Steven Saville | TalkMarkets | Page 21
Contributor's Links: The Speculative Investor
I graduated from the University of Western Australia in 1984 with a degree in electronic engineering and from 1984 until 1998 worked in the commercial construction industry as an engineer, a project manager and an operations manager. I began investing in the stock market 2 months prior to ...more

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Gold’s “Commercial” Traders Are Different Because Gold Is Different
In a typical commodity market the traders known as “commercials” are usually hedging their exposure to the physical commodity when they buy or sell futures contracts.
Charts Of Interest - November 16, 2015
Charts listed in this article relate to comments on the gold and silver markets...
Why Hasn’t The Fed’s QE Caused “inflation”?
The Federal Reserve has monetised a few trillion dollars of bonds over the past seven years without creating much in the way of what most people call “inflation” (a rise in the general price level). How could this happen?
A Great Crash Is Coming!
One of the interesting aspects of the financial newsletter business is that an incorrect prediction of a market crash will probably drum-up a lot more new business than a correct prediction that there won’t be a crash.
A Critique Of Austrian Economics
I’d like to read a negative critique of “Austrian” economics from someone who actually understands it, but up until now every piece of criticism I’ve come across has contained basic misunderstandings of what this school of economics is about.
Objective And Subjective Selling Opportunities
There are two general reasons for a trader with an intermediate-term or a long-term time horizon to sell a stock during a period of strength, either an “objective selling opportunity” or a “subjective selling opportunity”
Why Governments Can't Just Print The Money They Need
Due to the nature of modern money, it would technically be possible to adjust the way the monetary system works such that governments directly print all the money they need.
Gold Is Not Money: The Final Word
It’s important to understand that money isn’t just a medium of exchange. At any given time in any economy, many things will be occasionally used as media of exchange, that is, as currencies.
Record-Breaking Household Debt In Australia
The easy-money policy of the country’s central bank is driving the housing-finance binge.
The Gold-Mining Sector Is Ready To Break Out
As we enter 'Fed day' (the day on which the US monetary politburo is scheduled to provide a new set of clues on how it intends to manipulate the price of credit in the future), the gold-mining sector is poised for a breakout.
What Is Gold?
Gold is primarily a liquid financial asset that can be held for speculative, insurance, store-of-purchasing-power or collateral purposes.
Don’t Be Sucked In By One-Sided Commentary
The point is that there are always two sides to any market. Regardless of your current view, you can be sure that there are many people who are just as smart or smarter than you who have the opposite view.
Another Look At Goldman's Bearish Gold View
My guess is that gold will end this year in the $1100-$1200 range, thus not meeting the expectations of GS and other high-profile bears and at the same time not meeting the expectations of the bulls.
The Zero-Reserve Banking System
Officially, the US has a fractional-reserve banking system (as does almost every other country), meaning that a fraction of deposits are backed by cash reserves held in bank vaults or at the Fed. In reality, the US has a zero-reserve banking system.
Gold Is Not Money, Part 2
This post is my attempt to rebut or otherwise address some of the comments provoked by the earlier post on the same topic.
Reverse Repo Follow-Up
The latest quarterly spike was larger than the preceding three due to the fact that the weekly update of the Fed’s balance sheet happened to be published on the day after the end of the September quarter.
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