Richard Russell on Gold
Richard Russell is “the man” in the investment newsletter business. Using Dow Theory, he has called the tops and bottoms of the biggest bull and bear markets since the late 50′s. You would do well by following this guys lead.
Richard Russell
Dow Theory Letters Snippet
Mar 23, 2009
I’ve written in the past that if you want to make ‘BIG’ money in the market, you have to take an over-sized position and be dead right on the trend. The last time I did that was in late-1958. I was very bullish on the market at that time. It was during a severe recession, but the stock Averages were singing an entirely different tune.
I was so bullish that I wrote a bullish article for Barron’s – that was my first Dow Theory article for Barron’s, and that
article put me in business (December 1958). At the time I had invested ALL my money in various stocks, everything from Texaco
to Sparton to Avco to Baldwin Lima. The market turned up in December and never stopped climbing. Breadth was terrific, there was a huge short interest that was getting killed, and I was on margin up to my ears. Whenever I had “extra money” in my margin account I bought more stock. I did extremely well on that fateful ride, and I never again had the nerve to take that large a position – until now.
I started building my gold position in 1999. At the time gold was flat on its fanny well below 300 — what few gold mining shares were still alive were selling under $5. I wrote at the time that many gold shares were so cheap that you could buy them as if they were perpetual warrants.
My gold position now is comparable to my market position back in 1958. My gold position represents maybe 30% of my total worth. Why have I done this again?
For the following reasons.
(1) I believe gold is in a major or primary bull market. I believe the gold bull market is currently in its second phase. This is the phase where sophisticated and seasoned investors and the funds enter the market. I don’t believe the public is in the gold market to any extent. They are interested and watching the action, but they do not have the nerve to buy gold. In fact, the public doesn’t know how to buy gold, although ads are now appearing telling them of the “wonders” of gold and how they can buy the coins (at huge premiums over spot gold).
(2) If there is only one bull market in progress, it will attract broad new coverage and attention — just as Thursday’s $70 rise in gold did.
“INFLATE OF DIE.”
This will serve to feed the gold bull market.
I’m in no hurry. Gold will ultimately fully express itself. The gold bull market, like all bull markets, will do its best to shake us off its back. The gold bull market wants to go up without us. The gold bull market will roar when least expected, after it’s worn out many of its followers.
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