RE: RE: Jim Sinclair ....
the stage is being set for tnx news and a new respect from a wider audience for Jim and tnx
JIm has a plan and a purpose for everything he does
Friday, November 19th, 2010
Shooting from the Hip, Sinclair Hits Bullseyes
Readers of these commentaries will already know that I don’t like to go too terribly far out on a limb when forecasting bullion’s next leap. I’ve always preferred to forecast long-term trends one predictable step at a time – a cautious but reliable way of seeing things that has attracted many like-minded subscribers over the years. There have been times when this approach contrasted sharply with my dire outlook for the economy. In the late 1990s, for instance, the column that I freelanced to the Sunday San Francisco Examiner was probably the most bearish rant published regularly in a big-circulation newspaper. Examiner readers would not likely have imagined that, on the guru side of my life, I was getting things consistently right in a stock-and-commodities letter that went out each day to professional option traders. I got it right because, rather than follow my instincts — which, to put it charitably, stink — I used coldly mechanical indicators.
Contrast that with the shoot-from-the-hip showmanship of Mr. Bet-a-Million, my colleague Jim Sinclair. Although his style and methods differ radically from my own, I have only respect for the man and for the way he has stuck to his guns on gold no matter what was happening in the markets. When an ounce was trading for around $1200 back in 2008, so certain was Sinclair that the price would rise to at least $1650 by this January that he baited doubters with a $1 million bet. Did he perhaps know something? Of course not. No one could possibly know for certain where gold will be trading three years from a given date. But he did know – and never tired of telling us — that the U.S. Government had embarked on the most reckless credit expansion in human history – a blowout so far beyond anything that had ever occurred that it all but guaranteed the continuation of gold’s steep upward trajectory.
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