Showing posts with label dow jones industrial average. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dow jones industrial average. Show all posts

Monday, July 19, 2010

Gold and the broad markets

With gold trading at U$1180 an ounce right now, down maybe $80 from the recent top seen in late June, it's been refreshingly fun to listen to the usual suspects telling us how gold is dead and we should have listened to them and we're all gonna die and all that jazz.

I mean, these are the same people that have been warning us all off gold for the last few years and I bet you're glad you listened to them and piled into their stockpicks, eh?


DYODD, dude.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Reminiscences of stock operators


The year is 2015, the scene a bar in Manhattan downtown:

Broker 1: Hey dude, remember that Goldman SEC thing back in 2010?
Broker 2: Yeah, that was wild!
Broker 1: Damn, you remember how all those bloggers were screaming about the end of Goldman?
Broker 2: Hahaha, Freakin' idiots! The suit was going to clean up WallSt or something, right?
Broker 1: HA! Yeah! All that contagion, and a mountain of lawsuits or something..HA!
Broker 2: I just strolled in on Monday morning and bought the fuck out of the market.
Broker 1: Of course...you just had to...... So obvious. Another beer?
Broker 2: Sure.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Dow Jones and Sesame Street


This episode was brought to you by the letter "W" and the number 9,077.60. It was a production of the Bernanke Television Workshop in conjunction with CNBC.

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Silver is a base metal

That's what this chart is saying.

I find this chart enlightening on several levels and an excellent roadmap for trading the near future. Using GLD as a proxy for gold and SLV as a proxy for silver, we can clearly see that silver performed as a classic precious metal asset class for a long time. Then with the onset of crisis that notion was blown away, silver immediately stopped tracking gold and dropped with the industrial indices (I'm using the Dow as proxy, as it's not called the Dow Jones Industrial Average for nothing).

The crossover drop happened just before the big swoon in the broad markets at the end of September 2008. Was silver the canary in the coalmine? I don't know about that one, but 20/20 hindsight makes it an intruiging thought.


It also explains, without recourse to silverbug paranoia and all that tosh about the PTB manipulating every given moment of our financial life, just why silver dropped as hard as it did when it did. Put simply, the market has rejected the notion that silver is an asset class...for the time being, at least. I more than suspect that silver's behaviour has a lot to do with this previously published chart that demonstrates the big rise in modern silver production.

This in turn is due to the fact that a large portion of modern-day world silver production is as a by-product of other metals, notably zinc and lead (and no doubts that they're base metals).

So what does this tell us? In my view it tells us that we can throw out the gold:silver ratio for the time being, as silver and the miners that produce silver will perform as a direct function of the broad economy. Or in other words, silver is operating as a classic commodity. Stick the Ag price up on the kitco basemetals page and strike it from the main website page as of this moment.

Also, taken with the chart above that shows SLV compared to a cross-section basket of silver miners (PAAS, SSRI, FVI.v, FN.to and GPR.to), it's clear that the silver miners offer significant leverage to the metal going forward (having been punished more severely from late September onwards).

Bottom line: Rules to trade silver as of today:

1) Watch the dow and forget about the price of gold. Silver is not tracking gold, it is tracking the broad markets. Silverbugs won't like the idea of that, but since when have they been right about the market anyway?

2) If you feel there is significant upside in silver the metal, trade the silver stocks. They will give you more bang per buck, at least for the time being.

The final question to be asked is; "What would make silver 'cross back', leave the industrials behind and allow it to start tracking gold again?" That's something that is worth thinking about for the medium term, but I really feel we have enough on our plates trying to survive on a week-to-week basis for the time being. Any suggestions for an answer to this part of the riddle gratefully received.

DYODD, dude

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

The Dow: excellent news


There's only another 19 days worth of 500 point drops before we bottom out.

In other news, I don't care what the goldbugs say, I'll be taking profits on GLD and SLV either today or very soon (depends how the day pans out).

Keep it safe, people.