Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Gold price moving up due to geopolitical unrest

$1,434 Gold Will Happen Again says analyst Lind Waldock
NEW YORK (TheStreet) - - Lind Waldock strategist Phil Streible is confident gold will return to the previous high of $1434.


Lind Waldock :... I think there's a high probability that we're going out there that think that the others no doubt that we're gonna move up there it's just matter -- and I think it could be easily in the next couple weeks. I think some of the main driving factors are there's geopolitical unrest is continuing -- we've seen. You know news report that now it's moved Almonte we've also heard reports that -- move to China. So -- continuing to spread here investors are definitely seeking you -- like quality and safety and they're finding it and that the models what. Main. Items that could happen -- that that can keep us from getting to that previous high. You don't Friday's unemployment report could be it bombs something that. By a little political left in the dollar and acts and you made the -- some gold come off

Wheat: A Value Commodity

Feb. 28 2011 | Wayne Gordon, senior analyst, commodities & rural economics at Rabobank, says wheat is the best trade in the agri-commodity space.

Silver Scarcer Than Gold But More Useful - Mike Maloney & David Morgan In Las Vegas

Silver Scarcer Than Gold But More Useful - Mike Maloney & David Morgan In Las Vegas (Ep 6) The world as we know it would cease to exist without silver.


I love you guys! You pint such a rosy picture for "the" metal!

With Silver looking fine above $34, of course the USA market will try to pull it down, but I do not think they will manage today...$38 here we come?

PS Hey Dan I thought you might be in the UK around this time?

PS II I should get my daughters little order of Silver Eagles right about now :0)

You speak, I listened and took action....but It would be worth to give gold _some_ credibility :) There is a lot of uses for gold in the electronics industry. Not to the same degree as silver, but it exists. Part of recycling of fine electronics is to get some of the gold back. It's also much used as a chemical catalyst, or at least experimented much as such.

So if gold suddenly disappeared, you'd certainly see signs of this in specific industries. It's not like no one would care or notice. But life would probably go on
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