2026 Lunatic Fringe - Market and Trade Chat

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What's going on with DelMonte folks??

Del Monte filed Chapter 11 in July 2025, leading to closure of its Modesto and Hughson plants in April 2026 and about $550 million in potential losses for growers reliant on the processor.

 
I see a lot of pundits/chartists on X saying $78 is/was a critical price level for silver today. Breaking through $78 is technically significant for bullish upside. I'm not a chartist, but what I'm seeing with vault stock movements tells me we are close to a bottom. :popcorn:
 
I see a lot of pundits/chartists on X saying $78 is/was a critical price level for silver today. Breaking through $78 is technically significant for bullish upside. I'm not a chartist, but what I'm seeing with vault stock movements tells me we are close to a bottom. :popcorn:

i am used to seeing a significant bottom peak blowoff (just like a top blowoff) before you get sharp upswings, which i havent really seen here yet, maybe the initial big drop covers that, hopefully this is a consolidation and climb action, but i am not convinced yet as we haven't threatened the 200dma yet
 
I think Claude did a good video that aligns with my thinking today on Silver chart.


....used to follow him for years, kinda lost track of him the last 5+yrs, thx for the post it let me subscribe to his youtube feed.....he in the past had a good track record doing chart analyses
 


"We are now entering that phase where governments begin tightening their grip on capital. It starts subtly. Expanded IRS reporting requirements. Increased scrutiny on bank transactions. Lower thresholds for what is considered “suspicious activity.” These are not random policy decisions. They are part of a broader shift toward monitoring and ultimately controlling the movement of money."
 

Who crashed Gold? Should we wait for future dips? Discussion with Nicholas Ward.​



and if you like to read... summarized by GROK:

Here's a clear summary of the YouTube video "Who crashed Gold? Should we wait for future dips? Discussion with Nicholas Ward" by Clive Thompson (uploaded April 17, 2026): Main TopicThe video analyzes the recent sharp sell-off in gold prices — a ~20% drop from its all-time high of around $5,589/oz in late January 2026 to lower levels by late March. This was one of the largest single-week declines since 1983. Host Clive Thompson discusses the causes and outlook with Nicholas Ward of Gold Bullion Partners.What Caused the "Crash"?The drop wasn't driven by weakening fundamentals but by a temporary, violent liquidity cascade in the paper gold market:
  • Central bank liquidations: Several countries sold gold for emergency liquidity amid oil price spikes, currency pressures, and geopolitical needs. Examples include Turkey (60 tons in two weeks to defend its currency), Russia (selling to fund the Ukraine war), and Poland considering monetizing 550 tons for defense.
  • COMEX margin rule changes: Shifts to percentage-based margins led to multiple hikes in a short period, triggering forced selling and a liquidation cascade among leveraged retail traders. The COMEX is mostly a paper market (only ~5% of contracts result in physical delivery).
  • Stronger US dollar: The DXY rose ~6% since the war escalated, making gold more expensive for non-US buyers and creating a negative feedback loop.
Additional factors mentioned include France repatriating and selling ~130 tons of old gold stored in US vaults (echoing 1971 tensions), with Germany also considering moves due to safety concerns.The Physical Market PictureDespite the paper price crash, the physical gold market remains strong:
  • Record deliveries and strong demand (especially from China via ETFs and the Shanghai Gold Exchange).
  • Shrinking inventories (gold available for immediate delivery down ~25%).
  • Resilient buying from safe-haven demand, portfolio diversification, and long-term structural drivers.
The speakers view this as a short-term liquidity event (historically lasting 4–6 weeks) rather than a structural bear market.Outlook and Advice
  • Fundamentals are still highly supportive for gold long-term: persistent inflation risks, dollar debasement, rising government debt/deficits, dedollarization trends (e.g., BRICS moves, China-Saudi oil trades in gold), geopolitical tensions, and central bank buying.
  • Gold is still up significantly (~47%) over the past 12 months (from ~$3,190 in March 2025).
  • Recommendation: Don't panic-sell. This is viewed as a buying opportunity ("buy the dip") rather than waiting for further declines, though timing is uncertain.
  • Silver gets a mention as potentially poised for a squeeze due to declining COMEX stocks and strong industrial demand (electronics, etc.).
Other NotesThe discussion covers storage options (e.g., neutral jurisdictions like Switzerland to minimize VAT), geopolitical risks (oil prices near $95/barrel, potential Strait of Hormuz issues), and promotional elements for Gold Bullion Partners and US precious metals dealers (Birch Gold, ITM Trading).Overall tone: Cautiously bullish on gold. The crash is explained as a paper-market overreaction amid strong underlying physical and structural demand. The video runs about 55 minutes and includes a full transcript on the YouTube page.If you'd like a more detailed breakdown of specific sections or timestamps, let me know!
 


🚨🇨🇳 Chinese scientists develop breakthrough membrane for critical metal extraction

Inspired by biological calcium channels, the eco-friendly membrane separation method reduces pollution, energy use, and chemical waste, according to the Chinese Academy of Sciences

The technology efficiently extracts metals like uranium, copper, and gold, with the potential to address supply shortages and environmental concerns

This could revolutionize metal recovery, support China's rapid growth in clean energy technologies such as wind power, electric vehicles, and photovoltaics, and strengthen the domestic mineral supply chain
 
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