2_point……Yes, you answered same time I wrote the post.

How about giving us a short tutorial on the Gann Square of 12 in terms of not only the math formula, but also how it is set-up on the chart………what Gann used it for, etc.  Also, any comparisons to Gann’s “other squares” in terms of how they differ, how they are used differently, etc.  Don’t ask for much, do I? I think you’ll find a lot of interest on the board.

The main reason I asked the question initially was in terms of the different lines on the chart.  Besides the lines shown in the HUI chart, on the NEM chart you had a series of lines that were different.

 TIA……………..GR.

silverboom @ 22:59

Where else to put your money?

Equities?

Real Estate?

Foreign Markets?

Duncan Donuts?

The PMs are the only place to be right now, but I think you know that. Hold tough, I know it is hard but our time is a’commin.!!

Anybody

PMFEVER catch it if you can @ 23:11 pm on July 6, 2008

re: ” If you don’t feel like answering- no problem. ”

answered at : answer

.. ..

2 point……….Sorrrrrrry..the Gann number came from a “calculator.”

I was just wondering what lines on that chart came from the Gann Square of 12, and what did not.  If you don’t feel like answering- no problem.

As far as “explaining things”, I have probably written the equivalent of several books in explanation of charts since 2005, LOL.

http://goldtent.com/wp_gold/2008/07/06/2pointcan-you-explain-what-all-those-lines-mean/

xs323.xs.to/xs323/08014/G144_HUI_1.jpg

..

Okay, lucky us, all the gains are going back to the negative side…once again.

Sheesh, this gets incredibly frustrating, no? Yo yo, with no end in site, despite gold price “recovery”. As much as GR/PM Fever and others continue as cheerleaders (yes, its this week; next week; soon, very soon; next month; this fall; summer rally; by the end of the year;). My gawd, how long and how repetitive can all these calls and prognostications be?????

Guess we’re gonna find out ‘cuase there ain’t no place else to put your cash, is there? Anybody???????

2.Point………..Can you explain what all those lines mean?

arch0708.goldtent.net/2008/07/06/2pointcan-you-explain-what-all-those-lines-mean/

Why are YOU asking ME

YOU ” seem ” to be ” a one ” that ” KNOWS ” ( insomuchas ) YOU have in your postings made such statement to Effect ” xyz is a Gann Number ”

As EYE see it,  ..  YOU explain NOTHING, ……. at GREAT Lenght

I show charts …..let the chipsFall whare they may

In My Opinion

YOU have a Very Large EGO which you NEED Stroked on an almost continuous Basis .

ICBW

2_p

Butters…………

The chart of Gold hit resistance exactly where it should have.  The moves are running a regular 2 week (ish) cycle which should put a bottom in this week with a top in the 985 to 998 area into around  July 20 to 22nd as far as I can tell.  After that top, I’d expect the next correction to take a bit longer as 5 waves up will be in……….probably down into the middle of August.  I don’t generally look at the shorter-term cycles, but that is what it looks like to me.  If that plays out- I’d expect the Silvers to outperform a bit on the next up-move.

 GR

LP……….Again, no problem……..

The reason I took the time to address everything more comprehensively is because it seems to me that the “deflation side” of the argument has seemed to almost completely reflect the “massive deflationary backdrop” that the dollar inflation is battling.  An analogy might be a patient with a well ingrained bacterial infection.  He goes to the doctor and the doctor puts him on antibiotics.  The patient gets very upset as the swelling, pain, and fever increase over the subsequent days, though the antibiotics are doing exactly what they were MENT to do.    The patient might believe that the infection “is getting worse” when the truth is that the antibiotics are preventing a spread of the infection/ allowing the body to “localize the infection.”……….the symptoms appear to be worse, the patient feels worse, but in reality the “spread of infection” is being contained which will allow the patient to get better.  The patient’s fears reflect the “physical symptoms”, not the underlying condition of the body/ state of the infection.

Thus, if one did not understand just what the “massive backdrop of deflation” entailed from the start, he has nothing to judge from going forward.  Per your past deflationary postings- Yes, the symptoms are getting worse.

Take care,

GR

They just have to play games and fool around.

au-24hr-lg.png

2.Point………..Can you explain what all those lines mean?

.. NEM .. Monthly .. Gann Square of 12

by 2_point @ 19:06 pm.

e) xs329.xs.to/xs329/08270/g144m_nem_3jul08_107.jpg

…………preferably in very simple terms.

FED investigation by International Monetary Fund.

Awhile back, reading about their ‘pay structure’…….we should ALL have a sweet job with the IMF. Not only are they paid “WELL”, they answer to nobody, and pay no taxes to anyone.

SPIEGEL ONLINE
The Shrinking Influence of the US Federal Reserve

By Gabor Steingart in Washington

Humiliation for Mr. Dollar: Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the United States Federal Reserve Bank, faces a general investigation by the International Monetary Fund. Just one more example of the Fed losing its power.

The United States Federal Reserve Bank, or Fed, seems as much a part of America as Coca-Cola or Pizza Hut. But at least one difference has become apparent in recent days. While the pizza chain and soft-drink maker are likely to expand their scope of influence in the age of globalization, the US central bank is finding that its power is shrinking.

The US Federal Reserve.
AFP

The US Federal Reserve.
No Fed chief in US history has been forced to submit to the kind of humiliation that Ben Bernanke is facing.

This is partly down to circumstances. Inflation is going up and up, and this year’s average will likely top 4 percent. But this time Mr. Dollar is also Mr. Powerless. He can raise interest rates in the fall, or he can pray, which would probably be the better choice. At least prayer would not prevent the US economy from growing, a highly likely outcome if interest rates go up.

After years of growth, the United States is now on the brink of a recession, one that is more likely to be deepened than softened by a tight money policy. Investments will automatically become more expensive, consumer spending will be curbed and economic growth will slow down, immediately affecting unemployment figures and wages.

REPRINTS
Find out how you can reprint this SPIEGEL ONLINE article in your publication.
The textbook conclusion is that this will stabilize the value of money, because no one will dare demand higher wages or higher prices. But the macroeconomics textbooks are no longer worth much in the age of globalization. Modern inflation is driven by the global scarcity of resources. Nowadays purchasing power exceeds purchasing opportunity. Most of all, there is not enough oil, and too few raw materials and food products. These increasingly scarce resources are becoming the focus of disputes among many people and billions of dollars are at stake.

This is why the price of a barrel of crude oil (159 liters) has increased from $25 (€16) in 2002 to $135 (€87) in 2008. And it is also why the price of corn has tripled in the same time period, while that of copper has almost quintupled.

If the inflation introduced in the United States is excluded, a small miracle is revealed, namely something approaching price stability. Adjusted for inflation, prices are in fact rising by only 2.3 percent. If this were the extent of it, the Fed chief could simply blink like an old watchdog and go back to sleep. Instead, he is barking loudly, which is his job. But he has lost his bite, because the Fed’s interest rate policy can do nothing about the scarcity of goods.

US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke. The entire US financial system is to come under the scrutiny of the IMF
Zoom
AFP

US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke. The entire US financial system is to come under the scrutiny of the IMF
Embarrassing Investigation

Some of Bernanke’s personal adversaries are also contributing significantly to his current humiliation. In the past, the chairman of the Federal Reserve was a pope among the priests of the financial elite. But unlike his predecessor Alan Greenspan, Bernanke is finding that his policies are not universally accepted, even within the Fed.

The last seven decisions reached by the Federal Open Market Committee, which sets monetary policy, were accompanied by a growing number of dissenting votes. Bernanke’s critics say that with his policy of cheap money — in other words, recurring rate reductions — he in fact helped fuel the inflation problem he is now trying to combat.

Another problem for Mr. Dollar is that it will be several months before his actions take effect. Officials with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) have informed Bernanke about a plan that would have been unheard-of in the past: a general examination of the US financial system. The IMF’s board of directors has ruled that a so-called Financial Sector Assessment Program (FSAP) is to be carried out in the United States. It is nothing less than an X-ray of the entire US financial system.

As part of the assessment, the Fed, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the major investment banks, mortgage banks and hedge funds will be asked to hand over confidential documents to the IMF team. They will be required to answer the questions they are asked during interviews. Their databases will be subjected to so-called stress tests — worst-case scenarios designed to simulate the broader effects of failures of other major financial institutions or a continuing decline of the dollar.

NEWSLETTER
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Under its bylaws, the IMF is charged with the supervision of the international monetary system. Roughly two-thirds of IMF members — but never the United States — have already endured this painful procedure.

For seven years, US President George W. Bush refused to allow the IMF to conduct its assessment. Even now, he has only given the IMF board his consent under one important condition. The review can begin in Bush’s last year in office, but it may not be completed until he has left the White House. This is bad news for the Fed chairman.

When the final report on the risks of the US financial system is released in 2010 — and it is likely to cause a stir internationally — only one of the people in positions of responsiblity today will still be in office: Ben Bernanke.

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan

TQ, wonderful, knowledge from one generation to the next.

Yes, the weather cycle seems to be trending towards more droughts.  We have purchased a property with a long (100yrs +) record of good rainfall, and a permanent creek.  Good soil.  Even has the occasional frost which are essential for some crops.  Off there for a week now.  No TV (by choice) or internet (not by choice!).

As this glorious weekend comes to a close, I am delighted that

there is a significant segment of Canadians that view this weekend as a celebration of Canada’s 400th birthday, not just Quebec City’s 400th birthday.  I think that the lead editorial in yesterday’s Globe & Mail, linked below, says it well.  Cheers to my fellow Canadians.  Equiz.

http://tinyurl.com/6ftpj4

ferret; yes, I do pinch those. My father taught me how; he called them suckers.

They hold back the fruiting stage, as the plant’s energy goes into forming the new shoots instead of the fruit from the main stem.

I also have rhubarb and raspberries.  Learning to keep them has been an education too.

How is your weather?  I saw an article about Australian climate that mentioned that the droughts are becoming more frequent.  I sure hope that you can get enough rain.

Getting up before dawn tomorrow as usual.  So will check in over breakfast.

Cheers, TQ