tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-53246864840716464.post2139391959261647663..comments2024-02-29T00:46:38.800-08:00Comments on Washingtons Blog: Is Gold In a Bubble ... And If So, How Much Further Can It Rise Before It Pops?Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-53246864840716464.post-10038848663623503182010-11-16T04:27:29.084-08:002010-11-16T04:27:29.084-08:00gerryhiles/keyhoti1 said...
> I've always ...gerryhiles/keyhoti1 said...<br /><br />> I've always found it amusing that gold is said to be "real money", or "store of wealth", or whatever, but riddle me this.<br /><br />> Let's say we remove the dollar, or any other "paper money", how much is gold then worth?<br /><br />Gold is valuable in and of itself due to its rare nature. Historically, 1 oz of gold would buy you one of the best suits, shoes and tie, 20 ounces of gold would buy you a nice car, and 100 ounces would buy you a decent house. At $2000/oz, that'd be $2,000, $40,000, and $200,000.<br /><br />Not that far off, if you ask me.HopeSeekr of xMulehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06181000583310435221noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-53246864840716464.post-74304815538261772402010-11-15T14:51:32.009-08:002010-11-15T14:51:32.009-08:00Well I can't afford to buy gold, or silver for...Well I can't afford to buy gold, or silver for that matter, but I wouldn't even if I could.<br /><br />I've always found it amusing that gold is said to be "real money", or "store of wealth", or whatever, but riddle me this.<br /><br />Let's say we remove the dollar, or any other "paper money", how much is gold then worth?<br /><br />It's not worth anything unless you can convert into some actually useable means of exchange - after all you cannot go into a shop, get your groceries and tender gold.gerryhiles/keyhoti1https://www.blogger.com/profile/13031654263065211491noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-53246864840716464.post-24483086508612878182010-11-15T12:48:33.610-08:002010-11-15T12:48:33.610-08:00Good question GW, the precious metals market is a ...Good question GW, the precious metals market is a speck compared to the bond and derivatives market, the big money banker gangsters can easily control the price; they can do whatever they want to do with the gold and silver market. They are above the Rule of Law. Keep in mind that the New World Order agenda of world governance calls for a world fiat currency; a currency that is physically worthless that the banksters can freely print and leverage.<br /><br />By devaluation, QE2 is the final coup de grace to the American dollar as the world benchmark trading currency. The Federal Reserve Central Bank (privately owned by the big four World Banksters) is buying up America’s debt (created by the World Banksters) simply by printing more money and buying US Treasury Bonds from world holders; the dollars cost them nothing.<br /><br />With QE2, the Federal Reserve Central Bank NOW effectively OWNS the United States of America by buying the fraudulent debt that they created! Sweet huh? In their benevolence, the Fed will temporarily lower our US interest rates on our US debt to them so that we can borrow more money from them! All of this National debt is at the expense of the American taxpayer who is legally indentured to the Federal Reserve Central Bank (owns the debt) for generations.<br /><br />During the transition period between the devaluation of the dollar and establishing a new world currency, gold and silver should skyrocket but once the world currency is established, the banksters will probably, by self made law, set the price of gold and silver. The World Banksters may dictate that gold and silver are illegal currency and freeze the price at $35 per ounce for gold and $3 for silver. That would be great for their manufacturing assets and reinforce their world fiat currency.<br /><br />I am always amazed when people think that there is no Big Oil and World Bankster plan for world government and that economic events just happen randomly as the gangster 20 year agenda of destroying our Democracy, Independence and Freedom and enslaving citizens to national debt moves forward! At each stage, the banksters in their charade always look so incapably and surprised at their well planned failures. Ha. Ha.<br /><br />There are American Traitors who are cheering that the Totalitarian World Banksters have finally and officially taken over the USA by criminal fraud and now officially tells Congress, President and the rest of us what to do (think austerity). <br /><br />They cheer that social services will be destroyed especially Social Security, retirement plans, Employment Insurance and Medicare. Government assets and infrastructure will be sold to the World Banksters for pennies on the dollar. QE2 is a great victory; it’s a glorious day for Totalitarian world government and Globalization!<br /><br />As a Tea Bagger squeaks “A Freedom that you have never known before, no more government on our backs, let the multinational corporations rule”windcatcherhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01472629221573977747noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-53246864840716464.post-89799360686575394412010-11-15T08:06:48.598-08:002010-11-15T08:06:48.598-08:00Re: Confiscation.
A Myth Concerning Gold Confisca...Re: Confiscation.<br /><br />A Myth Concerning Gold Confiscation<br />http://news.goldseek.com/GoldSeek/1243522800.phpUnknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00561135741464635939noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-53246864840716464.post-28052363732034091872010-11-15T05:42:44.378-08:002010-11-15T05:42:44.378-08:00"The chart is below, and it's both an eye..."The chart is below, and it's both an eye-opener and a spine-tingler."<br /><br />If anything is demonstrated by this chart -it is that there certainly is every indication that Gold is just a bubble.<br /><br />That last little wink from the giggling girl in the bikini with the golden hair certainly said something anyway. "TO GOOD TO BE TRUE!"<br /><br />Just look at the chart! LOL<br /><br />And any fool can see that the powers-that-ARE -->>can throw the switch at any time.<br /><br />And that THAT will send all the slack-jawed financial wizards who are all swooning over this sweet young thang with the beautiful smile and all the shapely curves in the right place into a tizzy trying to sell this yellow stuff into a marketplace with absolutely no buyers.<br /><br />"She's so fine, there's no tellin' where the money went..."<br /><br />Sweetheart, both Jim Rogers and Warren Buffet are small-town-boyz who made their money as financial analysts for the media -telling people when to buy what they were selling -and- when to sell what they were buying.<br /><br />That's the only common denominator in the financial markets.<br /><br />The markets are where guys like the stone-faced Louis Rukeyser make a living. Remember how he used to occasionally break out into that ridiculous grin of his, -a grin- that should have told everyone -this guy is nothing -if he's not full-of-it.<br /><br />Yeh, sure. If you want to gamble with your money, buy Gold, by all means.<br /><br />That's what bubbles are all about, and exactly why so many swear-off listening to the market-experts. It's all a lie meant to separate the victim from his money.<br /><br />The markets today, just like the markets have always been- are nothing about the real economy, nothing more than organized crime is about the real economy.<br /><br />Up or DOWN the markets are about hype, pure and simple. Up or DOWN the markets are about separating the victim from his money.<br /><br />The markets have nothing at all to do with the economy.<br /><br />Those who talk about the market as if they're economists, are making an argument analogous to telling you -they're beautiful and lovely because they've had sex with 10,000 different partners -and had their wallet stolen every time they did.<br /><br />They're not beautiful. They're desperately insane, that's all.<br /><br />The potential downside is colossal, gargantuan, staggering, and bearing a facial expression comparable to Medusa for its chilling effect upon the faint of heart as well as these bold and confident prognosticators of instant wealth.<br /><br />The weasels will come out of their holes eventually -to say- "You should have known better."<br /><br />LOL<br /><br />This article is saying one thing. It is saying -trust in the markets.<br /><br />If that is not cuckoo, it's news to me.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-53246864840716464.post-59188597557128859102010-11-15T02:10:18.705-08:002010-11-15T02:10:18.705-08:00David Goldman has some interesting points:
Gold, ...<a href="http://blog.atimes.net/?p=1617" rel="nofollow">David Goldman has some interesting points:</a><br /><br /><i>Gold, I argued in a 1996 paper for Laffer Associates, should be thought of as a put option on the currency; the opportunity cost of holding gold instead of interest-bearing assets (plus storage costs) are the option premium. If central banks managed their currencies well, gold would trade at its commodity value, that is, around the marginal cost of production, which is now $600 to $700 for the largest mining companies. But if there is a risk that paper currencies will devalue by some extreme margin, it is worth holding gold as a hedge. We cannot price the option using the usual Black-Scholes formula or its variants because we do not know the volatility of a currency over the long term; this is a political matter and inherently uncertain. But if we think that monetary policy is headed to a disaster (QE2 will end up like the Titanic, in short), we will pay more for gold.</i>gazzajhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16269126625443588798noreply@blogger.com