Home › 6a) Gold & Monetary Metals › 6a.) GoldCore › Is The Bull Market Over For Gold?
Permanent link to this article: https://snbchf.com/2021/04/flood-bull-market-gold/
Receive a Daily Mail from this Blog
Live Currency Cross Rates
On Swiss National Bank
-
SNB Sight Deposits: decreased by 15 billion francs compared to the previous four weeks
24 days ago -
2025-07-31 – Interim results of the Swiss National Bank as at 30 June 2025
2025-07-31 -
SNB Brings Back Zero Percent Interest Rates
2025-06-26 -
Hold-up sur l’eau potable (2/2) : la supercherie de « l’hydrogène vert ». Par Vincent Held
2025-06-24 -
2025-06-25 – Quarterly Bulletin 2/2025
2025-06-25
Main SNB Background Info
-
SNB Sight Deposits: decreased by 15 billion francs compared to the previous four weeks
24 days ago -
The Secret History Of The Banking Crisis
2017-08-14 -
SNB Balance Sheet Now Over 100 percent GDP
2016-08-29 -
The relationship between CHF and gold
2016-07-23 -
CHF Price Movements: Correlations between CHF and the German Economy
2016-07-22
Featured and recent
-
Wanderwitz dreht endgültig durch: Blamage mit AfD “Prüf-Video” -
Deutschland vor dem Kollaps? Warum alles ab 2016 aus dem Ruder lief -
Eilmeldung: Stuttgart ist in 17 Tagen pleite!! -
Polit-Bombe bei EU-Finanzministern: “Niemand hat die Absicht, Bargeld einzuschränken!” -
So werden Kritiker ausgeschaltet! Ganzes Interview: Heute 18 Uhr! -
Wie die Volatilität die Optionspreise beeinflusst -
AfD in New York: plötzlich zittert der Verfassungsschutz! -
800 Milliarden – wofür eigentlich? Ganzes Interview: Heute 18 Uhr. -
6 Dividenden-Fehler, die Du vermeiden solltest -
Wie viel macht der 1.000€ Freibetrag aus?
More from this category
Next Week: Six G-10 Central Banks Meet, But Only Two Move–BOE Cuts and BOJ Hikes13 Dec 2025
The “Double Bubble”13 Dec 2025
- Meet Switzerland’s first female bread sommelier
12 Dec 2025
Stadler Rail wins billion-franc night train order from Kazakhstan12 Dec 2025
Does AI Capex Spending Lead To Positive Outcomes?12 Dec 2025
A Third Of US Debt Matures In 202612 Dec 2025
Swiss energy provider profits harmed by nuclear plant shutdowns11 Dec 2025
Zurich airport set to break pre-Covid passenger record11 Dec 2025
Dollar Remains on the Defensive after the FOMC11 Dec 2025
Swiss interest rates remain at 0%11 Dec 2025
Hawkish Or Less Dovish? QE Or Not QE?11 Dec 2025
How we use AI responsibly11 Dec 2025
US tariff reduction will save Swiss firms: business federation11 Dec 2025
Switzerland gains retroactive US tariff cuts11 Dec 2025
Trump Accounts for babies, national security strategy, and chlorinated chicken10 Dec 2025
Fed Day with 10-year Yield at a Three-Month High10 Dec 2025
Gotthard work will delay Swiss trains in January10 Dec 2025
US Senator demands details of rumoured UBS relocation plan10 Dec 2025
EU rail expansion bypassing Switzerland10 Dec 2025
Affordability Crisis: Michael Green Challenges The Poverty Line10 Dec 2025







Is The Bull Market Over For Gold?
Published on April 3, 2021
Stephen Flood
My articles My videosMy books
Follow on:
Gold has not made new highs in many months. Gold peaked last year at US$2067 on August 6. The 7 month down leg of more than 18% as been deep enough and long enough that some commentators are now saying that the bull market has now turned to a bear market for gold. Losing faith is understandable because falling prices feel bad. But this week we want to show that current prices may not reflect reality. We will review the story of Archegos Capital Management which proved that prices often are false signals, a picture painted by others who have their own agenda. Then we can relate that story back to gold and silver by making the point that 7 months of down leg means nothing.
OFTEN WHAT WE SEE IS JUST WHAT OTHERS WANT US TO SEE
Archegos is something almost no one heard of until last week. Its founder has had past run ins with stock market regulators for breaking the rules. Regardless giant global banks like Mitsubishi, Credit Suisse and Nomura loaned billions of dollars to Archegos. Importantly those loans appear to have been on the scale of about 10 to 1. For example, if Archegos started with one billion, they then borrowed ten billion against that one billion, making a total of eleven billion available for ‘investing’. So its basically a hedge fund but since all money comes from the owner, its called a ‘family office’.
Apparently, Archegos investment strategy was to keep pouring money into the same few stocks so that the resultant rising price action would draw other investors into those same stocks at higher prices. Presumably Archegos intended to spark a rally and then sell into that rally near the top for a nice profit. Today’s main lesson is: Price action does not always tell the truth.
Instead of selling at the top, Archegos suffered a huge margin call for many billions of dollars. Apparently, they had borrowed so much money, from many different banks, that once all the banks came realize the size of the debt, faith was lost in Archegos. The giant banks will all lose billions and Archegos itself may even have the original billion wiped out to zero. Thus, today’s second lesson is: Banks have a simple business – they rent out umbrellas on sunny days but need umbrellas back when it rains to keep themselves dry. Sometimes, as in the case with Archegos, they get stuck in the hurricane without any cover.
Watch this video on GoldCoreTV
For months on end, to an outsider watching the upward progress of stocks bought by Archegos with ‘borrowed’ money from major banks, there was no sign of trouble whatsoever. Many investors were enticed to buy shares by rising prices. Those investors now wish they had not as prices declined dramatically as the scheme broke up, leaving banks to sell for whatever could be recouped. Until something broke, the price action was a beautiful picture painted by Archegos. Once the break happens [the reason for the break barely matters] that leverage goes into reverse.
Here is another proof of the main lesson. It turned out that once the banks recognized that rain was coming, they argued over the umbrella, as there was not enough protection to go around. Calling for a ‘bailout’ early on, some of the banks tried to prevent all banks from selling shares so quickly that the beautiful rising price picture would be revealed as a forgery. So once again we see that price action does not always tell the truth. Once that bailout conversation failed, it was each bank for themselves.
To recap the story what we see everyday over a very long period of time can very easily be a picture painted for us by someone else who is not displaying the entire truth. Once the truth cannot be hidden, everyone including sophisticated bankers worry about themselves only.
SHOULD I SELL GOLD NOW?
Let’s apply the main lesson to gold which has been falling for months. The picture painted certainly looks grim. Yet as we learned up above maybe the picture is not the entire truth. Is there some levered ’investor’ whose method is betting against retail buyers that used stimulus checks to buy gold and silver? Nothing in the Archegos story confirms or denies this. If there is one, we will not know until prices spike higher. We will not know until its too late for buying the metals. We will not know until after the global banks know.
Given the above story, should people sell metals because they have fallen in price for months? NO. Maybe the story above raises a vital question, when Central Banks lower interest rates and ensure liquidity, whom do those actions help the most?
Watch the video to learn more…
Full story here Are you the author?Follow on:
No related photos.
Tags: Commentary,Daily Market Update,Featured,Gold,gold price,investing in gold,newsletter,silver price