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Thread: Harry Dent vs Mike Maloney on the price of gold

  1. #11
    Platinum Carl's Avatar
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    Re: Harry Dent vs Mike Maloney on the price of gold

    Quote Originally Posted by Bigjon View Post
    You keep talking about this collapse of credit, but I have not heard any reason for it to collapse. The cop in charge is the bankers and they don't seem to care much about standards in accounting. The Fed has an unlimited checkbook and buys the bankers instruments at the marked up value they put on them.

    What will force the Fed to sell on the market?
    What the Fed does or doesn't do, is irrelevant.

    All it will take is for people/businesses/nations to stop accepting U.S. credit (a promise to pay) and demand cash payment.

    Banks don't have the cash (none of them do) default, credit as currency ceases to exist as such and transforms into what it always was, bank debt.
    The only ones who benefit from the conflation of money and credit are the issuers of credit with no money.

    ***

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    Unobtanium Serpo's Avatar
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    Re: Harry Dent vs Mike Maloney on the price of gold

    For gold to be priced a lot less than the price of removing it from the ground is difficult to comprehend............


    telling people gold will drop to one quarter the cost of production......

    Judging by recent earnings reports, the average all-in sustaining costs for the industry fall between US$1,100 and US$1,200 an ounce. In other words, margins in the gold sector are incredibly tight for all but the top-tier mines.
    http://business.financialpost.com/20...ounce-of-gold/


    Gold Prices Below $1,200 Could Mean Production Cutbacks: World Gold Council

    http://www.ibtimes.com/gold-prices-below-1200-could-mean-production-cutbacks-world-gold-council-1553008



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    Re: Harry Dent vs Mike Maloney on the price of gold

    Quote Originally Posted by Carl View Post
    All it will take is for people/businesses/nations to stop accepting U.S. credit (a promise to pay) and demand cash payment.
    I think understand what you're saying--businesses will fear that accepting credit cards will result in them not being paid, so they won't accept them.

    But have you ever watched the crowd at your local big-box store (Walmart, Target, etc.)? Most people pay with credit cards. I was one of the last holdouts at the grocery store, preferring to pay cash because it just seemed wrong to buy groceries on credit. (One day the checkout clerk just stared at my proffered dollars for a second before she recognized them and said, "Oh! Cash.") So won't all those businesses fear loosing almost all their business if they don't accept the preferred mechanism of payment?

    Back in the '80s, Exxon gave a discount for cash customers. That offended me so much that I boycotted Exxon. I guess a lot of other people did too, because I haven't seen any gas station or store give a discount for cash in a long time. Today, PM dealers are about the only ones that don't fear chasing away credit customers.

    And an AWFUL lot of stuff is bought on-line at Amazon. How can they reject credit cards?

    But in the end, how would this affect the price of gold?

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    Re: Harry Dent vs Mike Maloney on the price of gold

    Quote Originally Posted by KenJackson View Post
    I think understand what you're saying--businesses will fear that accepting credit cards will result in them not being paid, so they won't accept them.
    But in the end, how would this affect the price of gold?
    The fall of the dollar is the obliteration of credit as currency, no one's credit will be accepted, anywhere. Demand for payment will be made on all outstanding debts, Wall Street and the banks will be the first to fail while trying to sell everything that isn't nailed down, to include gold, desperately seeking cash liquidity. They will be followed by governments and then everything else. Maybe two, three days max, their/our world as they/we've known it, will end.
    The only ones who benefit from the conflation of money and credit are the issuers of credit with no money.

    ***

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    Unobtanium gunDriller's Avatar
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    Re: Harry Dent vs Mike Maloney on the price of gold

    Quote Originally Posted by Carl View Post
    They will be followed by governments and then everything else. Maybe two, three days max, their/our world as they/we've known it, will end.
    The world I knew has ended. Seems to have happened around 9-11.

    But my Amex card still works.
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    Iridium Bigjon's Avatar
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    Re: Harry Dent vs Mike Maloney on the price of gold

    Quote Originally Posted by Carl View Post
    The fall of the dollar is the obliteration of credit as currency, no one's credit will be accepted, anywhere. Demand for payment will be made on all outstanding debts, Wall Street and the banks will be the first to fail while trying to sell everything that isn't nailed down, to include gold, desperately seeking cash liquidity. They will be followed by governments and then everything else. Maybe two, three days max, their/our world as they/we've known it, will end.
    There have been campaigns to end the Fed with this sort of call for support by many others in the past and it has never happened.

    It won't happen your way either.

    I think the only way that the Fed is dumped is for a competing currency that is issued that presents a better value. Namely a gold backed currency out of the BRICS. Which is gold positive news. To the moon baby!!

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    Re: Harry Dent vs Mike Maloney on the price of gold

    Quote Originally Posted by KenJackson View Post
    But in the end, how would this affect the price of gold?
    Quote Originally Posted by Carl View Post
    Demand for payment will be made on all outstanding debts, Wall Street and the banks will be the first to fail while trying to sell everything that isn't nailed down, to include gold, desperately seeking cash liquidity.
    OK, in that scenario, people and companies that own gold AND are in debt will sell their gold to pay their suddenly-due debts. There's some sense to that.

    But how much gold is owned by entities that are in debt? Is this amount of gold bigger than the increase in demand that will result from nervousness? Is it larger than even China's voracious appetite for gold?

    I can only see this causing a little dip. The predictions of a huge increase in the value of PMs seem inescapable.

    But unanimity of opinion makes me a little nervous on top of my nervousness about the coming crisis, so I welcome your alternative view, Carl.

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    Re: Harry Dent vs Mike Maloney on the price of gold

    Is Gold Crash Proof This Time Around?

    I’ve been receiving quite a few emails regarding the topic of Gold and how it will perform if another Crash hits. The following are my thoughts on this matter.

    The first thing that needs to be said is that IF we have another systemic meltdown like that of Autumn 2008, Gold will likely go down along with everything else. There are simply too many big players (hedge funds, investment banks, etc) with heavy exposure to Gold who would be forced to liquidate their positions during a systemic collapse.

    I know this is not what the Gold bugs want to hear, but during systemic Crises, just about every investment on the planet plunges while the US Dollar and Treasuries rally. Of course, this time around if another 2008-type event hits, it will undoubtedly involve or be focused on sovereign debt. So this raises the potential that Treasuries, particularly those on the long-end of the yield curve, could be hammered as well as all other assets outside the Dollar. This is worth keeping in mind for those who view Treasuries as a safe haven.

    So if we go into a 2008-type event, Gold will fall. It will likely fall much less than other assets (stocks and industrial commodities), but it will still go down at least at first. This forecast is confirmed by the market action in 2008 as well as the market collapse from April 2010-July 2010. Both times Gold took a hit, but both times it came back quickly.

    So if you’re heavily exposed to Gold, you’re going to need to think “big picture” or have a very strong stomach when the market Crashes.

    Now, let’s take a look at the charts.

    For starters, the number one metric you need to focus on in terms of determining Gold’s market action is the 34-week exponential moving average. Since the Gold bull market began in 2001, this has been THE support line for Gold.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/defau...C%208-10-1.gif

    As you can see, Gold has only broken below this line ONCE in the last ten years and that was during the 2008 systemic collapse. So take a note of this line and always watch where Gold trades relative to it.

    Indeed, a significant break below this line that DOESN’T occur during a system Crash would be a MAJOR warning that the Gold bull market is in trouble. Remember, the ONLY time we took this line out before was during the systemic collapse in 2008. So a break below it WITHOUT a Crisis would be VERY bearish.

    And if Gold breaks below this line on its own (without a Crisis) and then fails to reclaim it… well, then it would be SERIOUS time to reevaluate the Gold bull market story.

    Because of its significance as THE support line for the Gold bull market, the 34-week exponential moving average also serves as an excellent gauge for determining when Gold needs to take a breather or correct.

    Indeed, anytime Gold has stretched too far away from this line to the upside, it has usually staged a pretty sharp reversal to re-test this line. I’ve circled the most significant episodes of this from the last seven years in red on the chart below.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/defau...C%208-10-2.gif

    These are the BIG picture gauges and items to take note of: the points to remember in terms of determining where Gold is in its bull market and whether it’s an asset class you want to “buy and hold.”

    Now let’s move into the more intermediate gauges and items relevant to determining Gold’s action from a trading perspective in the past and today.

    Gold’s bull market of the last ten years has largely taken place within the confines of several very clear upward trading channels. Indeed, each “leg up” has featured Gold breaking above the upper trend-line of a given channel at which point said upper trend-line became the lower trend-line for the next trading channel (see below).

    http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/defau...C%208-10-3.gif

    As you can see, the first “leg up” in Gold’s bull market took place from 2001 to late 2005. At that point Gold broke out of its old trading channel and entered its “next leg up” which took place from 2006-until early 2008 when the Bear Stearns crisis blasted Gold into yet another trading range.

    The systemic Crash in Autumn 2008 brought Gold back down into a former range (the only time this happened in the last 10 years), but the precious metal bounced back quickly. It DID have some difficulty breaking into its final “leg up” and staying there this time around, but by mid-2009, Gold was again on a tear entering its highest trading range yet where it remains today.

    You’ll note that the clear significance of these various trend lines have made for some great trading: virtually every test of a trend line to the upside or downside made for a good exit or entry point for a short-term trade.

    As I write this, Gold is trading in a well-defined range between $1,150 and $1,300. Going by Gold’s action of the last 10 years, we could see the precious metal continue to trade in this range for a while without breaking out either way. This, of course, assumes we don’t have another systemic meltdown AND that the Gold bull market has plenty of more room to run.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/defau...C%208-10-4.gif

    The major indicators that could nullify this forecast are:

    1) A break below the lower trend line WITHOUT a Crash
    2) A break above the upper trend line that held

    Regarding #1, if Gold broke below its lower trend line without a systemic “episode,” it would represent the first time Gold broke to a lower trading range without systemic risk. That would be a MAJOR red flag to watch out for if you’re a Gold bull.

    Conversely, a significant break above $1,300 would signal yet another “leg up” has begun and would a MAJOR sign that the Gold bull market has plenty of more room to run.

    A final significant move to watch for would be if Gold were to collapse into a lower trading range as a result of a Crash and NOT break out again. Even during the 2008 disaster, Gold was back to re-testing its upper trend line within a few months. So if another systemic Crash hits and Gold doesn’t bounce back quickly that’s ALSO a major warning sign that the Gold bull market is in trouble.

    We’ve covered a lot of ground here, so I’ll close this article by listing the main points of this article:

    1) “buy and hold” Gold investors MUST focus on the 34-week exponential moving average (currently $1,158). A break below this level WITHOUT a Crash is BAD NEWS.
    2) Traders should focus on Gold’s trend lines for determining entry and exit points. Currently the trend lines are $1,300 on the upside and $1,150 on the downside.

    A break below $1,150 WITHOUT a Crash would be a MAJOR warning to the bulls. So would a break below $1,150 WITH a Crash that wasn’t quickly followed by a strong bounce back and re-test of the upper trend line.

    Good Investing!

    Graham Summers

    PS. to get more in depth market analysis and find out about a proprietary "buy and hold" trading trigger that has caught both major "legs up" in Gold AND avoided the2008 Crash, you can join me at www.gainspainscapital.com.
    The only ones who benefit from the conflation of money and credit are the issuers of credit with no money.

    ***

  10. #19
    Unobtanium EE_'s Avatar
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    Re: Harry Dent vs Mike Maloney on the price of gold

    There are simply too many big players (hedge funds, investment banks, etc) with heavy exposure to Gold who would be forced to liquidate their positions during a systemic collapse.
    The only thing I'll add, why would hedge funds, investment banks, Wall Street have heavy exposure to gold?
    Watch CNBC...they all hate gold and always say gold is a losing proposition.
    That only leaves central banks that are holding gold. So is the author saying central banks will sell gold into the next crash?
    DON'T TAKE THE VACCINE!

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  11. #20
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    Re: Harry Dent vs Mike Maloney on the price of gold

    Quote Originally Posted by EE_ View Post
    The only thing I'll add, why would hedge funds, investment banks, Wall Street have heavy exposure to gold?
    Watch CNBC...they all hate gold and always say gold is a losing proposition.
    That only leaves central banks that are holding gold. So is the author saying central banks will sell gold into the next crash?
    CNBC, really? You're joking, right?

    Central banks don't own gold.
    The only ones who benefit from the conflation of money and credit are the issuers of credit with no money.

    ***

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