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Gold getting KILLED!


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2022 Jul 20, 6:54pm   28,070 views  203 comments

by stereotomy   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Now that iTulip is officially defunct, I thought I'd resurrect MEGA's (Malcolm) thread over there and transplant it here. Apologies in advance to @Patrick.

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159   stereotomy   2023 Oct 13, 7:42am  

Well, now that WWIII can break out along two separate fronts, I guess gold is getting some more love.

160   NuttBoxer   2023 Oct 13, 8:53am  

It's a safe haven, will always go up in a crises. And those just seem to be increasing daily.
161   stereotomy   2023 Oct 18, 8:31am  

^^^
True that - gold bouncing between 1920-1950.
162   stereotomy   2023 Oct 18, 10:17am  

I think I can, I think I can . . . Choo Choo!


163   NuttBoxer   2023 Nov 1, 9:34pm  

Gold buying by central banks is 800 tons for the year.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/central-bank-gold-binge-even-060000811.html
164   HeadSet   2023 Nov 2, 7:17am  

NuttBoxer says

Gold buying by central banks is 800 tons for the year.

Cool! Looks like they are transitioning to a gold back currency!
165   Misc   2023 Nov 2, 7:35am  

With what did they buy this gold with?

Oh, the paper currency they issued.
166   NuttBoxer   2023 Nov 8, 6:11am  

That would be an anathema to the institution of central banking. More likely their hedging their bets if the digital slave currency doesn't take right away, as another means to force it's adoption. Back it with gold, then pull the rug out. Also possible they're so arrogant they think that will help them weather the storm of a collapse. It won't...
167   NuttBoxer   2023 Nov 8, 6:13am  

Still buying, highest purchase rate is in Q3 of this year. Regardless of their reasons, one more indicator the economy is headed for a bad place:

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/central-bank-gold-buying-continued-unabated-september
168   RayAmerica   2023 Nov 8, 8:59am  

HeadSet says

NuttBoxer says

Gold buying by central banks is 800 tons for the year.

Cool! Looks like they are transitioning to a gold back currency!


That's not the case in the slightest. The central banks are privately owned conglomerates that are also the biggest con artists in history. They know what is coming; a collapse of fiat currencies, so they are converting their soon to be worthless paper into hard assets, such as gold.
169   AD   2023 Nov 8, 9:34am  

RayAmerica says

they are converting their soon to be worthless paper into hard assets, such as gold.


collapse of paper is collapse of society and the same powers-to-be do not want a collapse of society

they may let society's poor and working class suffer some, such as with inflation, but they want to maintain control even with society's standard of living degrading closer to 3rd world conditions

gold and silver are a good hedge as far as devaluation of currency unless there are competitors like crypto ... I think a lot of money that would have gone to precious metals have gone to established crypto coins like bitcon ...

.
170   HeadSet   2023 Nov 8, 10:29am  

RayAmerica says


HeadSet says


NuttBoxer says

Gold buying by central banks is 800 tons for the year.

Cool! Looks like they are transitioning to a gold back currency!


That's not the case in the slightest. The central banks are privately owned conglomerates that are also the biggest con artists in history. They know what is coming; a collapse of fiat currencies, so they are converting their soon to be worthless paper into hard assets, such as gold.


That quip "Cool! Looks like they are transitioning to a gold back currency!" was a joke, The last thing a central bank wants is an asset backed currency, as that would strip the central bank of its power.
171   NuttBoxer   2023 Nov 8, 1:26pm  

Ahh, the subtleties of online speech..
172   AmericanKulak   2023 Nov 19, 11:01pm  

Can't believe Gold hasn't gone way higher.
173   Onvacation   2023 Nov 21, 11:27am  

ad says

.. I think a lot of money that would have gone to precious metals have gone to established crypto coins like bitcon ...

Agreed! But they're not making any more bitcoin. Gold and silver can just be dug out of the ground.
174   stereotomy   2023 Dec 1, 12:29pm  

Off to the races . .


175   stereotomy   2023 Dec 3, 6:08pm  

Holy shit!


176   just_passing_through   2023 Dec 3, 6:35pm  

Someone(s) are thinking the printing presses are soon to be fired up again.
177   NuttBoxer   2023 Dec 3, 7:18pm  

December's usually pretty dead for serious movement. Stocks do well so CEO's can get their bonus's early next year.
179   NuttBoxer   2023 Dec 15, 6:14pm  

Chinese know what American's will learn the hard way. Never trust your governments paper currency...
https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Markets/Commodities/Chinese-pay-premium-prices-for-gold-as-economic-outlook-dims
180   AD   2024 Jan 8, 10:14pm  

.

1 kilo of gold is worth about $66,000



.
181   NuttBoxer   2024 Jan 13, 8:04am  

Texas latest state moving back to real money:

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/texas-gop-moves-support-gold
183   UkraineIsTotallyFucked   2024 Mar 8, 9:03pm  

Tons of the stuff is being bought and physically transferred to Shanghai. The world' largest gold exchange is there.
184   stereotomy   2024 Mar 21, 1:43am  

Fed Chair Powell is my hero - all that bullshit is great for gold. Pretty soon we'll have gold at $2500, gas at $10/gallon, and $15 for a gallon of milk.


185   Robert Sproul   2024 Mar 21, 7:46am  

AD says

... I think a lot of money that would have gone to precious metals have gone to established crypto coins like bitcon ...

One reason to wonder if Bitcoin is some kind of Gov Op.
186   UkraineIsTotallyFucked   2024 Mar 21, 8:43am  

stereotomy says

gas at $10/gallon, and $15 for a gallon of milk.


Really? We pay for those things in gold?
187   UkraineIsTotallyFucked   2024 Mar 21, 8:45am  

NuttBoxer says

Texas latest state moving back to real money:

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/texas-gop-moves-support-gold


Did you read the article? First paragraph states the proposition is not legally binding.
188   richwicks   2024 Mar 21, 9:50am  

UkraineIsTotallyFucked says


Did you read the article? First paragraph states the proposition is not legally binding.


Most of what Zerohedge is "misleading" at best. I long ago abandoned the site since 90% of it is just garbage. Used to piss me off when they'd post a chart with NOTHING labeling the X or Y axis and the "article" was "this chart needs no explanation" and nobody could tell me what it was.
189   NuttBoxer   2024 Mar 21, 10:45am  

Some have speculated it was created by the NSA who released an interesting study on digital coin sometime before bitcoin was created. No solid proof, but an interesting theory..
190   Onvacation   2024 Apr 3, 9:48am  

Long Term Trends in Precious Metals
Gold, Up and up and up compared to fiat. Notice the flatline before 1971. Also notice the little bump at the beginning of the chart, that's when FDR federalized gold and made it illegal to own. The late 1970's runup coincided with the Hunt Bro's silver fiasco.


Now silver. Notice the little bump up in the mid 1960's when we took silver completely out of our coinage. (Anyone know what "40% silver" coins are?) Then the big peak in 1980 when the Hunt Brothers tried to "corner the market", "https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/business/1980/04/27/hunt-brothers-thrill-ride-in-silver-takes-us-close-to-disaster/505507ce-a75b-407b-a407-0ed12cb35a5a/
before the SEC, CFTC, and the Fed shut them down. Also notice the "Iwog peak" in 2011 where a couple of market timers cashed out at just the right time. IMO silver has nowhere to go but up.


191   RayAmerica   2024 Apr 3, 10:16am  

Mark Dice Trying To Trade 1 oz Gold Coin (worth $1800 at the time of the video) for Worthless Random Stuff

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_x8VswuLwU
192   NuttBoxer   2024 Apr 4, 9:20am  

Onvacation says

FDR federalized gold and made it illegal to own.


That's an exaggeration, was never illegal.

Onvacation says

Now silver.


Not sure there's data, but would rather see this go back to the 1870's when silver standard was removed. Everything else significant in our financial history is pinned to this one moment.
193   richwicks   2024 Apr 4, 9:48am  

NuttBoxer says

That's an exaggeration, was never illegal.


Yes it was. An individual could have up to 5 ounces of gold bullion meaning coins and bars, anything beyond that was illegal.

People could have gold in the form of jewelry and several things were done to attain that.
194   NuttBoxer   2024 Apr 4, 9:51am  

It was a voluntary turn in, not mandatory confiscation. Feel free to provide a citation proving otherwise, but Griffin and Sanders both disagree with you. And their collective knowledge on this subject is more than we'll ever forget.
195   richwicks   2024 Apr 4, 10:32am  

NuttBoxer says

It was a voluntary turn in, not mandatory confiscation. Feel free to provide a citation proving otherwise,


Executive Order 6102 - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executive_Order_6102

It was a bailout of the Federal Reserve that was counterfeiting money.

Executive Order 6102 required all persons to deliver on or before May 1, 1933, all but a small amount of gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates owned by them to the Federal Reserve in exchange for $20.67 (equivalent to $487 in 2023)[7] per troy ounce. Under the Trading with the Enemy Act of 1917, as amended by the recently passed Emergency Banking Act of March 9, 1933, a violation of the order was punishable by fine up to $10,000 (equivalent to $235,000 in 2023),[7] up to ten years in prison, or both.


It won't work this time. People who own bullion would rather dump the stuff in the Mariana Trench than give it to the government.
196   AD   2024 Apr 12, 11:13pm  

.

time for a correction to gold price ?

.


.
197   Robert Sproul   2024 Apr 13, 7:15am  

richwicks says


Executive Order 6102 - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executive_Order_6102

It was a bailout of the Federal Reserve that was counterfeiting money.

Also the Fed 'bought' citizen's gold for 20 bucks and immediately revalued it at $35. That can't have felt too good.
198   Patrick   2024 Apr 15, 10:33pm  




Can someone explain this graph?

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