C&P from Midas
posted on
Jul 28, 2010 08:35AM
Golden Minerals is a junior silver producer with a strong growth profile, listed on both the NYSE Amex and TSX.
"Today, of course, gold ran into enormous selling on the open: some 63,000 lots before 9AM NY time and a colossal total of 282, 931 by 12noon.
Standard Bank supplies the antidote with an update of its "Standard Bank Gold Physical Flow Index"
"Since the start of the month our Standard Bank Gold PhysicalFlow Index continued to climb and remains at high levels. In fact,the current levels seen in our index compare well with previoushighs reached earlier this year and late-2009."
Today appears to be a triumph for the market sense/information of The Gartman Letter, which remarked very early today
"Turning then to gold, we get the sense that the recent support at the $1175-1180 level really shall be put to test today for gold failed to sustain any strength
yesterday and failed at yet another new intra-day high at $1195. The support that stands at $1175 has only been tested once, and at the same time that support is
along a very well defined trend line that simply must hold. We fear that it won’t."
Absolutely none of this will influence the Asian Market. Bearing in mind the seasonals, this could well be the buying opportunity of the year."
"Richard Russell last night on gold:
Not you, Alan Abelson, not you! In the latest issue of Barron's, Alan heads his weekly column as follows: "A Contrarian's View of Gold." Clearly, it's not Abelson's view, it's some contrarian. And who's the contrarian? It's Peter Berizen, who works for my old friends at the Bank Credit Analyst. I've been trading services with the Bank Credit Analyst for about 50 years, and I know that they have never been openly enthusiastic about gold. Peter obtains his anti-gold arguments from Barclay's Capital's latest commodity forecasts. Peter lists six arguments suggesting that gold has made most of its move to the upside.
And what do I think? I think it's pure baloney. Gold has been in a sensational but secret and subtle bull market for the last ten years. In my experience, I've never seen a long-term primary bull market end without a highly speculative third phase. So far, although gold has enjoyed a spectacular percentage rise over the last decade, gold has never produced a third, speculative phase. In fact, figuring from gold's peak of 850 an ounce in 1980, gold hasn't even kept up with inflation. Adjusting gold for 30 years of inflation, gold today would have to be over $2,000 an ounce. Thus, gold can hardly have been in a speculative bull market phase so far.
My own thinking is that somewhere ahead we will indeed see gold go into its speculative third phase. So that's my answer to Peter Berizen's anti-gold stance.
Alan Abelson, I know you like to be controversial, but how could you do it? Pretty soon I'll have to rank you with Alan Greenspan, who sold out on his intensely pro-gold stance when he became Fed Chairman."