
Jesse Colombo
Contributor at Forbes
Precious metals analyst and investor. Advocate for free markets and sound money. Recognized by the London Times for predicting the Global Financial Crisis.
Articles
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3 days ago |
gold-eagle.com | Jesse Colombo
Both gold and silver are undergoing healthy consolidation phases after their strong rallies, allowing them to reset and work off overbought conditions. It’s time for an updated look at where things stand. Three weeks ago, I suggested that gold may have temporarily peaked after a strong rally, and that a period of sideways movement or a minor pullback would be both healthy and necessary to cool off its overbought condition.
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3 days ago |
thebubblebubble.substack.com | Jesse Colombo
As a silver investor and analyst, I closely track copper because of its strong correlation with—and influence on—silver. Silver is unique in that it’s both a precious metal and an industrial one, with industrial demand making up about 55% of total usage. This gives silver price behavior that often mirrors copper, a purely industrial metal. Additionally, there are trading algorithms that arbitrage the silver-copper relationship, reinforcing their tight price connection.
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5 days ago |
thebubblebubble.substack.com | Jesse Colombo
It’s been a couple of weeks since my last technical analysis on gold and silver, so it’s time for an updated look at where things stand. In my previous gold-focused update on April 22nd, I suggested that gold may have temporarily peaked after a strong rally, and that a period of sideways movement or a minor pullback would be both healthy and necessary to cool off its overbought condition. That’s exactly what we’ve seen since—gold has moved sideways, consolidating its gains.
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6 days ago |
miningfeeds.com | Jesse Colombo
Whenever gold rises and I get excited as a gold investor, I’m often met with the familiar refrain: “Gold isn’t really going up—the dollar is just losing value.” I used to brush that off as a cliché or a semantics game, and honestly, it annoyed me. But eventually, I decided to dig deeper. I started analyzing the data visually—my favorite way to learn—and that’s when it really clicked: they were right. Gold wasn’t so much soaring as fiat or paper currencies were quietly eroding.
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1 week ago |
thebubblebubble.substack.com | Jesse Colombo
Gold has a remarkable track record of warning about—and hedging against—major threats well before the public catches on, whether it’s recessions, inflation, or geopolitical turmoil. Another critical warning it provides is when major governments and central banks start losing control—usually a precursor to full-blown crises.
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