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发表于 2013-4-15 11:02 PM
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Gold Meltdown - How Low Can Gold Go?
By Chuck Kowalski, About.com April 15, 2013
Gold prices are in the midst of a complete meltdown. Gold traded about $144 lower on Monday, which is on the back of a large selloff late last week. Gold is now trading at $1,356 an ounce, down 9 percent on the day. Silver prices were in even worse shape. They lost about 11 percent on the day, ending at $23.36 an ounce.
There has been a lot of talk on why prices are down. The main one centers on the fear that Cyprus will be forced to sell a great deal of their gold holdings and many other struggling European countries may be forced to do the same. Goldman Sachs also recently came out with a bearish call on gold.
Regardless of the catalyst, gold broke major technical support and the market is in severe liquidation mode. Market moves like this tend to be exaggerated and it is likely there will be an overshoot to the downside. I don't like to sound like one of the perpetual gold bulls, but I believe the market will move higher in the long run and much of this is panic technical selling. Many investors and institutions have to liquidate for margin reasons and gold funds like GLD have to liquidate their physical gold positions.
The main thing I look at is the cost of production for gold. I have seen many figures thrown around, but an average cost of production around the world is about $1,300. The large miners are a couple hundred dollars below that figure, but this is an average cost. When commodities break below their cost of production, a low in price is not far behind. Buying gold near or below $1,300 looks very attractive.
I like buying the ETF (GLD) for a long term trade. You could get washed out if you trade futures in this environment and trying to pick a bottom. It is amazing to think that the cost of production has gone from about $300 when the rally began around the turn of the century to where it is now. The same can be said for corn and soybeans. I remember around the same timeframe that farmers could turn a profit with corn in the low 2's. Now, they would be far underwater. Who says there isn't any inflation? |
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