Re: Anatomy of a credit crunch induced bankruptcy - Eric Janszen
Agreed. Gold can easily be the least affected of all assets vs. the USD rise. Does not mean it's embarking on a blistering bull market rise vs. the USD though. It can of course continue to be a quite good investment in any number of other currencies though. The USD breaking up past 88 on the above index has another significance though, at least to this reader. The big first event was the USD breaking down through 80 on that index in mid 2007. That was a once in 25 years event and it broke to the downside very decisively. That probably gives the preliminary hint as to what will work out over the next decade (i.e. USD is most definitely headed down below that in a big way).
The huge anomaly however has been it's breaking right back up through that 80 level in 2008. After the USD's first blistering run up last year, it broke and had this violent decline, leading many to conclude it was a false breakout and that the smart money must remain positioned for an imminent USD collapse. The 80 level still lies below and it's a very big floor or ceiling, depending on which side of it the USD winds up on after these recent gyrations. So in relation to that, if the USD now runs up past 88 (the recent high) and so indicates it's heading on north from there, actually this is a very large indicator that it's break back up over 80 on the index was decisive, and it would at very least suggest that the intermediate run is going to be up rather than down.
Some people will pooh pooh this entire glance at that 80 USD index as "even meaning anything" but there are competent currency tacticians out there who insist that whichever side of 80 the USD accelerates away from gives the macro direction that's likely good for at least a couple of years if not more. In other words and in brief, what the USD is going to do now relative to it's recent high at 88 is actually quite telling. An "inevitably collapsing USD" is going to be a thesis under a bit of strain if we see the dollar move up past 88, and we could see how that particular juncture works out within just a month or two. And BTW, this is not technical chart navel gazing - it is merely watching what the USD is **actually doing**.
Agreed. Gold can easily be the least affected of all assets vs. the USD rise. Does not mean it's embarking on a blistering bull market rise vs. the USD though. It can of course continue to be a quite good investment in any number of other currencies though. The USD breaking up past 88 on the above index has another significance though, at least to this reader. The big first event was the USD breaking down through 80 on that index in mid 2007. That was a once in 25 years event and it broke to the downside very decisively. That probably gives the preliminary hint as to what will work out over the next decade (i.e. USD is most definitely headed down below that in a big way).
The huge anomaly however has been it's breaking right back up through that 80 level in 2008. After the USD's first blistering run up last year, it broke and had this violent decline, leading many to conclude it was a false breakout and that the smart money must remain positioned for an imminent USD collapse. The 80 level still lies below and it's a very big floor or ceiling, depending on which side of it the USD winds up on after these recent gyrations. So in relation to that, if the USD now runs up past 88 (the recent high) and so indicates it's heading on north from there, actually this is a very large indicator that it's break back up over 80 on the index was decisive, and it would at very least suggest that the intermediate run is going to be up rather than down.
Some people will pooh pooh this entire glance at that 80 USD index as "even meaning anything" but there are competent currency tacticians out there who insist that whichever side of 80 the USD accelerates away from gives the macro direction that's likely good for at least a couple of years if not more. In other words and in brief, what the USD is going to do now relative to it's recent high at 88 is actually quite telling. An "inevitably collapsing USD" is going to be a thesis under a bit of strain if we see the dollar move up past 88, and we could see how that particular juncture works out within just a month or two. And BTW, this is not technical chart navel gazing - it is merely watching what the USD is **actually doing**.
Originally posted by aps1087
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