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Printer Friendly VersionJeff Clark
Managing Editor – BIG GOLD
Casey Research
It’s true for almost any commodity: there are a lot of influences pushing on the price, and it’s hard to untangle them all. But gold is exceptional. A single factor dominates the market price – and you can measure it.
More than any other commodity, gold’s price rises (and falls) with demand from investors; the demand from consumers and industrial users is very much a secondary consideration. Or to put it another way, what ultimately controls gold is mass psychology.
If you were an investor during the internet craze, do you recall the absolute hysteria about Nasdaq stocks? Do you remember how everyone knew about them? Do you recall the excited banter about the latest internet company you heard at work, at home, or with friends? Do you remember the stories of people getting rich almost overnight? I still remember a news report saying that local officials at Lake Tahoe were worried because all the dot-com millionaires from Silicon Valley were buying up lakefront property and building wall-to-wall mansions, blocking everyone else’s view.
Those companies weren’t really worth 400 times earnings, and many had no earnings at all. Yet most such stocks didn’t just double or triple, but increased by a factor of 10 or more. There were internet stocks that went up 100 fold.
Is this happening to gold right now?
Hardly. The general public is nearly indifferent to gold – which is evidence that the Mania stage is still in front of us, and it foretells the kind of hysteria that will come as the economy’s troubles deepen. Except that tomorrow’s mania for gold investments will be stronger than yesterday’s mania for internet stocks. With gold, we won’t just have the greed factor, we’ll also have the fear, or flight to quality, factor banging on the price.
If this is true, is it possible to project how high mass psychology could push gold? And just as importantly, is there a way to determine when you should sell? Predictions abound, but talk is just too easy. So I’ve devised a simple method for you to calculate, for yourself, where the price of gold will peak, so you’ll know when to sell.
To get your personal gold score, take this 2-minute quiz about what you read and what you hear from the people you know. Here’s the key to score each answer you give:
What I Tell Myself When Gold Sells Off 8/29/08
How to Calculate Your Own Gold Price Projection
Why the Mania Phase in Gold May Be Upon Us 7/18/08
The Bursting Commodities Bubble 6/23/08
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