ROTFLMAO!!:p
How many logical fallacies can you spot in this piece?
http://www.commodityonline.com/futur...nce-13613.html
Current gold price should be $2163 per ounce
For the second time in 30 years, we're in the midst of a classic gold bubble.
There are "gold parties" akin to Tupperware parties across the U.S., where people trade in their gold jewellery and even gold dental fillings for cash.
"Goldbugs," the term for gold-investing zealots, are predicting a gold price of $2,000 (all figures U.S.) per ounce next year. And a rise to as high as $15,000 in years to come – a 15-fold increase over the modern-day record price of $1,086 set on Dec. 3, from which gold has since retreated 11 per cent.
Gold Bubble Debate: Is it wise to invest in gold?
U.S. talk-radio yakkers Glenn Beck and Watergate ex-convict Gordon Liddy have become paid shills for gold vendors. On behalf of an outfit called Rosland Capital, Liddy in TV spots describes gold as "an intrinsically valuable liquid preserver of purchasing power."
Bank of Nova Scotia, one of the world's largest precious metals dealers, has launched an online store for sales of Scotia Gold Bars and other gold items. Such is gold's demand among everyday folks, as the Star's Rita Trichur reported last week, that the U.S. Mint has suspended sales of its popular American Eagle one-ounce gold coin for lack of supply. The Royal Canadian Mint has some of its most popular gold coins on back order.
These are all classic "sell" signs.
And a few sages finally are beginning to say as much.
Jon Nadler, senior analyst at Kitco Metals Inc., says gold has been riding a "bubble" of "hot air." The Montreal gold expert, noting gold's historic role as a hedge against the world going to hell in a hand basket, warns: "Don't get carried away with scenarios of Mad Max," referring to the film set in an apocalyptic future.
How many logical fallacies can you spot in this piece?
http://www.commodityonline.com/futur...nce-13613.html
Current gold price should be $2163 per ounce
December 28, 2009 15:50:00 IST
For the second time in 30 years, we're in the midst of a classic gold bubble.
There are "gold parties" akin to Tupperware parties across the U.S., where people trade in their gold jewellery and even gold dental fillings for cash.
"Goldbugs," the term for gold-investing zealots, are predicting a gold price of $2,000 (all figures U.S.) per ounce next year. And a rise to as high as $15,000 in years to come – a 15-fold increase over the modern-day record price of $1,086 set on Dec. 3, from which gold has since retreated 11 per cent.
Gold Bubble Debate: Is it wise to invest in gold?
U.S. talk-radio yakkers Glenn Beck and Watergate ex-convict Gordon Liddy have become paid shills for gold vendors. On behalf of an outfit called Rosland Capital, Liddy in TV spots describes gold as "an intrinsically valuable liquid preserver of purchasing power."
Bank of Nova Scotia, one of the world's largest precious metals dealers, has launched an online store for sales of Scotia Gold Bars and other gold items. Such is gold's demand among everyday folks, as the Star's Rita Trichur reported last week, that the U.S. Mint has suspended sales of its popular American Eagle one-ounce gold coin for lack of supply. The Royal Canadian Mint has some of its most popular gold coins on back order.
These are all classic "sell" signs.
And a few sages finally are beginning to say as much.
Jon Nadler, senior analyst at Kitco Metals Inc., says gold has been riding a "bubble" of "hot air." The Montreal gold expert, noting gold's historic role as a hedge against the world going to hell in a hand basket, warns: "Don't get carried away with scenarios of Mad Max," referring to the film set in an apocalyptic future.
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