I wonder if Benny is willing to take it to the limit one more time.
Chart from Brian at ContraryInvestor
"It is crudely general to suggest collective responsibility for the German populace. It is, however, fair to suggest that those who continued to defend the idea of Germanhood publicly as the war went on—when this had become synonymous with barbarity—were in fact renouncing their humanity for the sake of individual survival and peace of mind."
Panayiotis Demopoulos, Götterdämmerung: Suicide Music
Raptores orbis, postquam cuncta vastantibus defuere terrae, mare scrutantur: si locuples hostis est, avari, si pauper, ambitiosi, quos non Oriens, non Occidens satiaverit: soli omnium opes atque inopiam pari adfectu concupiscunt. Auferre trucidare rapere falsis nominibus imperium, atque ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant. Tacitus, Agricola
Translation: "Plunderers of the world, when nothing remains of the lands to which they have laid waste by indiscriminate thievery, they search out across the seas. The wealth of another excites their greed, and its poverty their lust of power. Nothing from the rising to the setting of the sun can satiate them. They alone are as compelled to attack the poor as they are the wealthy. Robbery, rape, and slaughter they falsely call empire; and where they create a desolate waste, they call it peace."
Kitco’s Jon Nadler is today’s most notorious gold bear; and, although Mr. Nadler’s predictions are remarkably consistent, they also have been consistently wrong; but within this consistency lies a clue to tomorrow’s price of gold.
The website www.buygoldco.com kept track of Mr. Nadler’s predictions regarding the future price of gold in 2010. In November 2006, he predicted in 2010 gold would average $800. In October 2008, he predicted gold would be in the low $500 an ounce range in 2010. In January 2010: he predicted “With a view to the three-year average gold price still near $845… In May 2010 (with gold at $1200), He predicted the 2010 price would end [lower]…gold at the $800 per ounce figure. I am not alone in computing such figures. I still think..between $680 and $880. From 2006 to 2010, Nadler predicted the price of gold would be in the low $500s to the high $800s today, a spread of approximately $400, the mean being approximately $700. Based on this data, the apparently unerringly accurate Nadler Gold Predict-O-Meter is as follows:
To accurately predict the future price of gold, investors can take the arithmetic mean of Mr. Nadler’s predictions—then simply double it, i.e. $700 x2 = $1400, a number which, astoundingly, is almost exactly today’s gold price, i.e. $1405, at the end of 2010.
Gold Bears Predicting the Gold Price - Darryl Robert Schoon