vincecate wrote:Higgenbotham wrote: I would suspect the Chinese have intercepted Fed communications and know a takedown of the metals is coming.
I really don't think Bernanke cares about gold prices. Greenspan thought they were something to take notice of, but I don't think Bernanke has that view. Anything I can think of for Bernanke to lower gold and silver would crash the stock market. Bernanke really wants the stock market up. Can you see something that he could do to help stocks while hurting gold and silver?
My intent with my S&P puts and SLV calls is to be positioned so I can win no matter what Bernanke does, print or not print.
Just some random thoughts:
Once the Fed lost control of gold the game changed to one of pretending that high gold prices don't hurt. It's like when a management person who has lost control of their union says grievances don't hurt when in reality they hurt really bad. When a management has control they will openly talk about their great grievance record and grievance avoidance.
Once control is lost the best remedy is to use something akin to electroshock therapy. The specs are lulled into complacency, then administered a huge shock. Then the Central Banker can smirk and say you didn't really want to be long the metals, did you? And are you sure you want to be short stocks? Anybody left on this forum who was short in 2009? Didn't think so.
There are two things about printed money and paper markets that I keep foremost in my mind. One is that gold is a paper market and unlimited short gold positions can be printed up just like unlimited dollars can be printed up. The second part of that is printed money can be levered up and used to sell any exchange traded thing that can be bought with printed money. Knowing that, why would anybody suppose that the gold and silver futures markets were established just a few months after Bretton Woods was abandoned in August 1971?
Silver made its 2008 high with the March Bear Stearns blowout and that high was not recovered until after QE2 was announced. Stocks moved up against the silver downtrend for 2 months after silver's 2008 high was posted. So silver bulls had better be hoping for a QE3 because if they don't get one this could be the end of the bull market in silver.
I have a friend who has never been long silver before but tonight (yes, tonight!) he is insisting to me that the trend in silver is up and he wants to get long. Hated to inform him, but the trend in silver is no longer up and won't be unless this week's high is taken out. This is the same guy who bought beachfront property in 2005 while ignoring similar warnings. I would seriously consider that a sign of an impending bear market in silver.
While the periphery breaks down rather slowly at first, the capital cities of the hegemon should collapse suddenly and violently.