J. Christoph Amberger Says ‘Commodities Bubble’ Is Deflating
Aug 19th, 2008 | By J. Christoph Amberger | Category: Gold MarketSpeculative commodities like oil and gold are selling off at alarming speed as funds liquidate losing positions and buyers retreat to wait for a bottom, says J. Christoph Amberger, editor of Today’s Financial News. According to J. Christoph, these commodities are now caught in “an accelerated downward spiral”…
“Pray for a good Indian harvest. Like the price of tea in China, an abundant crop on the subcontinent has a lot to do with the overall fate of the yellow metal,” wrote Kitco.com’s Jon Nadler on August 12, as gold plunged to $802 per ounce, down a whopping $232 in less than five months.
When gold bugs are imploring many-armed deities for rain to keep memsahibs in 24-carat bangles and bracelets, its time to realize that you have a problem.
Like it or not, speculative commodities are deflating as funds sell at-risk holdings for easier pickings. Oil, copper, gold and other speculative assets that promised unlimited upside are now caught in an accelerating downward spiral.
In all likelihood, that descent will occur in leaps and bounds, which each plateau suggesting an imminent recovery. We’ve seen it happen before, with Internet stocks and with U.S. real estate.
And we’re seeing it again.
The next alarm sign will be excessive use of the undead word “accumulate.” As in “accumulate Pets.com shares on weakness.”
Source: The Gold Bubble is Deflating
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Amberger began his career as a freelance contributor to Agora publications before emigrating from Germany to the United States in 1989, when he joined the editorial board of Taipan. In 1991, he took over as managing editor for the publication and assumed responsibility as group publisher four years later. In 2007 Christoph left Taipan and founded Today's Financial News.
