HA65MPH's Comments HA65MPH's Comments RSS Syndication from SeekingAlpha.com http://seekingalpha.comuser/133352/comments Gold's Boom-Bust Cycle in Early Boom Phase http://seekingalpha.com/article/178829-gold-s-boom-bust-cycle-in-early-boom-phase?source=feed#comment-812456 812456 Fri, 18 Dec 2009 12:46:38 -0500 What Motivates Fox's Glenn Beck on Gold and Healthcare? http://seekingalpha.com/article/178404-what-motivates-fox-s-glenn-beck-on-gold-and-healthcare?source=feed#comment-808589 808589 Wed, 16 Dec 2009 12:37:39 -0500 What Motivates Fox's Glenn Beck on Gold and Healthcare? http://seekingalpha.com/article/178404-what-motivates-fox-s-glenn-beck-on-gold-and-healthcare?source=feed#comment-808579 808579 Wed, 16 Dec 2009 12:32:25 -0500 What Motivates Fox's Glenn Beck on Gold and Healthcare? http://seekingalpha.com/article/178404-what-motivates-fox-s-glenn-beck-on-gold-and-healthcare?source=feed#comment-808565 808565

On Dec 16 10:48 AM ussmls7 wrote:

> The libs hate Beck because he exposes their real motives. I like
> Becks view, God,Gold,Guns!]]>
Wed, 16 Dec 2009 12:28:09 -0500

On Dec 16 10:48 AM ussmls7 wrote:

> The libs hate Beck because he exposes their real motives. I like
> Becks view, God,Gold,Guns!]]>
What Motivates Fox's Glenn Beck on Gold and Healthcare? http://seekingalpha.com/article/178404-what-motivates-fox-s-glenn-beck-on-gold-and-healthcare?source=feed#comment-808560 808560

On Dec 16 09:36 AM TCK wrote:

> "What Motivates CNBC's Glenn Beck on Gold and Healthcare?"
>
> How much credibility can we give an article that thinks Beck is on
> CNBC ?
>
> Wondering if the author has ever watched Fox or CNBC ?]]>
Wed, 16 Dec 2009 12:26:38 -0500

On Dec 16 09:36 AM TCK wrote:

> "What Motivates CNBC's Glenn Beck on Gold and Healthcare?"
>
> How much credibility can we give an article that thinks Beck is on
> CNBC ?
>
> Wondering if the author has ever watched Fox or CNBC ?]]>
What Motivates Fox's Glenn Beck on Gold and Healthcare? http://seekingalpha.com/article/178404-what-motivates-fox-s-glenn-beck-on-gold-and-healthcare?source=feed#comment-808556 808556

On Dec 16 09:02 AM USisCorrupt wrote:

> STFU !
>
> Only Smart people understand the value of REAL Money!
>
> Not worth wasting my time with a longer reply.]]>
Wed, 16 Dec 2009 12:24:34 -0500

On Dec 16 09:02 AM USisCorrupt wrote:

> STFU !
>
> Only Smart people understand the value of REAL Money!
>
> Not worth wasting my time with a longer reply.]]>
Where Is Gold Headed? http://seekingalpha.com/article/178190-where-is-gold-headed?source=feed#comment-806955 806955 Tue, 15 Dec 2009 13:40:15 -0500 Gold: Despite Recent Rise, It's Still Under Water http://seekingalpha.com/article/176893-gold-despite-recent-rise-it-s-still-under-water?source=feed#comment-796202 796202

On Dec 07 11:41 AM tmosley wrote:

> Right, because a 6% correction in gold prices that have gone parabolic
> means that gold is worthless. Let me roll my eyes whilst I buy with
> both hands.
>
> The fundamentals of gold point nowhere but up. This correction is
> a technical one, with technical traders getting spooked by better
> than expected job numbers, executing their self fulfilling prophecy
> that gold must correct, since it has done nothing but go UP for a
> whole month, with new record highs practically every day. China and
> many others are buying this dip, just like they did the last one
> in November. Don't expect it to last more than a few days.
>
> Conspiracy theories aside, the US economy is on life support, with
> insane liberals on every front screaming for us let some more blood
> out with things like universal health care and cap and trade. These
> witch doctors are the ones who got us here with their damned housing
> subsidies and their "saving free market capitalism by destroying
> it" mantra. All we can do is buy gold and silver, or else stock the
> bunker. At least those who sold gold on this dip will have plenty
> of toilet paper.]]>
Tue, 08 Dec 2009 10:50:38 -0500

On Dec 07 11:41 AM tmosley wrote:

> Right, because a 6% correction in gold prices that have gone parabolic
> means that gold is worthless. Let me roll my eyes whilst I buy with
> both hands.
>
> The fundamentals of gold point nowhere but up. This correction is
> a technical one, with technical traders getting spooked by better
> than expected job numbers, executing their self fulfilling prophecy
> that gold must correct, since it has done nothing but go UP for a
> whole month, with new record highs practically every day. China and
> many others are buying this dip, just like they did the last one
> in November. Don't expect it to last more than a few days.
>
> Conspiracy theories aside, the US economy is on life support, with
> insane liberals on every front screaming for us let some more blood
> out with things like universal health care and cap and trade. These
> witch doctors are the ones who got us here with their damned housing
> subsidies and their "saving free market capitalism by destroying
> it" mantra. All we can do is buy gold and silver, or else stock the
> bunker. At least those who sold gold on this dip will have plenty
> of toilet paper.]]>
Gold: The Glenn Beck Indicator http://seekingalpha.com/article/176933-gold-the-glenn-beck-indicator?source=feed#comment-796197 796197

On Dec 07 06:25 PM ggirard wrote:

> Glen Beck is one of a handful of commentators that offer information
> and insight that stands up to serious intellectual scrutiny and fact-checking
> research. His message is often alarmist because the events he describes
> are truly alarming and need to be brought to the attention of the
> public. His conservative ideological bent impells him to to expose
> the lies and treachery of liberals who are agressively working to
> destroy the social fabric and economy of our country; naturally,
> the leftists among us are offended by Beck's efforts to show how
> they labor to diminish our freedoms, pervert critical moral traditions,
> and bankrupt our economy. Gold is unique in its ability to offer
> us freedom from the losses that we would otherwise suffer from our
> failing fiat currency. Leftist despise this freedom and the fact
> that those with their wealth in gold are generally out of the reach
> of efforts to confiscate wealth for the purpose of redistribution.
> To the leftist, gold owners are the ones that got away with their
> wealth intact, and who therefore cannot be enslaved or blackmailed
> by the usual gov't tools of wealth confiscation. So, not only does
> Beck defend our freedoms by calling out the ongoing efforts of the
> left to take them away, he pushes the services of gold vendors whose
> products defend our economic freedom. This is just too much to bear
> for the leftists who would rather we all unwittingly lose our political
> and economic by failing to oppose liberal policies and leaving our
> wealth in the form of dollars, which are much more convenient for
> the gov't to track, confiscate, and redistribute.]]>
Tue, 08 Dec 2009 10:47:22 -0500

On Dec 07 06:25 PM ggirard wrote:

> Glen Beck is one of a handful of commentators that offer information
> and insight that stands up to serious intellectual scrutiny and fact-checking
> research. His message is often alarmist because the events he describes
> are truly alarming and need to be brought to the attention of the
> public. His conservative ideological bent impells him to to expose
> the lies and treachery of liberals who are agressively working to
> destroy the social fabric and economy of our country; naturally,
> the leftists among us are offended by Beck's efforts to show how
> they labor to diminish our freedoms, pervert critical moral traditions,
> and bankrupt our economy. Gold is unique in its ability to offer
> us freedom from the losses that we would otherwise suffer from our
> failing fiat currency. Leftist despise this freedom and the fact
> that those with their wealth in gold are generally out of the reach
> of efforts to confiscate wealth for the purpose of redistribution.
> To the leftist, gold owners are the ones that got away with their
> wealth intact, and who therefore cannot be enslaved or blackmailed
> by the usual gov't tools of wealth confiscation. So, not only does
> Beck defend our freedoms by calling out the ongoing efforts of the
> left to take them away, he pushes the services of gold vendors whose
> products defend our economic freedom. This is just too much to bear
> for the leftists who would rather we all unwittingly lose our political
> and economic by failing to oppose liberal policies and leaving our
> wealth in the form of dollars, which are much more convenient for
> the gov't to track, confiscate, and redistribute.]]>
Gold: Expect a Technical Correction Before the Final Frontier http://seekingalpha.com/article/176843-gold-expect-a-technical-correction-before-the-final-frontier?source=feed#comment-795072 795072 Mon, 07 Dec 2009 18:09:44 -0500 Global Market Outlook: Improved Expectations http://seekingalpha.com/article/176768-global-market-outlook-improved-expectations?source=feed#comment-795052 795052 Mon, 07 Dec 2009 17:51:50 -0500 The Recurring Gold 'Bubble' http://seekingalpha.com/article/176210-the-recurring-gold-bubble?source=feed#comment-788635 788635

On Dec 03 09:56 AM MikeyMouthsOff wrote:

> Just yesterday the DJIA fell slightly as the
> dollar strengthened. But the gold price, which normally
> retreats as the dollar gains, went up.
> Why? Because there is nothing to suggest that the dollar
> will strengthen over the long term. Perhaps a debt crisis much larger
> than Dubai's is looming and will cause a flight to safety in U.S.
> treasuries, but even that will only temporarily slow gold's ascent.
>
> -The Federal Reserve will leave interest rates near zero for the
>
> foreseeable future.
> -Job growth, our best hope for an economic recovery, will be anemic,
> if any.
> -The F.D.I.C., after taking over more than 100 failed banks in 2009,
> now has a negative account balance, and has
> recently increased to nearly 500 the number of small and mid-sized
> banks on its watch list of financial institutions which might go
> under in the coming year.
> Not much confidence there, huh?
> And the list goes on.
> One thing is for certain: If the recovery stalls and Congress gets
> serious about a second round of stimulus measures, there will be
> a stampede to buy gold the likes of which we have never seen. It
> will make the gains in the past year look like chump change. For
> goldbugs there is nothing sweeter than the sound of the U.S. Treasury's
> printing presses churning out worthless currency.]]>
Thu, 03 Dec 2009 12:14:44 -0500

On Dec 03 09:56 AM MikeyMouthsOff wrote:

> Just yesterday the DJIA fell slightly as the
> dollar strengthened. But the gold price, which normally
> retreats as the dollar gains, went up.
> Why? Because there is nothing to suggest that the dollar
> will strengthen over the long term. Perhaps a debt crisis much larger
> than Dubai's is looming and will cause a flight to safety in U.S.
> treasuries, but even that will only temporarily slow gold's ascent.
>
> -The Federal Reserve will leave interest rates near zero for the
>
> foreseeable future.
> -Job growth, our best hope for an economic recovery, will be anemic,
> if any.
> -The F.D.I.C., after taking over more than 100 failed banks in 2009,
> now has a negative account balance, and has
> recently increased to nearly 500 the number of small and mid-sized
> banks on its watch list of financial institutions which might go
> under in the coming year.
> Not much confidence there, huh?
> And the list goes on.
> One thing is for certain: If the recovery stalls and Congress gets
> serious about a second round of stimulus measures, there will be
> a stampede to buy gold the likes of which we have never seen. It
> will make the gains in the past year look like chump change. For
> goldbugs there is nothing sweeter than the sound of the U.S. Treasury's
> printing presses churning out worthless currency.]]>
It's All About Gold http://seekingalpha.com/article/176228-it-s-all-about-gold?source=feed#comment-788622 788622 Thu, 03 Dec 2009 12:03:38 -0500 The Gang that Couldn't Shoot Straight: Central Bankers and Gold http://seekingalpha.com/article/176285-the-gang-that-couldn-t-shoot-straight-central-bankers-and-gold?source=feed#comment-788616 788616

On Dec 03 11:27 AM Mad Hedge Fund Trader wrote:

> nfw Welcome to the new gold standard! There was a time that to own
> gold you had to be a “gold bug” and believe in the myriad urban legends
> that percolated in the underground. Fort Knox is either empty, or
> full of gold plated steel bars. The Treasury cut back on the minting
> of new gold coins because it had to ship the bulk of our reserves
> to China to cover the trade deficit. The US government is going to
> ban private gold ownership again. The Feds have unwittingly fanned
> the flames of paranoia, with the Patriot Act forcing all American
> gold and jewelry dealers to register with the Treasury Dept. But
> adherents to the yellow metal are considered raving nut cases and
> conspiracy theorists no more. Emerging market central banks, pension
> funds, hedge funds, mutual funds, and millions of individuals around
> the world have all simultaneously decided to keep a certain percentage
> of their assets in the barbaric relic. They are either making a bet
> on an extended super cycle in favor of all hard assets, or looking
> for insurance against a wave of hyperinflation that Washington’s
> policies threaten. Enthusiasts are no longer burying pillow cases
> of coins in the back yard, but instead are pouring into an ever expanding
> legion of ETF’s, mining shares, bullion, and futures contracts. The
> SPDR Gold Shares (GLD), with $37 billion of the yellow metal, is
> now the world’s sixth largest owner of gold. Some economists are
> now arguing that if you take world GDP and divide it by the value
> of the gold above ground today, an historic mean ratio would put
> the yellow metal at $11,000 an ounce. That makes the current spot
> price look like the deal of the century, and my target of the old
> inflation adjusted high of $2,300 positively conservative. To sign
> up for a great free weekly research product on precious metals, please
> click here at www.millenniummetals.net/]]>
Thu, 03 Dec 2009 12:01:12 -0500

On Dec 03 11:27 AM Mad Hedge Fund Trader wrote:

> nfw Welcome to the new gold standard! There was a time that to own
> gold you had to be a “gold bug” and believe in the myriad urban legends
> that percolated in the underground. Fort Knox is either empty, or
> full of gold plated steel bars. The Treasury cut back on the minting
> of new gold coins because it had to ship the bulk of our reserves
> to China to cover the trade deficit. The US government is going to
> ban private gold ownership again. The Feds have unwittingly fanned
> the flames of paranoia, with the Patriot Act forcing all American
> gold and jewelry dealers to register with the Treasury Dept. But
> adherents to the yellow metal are considered raving nut cases and
> conspiracy theorists no more. Emerging market central banks, pension
> funds, hedge funds, mutual funds, and millions of individuals around
> the world have all simultaneously decided to keep a certain percentage
> of their assets in the barbaric relic. They are either making a bet
> on an extended super cycle in favor of all hard assets, or looking
> for insurance against a wave of hyperinflation that Washington’s
> policies threaten. Enthusiasts are no longer burying pillow cases
> of coins in the back yard, but instead are pouring into an ever expanding
> legion of ETF’s, mining shares, bullion, and futures contracts. The
> SPDR Gold Shares (GLD), with $37 billion of the yellow metal, is
> now the world’s sixth largest owner of gold. Some economists are
> now arguing that if you take world GDP and divide it by the value
> of the gold above ground today, an historic mean ratio would put
> the yellow metal at $11,000 an ounce. That makes the current spot
> price look like the deal of the century, and my target of the old
> inflation adjusted high of $2,300 positively conservative. To sign
> up for a great free weekly research product on precious metals, please
> click here at www.millenniummetals.net/]]>
Paulson Makes His Biggest Bet on Gold, Inflation Yet http://seekingalpha.com/article/175835-paulson-makes-his-biggest-bet-on-gold-inflation-yet?source=feed#comment-785584 785584 Wed, 02 Dec 2009 01:06:35 -0500 Why Gold Is Up: BRIC Countries Are Buying http://seekingalpha.com/article/175783-why-gold-is-up-bric-countries-are-buying?source=feed#comment-783799 783799 Tue, 01 Dec 2009 00:44:21 -0500 Max Keiser: 'World Entering Phase Two of Global Economic Crisis' http://seekingalpha.com/article/175703-max-keiser-world-entering-phase-two-of-global-economic-crisis?source=feed#comment-783794 783794 Tue, 01 Dec 2009 00:39:16 -0500 Roubini on Unemployment: 'The Worst Is Yet to Come' http://seekingalpha.com/article/173494-roubini-on-unemployment-the-worst-is-yet-to-come?source=feed#comment-763122 763122 Tue, 17 Nov 2009 01:05:54 -0500 Facts Behind Gold's Concentration http://seekingalpha.com/article/169244-facts-behind-gold-s-concentration?source=feed#comment-733066 733066 Tue, 27 Oct 2009 19:06:39 -0400 Dollar Forced to Abdicate Its Throne http://seekingalpha.com/article/168710-dollar-forced-to-abdicate-its-throne?source=feed#comment-730020 730020

On Oct 25 01:04 PM Albertarocks wrote:

> As an admirer of Peter Schiff "and" his father, both for their insight
> and their courage, I always listen to Peter's messages with a bent
> toward the question of "when". Peter never says exactly "when", because
> he doesn't know when, he "can't" know when. But his message still
> makes so much sense that logic says he has to be right. The "when"
> part is trickier. When what? When will the dollar recover to its
> former position of world leader? Never! Not in its current form.
>
>
> When will the stock markets resume their secular bear trend? Sooner
> than most Americans investors think, but not as quickly as I have
> thought would be the case. I've underestimated the willingness and
> bold faced audacity of the big banks to interfere to the extent that
> they have.
>
> Will the dollar enjoy a bounce? Very likely! When? With sentiment
> sitting at 96% bearish and indicators sitting at oversold levels
> never seen before, it stands to reason that the answer is probably
> "soon", very soon. The market will not respond well to that either,
> not this time. In years past when the American economy was truly
> strong, a strong dollar was a legitimate product of that strong economy.
> Any bounce in the dollar now, wouldn't be a result of a strengthening
> economy but of something else, I'm not sure what, but not a legitimate
> strengthening economy. Maybe it will bounce temporarily due to credit
> tightening or even a more serious credit contraction that lasts a
> year or more. If that's the case, we're probably looking at a short,
> sharp period of deflation. Again, the markets won't like that one
> iota.
>
> The one other possibility that disallows Mr. Schiff to answer the
> question "when", is the possibility that the administration's owners
> and handlers have decided to allow the dollar to drop right off the
> face of the earth right here, right now, with absolutely no intention
> of supporting it. If that's the case, the dollar will be going on
> a permanent vacation to its private hideaway in Zimbabwe and this
> nutty, equity driven, bankster driven stock market rally will simply
> continue it's unabated journey toward the moon until the world suddenly
> realizes what the hell is really going on.
>
> And when will that happen? Too soon for comfort and too late for
> those investors who are kept in the dark by the media arm of the
> FED.]]>
Sun, 25 Oct 2009 22:04:41 -0400

On Oct 25 01:04 PM Albertarocks wrote:

> As an admirer of Peter Schiff "and" his father, both for their insight
> and their courage, I always listen to Peter's messages with a bent
> toward the question of "when". Peter never says exactly "when", because
> he doesn't know when, he "can't" know when. But his message still
> makes so much sense that logic says he has to be right. The "when"
> part is trickier. When what? When will the dollar recover to its
> former position of world leader? Never! Not in its current form.
>
>
> When will the stock markets resume their secular bear trend? Sooner
> than most Americans investors think, but not as quickly as I have
> thought would be the case. I've underestimated the willingness and
> bold faced audacity of the big banks to interfere to the extent that
> they have.
>
> Will the dollar enjoy a bounce? Very likely! When? With sentiment
> sitting at 96% bearish and indicators sitting at oversold levels
> never seen before, it stands to reason that the answer is probably
> "soon", very soon. The market will not respond well to that either,
> not this time. In years past when the American economy was truly
> strong, a strong dollar was a legitimate product of that strong economy.
> Any bounce in the dollar now, wouldn't be a result of a strengthening
> economy but of something else, I'm not sure what, but not a legitimate
> strengthening economy. Maybe it will bounce temporarily due to credit
> tightening or even a more serious credit contraction that lasts a
> year or more. If that's the case, we're probably looking at a short,
> sharp period of deflation. Again, the markets won't like that one
> iota.
>
> The one other possibility that disallows Mr. Schiff to answer the
> question "when", is the possibility that the administration's owners
> and handlers have decided to allow the dollar to drop right off the
> face of the earth right here, right now, with absolutely no intention
> of supporting it. If that's the case, the dollar will be going on
> a permanent vacation to its private hideaway in Zimbabwe and this
> nutty, equity driven, bankster driven stock market rally will simply
> continue it's unabated journey toward the moon until the world suddenly
> realizes what the hell is really going on.
>
> And when will that happen? Too soon for comfort and too late for
> those investors who are kept in the dark by the media arm of the
> FED.]]>
Nouriel Roubini, One on One: More Doom and Gloom http://seekingalpha.com/article/168497-nouriel-roubini-one-on-one-more-doom-and-gloom?source=feed#comment-727445 727445 Fri, 23 Oct 2009 14:33:15 -0400 The Greatest Depression Is Coming http://seekingalpha.com/article/167060-the-greatest-depression-is-coming?source=feed#comment-720020 720020 Sun, 18 Oct 2009 22:02:38 -0400 Global Liquidity Glut Bodes Well for Gold http://seekingalpha.com/article/166970-global-liquidity-glut-bodes-well-for-gold?source=feed#comment-719055 719055 Sat, 17 Oct 2009 23:52:49 -0400 Sold Gold http://seekingalpha.com/article/166888-sold-gold?source=feed#comment-717604 717604 Fri, 16 Oct 2009 11:17:52 -0400 The Gold Trend Is Up, But the Trade Is Over-Crowded: Proceed with Caution http://seekingalpha.com/article/166426-the-gold-trend-is-up-but-the-trade-is-over-crowded-proceed-with-caution?source=feed#comment-716259 716259 Thu, 15 Oct 2009 10:14:30 -0400 Gold: Is Now the Time to Buy? http://seekingalpha.com/article/166158-gold-is-now-the-time-to-buy?source=feed#comment-714249 714249 Tue, 13 Oct 2009 17:10:22 -0400 Gold's Breakout Revisited http://seekingalpha.com/article/165774-gold-s-breakout-revisited?source=feed#comment-711813 711813 Sat, 10 Oct 2009 13:48:25 -0400 Beware Fortune Magazine's Gold Warning http://seekingalpha.com/article/165472-beware-fortune-magazine-s-gold-warning?source=feed#comment-708505 708505 Thu, 08 Oct 2009 09:24:10 -0400 Gold: You Can't Sell High If You Didn't Buy Low http://seekingalpha.com/article/165240-gold-you-can-t-sell-high-if-you-didn-t-buy-low?source=feed#comment-707624 707624 Wed, 07 Oct 2009 17:20:36 -0400 Asset Reflation Does Not Signal Recovery for U.S.'s Collapsed Economy http://seekingalpha.com/article/164932-asset-reflation-does-not-signal-recovery-for-u-s-s-collapsed-economy?source=feed#comment-705142 705142 Tue, 06 Oct 2009 11:40:57 -0400