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IGO4IT said:Peter Costillo finally decided to comment on current share market status & had just warned investors of what he calls a resources "boom" that in his opinion may take another 2 years & then bust same as property boom that busted in 2003!!
I don't think its a boom.
a boom is a wide overvaluation of market price of property(s) due to many reasons including higher demand that pushes market prices higher than what their actual value or (book value).
I invest in resources stocks heavily & still don't see any reason to pay 1c higher for any stock that DOESN'T carry on that value of cashflow, physical production or reserves.
I think the resources market is heavily calculated very accurately on minute by minute basis & we always give the benefit of the doubt to a down trend unless proven wrong.
Do you really think resources investors pay too much for potential?? Do you think it's really a boom??
http://www.investorwords.com/550/boom.htmlboom
Definition
A period of rapid economic expansion.
If someone genuinely believes that demand will never ever be met by supply from hereon then obviously they will most likely think the current resources boom will go on indefinitely.
But imo there will come a time where supply will meet demand or even exceed it due to global consumer requirements being met, suppliers gradually increasing capacity, lowering of consumer demand due to higher prices (inflation) etc or a combination of these.
Now whether supply starts catching up to demand in say 6 months, 12 months, 2 years, 5 years or whatever is open to debate and everyone can assign their own probabilities on supply catching up with demand in whatever time frame they like.
Anyway, just food for thought if considering to jump on the resources band wagon now.
Smurf1976 said:It's not over IMO. But I think sentiment is getting far too bullish and that more than a few passengers need to get off the train. Question is when and how.
Smurf1976 said:Hearing the comments from politicians, in the media and on this forum I'm increasingly of the view that the resources boom is in for a correction.
The job of bull markets is to take as few along for the ride as possible. Right now this train's getting just a little too crowded for my liking. Indeed it seems that the number of passengers is doubling at every station.
I'm not saying the bull market in commodities is over. It's not over IMO. But I think sentiment is getting far too bullish and that more than a few passengers need to get off the train. Question is when and how.
Maybe.Right now I see gold pulling all the way back to 450-500 bucks in a correction that will take at least 2-3 years before bottoming
bullmarket said:Hi smurf1976
I generally agree with you
Regarding who will be left to pay ever increading prices for stocks - well, one way of looking at it is that there will always be mugs in chatrooms, pubs, factory canteens, office water coolers etc etc who are happy to jump on the band wagon after listening to all the hype whilst not knowing any better.
Eventually though, after share prices have gone past even the most optimistic valuations the 'smart money' will say enough is enough and start dumping their holdings to lock in profits and it will be mostly the johnny-come-latelies that will get hurt the most imo.
Imo a lot of the hype that you hear about the resources boom going on forever is mostly coming from johhny-come-latelies who have recently jumped on and so what else are they going to sayThey have to try to drum up other punters to pay even higher prices than they did so that they can make a small profit.
Sure, the current boom is not going to fall over over night (but then it might, who knows but when the correction comes after the smart money's greed has been satisfied it will shake out the late punters over however long it takes before resuming the uptrend if the global fundamentals still justify it.
Anyway, just more food for thought and my
cheers
bullmarket
Regarding who will be left to pay ever increading prices for stocks - well, one way of looking at it is that there will always be mugs in chatrooms, pubs, factory canteens, office water coolers etc etc who are happy to jump on the band wagon after listening to all the hype whilst not knowing any better.
IGO4IT said:.....secure our survival.
rederob said:Maybe.
I think the very opposite.
An easy $1000 for gold within 3 years - I reckon much less.
Silver's correction was inevitable.
But gold's correction was meagre, and recovered to close the week out within cooeeee of its recent intra-day cyclical high.
I hope for wavepicker's sake he is right.
I do know TLS has no saving graces and is a stock presently to be avoided like the plague. As for now going significantly into cash, I won't say it is unwise, but perhaps ill-timed.
This questionable (?) resources boom is presently in its third year, and is actually more powerful across all base metals, precious metals and oil - concurrently - than it has been in the period to date.
Copper, nickel zinc and oil are at all time life of contract highs.
The commodity markets have (for most metals and oil) never been tighter, ever.
2 years ago I read the bears widely, fearing a massive correction and curtailing my investments in commodities. The more I read the more I realised it was who you read, not what you read, that was important.
Don't listen to economists is my best advice to you in a commodity boom. Listen to BHP's Chip Goodyear or INCO's Scott Hand/Peter Jones (http://www.inco.com/investorinfo/newsreleases/Default.aspx?posting_id=3560) and hear what they are saying about demand: These guys are responsible for putting in billions of dollars of mining exploration and infrastructure each year, and they do it on the best advice money can buy.
I have a strong bias to commodities, but it’s because it has worked well for me for a number of years, and none better than this one.
Yet the big end of town is suggesting more of the same for longer.
They were right a few years ago, and they could be right again now.
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