2010: The Outlook for Silver and Gold

Subscriber Content & Resources

 

Listen to the MP3 audio file

The Solari Report – 14 Jan 2010

Download the MP3 audio file

 

It’s our first Precious Metals Market Report of the new year and the new decade. This is the perfect time to recap what happened in 2009 and assess the outlook for silver and gold in 2010.

Source: Franklin Sanders’ The Moneychanger

The gold price in dollars rose over 20% last year. Silver was up 35%, platinum up 57% and palladium up 118%. Numerous financial firms large and small are predicting another 20% + rise in gold prices this year. Is that really possible? And what does it say about the state of the US dollar, of our country and the world?

I am headed over this Thursday to see Franklin Sanders of The Moneychanger at Top of the World Farm in Westpoint, Tennessee. After a lively dinner with the Sanders clan on Thursday evening, Franklin and I will join you for The Solari Report for our “2010: The Outlook for Silver and Gold.”

In Money & Markets I will be covering the latest financial news, including new concerns that the federal government will require IRA’s and 401ks be used to provide capital to the US Treasury market.

As part of “2010: the Outlook for Silver and Gold” Franklin and I will address a significant number of new questions from subscribers. If there are questions you want to address, please post them at the your subscriber cart.

Here are topics that The Solari Report has covered so far this year that subscribers can access at your cart or library:

  • Top 10 FAQ’s of Buying Silver and Gold Coins
  • Ten Commandments of Gold and Silver Buying
  • Top FAQ’s about Precious Metals Markets
  • Options for an IRA or Tax-managed Account to Own Physical Precious Metals
  • Trading the Gold-Silver Ratio
  • Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) – Is the Gold and Silver Really in Inventory?
  • Traveling with Gold Coins
  • Inflation Adjusted Gold and Silver Prices

In Let’s Go to the Movies, we will review, Shut Up and Sing,  Barbara Kopple and Cecilia Peck’s documentary about the Dixie Chicks. The film follows the Dixie Chicks, an extremely successful Texas-based country music trio, over a three year period of intense public scrutiny, fan backlash, physical threats, and pressure from both corporate and conservative political elements in the United States after lead singer Natalie Maines publicly criticized then President George W. Bush during a live 2003 concert in London as part of their Top of the World Tour. View the documentary:

If you would like to learn more about The Solari Report and subscribe, click here. Subscribers access our full archive of mp3 files.

To sign up for our Solari Report Digest, click here.

This week’s Money & Markets Charts will be posted here on Thursday.