreeze
ParticipantThat should be *deflation*.
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March 19, 2008 at 6:54 AM #173306
TheBreeze
ParticipantThat should be *deflation*.
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March 19, 2008 at 7:01 AM #172873
Coronita
ParticipantBreeze. See dick run, see dick jump. But what ever he does, don't be a dick.
If there's anything that you should have learned over the past couple of month is, don't publicly gloat when the market happens to move in the direction you want it to for a couple of days. You quite possibly might eat your words and cry the following days.
 As of now, markets are red. And your darling LEH is down a buck.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
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March 19, 2008 at 7:21 AM #172883
TheBreeze
ParticipantIf there’s anything that you should have learned over the past couple of month is, don’t publicly gloat when the market happens to move in the direction you want it to for a couple of days.
Give me a break. You gloated more than any “Internet supertrader” I’ve ever seen after your supposed Bear short the other day (conveniently announced after Bear collapsed).
I’m just adding some accountability to the Internet Supertraders around here. Kewp professed his undying love for SKF and Gold yesterday. Today? Gold is down 5% and SKF is down 3.5%.
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March 19, 2008 at 7:28 AM #172888
TheBreeze
ParticipantBy the way, I’m no fan of Lehman. It could surely go to zero just like Bear did. And I would think up here at 44 or so would be a good level to short after the massive short squeeze yesterday.
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March 19, 2008 at 7:28 AM #173226
TheBreeze
ParticipantBy the way, I’m no fan of Lehman. It could surely go to zero just like Bear did. And I would think up here at 44 or so would be a good level to short after the massive short squeeze yesterday.
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March 19, 2008 at 7:28 AM #173230
TheBreeze
ParticipantBy the way, I’m no fan of Lehman. It could surely go to zero just like Bear did. And I would think up here at 44 or so would be a good level to short after the massive short squeeze yesterday.
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March 19, 2008 at 7:28 AM #173249
TheBreeze
ParticipantBy the way, I’m no fan of Lehman. It could surely go to zero just like Bear did. And I would think up here at 44 or so would be a good level to short after the massive short squeeze yesterday.
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March 19, 2008 at 7:28 AM #173332
TheBreeze
ParticipantBy the way, I’m no fan of Lehman. It could surely go to zero just like Bear did. And I would think up here at 44 or so would be a good level to short after the massive short squeeze yesterday.
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March 19, 2008 at 7:40 AM #172903
Coronita
ParticipantI gloated because I profited from luck rather than skill (because it does happen by freak of nature. I'm also not exactly shy when i take it up the groin either. This is one big game for me.
I never called out people specifically on a thread titled "person xyz, how's those short positions today?". Frankly, that's just being a dick (no offense). But I don't own this board, so post away.
I just find it funny this is turning out to be like the Yahoo finance message boards.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
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March 19, 2008 at 8:36 AM #172938
blackbox
Participantat some point contrarians become part of the herd, and you get screwed!
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March 19, 2008 at 8:56 AM #172953
kewp
Participantat some point contrarians become part of the herd, and you get screwed!
Then you are not being a very good contrarian.
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March 19, 2008 at 9:28 AM #172969
Anonymous
GuestLooks like a good time to pick up more gold imo.
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March 19, 2008 at 9:47 AM #172976
blahblahblah
ParticipantI’m sure that this is all just a coincidence.
The game is rigged.
The dice are loaded.
The house always wins. -
March 19, 2008 at 9:55 AM #172991
patientlywaiting
Participantbreeze, i think that you’re slamming the wrong person. If I recall, FLU is long the market (except for a few shorts).
I personally, I’m staying on the sidelines for a while longer.
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March 19, 2008 at 10:19 AM #173012
Coronita
Participantbreeze, i think that you're slamming the wrong person. If I recall, FLU is long the market (except for a few shorts).
Did I ever say that I'm consistently right? I'm pretty wrong a lot of times. For example, I'm dead wrong about BAC and C, though yesterday's action helped "dollar cost average" my losses on those fronts. I don't subscribe to the notion of a dow 10,000 or a dow 15,000 these days. It ain't moving anywhere but up and down these days.
But one thing is for sure..Dollar has tanked (and no I have no currency trading skills, though I wish i did). 1 penny isn't even worth 1 yen these days. It's just pathetic.
On a side note, having inflated currencies might do americans a good thing. it will make us have to sharpen are math skills. Gone are the days that you simply round up or down to the nearest dollar. We're getting to a point that cents don't matter, and that it takes several dollars to represent buying/selling real things.
I have a theory. Perhaps the reason why folks of certain countries are good at math has to do with the currency denomination. Take for example Japan. You have to regularly deal with 6-7 digit numbers. I'm sure folks from Argentina would do pretty well at arithmetic too. Pretty soon, even us too will have better math skills.
 $125 for a burger, $1255 for a tank of gas, $127,000 or a entry level used car, $20,000,000 for a 1 bedroom place,etc,etc.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
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March 19, 2008 at 12:39 PM #173162
drunkle
Participantbreeze:
bagged a fistful of c march $20 puts for .13, running .35 now and heading higher…
bouncing the bottom is fun! we’ll see if the fun lasts through tomorrow though…
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March 19, 2008 at 8:03 PM #173498
hipmatt
ParticipantI agree, this is a buying opportunity for gold. There has been so much money printing, not just from the us. I’m no pro investor, but I’m bullish on gold, even after a bad day like today and maybe tomorrow.
Do you really think this is the last rate cut, or that this is the last bailout, or that the banks or brokers won’t flirt with disaster again?
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March 20, 2008 at 3:03 AM #173638
TheBreeze
ParticipantI agree, this is a buying opportunity for gold. There has been so much money printing, not just from the us. I’m no pro investor, but I’m bullish on gold, even after a bad day like today and maybe tomorrow.
Gold down another $37 to $908/ounce. That’s almost a 10% cut in two days.
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March 20, 2008 at 3:03 AM #173977
TheBreeze
ParticipantI agree, this is a buying opportunity for gold. There has been so much money printing, not just from the us. I’m no pro investor, but I’m bullish on gold, even after a bad day like today and maybe tomorrow.
Gold down another $37 to $908/ounce. That’s almost a 10% cut in two days.
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March 20, 2008 at 3:03 AM #173986
TheBreeze
ParticipantI agree, this is a buying opportunity for gold. There has been so much money printing, not just from the us. I’m no pro investor, but I’m bullish on gold, even after a bad day like today and maybe tomorrow.
Gold down another $37 to $908/ounce. That’s almost a 10% cut in two days.
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March 20, 2008 at 3:03 AM #173999
TheBreeze
ParticipantI agree, this is a buying opportunity for gold. There has been so much money printing, not just from the us. I’m no pro investor, but I’m bullish on gold, even after a bad day like today and maybe tomorrow.
Gold down another $37 to $908/ounce. That’s almost a 10% cut in two days.
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March 20, 2008 at 3:03 AM #174084
TheBreeze
ParticipantI agree, this is a buying opportunity for gold. There has been so much money printing, not just from the us. I’m no pro investor, but I’m bullish on gold, even after a bad day like today and maybe tomorrow.
Gold down another $37 to $908/ounce. That’s almost a 10% cut in two days.
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March 19, 2008 at 8:03 PM #173838
hipmatt
ParticipantI agree, this is a buying opportunity for gold. There has been so much money printing, not just from the us. I’m no pro investor, but I’m bullish on gold, even after a bad day like today and maybe tomorrow.
Do you really think this is the last rate cut, or that this is the last bailout, or that the banks or brokers won’t flirt with disaster again?
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March 19, 2008 at 8:03 PM #173848
hipmatt
ParticipantI agree, this is a buying opportunity for gold. There has been so much money printing, not just from the us. I’m no pro investor, but I’m bullish on gold, even after a bad day like today and maybe tomorrow.
Do you really think this is the last rate cut, or that this is the last bailout, or that the banks or brokers won’t flirt with disaster again?
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:03 PM #173859
hipmatt
ParticipantI agree, this is a buying opportunity for gold. There has been so much money printing, not just from the us. I’m no pro investor, but I’m bullish on gold, even after a bad day like today and maybe tomorrow.
Do you really think this is the last rate cut, or that this is the last bailout, or that the banks or brokers won’t flirt with disaster again?
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:03 PM #173943
hipmatt
ParticipantI agree, this is a buying opportunity for gold. There has been so much money printing, not just from the us. I’m no pro investor, but I’m bullish on gold, even after a bad day like today and maybe tomorrow.
Do you really think this is the last rate cut, or that this is the last bailout, or that the banks or brokers won’t flirt with disaster again?
-
March 19, 2008 at 12:39 PM #173501
drunkle
Participantbreeze:
bagged a fistful of c march $20 puts for .13, running .35 now and heading higher…
bouncing the bottom is fun! we’ll see if the fun lasts through tomorrow though…
-
March 19, 2008 at 12:39 PM #173505
drunkle
Participantbreeze:
bagged a fistful of c march $20 puts for .13, running .35 now and heading higher…
bouncing the bottom is fun! we’ll see if the fun lasts through tomorrow though…
-
March 19, 2008 at 12:39 PM #173525
drunkle
Participantbreeze:
bagged a fistful of c march $20 puts for .13, running .35 now and heading higher…
bouncing the bottom is fun! we’ll see if the fun lasts through tomorrow though…
-
March 19, 2008 at 12:39 PM #173606
drunkle
Participantbreeze:
bagged a fistful of c march $20 puts for .13, running .35 now and heading higher…
bouncing the bottom is fun! we’ll see if the fun lasts through tomorrow though…
-
March 19, 2008 at 10:19 AM #173352
Coronita
Participantbreeze, i think that you're slamming the wrong person. If I recall, FLU is long the market (except for a few shorts).
Did I ever say that I'm consistently right? I'm pretty wrong a lot of times. For example, I'm dead wrong about BAC and C, though yesterday's action helped "dollar cost average" my losses on those fronts. I don't subscribe to the notion of a dow 10,000 or a dow 15,000 these days. It ain't moving anywhere but up and down these days.
But one thing is for sure..Dollar has tanked (and no I have no currency trading skills, though I wish i did). 1 penny isn't even worth 1 yen these days. It's just pathetic.
On a side note, having inflated currencies might do americans a good thing. it will make us have to sharpen are math skills. Gone are the days that you simply round up or down to the nearest dollar. We're getting to a point that cents don't matter, and that it takes several dollars to represent buying/selling real things.
I have a theory. Perhaps the reason why folks of certain countries are good at math has to do with the currency denomination. Take for example Japan. You have to regularly deal with 6-7 digit numbers. I'm sure folks from Argentina would do pretty well at arithmetic too. Pretty soon, even us too will have better math skills.
 $125 for a burger, $1255 for a tank of gas, $127,000 or a entry level used car, $20,000,000 for a 1 bedroom place,etc,etc.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
-
March 19, 2008 at 10:19 AM #173356
Coronita
Participantbreeze, i think that you're slamming the wrong person. If I recall, FLU is long the market (except for a few shorts).
Did I ever say that I'm consistently right? I'm pretty wrong a lot of times. For example, I'm dead wrong about BAC and C, though yesterday's action helped "dollar cost average" my losses on those fronts. I don't subscribe to the notion of a dow 10,000 or a dow 15,000 these days. It ain't moving anywhere but up and down these days.
But one thing is for sure..Dollar has tanked (and no I have no currency trading skills, though I wish i did). 1 penny isn't even worth 1 yen these days. It's just pathetic.
On a side note, having inflated currencies might do americans a good thing. it will make us have to sharpen are math skills. Gone are the days that you simply round up or down to the nearest dollar. We're getting to a point that cents don't matter, and that it takes several dollars to represent buying/selling real things.
I have a theory. Perhaps the reason why folks of certain countries are good at math has to do with the currency denomination. Take for example Japan. You have to regularly deal with 6-7 digit numbers. I'm sure folks from Argentina would do pretty well at arithmetic too. Pretty soon, even us too will have better math skills.
 $125 for a burger, $1255 for a tank of gas, $127,000 or a entry level used car, $20,000,000 for a 1 bedroom place,etc,etc.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
-
March 19, 2008 at 10:19 AM #173374
Coronita
Participantbreeze, i think that you're slamming the wrong person. If I recall, FLU is long the market (except for a few shorts).
Did I ever say that I'm consistently right? I'm pretty wrong a lot of times. For example, I'm dead wrong about BAC and C, though yesterday's action helped "dollar cost average" my losses on those fronts. I don't subscribe to the notion of a dow 10,000 or a dow 15,000 these days. It ain't moving anywhere but up and down these days.
But one thing is for sure..Dollar has tanked (and no I have no currency trading skills, though I wish i did). 1 penny isn't even worth 1 yen these days. It's just pathetic.
On a side note, having inflated currencies might do americans a good thing. it will make us have to sharpen are math skills. Gone are the days that you simply round up or down to the nearest dollar. We're getting to a point that cents don't matter, and that it takes several dollars to represent buying/selling real things.
I have a theory. Perhaps the reason why folks of certain countries are good at math has to do with the currency denomination. Take for example Japan. You have to regularly deal with 6-7 digit numbers. I'm sure folks from Argentina would do pretty well at arithmetic too. Pretty soon, even us too will have better math skills.
 $125 for a burger, $1255 for a tank of gas, $127,000 or a entry level used car, $20,000,000 for a 1 bedroom place,etc,etc.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
-
March 19, 2008 at 10:19 AM #173457
Coronita
Participantbreeze, i think that you're slamming the wrong person. If I recall, FLU is long the market (except for a few shorts).
Did I ever say that I'm consistently right? I'm pretty wrong a lot of times. For example, I'm dead wrong about BAC and C, though yesterday's action helped "dollar cost average" my losses on those fronts. I don't subscribe to the notion of a dow 10,000 or a dow 15,000 these days. It ain't moving anywhere but up and down these days.
But one thing is for sure..Dollar has tanked (and no I have no currency trading skills, though I wish i did). 1 penny isn't even worth 1 yen these days. It's just pathetic.
On a side note, having inflated currencies might do americans a good thing. it will make us have to sharpen are math skills. Gone are the days that you simply round up or down to the nearest dollar. We're getting to a point that cents don't matter, and that it takes several dollars to represent buying/selling real things.
I have a theory. Perhaps the reason why folks of certain countries are good at math has to do with the currency denomination. Take for example Japan. You have to regularly deal with 6-7 digit numbers. I'm sure folks from Argentina would do pretty well at arithmetic too. Pretty soon, even us too will have better math skills.
 $125 for a burger, $1255 for a tank of gas, $127,000 or a entry level used car, $20,000,000 for a 1 bedroom place,etc,etc.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
-
March 19, 2008 at 9:55 AM #173330
patientlywaiting
Participantbreeze, i think that you’re slamming the wrong person. If I recall, FLU is long the market (except for a few shorts).
I personally, I’m staying on the sidelines for a while longer.
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March 19, 2008 at 9:55 AM #173337
patientlywaiting
Participantbreeze, i think that you’re slamming the wrong person. If I recall, FLU is long the market (except for a few shorts).
I personally, I’m staying on the sidelines for a while longer.
-
March 19, 2008 at 9:55 AM #173354
patientlywaiting
Participantbreeze, i think that you’re slamming the wrong person. If I recall, FLU is long the market (except for a few shorts).
I personally, I’m staying on the sidelines for a while longer.
-
March 19, 2008 at 9:55 AM #173437
patientlywaiting
Participantbreeze, i think that you’re slamming the wrong person. If I recall, FLU is long the market (except for a few shorts).
I personally, I’m staying on the sidelines for a while longer.
-
March 19, 2008 at 9:47 AM #173315
blahblahblah
ParticipantI’m sure that this is all just a coincidence.
The game is rigged.
The dice are loaded.
The house always wins. -
March 19, 2008 at 9:47 AM #173321
blahblahblah
ParticipantI’m sure that this is all just a coincidence.
The game is rigged.
The dice are loaded.
The house always wins. -
March 19, 2008 at 9:47 AM #173339
blahblahblah
ParticipantI’m sure that this is all just a coincidence.
The game is rigged.
The dice are loaded.
The house always wins. -
March 19, 2008 at 9:47 AM #173422
blahblahblah
ParticipantI’m sure that this is all just a coincidence.
The game is rigged.
The dice are loaded.
The house always wins. -
March 19, 2008 at 9:28 AM #173310
Anonymous
GuestLooks like a good time to pick up more gold imo.
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March 19, 2008 at 9:28 AM #173316
Anonymous
GuestLooks like a good time to pick up more gold imo.
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March 19, 2008 at 9:28 AM #173334
Anonymous
GuestLooks like a good time to pick up more gold imo.
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March 19, 2008 at 9:28 AM #173417
Anonymous
GuestLooks like a good time to pick up more gold imo.
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March 19, 2008 at 8:56 AM #173291
kewp
Participantat some point contrarians become part of the herd, and you get screwed!
Then you are not being a very good contrarian.
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:56 AM #173297
kewp
Participantat some point contrarians become part of the herd, and you get screwed!
Then you are not being a very good contrarian.
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:56 AM #173314
kewp
Participantat some point contrarians become part of the herd, and you get screwed!
Then you are not being a very good contrarian.
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:56 AM #173397
kewp
Participantat some point contrarians become part of the herd, and you get screwed!
Then you are not being a very good contrarian.
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:36 AM #173277
blackbox
Participantat some point contrarians become part of the herd, and you get screwed!
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:36 AM #173282
blackbox
Participantat some point contrarians become part of the herd, and you get screwed!
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:36 AM #173299
blackbox
Participantat some point contrarians become part of the herd, and you get screwed!
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:36 AM #173381
blackbox
Participantat some point contrarians become part of the herd, and you get screwed!
-
March 19, 2008 at 7:40 AM #173242
Coronita
ParticipantI gloated because I profited from luck rather than skill (because it does happen by freak of nature. I'm also not exactly shy when i take it up the groin either. This is one big game for me.
I never called out people specifically on a thread titled "person xyz, how's those short positions today?". Frankly, that's just being a dick (no offense). But I don't own this board, so post away.
I just find it funny this is turning out to be like the Yahoo finance message boards.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
-
March 19, 2008 at 7:40 AM #173245
Coronita
ParticipantI gloated because I profited from luck rather than skill (because it does happen by freak of nature. I'm also not exactly shy when i take it up the groin either. This is one big game for me.
I never called out people specifically on a thread titled "person xyz, how's those short positions today?". Frankly, that's just being a dick (no offense). But I don't own this board, so post away.
I just find it funny this is turning out to be like the Yahoo finance message boards.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
-
March 19, 2008 at 7:40 AM #173264
Coronita
ParticipantI gloated because I profited from luck rather than skill (because it does happen by freak of nature. I'm also not exactly shy when i take it up the groin either. This is one big game for me.
I never called out people specifically on a thread titled "person xyz, how's those short positions today?". Frankly, that's just being a dick (no offense). But I don't own this board, so post away.
I just find it funny this is turning out to be like the Yahoo finance message boards.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
-
March 19, 2008 at 7:40 AM #173345
Coronita
ParticipantI gloated because I profited from luck rather than skill (because it does happen by freak of nature. I'm also not exactly shy when i take it up the groin either. This is one big game for me.
I never called out people specifically on a thread titled "person xyz, how's those short positions today?". Frankly, that's just being a dick (no offense). But I don't own this board, so post away.
I just find it funny this is turning out to be like the Yahoo finance message boards.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:46 AM #172943
kewp
Participant. Today? Gold is down 5% and SKF is down 3.5%.
A great buying opportunity for those late in the game. Don’t forget SKF is leveraged!
There are always bear market rallies and these do nothing to change the fundamentals. See: http://moneycentral.msn.com/investor/partsub/funds/etfperformancetracker.aspx
Foreign stocks, commodities, precious metals and my lovely SKF are all the top performers.
Got in(de)flation?
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:46 AM #173281
kewp
Participant. Today? Gold is down 5% and SKF is down 3.5%.
A great buying opportunity for those late in the game. Don’t forget SKF is leveraged!
There are always bear market rallies and these do nothing to change the fundamentals. See: http://moneycentral.msn.com/investor/partsub/funds/etfperformancetracker.aspx
Foreign stocks, commodities, precious metals and my lovely SKF are all the top performers.
Got in(de)flation?
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:46 AM #173286
kewp
Participant. Today? Gold is down 5% and SKF is down 3.5%.
A great buying opportunity for those late in the game. Don’t forget SKF is leveraged!
There are always bear market rallies and these do nothing to change the fundamentals. See: http://moneycentral.msn.com/investor/partsub/funds/etfperformancetracker.aspx
Foreign stocks, commodities, precious metals and my lovely SKF are all the top performers.
Got in(de)flation?
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:46 AM #173304
kewp
Participant. Today? Gold is down 5% and SKF is down 3.5%.
A great buying opportunity for those late in the game. Don’t forget SKF is leveraged!
There are always bear market rallies and these do nothing to change the fundamentals. See: http://moneycentral.msn.com/investor/partsub/funds/etfperformancetracker.aspx
Foreign stocks, commodities, precious metals and my lovely SKF are all the top performers.
Got in(de)flation?
-
March 19, 2008 at 8:46 AM #173386
kewp
Participant. Today? Gold is down 5% and SKF is down 3.5%.
A great buying opportunity for those late in the game. Don’t forget SKF is leveraged!
There are always bear market rallies and these do nothing to change the fundamentals. See: http://moneycentral.msn.com/investor/partsub/funds/etfperformancetracker.aspx
Foreign stocks, commodities, precious metals and my lovely SKF are all the top performers.
Got in(de)flation?
-
-
March 19, 2008 at 7:21 AM #173221
TheBreeze
ParticipantIf there’s anything that you should have learned over the past couple of month is, don’t publicly gloat when the market happens to move in the direction you want it to for a couple of days.
Give me a break. You gloated more than any “Internet supertrader” I’ve ever seen after your supposed Bear short the other day (conveniently announced after Bear collapsed).
I’m just adding some accountability to the Internet Supertraders around here. Kewp professed his undying love for SKF and Gold yesterday. Today? Gold is down 5% and SKF is down 3.5%.
-
March 19, 2008 at 7:21 AM #173225
TheBreeze
ParticipantIf there’s anything that you should have learned over the past couple of month is, don’t publicly gloat when the market happens to move in the direction you want it to for a couple of days.
Give me a break. You gloated more than any “Internet supertrader” I’ve ever seen after your supposed Bear short the other day (conveniently announced after Bear collapsed).
I’m just adding some accountability to the Internet Supertraders around here. Kewp professed his undying love for SKF and Gold yesterday. Today? Gold is down 5% and SKF is down 3.5%.
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March 19, 2008 at 7:21 AM #173244
TheBreeze
ParticipantIf there’s anything that you should have learned over the past couple of month is, don’t publicly gloat when the market happens to move in the direction you want it to for a couple of days.
Give me a break. You gloated more than any “Internet supertrader” I’ve ever seen after your supposed Bear short the other day (conveniently announced after Bear collapsed).
I’m just adding some accountability to the Internet Supertraders around here. Kewp professed his undying love for SKF and Gold yesterday. Today? Gold is down 5% and SKF is down 3.5%.
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March 19, 2008 at 7:21 AM #173325
TheBreeze
ParticipantIf there’s anything that you should have learned over the past couple of month is, don’t publicly gloat when the market happens to move in the direction you want it to for a couple of days.
Give me a break. You gloated more than any “Internet supertrader” I’ve ever seen after your supposed Bear short the other day (conveniently announced after Bear collapsed).
I’m just adding some accountability to the Internet Supertraders around here. Kewp professed his undying love for SKF and Gold yesterday. Today? Gold is down 5% and SKF is down 3.5%.
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March 19, 2008 at 7:01 AM #173211
Coronita
ParticipantBreeze. See dick run, see dick jump. But what ever he does, don't be a dick.
If there's anything that you should have learned over the past couple of month is, don't publicly gloat when the market happens to move in the direction you want it to for a couple of days. You quite possibly might eat your words and cry the following days.
 As of now, markets are red. And your darling LEH is down a buck.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
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March 19, 2008 at 7:01 AM #173217
Coronita
ParticipantBreeze. See dick run, see dick jump. But what ever he does, don't be a dick.
If there's anything that you should have learned over the past couple of month is, don't publicly gloat when the market happens to move in the direction you want it to for a couple of days. You quite possibly might eat your words and cry the following days.
 As of now, markets are red. And your darling LEH is down a buck.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
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March 19, 2008 at 7:01 AM #173234
Coronita
ParticipantBreeze. See dick run, see dick jump. But what ever he does, don't be a dick.
If there's anything that you should have learned over the past couple of month is, don't publicly gloat when the market happens to move in the direction you want it to for a couple of days. You quite possibly might eat your words and cry the following days.
 As of now, markets are red. And your darling LEH is down a buck.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
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March 19, 2008 at 7:01 AM #173317
Coronita
ParticipantBreeze. See dick run, see dick jump. But what ever he does, don't be a dick.
If there's anything that you should have learned over the past couple of month is, don't publicly gloat when the market happens to move in the direction you want it to for a couple of days. You quite possibly might eat your words and cry the following days.
 As of now, markets are red. And your darling LEH is down a buck.
[img_assist|nid=5962|title=selfportrait|desc=|link=node|align=left|width=100|height=80]
—– Sour grapes for everyone!
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March 20, 2008 at 5:53 AM #173642
alarmclock
Participantgold bubble evidence — not an ad. They turned off their shopping cart and are only selling gold+silver over the phone.
———————–
Due to the OVERWHELMING demand for precious metals, our online ordering system has been unable to keep up with our customers’ needs. We have had to disable the APMEX ordering system to allow us ample time to upgrade our site to accommodate the increased demand. We apologize for this temporary problem. In the mean time, we will be accepting telephone orders for the following items only as we have them available:• 1 ounce Gold American Eagles
• 1 ounce Gold Canadian Maple Leafs
• 1 Ounce Gold Krugerrands
• 100 oz Silver Bars
• Misc Generic .999 Fine Silver
• 90% Coin SilverDuring this time, we will have a minimum order of $5,000. We regret we have had to make this drastic change to our ordering process and rest assured, we are working expeditiously to correct the problem. As soon as we have our new site up and running, we will notify you via e-mail when you can again place orders online.
You may contact us during normal business hours Monday – Friday 7:30 am – 4:00 pm cst.
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March 20, 2008 at 9:30 AM #173707
blahblahblah
Participantgold bubble evidence — not an ad. They turned off their shopping cart and are only selling gold+silver over the phone.
Is that evidence of a bubble or simply evidence that people are looking for a safe place to put their money? Even using the bogus government CPI numbers, we are way below the inflation-adjusted price of gold in 1980. IMO, gold is valued fairly right now. It’s certainly no bargain but it’s not ridiculous either. You’ll know there’s a gold bubble when you hear people at Starbucks talking about how much money they’re making on theirs, when you see ads for trading gold on margin on late-night TV, and when Time magazine has a cover story entitled — “America’s Love Affair With Gold!”
The big problem I see with gold is that the market is very easy for the big playaz to manipulate. There is even a special interest group dedicated to exposing the rigging of the gold market. Of course in the stock market we have the PPT rigging the game using OUR TAX DOLLARS. Gotta love this “free market” system.
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March 20, 2008 at 9:30 AM #174049
blahblahblah
Participantgold bubble evidence — not an ad. They turned off their shopping cart and are only selling gold+silver over the phone.
Is that evidence of a bubble or simply evidence that people are looking for a safe place to put their money? Even using the bogus government CPI numbers, we are way below the inflation-adjusted price of gold in 1980. IMO, gold is valued fairly right now. It’s certainly no bargain but it’s not ridiculous either. You’ll know there’s a gold bubble when you hear people at Starbucks talking about how much money they’re making on theirs, when you see ads for trading gold on margin on late-night TV, and when Time magazine has a cover story entitled — “America’s Love Affair With Gold!”
The big problem I see with gold is that the market is very easy for the big playaz to manipulate. There is even a special interest group dedicated to exposing the rigging of the gold market. Of course in the stock market we have the PPT rigging the game using OUR TAX DOLLARS. Gotta love this “free market” system.
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March 20, 2008 at 9:30 AM #174056
blahblahblah
Participantgold bubble evidence — not an ad. They turned off their shopping cart and are only selling gold+silver over the phone.
Is that evidence of a bubble or simply evidence that people are looking for a safe place to put their money? Even using the bogus government CPI numbers, we are way below the inflation-adjusted price of gold in 1980. IMO, gold is valued fairly right now. It’s certainly no bargain but it’s not ridiculous either. You’ll know there’s a gold bubble when you hear people at Starbucks talking about how much money they’re making on theirs, when you see ads for trading gold on margin on late-night TV, and when Time magazine has a cover story entitled — “America’s Love Affair With Gold!”
The big problem I see with gold is that the market is very easy for the big playaz to manipulate. There is even a special interest group dedicated to exposing the rigging of the gold market. Of course in the stock market we have the PPT rigging the game using OUR TAX DOLLARS. Gotta love this “free market” system.
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March 20, 2008 at 9:30 AM #174067
blahblahblah
Participantgold bubble evidence — not an ad. They turned off their shopping cart and are only selling gold+silver over the phone.
Is that evidence of a bubble or simply evidence that people are looking for a safe place to put their money? Even using the bogus government CPI numbers, we are way below the inflation-adjusted price of gold in 1980. IMO, gold is valued fairly right now. It’s certainly no bargain but it’s not ridiculous either. You’ll know there’s a gold bubble when you hear people at Starbucks talking about how much money they’re making on theirs, when you see ads for trading gold on margin on late-night TV, and when Time magazine has a cover story entitled — “America’s Love Affair With Gold!”
The big problem I see with gold is that the market is very easy for the big playaz to manipulate. There is even a special interest group dedicated to exposing the rigging of the gold market. Of course in the stock market we have the PPT rigging the game using OUR TAX DOLLARS. Gotta love this “free market” system.
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March 20, 2008 at 9:30 AM #174153
blahblahblah
Participantgold bubble evidence — not an ad. They turned off their shopping cart and are only selling gold+silver over the phone.
Is that evidence of a bubble or simply evidence that people are looking for a safe place to put their money? Even using the bogus government CPI numbers, we are way below the inflation-adjusted price of gold in 1980. IMO, gold is valued fairly right now. It’s certainly no bargain but it’s not ridiculous either. You’ll know there’s a gold bubble when you hear people at Starbucks talking about how much money they’re making on theirs, when you see ads for trading gold on margin on late-night TV, and when Time magazine has a cover story entitled — “America’s Love Affair With Gold!”
The big problem I see with gold is that the market is very easy for the big playaz to manipulate. There is even a special interest group dedicated to exposing the rigging of the gold market. Of course in the stock market we have the PPT rigging the game using OUR TAX DOLLARS. Gotta love this “free market” system.
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March 20, 2008 at 5:53 AM #173983
alarmclock
Participantgold bubble evidence — not an ad. They turned off their shopping cart and are only selling gold+silver over the phone.
———————–
Due to the OVERWHELMING demand for precious metals, our online ordering system has been unable to keep up with our customers’ needs. We have had to disable the APMEX ordering system to allow us ample time to upgrade our site to accommodate the increased demand. We apologize for this temporary problem. In the mean time, we will be accepting telephone orders for the following items only as we have them available:• 1 ounce Gold American Eagles
• 1 ounce Gold Canadian Maple Leafs
• 1 Ounce Gold Krugerrands
• 100 oz Silver Bars
• Misc Generic .999 Fine Silver
• 90% Coin SilverDuring this time, we will have a minimum order of $5,000. We regret we have had to make this drastic change to our ordering process and rest assured, we are working expeditiously to correct the problem. As soon as we have our new site up and running, we will notify you via e-mail when you can again place orders online.
You may contact us during normal business hours Monday – Friday 7:30 am – 4:00 pm cst.
-
March 20, 2008 at 5:53 AM #173991
alarmclock
Participantgold bubble evidence — not an ad. They turned off their shopping cart and are only selling gold+silver over the phone.
———————–
Due to the OVERWHELMING demand for precious metals, our online ordering system has been unable to keep up with our customers’ needs. We have had to disable the APMEX ordering system to allow us ample time to upgrade our site to accommodate the increased demand. We apologize for this temporary problem. In the mean time, we will be accepting telephone orders for the following items only as we have them available:• 1 ounce Gold American Eagles
• 1 ounce Gold Canadian Maple Leafs
• 1 Ounce Gold Krugerrands
• 100 oz Silver Bars
• Misc Generic .999 Fine Silver
• 90% Coin SilverDuring this time, we will have a minimum order of $5,000. We regret we have had to make this drastic change to our ordering process and rest assured, we are working expeditiously to correct the problem. As soon as we have our new site up and running, we will notify you via e-mail when you can again place orders online.
You may contact us during normal business hours Monday – Friday 7:30 am – 4:00 pm cst.
-
March 20, 2008 at 5:53 AM #174004
alarmclock
Participantgold bubble evidence — not an ad. They turned off their shopping cart and are only selling gold+silver over the phone.
———————–
Due to the OVERWHELMING demand for precious metals, our online ordering system has been unable to keep up with our customers’ needs. We have had to disable the APMEX ordering system to allow us ample time to upgrade our site to accommodate the increased demand. We apologize for this temporary problem. In the mean time, we will be accepting telephone orders for the following items only as we have them available:• 1 ounce Gold American Eagles
• 1 ounce Gold Canadian Maple Leafs
• 1 Ounce Gold Krugerrands
• 100 oz Silver Bars
• Misc Generic .999 Fine Silver
• 90% Coin SilverDuring this time, we will have a minimum order of $5,000. We regret we have had to make this drastic change to our ordering process and rest assured, we are working expeditiously to correct the problem. As soon as we have our new site up and running, we will notify you via e-mail when you can again place orders online.
You may contact us during normal business hours Monday – Friday 7:30 am – 4:00 pm cst.
-
March 20, 2008 at 5:53 AM #174089
alarmclock
Participantgold bubble evidence — not an ad. They turned off their shopping cart and are only selling gold+silver over the phone.
———————–
Due to the OVERWHELMING demand for precious metals, our online ordering system has been unable to keep up with our customers’ needs. We have had to disable the APMEX ordering system to allow us ample time to upgrade our site to accommodate the increased demand. We apologize for this temporary problem. In the mean time, we will be accepting telephone orders for the following items only as we have them available:• 1 ounce Gold American Eagles
• 1 ounce Gold Canadian Maple Leafs
• 1 Ounce Gold Krugerrands
• 100 oz Silver Bars
• Misc Generic .999 Fine Silver
• 90% Coin SilverDuring this time, we will have a minimum order of $5,000. We regret we have had to make this drastic change to our ordering process and rest assured, we are working expeditiously to correct the problem. As soon as we have our new site up and running, we will notify you via e-mail when you can again place orders online.
You may contact us during normal business hours Monday – Friday 7:30 am – 4:00 pm cst.
-
March 20, 2008 at 7:17 AM #173652
tugg49
Participant85 dollar oil in April…get ready for the open markets to do their thing. This is gonna be a great correction! Uncharted territory for everything….But the oil correction is imminent.
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March 20, 2008 at 7:17 AM #173992
tugg49
Participant85 dollar oil in April…get ready for the open markets to do their thing. This is gonna be a great correction! Uncharted territory for everything….But the oil correction is imminent.
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March 20, 2008 at 7:17 AM #174001
tugg49
Participant85 dollar oil in April…get ready for the open markets to do their thing. This is gonna be a great correction! Uncharted territory for everything….But the oil correction is imminent.
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March 20, 2008 at 7:17 AM #174012
tugg49
Participant85 dollar oil in April…get ready for the open markets to do their thing. This is gonna be a great correction! Uncharted territory for everything….But the oil correction is imminent.
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March 20, 2008 at 7:17 AM #174098
tugg49
Participant85 dollar oil in April…get ready for the open markets to do their thing. This is gonna be a great correction! Uncharted territory for everything….But the oil correction is imminent.
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March 20, 2008 at 10:00 AM #173732
alarmclock
Participantconcho-
My apmex posting is trying to make the argument that buying gold is going mainstream… I don’t really know anything about the company in particular, but it looks like a “retail” outlet (to me). However they are listed on the first page of google for a variety of gold + silver keywords… so I am making a few assumptions
1) they really are experiencing an n-fold increase in business
2) they are focused on a retail level (small lots) to many buyersI conclude the retail demand for gold is increasing because… everyone thinks that everyone else is getting in on it, so they should do, ergo bubble
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March 20, 2008 at 10:08 AM #173742
blahblahblah
ParticipantI see your point alarmclock, this could be the beginning of a bubble. Many of us saw evidence of a housing bubble here in SD back in 2002-2003. Of course it ran for a couple of years after that and is only now beginning to deflate. If gold is getting bubbly I think we are closer to the beginning than the end. This is NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE of course!
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March 20, 2008 at 10:50 AM #173782
Omega Point
ParticipantIMO, gold and oil are declining because the general feeling is the Fed has put out the fires, at least in the short-term. Because of this, people are moving out of gold and oil and back into the stock market. Once this perception passes and people realize that the financial crisis is not past us, gold and oil will move back up.
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March 20, 2008 at 2:05 PM #173866
Eugene
ParticipantGold is declining because it is overbought. It is overbought because people were afraid that the Fed would run printing presses at full power (figuratively speaking), devaluing the dollar. It wouldn’t be anywhere near $1000 if not for “investors”. Natural supply-demand equilibrium price (without the likes of GLD adding 200 tons of gold to their vaults every year) is most likely below $750.
75 bp cut and wording of the recent meeting press release change these expectations.
BTW did you see what’s happening to agricultural commodities? DBA and RJA are down 15% in a week.
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March 20, 2008 at 2:05 PM #174210
Eugene
ParticipantGold is declining because it is overbought. It is overbought because people were afraid that the Fed would run printing presses at full power (figuratively speaking), devaluing the dollar. It wouldn’t be anywhere near $1000 if not for “investors”. Natural supply-demand equilibrium price (without the likes of GLD adding 200 tons of gold to their vaults every year) is most likely below $750.
75 bp cut and wording of the recent meeting press release change these expectations.
BTW did you see what’s happening to agricultural commodities? DBA and RJA are down 15% in a week.
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March 20, 2008 at 2:05 PM #174217
Eugene
ParticipantGold is declining because it is overbought. It is overbought because people were afraid that the Fed would run printing presses at full power (figuratively speaking), devaluing the dollar. It wouldn’t be anywhere near $1000 if not for “investors”. Natural supply-demand equilibrium price (without the likes of GLD adding 200 tons of gold to their vaults every year) is most likely below $750.
75 bp cut and wording of the recent meeting press release change these expectations.
BTW did you see what’s happening to agricultural commodities? DBA and RJA are down 15% in a week.
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March 20, 2008 at 2:05 PM #174226
Eugene
ParticipantGold is declining because it is overbought. It is overbought because people were afraid that the Fed would run printing presses at full power (figuratively speaking), devaluing the dollar. It wouldn’t be anywhere near $1000 if not for “investors”. Natural supply-demand equilibrium price (without the likes of GLD adding 200 tons of gold to their vaults every year) is most likely below $750.
75 bp cut and wording of the recent meeting press release change these expectations.
BTW did you see what’s happening to agricultural commodities? DBA and RJA are down 15% in a week.
-
March 20, 2008 at 2:05 PM #174313
Eugene
ParticipantGold is declining because it is overbought. It is overbought because people were afraid that the Fed would run printing presses at full power (figuratively speaking), devaluing the dollar. It wouldn’t be anywhere near $1000 if not for “investors”. Natural supply-demand equilibrium price (without the likes of GLD adding 200 tons of gold to their vaults every year) is most likely below $750.
75 bp cut and wording of the recent meeting press release change these expectations.
BTW did you see what’s happening to agricultural commodities? DBA and RJA are down 15% in a week.
-
March 20, 2008 at 10:50 AM #174124
Omega Point
ParticipantIMO, gold and oil are declining because the general feeling is the Fed has put out the fires, at least in the short-term. Because of this, people are moving out of gold and oil and back into the stock market. Once this perception passes and people realize that the financial crisis is not past us, gold and oil will move back up.
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March 20, 2008 at 10:50 AM #174131
Omega Point
ParticipantIMO, gold and oil are declining because the general feeling is the Fed has put out the fires, at least in the short-term. Because of this, people are moving out of gold and oil and back into the stock market. Once this perception passes and people realize that the financial crisis is not past us, gold and oil will move back up.
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March 20, 2008 at 10:50 AM #174142
Omega Point
ParticipantIMO, gold and oil are declining because the general feeling is the Fed has put out the fires, at least in the short-term. Because of this, people are moving out of gold and oil and back into the stock market. Once this perception passes and people realize that the financial crisis is not past us, gold and oil will move back up.
-
March 20, 2008 at 10:50 AM #174227
Omega Point
ParticipantIMO, gold and oil are declining because the general feeling is the Fed has put out the fires, at least in the short-term. Because of this, people are moving out of gold and oil and back into the stock market. Once this perception passes and people realize that the financial crisis is not past us, gold and oil will move back up.
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March 20, 2008 at 10:08 AM #174083
blahblahblah
ParticipantI see your point alarmclock, this could be the beginning of a bubble. Many of us saw evidence of a housing bubble here in SD back in 2002-2003. Of course it ran for a couple of years after that and is only now beginning to deflate. If gold is getting bubbly I think we are closer to the beginning than the end. This is NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE of course!
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March 20, 2008 at 10:08 AM #174092
blahblahblah
ParticipantI see your point alarmclock, this could be the beginning of a bubble. Many of us saw evidence of a housing bubble here in SD back in 2002-2003. Of course it ran for a couple of years after that and is only now beginning to deflate. If gold is getting bubbly I think we are closer to the beginning than the end. This is NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE of course!
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March 20, 2008 at 10:08 AM #174102
blahblahblah
ParticipantI see your point alarmclock, this could be the beginning of a bubble. Many of us saw evidence of a housing bubble here in SD back in 2002-2003. Of course it ran for a couple of years after that and is only now beginning to deflate. If gold is getting bubbly I think we are closer to the beginning than the end. This is NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE of course!
-
March 20, 2008 at 10:08 AM #174188
blahblahblah
ParticipantI see your point alarmclock, this could be the beginning of a bubble. Many of us saw evidence of a housing bubble here in SD back in 2002-2003. Of course it ran for a couple of years after that and is only now beginning to deflate. If gold is getting bubbly I think we are closer to the beginning than the end. This is NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE of course!
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March 20, 2008 at 7:06 PM #174005
equalizer
ParticipantThat ad is just marketing BS used to create false sense of demand. Simply brilliant. I bet they price 10% over par too.
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March 20, 2008 at 7:06 PM #174345
equalizer
ParticipantThat ad is just marketing BS used to create false sense of demand. Simply brilliant. I bet they price 10% over par too.
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March 20, 2008 at 7:06 PM #174351
equalizer
ParticipantThat ad is just marketing BS used to create false sense of demand. Simply brilliant. I bet they price 10% over par too.
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March 20, 2008 at 7:06 PM #174361
equalizer
ParticipantThat ad is just marketing BS used to create false sense of demand. Simply brilliant. I bet they price 10% over par too.
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March 20, 2008 at 7:06 PM #174448
equalizer
ParticipantThat ad is just marketing BS used to create false sense of demand. Simply brilliant. I bet they price 10% over par too.
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March 20, 2008 at 10:00 AM #174073
alarmclock
Participantconcho-
My apmex posting is trying to make the argument that buying gold is going mainstream… I don’t really know anything about the company in particular, but it looks like a “retail” outlet (to me). However they are listed on the first page of google for a variety of gold + silver keywords… so I am making a few assumptions
1) they really are experiencing an n-fold increase in business
2) they are focused on a retail level (small lots) to many buyersI conclude the retail demand for gold is increasing because… everyone thinks that everyone else is getting in on it, so they should do, ergo bubble
-
March 20, 2008 at 10:00 AM #174082
alarmclock
Participantconcho-
My apmex posting is trying to make the argument that buying gold is going mainstream… I don’t really know anything about the company in particular, but it looks like a “retail” outlet (to me). However they are listed on the first page of google for a variety of gold + silver keywords… so I am making a few assumptions
1) they really are experiencing an n-fold increase in business
2) they are focused on a retail level (small lots) to many buyersI conclude the retail demand for gold is increasing because… everyone thinks that everyone else is getting in on it, so they should do, ergo bubble
-
March 20, 2008 at 10:00 AM #174091
alarmclock
Participantconcho-
My apmex posting is trying to make the argument that buying gold is going mainstream… I don’t really know anything about the company in particular, but it looks like a “retail” outlet (to me). However they are listed on the first page of google for a variety of gold + silver keywords… so I am making a few assumptions
1) they really are experiencing an n-fold increase in business
2) they are focused on a retail level (small lots) to many buyersI conclude the retail demand for gold is increasing because… everyone thinks that everyone else is getting in on it, so they should do, ergo bubble
-
March 20, 2008 at 10:00 AM #174178
alarmclock
Participantconcho-
My apmex posting is trying to make the argument that buying gold is going mainstream… I don’t really know anything about the company in particular, but it looks like a “retail” outlet (to me). However they are listed on the first page of google for a variety of gold + silver keywords… so I am making a few assumptions
1) they really are experiencing an n-fold increase in business
2) they are focused on a retail level (small lots) to many buyersI conclude the retail demand for gold is increasing because… everyone thinks that everyone else is getting in on it, so they should do, ergo bubble
-
March 20, 2008 at 12:39 PM #173851
Arraya
ParticipantKeep piling into gold when it’s near an all-time high and shorting the market as it bounces off the bottom, piggs.
Its not nearly at an all time high, inflation adjusted it was close to $2000 before.
Oil on the other hand did surpass it’s all time high, but there is supply side justification for that.
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March 20, 2008 at 12:39 PM #174195
Arraya
ParticipantKeep piling into gold when it’s near an all-time high and shorting the market as it bounces off the bottom, piggs.
Its not nearly at an all time high, inflation adjusted it was close to $2000 before.
Oil on the other hand did surpass it’s all time high, but there is supply side justification for that.
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March 20, 2008 at 12:39 PM #174202
Arraya
ParticipantKeep piling into gold when it’s near an all-time high and shorting the market as it bounces off the bottom, piggs.
Its not nearly at an all time high, inflation adjusted it was close to $2000 before.
Oil on the other hand did surpass it’s all time high, but there is supply side justification for that.
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March 20, 2008 at 12:39 PM #174211
Arraya
ParticipantKeep piling into gold when it’s near an all-time high and shorting the market as it bounces off the bottom, piggs.
Its not nearly at an all time high, inflation adjusted it was close to $2000 before.
Oil on the other hand did surpass it’s all time high, but there is supply side justification for that.
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March 20, 2008 at 12:39 PM #174298
Arraya
ParticipantKeep piling into gold when it’s near an all-time high and shorting the market as it bounces off the bottom, piggs.
Its not nearly at an all time high, inflation adjusted it was close to $2000 before.
Oil on the other hand did surpass it’s all time high, but there is supply side justification for that.
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