Weekly Pit Futures Review

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Financials Review on Feb 22, 2011

Trouble overseas and the question is, what will happen to the global production of oil? Libya is seeing air force pilots defect and New Zealand had a large earthquake which has negatively affected the country's currency. Let's talk numbers so it is easier to see why traders might be fearful this morning. Libya creates an estimated 1.8 million barrels of crude a day which is 2% of the world global output. The other kicker is Libya sits on the biggest oil reserves in Africa. Investors may become concerned due to raw materials growing and of course the word some are fearing, inflation. When consumers have to pay more at the gas pump they have less money to spend on essentials. The U.S. Dollar Index and gold could see buy orders over the next few days if the events overseas worsen. This could put pressure on the stock market today. (1)

Over the past 21 months Wal-Mart has posted drops in sales and is blaming dollar stores as to why they are losing money. Sales overall have risen 2.5% to $115.6 billion which did not meet the expectations of Wall Street.(2) Home Depot beat sales and quarterly profit estimates as more and more people took on maintenance improvements. Net income rose over $240 million from last year at this point. (3)

Today the Case-Shiller 20-city Index is forecasted to come in at -2.2% and consumer confidence is expected to grow from 65.6 to 67.0. Wednesday existing home sales are forecast to be 5.40m which is up from the last announcement of 5.28m. Thursday initial claims will be announced and are forecast to be the same as the last announcement of 410k. Durable orders are forecast to grow to 3.6% which is revised from -2.5%. New home sales are expected to be 310k and forecasts might come in higher at 335k. Friday, there will be a GDP estimate that is expected to be raised by 0.2% to 3.4%. Michigan sentiment is forecasted to 75.5 up from 75.1 when last announced. (4)

- Frank LaMantia, Financials Guru

1 http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Libyan-turmoil-hits-stocks-as-apf-1471605558.html?x=0&sec=topStories&pos=main&asset=&ccode=
2 http://www.cnbc.com/id/41702728
3 http://www.cnbc.com/id/41702997
4 http://biz.yahoo.com/c/e.html

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Grains Review on Jan 13th

Calls: Following WASDE the beans and corn trades touched limit twice before backing off slightly on the close. There was plenty of selling into the rally early with front end corn vol dropping by a whopping 18% to 34% basis Feb. March dropped by 6.5% on the day due to a lack of follow though once we touched limit. Also, this report offered a great exit for entrenched longs looking for an exit early in the year. The report offered no momentum for wheat after raising world stocks leaving the trade in the dust as compared with row crops. Outside momentum helped all session with talk of an Argentine farm sector strike starting on Jan 17th and running for 7 days. This is in protest of changing export parameters for corn and wheat. This is another brilliant political move by Kirchner that I think will blow up in her face. Bull spreads carried the day in corn and beans with the N/Z and N/X (beans) widening on the day. Paper was an aggressive seller of the N/Z 100p CSO for 20-cents. This is a bullish play commercials should love. Overall it was a day of many exits with few fresh positions put on. The strangest and most interesting one was in Beans with ADM buying 3,000 SN 23.00 calls for 8-cents. This smells of fund business going through a commercial. Heading into the afternoon, the trade is waiting for further word concerning the Argentine strike possibilities with confirmation seen late in the day. The strike is a no selling stance by farmers for corn, beans and wheat between Jan 17th-24th. This helped the market into the overnight with corn continuing to lead the way with oil losing to meal but this looks short lived due to production problems in Malaysia and India looking to eliminate their palm import tax. Heading into the day session export sales were nothing to get excited about and macros are having only a minor impact so far with both the Euro and crude chopping on either side of unchanged. This is a big pullback for the Euro so watch this factor closely.

Beans are called 6-8 Higher to start moving above the daily contract high and into no man's land on the weekly chart. The only comparative year is 2008 but I think the market actually has a major world production and consumptive problem. Indicators on the weekly chart remain in the upper end of the range with no overt signs of weakness. Corn is called 8-10 Higher breaking above contract highs with indicators turning positive following a week long pullback. A perfect picture for bulls, I think. Wheat is called 6-8 Higher holding the most upside ground to gain. There is nothing to stop the wheat except a lack of excitement. I favor KC and Minni over Chicago and ride this horse all season long. Meal is called 2-3 dollars Higher breaking above contract highs yesterday and continuing this overnight. There is no reason to be bearish from a technical standpoint. Indicators are at the upper end but they have been for weeks. Oil is called Flat/Mixed looking for momentum for crude and palm oil. A break above 59.10 is needed to spark fresh interest.


Fundamental: Argentine weather is looking at bit wetter through the weekend with the southern and central regions favored over the far northern regions. BA and surrounding areas look to receive .50-1.00" with 70% coverage through Monday. This will help overall prospects but the north remains too dry for anyone to be comfortable. Brazil remains in good shape overall with only the far south of any concern at the moment.

Open interest shifted as follows: Corn +27277, Beans +12701, Wheat +3633, Meal +8310 and oil +9485. Rebalancing is a major factor right? I feel the population of new ETF's and fresh allocations from CTAs is the major factor. Add commercial fund money and this looks to continue, not abate. Commodities are a hot topic that will continue to garner media attention potentially pulling more money into the trade. It's a beautiful circle.

China bought 40 TMT US bean oil yesterday for second quarter delivery.

Pakistan has sold between 200-2500 TMT of wheat to Bangladesh and Myanmar. This is their first sales in three years due to floods and drought ravaged crops. This is a mildly bearish impact but Pakistan will not export to anyone not abutting the country so the world impact is minimal.


The 6-10 day maps continue to show below average temps in the Midwest but there is ample coverage following the recent snows to cause no worry. The worry still lies in the HRW regions with no precipitation expected with the current 3-4-days system moving through the northern half of the US. This only adds to woes for farmers in that region. The trade impact is minimal today due to this being a known factor but it offers no relief for shorts nor any threat to those long KC versus CHI.

Jordan tendered for 100 TMT Hard milling wheat. Bad timing I think.

Following yesterday's WASDE report the corn stocks to use ratio is down to 5.5% (Thanks MaryAnn). This is shockingly low forcing more and more corn users to sweat against shorts July forward. If Argentina continues to show problems I believe corn has no choice but move higher due to world supply concerns. The corn carryout at 745 million is the lowest in 15 years...want to get short this? I don't.

Palm oil traded 44 Higher overnight on production concerns. Couple this with India talking of eliminating their palm import tariff and you can start to paint the tight world situation that I talked about in the preWASDE report. The US is swimming in oil but the world is not, the world will win.

Talk has Chinese crush margins back to even and possibly turning positive shortly. This is a major swing from the talked about 20/tonne loss just a month ago.

Export sales came in as follows: Corn 439.2 10/11 and 68.3 11/12 with 613.7 TMT shipped. Beans 495 10/11 and 180 11/12 with 950.2 TMT shipped. Most of the sales and shipments were, of course, to China. Wheat 147.3 10/11 with 27.9 11/12 with 613.7 shipped. Meal 26.2 TMT sold with 278.2 shipped (none to China) Oil 7.5 TMT sold and 57.2 TMT shipped with 29 TMT heading to China.

Overall disappointing but the trade was still in holiday mode. I look for these numbers to pick up dramatically in the coming weeks.

Options: Yesterday the market learned how volatile cereal options can be with an amazing drop of 18% in CG options. This was due to a lack of follow through following WASDE with March taking a 6% hit now sitting at 39%. May was down 3% lower with deferreds down about 2%. This is a solid drop but still expensive enough to make buying it scary but I would not sell any vol. If you want to own vol, look to beans. Following yesterday's drop, SH vol is down to a scary low level of 31%. This is 8% under corn or wheat in March with July sitting at only 32%. I like looking at owning upside calls in beans and straddles with vol ownership advised. Corn bulls may want to simply buy calls or invert 1X2 call spreads looking for an explosion. There is no slope so buying call spreads is not advised.

The following chart includes my observations:

***chart courtesy Gecko Software
Past performance is not indicative of future results.

MACROS:Are mixed but support from a surging Euro following good bond sales in Spain and Italy helps the upside momentum. Crude remains choppy with metals on the sideline so far. Cotton is 200 higher with sugar inching its way higher helping even more.

Gold is trading 4.20 Higher sitting at 1,390.00.
Crude is trading .20 Lower sitting at 91.66 as of 8:25 CST.
The Euro is .0148 Higher against the USD trading at 1.3276.
The Yen is .22 Lower against the USD trading at 82.74.

Daily Wisdom: A peace is of the nature of a conquest; for then both parties nobly are subdued, and neither party loser. - William Shakespeare

- Matthew Pierce, Grains Guru

Monday, December 13, 2010

James Mound’s Weekend Commodities Review

Financials

The S&P500 has developed an interesting multi-pronged technical setup on a daily chart that indicates a strong decline to 1203, possibly as low as 1184 in the near term. I believe the stock market rallied based on the Obama extensions of the Bush tax cuts, but overall the market will find weakness in global economic concerns and a reversal in premature bond selling. As money migrates back into the U.S. dollar from a continued exodus in Europe it is more likely funds will pour into bonds than an overbought stock market. Expect a dollar run to 83, a 3-5% drop in stock prices, and a decent bond retracement to 126 over a relatively short time frame. The euro and pound remain sells with the Canadian and Aussie dollar worthy of long term shorts. The Japanese yen remains a bull bright spot amid a sea of bearish foreign currency plays, with money moving to Japan as it leaves Europe and investors lack alternatives. I continue to stand by my forecast that:

Grains

Corn, wheat and soybeans have all developed congestion patterns near the highs, not altogether a bearish indicator but rather a suggestion that momentum and upside volatility have subsided. My expectations for declines in the stock market and energy sector are likely to hit the grain sector as well, given the lack of fundamental influences in grains this time of year and the overall psychology that global economic weakness means declining grain demand. Put plays are recommended across the board.

12-12-10 beans.jpg

Past performance is not indicative of future results.

**Chart courtesy of Gecko Software's TracknTrade

Meats

Cattle is testing key trend line support and should fail this week. Hogs remain choppy and avoidable for the time being.

Metals

Gold and silver remain near the highs with choppy intermittently volatile trade lacking clear near term direction. Get short heading into the last few weeks of 2010 as a liquidation event is expected in both markets in the near term. Copper offers a fundamental long term sell ahead of a China slowdown causing panic selling in that market.

Softs

A short covering rally in coffee appears underway, however this move (possibly to 230) is expected to be short-lived and worthy of a put play on a further move up. Cocoa has established a likely near term top and is a sell with straight long puts. Cotton is attempting to pull off the miraculous feat of new highs after such a dramatic collapse. This is unlikely to occur, mainly on a technical level as it is very rare to see epic highs followed by an extreme retracement followed by a rapid return to the highs. Instead, look at this as the market setting a secondary top for a less volatile selloff ahead. OJ is a short with puts. Sugar is a sell using bear put spreads. Lumber remains a cycle buy on dips.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Soybeans Futures History

Although there are several claims to the origin of soybeans, most believe its roots can be traced back to Asia. More specifically, the history of soybean use for human consumption goes back at least 5,000 years in the Chinese culture. Soybeans were proclaimed as a “sacred plant” by Chinese Emperor Shennong. If anyone was to claim a particular crop as sacred it’s Shennong. His name directly translates to “divine farmer” and he’s often referred to as the Emperor of Five Grains for his contribution to Chinese agriculture.

Fast forward a few thousand years to the early part of the 1930s; the U.S. is recovering from the Great Depression and the droughts of the Dust Bowl. At the time, Ford was doing more than building cars. A little known fact about Henry Ford is that he was one of the biggest proponents of soybeans’ uses. His financial contributions to the research of soybean applications directly assisted in the development of products like soymilk and soy-based fibers. Soybean markets were growing, and a proper place to trade them was becoming a growing need.

In 1936, the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT), the first formal futures exchange in the United States, launched its futures contracts for trading soybeans; the first of its kind. Another product of 1936 was the Commodities Exchange Act that banned futures trading on non-designated exchanges. By consolidating soybean trading under one roof, the soybean futures market grew. These developments solved two large issues facing producers and consumers of soybeans. Having a futures exchange allowed for buyers and sellers of soybeans to meet and trade their goods resulting in proper price discovery. The futures market gave an accurate price reference for those who needed one. The other major issue that existed before exchanges was the lack of accurate supply and demand data. This resulted in supply gluts and shortages because producers weren’t able to properly assess demand needs. Formalized futures exchanges not only consolidated trading, but they also consolidated market data.

15 years after trading soybean futures markets began, the CBOT introduced futures on the soybean complex: soybean oil and soybean meal. Options on soybean futures products were released in 1984. These different products have all developed and grown in their own rights. They are widely used by spreaders, hedgers, speculators, and commercials. The historic development of futures markets are the reason that people trading soybean markets today have the versatility and choice to pick which financial vehicle suits them best.

(Soybean. Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07. Accessed Feb.25, 2009)

(Jane Reynolds, Phil Gates, and Gaden Robinson (1994). 365 Days of Nature and Discovery. Harry N. Adams, Inc., New York. p. 44. ISBN 0-8109-3876-6. )

(CBOT: About CBOT: History)

Trading in futures and options involves a substantial degree of a risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

The Bullion Report : The Gold-Silver Ratio

The gold-silver ratio is among the many tools and topics that investors take a hard look at when it comes to precious metals. There are several moments in time that the ratio was made a permanent force by government decree. Even in modern trading, the ratio has a home in certain trading strategies. With both markets playing with record highs, it is worth explaining and exploring the ratio between these two markets.


Past performance is not indicative of future results.
***chart courtesy Gecko Software’s Track n’ Trade Pro


Past performance is not indicative of future results.
***chart courtesy Gecko Software’s Track n’ Trade Pro

The gold-silver ratio is pretty straightforward math – to determine the ratio, look at how many ounces of silver it takes to buy a single ounce of gold. If gold were trading around $1,000 an ounce and silver around $20 an ounce, the ratio would be 1,000 over 20 or 50:1. The result is that a higher ratio is seen as a signal for cheaper silver versus gold and a high ratio signals more expensive silver. Older references regarding the mining resources for silver suggest that there is roughly 16 times more silver to be mined than gold, which sets up the older ratio valuations from countries like France, the US, and Great Britain. Today, the values for both metals are obviously constantly changing, but adherents to trade strategies based on this ratio look at historical references for potential trading opportunities.

Coinage acts in the United States during the 18th and 19th centuries placed the gold-silver ratio in the neighborhood of 1:15 or 1:16. When the bimetal standard was dropped, this shifted and the ratio has drifted high and low in subsequent generations. Events like the Great Depression, the implementation of Bretton-Woods, post-war prosperity, dropping of the gold standard, the Hunt Brother’s manipulation, and other price extremes in precious metals have been cited as significant shifts in the ratio.

Trading strategies based on the gold-silver ratio look at these previous ratio levels as possibilities for extremes which might present opportunities. Basically, if it takes fifty ounces of silver to buy one ounce of gold at one point, an investor who thinks the ratio may expand would look to sell or be short silver-related assets. There is still a substantial level of risk in the trade, and it would be based on the ability to correctly identify an opportunity in the ratio and the potential for a future shift. Trading the ratio can be done through various investment outlets. Some bullion bugs trading the ratio may do so without regard to the actual prices. In the same example, if an investor believed the ratio would expand from 50:1, they could convert 50 ounces of silver to one ounce of gold. If the silver price dropped and the ratio grew to 100:1, the same investor could convert that ounce of gold to 100 ounces of silver.

Using an average price for each precious metal, a chart of the gold-silver ratio over time might look a little like this:


Past performance is not indicative of future results.

To ratio traders, the suggestion of this chart is that extremes run the gamut from around 16:1 to nearly 100:1. The last decade has frequently produced numbers around 50:1 or 60:1. Therefore, any divergence from this could be viewed as a potential trade.

Summary


The gold-silver ratio is obviously another tool that can be employed by investors looking for particular signals when trading precious metals. The current analysis suggests that when compared to the rest of the decade, a ratio above 50:1 means greater opportunities in long silver positions. However, the extreme volatility seen as of late might mean the ratio has room to expand. There are also the recent lawsuits regarding silver price manipulation to consider. Most importantly, the current recession has yet to push towards a tangible recovery. This means that silver could still be highly susceptible to larger price movements to the downside as it is used in both industry and investment. The precious metals investment expansion could still see strong demand this year and next. The manufacturing industry might not. That means there is a possibility of a fundamental weakness in silver markets that needs to be accounted for when looking at the gold-silver ratio. If gold can retain its strength or outperform silver at any time, the downside pressure in the silver market might easily deliver another spike in the gold-silver ratio.

For your FREE gold trading kit, call (866)258-5997.

It means that the silver coins of the United States at whatever ratio is fixed, and I want the present ratio that we have now, 16 to 1, maintained precisely as it is. -Richard Parks Bland


Disclaimer: The prices of precious metals and physical commodities are unpredictable and volatile. There is a substantial degree of a risk of loss in all trading. Past performance is not indicative of future results. © 2010 Berkshire Asset Management, LLC

Monday, November 8, 2010

PitGuru.com’s Weekly Grains Review for Nov 8th, 2010

Friday saw a messy session with wheat and bean oil leading the way higher on relationship buying ahead of the report. Oil share widened on Chinese demand talk and possible production concerns coming out of Indonesia following the recent volcanic activity. There is no wipeout talked about but the light ash cover is coating leaves restricting photosynthetic activity. This is a concern for total production in a time of tightening global food oil supply. Wheat recovered from chart lows versus corn with protective buying seen in options. The WZ 750-800 call spread was bought all day with the WZ 750-775 call spread bought a couple thousand times. The most interesting play is in corn options with paper buying the CH 10.00 calls, the CK 11.00 calls and the CZ11 10.00 calls. This is obviously a gamma and slope play with delta a mute point with calls this far out of the money. Outside of this the market is seeing puts bought in bean oil as players start looking for the downside technical correction. Owning put vol covered is a smart way to play the put slope inversions with long futures helping counter the upside delta move. All in all a very supportive week with the market inching closer to key strike prices as the Dec option expiration approaches. Heading into the weekend the trade is asking itself, what comes next? What happens if the USDA lowers corn yield below 154? What if John Macintosh is correct and corn yield is 148? Is China’s recent absence from the bean export market the first piece of evidence that they are now covered through March? Will the USDA raise bean exports 50 million bushels and if so, where do they get the extra beans? Do they borrow from the “residual” sludge fund or are they going to raise the yield? Bean ending stocks, though larger than last year, are still too low to be comfortable making the trade jittery.

The weekend offered little fresh information leaving the trade erratically choppy heading into the November report. Early strength was seen in the wheat market with this trade seeing a 20-cent range overnight after weekend weather did not offer any relief to the US plains or NW Australia. The macro situation overnight was slightly weaker with nothing dramatic but a slight contraction erased early overnight gains in grains. All markets ended slightly lower with bean oil losing the most following a contraction in palm oil. The USD is gaining versus the Euro on growing concern over Irish debt levels with this looking to continue into the day session.

The day ahead of the report is usually a protection day. This is when traders with naked length or shorts look to buy options as an insurance policy for immediate movement. Look for hefty action in Dec options again today, following the action the market saw on Friday. With the information currently at hand the trade is looking for a drop in overall corn yield, no change to a minor increase in bean yield with world wheat numbers expected to fall again. Overall this report should offer plenty of opportunity for the trade to change their bias if they want to. The “spin” following the trade will be interesting in that pundits are polarized at the momentum concerning the actual impact fundamentals will have versus the impact of the USD. I am a fundamental trader so I feel this will be fundamentals will win the day, if not tomorrow then the market has to wait for the final numbers on the WASDE report come January.

The market looks to open slightly lower to start the day with a weaker crude market and a sizable (100+) move in the USD over the Euro. All factors look bearish heading into the report but do not get enamored with bearish sentiment until we get tomorrow’s numbers behind us.

I am currently in Cartagena Colombia at an international conference of wheat producers and consumers. Following the conference I hope to have a better idea of what the actual world producers are looking for concerning protein, production and overall producer sentiment. From early indications I estimate that the world crop will be big but overall quality is a concern making the wheat versus corn spread a feature following the WASDE report.

World production numbers are going to be closely scrutinized. Focus on Argentina, Brazil, Australia, Russia and look for possible changes in the Chinese numbers. The USDA is currently 16 MMT above private forecasters concerning Chinese corn production so I think this a possible bomb about to go off. The direction of the impact following the grenade is yet to be seen but I have to believe that the upside is the path of least resistance for corn and all agricultural markets due to growing world consumption and questionable weather patterns. The La Nina effect is stated to be the largest in 70 years. If this is true, the Latin American crops are in for a tough struggle as planting approaches completion.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

High Marks

Today the markets eagerly anticipate an announcement from the Federal Reserve as it wraps up a two day meeting. The focus will fall on the full measure of proposed quantitative easing. Heading into the report, there has been little doubt that the Fed will take some easing measures and that the US dollar and metals markets will react. So far this year, gold and silver have made fresh highs, reigniting interest into the high marks of the past and the events that motivated them.


Past performance is not indicative of future results.
***chart courtesy Gecko Software’s Track n’ Trade Pro

Past performance is not indicative of future results.
***chart courtesy Gecko Software’s Track n’ Trade Pro

The fundamental focus for the last few years has been relatively narrow, falling on a handful of US dollar events and a broad picture of the global economic landscape. The housing and credit crisis precipitated reactions from the Federal Reserve that led to easing and a drop in the US dollar. Subsequent economic fallout including high unemployment and stagnant growth led some investors to the ‘haven’ of precious metals as an alternative asset. This has continued to bring some high price levels in both gold and silver.

The march to new highs in gold was nearly three decades in the making. In 1980, the price of gold topped $850 amid a climate of high inflation, high oil prices, and high geo-political tensions, specifically in Afghanistan. The price of gold tumbled following that peak, apparently bottoming out above $250 an ounce in 1999. The low came in as investors speculated that central banks would begin selling their gold reserves. Once the central banks of Europe signed their gold agreement limiting gold sales, the stage was set for a price comeback.


Past performance is not indicative of future results.
***chart courtesy Gecko Software’s Track n’ Trade Pro

In the decade that followed, gold prices picked up steam, gathering momentum as geopolitical tensions began to rise and commodities prices picked up. Starting in 2006, the weakening dollar provided a likely catalyst for investors to move towards commodities. The subsequent price peaks in gold hit a climax in January of 2008 when gold broke that $850 price high. Each new high shook out some investors as profit taking ensued, but the market forged ahead to the $1,000 an ounce level, breaking through in March of that same year. After that, gold prices appeared to fall victim to the commodities exodus as investors began to focus on demand fundamentals and the potential for recovery. Plenty of stimulus was being poured into the global economy in an effort to restart the growth engines, and it appeared to have the potential to work.

However, gold came back after falling below the $700 level. Investment interest and demand, especially in ETFs, grew exponentially last year. That kind of hunger for the perceived haven of gold propelled the market back over the $1,000 mark and beyond. For now, gold has already managed to top $1,380, and there appears no shortage of analysts who thing the twin threats of inflation and fear could move things higher.

Gold prices have not stood alone in hitting fresh highs. Silver has also managed to break out, topping previous high marks. However, cresting the all-time peak in silver prices could be a little more challenging. The peak price in silver took place in the 1980s under the price manipulation of the Hunt Brothers. At that time, silver prices could have been faring reasonably well in tandem with gold as fundamentals like inflation and political tensions affected commodities priced in US dollars. However, the exponentially high silver spike above $50 had some help from the Hunt’s cornering the market. Once the chase had ended, the Hunts were bankrupt and many speculators suffered huge losses.

Finding a high mark in silver prices absent of manipulation, it would seem natural to take a look at the prices in 2008, when gold and other commodities were logging price peaks. In March of that year, silver prices topped $20 an ounce. This level was only recently breached again. Unfortunately, this new high comes as more accusations of manipulation come into play. CFTC commissioner Bart Chilton recently issued a statement that suggests they are looking into the potential that there were attempts to influence silver prices. (1)


Past performance is not indicative of future results.
***chart courtesy Gecko Software’s Track n’ Trade Pro

Summary

There seems to be little doubt that the recent economic crisis and the reaction to the same have helped propel precious metal prices higher. Gold, as well as silver, have been the beneficiaries of renewed interest from investors. As a result, prices gained a great deal of momentum and hit fresh highs. Going forward, it seems that there is plenty of room for price action on both sides of these high marks. On one hand, the new peaks are likely to inspire intermittent profit taking. On the other hand, the bigger picture could spell strength and support for these markets. What it comes down to is the strength of the fundamentals behind the move. Price highs based solely on fear and manipulation face a greater challenge in finding support on the way down. Those are weaker fundamentals. Gold and silver prices would need to find strength in the possibility that investor and central bank demand for gold will remain vibrant and that the US dollar will remain in a pattern of competitive devaluation.

For your FREE gold trading kit, call (866)258-5997.

1 http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-10-26/silver-market-faced-fraudulent-efforts-to-control-price-chilton-says.html

Gold and silver are no doubt subject to fluctuations, from the discovery of new and more abundant mines; but such discoveries are rare, and their effects, though powerful, are limited to periods of comparatively short duration. - David Ricardo