SILVER – HOW HIGH CAN IT GO?
The price of silver jumped higher by nearly $2 oz. over a two-day period last week. The white metal now sits just under $25 oz. and this is depicted on the chart (source) below…
"Everything you need to know about gold"
PRICE OF GOLD IS NOT ABOUT GOLD
Attempts to analyze and value gold are superfluous. Gold’s value – its use as money – has already been established. That value is constant and unquestioned.
The price of gold does not tell us anything about gold or its value. The gold price tells us only how much purchasing power the U.S. dollar has lost – nothing else.
GOLD AT $4000?
For that to happen will require something almost unbelievable – if you expect gold to be at $4000 anytime soon, that is. The problem with most predictions for higher gold prices is that they fail to account for the financial and economic turmoil that would accompany those higher prices.
What is so unbelievable that would need to happen for gold to go to $4000 oz.?
(also listen to The Prostitution Of Gold)
Kelsey Williams is the author of two books: INFLATION, WHAT IT IS, WHAT IT ISN’T, AND WHO’S RESPONSIBLE FOR IT and ALL HAIL THE FED!
PAYMENT FOR SERVICES RENDERED
The gold market has become a social gathering place for an odd combination of participants. Those participants range from the gullible and the disillusioned to those seeking the next big thing.
Permeating the atmosphere surrounding the commotion are false fundamentals and faulty logic. Fundamental analysis, or what passes for it, gets distorted and perverted beyond recognition.
GOLD’S DECEPTIVE NEW HIGHS (audio version)
The latest gold analyses have shifted to a more accommodative nature regarding the yellow metal’s failure to extend its gains after breaking above $2000 for the fourth consecutive year. Here is a chart (source) that depicts what most analysts and investors are seeing…
GOLD BULLS TOO PRICE-DEPENDENT?
Theoretically, a higher price can indicate an increase in value for a good, a service, a stock, etc. That does not mean that a higher price is always indicative of an increase in value.
On occasion, the higher price tells us something else. For example, most people are quite sensitive to the higher prices they pay for groceries and gasoline. Since the forced shutdown of the economy in response to Covid, prices for food and energy have risen along with most other goods and services.
The emphasis on “NOT” in the title of this article is critical to a better understanding of what inflation is – and isn’t. We hear all the time: “Inflation rose sharply last month as consumer prices increased by .6%”, or something similar.
We also hear that higher prices themselves are a cause of inflation. Example…
Do cryptocurrencies still have value? Some would say yes, absolutely. Others might be rethinking previous expectations for cryptocurrencies. We give the nod to the former – with some strong caveats.
The value of cryptocurrencies has to do with the transaction process. Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies have value because they provide a process for the private transfer of money.
SIGNIFICANCE OF 1980 GOLD PEAK
When President Nixon slammed shut the gold window for foreign holders of U.S. dollars, it was the final step in a planned exit from the gold standard. It was also tacit admission that the United States government, in conjunction with the Federal Reserve, had debased the world’s s reserve currency beyond a point that could no longer be ignored.