Is This the Final Blast-Off?
By David Morgan
October
16, 2009
At this point, I am a little reluctant to state this
is the final blast-off and that we will not see gold
below US$1,000 ever again. Certainly the percentages
are with the precious metals investors and it seems
gold has nowhere to go but up. As we know, you’re at
a level that has been resistance in the past
($1,000), and that area has been resistance for gold
for quite some time. And once that level is
penetrated for three days in a row then you have a
strong probability that the trend is going to
continue. In fact, we alerted our subscribers to
that very fact!
The biggest caveat is that the big, big picture is
very tenuous going forward in the October/November
timeframe. The powers that be seem to think that the
recession is over, but the facts send a different
message. Some of these concerns are as follows:
·
Confidence
in the dollar is all we have left. Almost anyone
paying attention knows the dollar has lost over 95
percent of its value. This was addressed by this
writer about eight years ago in an article titled,
“Dollar Dotcom”.
This faith has probably reached its limit. China,
Russia, and some of the Middle Eastern countries
have all expressed interest in some alternative to
the U.S. dollar. Since in real terms the U.S.
economy has been declining for several years, the
ability for the U.S. to make good on all of the debt
obligations becomes highly questionable.
·
Credit
seems to be contracting at a local level and
exploding at a bank/financial institution level, as
long as your (bank/institution) is favored by the
powers in the government. Have any of you tried to
get a loan on your home or apartment building
lately? How about a loan for your small business?
Credit is contracting on Main Street but exploding
on Wall Street; this does not yield a strong economy
going forward.
The U.S. government seems to be progressing into
that legislation that we have kept in mind for
almost 30 years—the “Monetary Control Act of 1980.”
I honestly have not read it in many years, but to
the best of my memory, this “act” provides the
ability to monetize almost anything. Have some
confederate currency you’d like to swap for some
Federal Reserve Notes? The bailout schemes are
risking the integrity of the U.S. debt previously
issued. This is an area to watch very closely.
·
Derivatives
had a profound influence on bringing the system down
and yet most of the derivatives in the system are
still “open,” meaning these bets are not resolved at
this time and the value of many is highly
questionable. Derivatives pose one of the greatest
risks to the entire banking and financial system.
·
Bank failures
continue: the FDIC is broke and the balance sheets
of many are of grave concern to investors. It is
worth your time to check out the safest banks and
limit your exposure!
·
Real estate
problems are far from over, in our view. The Alt-A
and even conventional mortgages have rollovers into
2010 and 2011 and are equal in size to the sub prime
fiasco. This does not even consider fully what is
taking place in the commercial real estate sector.
·
Social Security
is simply a wealth-transfer scheme and I have
written about it in the past. With tax revenues
down, funding of this program and hundreds of other
government obligations can only be funded by more
borrowing—but from whom?
One of the questions we are getting quite frequently
is . . .
If the recession is over officially, doesn’t that,
along with the thousand-dollar gold mark, trigger
inflation and suggest getting in now potentially (if
you’ve been sitting on the fence about gold)?
Investors are always looking for certain signs or
indicators to help with their decision-making
process. This is especially true in the technical
community, and more people are in the technical
community today than probably ever before. That is
because you have trade stations and all these
software programs that anyone can buy and basically
run the numbers and come up with a conclusion that
gold is breaking out. However, there are no
guarantees on this; it’s only a probability.
Deflation concerns still enter into my thinking.
Looking at it as I do from a perspective of the real
world, things are not really picking up. Not that
there isn’t some of that going on, but it certainly
isn’t widespread, and this breakout that we had is
not very strong.
The easiest thing to say with conviction is, if
you’re not in this market you absolutely need to buy
physical gold and silver here. Whether it stays
above a thousand or drops below is a moot point.
When gold goes to 2,000 or 3,000 or more, if you
bought it as it broke through 1,000 and then went
back under 1,000 for a while, it might make you sad
for a day, a week, maybe a month . . . but it’s
going much higher in the longer term. So that’s one
thing to keep in mind.
Many ask,
how to buy silver? Secondly, it’s the general
equity market or the overall health of the financial
asset market. The general market has a great
influence on the mining shares, at least on a
temporary basis. So that could color your view as
far as what to do now. Personally, I’d be much more
favorable toward buying the physical metal rather
than the mining equities at this point.
Technically, both gold and silver are overbought.
The markets can stay overbought for a very long time
and continue to move up and up and up in price,
being overbought the whole time. So that doesn’t
concern me, as far as will it go higher or not, at
this point (October 7, 2009). I do want to advise
our readers that, if they’re making a decision on
what to do now, be cautious. I’m very, very
skeptical of what could happen in the
October/November timeframe, so look out ahead.
I was cautious last year through the end of
September; that was a good call, except that it
wasn’t for a long enough period. If it had been
extended through the end of November, we would have
gotten back in with our trading portion of the
portfolio at the perfect time, instead of getting
back in a bit too early. Regardless, that position
certainly made good gains if you were in the correct
mining stocks. Take a look at Silver Standard from
the November low of 2008 until present time, going
roughly from around the five-dollar level to over
twenty. Four hundred percent on this company!
Compare that with some of the junior mining
companies, and not many have had that type of
recovery.
Oftentimes, I am criticized for my “conservative”
approach of putting serious money into a serious
company. At this point, let the facts speak for
themselves. No one in this market is perfect, and
timing is extremely difficult but we do our best and
can probably hold our own against almost anybody.
However, this isn’t day-trading—I’m not a real
in-and-out kind of a trader. I’m much more a
position trader, where big moves down occur and no
one wants to buy gold or silver anymore—that’s the
time to jump on board and add to your position. Then
at these highs (which we may or may not be at right
now, time will tell) I’m a little bit more inclined
to lighten up.
You want to sell in the strength. Very few people
seem to learn that, because there’s a philosophical
adherence to gold as money and silver as money, and
I hold those views myself. However, I also hold the
view that if you can take a profit on part of your
position—which is what we do—you might as well take
it, because it’s available to you.
The idea is to stay fully invested with roughly 75
percent of your funds, and to trade with about 25
percent. That is a good approach, because if the
market just takes off and blasts upward from here,
you still have the lion’s share of your investment
and have left only 25 percent behind. Shorter-term
trading with the 25 percent can make you feel good.
Markets do move quite a bit and they are quite
volatile, so when you do catch a nice move in one
direction or the other, both can help you weather
these long consolidation periods. That’s exactly
what we did the last time we got a huge move up in
the gold and silver price—when gold got up to the
$1,000 level or actually beyond it and silver at
that time was at $21.00.
I would be much more comfortable saying this is the
final blast-off if silver were hitting $21.00 right
now as gold is trading over $1,000—that would be
confirmation in my book, and I’d be very, very
bullish. Unfortunately, silver isn’t leading the
charge at this time and that is acceptable. It’s
certainly shown some good strength this whole year,
but not quite the amount of strength I would expect
if we were to see all this inflation pouring into
the financial markets. Again, I still suspect that
there’s probably some more recessionary,
deflationary, depression type of news coming.
It is an honor to be.
Sincerely,
David Morgan
Mr. Morgan has followed the silver market for more than 30 years.
He wrote the book
Get the Skinny on Silver Investing. Much of his
Web site,
Silver-Investor.com,
is devoted to education about the precious metals;
it is both a free site and does have a members-only
section. Mr. Morgan has just written a free report
titled, Silver Fundamentals, Fundamentally Flawed,
which can be accessed here:
Free Silver Report. To receive full access to
The Morgan Report, click the hyperlink.
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