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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Golconda who wrote (59094)12/17/2009 6:45:23 PM
From: Box-By-The-Riviera™  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 218160
 
are you spamming?

does TJ need to break one of your legs?



To: Golconda who wrote (59094)12/17/2009 10:50:51 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218160
 
files.e2ma.net
issues blowing in the wind, and we must be afraid, of being on board as well as being left behind :0)

we must mineralize to mortarize, and then mortarize to mineralize, and so eventually end up with all that we can see, touch, and count, brick by brick, different kinds of bricks, but all bricks, some yielding, some enduring, all solid



To: Golconda who wrote (59094)12/18/2009 4:43:55 AM
From: Box-By-The-Riviera™  Respond to of 218160
 
there are bids out there that did not exist during the 70's period, which may well account for the more gentle corrections of which you take note comparatively speaking.

additionally, it is a bull market in all major currencies this time, with clearly distinguishable fundamental circumstances......i.e. not as much a speculation, as it was then.

it is not yet a retail market, very unlike the 70's period. if anything, retail is selling its gold to pawn-like storefronts. the 70's speculation was akin to the inflating bull period earlier in this decade, of which most occured, not in gold, but in places like tech stocks. retail is selling because the rest of their asset base has deflated in both net terms and in drying up free liquidity; i.e. they need cash now. they cannot wait for the time it will take for the inflationary machinations of the centrals banks to reach them, and thereby alleviate their distress, of course, ironically in the end, at the expense of the very currency they need and ultimately to the upward detriment of the prices they will be least able to afford. the 70's crowd is not in the gold market, yet. this is further evidenced by ever diminishing numbers in jewelry demand concurrent with the rise in the price of bullion and other prescious metals. thus far, it has been a distinctly investment driven market this time almost devoid of speculative fever on a comparative basis.

i would like to see the parabola you mentioned. do you have a chart illustrating it?

thanks in advance.