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Commodity – A World of Possibilities

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Archive for March, 2011

Nifty Daily Triangle breakout @ 5522 – update 28 Mar 2011

Posted by commoditydaily on March 28, 2011

Dear Members,

Please find attached analysis for your kind perusal.

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Gold Daily – Channel Formation – Update 22 Mar 2011

Posted by commoditydaily on March 22, 2011

Dear Members,

Please find attached analysis for your kind reference.

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Nifty Daily Chart – Forming Possible Triangle formation – 18 Mar 2011

Posted by commoditydaily on March 18, 2011

Dear Members,

Please find attached chart for your reference.

Thanks,
Commodity Daily

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Note- Members express their own view & may be or may not be having investment or speculative positions in the commodity, please do not take it as buy or sell advise, please use your own judgments for buying or selling, after having discussion with your certified investment brokers or the person to whom u have good level of confidence. once sentiment is changed from good to bad no good news work but bad news do work, investors must keep this in mind.NEW INVESTORS SHOULD BE VERY CAREFUL.


Posted By Commodity Daily to Commodity Daily – A World of Possibilities at 3/18/2011 12:59:00 PM

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Look at what people believe about our Group/Blog and it’s reliability :)

Posted by commoditydaily on March 16, 2011

Please find below the comments and believability of the visitors of commodity daily’s Blog and Google Group.

from ton****k94
Sir my name is tonymalik and i have deep interest in the stock market and i have been doing trading in the market on the regular basis and have losing money in the market . Sir i want to earn some money and also learn the skills of technical analysis of the stocks . I think that this group can help me in both the ways it can help me in recovering my lost money and also in learning the technical skills of stock trading so please accept my request of joining this group i shall be really very thankfull to you for this help .
Email Reason Date
4×4*****rading@gmail.com Very best group in google business. i wanna join to learn many thing to this group.. Oct 19
f*r*****de.com@gmail.com Hi, Wish to be a member. Even if you prefer to decline, please accept my Best Wishes for New Year. Best regards —- Jan 6
ab****aval@gmail.com Financial markets are beyond the fundamentals and technical… I want to join or work with these kind people who have really made it with the brain…. Feb 22
eq****evice@gmail.com Very interested in learning more about trading commodities and I feel this will be the best place to come. Jul 1

Dear visitors your membership is approved, Happy Trading.

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GOLD AT FAHRENHEIT 451 – Article by Richard J. Greene

Posted by commoditydaily on March 16, 2011

GOLD AT FAHRENHEIT 451


Richard J. Greene

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Some of you may remember the book by Ray Bradbury entitled "Fahrenheit 451." The significance of that temperature is that it represents the kindling level of paper. With the temperature rapidly rising, more and more are opting for gold rather than paper money. There is little doubt that an excursion to paper money can lead to a period of rapid growth and advancement for the economy and society for a period of time. The big problem comes to a head when paper money is abused without limit. There are mounting signs that we have come to that point and that the temperature in the oven is in the range of 430-450 degrees.

As it is clear we have transformed to a debt-based monetary system, it should also be clear that an economy fueled by debt must continually increase supply since interest is always adding to the total obligation owed. When debt grows in excess of the rate of the economy which it is currently doing by several times, interest charges will consume the economy itself, particularly if interest rates are rising. Could this be why M3 money growth has taken on growth rates over the past two months that could only be termed hyperinflationary if they persist? No wonder the Fed plans to stop releasing this number in the near future. We may have reached the point where the only way to fund shortfalls in capital is to flat out print it. Gold moves up when this becomes feared. Among other concerns that are worrisome are: an oil exchange soon to open in Iran that will offer the sale of oil in euros decreasing the demand for dollars; and ongoing resignations at the Fed including the retirement of Alan Greenspan. Could these ultimate insiders in the money game be bailing out of a hopeless situation so as not to be directly associated with the implosion of the financial system? You would not have this impression if you tuned in to Bubblevision on CNBC, where everything is perceived as just great as long as the stock market stays up and the economic statistics can be tortured into admitting anything the masses wish to hear. As long as the money expansion continues at its recent pace it will be difficult for the major stock averages to move much lower since the currency, (or measuring weight) is on a constant debasement.

Some signs that gold, silver, oil, and all real things are the place to be include the high level of deliveries being exercised on the COMEX recently in both gold and silver trading. Investors may finally be wising up to the fallacy of depending on paper claims to hard assets as opposed to the assets themselves. Jimmy Rogers manages one of the biggest commodity funds and had the research dead right but is learning the hard way about paper claims through the defaults at Refco. If you own futures and the demand for the physical soars you get on line and hope you get filled with something other than more paper. Those that get caught in that dilemma have not completed their homework or understand a big part of the reason for owning gold and silver in the first place.

So how do we know when that time has come when paper promises are no good and when we go to the bank to get our money it is not really there? How do we know when the next dollar printed will tip the boat and lose the confidence of the people and lead to massive losses in purchasing power? I for one do not know exactly when that time will come, however, I can see quite clearly today that the risk of a problem runs quite high right now and has for some time. I only know that as far as confidence in money goes the limit for additional dollars can only be described as "one dollar too much." It should make one shudder to consider the outcome. Yet, if you asked 100 people to name the ten smartest people they know, I would bet that considerably less than 100 of that 1000 would have any exposure to precious metals at all. For some reason, the threat posed by the current financial system can not be grasped or confronted by the vast majority of people and the subject is absolutely vital. If the financial system goes which if you understand its true mechanics it is destined to, the move to gold and silver will be as instinctual as it has every other time paper money has failed. If this is so then we can have some idea of what the potential range for where gold could trade.

The current value of all the gold in the world approximates $2.5 trillion. US gold which is supposed to approximate 261 million ounces is worth roughly $135 billion. We say "supposed to" because the gold hasn’t been audited for a very long time and with all the gold leasing that has gone on over the past 20 years it is very unlikely that everyone is still holding the gold they claim. Comparing this with the US only M3 money supply – $10 trillion and the world bond market – $35 trillion, and gold would have to appreciate over 18 times or $9306 per ounce. Using only these two components should provide a very conservative estimate of what we could expect. However, let’s take into account that a lot of debt would just disappear due to cascading defaults and discount that number by 80% and we get $1861 per ounce. Jason Hommel of goldismoney.com uses the M3 figure of $10 trillion and divides it by the 261 million ounces and comes up with $38,314 per ounce which I believe will ultimately be closer than my two conservative targets. Another important consideration is the terrible fundamentals and deficits affecting the US dollar which would most likely shift the results back up in favor of a higher US dollar price of gold. While it is clearly a moving target it is a pretty good risk to reward bet that the additional investment demand for gold and silver just as supply is falling off will provide a strong upward catalyst over the next few years. As the heat is turned up on the US paper shuffling economy and the temperature approaches Fahrenheit 451 you will be glad to have your wealth in gold rather than paper which can be expected to kindle into nothingness.

Richard J. Greene
January 10, 2006
Clearwater, Florida
www.thundercapital.com

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For the Last Time, Is Gold in a Bubble?

Posted by commoditydaily on March 16, 2011

For the Last Time, Is Gold in a Bubble?

Jeff Clark, Senior Editor, BIG GOLD

While a few mainstream outlets are coming around to at least acknowledging gold’s stellar run, most remain skeptical or outright bearish. And the blasphemy they purport is that gold is in a bubble.

Let’s settle it, right now, and shut these naysayers up.

Gold returned 10 (and as much as 14) times your money in the 1970s bull market, and the Nasdaq advanced over 1,900% during its run. Our current gold price is up about 400% (when measured on a daily basis, not monthly as in the chart).

In fact, the Nasdaq gained 182% in the final year of its peak, and gold surged 80% in four weeks during the blow-off top of January 1980. None of this is happening to our current gold price.

Note to doubters: we’ve got a long way to go before we start legitimately using the "bubble" word.

Besides, the fact that these skeptics aren’t buying – and don’t even own any gold in the first place – is further proof we’re not in a bubble. Ever notice none of them claim to own it?

And they definitely need to catch up on world affairs. The World Gold Council (WGC) reported that Russia, Venezuela, the Philippines, and Kazakhstan all bought gold in the first quarter. Central bank sales, meanwhile, remain depressed.

Russian President Medvedev won’t quit his quest to move international reserve assets away from the dollar. And his country’s central bank is backing up his words; it increased its gold reserves by $1.8 billion and decreased its currency reserves by $6.6 billion so far this year.

China, the world’s largest gold producer, already buys all the gold produced within its country. But the WGC recently forecasted that overall gold consumption in China could double in the coming decade, a demand that production certainly won’t be able to match.

The Iran/Israel showdown appears closer almost every week. As further evidence that each side is preparing for conflict, Saudi Arabia recently agreed to permit Israel to use a narrow corridor of its airspace to shorten the distance for a bombing run on Iran – all done with the agreement of the U.S government. Simultaneously, the UN Security Council imposed a new round of sanctions on Tehran. Nobody appears to be backing down.

And the current run in gold is with no inflation. Core CPI has fallen to the lowest level since the mid-1960s – but what happens when inflation does set in? And what if it’s as bad or worse as the 14% rate we got in the ’70s? Sure, deflation is the immediate concern, but with a U.S. federal debt of $13 trillion, unfunded future liabilities exceeding $50 trillion, and a current budget deficit of over 10% of GDP, a massive debasement of the dollar is virtually ensured, triggering an onslaught of inflation. It’s coming.

With all these concerns, these guys don’t want to own gold?

Bubble, schmubble. Stocks are vulnerable, bonds are toast, currencies are fiat. Other than cash, where are you going to put money right now?

Gold could correct, of course, and I frankly hope it does. I’m not counting on it, though. The price is just as likely to head the other direction. But if it does temporarily fall, while the bubble-heads are smirking, I’ll be buying.

Someday I think we’ll be reversing roles.

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GLOBAL PIVOTS – MONTHLY – MARCH 2011

Posted by commoditydaily on March 7, 2011

** P M HIGH = Previous Month High, P M LOW = Previous Month Low, S  = Support  , R = Resistance

COMEX

COMMODITY P M HIGH P M LOW P M CLOSE S4 S3 S2 S1 PIOVT R1 R2 R3 R4 + / –
GOLD SPOT 10 1418.20 1325.35 1411.48 1113.00 1205.85 1298.70 1364.89 1391.55 1457.74 1484.40 1577.25 1670.10 78.68
SILVER SPOT 10 34.32 27.86 33.89 13.12 19.58 26.04 30.67 32.49 37.12 38.95 45.40 51.86 5.84
CRUDE MAR 11 103.41 87.09 96.97 47.15 63.47 79.79 88.81 96.11 105.13 112.43 128.75 145.07 2.69
 

LME

ALUMINIUM 3 M 2602.50 2470.00 2600.00 2169.38 2301.88 2434.38 2531.25 2566.88 2663.75 2699.38 2831.88 2964.38 80.00
COPPER 3 M 10190.00 9311.00 9885.00 7175.19 8054.19 8933.19 9434.38 9812.19 10313.38 10691.19 11570.19 12449.19 140.00
NICKEL 3 M 29425.00 27130.00 28990.00 21751.25 24046.25 26341.25 27847.50 28636.25 30142.50 30931.25 33226.25 35521.25 1640.00
TIN 3 M 32799.00 29800.00 32325.00 22784.00 25783.00 28782.00 30763.00 31781.00 33762.00 34780.00 37779.00 40778.00 2225.00
ZINC 3 M 2599.75 2402.50 2520.00 1917.81 2115.06 2312.31 2419.38 2509.56 2616.63 2706.81 2904.06 3101.31 93.00
LEAD 3 M 2685.00 2445.25 2562.00 1843.81 2083.56 2323.31 2441.13 2563.06 2680.88 2802.81 3042.56 3282.31 52.00
 

CURRENCIES

USDINR 45.8750 44.9925 45.2708 42.6890 43.5715 44.4540 44.7979 45.3365 45.6804 46.2190 47.1015 47.9840 -0.6342
USDSGD 1.2858 1.2695 1.2716 1.2257 1.2420 1.2583 1.2635 1.2746 1.2798 1.2909 1.3072 1.3235 -0.0079
EURUSD 1.3862 1.3428 1.3806 1.2424 1.2858 1.3292 1.3589 1.3726 1.4023 1.4160 1.4594 1.5028 0.0112
GBPUSD 1.6279 1.5964 1.6257 1.5244 1.5559 1.5874 1.6100 1.6189 1.6415 1.6504 1.6819 1.7134 0.0243
SGDINR 36.0298 35.0744 35.6026 32.7110 33.6664 34.6218 35.1246 35.5772 36.0800 36.5326 37.4880 38.4434 -0.2825
DOLLAR INDEX 78.8730 76.7560 76.8890 70.9848 73.1018 75.2188 75.7985 77.3358 77.9155 79.4528 81.5698 83.6868 -0.8460
USDJPY 83.9800 81.1300 81.7800 73.6175 76.4675 79.3175 80.3550 82.1675 83.2050 85.0175 87.8675 90.7175 -0.2600

ASIAN & AMERICAN MARKETS

BSE 18690.94 17295.62 17823.40 13762.10 15157.42 16552.74 17205.18 17948.06 18600.50 19343.38 20738.70 22134.02 -504.36
NSE 5599.25 5177.70 5333.25 4108.40 4529.95 4951.50 5146.85 5373.05 5568.40 5794.60 6216.15 6637.70 -172.65
STRAITS TIMES 3232.99 2965.24 3010.51 2255.85 2523.60 2791.35 2885.22 3059.10 3152.97 3326.85 3594.60 3862.35 -169.21
HANG SENG 23981.74 22446.67 23338.02 18665.89 20200.96 21736.03 22560.46 23271.10 24095.53 24806.17 26341.24 27876.31 -109.32
DOW 12391.29 11892.50 12226.34 10687.79 11186.58 11685.37 11977.02 12184.16 12475.81 12682.95 13181.74 13680.53 334.41
NASDAQ 2840.51 2705.54 2782.27 2374.94 2509.91 2644.88 2719.19 2779.85 2854.16 2914.82 3049.79 3184.76 82.19
NIKKEI 225 10891.60 10245.75 10624.09 8671.87 9317.72 9963.57 10327.24 10609.42 10973.09 11255.27 11901.12 12546.97 386.17
This research report is prepared for general information. This material is not intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any financial instrument.

 

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