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  #21 (permalink)  
Old 04-18-2008, 10:21 AM
Scanner Scanner is offline
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Well. . .as a person who has to mediate risk. . .I have to concede to sweeps/Broken Arrow that yes, at the first sign of an economic upturn, my silver (gold or maybe oil. . .oil behaves differently) is going to downturn.

But that's why I own positions in Blue Chips and International.

The way I see it, I don't know you cannot afford to have at least some of your portfolio in a commodity.

How much? Hard to say. . .I think more than the pundit's 5-10% just like I thought 10 years ago you should have more than 10% in International (the standing recommendation in 1997).

Little ventured. . .little gained. . .little hedged.
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Old 04-18-2008, 10:24 AM
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Feh,

Again, all depends on oil. . .you could subsitute all college economics classes with the price of oil and you'd be more accurate than Keynsaian theories and so forth.
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Old 04-18-2008, 11:17 AM
jc3900 jc3900 is offline
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Quote:
I'm not saying the price is gonna crash, but I wouldn't expect large returns any more.
I think at the current prices, this pretty much hits the situation. We could have a big quick run up that would quickly become wiped out paper gains. However, those who got in early probably should expect their value to be fairly consistent in the near future.
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Old 04-18-2008, 03:47 PM
humandraydel humandraydel is offline
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A few words:

Look at the rise in price of oil in Euros. It's not nearly as impressive.
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Old 04-18-2008, 05:09 PM
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Even more, look at the price of gas in gold. AAA to bad we arn't on the gold standard.
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Old 04-18-2008, 09:01 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Broken Arrow View Post
Q1 is next Monday, and people are expecting many more write-downs from the financials. Commodities will likely get a bit more boost....
I just wanted to point out that I was wrong about this prediction. Turned out Google and Citigroup ended up rallying the market today.

But I guess that also proves my point about the dangers of trying to guess the market's next move. And aside from idle conversations and stock simulations, this isn't a good way to make money.
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Old 04-23-2008, 07:41 AM
Broken Arrow Broken Arrow is offline
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Relevant article on oil's record high. I think it correctly points out the possibility, but not the certainty, of "the mother of all corrections".

Again, I'm speculating on the future, but only for conversation sake. So, please by all means don't take it seriously. I don't. But I believe that there will be a pretty significant correction. Don't know if it will be "the mother of all corrections", but nobody likes the idea of high oil prices... except OPEC and bullish speculators I suppose. That and interest rates are already very low... there isn't much more room left to go.

So, in my opinion anyway, chances are very good that these record highs are not sustainable.
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Old 04-23-2008, 09:00 AM
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Broken Arrow,

I only stimulate these conversations also for conversation's sake and it would be totally wrong for me to not admit that you, Sweeps, et al. have a bonafide legitimate point.

And everytime I start to think. . .gee. . .maybe I should just take my profit now. . .there's a reason emerging for me to stay invested.

I have to go back to my original premise - what's my asset allocation.

It's not like I have 100% invested in oil, gold, silver or grain. It's only 33% of my portfolio and 25 years away from retirement.

Sure. . .there could be a short term crash of oil. Just last year the IEA said for the next 20 years, about $55-65/barrel is right for oil, except in certain global crises (Hurricanes, wars, etc.) Look at where it's at now. So either:

a. The IEA was talking out it's rumpus

or

b. Something is askew

That being said, I don't take a profit because frankly, if I sell off 33% of my silver. . .where do I stuff it? REIT's or financials as far as I can tell. . .not sure if I should do that. Bonds? Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, haaaaa. With the Fed lowering the interest rate to -5%? Bonds are too risky now.

Now. . .what could sustain oil at $100+/barrel? Well, we are back to the problem that America has been printing "funny money" since Nixon.

It now costs $.015 to make $.01 because of steel costs. You/we all may just kind of joke about this but this is a real problem, not being on any standard/having fiat currency.

The IEA may have not taken this into account when it issued it's prediction.

Years ago, they talked about "oil dollars", that $1.00 would stand for cashing in an oz. of oil let's say. It wasn't a bad idea as far as I can see because oil is a universal currency that carries intrinisic value. Just saying, "A dollar has the full backing of the US Gov't". . .well, that and 3 oz. of oil can buy you a cup of coffee.

Listen. . .to let you all know. . .and I am serious about this. . .I have been happy with my portfolio. My portfolio really seems to zig when the other zags. But as DisneySteve has pointed out. . .Vanguard's Total Bond Index returned 7.7% last year. . .while stocks fell. . .maybe for the risk incurred, that's better zag than my commodity zag.

I don't know.

Last edited by Scanner : 04-23-2008 at 09:04 AM.
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  #29 (permalink)  
Old 04-23-2008, 10:06 AM
Broken Arrow Broken Arrow is offline
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Scanner, I promise I'm not trying to talk you or anyone out of their portfolio here. Honest. I thought it was just relevant to the conversation, and it specifically relates to oil.

The article touches on something that I believe as well, which is that oil right now is way over-valued. And the seeming lack of places to invest elsewhere is exactly why the speculation may be so high.... Kind of a lake-drying effect where all the fish is concentrated in one little spot.

Thing is, we're not fish, and I believe short-term speculators may be missing out on opportunities elsewhere, all the while losing their winnings by hanging on to oil for too long.

But again, that's just me.

Now, fiat currency... that's a different topic altogether.
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Old 04-23-2008, 12:28 PM
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Once I say I've had it with missing out on this commodity bull run and I've put my money in oil and gold and silver, that's when you'll want to abandon ship.
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  #31 (permalink)  
Old 04-23-2008, 12:29 PM
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BA,

OH, I didn't think that were trying to convince me. . .Sweeps talked me into a stop order on my ETF. . .but I then later cancelled it because I wouldn't know what to do after I was sitting on the cash.

I know we are all different.

Again. . .just like the lake drying up analogy, which is good, I don't know where else to invest. . .maybe I am poo-pooing bonds too much. I do beleive the bond market has been artificially kept low and the stock market high the last 20 years. . .it may be time for a correction there but I don't know how much lower interest rates can go as you point out.
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  #32 (permalink)  
Old 04-23-2008, 04:40 PM
Broken Arrow Broken Arrow is offline
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No... I pretty much agree with you on the bond issue....

Truth is, I don't know what to think of it yet, but I'm certainly not too giddy about it either (for active investing purposes, which is what I am assuming we are talking about here).

What's happening in the bond world right now is... history in the making. But not in a good way, with insurers risk losing their AAA rating from all this toxicity that's floating out there.

I don't remember what your portfolio was... but if you don't like anything else out there, how about just rebalancing? Sell some SLV and buy more of another existing position? You'll still capture some of the gains and have it re-invested into something that you still like.

Last edited by Broken Arrow : 04-23-2008 at 04:43 PM.
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