View Single Post
Old 09-29-2008, 11:52 PM   #98
LOCOAZ2008
Avalon Senior Member
 
LOCOAZ2008's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: TUMBES, PERÚ
Posts: 77
Exclamation Re: Breaking news, stocks plunge,$700bn plan rejected!

Today the Fed pumped $650 billion into the financial system, so what good even is the $700 billion bailout?

This appears to be the first time representatives have been sensitive to their political supporter's strong, yet email expressed feelings.

Hundreds of thousands read this page.

With respect, I urge you to email your representative in the STRONGEST POSSIBLE WORDS what you want done.

Start your message with a large YES or NO with regards to the bailout.

Decide what you want and please act. It takes very little of your time.

http://jsmineset.com/

Jim Sinclair's Commentary

Gold is going to $1200 and then onward to $1650.

The US dollar will trade at .72 -.62 -.52

Gold sharers holding this asset are not going down.

Gold shares are under the Hail Mary play for pool and naked shorts. Lack of an uptick allows shorts to pound away on the downside.

Don't let your emotions drive your reasoning on the many good situations out there.

BarCap sees "perfect storm" for fresh gold spike
Mon Sep 29, 2008 11:04am IST

KYOTO, Japan, Sept 29 (Reuters) - A near "perfect storm" has reformed in the gold market that should drive bullion to new record highs within the next six months, fuelled by a mix of anxious uncertainty and a weaker dollar outlook, a Barclays Capital official said on Monday.

While gold prices may weaken briefly if other markets rally in relief once U.S. legislators gave the greenlight to a $700 billion bailout of the financial system, a reconsideration of gold's merits should propel it beyond the March record of $1,030.80 an ounce, says Jonathan Spall, a director in BarCap's commodities division.

"I think we should make new highs .. .within the next six months, I would've thought," he told journalists at the London Bullion Market Association's annual conference in Kyoto. "We should be in a perfect storm for gold."

The U.S. and European governments have stepped in this month to bail out major banks and financial institutions whose near collapse under the weight of toxic debt triggered the worst crisis in decades and threatened to wreck the world economy. "I was always very sceptical of the argument of gold as a safe haven, but that has changed dramatically for me and for others -- now it's financial institutions themselves that are under threat," he said.

More...

PEACE & LOVE
LOCOAZ2008 is offline   Reply With Quote