BRACE Yourselves...
Submitted by Deviant Investor:
Bubbles come and go.
Silver and gold - 1980
Japanese Nikkei - 1990
NASDAQ - 2000
Mortgages and Real Estate - 2006
Bonds, Debt, Stocks, Real Estate - 2017
Examine the following graph of monthly data for 32 years of the NASDAQ 100 Index and Silver.
We saw the NASDAQ bubble in 1999-2000, a rapid rise for silver in 2010 - 2011 and a large rise in the NASDAQ 100 during 2009 - 2017.
Prices for both markets have often risen too far and too fast, and then corrected or crashed. The NASDAQ dropped more than 80% from 2000 to 2002. Silver dropped about 70% from 2011 to late 2015.
The NASDAQ 100 is likely to drop by a large percentage following its current run-up. Stay tuned - no correction yet.
Prices for stocks and silver rise, primarily because of currency devaluations. The two markets often offset each other, which suggests we should look at their sum. Examine 32 years of the NASDAQ 100 plus 175 times silver prices, which gives both markets roughly equal weight.
Over thirty years prices have risen exponentially as the dollar has purchased progressively less. Conclusion: Prices rise exponentially and probably will continue to rise as long as governments increase debt and central banks devalue their currencies.
Examine the ratio of 175 times the silver price divided by the NASDAQ 100. When the ratio is high - as in 2011 - silver is relatively high. When the ratio is low - as in 2017 - silver is undervalued compared to the NASDAQ 100 Index.
How long will the ratio stay this low? Probably not much longer ...
When the NASDAQ 100 top will occur is important if you are riding the NASDAQ bull market. Now is a time for caution!
How much longer silver prices will stay low is important if you are stacking silver, as I hope you are. Take advantage of these low prices!
Prices for silver and the NASDAQ 100 rise exponentially as unbacked paper currencies are systematically devalued.Expect much higher silver prices because the silver to NASDAQ ratio is too low, along with dozens of other reasons.Consider taking profits out of the NASDAQ to buy silver. Don't expect to hear this suggestion on Wall Street.Wall Street benefits from higher NASDAQ prices. Wall Street benefits little from higher silver prices, with the exception of JPM which, per Ted Butler's data, has accumulated a massive hoard of silver bullion. Expect Wall Street to promote buying stocks and discourage acquisition of silver, as usual.Silver has been money and a store of value for thousands of years. The NASDAQ stocks have existed for a few decades. In the long term, trust silver. In the short term, the NASDAQ is over-valued and silver is inexpensive. Buy Silver!
Read Gold Moves Ahead of Silver
Read "House of Cards: Netflix is One of the Poster Children for Tech Bubble 2.0"
John Mauldin quoting Jim Mellon:
When you see this Blue Free Shipping Seal, make sure and use the coupon code SILVER17 and enjoy free shipping and insurance on your entire order!