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Investing in precious metals
hasn’t been much of a fun ride lately. In late April of 2011, silver
spiked to its still standing nominal high of $50, last reached over 30 years
ago, back in 1980. Afterwards it plunged to about $32, before recovering to
around $44 in September. At this time gold – which wasn’t nearly
hit as hard in May and rallied to a new high of $1,920 in September –
was up for the hammer drop and fell by 20% to $1,530. Expectedly, silver had
to be dragged down with gold and got smashed to the $26 level for an almost
50% correction from its April highs.
 
As if these big and fast
corrections in price were not enough, an equally painful correction through
time set in. While support at $26 for silver and $1.530 for gold was
successfully tested many times, it seemed that with every new test the number
of precious metals skeptics increased and many bulls buried their remaining
hopes. As David Morgan likes to say: ‘The market will either scare
you out or wear you out'.
This however is the natural
behavior in a healthy bull market, which tries to take with it the fewest
number of people possible and only rewards those with the strongest nerves,
who are ready to trust their beliefs and weather the storm of fear. After the
‘scare’ and the ‘wear’ the bull will be ready for its
next round.
In his latest interview over at
King World News, Bill Haynes suggests that there are indeed those strong
hands draining the market of physical metal and causing the prices to bottom.
They seek gold and silver as protection from the worsening debt and fiat
currency crisis and are never sellers. Interestingly, he points out that
‘we are seeing an equal amount of money going into both gold and
silver’.
Fasten your seatbelts: The ride
won’t stay dire forever.
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