Trading with PT style Part 2

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praveen taneja

Well-Known Member
Mujhe bhi yahi sacch lagta hai..!!! :lol::lol:
and tukka marru log ki baaton se door hi rehta hu...!! :lol:
:rofl::rofl:Bro fir bhi aap is tukka maaru thread pe dusari baar aaye aur koi tukka maaru aap ke paas nahin aaya:D

waise aajkal bhi crudemein kaam kar rahe ho ya us se tauba kar li :p

mujhe pata hai us post mein crude ka jikar ne aap ko matwala kar diya :lol:

Na jaane kyon mujhe saand aur lal kapda yaad aa raha hai:rofl:

Bro joke aside hamesha bhidne ki bajaye haath pakad kar chalna seekho jindagi mein kaam aayega:thumb:
 

praveen taneja

Well-Known Member
covered Petals sold at 3180 at 3163 now have 75% with cost 3154 and cmp is 3163 Jai Ram Ji Ki
PT to to chha gayaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa:clap::clap::clap::clap:

Petals cmp is 3175 bought today at 3163 cost for all is 3154 sl for all now is 3162 Jai Ram Ji KI
yday Petals made a high of 3181 but as expected 3180 gave a good resistence due to USD?INR game:thumb:

Booked 25% there bought back at 3168 now cost is at 3148 cmp is 3170 :clap:

its 4th time gold reverse from 3180 and usd is at 5250 around its time for some gain wont book now at 3180 as shooting time is near spot is at 1786 now a close above 1784 all bulls want lets see they can make it or not aur uske badd Dhan Tannna Tanna Tanna:p:p:p

Jai Ram JI KI
 

praveen taneja

Well-Known Member
General market conditions


It’s just a consolidation phase in gold, silver, copper and crude oil. Technically they are all bullish. The current consolidation phase will be broken soon and a new range will be formed. There can be big moves in gold and silver any time. One needs to be cautiously trading using stop losses.

There are no major negative news in gold and silver for a sell off. The market focus has shifted to the Spanish bailout and other eurozone news. The bets on Spain asking for bailout and getting the same are on the rise. Indian physical demand of gold should rise on every Rs.200-Rs.300 fall. At the moment gold demand in India is negligible due to inauspicious period(SHRADHH). Indian gold jewelry demand should zoom after the middle of this month and will continue till end November.
 

praveen taneja

Well-Known Member
Do Western Central Banks Have Any Gold Left???





-- Posted Tuesday, 2 October 2012



By Eric Sprott & David Baker

Somewhere deep in the bowels of the world’s Western central banks lie vaults holding gargantuan piles of physical gold bars… or at least that’s what they all claim. The gold bars are part of their respective foreign currency reserves, which include all the usual fiat currencies like the dollar, the pound, the yen and the euro.

Collectively, the governments/central banks of the United States, United Kingdom, Japan, Switzerland, Eurozone and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) are believed to hold an impressive 23,349 tonnes of gold in their respective reserves, representing more than $1.3 trillion at today’s gold price. Beyond the suggested tonnage, however, very little is actually known about the gold that makes up this massive stockpile. Western central banks disclose next to nothing about where it’s stored, in what form, or how much of the gold reserves are utilized for other purposes. We are assured that it’s all there, of course, but little effort has ever been made by the central banks to provide any details beyond the arbitrary references in their various financial reserve reports.

Twelve years ago, few would have cared what central banks did with their gold. Gold had suffered a twenty year bear cycle and didn’t engender much excitement at $255 per ounce. It made perfect sense for Western governments to lend out (or in the case of Canada – outright sell) their gold reserves in order to generate some interest income from their holdings. And that’s exactly what many central banks did from the late 1980’s through to the late 2000’s. The times have changed however, and today it absolutely does matter what they’re doing with their reserves, and where the reserves are actually held. Why? Because the countries in question are now all grossly over-indebted and printing their respective currencies with reckless abandon. It would be reassuring to know that they still have some of the ‘barbarous relic’ kicking around, collecting dust, just in case their experiment with collusive monetary accommodation doesn’t work out as planned.

You may be interested to know that central bank gold sales were actually the crux of the original investment thesis that first got us interested in the gold space back in 2000. We were introduced to it through the work of Frank Veneroso, who published an outstanding report on the gold market in 1998 aptly titled, “The 1998 Gold Book Annual”. In it, Mr. Veneroso inferred that central bank gold sales had artificially suppressed the full extent of gold demand to the tune of approximately 1,600 tonnes per year (in an approximately 4,000 tonne market of annual supply). Of the 35,000 tonnes that the central banks were officially stated to own at the time, Mr. Veneroso estimated that they were already down to 18,000 tonnes of actual physical. Once the central banks ran out of gold to sell, he surmised, the gold market would be poised for a powerful bull market… and he turned out to be completely right – although central banks did continue to be net sellers of gold for many years to come.

As the gold bull market developed throughout the 2000’s, central banks didn’t become net buyers of physical gold until 2009, which coincided with gold’s final break-out above US$1,000 per ounce. The entirety of this buying was performed by central banks in the non-Western world, however, by countries like Russia, Turkey, Kazakhstan, Ukraine and the Philippines… and they have continued buying gold ever since. According to Thomson Reuters GFMS, a precious metals research agency, non-Western central banks purchased 457 tonnes of gold in 2011, and are expected to purchase another 493 tonnes of gold this year as they expand their reserves.1 Our estimates suggest they will likely purchase even more than that.2 The Western central banks, meanwhile, have essentially remained silent on the topic of gold, and have not publicly disclosed any sales or purchases of gold at all over the past three years. Although there is a “Central Bank Gold Agreement” currently in place that covers the gold sales of the Eurosystem central banks, Sweden and Switzerland, there has been no mention of gold sales by the very entities that are purported to own the largest stockpiles of the precious metal.3 The silence is telling.

Over the past several years, we’ve collected data on physical demand for gold as it has developed over time. The consistent annual growth in demand for physical gold bullion has increasingly puzzled us with regard to supply. Global annual gold mine supply ex Russia and China (who do not export domestic production) is actually lower than it was in year 2000, and ever since the IMF announced the completion of its sale of 403 tonnes of gold in December 2010, there hasn’t been any large, publicly-disclosed seller of physical gold in the market for almost two years.4 Given the significant increase in physical demand that we’ve seen over the past decade, particularly from buyers in Asia, it suffices to say that we cannot identify where all the gold is coming from to supply it… but it has to be coming from somewhere.
 

praveen taneja

Well-Known Member
The Tremendous War In Gold Continues Near The $1,800 Level

“There really has been a battle just below the $1,800 level on gold. It’s fierce, and it’s ongoing. Some people will say there is some government or bank selling to keep gold in check. Others will say it’s just normal profit-taking as you get toward a round number.”

“It really doesn’t matter. Gold is going to go through $1,800 and eventually much higher. $1,800 is not a stopping point for gold. Could it dip again below $1,750? Of course. But look at the dynamics for gold and you will see that $1,800 is nothing. It’s simply a platform for higher prices.





The question is, once gold gets above $1,800, is it going to $1,850 right away, or is it going to go to $2,500?....

“You want to hope gold does this consolidation because it’s giving you a chance to buy. If gold goes down a little bit, buy more. Hope it doesn’t go through $1,800 before you’ve accumulated all you possibly can.





Yes central banks could be selling gold to try to control the price. The Chinese, who have been the biggest buyers of gold, are also the smartest buyers of gold. Would it surprise me to find out that the Chinese have some sell orders (in the paper market) in here? Not at all. They play the game.





So there could be any number of reasons for entities to want to slow the advance of gold. The developed countries have a great many reasons to want to see gold struggle. As gold rises, it simply makes their currencies look even worse.





The smart ones, that are really buying gold, also want to keep the price from running away to the upside. But the gold market will get to a point where investors will not be able to get into the market. They really will not let you in because it will be going up so fast.





That’s the type of thing the buyers, such as the Chinese, are worried about. They are not worried about when gold goes through $1,800. They know it will go through $1,800. The Chinese don’t want to be in a position where they have to get aboard a fast-moving freight train.





People should be worried about getting in to the market and making sure they have a position before it becomes too hard to take one because it’s going up so fast. So what I would say is be thankful for this war in gold near the $1,800 level. Be thankful because it does allow you to buy more.”
 
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