A good article here, showing again why I look at Gold/Bonds/Oil to try and
ascertain the possible direction of Dollar crosses.
Link to article
A few extracts:
Key to the gold's rise is the dollar's demise, especially in an election year.
And the dollar is "more vulnerable than ever," said Ned Schmidt, editor of the
Value View Gold Report, asserting his belief that the "dollar bear market will
accelerate after the U.S. election."
the glut of the dollar debt in central banks around the world is approaching a
critical level," Schmidt said, and central banks are slowing their acquisition of U.S.
debt, which will further weaken the dollar
The greenback is "in dire trouble so investors in gold know the risk is one to the upside
with only short-term fund traders taking gold lower for additional opportunities to add at discounted levels
"The strongest reason to own gold right now is the fact that we have three
U.S. aircraft carriers with task forces parked opposite Iranian shores
Saudi Arabia has put its entire navy and special forces units in defensive
position around the world's largest oil terminal, Ras Tanura, said Preston. News
reports last week said there were threats of a possible al-Qaida attack on Persian Gulf oil terminals.
"This is an unusually high concentration of military build up on the part of the
United States in the Persian Gulf,
The Bold highlighting is mine.
The problem I have here, though, is can everyone be positioned the same way
and all make the same profits?
Most folk seem to be reading the same stuff, drawing the same conclusions, and
putting on the same positions.
We can't all be right, can we?
Do Forex trades mimic the action of Indice trading, where you get a head fake in
the opposite direction first, whip out folks stops, and then go the right way
whilst the speculators are out of the trade, licking their wounds and wondering what
just happened?