Silver

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Most assets were higher again this week, with bitcoin leading the way.  Silver, gold stocks and crude oil were the only exceptions.

Currencies were all higher, but bitcoin was in a league of its own, rising 7.8% to 244 mg. The  Euro was in second place, gaining 2% to close at 23.8 mg. The weakest of the bunch was the Japanese Yen, which still rose a respectable 1.1%.

More on Market Update 7 Dec 2012 – Silver Down, Bitcoin Up

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Every asset class except gold stocks was higher this week.  The HUI 'Gold Bugs' index fell 2.3% to close at 8.12 grams, about 8% above its low for the year.

The strongest assets were commodities. In the lead was cotton, which rose 4.6% this week to close at 13.1 mg/lb – recovering most of last week's losses, but still trading only 8% above its all-time low of 12.1 mg/lb set two months ago on Sep-30.  Copper and silver were also strong, rising 3.7% and 3.1% respectively. Even coffee, which continues to trade just above its all-time low, caught a break this week, rising 0.5% to close at 25.6 mg/lb.

More on Market Update 30 Nov 2012 – Gold Stocks Retreat

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Currencies and bonds reversed course this week, with all but Bitcoin moving lower. Stocks rose across the board, with the HUI gold stocks leading the way, and the Nikkei, hindered by the weak yen, rising the least. Commodities were mixed, with metals and energy higher, while cotton and coffee moved lower.

More on Market Update 23 Nov 2012 – Bitcoin continues to shine

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This was a good week for most asset classes, with currencies and bonds all higher, stocks mixed, and commodities all higher except for coffee, which made a new all-time low of 26.3 mg/lb on Tuesday, but rallied to finish the week down 0.3% at 26.7 mg/lb.

More on Market Update 16 Nov 2012 – Bitcoin up, Gold Stocks down

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This week saw massive coordinated central bank "easing", aka money printing, with the ECB promising unlimited new bond purchases to bail out the Eurozone and the German high court giving it's go-ahead, with the result that the EUR dropped to new all-time lows before experiencing a little "shadenfruede recovery" on the Fed's announcement and closing the week down 0.3%.

More on Market Update 14 Sep 2012 – EUR, Cotton, TLT and London Bitcoin Conference

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I got a great question in my email this morning, and I'd like to share it, and my answer, with you.

Using your methods, how can one know when gold and silver are grossly overvalued? Much like the tech stocks around 2000-2001?
 
I don't think of it in quite those terms… I use gold as the unit of measure, and thus see it as unchanging.  The USD may rise and fall, silver may rise and fall, but gold is my constant, like cash.
 
If you put 1kg of gold in a safe for 10 years (or 100 years!), you will still have 1kg of gold.  No gain, no loss. Put enough $100 bills to buy 1kg of gold in the same safe, and you will probably not be able to buy anything close to the same amount of stuff with it in 10 or 100 years (if the bits of paper have any value at all!)
 
So taking the US Dollar first, your question would be translated as "how can one know when the dollar is grossly overvalued, much like the tech stocks in 2000-2001?"  If that time comes again, you will want to sell your dollars and go to cash (gold), just as in 2000-2001.  Conversely, we could get a bottom in the USD, as in 1980, and it might become a good long-term speculation.  I don't think that is anywhere close yet.  And there is a real possibility that the USD will continue to fall gradually for a long time, or suddenly fall a lot, or even be replaced by some other monetary unit leading to a near-zero value… so I see buying dollars as a risky speculation, but one that could be quite profitable from time to time – as indeed it has been for the last 12 months or so.
 
My favorite tool is the "half-life of the dollar chart".  When I see the USD moving below the half-life curve significantly, say by 10%, I start paying attention. If it starts to recover, you could be entering a period of mean reversion that would make the USD a good buy.  The main fundamental that is likely to drive the USD up would be positive and rising real rates of interest.  When the bond vigilantes ride again, it might also be time to buy USD, at least for a medium term speculation. As long as the Fed is holding interest rates low, and concern about the economy and deflation is strong, I think you are better off in cash (gold), since the Fed will be using various tricks to increase the money supply to fight these perceived threats.
 
Silver is a different animal; I see silver as primarily an industrial metal, with a secondary monetary appeal to smaller savers.  As such, it is quite volatile, but unlike the USD, will never be without value – and is thus a less risky speculation than the dollar.  My suspicion is that either the economy will need to improve dramatically, or the USD will need to tank, for silver to show real strength.
 
I hope this is helpful!
 
Cheers,
 
Sir Charles

More on When gold and silver are grossly overvalued?

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Last week saw yet another reversal from the week before; once again, the only thing in common was the continuing decline in silver and copper, now in its 3rd week.

Currencies gained back some of what they lost the week before, lead by the CAD, which rose 1.8%. Bonds were higher, the SHY up 1% (in line with the USD) and the long term TLT up 0.4%, only recovering a tiny portion of the prior week's 3.8% loss.

More on Market Update 3 Aug 2012 – New Low for Platinum

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Last week showed many gains and few losses.  Once again commodities lead the way, with crude oil up 6.7% and coffee up 2.6%.  Silver and copper were each down 0.3% – the largest losses for the week.  Gold and silver mining stocks also suffered, falling 0.2% for the week.

More on Market Update 20 Jul 2012

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Market Update, 29 Jun 2012

This week saw a reversal of last week's trend, with almost all investment categories showing losses.  Currencies and bonds were all lower, on news of new European bank bailouts and fears that next week will bring further easing from the ECB and Bank of England.  Most stock markets were also lower, with the Japanese Nikkei, up 0.6%, being the exception.

More on Market Update, 29 Jun 2012

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All investment categories except commodities showed nice gains last week.  Interestingly, the week's biggest winners and losers were both commodities, with coffee rising a stunning 7.5% and cotton dropping 3.6%.  Silver and crude oil both lost ground, down 2.8% and 1.3% respectively, while copper was slightly higher, up 0.7%.

More on Market Update, 22 Jun 2012