Tuesday, August 18, 2020

Gold, Silver Making Historic Bounce Back From Last Week's Raid

Just a week ago, gold and silver futures were smashed lower after running up incredibly over the prior six months. Gold had reached a record high in dollar terms and silver had put on a nearly 60% gain from its mid-March bottom.

Then came the not-unexpected selloff that sent silver down nearly 15% and gold off by more than $100 in just one day (Tuesday, August 11). Some pundits of stocks and other paper currency derivatives were calling it the end of the bull run, but serious holders of precious metals were unswayed by the day's events. Many bullion dealers reported that instead of people rushing in to sell them their gold and silver, they saw record sales. Buyers were responding to the lower price as an incentive to buy more on the cheap.

As time progress to the present, the prices of both metals have recovered quite nicely, thank you very much. Silver, which had been testing the $29 mark, is currently trading in a range between $28.35 and $28.50, not far from the point at which it was pummeled a week prior. Gold is once again above $2000 an ounce, and looks to be heading higher. As of this pre-market writing, it's priced at $2015 on the futures market. The point from which it had fallen - $2050 - is once again targeted and all indications are that gold will continue to make new highs against the US dollar - and most other major currencies - for the foreseeable future.

The quick bounce in price off the shock selloff indicates the overwhelming demand for precious metals that has persisted since the start of the pandemic in March, with premiums at near-record levels and shortages reported throughout the bullion markets for everything from one ounce coins to 400-ounce bars, from London to Zurich, to Hong Kong and New York. People are rushing to buy gold and silver primarily for one reason and one reason only: they mistrust their governments and their central bank currency.

Nobody can dispute that the vast majority of sovereign currencies (likely all of them) have lost value over any period of time measured, be it just the past six months or the past six or 60 years. Otherwise known as inflation, the decimation of purchasing power in the major currencies (especially the UK pound sterling and US dollar) has been profound. Backed by nothing other than faith and trust in government institutions and the central banks which finance them, national currencies are being roundly rejected by the illuminati and people of progressive thinking.

Millennials may be flocking to other forms of safety, particularly crypto currencies like Bitcoin and Etherium, but baby boomers and beyond are old school hoarders of gold and silver, the effects seen in the day-to-day transactions by online bullion dealers, local coin shops and trading sites such as eBay.

(Check the latest "people's prices" on our gold and silver tracking page, which evidences the high premiums over spot being paid.)

The metals have bounced back well for now. What's next? New highs or another overnight raid?

At the Close, Monday, August 17, 2020:
Dow: 27,844.91, -86.11 (-0.31%)
NASDAQ: 11,129.73, +110.42 (+1.00%)
S&P 500: 3,381.99, +9.14 (+0.27%)
NYSE: 12,936.11, +33.61 (+0.26%)

No comments: