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Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: cAPSLOCK who wrote (20719)10/5/1998 3:51:00 PM
From: butkus  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116825
 
Gold is kaput! Maybe... Oil glut continues. Too many goods chasing too few buyers. Buyers loosing purchasing power. Gold can be produced for $200 per oz. Dollar will not melt soon - drop, but not melt. Hedge funds short, maybe. Panic buy into gold, maybe. Not enough yet, however, to brush aside the deflation. When one or both begin to exercise more strength gold could overtake and overwhelm the deflation that is holding the lid on.



To: cAPSLOCK who wrote (20719)10/5/1998 8:09:00 PM
From: Serge Collins  Read Replies (7) | Respond to of 116825
 
Gold is kaput!

The statement says it all but for those who like their t's crossed and their i's dotted, I offer the following.

It is clear, or at least it should be by now, that gold is finished as a hedge against anything, including economic turmoil. It's also clear that the commodity, having been demonitized, is now merely an industrial commodity. It doesn't pay interest, it has no practical use other than the traditional ancient usages, you can't eat it and it no longer even holds any sort of magical allure.

It will continue to be used to make jewelry, coins, Olympic medals, china, pens and other assorted objects of affection but as a backing for currency or a safe haven from the ills of the world, gold is no longer, and will more than likely never again be, a metal to protect your wealth.

This is now quite clear and the news that the IMF wants to sell its reserves to raise cash illustrates the dilemma facing gold. Gold bugs want the price to go up but every time it does, it becomes an opportunity to liquidate was has become an antiquated repository of wealth. Today people want to sell their gold to turn it into something of value, a sort of reverse alchemy.



To: cAPSLOCK who wrote (20719)10/6/1998 10:16:00 AM
From: craig shipman  Respond to of 116825
 
*** OT ***>no more knowledge than betting on the 'Don't Pass'
line.<

FWIW, betting on the "Don't Pass" line, with full odds, has the best odds (of winning) of any bet in the house, even slightly better than the "Pass" line with odds. Even so, odds always favor the house (unless you can count into a six-deck shoe). ;-)

Good Chance,

Craig