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Andy Sutton: Hello everyone. Welcome to Contrary
Investors Cafe for the Rocks and Stocks Report. My name is Andy
Sutton and this week we have an exciting guest, David Morgan from Silver-Investor.com.
I dont think this really needs much preamble, so without ado let's get right
into the interview with David Morgan.
Everybody is asking the question recently and it's a question I've heard a
lot and it's a question I know that the people are asking. Silver seems to
be stuck in a little bit of a range here. What do you see as having needed
to happen to get silver back up to that maybe $20.00 area? Everybody was real
ecstatic when it got up to $20.00. What's it going take to get it back up there?
David Morgan: Well as trite as this may sound, it is a very good answer
and it's also the truth. What it takes in any market, whether it's silver or
a stock or commodity or whatever, is buying pressure. I mean the reason any
stock or commodity goes up is because there are more buyers than sellers and
of course the converse is true.
What happens is it is a consolidation period that is pretty high level right
now but not at the old high, yet gold is over $1,000.00 per ounce.
In silver right now you have about an equal number of buyers and sellers between
the range we have seen recently. And this is very typical of all markets. A
bull market is named bull for a reason. All bull markets shake off as many
participants as possible, on the way up.
For example, say you were an ardent gold bug or maybe a recent one, and you
were smart enough to buy gold under $400.00 and you watched it go up past the
$1,000.00 level. Or with silver, maybe you bought it under $5.00 and watched
it go all the way to $21.00 and now it's sitting at $17.00. You might think, "I've
always got a triple, I don't think it's going any higher. I should have sold
it at above $20.00, but I didn't; I'm selling now." And so you're out of the
market. Once they enter a market and make a sale for profit, very few people
will reenter the same market.
Now of course, it does happen. I'm not talking about professional traders
or people on the floor of the COMEX. Those are not people I'm speaking about.
I'm talking about your average individual investor, who gets left on the sidelines.
Once that person is in this consolidation period and sells out, then the market
takes off again.
Mr. Sutton: How do you evaluate the precious metals markets, or even
the mining shares?
Mr. Morgan: I use both technicals and fundamentals. In the newsletter
I stress the fundamentals, because most people can understand the fundamental
case if it is laid out logic-wise as to why you would want to be in the sector.
The technicals are a tool and they're a good tool, but they're not an exact
tool. So people get a little hung up, especially when they first start trading.
I know when I started trading so many decades ago, I looked at all the indicators.
It was confusing. I didn't know which one had priority. Eventually I came
around to looking at very few indicators, the very key indicators, and these
give the best information. I think the fundamentals are the thing to stress
and what we do know is that gold and silver never failed as money. The
financial system is based on a lie at this point, where you can create money
out of nothing! These types of systems have always failed. Will this one fail?
I believe it has. Not totally, not completely, but it has failed.
In fact, if you consider it objectively and you look at the Federal Reserve's
own data, you will see what they have to say about the 1913 dollar. You will
observe from their own numbers that the dollar's now worth about $0.04. So
if my child comes home from school with a 100-point quiz on which she correctly
answered only four . . .
Mr. Sutton: You wouldn't be very happy.
Mr. Morgan: I would say that was about as bad an F as you could get.
In fact that's a miserable failure. And yet we pretend the dollar is still
worth something. Well in reality it is, but from a perspective of 100 years,
we had a 96 percent failure, using their numbers. Again, just to drive home
the point -- that dollar (which is a weight of precious metal, but we all overlook
that little fact) is worth just four cents. Yes, in some sense that is a failure,
especially when you consider that the Federal Reserve's mandate is to preserve
monetary stability.
So to see the dollar get cut in half, when it's worth $0.02 instead of $0.04,
do you think that could have a devastating effect on us? You bet! And at the
end of these great inflations you can see an acceleration of the downside,
which is what I expect. But I don't expect it quite yet, and going back to
what we said just on the previous question, I think we have a few more months
here where the dollar is going to move around. And once it breaks to the downside,
I think you're going see an acceleration, and when that happens, you'll probably
see a near simultaneous break of the silver and gold moving further to the
upside.
Mr. Sutton: That's one thing I've noticed as well, particularly in
checking out the dollar and looking at the indicators both fundamental and
otherwise. It seems that the dollar doesn't have much of a head of steam to
go too much higher. And I'll tell you what, that's a really good analogy that
you just made in how you can actually "assign a grade," if you will, to the
Federal Reserve. I mean really, the performance of the Central Bank is measured
by the value of the currency that it manages. And they've done a terrible job.
And if you consider another 50 percent decline in the dollar, $0.04 to $0.02
doesn't seem like a big deal over a 100-year period. But if you look at basically
cutting people's standard of living in half over a short period of time here
over the next couple of years, that's going leave a big mark.
Mr. Morgan: Absolutely, and I do believe that's what we're facing.
One of my themes in my newsletter a couple months ago was death of the dollar.
And I don't mean that the dollar is absolutely zero and it's absolutely funny
money, but what I do mean is that it ceases to be the reserve currency of the
world. And once it loses that status, then it becomes nothing more than an
internal currency where all our imported goods (which is almost everything
we buy now -- everything at Wal-Mart, for all practical intents and purposes)
double in price. It is going to have a significant impact on us, and I believe
very much that's what we're looking at over the next two years.
Now there are still some deflationary forces out there and it will continue.
It's an odd mix this time around, meaning that everything we need is going
to cost more and everything that is non-essential is probably going to fall
in price. For instance, you need food, that's going higher; you need energy,
gasoline, and electricity, those are going higher. Almost all your commodities
are needs -- sugar, wheat, you name it -- they're only going higher, longer-term.
Things you don't really need are going to see price pressure.
Mr. Sutton: David Morgan, appreciate your coming on Rocks and Stocks.
It was a pleasure talking to you.
Mr. Morgan: My pleasure, thank you.
Mr. Sutton: Again we'd like to thank David Morgan for coming on CIC's Rocks
and Stocks. We're certainly looking forward to talking to him in the
future. Until next time, this is Andy Sutton signing off for Contrary Investors
Cafe, Rocks and Stocks.
Mr. Morgan has followed the silver market for more than 30 years.
He wrote the book Get the Skinny
on Silver Investing. Much of his Web site, Silver-Investor.com,
is devoted to education about the precious metals; it is both a free site and
does have a members-only section. Mr. Morgan has just written a free report
titled, Silver Fundamentals, Fundamentally Flawed, which can be accessed
here: Free Silver Report.
To receive full access to The
Morgan Report, click the hyperlink.
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