Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

    from ftalphaville

    Originally posted by dennis gartman

    THE DOLLAR IS WEAK and although it is not violently so, it is weak relative to nearly all of its major and minor trading partners, and it is particularly so relative to gold. Indeed, perhaps the most important comment we can make relative to the forex market… and relative to nearly all capital markets generally… this morning is that there is growing disdain for currencies generally and there is growing enamourment of gold as the most important ‘currency” of all. We are not Gold Bugs here at TGL. That is rather obvious, for on balance we’ve long subscribed to the Keynesian notion that gold is indeed a “barbarous relic.” We’ve been disdainful of the Gold Bugs during our entire career, seeing most of them as gun-toting, canned-food hoarding, doomsday-awaiting crotchety old geezers with little good to say about society generally, and much bad. However, with the advent of the spending, entitlement and tax programs being put forth by the current Administration, and with the same sorts of tax/spend programs being embraced so fully abroad, gold’s become the third reservable currency after the US dollar and the EUR, and it is swiftly on its way to becoming the 2nd.

    The tectonic plates of the global economy shifted rather vividly yesterday when gold soared to the upside and did so not just in terms of the US dollar, but in terms of every currency everywhere. It was as if the flood gates had spilled open and a torrent of buying of gold along with a torrent of selling of dollars, of sterling, of EURs, of Yen, of rupees, of rubles and of Renminbi hit the market.

    Perhaps this was, as some have tried to explain it away, a result of the less-than-liquid market conditions that prevail as the summer is ending and as the dealing rooms around the world are manned by less-than-full compliments of senior traders. We have argued this case ourselves, having warned our readers/clients and friends around the world of being too active and taking too large positions at this time of the year, preferring to await the return of liquidity that should mark next week’s activity. But that having been said, we cannot discount the seriousness… the violence… the material nature of the moves in favour of gold yesterday across the forex spectrum.

    S
    omething more than mere illiquidity was and is at work in the gold market, and despite our antipathy toward this “barbarous relic,” attention really must be paid.

    bold emphases in the original- not added by me
    red color added by me-jk

  • #2
    Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

    "The maestro" and "The putz from Princeton" don't quite look as brilliant as they looked a few days ago.

    If gold continues upward, they will have to raise interest rates to shore-up the dollar.... Then the fun will really begin, especially as the world economy aborts its recovery.

    The problem with Keynsian economics is that there is no exit strategy from it except by inflation. And the problem with supply-side economics is that there is not always growth to pay for the deficits.

    You can not dig-out of a debt hole by digging deeper.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

      Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
      "The maestro" and "The putz from Princeton" don't quite look as brilliant as they looked a few days ago.

      If gold continues upward, they will have to raise interest rates to shore-up the dollar.... Then the fun will really begin, especially as the world economy aborts its recovery.

      The problem with Keynsian economics is that there is no exit strategy from it except by inflation. And the problem with supply-side economics is that there is not always growth to pay for the deficits.

      You can not dig-out of a debt hole by digging deeper.

      looks like gold will break $1000.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

        Originally posted by jk View Post
        from ftalphaville


        bold emphases in the original- not added by me
        red color added by me-jk
        Third currency? Close but no cigar.
        Ed.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

          Originally posted by FRED View Post
          Third currency? Close but no cigar.
          I picture Eric & FRED doing this:
          Attached Files

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

            uh .... what's a
            short-term (not that there's anything wrong with that)™
            , timer (not that there's anything wrong with that)™
            , technician (not that there's anything wrong with that)™
            , in&out (not that there's anything wrong with that)™
            trader-type (not that there's anything wrong with that)™

            doing looking at Gold in this way?

            Originally posted by jk View Post
            from ftalphaville


            bold emphases in the original- not added by me
            red color added by me-jk

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

              Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
              "The maestro" and "The putz from Princeton" don't quite look as brilliant as they looked a few days ago.

              If gold continues upward, they will have to raise interest rates to shore-up the dollar.... Then the fun will really begin, especially as the world economy aborts its recovery.

              The problem with Keynsian economics is that there is no exit strategy from it except by inflation. And the problem with supply-side economics is that there is not always growth to pay for the deficits.

              You can not dig-out of a debt hole by digging deeper.
              Why? Who cares about what the price of gold does? It's totally irrelevant except maybe for the fact it correlates with things that do matter.

              It's the price of Oil that matters.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

                Originally posted by FRED View Post
                Third currency? Close but no cigar.
                Fred first, second?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

                  Originally posted by rabot10 View Post
                  Fred first, second?
                  The correct answer is:
                  d) None of the above
                  Try: http://www.fourthcurrency.com/ ;)

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

                    Originally posted by jk View Post
                    from ftalphaville


                    bold emphases in the original- not added by me
                    red color added by me-jk
                    Gartman has been all over the map with his gold analysis over the last year; I find it hard to take him seriously especially now that he is pushing his hedge fund.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"


                      Ed.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

                        Perhaps barbarous times will require a “barbarous relic”

                        Have you been to China or India lately?

                        and if you do believe that gold will become/is a currency, then I believe that you should be buying silver, not gold.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

                          Originally posted by FRED View Post
                          Third currency? Close but no cigar.
                          i'm afraid we've skipped fourth.:p as the quote said, it's 3rd, on the way to 2nd. of course, then there's 1st.:cool:

                          [this is another example of ej's overly optimistic bearish projections, this time his predictions about currencies.]

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

                            Originally posted by jk View Post
                            i'm afraid we've skipped fourth.:p as the quote said, it's 3rd, on the way to 2nd. of course, then there's 1st.:cool:

                            [this is another example of ej's overly optimistic bearish projections, this time his predictions about currencies.]
                            the idea of gold as 4th currency isn't the order/preference over others but gold as an alternative intl. currency to the other 3. this guy gartman caught on to the idea but neglects the yen as an intl. currency. ignorance... rampant.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: dennis gartman: "gold's become the 3rd currency"

                              Originally posted by blazespinnaker View Post
                              Why? Who cares about what the price of gold does? It's totally irrelevant except maybe for the fact it correlates with things that do matter.

                              It's the price of Oil that matters.

                              Alas, poor friend, it is only gold that doesn't get used up, that everyone holds onto, that century by century is the standard currency, because it is used as a portable and tradable store of wealth as well as a commodity.

                              Oil is great for trading, for use, for building wealth...not for currency.

                              If we could only look at all cost in terms of gold, which is real, and at paper currencies, which are only a "promise", as the false weights and measures they are, we could happily trade on and off the gold standard, and consequently, always know where we stand.
                              Last edited by Forrest; September 04, 2009, 01:17 PM. Reason: Grammar

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X