Re: Bullish Information
i've never been able to make much sense out of elliot waves, but i like prechter's notions about social mood moving the market. certainly, psychology matters, A LOT, at least in the short run. but, as buffett likes to say, in the short run the market is a voting machine, but in the long run it is a weighing machine. that is, value ultimately determines price. but then there's that saying of keynes about being dead in the long run, and another about the market staying irrational [staying a voting machine] for long enough to break you. enough quotes!?!?#&**
fwiw, i agree with casey's assessment of the gold market. it's still early days. we are in the transition from stage 1 to stage 2 of what will be a 3 stage process. gold has been accumulated by the early adopters, and is building a base as it is accumulated by institutions, especially cb's, "diversifying" their reserves. stage 2 will be characterized by the legitimization of gold and commodities as asset classes to be included in every investor's properly diversified portfolio. the model for the masses will go from 60/40 equity/bonds to, perhaps, 55/30/15 equity/bonds/gold-commodities. this period will coincide with an "orderly" decline in the dollar vis a vis other currencies, and moderate inflation. in stage 3 the decline of the dollar becomes disorderly, and a gold bubble develops. richard russell has said that the 3rd stage in a gold bubble is different than any other asset bubble, because it is motivated not just by greed, but also by fear. something to look forward to, huh?
[for more, see the recent piece from minyanville on china, the dollar and gold, posted in the "got gold?" thread]
i've never been able to make much sense out of elliot waves, but i like prechter's notions about social mood moving the market. certainly, psychology matters, A LOT, at least in the short run. but, as buffett likes to say, in the short run the market is a voting machine, but in the long run it is a weighing machine. that is, value ultimately determines price. but then there's that saying of keynes about being dead in the long run, and another about the market staying irrational [staying a voting machine] for long enough to break you. enough quotes!?!?#&**
fwiw, i agree with casey's assessment of the gold market. it's still early days. we are in the transition from stage 1 to stage 2 of what will be a 3 stage process. gold has been accumulated by the early adopters, and is building a base as it is accumulated by institutions, especially cb's, "diversifying" their reserves. stage 2 will be characterized by the legitimization of gold and commodities as asset classes to be included in every investor's properly diversified portfolio. the model for the masses will go from 60/40 equity/bonds to, perhaps, 55/30/15 equity/bonds/gold-commodities. this period will coincide with an "orderly" decline in the dollar vis a vis other currencies, and moderate inflation. in stage 3 the decline of the dollar becomes disorderly, and a gold bubble develops. richard russell has said that the 3rd stage in a gold bubble is different than any other asset bubble, because it is motivated not just by greed, but also by fear. something to look forward to, huh?
[for more, see the recent piece from minyanville on china, the dollar and gold, posted in the "got gold?" thread]
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