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Category Archives: Jschulmansr

Catch Me If You Can!

18 Wednesday Feb 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, banking crisis, banks, bull market, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, Fed Fund Rate, Federal Deficit, federal reserve, Finance, financial, Forex, Fundamental Analysis, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, hard assets, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, IAU, IMF, India, inflation, Investing, investments, Japan, Jschulmansr, Junior Gold Miners, Latest News, majors, Make Money Investing, market crash, Markets, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, monetization, palladium, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, Saudi Arabia, silver, silver miners, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, Technical Analysis, The Fed, Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3, Today, U.S., U.S. Dollar

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Austrian school, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, bull market, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, deflation, Dennis Gartman, depression, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, economic, economic trends, economy, Federal Deficit, financial, Forex, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GLD, gold, gold miners, hard assets, hyper-inflation, IAU, India, inflation, investments, Jeffrey Nichols, Jim Rogers, Keith Fitz-Gerald, majors, Marc Faber, market crash, Markets, Michael Zielinski, mid-tier, mining companies, monetization, Moving Averages, palladium, Peter Grandich, Peter Schiff, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, protection, recession, risk, run on banks, safety, Sean Rakhimov, silver, silver miners, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Technical Analysis, TIPS, U.S., U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, XAU

As I write this Gold is taking a breather and consolidating at the $960 level, this is before I believe the next launch to test the $1000 mark+ which can easily come in the next few days. Gold is certainly saying “catch me if you can!”. Todays articles include several different vehicles with which to cash in on gold! Good Investing – jschulmansr

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Jschulmansr Recommended:

Here is where I buy my Bullion, get one free gram of Gold just for opening an account! Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free just for opening account!, no minimums – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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Riding the Gold and Silver Uptrend with ETF’s – Seeking Alpha

By: The Sun of The Sun’s Financial Diary

As I mentioned earlier, gold has had a tremendous run lately. The main force behind the gold rally is the deterioration of economies around world. Despite the passage of the $789 billion economic stimulus package over the weekend, gold price has continued to climb since the holiday.

Currently, spot gold is traded at $967 an ounce, up more than $10 from last Friday’s close, breaking the key $950/ounce level. That’s the seven-month high for gold. Also, major stock benchmarks are likely to test the November lows amid jitters in the financial sector.

 Even though there are predictions that gold could back fall after the stimulus plan became a law, that hasn’t happened. In contrast, investors are increasing their holdings of gold as a safe haven to preserve their wealth while the stock market continues to decline. Right now, gold is trading well above its 50- and 200-day moving averages, a clear indication of the uptrend of gold. (click to enlarge)

Gold rally

Investors’ appetite for physical gold, such as bars and coins, has driven up share prices of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) specializing in precious metal as well. For instance, take a look at SPDR Gold Trust Shares (GLD), the world’s largest gold-backed ETF. GLD gained 3% in 2008 and 6.9% so far in 2009.

The reason investors are also chasing GLD is that it offers investors an easy way to invest in the bullion without having to hold the metal themselves (you will have many more things to consider, such as storage and insurance, if you want to hold physical gold yourself). If you invest in GLD instead, your investment will reflect directly the price of gold because GLD’s share price is determined based on 1/10th of an ounce of gold. SPDR Gold Trust buys and stores physical gold to back GLD prices. In fact by tracking holdings of SPDR Gold Trust, you can get a sense of the demand for gold. Currently holding 985.86 tonnes of gold, a record level for GLD, the indication is that demand is strong.

If you are interested in investing in precious metal ETFs, check out these funds in gold and silver:

  • SPDR Gold Shares
  • iShares COMEX Gold Trust (IAU)
  • Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX)
  • PowerShares DB Gold (DGL)
  • iShares Silver Trust (SLV)
  • PowerShares DB Gold Double Long ETN (DGP)
  • PowerShares DB Precious Metals (DBP)
  • PowerShares DB Silver (DBS)

Among them, GLD has the largest daily trading volume according to Morningstar data, followed GDX and SLV. Remember, volume matters when trading an ETF. Not only because of the bid/ask spread, but also for the survival of the fund.

Stock chart from INO Stock Analysis

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My Disclosure: Long DGP and GLD – jschulmansr

Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free just for opening account!, no minimums – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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Want a Way Out of the Economic Stupidity? Buy Gold – Seeking Alpha

By: Adam Lass of Wave Strength Options Weekly

For every analyst arguing one side of the above arguments, you have another analyst strongly arguing the opposite. And often you have the majority of analysts taking one position in the above arguments and then flip-flopping like a politician to the opposite position just two months later if things move the opposite way from their predictions.

Make 203% as Washington becomes a global laughing stock

According to our nation’s new “Intel Czar,” the economy is the number one threat to the U.S. right now.

In testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee, National Intelligence Director Dennis Blair warned that: “The longer it takes for the recovery to begin, the greater the likelihood of serious damage to U.S. strategic interests.”

Now, one ought to keep in mind that Blair was addressing the committee just a day or so before Congress would be disgorging the bolus known as the 2009 Stimulus Act. As such, Blair, with his 49-page statement, was just one more player in the administration’s full court press.

Our Own Worst Enemy

Still, Blair does make some interesting points: Suddenly, al-Qaeda is no longer the top-listed actor. Indeed, most of the “Axis of Evil” has fallen several notches down the old hit parade.

North Korea’s current or Iran’s future nukes? Still salient, but not “Number One with a Bullet,” as old Casey Kasem used to say. Russian territorial belligerence and Chinese currency intransigence? Worrisome in the long run, but still not the top threat.

No, Washington’s Numero Uno spy tells us that our worst problems stem from the rot within. Or, to quote the ever-so-sage Walt Kelly: “We have met the enemy, and he is us.”

Our Newest Secret Weapon: The Dollar Bomb

The grand economic downturn (wow, that is such an elaborate way to avoid saying “depression”) presents two key security issues. The first seems obvious enough: We need cash to fully fund our military.

I suspect that this is less of a problem than it seems at first blush. Coming up with more dollars these days is actually remarkably easy: Washington just prints as many as it wants.

In fact, this may even turn out to be a bit of a blessing in disguise (okay, it’s a really good disguise, but bear with me here). A great way to get more bang for your newly imagined bucks would be to hand them off to military contractors, who could then hire more workers to build more armored troop carriers, which could then be blown up in Afghanistan. Then we just do it all again!

Bingo: You’ve cut unemployment and sopped up excess industrial capacity in one fell swoop! Hey, it worked for LBJ and Nixon, right? Right? Hey, stop throwing those “Whip Inflation Now” buttons at me!

The Price of Weakness

Let’s move on to issue two: The longer this debacle continues, the more folks in odd corners of the world might get the idea that maybe those “‘Mericans ain’t so smart after all.”

Much like Britain in its day (an apt comparison, since we pretty much bought our empire used from the Brits at the end of WWI), global control pretty much depends on the projection of the image of power. When that image falters, suddenly café agitators round the world have a much easier time persuading recruits to run around with Kalashnikovs and C4 undergarments.

And indeed, if you dig deep into Admiral Blair’s report, he does mention that al-Qaeda’s successful recruitment of Westerners over the past two years is making it increasingly difficult to play “Spot the Terrorist” at airports.

Hard to March When You’ve Shot Yourself in the Foot

But a mere economic downturn could not make us look but so dumb. Seriously, these things happen all the time, without risking national security. No, what makes us look inane and weak is the way in which our ineptitude has exacerbated a downturn into a full-blown crisis.

An example: Over the past few days, Justice and I have both bemoaned the current Secretary of Treasury’s glacial pace. It’s not so much that we want to see trillions in funny money dumped on us. It’s just that we wish they would rip the damn bandage off and move on already.

After weeks of promising to reveal his latest scheme, the best we got was a promise to come up with a schedule for formulating a plan, along with some vague threats to further “stress test” banks that have obviously already failed any sort of common sense test.

“It’s the Other Guy’s Fault. Oh Wait, I Am the Other Guy”

After calming down a bit, I actually went so far as to check with some connections I have in Washington as to why Geithner is moving so slowly. The current excuse coming out of the Treasury? The “New Team” has been unable to hire adequate expertise to figure out what to do next.

As I pointed out last week, the “New Team” is pretty much the “Same Old Team” that screwed things up in the first place. Indeed, the whole reason we were told to tolerate them was because their prolonged exposure supposedly ensured their expertise on the topic.

No wonder folks outside our borders are beginning to think we are stupid.

Turning Ineptitude Into Gold

There is one place where they are treasuring our fiscal inanities. Canada is enjoying a (relative) boom at our expense. Whereas the benchmark drop for most of the world’s markets has been hovering around 7.3% so far in 2009, Toronto’s TSX composite is down a mere 2.7%.

What’s propping things up north of the border? Gold, my friends.

Barrick Gold (ABX) and 11 of their fellow miners are up some 5.2% as a group this year. And it looks like this boom is nowhere near clapped out.

And why should it be, when guys like Euro Pacific Capital’s Peter Schiff are calling for gold to increase another 60% before the dust settles. Think that’s a speculative call? Heck, you can make a pure value argument for these guys.

After being bludgeoned by 14 months of recession and a 47% share price crash, one might imagine that U.S. stocks ought to be pretty darned cheap right now. And despite all this damage, the S&P 500’s trailing P/E is hanging out around 29.1, some 40% higher than at the market’s absolute top back in October 2007. Barrick’s P/E of 18.88 beats that by some 35%!

Now if you were looking for a way to turn our foolishness into treasure, you could simply do as the Canadians do, and buy shares of ABX. That increase in gold ought to bump up the share price some $20 between now and mid-summer.

If you were interested in a bit of leverage, you could easily pick up mid-dated ABX call options. That same $20 spike would offer you gains as high as 203%.

Disclosure: no positions- Adam Lass

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My Note: Of course I agree with the above article but “no positions?”. You gotta play if you want to get paid!… – jschulmansr

Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free just for opening account!, no minimums – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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The following is a Very Interesting Article! – jschulmansr

In Today’s Enviroment, Neither Technical Nor Fundamental Analysis Alone Will Work-Seeking Alpha

By: J.S. Kim of SmartKnowledgeU

 

In an extremely difficult investment environment, it is often difficult to know who to believe. Deflation or inflation? Have financial stocks bottomed or do they have much more to fall? When gold corrects sharply, is the gold bull over or still alive? Is oil heading to $20 a barrel or $80 a barrel?

For example, when we look at oil prices, oil has plunged from $147 a barrel to less than $35 a barrel in 7 months! During this time, the deflationists have been out en masse in the mainstream media, claiming that plunging oil prices were directly attributable to plunging demand worldwide from economies that were stagnant. For example, here’s a link to a story that seems to infer that plunging oil prices are caused primarily by plunging U.S. demand and growing U.S. inventories. Though it would be ignorant to ignore the effect of a slowing global economy on demand for crude oil and its effect on lower crude oil prices in the futures markets, it would be equally ignorant to attribute the majority of crude oil’s plunge to a shrinking global economy as well.

How many people really believed that when we had $147 a barrel crude oil prices that this price was solely attributable to skyrocketing demand?

Instead, I can assure you that these stories have been planted to distract you from the real culprit of plunging oil prices –fraud, manipulation of crude oil futures, and political scheming to try to save the U.S. dollar. The plunge in oil prices, after the fraud that caused the run-up to $147 a barrel, is most likely more significantly attributable to the root of this global crisis – a monetary crisis – than slowing GDP rates of world economies. There is much more to the story of any continuing and extended weakness in the United States Oil Fund, LP (NYSE:USO) than just sluggish demand from slowing world economies. Has global demand really shriveled so drastically to account for a 76% free fall in crude oil futures prices?

I’ve taken the stance for a long time now that the extreme volatility we have experienced in gold, silver, and oil futures markets is most likely nearly entirely driven by Wall Street manipulation and free market interventions executed by the U.S. Treasury and the U.S. Federal Reserve. For years, I’ve argued that Central Bank and government intervention into these markets have created massive distortions. In fact, the free-market interventions are so obvious now that even mainstream investment figures such as Donald Coxe, chairman and chief strategist of Harris Investment Management in Chicago, have made similar claims in recent months.

Unfortunately, if you rely solely on technical analysis and fundamental analysis in today’s investment arena without accounting for or anticipating government and Central Bank interference into free markets, you will not understand how to make money. The problem with U.S. regulatory agencies is that they have been asleep at the wheel for the last decade and have been non-responsive to those individuals that have been awake. Repeated requests to investigate fraud in stock markets and commodity markets have been ignored over the past decade by top U.S. regulatory agencies, even when the requests were accompanied by overwhelming evidence.

U.S. Representative Gary Ackerman [D, NY] demonstrated his understanding of the worthlessness of these regulatory agencies when he berated the SEC for aiding and abetting massive fraud in U.S. Securities markets. (Click to view)

I strongly believe that fraud on a similar scale is taking place right now and has taken place for years on the COMEX gold and silver futures markets. In the future, if U.S. Congressmen finally realize this, you will see U.S. Congressional hearings of a similar contentious nature occur with the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Currently, there is a mountain of circumstantial evidence of very large players attempting to manipulate gold and silver futures contract prices, even during this recent spike in gold and silver futures prices.

Remember, Harry Markopolos presented evidence of the Bernard Madoff $50 billion fraudulent Ponzi scheme to the SEC over a period of 9 years and was repeatedly stonewalled and ignored by the SEC (Securities Exchange Commission). Markopolos stated in testimony before the U.S. Congress that the SEC was protecting fraudsters instead of prosecuting them and “that’s why they shy away from the big cases.”

Asked by lawmakers if his warnings to the SEC could have been more explicit, Markopolos said, “I even drew pictures so I don’t know how I could’ve been more explicit.” He added the agency “roars like a lion and bites like a flea…The SEC was never capable of catching Mr. Madoff. He could have gone to $100 billion” without being discovered, Markopolos testified. “It took me about five minutes to figure out he was a fraud.”

Just like Markopolos, it did not take me long to conclude that massive fraud is and has been occurring in the New York-based gold and silver futures COMEX markets. And just like Markopolos, I also presented what I believed to be strong evidence of this fraud to the commissioners of the overseeing regulatory agency, the Commodities Futures Trading Commission [CFTC]. While my efforts were acknowledged by the CFTC, in their own words, as “great info”, no action has been taken upon my request for an investigation into fraudulent activity in the gold futures markets. I felt that I certainly presented enough compelling circumstantial evidence enough to warrant an investigation, but so did Markopolous, and he was ignored for nine years.

On the other hand, Ted Butler’s tireless efforts in presenting fraudulent COMEX activity to the CFTC has resulted in an internal investigation but as of yet, there still has been zero action as a result of this investigation. In the end, all investigations are ultimately worthless to the common investor unless the investigations are sincere. As Markopolos stated in recent U.S. Congressional testimony, he believes that the regulatory agencies’ intent will never be sincere until a drastic overhaul of the agencies occurs.

Markopolos hit the nail on the head for the biggest reason why the efforts of people such as myself and and many others to expose fraud in certain markets is being ignored by regulatory agencies: “What you’ll see is the [regulatory agencies are] busy protecting the big financial predators from investors and that’s their modus operandi right now.” In the case of gold and silver futures markets, when the agencies involved in the fraud most likely include the U.S. Treasury and the U.S. Federal Reserve, you will never see a true investigation materialize. So if, as investors, we are all fighting an uphill battle against fraud that has been imprinted within the “system” for a while, what is my point, right? My points are the following:

(1) Fraud has been part of the system for a while now, it will continue to be part of the system, and every investor needs to anticipate fraudulent activity to be profitable in these markets. Reliance on technical and fundamental analysis only will most likely lead to poor analysis.

(2)During periods of great economic crisis such as the one we are facing today, fraudulent activity will increase.

(3) Fraudulent activity manifests itself in the form of great distortions in stock markets and commodity markets. Why do you think you have seen financial stocks bounce around from $40 a share one month to $85 two months later, back down to $30 a share six months later, and up to $90 a share one month later? Why do you think you’ve seen gold plunge from over $1,000 an ounce in futures markets to $680 an ounce and then climb right back to more than $950 an ounce?

So the lessons to be learned are these:

(1) Volatility, due to massive fraud and free market intervention, is here to stay.

(2) To know how to play this volatility, you have to be able to analyze the situations properly and understand if fraudulent schemes are sustainable over the long-term or if they are only sustainable over the short-term.

(3) By taking step (2) into consideration above, you will know if rising financial share prices are a house of cards ready to tumble again or if they are a good long term play; if tumbles in gold prices should be interpreted as the end of a gold bull or a great buying opportunity; if oil prices are likely to remain low for a while or if a rapid spike in prices is likely in the future; and so on.

Do this, and you can make volatility your friend and not your enemy, because for now, volatility is here to stay.

My Note: I highly Recommend visiting SmartKowledgeU and signing up for the free newsletter, I did… – jschulmansr

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One other note: In Comex Silver it is a few large banks which represent over 90% of the short interest, and Gold has a similar situation where the shorts there are in on an average around $750 – $850oz, where the short positions where initiated. How long will they be able to hang in there? If Comex actually follows thru along with the CFTC in their investigation and these positions come to light… Wow what a potential “Short Squeeze”! We could see a frenzy where Gold will shoot to $1500 and Silver to $25-$50 oz  easy. – We will see… – jschulmansr

Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free just for opening account!, no minimums – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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Gold Around the Globe: Setting Records – Seeking Alpha

Source: Monday Morning

Gold’s performance in 2008 could look like a real yawner.

After all, it only managed to eke out a 5.7% gain. Not the kind you’d normally brag about over cocktails.

As we rang in the 2009 New Year, gold at $850 an ounce (in U.S. dollars) was roughly 15% below its all-time record high, set in March 2008.

But everything in life is perspective. In a year when oil lost 59%, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index was down 38%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average gave back 30%, things could certainly be worse for gold bullion investors. Much worse, in fact. Just ask the typical investor about his portfolio: He’s likely to grumble, and change the subject.

As it turns out, 2008 marks the eighth consecutive year that gold has clocked a positive annual return. It’s now starting to look like the trade of the decade.

Truth be told, many are disappointed with gold’s behavior during the October-November stock-market panic, too. But here again, it’s all relative. When we compare the Standard & Poor 500 Index (a proxy for the market) with the SPDR GLD Trust (an ETF proxy for Gold) (GLD), we know where we’d rather have our money.

As this chart shows, from September to December, gold, despite its volatility, ended essentially flat in U.S. dollar terms, yet shows a marked recovery since the end of November. The S&P, on the other hand, looks like an Alpine ski hill heading for Jackson Hole. The divergence between the two is remarkable.

During last fall’s violent stock market downdraft, the U.S. Dollar Index (USDX) put on a spectacular, unprecedented two month – 15% rally. Spectacular, because to get even a 10% move over an entire year is a big deal for any major currency.

But gold is still (mistakenly) considered by many as the “anti-dollar.” So its behavior during a U.S. dollar rally does not come as a complete shock in hindsight.

Yet the gold price we see is misleading in two significant ways.

First, try going out there and buying an ounce of physical gold. In normal times, the average coin dealer will charge in the neighborhood of 3% above spot price. This past November, that premium shot up by 3-5 times, with many charging 10%-15% above spot, plus eight weeks or more for delivery. So when buying an ounce of gold, how realistic is the spot price, especially during a panic? In the midst of the mayhem, one larger Canadian precious metals dealer, Kitco, saw its list of products shrivel overnight from about 16 items to merely three, due to a lack of supply.

Second, gold is quoted in U.S. dollars around the world. But India is the single-largest gold market, with the rest of Asia showing a strong affinity for the universally cherished yellow metal. Throw in Europe and Latin America, and you can see how most of the world looks at gold through entirely different lenses – through their own currencies.

To be fair, let’s gain some distance from our own provincial viewpoint by taking a small trip around the globe. This way, we can get a handle on how the price of gold has behaved elsewhere.

Euro Gold

During the anomalous spike in the U.S. dollar last fall, the European euro lost considerable ground against it. So gold priced in euros shot up. March saw the record of near € 650 gold bettered in September by € 670 gold. Europeans were clearly happy with gold’s behavior, which currently sits around an all-time euro high of € 720.

UK Gold

Gold priced in British pounds sterling has performed astoundingly well. Brits saw gold at £500 per ounce in March, then £530 in September, and £600 by year’s end. Gold, now at £650, is still setting new record levels, dating back to 1717 when they began keeping records.

Canadian Gold

Canadian gold investors have few gripes. In March of last year, gold was trading at C$1,003; by late September, the price was up by nearly C$50. And right now, it hovers at a record C$1,160 level. Despite the amazing strength the Canadian dollar has shown in recent years, gold has performed very well in this resource-based currency.

Brazilian Gold

Brazil is the most populous country in Latin America. And gold’s performance in the Brazilian real did not disappoint either. The record set in March at R$ 1,719 per ounce was easily surpassed in September with a sharp spike to R$2,069. Today, it sits at R$2,115; which is R$415, or 24%, above its March levels.

Indian Gold

India’s currency is the rupee (INR). And for traditional, cultural, and even practical reasons, Indians are the biggest gold investors on the planet. As in much of the rest of the world, gold set a record near INR41,000 in March. It then pulled back in July, but spiked to a new record near INR43,000 in September. At roughly INR45,800 today, gold is priced way above its previous March and September 2008 record levels.

Chinese and Japanese Gold

If anyone should be disappointed with the performance of gold over the past year, it is investors in China and Japan. Gold’s record in March, at CNY (yuan) 7,050, has not been bettered yet. September saw a spike back near the CNY6,250 level, and gold currently rests at a price of roughly CNY6,400 per ounce.

Japan’s gold price hasn’t fared much better. The March record near ¥100,000 per ounce remains unchallenged. Gold managed a rally to ¥95,000 in September, but has since fallen back to the ¥84,850 level.

So as the U.S. dollar rose late last year, the Chinese yuan and Japanese yen were the two major currencies that tagged along, making gold investors relative losers in those nations. The Chinese and Japanese 2008 gold experience differs little from the American one. And yet, gold in U.S. dollars is currently just 8% shy of its all time record at $1,023.50.

Despite the recent American, Chinese and Japanese gold experience, most of the rest of the world’s gold investors are a happy lot. When converting the price back into their home currency, those investors are basking in its glow, while gold sits at or near all-time record highs.

For now, however, gold is still priced in dollars for many market participants. The same is true for all other commodities. I expect that will change over the next several years. Scores of foreign central banks have indicated their intentions to lower levels of dollar-denominated reserves to reduce exposure. Meanwhile, Kuwait has dropped its dollar peg, opting instead for a basket of currencies. And Iran already trades some of its oil for non-U.S. dollar currencies.

As the U.S. dollar continues to lose value – and hence, its influence – on the world stage, commodities are increasingly likely to be priced either in local money, or to be quoted in a variety of currencies.

Heck, commodities may even be priced in quantities of gold before this is all over. Gold investors can only hope. For now, as new price records are regularly being established, most aren’t complaining about the value of their gold.

With their sights set on breathtaking new heights to come, American, Chinese, and Japanese gold investors are sure to see their patience rewarded, as have already so many of their fellow investors the world over.

Original post

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Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free just for opening account!, no minimums – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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 In yesterday’s post I included a partial list of tier 2, tier 3 junior mining companies to check out, and after doing your due diligence; potentially invest in. Some Bargains in there at or near book values.

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Look to Junior Miners as Gold Feeding Frenzy Ensues – Seeking Alpha

By: James West of Midas Letter

Ever seen what happens to a piece of meat thrown into a tank full of vicious piranhas?  

The water is whipped into a froth and within seconds the meatless bone sinks to the bottom. There’s virtually nothing left.

The same thing is about to happen in the gold bullion market.

After some apparent weakness in Asian markets, gold powered higher Monday as news of the Japanese economic rout sent global markets into freefall. The only thing that stopped it from happening in the Unites States was the mixed blessing of a holiday keeping markets closed.

I say mixed, because a second day of selling overseas means the American market will have two days of pent up selling pressure to be unleashed as the market opened Tuesday morning.

The news keeps getting worse out of global G7 economies, and that has investors flocking to gold in recognition of its safe haven role.

ETFs are the biggest consumers of physical gold right now, and last week global ETFs took down the equivalent of 5% of the annual world gold production in just one week.

SPDR Gold Trust GLD.PGLD.A, popularly known as GLD, said the gold bullion it owned rose by more than 100 tonnes to 970.57 tonnes as of Thursday, which marked the biggest weekly gain in the history of the gold-backed exchange-traded fund.

One does want to bear in mind that all ETFs are not created equally. There are very few, in fact, that hold their full portfolio worth completely in physical bullion. It is incumbent upon the investor to read carefully the information provided by ETF vendors. While there has yet to be an instance of ETF-related fraud (that I’m aware of), ETFs are nonetheless a paper representation of the physical bullion, and therefore presents the opportunity for subterfuge.

This is the phase of the secular gold bull that silences all gold critics, and puts smiles on the faces of gold bugs that is so wide their heads threaten to fall in half! This is also the phase where the herd mentality starts to get folks looking around for the nearest bandwagon to jump on. Most of the bandwagons have rattled off into the sunset, though, so there will be a lot of head scratching as the left behind try to figure out how to get in the game.

Investors need to beware though. As gold demand increases so will volatility, as the sheer number of investors means profit-taking is likely to cause same-day leaps and drops by as much as $100 per ounce.

That’s because there are a lot of investors who will be taking profit off the table as the price ratchets higher, and the see-saw effect threatens tender hearts with life-threatening cardiac sincerity.

If you’re late to the game, the trick might be to a look a little further down the road than where the vultures are already fighting over the last few American Eagles or Krugerrands to what will inevitably be the next meal for the hungry mob – mining companies.

In particular, mining companies that boast near-to-production Canadian National Instrument 43-101 compliant resources. There are more than a few of them out there. With the intense interest that will follow a gold price spike, these companies will be able to raise a lot of capital at premium levels, and that will speed up the timeline to production in a lot of cases.

Other companies are not going to themselves go into production, and instead are developing huge deposits for joint venture or outright sale to major and mid-tier mining companies. Important here is the existence of agreements with aboriginal groups (if applicable) and stable democratic jurisdictions. Projects in Canada, the United States, Australia, and Mexico rank highest, with those in Peru, Chile, Colombia and Argentina, followed by African nations. Highest risk are those with socialist governments or military regimes, such as Ecuador, Venezuela, Russia, Mongolia.

Information is the key to successfully investing in the juniors, and keeping abreast of developments on a day-by-day basis is the secret to not losing your shirt.

Investing in juniors is risky, but in the current environment, investing in blue chip stocks, treasuries, mutual funds and financials is far riskier.

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Gold Set To Rise Even Higher – Seeking Alpha

By: Mark O’Byrne of Gold and Silver Investments

After another strong week last week (both gold and silver were up some 3%) despite falling stock markets, gold continues its outperformance of other asset classes due to safe haven demand. It has surged again overnight in Asia and is now at 7 month highs and looks very likely to target its record high of $1,000/oz in the coming days.

Resistance at $950/oz was sailed through very easily overnight and the next level of resistance is $980/oz prior to a likely challenge of $1,000/oz in the coming days.

click to enlarge

With the global economy slowing very sharply, international demand remains very strong as seen in gold coin, bar, certificate and exchange traded fund demand. ETF holdings of the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded reached a record 985.86 tonnes as of February 13, up 15.29 tonnes or 1.6% from the previous day. The trust’s gold holdings are up a very significant 205 tonnes, or 26% in just the first six weeks of the year (see chart below).

Besides increasing retail, pension and institutional demand, many central banks are increasingly favourable to gold. Russia’s central bank has increased gold’s share in reserves, and plans to continue this trend in 2009, first deputy chairman told Reuters in an interview on Monday. The ECB Eurosystem’s reserves of gold and gold receivables increased EUR 1 million to EUR218.320 billion in the week ended Jan. 30.

Gold’s strength in recent days is particularly impressive as it comes in conjunction with a stronger dollar. However, this “strength” is more a function of a weakening in most fiat currencies internationally versus the dollar.

Gold has risen above £675/oz and €760/oz reached new record highs in many other currencies such as the South African rand and the Canadian dollar.

This bodes well for gold prices in the coming weeks as when the dollar begins to weaken again in the coming weeks, which seems very likely, then gold should rise even more sharply and target levels above $1,200/oz in the coming months.

Importantly, the commonly quoted COMEX gold price is actually lagging considering the extent of international demand as seen in the charts above.

And this marked rise in demand comes at a time when world gold production is actually falling.

While investment demand remains very strong and is increasing, there are growing fears about the declining supply of gold – the world’s mine gold supply has been falling in recent years and it fell to 2,385 tonnes last year, down 3.6 per cent from 2007 (despite the rise in prices in recent years).

This is a recipe for markedly higher prices in the coming months and the inflation adjusted high of some $2,400/oz looks more and more likely in the next few years.

Disclosure: no positions

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Gold -“Catch Me If You Can” – Whichever way you invest remember to do your due diligence especially if investing in the “junior” gold mining companies. I usually only invest in those companies which have production or are set to start producing in the very near term future…       – Good Investing! – jschulmansr


Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free just for opening account!, no minimums – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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Nothing in today’s post should be considered as an offer to buy or sell any securities or other investments; it is presented for informational purposes only. As a good investor, consult your Investment Advisor/s, Do Your Due Diligence, Read All Prospectus/s and related information carefully before you make any investing decisions and/or investments. –  jschulmansr

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Wake Up Call!

16 Monday Feb 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, Bailout News, banks, Barack Obama, bear market, bull market, capitalism, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, depression, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, Federal Deficit, federal reserve, Finance, financial, Forex, Fundamental Analysis, futures markets, GDX, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, hard assets, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, inflation, Investing, investments, Japan, Jschulmansr, Junior Gold Miners, Latest News, majors, Make Money Investing, market crash, Markets, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, monetization, palladium, Peter Brimelow, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, prices, producers, production, rare earth metals, recession, resistance, risk, run on banks, safety, Saudi Arabia, silver, silver miners, small caps, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, The Fed, TIPS, Today, U.S. Dollar, uranium

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Austrian school, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, bull market, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, deflation, Dennis Gartman, depression, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, economic, economic trends, economy, Federal Deficit, financial, Forex, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GLD, gold, gold miners, hard assets, hyper-inflation, India, inflation, investments, Jeffrey Nichols, Jim Rogers, Keith Fitz-Gerald, majors, Marc Faber, market crash, Markets, Michael Zielinski, mid-tier, mining companies, monetization, Moving Averages, palladium, Peter Grandich, Peter Schiff, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, protection, recession, risk, run on banks, safety, Sean Rakhimov, silver, silver miners, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Technical Analysis, TIPS, U.S., U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, XAU

The U.S. Markets are closed today yet something very interesting is starting to happen. Can you sense it? The shift from deflation to inflation. The “smart money” big investors are sensing it and starting to jump into Gold in a big way! Gold Prices are holding steady overseas above the $935 support level. Todays articles show the why and how of this move by big money into Gold, read on… and Good Investing! – jschulmansr

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 Something still stirring in precious-metals pond – Market Watch

By: Peter Brimelow of Market Watch

With some wild swings, gold gained about 3% on the week, closing Friday at $941. The Phx Gold Silver Index (XAU:

Technicians were impressed. Long-term chartist Martin Pring is deflationary-minded at present. Two weeks ago, he remarked that if certain trend lines were broken, “I would be dragged kicking and screaming into the bullish camp”. But now he simply says in his recent weekly Intermarket Review: “Not much to add to my recent bullish comments. Both the metals and shares recently broke out of giant patterns … With our Global Gold Index at a new all-time high – enjoy the ride!”
Pring also flags a powerful conceptual reason for the gold move. Discussing a chart of the inflation proofed Treasuries, and using the iShares:Lehm TIPS TIPT as a proxy, Pring says: “Here we see the inflation protected bonds, or TIPs. Who needs these in a deflation? But look, the price just broke to the upside … and volume is expanding! When we look at the longer term we see it’s still in a primary bear market … However this week’s breakout suggests a turn is likely.”
In other words, the bond market is getting seriously concerned about inflation. See Website
The Privateer, being Australian, is even more direct in its weekly remarks: “Why is gold going up? It is certainly not in spite of the global mania for bailout programs now sweeping the world. It is because of these programs. The more ‘liquid’ the global financial powers that be make their money — by creating it in ever larger swathes — the more they run the risk that the world starts to look elsewhere for a viable and trustworthy way to exchange goods and services.”
The Privateer’s invaluable $US 5X3 point and figure chart has now broken above its last downtrend, although its proprietor would like more progress: “This week the chart got up to and just above the second of the two downtrends. The ‘poke’ above the line which came with Gold’s close above $U.S. 945 on Feb. 12 is not yet decisive, a close above $U.S. 960 would be.” See Website
Silver, which I reported last week was exciting the gold bugs by showing unusual leadership characteristics, persisted — rising 3.5% on the week, including on Friday despite gold’s fall, and pushing the Gold/Silver ratio to 68.9 from last week’s 69.5.
But the star of the week was the reported bullion holdings of Spdr Gold Trust. (GLD:
GLD is regarded with deep suspicion by the radical gold bugs who think the metal’s price is manipulated. But at the least it has to been seen as a measure of the Western Hemisphere investment appetite for gold.
In contrast, Le Metropole Cafe monitors Indian gold imports and reports that, unusual in the past few years, the world’s largest gold consumer is standing aside for now. See Website
Interestingly, two sentiment indicators did not react much this past week. Mark Hulbert’s HGNSI on Friday stood unchanged at 60.90%. MarketVane’s Bullish Consensus actually lost a point on Friday to 78%, gaining only 3 points on the week. See Website
In serious gold moves, MarketVane excursions into the 90s are reportedly common.
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Here is where I buy my Bullion, get one free gram of Gold just for opening an account! Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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Major Investors Piling into Gold – Seeking Alpha
By: James West of Midas Letter

Endeavour Financial Corp (TSX:EDV) closed a $100 million equity offering last week, and several other “bought deal” financings point to a strengthening trend: major investors are piling into gold.

The Offering was underwritten by a syndicate co-led by GMP Securities L.P. and Canaccord Capital Corporation (the “Underwriters”). Endeavour will use the funds to support its investment activity in the mining sector with an emphasis in the short term on precious metals.

The first quarter of 2009 has seen well over $1 billion flow into near term and existing mining companies, which is a reflection of the strong gold price amid safe haven demand. With estimates of U.S. government spending reaching as high as $2 trillion, large value investors are increasingly deterred by U.S. Treasury related securities in favour of precious metals.

  • Newmont Mining (NYSE:NEM), one of the world’s largest gold mining companies, raised US$1.7 billion in a combined common share/convertible debt deal which it will use primarily to fund the acquisition of the remaining 33.33% interest in the Boddington project in Western Australia that it does not already own and the additional capital expenditures that will result from its increased ownership in the Boddington project, as well as for general corporate purposes. Citigroup Global Markets and J.P. Morgan Securities led the placement.
  • Freeport McMoran Copper and Gold (NYSE:FCX) raised US$740 million through the issuance of 26.8 million common shares at $28 per share;
  • Kinross Gold Corporation (KGC) announced a “bought deal” financing for US$360 through the issuance of 24,035,000 million common shares US$17.25 per common share. The underwriters were led by UBS Securities Canada Inc.;
  • Osisko Mining Corporation (OSKFF.PK) entered into another “bought deal” led by Thomas Weisel Partners and BMO Capital Markets. The offering of 77 million units at $CA4.55 a share will gross CA$350.4 million. Osisko is developing the 6.28 million ounce Canadian Malartic Project Quebec.

Smaller deals are becoming more common for junior emerging gold companies as well. Among the recent actions:

  • Centamin Egypt (CELTF.PK) raised $CA69 million through the issuance of 106.2 million shares at CA$0.65 per share for development and construction of the Sukari Project in Egypt. This financing was led by Thomas Weisel Partners and Cormark Securities.
  • Romarco Minerals Inc. (TSX.V:R) announced a bought deal Friday worth $20 million for the development of the Haile Gold Mine in South Carolina. Romarco issued 54 million units at $0.38 each. The financing was led by a syndicate of underwriters led by Macquarie Capital Markets Canada Ltd. and including Paradigm Capital Inc. and GMP Securities L.P.
  • International Tower Hill Mines (THM) sold 2 million common shares at $2.50 per share for gross proceeds of CA$5 million, which will be directed towards further development of its projects in Alaska and Nevada. The placement was a “bought deal” led by a syndicate of underwriters led by Canaccord Capital Corporation and including Genuity Capital Markets and GMP Securities L.P.
  • Exeter Resource Corporation (AMEX:XRA) raised CA$25.2 million at $2.40 a share for development of its assets in Argentina and Chile.

And it isn’t just gold that is attracting big financing. On February 10th, Uranium One (SXRZF.PK) announced a $270 million investment by a Japanese Consortium comprised of Tokyo Electric Power Company, Incorporated (TKECF.PK), Toshiba Corporation (TOSBF.PK), and The Japan Bank for International Cooperation.

Concurrently with the execution of the subscription agreement, Uranium One has also entered into a long-term off-take agreement and a strategic relationship agreement with the Japanese consortium, both of which will become effective upon closing of the private placement.

The off-take agreement provides the consortium with an option to purchase, on industry-standard terms, up to 20% of Uranium One’s available production from assets in respect of which Uranium One has the marketing rights.

Junior Uranium company First Uranium Corp. (FURAF.PK) was also the beneficiary of a bought deal financing led by Macquarie Capital Markets this week, which saw First Uranium place 20.5 million units of its shares at $3.00 per unit for gross proceeds of $61.5 million. First Uranium will direct the funds towards the development of the Ezulwini Mine in South Africa.

Endeavour Financial is followed by many analysts and newsletter writers for its robust project pipeline.

Brien Lundin, who publishes the Gold Newsletter, says one of the main reasons he follows Endeavour Financials is because of management – especially Mr. Frank Giustra. He says this team now senses a market bottom, as they are raising capital to go after assets that now cost a fraction of what they did last year, or even six months ago. He intimates strongly that his subscribers should do the same, using Endeavour as their proxy. A mix of entrepreneurial expertise and value investing, he outlines what the smart money is doing now.

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Here is where I buy my Bullion, get one free gram of Gold just for opening an account! Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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Gold: Now Demonstrating Trust in Obama – Seeking Alpha

By: Boris Sobolev of Resource Stock Guide

Gold is Starting to Believe the Obama Administration

Despite making loud headlines about stimulating the economy, the US government has been unable to raise the level of optimism among the general public, while the stock market seemed to drop into a deep state of apathy.  

 

Last week we received the long-awaited economic stimulus packet as well as the so-called plan for the rescue of the US financial system. We have already voiced our skepticism regarding the structure of the stimulus and its potential effect on the economy in a prior article.

 

As far as the size of the $787 billion package, it is clear that it is too small and too spread out into 2010 and beyond to be called a stimulus. $787 billion is just 5.6% of the GDP and when spread over two years will account for just 2.8% at a time when many industrial economies around the world are contracting by 5-10% per year. It can only be called a life support package, not a stimulus.

Japan, which got into a deflationary spiral as a result of a real estate bust, spent much more than 100% of its GDP since 1991 just to see its economy stagnate. Construction related investment alone ate up $6.3 trillion of public funds over the 17 years since 1991. Infrastructure spending accounted for $350 billion to $400 billion per year for the first half of the 1990s for an economy half the size of the United States.

The results of the Japanese fiscal stimulus were unimpressive, although it could be argued that without this stimulus, it could have been much worse.

With the United States facing similar post bubble dynamics as Japan did twenty years ago, how can we expect greater effectiveness of the Obama stimulus plan when it is insufficient and much of is clearly misdirected?

In reality, this economic stimulus package has to be viewed as only the first one of many yet to come. By having the US dollar as a world reserve currency, the US government can be much more effective than its Japanese counterpart in printing its own currency.

We will soon be quantifying the size of the government stimulus plans in trillions rather than in billions. Within the next 3 to 4 years, government spending can easily reach $10 trillion, doubling the size of the US government debt.

One of the main problems with this crisis is that the majority of the debt bubble is related to residential real estate, which does not produce cash flow, but only seems to eat it up. As home prices decline and unemployment rises, debt serviceability is worsening dramatically.

In order to avoid social unrest and to maintain popularity, the Democratic majority will face two realistic options which could begin to address the economic disaster:

  1. Forgive portions of mortgage debt which cannot be serviced. But who will pay for the losses – clearly not the weak banks. Uncle Sam would pick up the tab by printing more currency.
  2. Print new dollars to increase the nominal income of the indebted population through tax cuts, job creation, jobless benefits and various social spending.

There is no other politically possible way out of this mess other than to run the printing press. The way of the free market via bankruptcies is not popular so there is no sense to even discuss it.

Within hours President Obama will sign the stimulus into law, but we are sure that this is just the beginning of the government spending campaign.

As far as the US banks, the new US Treasury Secretary seems to be mimicking his predecessor, Hank Paulson. The essence of the announced “plan” is as follows: “We are absolutely sure that we will save our banking system, but are yet unsure of how we will do so. We will find out very soon, however. Stay tuned”.

While not knowing what to do with the banking system, the government is trying to temporarily act as one. The only specific point in Geithner’s announcement is the plan to increase the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF) facility from $200 billion to $1 trillion. This joint initiative with the Federal Reserve expands the resources of the previously announced, but not yet implemented TALF.

In essence, TALF will support the purchase of loans by providing the financing to private investors. In theory, this should help unfreeze and lower interest rates for auto, small business, credit card and other consumer and business credit. Treasury will use $100 billion to leverage $1 trillion of lending from the Federal Reserve. The TALF, which will potentially have greater effect than the stimulus plan, passed in a blink of an eye without any debate.

The markets around the world have deteriorated in deep state of indifference to the first round of actions of the new US government. Only gold is starting to demonstrate its trust in the Democratic majority. Since the inauguration, investors poured $6 billion into gold purchases through GLD alone. This is an increase of 210 tonnes in gold holdings or 24% in less than a month.

click to enlarge

Huge investment demand around the world has put an end to a steep gold correction of the second half of 2008. Most intermediate and long term technical indicators for gold have turned decisively bullish. A test of new highs by gold is very probable this spring.

In sum, gold investors are starting to believe that the Obama Administration sees one way out of economic problems which will for sure resurrect inflation.

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My Note: Did you catch that? They’re believing alright, not that Obama will get the situation fixed, just that he will cause inflation; yes even hyper-inflation , maybe even stagflation! Jump into Gold now before it’s too late… -jschulmansr

 

Here is where I buy my Bullion, get one free gram of Gold just for opening an account! Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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Moody’s, S&P Dole Out Global Downgrades – Time to Go Gold? – Seeking Alpha

By: Mark O’Byrne of Gold and Silver Investments

 Gold rose again on Thursday, briefly rising above $950/oz and was up 0.6% on the day. Determined selling on the open in Asia saw gold fall and profit taking has seen gold fall in Asia and in early trading in London. This is to be expected as gold had risen by more than 15% in less than a month.

 

 

US, UK Credit Ratings Look Set to Be Downgraded

The credit rating agency Moody’s has said that the UK and US credit ratings were being “tested”. In a novel and somewhat bizarre departure, Moody’s has split various “AAA” sovereign countries into three categories based on their strength in weathering the economic storm, denoting Ireland and Spain as the weakest, with the UK and US somewhere in the middle and Germany, France, Canada and the Scandinavian nations at the top.

This will in time be seen as gimmickry. Standard and Poor’s have already downgraded Spain to AA+ and did not create sub grades within the credit rating system.

Some have criticized Moody’s for being “unfair” to Ireland, Spain, the UK and US and have argued that these agencies previously gave almost everybody good ratings, and underestimated risks, but were now going to the other extreme.

This is errant nonsense and the unfortunate fact is that Moody’s, the other credit rating agencies and the vested interests in the financial services industry continue to underestimate risks, as they have done for months and years.

Given the massive deterioration in the public finances and economies of these nations, by right they should be downgraded and unfortunately in the coming months they will inevitably be downgraded.

But Moody’s and all the rating agencies realize that this would compound an already disastrous financial and economic crisis. Many pension funds internationally have mandates or investment guidelines to only invest in “AAA” rated government bonds and if these countries bonds were downgraded, they would be forced to sell those bonds en masse. This would likely see a crash in the already very overvalued government bond markets and see long term interest rates rise quickly and sharply.

The creditors of the US in Russia and China have rightly criticized the ratings agencies for their highly irresponsible practices in recent years and are increasingly nervous about their US denominated assets.

Ratings agency Standard and Poor’s in January downgraded Spain’s sovereign debt rating to “AA+” from “AAA” in January, citing insufficient means to deal with weak growth and a ballooning budget deficit. As they did the sovereign rating of New Zealand. The fiscal position in the UK and US is arguably much worse than in these two countries (Martin Wolf of the Financial Times recently said that major US banks, with their humongous Wall Street liabilities, are insolvent) and thus it seems inevitable that the UK and US will be downgraded in the coming months.

If the US is downgraded, then in effect the reserve currency of the world is being downgraded and this has huge implications for the international monetary system. Not surprisingly there have been op-ed pieces in the Financial Times and the Wall Street Journal calling for a return to some form of gold standard.

The governments of the world are nationalizing and socializing the meltdown in the shadow banking system and the international system with potentially disastrous consequences for us all.

Conditions are set to get markedly worse before they get better and the experience of Argentina and other previously wealthy South American countries may be instructive. The IMF is called in and there are structural adjustments, social services are affected or discontinued, banks nationalized, savings inaccessible, food and energy insecurity rise.

This is a potential reality for large western economies, especially if governments keep trying to inflate their way out of the current crisis. This is leading to massive currency debasement and will potentially lead to very significant stagflation and maybe even what could be called hyper stagflation.

Now more than ever, it is essential that individual savers and investors, companies, pension funds and sovereign wealth funds have an allocation to and directly own actual physical gold bullion. Paper exchange traded funds with all the attendant counter party, custodian, sub custodian, auditing and indemnification risk are speculative trading vehicles and not physical gold.

In these unprecedented economic times, it is irresponsible and extremely high risk not to have an allocation to gold bullion in an investment portfolio.

Disclosure: no positions

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My Note: No Positions??? Mr. O’Byrne I think you need to follow your own advice above! Here is where I buy my Bullion, get one free gram of Gold just for opening an account! Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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Is Gold the only salvation from this Financial Armageddon? – MineWeb

Source: MineWeb

Indications are that the global financial situation could yet get far worse before it starts getting better – particularly in Europe – and gold may again prove to be the only real way of protecting wealth in a continuing global financial meltdown.

Author: Lawrence Williams
Posted:  Monday , 16 Feb 2009
LONDON – 
 

 

“It ain’t over ’til its over” is one of the best known quotations from baseball catcher and coach Yogi Berra and as the global financial crisis unwinds it is very apposite yet again.  We ain’t anywhere near the end yet and possibly the worst is yet to come as far as European banks in particular are concerned.  Markets have breathed sighs of relief as various banks have been bailed out and stimulation packages are being approved if not already implemented. 

 

But, one gets the feeling that any relief is premature.  The debt situation in a huge number of debtor nations – virtually the whole of Eastern Europe falls into this category – is dire and has not really yet fallen into the sights of the investment world – but bankers must be quaking in their shoes as surely they are aware of the potential financial Armageddon that still lies ahead. 

And this time it is the already shaky Western European banking sector that is most at risk.  US Banks, accused of starting this all, maybe far less vulnerable to the times ahead.  True the US financial sector may have got us into this mess, but European bankers followed suit and, in the event, may be shown to have behaved far more recklessly than their American counterparts.  It would seem that some of the potential shortfalls being faced would be beyond the financial ability of Central Banks, Governments and transnational agencies like the IMF to sort out.  The system is like a house of cards.  One major failure could bring the whole house tumbling down. 

This is the kind of situation that leads to global nightmares – wars even.  Radical extremists get elected to positions of power – as with the rise of National Socialism in Germany after the crash of the Weimar Republic with its hyperinflation.  We could be in for a very sticky time ahead as the real implications, and depth, of the financial meltdown catch up with us. 

The problems ahead may not be beyond the wit of man to devise a solution which can ‘save the world’, but that is unlikely to come from UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown who appears to have laid claim to this cachet in a freudian moment of rhetorical madness.  Don’t forget this is the same Gordon Brown who decimated the UK’s gold reserves by selling half of them off (395 tonnes) at gold’s low points from 1999-2002 – amounting to some $12bn at today’s prices – a sum the UK treasury would give its eye teeth for in the current financial crisis, although this is small beer relative to the sums squandered by the UK banks.  But it is an indicator of Gordon Brown’s acumen, or lack of it, in dealing with global financial trends. 

Indeed Gordon Brown’s thinking is probably echoed by many others in the European and perhaps the US financial hierarchy which doesn’t bode well for any rescue package that will actually work to stem the flow of toxic debt which has built up all around the world and may almost certainly amount in total to a greater sum than all the world’s financial reserves combined,  But then that is the nature of banking.  It only takes a run on almost any bank to bring the whole institution crashing down, and to allow any country to fail – and there are signs that the European Central Bankers may let some Eastern European states go under, thus triggering a domino effect of defaults worldwide, to bring the world banking system to its knees – or worse.  There are even fears that past high flyers like the Irish Republic could be forced to default on its debts, and undoubtedly the situation for, say, the Baltic states is far worse still. 

What solution is there out there.  Printing money on an unprecedented scale will expose the world to huge inflationary pressures for years to come, but this may be the only way forward using more conventional solutions.  Perhaps a huge revaluation in the price of gold could help bolster some treasuries and bring some confidence back into the system.  And, as with any bank run it is confidence which is needed to stem the tide, not necessarily actual money! 

But where does all this leave the investor?  Not in a happy position.  The logic of further financial collapses and bank failures would be to knock the markets down and down, which in turn takes wealth out of the system and decimates pensions upon which an increasingly aging society is dependent. 

Buy gold may be an answer to protect oneself, but as we saw last year, gold too can be vulnerable as in times  of reduced liquidity funds and individuals have to sell any liquid assets to cover their positions.  But then gold is probably not as vulnerable as other assets – again as we have seen over the past year.  Those who were invested in gold at the beginning of 2008, for example, and did not sell during the year, at least maintained the value of their holdings while virtually all other investment options crashed, although this was not true of most gold stocks. 

Now we are seeing professional and institutional investors moving into gold in a big way just to try and protect their, and their clients’  wealth.  As we have pointed out here frequently, gold ETFs are seeing an unprecedented inflow of funds, although there are those out there who would say it is better to hold physical gold than any form of paper gold because of a growing distrust of financial institutions and paper solutions. 

And perhaps rather gold than other precious metals – notably silver.  Silver would be sure to be dragged up on gold’s coattails, but perhaps not as much  this time – even though history tells us that silver’s volatility leads it to perform better than gold in percentage terms on the upside and worse on the downside.  We are in a different situation with silver not really a monetary metal any longer.  Industrial demand pressures on silver may well mitigate any price rises here. 

Gold’s performance, though, is perhaps also dependent on investment demand outstripping a fall off in the jewellery market and an increase in liquidation of such holdings into the scrap sector.  If the big Asian economies like India and China, where mark-ups on gold jewellery are minuscule compared with the West, falter significantly then reduced demand and increased supply from this sector will need to be soaked up by the investment sector.  At the moment this seems to be capable of doing this hence the recent gold price strength, but unless sentiment changes in India in particular, where buyers seem to be waiting for lower prices, the fall in gold purchases there may limit global gold price growth.  If liquidity becomes a problem in the North American markets again, this could also dent upward movement. 

But overall, physical gold, gold ETFs and selected gold stocks would seem to be the best wealth protectors out there.  As commentators have pointed out, prices may remain relatively volatile, but currently the overall price trend tends to be upwards movement, followed by stabilisation, before the next upwards resistance levels are tested.  Gold does look to be steadily climbing back towards the psychological $1,000 an ounce level but it has had trouble sustaining increases beyond this level in the past.  Perhaps it will be third time lucky for the gold bulls.

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My Note: Prudence dictates at least 10% of your portfolio should be in Gold. Personally, I have that and also a lot of my discretionary funds invested in precious metals Stocks, ETF’s, Bullion…jschulmansr

Here is where I buy my Bullion, get one free gram of Gold just for opening an account! Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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Nothing in today’s post should be considered as an offer to buy or sell any securities or other investments; it is presented for informational purposes only. As a good investor, consult your Investment Advisor, Do Your Due Diligence, Read All Prospectus/s and related information carefully before you make any investments. –  jschulmansr

 

 

 

GLD

GLD, , ) GLD . These rocketed a startling 13.7% to 985 tonnes, setting records each day.

XAU

Delayed quote dataHUI, , ) added 1.36% to 311.16. The stock market, in case you missed it, lost ground.

Commentary: Gold’s gains for week catch bugs’ interest

By Peter Brimelow, MarketWatch
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — Something was indeed stirring in the precious metals pond, as I reported a week ago. Key investment letters say it still is. See Feb. 8 column

 

Here is where I buy my Bullion, get one free gram of Gold just for opening an account! Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

 

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Taking a Quick Breather? – Gold and Silver News Today!

13 Friday Feb 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, bull market, capitalism, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, financial, Forex, GDX, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, India, Investing, investments, Jschulmansr, Junior Gold Miners, Latest News, majors, Make Money Investing, Markets, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, monetization, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, prices, producers, production, silver, silver miners, small caps, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, Technical Analysis, U.S. Dollar

≈ Comments Off on Taking a Quick Breather? – Gold and Silver News Today!

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Austrian school, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, bull market, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, deflation, Dennis Gartman, depression, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, economic, economic trends, economy, Federal Deficit, financial, Forex, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GLD, gold, gold miners, hard assets, hyper-inflation, India, inflation, investments, Jeffrey Nichols, Jim Rogers, Keith Fitz-Gerald, majors, Marc Faber, market crash, Markets, Michael Zielinski, mid-tier, mining companies, monetization, Moving Averages, palladium, Peter Grandich, Peter Schiff, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, protection, recession, risk, run on banks, safety, Sean Rakhimov, silver, silver miners, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Technical Analysis, TIPS, U.S., U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, XAU

As I am writing this post, Gold is taking a breather off $11.00 oz to $937 but still above the all important $930 to $940 level. I would say that we have a definite confirmation of a bull market rally in place should Gold close above $940 for the week. After all everyone deserves a breather once in a while! Today’s articles look at the dollar, gold-silver ratio, and more… Good Investing! – jschulmansr

==============================

Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

===================================

Dollar Rises Gold Stays Up – Seeking Alpha

By: Dr. Duru of Dr. Duru One-Twenty

If you had told me late last year that we would soon see both the dollar and gold rally, I would have dismissed you as nuts. But this is exactly what happened after the dollar made a short-term bottom in mid-December. In early December, I suggested that the dollar had formed a double-top making it likely the dollar was headed lower. The dollar did sell-off, but it quickly rallied right back to the resistance formed by the double-top (click on chart to enlarge).

U.S. Dollar

At the same time, gold has finally broken out of the pattern of lower lows and higher highs. It is now up almost 10% for the year. Last year, I said that gold would be my favorite place to be in 2009. So far, so good.

Gold

 

While gold was working off late 2008’s downtrend (click on chart to enlarge), I was fascinated by skeptics who observed that gold had “every reason to blast higher” given the world’s economic chaos and yet had done nothing. From a short-term trading perspective, such contrast certainly takes the gold trade off the table. But from the perspective of longer-term capital preservation on a planet where currencies are growing (or will be growing) on trees, the disconnect simply meant there were more immediate things on the collective minds of investors.

 

 

But we are only just getting started. It is nearly impossible to say when inflation will become a problem, only that it will likely be a problem once credit finally gets converted into investment and purchases again to take advantage of all the liquidity facilities being provided by the Federal Reserve. Some point out that Japan is an example where massive liquidity accomplished very little, and the same fate awaits the U.S. But from what I understand about the yen carry trade that took advantage of the low borrowing costs in Japan, Japan essentially EXPORTED inflation to the rest of the globe.

 

Investors took advantage of Japan’s cheap money to inflate assets all over the world where there was appetite to borrow, consume, and repeat. (Please correct me if I am wrong!). I am not yet clear how the U.S can export its inflation away when more and more central banks are dropping rates to rock bottom levels. In this scenario the supply of gold relative to paper money is rapidly decreasing. Moreover, America has been a global pioneer in financial engineering. I have full confidence that smart bankers are already mapping out long-term strategies for generating profits that will help drive future reflation.

 

I am focused now on just two other commodity plays for core positions: silver (SLV) and copper (FCX as an approximate proxy). SLV is up 20% this year while Freeport McMoran (FCX) has chopped around in a trading range. Late last year, I was premature in making bets in the falling knives of commodities like copper and steel. I ended up with a lot of profit in puts, but not quite enough to eliminate the pains in the related stocks. I plan to pick my spots for steel very selectively and for shorter-term moves. So far this year, I have liked playing Cliff’s Natural Resources (CLF) and Nucor (NUE) after sell-offs. I thought I would include U.S. Steel (X

) on this list, but it has been stuck drifting in a downtrend all year. My thinking is that I will not be smart enough or fast enough to time the switch from deflation to inflation; I just know I want to have at least a small core position ready for whenever that time comes. Outside of that, I am mainly biased short for now.

 

I will end with a quick look at the S&P 500. Since I still believe fresh 52-week lows are coming in the near future – news and rumors of government economic plans notwithstanding – I tread very carefully and selectively with any longs.

 

 

 

 

 

In the past month, we have had three separate high-volume selling events that have attempted to break the support that still holds from the “the December wash.” Each bounce from support seems to produce more hope that we are building a base for a sustainable bottom (click on chart to enlarge). There are also a good number of stocks that have hit fresh highs for the year just in the past week. But once it is clear that a modest recovery in the 2nd half of the year will not make its annually scheduled appearance, the major indices will be sold to fresh lows (I may have to make an exception for the NASDAQ which has proven particularly resilient so far in 2009). In the meantime, the stock market will continue to predict this imminent (soon to be elusive) recovery over and over and over again.

S&P 500

*All charts created using TeleChart

Be careful out there!
=================================

Gold: nothing succeeds like success – MineWeb

Source: MineWeb.com

Listed gold (and silver) stocks continue to deliver price increases at an astounding pace, underpinned by continually robust gold bullion prices.

Author: Barry Sergeant
Posted:  Thursday , 12 Feb 2009

CAPE TOWN – 

Listed gold stocks continue to lead the attempted recovery in global stock markets, supported on Wednesday by a dollar gold bullion price that moved to seven-month highs, above USD 945 an ounce. Measured on an absolute basis, the market value of gold stocks listed around the world moved to well above USD 200bn, the highest level seen since October 2008, a month after erstwhile Wall Street investment bank Lehman Bros. filed for bankruptcy, triggering yet another stage of the most intense crisis in world credit and equity markets seen in decades.

Seen as a commodity, gold bullion has surrendered the least of its record price, seen in March 2008, and currently trades just 9% below that record price of just short of USD 1,033 an ounce. The ongoing recovery of gold bullion prices -which have moved below USD 700 an ounce since making record highs – has underpinned a recovery in listed stock prices for companies representing the metal, from explorers to miners. The extent of the recovery has left the vast majority of other mining stocks (with the narrow exception of silver stocks), and stocks of any other kind, far behind. While the MSCI Barra dollar index for all global equities has moved 12% above its lows, seen late in 2008, and emerging market stocks have “bounced” up by 26% from lows, gold stocks, measured on the weighted average value of 250 listed names, have risen 128% from low points, seen just months ago.

The Tier II gold stock grouping, led by names such as JSC Polymetal, Centerra, and heavyweights such as Yamana and Agnico-Eagle, has risen by a fantastic 173% from low points, also within just a few months. Silver stocks have outperformed gold stocks as an overall group, with a weighted average increase of 147% from lows, led by the likes of Fresnillo, and Silver Standard.

Spot silver prices are trading 36% below record highs, also seen in March 2008, but listed silver stocks have long traded in sympathy with trends in gold stocks, tending, however, to overshoot on the rise and also on the fall. However, while the global market value of listed gold stocks runs at well above USD 200bn, silver stocks are worth well short of USD 20bn.The majority of silver is produced as a by-product at mines primarily focused on other metals.

Seen as a grouping, listed uranium stocks are also outperforming most mining stocks, with First Uranium among those names that continue to deliver exceptional price increases. Meanwhile, the SPDR Gold Shares exchange traded fund (ETF), a security that holds physical gold on behalf of its investors, continues to attract significant investor inflows. The security, the biggest gold bullion EFT in the world, currently holds nearly 900 tons of physical gold, valued at nearly USD 27bn. In line with the price performance of dollar gold bullion, the SPDR Gold Shares ETF is currently just 8% below its record highs.

 

INDICES  

From

From

 

Points

high*

low*

MSCI world equities USD

846.42

-46.0%

11.5%

MSCI emerging markets USD

561.38

-55.2%

25.9%

S+P 500

828.08

-42.5%

11.7%

DJ Stoxx 600

192.11

-42.3%

7.9%

KBW banks

27.41

-69.5%

9.9%

       
STOCK

Value

From

From

GROUPS

USD bn

high*

low*

Dow Jones Industrial

2598.66

-42.6%

17.4%

Top 100 miners

873.36

-63.4%

78.7%

Oil stocks

1998.86

-48.4%

33.2%

S + P 500 Energy

1039.73

-46.3%

33.4%

Gold Tier I

160.36

-44.4%

117.2%

Gold Tier II

41.58

-45.3%

173.3%

Gold overall

225.39

-46.7%

127.7%

Silver stocks

12.46

-63.0%

147.4%

World banks (80)

1713.03

-62.6%

30.1%

Uranium stocks

14.95

-58.0%

81.8%

* 12-month      
Source: market data; analysis by Barry Sergeant===================================================Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com======================================= 

The Gold:Silver Ratio – pointing to higher prices all round – MineWeb

 

Source: MineWeb.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

Silver defies its fundamentals in maintaining a price ratio which relates to gold and the movement in this is taken by many silver investors as a guide to forward prices.

Author: Rhona O’Connell
Posted:  Friday , 13 Feb 2009

LONDON – 

Back in biblical times gold and silver prices were at parity although by the Roman era the ratio had widened to between 15 and 16.  Silver backed major currencies right the way through to the nineteenth century although as economies evolved it tended to become the norm that silver was used for intra-national payments while gold was used for international transactions.  India and China were among the last countries to remove the silver backing from their currencies, which is the reason why there have been substantial government sales of the metal from these two nations in particular although these sales have dwindled somewhat over the past two years or so.  It is also the primary reason why the markets are uncertain as to the level of silver stocks, private or public, that lie in countries such as these. 

Net government sales into the market reached a recent peak of 2,743 tonnes in 2003 (GFMS figures), but had halved by 2007 and it looks as if they halved again in 2008, with further reductions looking likely in the future, although since these sales currently comprise less than 5% of silver supply their further erosion is unlikely to make much of a difference to silver prices per se. 

What has been making something of a difference recently is the rejuvenation of gold: silver ratio trading.  Technical analysts have been looking favourably on silver since the start of the year and the gold: silver ratio has come increasingly onto the radar screens.   Technically-driven trading of the ratio has also been important, with the ten-day and twenty-day moving averages defining the upper boundary of the ratio’s path.  Once the ratio had severed support at 72 this trading gained considerable traction and within two days we were at 69, en route for a test of 67, the lowest since late September, when gold was at $740 and silver at just less than $11. 

This time the activity in the market brought silver up to $13 while gold was easing from $920 to just below $900 and since then gold has taken up the reins to test $950 while silver has approached $14 then retreated towards $13.40. and the ratio has settled at around 70. 

Obviously the ratio, of itself, does not drive markets.  It is normally a result of the inter-related moves of both gold and silver, but every now and then it does have an impact on the metals’ prices – much more so on silver than on gold.  

What has lain behind the changes in the ratio this time?  Certainly not the silver market’s fundamentals in terms of marginal costs of production against the balance between industrial supply and demand (and this includes jewellery demand but not investor interest), which are not looking favourable.  Silver may often be regarded as a precious metal by virtue of its historic connection with currencies and its lingering jewellery market but jewellery, silverware and coins+medals between them comprise less than 30% of silver demand as against more like 80% in the gold market); on a purely fundamental basis, therefore, silver belongs in the industrial camp. 

Sentiment and perception are important market elements, however and silver’s long-standing relationship with gold is a vital influence on prices and investment activity.  Essentially, because of silver’s intrinsically higher volatility than gold, some speculators and investors use exposure to silver as a means of gearing up their exposure to the latter. If gold is going up, silver typically goes up further, so a combination of the two is a stronger performer than gold on its own.  This does not work for the whole time, obviously, but it is a well-entrenched mechanism and has been playing an important part in silver’s price performance over the past two months since the gold: silver ratio briefly exceeded 80. 

This has been no more evident than in the exchange traded funds and the London ETC.  When the gold:silver ratio reached its maximum in mid-December 2008, these funds harboured 7,661 tonnes of silver in their coffers.  In the two months since then this has shot up to 8,734 tonnes, an increase of 1,073 tonnes and on annualised basis this is the equivalent of 6,096 tonnes per annum (196 million ounces) or almost 25% of global industrial demand.  Over this period the silver price has increased by 21%, from just over $11 to just less than $13.40.  Gold has risen by 13% and copper, 12% over the same period. 

With this degree of uptake it is not surprising that silver has outshone gold recently and left copper some way behind.  Although gold and copper have improved by similar amounts, silver’s correlation coefficient with gold over the period has been a healthy 90%, while that with copper, although still impressive, has been lower at 63%. 

Speculative exposure on COMEX over the same period has also been increasing, although it is important to remember that this does not involve physical metal – but it can be very important in terms of price discovery.  The net long speculative position rose from 3,849 tonnes on 9th December to 5,158 tonnes on 3rd February (latest available figures), with a goodly size of fresh longs entering the market, and only a small degree of short covering. 

There is an old adage in the market that the gold:silver ratio only really counts in two places; the COMEX floor and the Indian market.  In India it is by no means unusual for jewellery and investment holders to switch between gold and silver when they perceive that the prices are out of line.  Certainly recently there has been a very healthy market in old gold scrap, but silver demand has remained slack in response both to high outright prices and the economic environment.  

Silver’s outright fundamentals do not justify prices at these levels, but for as long as the  market retains its bullish stance and investors keep coming for the metal then any industrial surplus this year stands a good chance of being absorbed and when investors like the look of gold, some of them will like the look of silver even more.  This metal is, however, flying almost as high as Icarus and when that ratio starts to rise, then silver speculators had better be watching very closely.

=======================================

Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

==================================

Will Big Money Interest Propel Gold over Its Final Hurdle? – Seeking Alpha

By: Andrew Mickey of Q1 Publishing

 

Bloomberg declares:

 

 

 

Gold Soars to Highest Since July.

A Wall Street Journal headline proclaims:

Gold is Flirting with $1,000, Again; ‘There’s No Sign of the Market Tiring.’

On Wednesday, gold surged another $30 an ounce, surpassing $930 and now, the mainstream media is getting on board in a big way.

We can spend all day debating whether this is the time gold runs back to $1,000 and beyond, or whether this is just another short-lived bounce which could run out of steam at any moment. Frankly, the exceptional volatility of the gold market has taught me that only time will tell.

What I can tell you is that there has recently been a change in gold – a dramatic change -at least the perception of gold. This change could set gold and gold stocks on a long march higher, yet, the mainstream media have completely glossed over it. Let me explain.

Gold Goes Big

You see, gold’s a funny thing. It elicits such an emotional response. Gold has had a pretty volatile year. In 2007, the yellow metal started attracting a lot of attention when it passed the highs set in the early 80s and has been up and down since, although lately, it has had more ups than downs. Despite all the recent attention, we’re right back where we were a year ago, when gold passed the $900 mark.

Whether you’re an all out “gold bug” who has been waiting a long time for this run, you question the value of gold because it has very little industrial use (ala Warren Buffett), or somewhere in between, you’ve got to take a look at what has happened to gold in the past few weeks.

But here’s the thing, this time around there’s interest from some very big money investors, as it is now considering gold to be a viable investment again. It’s not just the hyperactive, hot money hedge funds batting around gold anymore. Now pension funds, mutual funds, and other institutional investors are betting on gold – in a big way.

That is the big difference this time around. The big money interest hasn’t been there for decades, and it looks like that’s quickly starting to change.

Big Money Bets on Gold

Unprecedented sums of money have been pouring into gold in the past few months. While many funds are licking their wounds from the recent downturn and facing ongoing redemptions, some still have money. Those that do are at least putting some of it, into gold.

Just look at the recent money, which has been put into gold companies across the board. They’re all getting new cash. Major miners looking for extra cash to fund takeovers, exploration, and mine development, along with small gold companies looking for one more financing to put themselves into production, are all getting it. There’s money out there for gold.

For instance, Newmont Mining (NYSE:NEM) is expecting at least $1.7 billion (or more depending on the final terms of agreement) in new cash in its coffers. The cash infusion will come from the sale of stock and convertible notes. That’s billion – with a ‘B.’

Leading the charge in putting this financing together was Citigroup (C), J.P. Morgan (JPM), and the Bank of Montreal (BMO). They’re the big money, and except for BMO, they wouldn’t have given gold the time of day when private equity players were chasing after real estate, Chinese companies, and other “hot” sectors over the past few years.

Of course, it’s not just one big deal though. It’s lots of them. Industrials may be going under because they can’t get financing, but when it comes to gold companies, suddenly, there appears to be plenty of available money. Over the past few months, there have been a slew of financings of gold companies. Yamana (NYSE:AUY), Agnico-Eagle (NYSE:AEM), and Kinross Gold (NYSE:KGC), combined have attracted more than $800 million in new money.

Even gold companies, which were pretty much left for dead during the credit crunch are getting the cash they need. Shares of Osisko Mining [TSX:OSK] dropped well below $2 per share in November amid concerns the company wouldn’t be able to get the cash necessary to move forward with its prospective gold mine. Three months later, its shares are trading above C$4 after hitting highs of over C$5 per share, and it now has the money it needs. NovaGold (AMEX:NG) went through a similar ordeal. Its shares dropped all the way to $0.37 only to climb back to close at $3.52, on Wednesday.

These are just some of the bigger deals. We could highlight the dozens of smaller deals which are or are about to get some new capital, but you get the point. There’s big money backing gold now. In a way, the whole gold situation may have changed.

A “Frightening” Change

Two weeks ago Peter Munk, the Chairman of Barrick Gold (NYSE:ABX) – the world’s largest gold mining company – identified an “unpleasant and frightening” trend. In an interview with Bloomberg, Munk said:

He has received an increasing number of calls from wealthy investors looking for ways to buy bullion. While that is positive for the metal market, it is a “sad part of a civilized society.”

“That’s not where you want to be, it’s alarming. Do I personally believe gold will break through $1,000? It’s not a question of if; it’s a question of how soon.”

You’ve got to remember that Munk is the chairman and founder of a gold company, so he has a lot of experience in gold. He has access to the inner workings of the gold market, and benefits from rising gold prices, as well.

Despite the potential conflict of interest, he is definitely correct in saying that change has taken place.

What Really Matters About Gold

As long time Prosperity Dispatch readers know, I hate talking about gold. When it comes to gold, everyone has an opinion, and it’s usually a very strong one, as there’s very little middle ground when it comes to gold.

Just to be clear though, I’m not a gold bug. I’m not about to predict gold is going to $1,000 before it goes to $800, as there are just too many variables driving gold lately. I think a world with $200 gold is a much better place to live in than a world with $2,000 gold, but the recent big money push into gold could mark a significant change in the prospects for gold.

In the end, it all comes down to whatever the markets believe. Perception is reality, and a lot of money is betting gold will be perceived as more dearly down the road, whether deflation or inflation, wins out.

Over the past few months, deflation vs. inflation has been a popular subject of debate. While $60 trillion of wealth has been wiped out in this downturn, central banks are going all out to print enough new money to prevent the inevitable deflationary effects of the losses. And as we’ve noted before, all speculative bubble-booms end in deflation.

That doesn’t matter now. The current theory is gold will win either way – deflation or inflation, it doesn’t matter. Gold wins during inflation because it’s a store of value, and it wins in deflation as central banks debase their currency. As a result, there’s demand from both the inflation and deflation camps. In the end, the perception of value is what really matters for gold (and every other financial asset for that matter).

For decades, the big money refused to view gold as anything other than something horded by conspiracy theorists. The lack of big money interest was a huge hurdle for gold. Now, with the billions of dollars headed into gold from leading U.S. institutions, it appears the hurdle may have finally been passed.

Disclosure: None

===============================

Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

===============================

ps- Gold is inching back now only down $7.00 to $942

Have a Great Weekend and Happy Valentines Day! – jschulmansr

================================ 

Nothing in today’s post should be considered as an offer to buy or sell any securities or other investments; it is presented for informational purposes only. As a good investor, consult your Investment Advisor, Do Your Due Diligence, Read All Prospectus/s and related information carefully before you make any investments. –  jschulmansr

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Even if the velocity of money takes forever and a day to build up to inflationary speeds, I strongly suspect that the Federal government will attempt to inflate its way out of its massive debt. When the bills come home for all the financial repair work being done in this country, there will be little appetite for increasing taxes enough to pay down this debt in any significant way. The economic multiplier from stimulus programs will also not provide sufficient tax revenues. America’s biggest and most cooperative foreign creditor, China, has probably just served us notice that they will not help us more than they already are helping

. China currently holds 12% of the $5.75 trillion in U.S. marketable debt. Inflation will be the indirect tax that will confront lower legislative hurdles.

 

The fear of deflation and other assorted global economic calamities had everyone focused on taking shelter in U.S. Treasuries and the dollar. But as those fears slowly (very, very slowly) subside, more and more attention has turned to gold.

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Shock and Awe! – Doug Casey

12 Thursday Feb 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, Barack Obama, bear market, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, bull market, capitalism, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Contrarian, Copper, Credit Default, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, Dennis Gartman, depression, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, Fed Fund Rate, Federal Deficit, federal reserve, Finance, financial, Forex, Fundamental Analysis, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, hard assets, how to change, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, IMF, India, inflation, Investing, investments, Jeffrey Nichols, Jim Rogers, Jschulmansr, Keith Fitz-Gerald, Latest News, Long Bonds, majors, Make Money Investing, Marc Faber, market crash, Markets, Michael Zielinski, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, monetization, Moving Averages, palladium, Peter Grandich, Peter Schiff, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, protection, rare earth metals, recession, resistance, risk, run on banks, safety, Sean Rakhimov, SEO, Short Bonds, silver, silver miners, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, TARP, Technical Analysis, The Fed, TIPS, U.S., U.S. Dollar, uranium, volatility, warrants, XAU

≈ Comments Off on Shock and Awe! – Doug Casey

Tags

Bailout News, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, Dennis Gartman, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, Federal Deficit, Forex, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GLD, gold miners, hard assets, hyper-inflation, India, investments, Jeffrey Nichols, Jim Rogers, Keith Fitz-Gerald, majors, Marc Faber, Michael Zielinski, mid-tier, mining companies, monetization, Moving Averages, palladium, Peter Grandich, Peter Schiff, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, protection, recession, risk, run on banks, safety, Sean Rakhimov, silver, silver miners, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Technical Analysis, TIPS, U.S., U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, XAU

Late Breaking: I came across this from the Contrarian Master Himself- Mr. Doug Casey. Here is his take for 2009 a must read for investors- especially Gold Bugs! Enjoy and Good Investing! – jschulmansr

================================

Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

====================================

2009: Another Year of Shock and Awe – Seeking Alpha

By: Jeff Clark of Casey Research

 

In their annual forecast edition, the editors of BIG GOLD asked Casey Research Chairman and contrarian investor Doug Casey to provide his predictions and thoughts on issues everyone’s thinking about these days. Read what he has to say on the economy, deficits, inflation, and gold…

 

 

The $1.1 Trillion Budget Deficit


My reaction is that the people in the government are totally out of control. A poker player would say the government is “on tilt,” placing wild, desperate bets in the hope of getting rescued by good luck.

 

 

The things they’re doing are not only unproductive, they’re the exact opposite of what should be done. The country got into this mess by living beyond its means for more than a generation. That’s the message from the debt that’s burdening so many individuals; debt is proof that you’re living above your means. The solution is for people to significantly reduce their standard of living for a while and start building capital. That’s what saving is about, producing more than you consume. The government creating funny money – money out of nothing – doesn’t fix anything. All it does is prolong the problem and make it worse by destroying the currency.

Over several generations, huge distortions and misallocations of capital have been cranked into the economy, inviting levels of consumption that are unsustainable. In fact, Americans refer to themselves as consumers. That’s degrading and ridiculous. You should be first and foremost a producer, and a consumer only as a consequence.

In any event, the government is going to destroy the currency, which will be a mega-disaster. And they’re making the depression worse by holding interest rates at artificially low levels, which discourages savings – the exact opposite of what’s needed. They’re trying to prop up a bankrupt system. And, at this point, it’s not just economically bankrupt, but morally and intellectually bankrupt. What they should be doing is recognize that they’re bankrupt and then start rebuilding. But they’re not, so it’s going to be a disaster.

The U.S. Economy in 2009

My patented answer, when asked what it will be like, is that this is going to be so bad, it will be worse than even I think it’s going to be. I think all the surprises are going to be on the downside; don’t expect friendly aliens to land on the roof of the White House and present the government with a magic solution. We’re still very early in this thing. It’s not going to just blow away like other post-war recessions. One reason that it’s going to get worse is that the biggest shoe has yet to drop… interest rates are now at all-time lows, and the bond market is much, much bigger than the stock market. What’s inevitable is much higher interest rates. And when they go up, that will be the final nail in the coffins of the stock and real estate markets, and it will wipe out a huge amount of capital in the bond market. And higher interest rates will bring on more bankruptcies.

The bankruptcies will be painful, but a good thing, incidentally. We can’t hope to see the bottom until interest rates go high enough to encourage people to save. The way you become wealthy is by producing more than you consume, not consuming more than you produce.

Deflation vs. Inflation

First of all, deflation is a good thing. Its bad reputation is just one of the serious misunderstandings that most people have. In deflation, your money becomes worth more every year. It’s a good thing because it encourages people to save, it encourages thrift. I’m all for deflation. The current episode of necessary and beneficial deflation will, however, be cut short because Bernanke, as he’s so eloquently pointed out, has a printing press and will use it to create as many dollars as needed.

So at this point I would start preparing for inflation, and I wouldn’t worry too much about deflation. The only question is the timing.

It’s too early to buy real estate right now, although a fixed-rate mortgage could go a long way toward offsetting bad timing. It would let you make your money on the depreciation of the mortgage, as opposed to the appreciation of the asset. Still, I wouldn’t touch housing with a 10-foot pole – there’s been immense overbuilding, immense inventory. And people forget: a house isn’t an investment, it’s a consumer good. It’s like a toothbrush, suit of clothes, or a car; it just lasts a little bit longer. An investment – say, a factory – can create new wealth. Houses are strictly expense items. Forget about buying the things for the unpaid mortgage; before this is over, you’ll buy them for back taxes. But then you’ll have to figure out how to pay the utilities and maintenance. The housing bear market has a long way to run.

The U.S. Dollar and the Day of Reckoning

It’s very hard to predict the timing on these things. The financial markets and the economy itself are going up and down like an elevator with a lunatic at the controls. My feeling is that the fate of the dollar is sealed. People forget that there are 6 or 8 trillion dollars – who knows how many – outside of the United States, and they’re hot potatoes. Foreigners are going to recognize that the dollar is an unbacked smiley-face token of a bankrupt government. My advice is to get out of dollars. In fact, take advantage of the ultra-low interest rates; borrow as many dollars as you can long-term and at a fixed rate and put the money into something tangible, because the dollar is going to reach its intrinsic value.

The Recession

This isn’t a recession, it’s a depression. A depression is a period when most people’s standard of living falls significantly. It can also be defined as a time when distortions and misallocations of capital are liquidated, as well as a time when the business cycle climaxes. We don’t have time here, unfortunately, to explore all that in detail. But this is the real thing. And it’s going to drag on much longer than most people think. It will be called the Greater Depression, and it’s likely the most serious thing to happen to the country since its founding. And not just from an economic point of view, but political, sociological, and military.

For a number of reasons, wars usually occur in tough economic times. Governments always like to find foreigners to blame for their problems, and that includes other countries blaming the U.S. In the end, I wouldn’t be surprised to see violence, tax revolt, or even parts of the country trying to secede. I don’t think I can adequately emphasize how serious this thing is likely to get. Nothing is certain, but it seems to me the odds are very, very high for an absolutely world-class disaster.

Gold’s Performance in 2008

The big surprise to me is how low gold is right now. It’s well known that even if we use the government’s statistics, gold would have to reach $2,500 an ounce to match its 1980 high. I don’t necessarily buy the theories that the government and some bullion banks are suppressing the price of gold. Of course, with everything else going on, the last thing the powers-that-be want is a stampede into gold. That would be the equivalent of shooting a gun in a crowded theater; it could set off a real panic. But at the same time, I don’t see how they can effectively suppress the price. Either way, the good news is that gold is about the cheapest thing out there. Remember, it’s the only financial asset that’s not simultaneously someone else’s liability. So I would take advantage of today’s price and buy more gold. I know I’m doing just that.

Gold Volatility

Gold will remain volatile but trend upward. I don’t pay attention to daily fluctuations, which can be caused by any number of trivial things. Gold is going to the moon in the next couple of years.

Gold Stocks

Last year, it seemed to me that we were still climbing the Wall of Worry and that the next stage would be the Mania. But what I failed to read was the public’s indirect involvement through the $2 trillion in hedge funds. On top of that, while the prices of gold stocks weren’t that high, the number of shares out and the number of companies were increasing dramatically. Finally, the costs of mining and exploration rose immensely, which limited their profitability.

The good news is that relative to the price of gold, gold stocks are at their cheapest level in history. I still have my gold stocks and the fact is, I’m buying more. I’m not selling, because I think we’re starting another bull market. And this one is going to be much steeper and much quicker than the last one. I’m not a perma-bull on any asset class, but in this case I’m forced to go into the gold stocks. They’re the cheapest asset class out there, and the one with the highest potential.
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Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

 

 

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Enjoy and Good Investing – jschulmansr

 

Nothing in today’s post should be considered as an offer to buy or sell any securities or other investments; it is presented for informational purposes only. As a good investor, consult your Investment Advisor, Do Your Due Diligence, Read All Prospectus/s and related information carefully before you make any investments. –  jschulmansr

 

 

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Gold’s Big Test – Will it Pass?

12 Thursday Feb 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, Barack Obama, bull market, capitalism, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Credit Default, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, futures markets, GDX, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, hard assets, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, IMF, inflation, Investing, investments, Jschulmansr, Junior Gold Miners, Latest News, Make Money Investing, market crash, Markets, mining companies, mining stocks, palladium, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, prices, producers, production, rare earth metals, recession, silver, silver miners, small caps, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, TARP, The Fed, Today, U.S. Dollar, uranium

≈ 1 Comment

Sorry for the late post today, as I am writing gold closed today at $949.20 up another $4.70 oz. We are now at Gold’s big test, if it can successfully clear and close over $950 -$960 oz. then ther is nothing stopping it to go for a new test of the all time highs. Today’s action was a feint like a boxer about to deliver the knockout punch! However a word of caution if Gold fails after 2-3 attempts at clearing the $950 level then a retracement back to the $875-$890 level will occur. It will consolidate and then come back up to retest the $950 level. Personally however, in my opinion I think this is it the 2nd successful close over $940, I think we are getting ready to see Gold go back and test all time highs. If you hurry you can still get aboard! – Good Investing! – jschulmansr

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Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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Stocks Are Doomed, Only Cash or Precious Metals May Survive – Seeking Alpha

By: Doctor O of Sell The Rally

 

President Obama, his administration, and the Democratically controlled Congress are working as quickly as possible to spend as much money as possible on their constituent base, to consolidate their stranglehold on power. There is still no bank rescue plan, nothing in the “stimulus” bill to create or even slow job losses, and seemingly no understanding about the enormous amount of bad debt that is rapidly losing value and destroying the financial system from the inside out.

 

 

 

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Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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Will Gold Hit $1,000 – Seeking Alpha

 

Gold prices broke out Wednesday and traded above $940/ounce. This is a new 6-month high! In my article last week, on 2/4/09, I said:

 

 

 

Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Just open an Account, Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

 

 

In the three months ending January 31, SLV led its benchmark index by nearly 25%, trumping PowerShares’ DB Silver offering, DBS, by a narrow 1.25%. If analyst predictions play out, the demand for silver could continue to grow in upcoming weeks, even as a dismal holiday season for jewelry persists well into the new year. In a recent report, UBS upped forecasts for both silver and gold, citing expectations of speculation and investor interest, as uncertainty still reigns in U.S. markets.

Supporting the hypothesis that the flight to precious metals still results from investor uncertainty is UBS strategist John Reade, who noted that “purchases of physical gold have jumped over the past six months as investors’ fears about the current financial crisis and the possible outcomes from government efforts to support banks and economies have intensified.” UBS also estimates that investor interest in precious metals such as gold will double in 2009, compared with 2007. If this prediction plays out, gold could reach an average of $1,000 before interest wanes.

Shares of SLV track the spot prices of silver and are backed by physical silver reserves. On February 3, New York–based SLV announced that the bullion holdings for the fund rose 77 tons, approximately 1%. This increase puts the fund at a record 7,530.2 tons of bullion, up 11% since January 2. While other factors come into play during the intraday trading of SLV shares, increasing stocks of bullion underscore the growing interest that SLV is seeing in 2009.

Futures, currency and commodity prices are extremely volatile and unpredictable, so understanding the reasons behind silver’s recent spike is an important step in avoiding the swell and vacuum of SLV’s swings. As currency concerns continue to plague investors worldwide, an increasing number of people have turned to silver as a “why-not” alternative to investing in unpredictable notes. India, whose citizens seize silver as a tangible alternative to currency, imports an average of 3,000 tons of silver per year. The Economic Times recently reported that banks may not be able to import regular amounts of silver in the future, a factor that could drive silver prices there drastically higher in black market arenas.

So what makes SLV stand apart from the ever-expanding sea of commodity ETF choices? Its track record, size, and liquidity are all comforting factors for investors looking to jump into the silver fray. With 245 million shares outstanding and an average of 6 million shares traded per day over the last three months, SLV simply dwarfs peers such as DBS. Launched in January 2007, DBS has a three-month average daily trading volume of nearly 200,000—a factor that makes SLV a more liquid choice in white-knuckle times.

Investors should also be wary because while SLV tracks the spot price of silver, other important factors come into play during the intraday trading of the ETF. In addition to reflecting the price of physical silver, SLV also takes into account counterparty risk and the ever-changing emotions of investors in the open marketplace. While the silver is likely “there,” the ratings on even the most venerable of banks—like SLV keeper Barclays—could come into question in perilous economic conditions. Success in the fund is also contingent on the increasing price of silver. Placing funds in SLV is not the same as under the mattress—management fees and “iShares Silver Trust expenses” are exacted by the issuer on a regular basis, slowly eroding the value of one’s investment over time, if the price of silver does not continue to rise.

The longer the economic stimulus plan is stripped and scrubbed across the floor of the Senate, the more investors could continue to pile into a tangible investment like SLV until the storm passes. When the outcome becomes clearer, one-tune investments like SLV may become a more proportionate segment of portfolios and lose steam as the attention that has prompted their rise refocuses on other sectors.

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Will Gold Reach $5000 an Ounce? – Seeking Alpha

By: Mark O’Byrne of Gold and Silver Investments

 

 

Gold surged a further 3.3% yesterday to $942.45 (as did silver) as worries about the US and global financial system and economy continue to grow and governments print money on an unprecedented scale to combat the economic crisis. Asian and European stock markets are again under pressure this morning.

The strong close above $930/oz yesterday should see us once again challenge the record highs of $1,003/oz seen last March (March 17th) when Bear Stearns collapsed.

We have since had a long period (nearly 12 months) of correction and consolidation and thus a solid foundation has been built from which the next leg of the bull market will likely be launched. Our forecast at the beginning of the year for gold to rise as high as $1,250/oz looks increasingly conservative.

Gold Surges to New Records in Euros and Sterling as Crisis Deepens

Gold continues to surge to record highs in other major currencies (the London AM Fix this morning was at $944.00 USD, £666.33 GBP and €737.04 EUR. Worries about the health of the financial system and economy in the UK and EU are leading to weakness in the euro and sterling that has seen them fall in value versus gold. Gold has surged to €737/oz and over £666.33/oz (see charts below).

Gold to Reach $5000/oz According to Respected Goldcorp Founder

The respected founder of Goldcorp (GG), Rob McEwen told Bloomberg how he sees gold rising to as high as $5,000/oz in the next four years. Goldcorp is the second largest gold mining company in the world by market capitalization.

As governments increase the money supply to combat recession, bullion will more than double to $2,000 an ounce by the end of next year. “Politicians around the world are listening to cries from their electorates and they’re giving money to all callers,” McEwen said yesterday.

McEwen has more than $100 million in gold investments and said he also has a “big, big” holding in bullion. McEwen said he started buying bullion in August 2007, at the beginning of the subprime mortgage crisis. “I realized we had reached an inflection point regarding money,” McEwen said. “It was all about protecting money, and gold served that purpose.”

The recent trend of fiat currencies falling vis a vis gold looks set to continue for the foreseeable future. McEwen’s bold prediction looks outlandish now (as did predictions of gold at over $1,000/oz in 2001) but given the confluence of extremely strong fundamentals, gold will likely rise to levels in the coming years that seem unfathomable today.

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My Note:- I think a more realistic view would be Gold at $2500 to $3000 in next 2-3 years. However if everything goes to H*** in a Handbasket then yes $5000 and more! – Good Investing! – jschulmansr

Nothing in today’s post should be considered as an offer to buy or sell any securities or other investments; it is presented for informational purposes only. As a good investor, consult your Investment Advisor, Do Your Due Diligence, Read All Prospectus/s and related information carefully before you make any investments. –  jschulmansr

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Silver The Other Precious Metal – Seeking Alpha

By Don Dion of Fidelity Independent Advisor

 

In a global economic crisis for which the media has seemingly exhausted its cache of negative adjectives to describe the meltdown, one is hard-pressed to find an example of success in the quagmire that has become the marketplace. When scanning the ranks of the ETF Sector Momentum Table, however, one fund’s sweeping forward progress makes it a glinting example among its peers. iShares’ Silver Trust (SLV) vaulted from the No. 60 position in the rankings on December 2, 2008, to the No. 14 spot on February 3, 2009. If precious metals continue to outpace agricultural commodities, and the “flight to safety” extends into a probable “odyssey toward conservative investing,” SLV will be an interesting fund to track in upcoming months.

 

“We’ll wait for GLD to confirm that $88 will hold. Above $90, we should see more buyers coming in. March in-the-money calls are reasonably priced. AEM is another good vehicle to play gold. Although it is very volatile, it is a momentum stock and can run up fast!”

GLD successfully tested $88 and closed above $90 on Tuesday. On Wednesday, it jumped on high volume, more than twice the average volume!! GLD closed at $92.29, up +2.31%. AEM also did well, gaining +6.58%, or $3.48, finally breaking above $55.

click to enlarge

GLD

GLD added $2.08 to close at $92.29. It jumped on very high volume Wednesday. It closed just below the resistance at $92.5. This is only a soft resistance. The nearest hard resistance is between $95-$97.5.

Compared to the stock market, which had been treading water in a tight range since November last year, GLD had done much better. We can see a big divergence in this comparson chart:

The SPX has basically traded flat. On the other hand, GLD has risen nearly +30%, from $72 to $92!

GLD’s chart is still very strong. Its daily MAs are curving higher and still holding a bullish formation. The MACD is also turning up. I think GLD can easily revisit $100 within the next few months, which means gold can retest $1,000, and likely go above. Again, March “within-the-money” calls are reasonably priced. If GLD goes to $100 within the next few weeks, these options will probably double.

Good day and HappyTrading! ™.

Disclosure: no positions

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My Note: Yes! Gold will hit $1000 in fact will go and test the $1050 level. I n the case above the writer Mr Wang did an excellent forcast but notice no positions! I hope he follows his own advice and jumps on either (GLD) or if you want more bang for the buck (DGP). My disclosure I am Long (DGP), and (GLD). Also Long Bullion, Large, mid-tier and junior mining shares in the whole Precious metals spectrum including Rare Earths and Strategic Metals. Also Don’t forget silver as the next article points out. Finally do not forget Platinum and Palladium their time is coming too, mark my words! – jschulmansr

 

Home foreclosures are accelerating. We await a tidal wave of personal and corporate bankruptcies and the implosion of the commercial real estate market that will trigger more massive losses in the banking system.

In short, I have no confidence in the U.S. Government to “solve” the current depression. In fact, they will no doubt make it worse by socializing the economy and spending money obscenely. No wonder the only thing that’s working is precious metals.

I cannot consider investing in any stock until this virulently anti-business administration is either voted out of office or starts to see things more rationally.

The Last Depression, Coming to a Town Near You

Keep Away from U.S. Stocks as They Cascade Down

Gold Threatening to Break Out To New Highs Against the U.S. Dollar

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No Stimulus Here!

11 Wednesday Feb 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, bull market, capitalism, central banks, China, Comex, Currency and Currencies, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, Fed Fund Rate, Federal Deficit, federal reserve, Finance, financial, futures, futures markets, GDX, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, IMF, inflation, Investing, investments, Jschulmansr, Junior Gold Miners, Latest News, Long Bonds, Make Money Investing, market crash, Markets, mining companies, mining stocks, palladium, Peter Grandich, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, producers, production, recession, silver, silver miners, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, TARP, The Fed, TIPS, U.S. Dollar

≈ Comments Off on No Stimulus Here!

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After yesterday’s almost 400 point drop on the Stock Market we know what traders think of the stimulus plan… No stimulus here! Gold is up another $8 and is looking like it’s getting ready to test $930 then $950. The treasury has the money presses running full steam and Inflation will be the end result. Smart Investors are starting to realize there is only one place to be and that is Gold and Precious Metals. A good place to start, is where I get my bullion,and get a free gram of Gold to boot just for opening an account… Good Investing – jschulmansr

Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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Source: Mineweb.com

VM GROUP BRIEFING

IMF may no longer need to sell its gold

The IMF does well in difficult times for the global economy as its income to meet its internal budgets arises from loans to nations in economic difficulties. In such times IMF loans increase, as does its income, which could mean there is not such a pressing need for the Fund to sell its gold says London’s VM Group.

Author: Lawrence Williams
Posted:  Wednesday , 11 Feb 2009

LONDON – 

Some two years ago the gold price was hit, albeit temporarily, by the announcement that the International Monetary Fund would sell 403 tonnes of gold as the basis of an endowment, the interest on which would be used to help defray the shortfall in the IMF budget.  Indeed, at the time the Fund was suffering as its loan book was shrinking, eventually falling to SDR5.8bn at the end of the first quarter of 2008.  The IMF does well when the world economy does badly, but conversely does badly when the world economy does well and at that time the global economy seemed to be riding high.

The reason the IMF does badly when the world economy does well is a simple one.  The Fund relies on income from the loans it puts out to countries in economic difficulties for its day to day running expenses.  When the Global economy is strong, countries can repay these loans and there are few takers for new ones, so income shrinks.  After several years of strong global growth the Fund’s loan book had shrunk – hence the need for the new source of funding recommended by the IMF’s Committee of Eminent Persons to Study Sustainable Long Term Financing of IMF Running Costs, chaired by Sir Andrew Crockett, former head of The Bank for International Settlements (BIS). This is the Committee which recommended the sale of IMF gold reserves, the interest on the revenue from which could be used to plug the Fund’s own internal budget deficit.

But, since the middle of last year the global economy has been in virtual freefall and the IMF has again been called upon by a number of countries to help prop up their economies with major loans.  From the low of SDR5.8bn noted above, at the latest count the IMF now has loans out totalling $17.8 bn – and this figure is much more likely to rise than fall for the foreseeable future.  Indeed it may well double or more.

In a briefing to clients from London’s VM Group, the Group’s analysts suggest that, with the increase in income currently being generated, the IMF no longer has a short term need to boost its income in other forms – such as with interest from the proceeds of a gold sales programme – and there will be certainly less urgency to implement such a programme.

Notwithstanding the IMF’s improved internal funding circumstances the VM Group believes though, that “the Fund would still like to sell, largely because the Crockett Committee pinpointed some structural problems in the way the IMF financed itself. The Committee criticised the IMF’s funding strategy, not just on the ground that it no longer covered its expenditure, but because it was too concentrated, wasn’t related to its expenditure (in that other functions were covered by unrelated interest income), and – crucially – that it lacked predictability, soaring in bad times and falling in good times.”

But – and the VM group reckons this is an important ‘but’ – “..the Fund is not the only interested party in the question of IMF gold sales. It was always considered the US’s share of IMF votes, has an effective veto. In the past, Congress has been against gold sales, not just because of the impact on the gold price (and gold-mining in the US and elsewhere), something the Committee was at pains to say would be minimised, but also through general unease about funding commitments to international financial institutions. Some US legislators will certainly pose the question …. now that the IMF’s income is much better, does it really need to sell any gold? Moreover, the Fund might possibly have too much money after the financing reforms, if its loans were to continue to increase.”

This is obviously a speculative assessment, but not one without merit.  A major improvement in IMF finances may well lead to a ‘no sale’ directive by the US Congress given that there will likely be many in the legislature uncertain of the impact of such sales on an already very fragile economic system.  Leave well alone may be their feeling if the IMF is seen to be fully self funding again.

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My Note: Is the Treasury Bubble Getting Ready to Burst? Read between the lines in this next article and you decide… jschulmansr

China Needs U.S. Guarantees for Treasuries, Yu Says 

Source: Bloomberg.com Worldwide

By Belinda Cao and Judy Chen

Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) — China should seek guarantees that its $682 billion holdings of U.S. government debt won’t be eroded by “reckless policies,” said Yu Yongding, a former adviser to the central bank

 

 

 

 

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The U.S. “should make the Chinese feel confident that the value of the assets at least will not be eroded in a significant way,” Yu, who now heads the World Economics and Politics Institute at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said in response to e-mailed questions yesterday from Beijing. He declined to elaborate on the assurances needed by China, the biggest foreign holder of U.S. government debt.

Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields climbed above 3 percent this week on speculation the government will increase borrowing as President Barack Obama pushes his $838 billion stimulus package through Congress. Premier Wen Jiabao said last month his government’s strategy for investing would focus on safeguarding the value of China’s $1.95 trillion foreign reserves.

China may voice its concerns over U.S. government finances and the potential for a weaker dollar when Secretary of State Hillary Clinton visits China on Feb. 20, according to He Zhicheng, an economist at Agricultural Bank of China, the nation’s third-largest lender by assets. A People’s Bank of China official, who didn’t wish to be identified, declined to comment on the telephone.

Clinton Talks

“In talks with Clinton, China will ask for a guarantee that the U.S. will support the dollar’s exchange rate and make sure China’s dollar-denominated assets are safe,” said He in Beijing. “That would be one of the prerequisites for more purchases.”

Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Jiang Yu said yesterday that talks with Clinton would cover bilateral relations, the financial crisis and international affairs, according to the Xinhua news agency.

The dollar fell 0.6 percent to 89.96 yen today on concern that the U.S. government’s bank-rescue plan will fail to revive lending. Treasuries declined as investors prepared to bid for a record $21 billion sale of 10-year notes today. The yield on the benchmark 10-year note rose three basis points to 2.83 percent.

Currency Reserves

“These comments are some sort of a threat but of course China can never get such a guarantee,” said Thomas Harr, a currency strategist at Standard Chartered Plc in Singapore. The U.S. may assure China that it will clean up the financial system and that it “won’t push for a weaker dollar but they can’t promise not to increase the fiscal deficit,” he said.

U.S. government bonds returned 14 percent last year including price gains and reinvested interest, the most since rallying 18.5 percent in 1995, according to indexes compiled by Merrill Lynch & Co. Concern that the flood of bonds would overwhelm demand caused Treasuries to lose 3.08 percent in January, the steepest drop in almost five years, Merrill data show.

China’s loss of more than $5 billion from investing $10.5 billion of its reserves in New York-based Blackstone Group LP, Morgan Stanley and TPG Inc. since mid-2007 may increase its demand for the relative safety of Treasuries.

“The government will be a net buyer of Treasuries in the short term because there’s no sign they have changed their strategy,” said Zhang Ming, secretary general of the international finance research center at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing. “But personally, I don’t think we should increase holdings because the medium- and long-term risks are quite high.”

Fed Buying

Bill Gross, co-chief investment officer of Pacific Investment Management Co., said on Feb. 5 the Federal Reserve will have to buy Treasuries to curb yields as debt sales increase. Fed officials said Jan. 28 they were “prepared” to buy longer-term Treasuries.

“The biggest concern for China to continue buying U.S. Treasuries is that if Obama’s stimulus doesn’t work out as expected, the Fed may have to print money to cover the deficit,” said Shen Jianguang, a Hong Kong-based economist at China International Capital Corp., partly owned by Morgan Stanley. “That will cause a dollar slump.”

China’s foreign-exchange reserves grew about $40 billion in the fourth quarter, the least since mid-2004, as an end to yuan appreciation since July prompted investors to pull money out.

The world’s third-biggest economy grew 6.8 percent in the fourth quarter, the slowest pace in seven years. Policy makers announced a 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) economic stimulus plan in November to spur domestic demand.

Linking Disputes

Yu said China has no plans to channel its reserves toward stimulating its own economy because its trade surplus is sufficient to fund any import needs. China’s trade surplus was $39 billion in January.

China “should diversify its reserves away from U.S. Treasuries if the value of China’s foreign-exchange reserves is in danger of being inflated away by the U.S. government’s pump- priming,” he said.

China may try to link trade and currency policy disputes to its future investment in Treasuries, said Lu Zhengwei, an economist in Shanghai at Industrial Bank Co., a Chinese lender partly owned by a unit of HSBC Holdings Plc.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner accused China on Jan. 22 of “manipulating” the yuan to give an unfair advantage to its exporters. The currency has dropped 0.16 percent this year to 6.8342 per dollar, following a 21 percent gain since a peg against the dollar was abandoned in July 2005.

“China can also use this opportunity to get a promise from the U.S. not to make inappropriate requests on bilateral trade and the Chinese yuan,” Lu said. “We can’t afford more yuan appreciation as the economy is facing a serious slowdown.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Belinda Cao in Beijing at lcao4@bloomberg.net; Judy Chen in Shanghai at xchen45@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: February 11, 2009 04:04 EST

=========================

Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

Steve Palmer: Juniors Staged to Climb from New Ground Floor? – Gold Report

Source: The Gold Report

 Whether irrational exuberance or the faltering dot-com industry triggered it, the economic downturn of 2001 hit junior resource companies hard. They bounced back in a big way. “Downturn” understates the current scenario, but AlphaNorth Asset Management President and CEO Steve Palmer sees similarities. He looks forward to taking advantage of opportunities “to get in on some of what has now become the new ground floor” and make some “tremendous gains.” While he anticipates more bad news on the employment front, he also tells The Gold Report followers that he believes “we’ve avoided the abyss” and confidence is returning.

The Gold Report: Tell us about your outlook for the natural resource sector for 2009 and your thinking about the primary market of commodities—precious metals, base metals and so forth. Also, are these markets separate or all tied together?

Steve Palmer: 2008 was clearly a disaster for almost everybody. I manage a generalist fund, so it’s not focused only on resources. At the beginning of 2008, I was fairly cautious on resources. I thought the easy money had been made and the risk-reward wasn’t that good compared to some other sectors. However, with the pullback in many of the commodities, many of the resource companies are back to marginal cost of production and the share prices have been pounded so much—in many cases, below their cash value—that those resource opportunities are much more interesting at this stage.

The index I track for the small-cap focused fund I manage is the TSX Venture Index, which is the most comparable benchmark. This index has declined about 80% peak-to-trough. I think it peaked in the spring of ’07 and last year was down over 70%. That’s probably one of the worst-performing indices in the world as it’s heavily weighted toward resources. A lot of the junior companies in Canada are resource companies, probably a little more than 50%. So I think it’s a great opportunity to get in on some of what has now become the new ground floor.

The last time this occurred, back in ’01, I was managing a small-cap fund at a major financial institution that was invested heavily in the junior technology and biotech stocks. There was a significant correction; the NASDAQ declined by 80% over a two-year period and dragged the small caps down with it. The small cap fund I was managing at the time went through a rough patch and bottomed in April 2003, but was up more than 900% over the next four years. So when I look forward from where we are today, I see a similar opportunity for a period of tremendous gains, significantly above what you’d normally expect on a long-term basis.

TGR: But it’s such a different market now. Part of what drove the commodities move earlier in this decade was global growth. What’s the driver going to be in ’09?

SP: I think stabilization. The areas of big scares in the fourth quarter—the financial system and credit markets—needed to stabilize and that seems to have occurred. Credit spreads have come down and indicators of panic (such as T-bills with a negative yield) have subsided. People aren’t panicking like that anymore; it seems we’ve avoided the abyss and we have moved on to addressing the economic downturn.

TGR: Are you looking for a rebound?

SP: Not that we’re out of the woods yet, but there could be a big bounce. Governments are being very aggressive in trying to get things moving again. The stock market hits bottoms before you see the worst of the job numbers, though, many months before. That’s occurred almost every time in the past. This time, too, we can expect to see unemployment keep getting worse after the market has long since bottomed.

TGR: Do you think we saw a bottom in November and December, particularly in the junior resource sector?

SP: I definitely think it was a bottom, at least a short-term bottom. The level of panic was unprecedented. Compounding that was the timing of tax-loss selling that had to be done before year-end, so some stocks plunged to insanely low levels. This wasn’t due to fundamentals—it was all liquidity-driven, tax-loss selling driven and forced selling by various funds.

But as I said, I think most of that’s behind us. We’re in a more normal market and people are starting to look at fundamentals again. From the bottom that the TSX Venture hit, we’ve already had a nice little bounce, more than 25%, in just a few weeks. The larger-cap stocks bounced, too, but only half as much.

TGR: What about the broader markets, the S&P and Dow? Have they bottomed, too?

SP: I focus more on the Canadian markets. With the narrow number of stocks and the way the index is calculated, I think the Dow is an irrelevant benchmark. I don’t even look at that index. The S&P is a broader measure of U.S. large caps. I don’t expect it to go rocketing back up, but the bottom from November has held. I do a lot of technical analysis work and the charts are indicating to me now that, after the initial January bounce, we’ve pulled back fairly significantly. A lot of people are calling it a re-test of the low. It looks as if the S&P has bounced off 800 and it wouldn’t surprise me if it traded up to 1,000 before heading back down again in the spring. It will probably trade in a channel this year.

TGR: Harking back to your stability theme.

SP: Yes. And once we have some stability, people will regain confidence. There’s going to be a lot of money made in some areas of the market. Recently the golds have done really well, and takeouts will occur, especially when we have the very depressed juniors.

Greed will come back quickly, as well. We’ve had several greed cycles just in the last decade. We had the whole junior bull market around Bre-X in 1987. That whole thing imploded. The benchmark at the time was the Vancouver Stock Exchange Index, which was the measure in Canada of all these resource plays. It declined 75% after the Bre-X blew up. It wasn’t long after that when everybody scrambled to buy technology stocks in ’99, and then they imploded. Then in 2002, we started the latest bull run in commodities. So we’ve had three major up-and-down cycles in the last 10-12 years. It will occur again.

TGR: Does your technical analysis give you an idea where the various commodities will be in 2009?

SP: Yes. I use the charts a lot because commodity prices are so hard to predict; so many factors are involved. Those who set commodity price targets are wrong 80% of the time. If you’re contrarian, too, it usually works. For example, during a broker-sponsored dinner with 30-plus portfolio managers at the Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada (PDAC) convention in early March last year, they went around the table and asked everyone what they thought gold would be at the next PDAC. Gold was around $960 at the time and everybody was forecasting prices of $1,500 to $2,000. It’s almost a year later now and the 2009 PDAC convention is coming up. So we’re almost there right now and there were only two people at that dinner—I was one—who predicted a lower gold price. I picked $885. Where it makes sense, I like to go against the crowd. It looks to me like many of the commodities are going to lift in the short term. I wouldn’t be short.

TGR: So where do you see gold going in ’09?

SP: I trade gold almost exclusively—on technicals. It’s very much correlated inversely with the U.S. dollar. One gold analyst plotted the correlation since January ’06 and it was minus 0.926, almost perfectly inversely correlated since January ’06. All you need to do is put up two charts side by side—gold and the U.S. dollar—and you can see it clearly. You don’t need to calculate any fancy correlation numbers.

TGR: So you expect gold to be good going forward, considering all the troubles the U.S. dollar has?

SP: I have been quite negative on the U.S. dollar and thus quite bullish for most of the past few years on gold. I picked a lower gold price a year ago for two reasons: 1) the USdollar had made a significant move lower and was due for a rebound (technicals), and 2) it was a contrarian call as everyone was bullish. However, the direction of the U.S. dollar seems harder to predict now; it could be in for a period of strength. If the U.S. economy leads the way out of this global mess, the U.S. dollar will be strong and that’s not good for gold.

TGR: So if the U.S. leads us out of this global problem, you’re saying the U.S. dollar will be strong and that would put negative pressure on gold?

SP: Yes. That may be offset somewhat by inflation concerns or the “fear” trade persisting for a period of time. I’m not predicting that gold’s going to collapse or anything, but I’m not a super bull like a lot of people. We see a fair number of gold bugs around.

TGR: What about some specific stocks that you’d have The Gold Report readers take a look at?

SP: Colossus Minerals Inc. (TSX:CSI) is one I really like. They’ve been getting some phenomenal grades drilling on their property in Brazil. Garimperos had been hauling gold out of a big pit created there; it’s thought that they took 2 million ounces of gold out of the pit; very high-grade zones of several thousand grams per ton in some cases. After the pit got flooded, it was in limbo with the locals for many decades. Colossus got their hands on it a couple of years ago and went back and started doing re-assays of some of the historical drilling results and re-drilling, as well. The grades they’re getting are quite good. It’s not just gold; they have very high platinum and palladium grades, as well.

TGR: So Colossus came in, acquired the property, got rid of the water and—

SP: No, the water’s still there. It’s like a little lake, actually, in the pit. I think they’re drilling southwest of the pit, and the gold zone continues there. They’re currently considering drilling from a barge, too, to see if they can intersect some of the zones that were being mined before.

TGR: How deep is the lake?

SP: It’s probably about 100 meters deep. That’s another thing. The gold zones are very near surface, which lowers the mining costs significantly, as well. So it would be a very profitable operation because it’s so shallow and very high grade.

TGR: Do they have a 43-101 on this?

SP: No, they’re working on that. They just started Phase II drilling and will be doing a 43-101 report this year. The company has enough money to carry out their Phase II over the balance of this year. The market cap is about $70 million. They could have several million ounces of gold equivalent there. I would consider a takeout highly likely once they get a little more advanced.

TGR: By one of the majors?

SP: Yes, I think several of them have been on the property already.

TGR: Interesting. Another company to look at?

SP: Orko Silver Corp. (TSX.V:OK) is another, a $50 million market cap company. They have a property in Mexico they’ve been drilling, and should have an updated 43-101 report out any day now. It should add to the current inferred resource of 103 million ounces. A lot of the more senior names have done quite well recently. Some of them have doubled in the last couple of months. People are starting to look lower down on the market cap scale at some of the ones that haven’t moved as much. So I think companies in the range of $50 million (where Orko is) and $70 million (where Colossus is) will be on people’s radar screen, as well.

TGR: How far advanced is Orko? Is it close to other mines?

SP: Of course, Mexico is noted for its silver, and it has many, many silver mines. Orko is in an area with many mines around. They’re at the stage now where they’re proving up a resource and then they’ll do a scoping study.

TGR: Do they have sufficient cash in the bank?

SP: They have $3 million in cash right now. They raised money last summer at $1.65 and the stock is 55 cents now.

TGR: Looking at the technical chart, they seem to have been building a base since October. It hasn’t had the move that a lot of other juniors have.

SP: Exactly. That’s why I like it. We’ve been picking away at it recently because I think it’s good for a move. It could double quite easily in the next couple of months. Most of the precious metal names, like this one, I typically don’t hold for many years unless it’s a story like Colossus where I have a lot of conviction that they’re building something that’s going to be big and maybe taken over one day. Some of my positions, as with Orko, are initiated on technical analysis work but are also supported by fundamentals. Combining the commodity and the stock, this one looks like a good opportunity to get in on a timely basis and possibly double your money and move on.

TGR: Any others?

SP: Another one that has a similar chart is Silverstone Resources Corp. (TSX.V:SST). It’s a royalty company, similar to Silver Wheaton, where they take the silver and gold from companies that have producing base metal mines with silver and gold as byproducts. So they typically buy the silver at $4 and the gold at $300 and then they can sell it into the market. There’s little overhead required and you get your exposure to the commodity. In this case, with only $100 million market cap, Silverstone Resources is less liquid and trades at a much lower multiple than Silver Wheaton. I think Silver Wheaton’s trades around 15 times cash flow and this one is close to three times 2009 cash flow.

TGR: And like Silver Wheaton, Silverstone Resources either has capital or access to capital?

SP: It’s small working capital, but they have agreements to buy from these three mines and then they resell. It’s just the timing of when they get paid, really. There’s not much capital required. It’s a royalty play at the moment. It’s a very low cash flow multiple, lower risk. They probably would need to raise a little more capital on the back of a new off-take arrangement, which would be another avenue or catalyst to move the stock higher in the future.

TGR: What about any energy plays?

SP: One of my favorite energy names would be Sea Dragon Energy Inc. (TSX.V:SDX). They’re currently drilling a well in the Gulf of Suez that we should have results on in a matter of weeks. It has a one-in-three shot at success. It IPO’d at 60 cents. It’s currently trading at 14 cents. After they spend the money on the well, the cash per share will be 17 cents, so it’s trading below cash, assuming a failure. So there could be some significant gains if they hit on this well.

The management team has done it before: The same guy (Said Arrata, Sea Dragon Chairman and Director) was behind Centurion Energy, which was a huge success and taken out for over a billion dollars a year or two ago. He’s very well connected in Egypt. Sea Dragon is looking at other opportunities to get in on where junior companies are starved for cash, given that they have a significant amount that they raised on their IPO, $35 million I think. Even after drilling this well, they’ll still have a lot of cash left and could get in very cheaply on other opportunities in the area.

Steve Palmer and Joey Javier, an investment team since 1998, took three key assets—their excellent track record, their experience and their belief that exploiting inefficiencies in the Canadian small-cap universe would produce superior long-term equity returns—to AlphaNorth Asset Management, launching the Toronto-based investment management firm in August 2007. By year-end 2007, the long biased small-cap hedge fund they built made its debut. Until Lehman Brothers’ liquidated, credit markets froze, massive investor requests for redemptions forced hedge funds to sell out of their positions and “volatility” no longer came close to describing the frenzy in financial centers, the fund was flush and its investors were as happy as clams. Its first seven months netted a return of 35.6%, significantly outperforming the major Canadian indices. During that period, the TSX Venture Index declined by 3.7% and the TSX Composite Index rose by 7.4%.

Steve, who is a Chartered Financial Analyst, earned his BA in Economics at the University of Western Ontario. After starting in the investment community as a research associate, he moved to a major financial institution in mid-1998, where he met Joey and built his career. As Vice President of Canadian Equities, he managed assets of approximately $350 million, including a pooled fund that focused on small-cap companies.

Want to read more exclusive Gold Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Expert Insights page.

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Gold Is Entering An Accelerated Trend Channel – Gold Report

Source: The Gold Report – from/by: Oliver Tischendorf of Tischendorf.com

Gold has history on its side. It is a proven way to preserve one’s wealth over time. It acts like an insurance and it is highly unlikely mankind’s behavior during the last 6,000 years is going to change anytime soon. Some things never change. Two of those things are human nature and gold’s capacity to preserve one’s purchasing power.  


That said gold has recently reached new highs in various foreign currencies. The chart of gold in Euro terms tells the story of what is to come. Don’t take this lightly. This is an important event as new highs typically attract more buying. If the Europeans start allocating more funds to physical bullion demand will increase drastically and gobble up supply. It is reasonable to expect additional upward pressure for the price of gold. Physical accumulation is accelerating on a worldwide basis. Keep in mind gold is a very tiny market compared to the equities market. A change in asset allocation resulting in a small increase to bullion exposure could easily double worldwide demand for gold bullion investment purposes.

A story hitting the wires recently is that: Greenlight Capital’s founder, David Einhorn, is finally taking his grandfather’s advice. The $5.1 billion hedge fund is buying gold for the first time amid the threat of inflation from increased government spending. Einhorn fund’s recent decision to invest in physical gold bullion is testament to increased awareness of gold’s bullish long term trend and it looks like this is only the beginning to added buying pressure for gold bullion.’ For full coverage of the story click here.

It looks like the price of gold in US Dollar terms is merely lagging other currencies as the US Dollar has been very strong lately. It is still early to draw conclusions as the US Dollar could stay stronger than most people expect but the new accelerating trend channel looks to be a valid one.

So what it all comes down to is that worldwide accumulation of physical gold is accelerating. Hence the odds the gold price is going to accelerate as well are rather high.

If you haven’t built a physical bullion position yet now is a good time to think about doing so. I typically recommend holding at least 5% of one’s liquid net worth in gold bullion held in your own possession. Increasing that percentage up to 20% isn’t that bad an idea either. Although the markets look like they might want to stage some kind of rally right now taking a longer term perspective indicates the gold trend is going to make you more money than buying the S&P500 via the SPY.

Gold should reach new highs in US Dollar terms soon following the lead of foreign currencies like the Euro, the Canadian Dollar, the Australian Dollar, the Swiss Franc and the British Pound Sterling to name a few. As long as the lower trend line of the new dotted trend channel is not breached ‘the trend is your friend’ and you should hold on to your gold bullion position. You could use that level to protect your position with a stop loss.

If you want to be more aggressive you should consider buying silver bullion. The silver market is much smaller than the gold market so the market is considered to be a riskier one. But once the public is going to stress silver’s monetary significance as opposed to viewing it simply as another commodity silver prices will increase significantly and should ultimately outperform gold. I recommend closely watching the gold – silver ratio for clues. Historically the ratio has showed to be lower than the actual one. Watch for the ratio to go back to the 55 level and overshooting to the downside as soon as silver garners more interest.

You can easily keep track of the three charts and how they evolve over time by visiting my public list.

Subscribers to my free newsletter get an email notice whenever I buy or sell stocks.

Olivier Tischendorf
http://www.tischendorf.com/

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As the last article said now is time to accumulate Gold, do so here and Get 1 Free Gram just for Opening an Account!

Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free! – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

Good Investing! – jschulmansr

================================

 

Nothing in today’s post should be considered as an offer to buy or sell any securities or other investments; it is presented for informational purposes only. As a good investor, consult your Investment Advisor, Do Your Due Diligence, Read All Prospectus/s and related information carefully before you make any investments. –  jschulmansr

 

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Can’t Keep A Good Investment Down?

10 Tuesday Feb 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, bull market, capitalism, central banks, Comex, commodities, Copper, Credit Default, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, Fed Fund Rate, Federal Deficit, federal reserve, Finance, financial, Forex, Fundamental Analysis, futures, futures markets, GDX, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, inflation, Investing, investments, Japan, Jschulmansr, Junior Gold Miners, Latest News, Make Money Investing, market crash, Markets, mining companies, mining stocks, Moving Averages, palladium, Peter Grandich, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, silver, silver miners, small caps, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, Technical Analysis, TIPS, U.S. Dollar

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As I write Gold has come screaming back like a rocket to the moon! Currently Gold is up $20 oz back to $913 an oz. Today we here from Peter Grandich on new all time highs for gold are just around the corner. We’ll take a look at Silver, oh we can’t forget about Platinum too! There’s still time but the Precious Metals Bull Train is about to leave the station-Hop aboard! – Good Investing – jschulmansr

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Gold All Time Highs – Not If But When – Grandich Blog

By: Peter Grandich of Grandich Blog

February 10th, 2009

They say in life only death and taxes are guaranteed. They send you to jail if you guarantee an investment and it fails. With both things in mind, I believe we “should” make a new, all-time nominal high in gold before too long.

After putting a strong bottom in at $700, gold has made a series of higher lows while the $930-$940 area remains resistance. Despite an incredibly strong physical market, the paper market at the Comex seemingly trades to a different “drummer”. That’s okay as physical demand eventually overtakes paper markets.

Gold continues to be my most favorite play, followed by being long the Canadian dollar and then oil. But remember, I was also a NY Jets fan for 35 years.

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Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! Bullion Vault.com

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What’s Going on With the Dollar and Gold? – Seeking Alpha

By: Tim Iacono of Iacono Research

 

Those of you who have noticed that the U.S. dollar and gold have been moving in the same direction over the last few weeks are not alone. In fact, the two have moved together eight days in a row and nine out of the last ten, something that is quite unusual.
IMAGE When looking at the PowerShares DB U.S. Dollar Index Bullish ETF (PCX:UUP) and the SPDR Gold Shares ETF (PCX:GLD), it’s clear to see how different the last couple weeks have been as compared to earlier in the year.

 

 

Based on the data for these ETFs (which, unfortunately only goes back to early 2007 for UUP), the two have moved in the same direction on just 150 out of 490 days – about 30 percent of the time.

 

As shown in the chart below, the recent surge to much higher levels has not happened in at least two years, probably much longer.
IMAGE

The only other time that something similar happened was back in January of 2008.

 

What else happened in January of 2008?

Ahhh… How soon we forget…

From the St. Louis Federal Reserve website:

January 11, 2008

Bank of America announces that it will purchase Countrywide Financial in an all-stock transaction worth approximately $4 billion.

 

January 18, 2008
Fitch Ratings downgrades Ambac Financial Group’s insurance financial strength rating to AA, Credit Watch Negative. Standard and Poor’s place Ambac’s AAA rating on CreditWatch Negative.

January 22, 2008
In an intermeeting conference call, the FOMC votes to reduce its target for the federal funds rate 75 basis points to 3.5 percent. The Federal Reserve Board votes to reduce the primary credit rate 75 basis points to 4 percent.

January 30, 2008
The FOMC votes to reduce its target for the federal funds rate 50 basis points to 3 percent. The Federal Reserve Board votes to reduce the primary credit rate 50 basis points to 3.5 percent.

 

This was the really steep part of the rate reduction cycle – 125 basis points in just over a week.

 

Whether any of this has any real significance remains to be seen, but, the fact that, last time around, the gold price then surged to over $1,000 an ounce should not be ignored.

I, for one, will be happy to see the inverse relationship between the dollar and gold go the way of the dodo bird, never to affect twitchy traders again.

As noted here on many occasions before, there is no fundamental reason for this relationship to exist. If the dollar strengthens against the euro, why should that make the gold price go down? Because gold, priced in dollars, has become more expensive in Europe?

Despite hearing that ad nauseum in the financial media, that really doesn’t make any sense when you think about it.

 


Full Disclosure: Long GLD, no position in UUP
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Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! Bullion Vault.com 

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Silver Surges but Remains Undervalued Compared to Gold – Seeking Alpha

By: Mark O’Byrne of Gold and Silver Investments.com

 

Gold fell some 1.5% last week as investors tookgl profits with gold having been up some 10% in the previous three 3 weeks. But the short and medium term prospects look sound in the light of strong fundamentals and some important indicators – silver was up by another 4.2% last week and the gold mining indices were also higher (XAU +4.6% and HUI +2.3%). The mining indices are often a leading indicator and silver usually underperforms gold in the early stages of rallies and outperforms in the latter. Silver’s recent strength (up by some 15% since the start of the year) may be a prelude to higher gold prices in the coming weeks.

 

The recent sharp rally in the US dollar appears unsustainable and the USD Index was down 0.64% last week and US bonds also fell again – the 10-Year bond sold off again and the yield rose another 4.75% (from 2.9% to 2.979%). As ever, the bond market remains of fundamental importance and nervousness about the humongous size of the Obama bailout and stimulus packages and talk of central banks printing money to buy government bonds is not helping sentiment here. And government debt issuance is set to surge in the coming weeks and there is a real concern that there simply will not be enough buyers – meaning that bond prices may fall from their lofty heights and long term yields and interest rates begin to rise again.

The gold/silver ratio has fallen to around 70 ($905oz/$13/oz = 69.6) today from around 80 in mid January. The long term historical average is 15:1 and this is because it is estimated that geologically there are some 15 parts of silver in the ground for every one part of gold. It is important to note that silver, unlike gold, besides being a safe haven investment is also used in industry and it is believed that since the dawn of the industrial revolution some 95% of the world’s silver has been used up in industrial applications. Because of gold’s much higher value, it gets recycled and all the gold mined in the world ever is still with us but photography and other industrial uses makes silver like oil – when used it is gone forever.

The 1970s saw an average gold to silver ratio of around 25:1 and fell below 20:1 when silver rose to over $45/oz nominally. Thus it seems very likely that in the coming years, silver may well return to its long term historical average of closer to 15:1. This means that silver is likely to continue to outperform even gold in the coming weeks and months. Silver may return to its recent highs of over $20/oz in 2009 due to very strong supply demand fundamentals. It is also important to note that the CFTC investigation into artificial manipulation and suppression of the silver market could potentially lead to a massive short squeeze.

All investors should diversify within the precious metals allocation in their portfolio and own silver as well as gold. Gold remains the ultimate safe haven while silver is a safe haven but has the potential for very significant returns and growing wealth in the coming months.

Stock position: None.

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Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! Bullion Vault.com

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Bullish for the Short Term But Consider Gold, Platinum as Well – Seeking Alpha

By: Jeffrey Saut of Raymond James

 

Excerpt from Raymond James strategist Jeffrey Saut’s latest essay, published Monday (February 9th):

 

…[I]n last Tuesday morning’s verbal strategy comments we noted that since the inception of the S&P 500 futures contract there have been five instances when the futures slid by 2% (or more) on back-to-back days and then gapped lower by 1%+ the following session. On EVERY one of those occasions the S&P 500 (SPX/868.60) was at, or within one day, of beginning a decent rally. Further, last November we opined that at the November 20, 2008 “price low” the DJIA was 34% below its 200-day moving average [DMA] and consequently very oversold.

According to Susan Berge, of the Berge Report, that reading was greater than the momentum low occurring in October 1974 of 27%, as well as the 24% reading during the 1987 crash. Even after the rally we have experienced since the November “lows” during the recent downside re-test of those November’s “lows” the differential was still a massive 25%. Subsequently, we advised buying the exchange-traded fund [ETF] of your choice, which in our case was the recommendation of the ProShares Ultra S&P 500 (SSO) that is “geared” two-to-one on the upside. We further suggested that the more timid types might want to consider hedging these positions to minimize the downside.

Accordingly, the Dutiful Dow sprinted 141 points in Tuesday’s session, but gave back most of those gains on Wednesday’s wilt (-121). Therefore, in Thursday morning’s strategy comments, we said that if our upside rally “call” was going to play ,the equity markets would need to shake off Thursday’s worse than expected employment claims number, as well as the anticipated worse than estimated employment numbers on Friday. BINGO, for indeed the late week numbers were much worse than expected, yet the DJIA shook them off and rallied. How far the rally will carry is anyone’s guess, for while we are bullish on a short-term basis, it would take a closing price above 8375 on the DJIA to turn us merely “neutral” on an intermediate-term basis.

However, if the DJIA (8280.59) can close above its January 6, 2009 closing high of 9015.10, with a like close by the D-J Transportation Average [DJTA] (3203.70) above its 1/6/09 closing high of 3717.26, it would be a Dow Theory “buy signal” according to our interpretation of Dow Theory; and should be viewed as a pretty bullish occurrence. Moreover, as stated in previous missives, so far what we have seen is a downside non-confirmation, with the DJTA breaking below its November 2008 “low” without a similar breakdown by the DJIA; and, you should read that bullishly.

Meanwhile, there was an interesting rotation last week with the Commodity Research Bureau Index “up,” the Dollar Index “down,” bond prices “down” (read: higher interest rates), and Dr. Copper “up” nearly 11%. This action, if it continues, suggests the potential for the return of inflation and the potential for a stronger economy. If so, in addition to our recommendation on gold, participants might want to consider investments in platinum. Indeed, unlike gold, platinum is not only a precious metal, but is used heavily in industry due to its tensile strength characteristics…

Typically, platinum sells at a substantial premium to gold, but because of the collapse of the auto industry platinum is approaching parity with gold for the first time since the early / mid-1990s. Investors, therefore, might want to consider platinum in addition to their gold positions, for they will be purchasing a relatively “cheap” metal with a “call” on an auto industry rebound. Our vehicle of choice for this theme is the iPath Dow Jones AIG Platinum ETF (PGM).

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Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! Bullion Vault.com

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Late Breaking Intelligence Report…

MineWeb Gold News – Japan Investors Turn To Gold! – MineWeb

Source: Reuters

 

 

TREND SPREADING

Japan investors turn to gold

Online traders are turning to commodities from FX, stocks and gold is the most popular commodity product for online retailers.

Author: Chikako Mogi
Posted:  Tuesday , 10 Feb 2009

TOKYO (Reuters)  – 

Japanese retail investors are stepping up their online gold investment in a trend that is unlikely to be reversed, an executive at a top online commodity trading firm said on Tuesday.

As the country’s retail investors catch up with global trends of asset diversification, they are hunting for alternative investments to enhance returns, and the trend is spreading outwards from the rich to engulf ordinary people.

Japan’s risk-averse retail investors are estimated to hold an eye-popping $16.4 trillion, more than half of it in cash and deposits, Mizuho Bank, the country’s second-largest lender, says.

Although the global financial crisis hit the real economy and battered commodities directly linked to the economy, gold remains unscathed by such declining industrial demand while retaining merit as an asset.

“Given its relatively stable value, interest in gold will persist for a while and the market will remain bullish,” Naoaki Kurumada, chief executive of Dot Commodity, Inc, told Reuters.

“Gold is our main commodity product — by purchasing gold, investors can start including commodities in their portfolios.”

Since its establishment in 2005, the company has grown as Japan’s top online commodity trading firm, with about 20,000 accounts against some 50 initially, and assets of 8 billion yen ($87.45 million) by October. It is also second in the online commodity trading industry in volume terms.

The company is drawing interest from seasoned online traders who are turning to commodities for high returns, as Japanese stocks have plunged and the yen has strengthened.

“I expect online accounts to increase, given the strengthening appetite for asset diversification and more people finding commodity trading interesting,” Kurumada said.

There are two key kinds of investors who use the firm’s services. One of them has experience in trading currency or stocks online and can analyse technical charts or moves in other markets to aim for high returns amid price fluctuations.

“Some are day traders, others more longer term, like a few weeks. They are largely in their 30s and 40s,” Kurumada said.

The other type is non-traders interested in commodity investment who buy gold as a start, he said.

Reflecting the popularity of the yellow metal as an investment, the open interest in the gold mini contract, launched in July 2007, hit a record high 83,428 contracts on Jan. 8, according to Tokyo Commodity Exchange Inc (TOCOM), exceeding that of the standard gold contract.

TOCOM will extend trading hours of all derivatives contracts later this year to boost liquidity after Japan’s main commodity market launches upgraded trading systems in May.

Kurumada said this would help attract more investor interest to commodity investment and trading, as it would allow players to cut losses timely or swiftly react to overseas market moves.

“We hope that the environment will be set so traders can reap profits just like in currency and stocks,” he said.

While Japanese retail investors are waking up to the attraction of commodity investment, the pace of growth may be moderate.

About 20 percent of those investing in gold, for instance, are investing in TOCOM’s gold mini contract and about 10 percent are actively trading. The rest are investing in such products as gold savings plans, Kurumada said.

“Retail investors jumped on the gold mini contract a year after its launch. It takes time for them to catch up,” he said. ($1=91.48 Yen) (Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved

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Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! Bullion Vault.com

==================================

That’s It for Now- I close with this quote below- Good Investing! – jschulmansr

“Nothing will unnerve the paper gold shorts more quickly and do more to undercut their confidence than to strip them of the real metal and force them to come up with more hard gold bullion to make good on deliveries. “Stand and Deliver or Go Home” should be the rallying cry of the gold longs to the paper gold shorts.” –Trader Dan Norcini

==================================
Nothing in today’s post should be considered as an offer to buy or sell any securities or other investments; it is presented for informational purposes only. As a good investor, consult your Investment Advisor, Do Your Due Diligence, Read All Prospectus/s and related information carefully before you make any investments. –  jschulmansr

 

 

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Murphy’s Law? – What is Gold doing?

09 Monday Feb 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, Barack Obama, Comex, Copper, Currency and Currencies, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, financial, Fundamental Analysis, GDX, GLD, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, inflation, Investing, investments, Jschulmansr, Junior Gold Miners, Make Money Investing, Markets, mining companies, mining stocks, palladium, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, prices, producers, production, rare earth metals, silver, silver miners, small caps, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, U.S. Dollar

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Austrian school, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, bull market, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, deflation, Dennis Gartman, depression, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, economic trends, economy, Federal Deficit, financial, Forex, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GLD, gold, gold miners, hard assets, hyper-inflation, India, inflation, investments, Jeffrey Nichols, Jim Rogers, Keith Fitz-Gerald, majors, Marc Faber, market crash, Markets, Michael Zielinski, mid-tier, mining companies, monetization, Moving Averages, palladium, Peter Grandich, Peter Schiff, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, protection, recession, risk, run on banks, safety, Sean Rakhimov, silver, silver miners, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Technical Analysis, TIPS, U.S., U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, XAU

As I write todays post Gold is testing support around the $895 level. Mr. Murphy is laughing today as you can tell by today’s articles. However, I still feel this is another buying opportunity to add more, especially among the Gold mining Stocks. Many of the producers are still selling at or near book value. Pull up a chair, take a bite, you won’t be eating humble pie! – Good Investing! -jschulmansr

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Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! Bullion Vault.com

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Gold Charts Are Plugging Along – Seeking Alpha

By: Jeff Pierce of Zen Trader

I realize there’s been a lot of talk about gold putting in a top, and I’m aware that we are at longer term resistance on a multi-year chart, however short term I’m still seeing bullish charts. Take a look at the following 15 min chart on a few random gold stocks and you’ll see a very bullish constructive chart. It moves up 3 steps, and gives back 2. The moving averages have a nice flow to them as the stock continues to push higher and volume seems to favor the bulls. I’m a big fan of the 15 min chart and I always look at it to see which way the smaller trend is moving and until I see these charts roll over on this time frame, then the longer term time frames should be safe for now. 

One note of caution. This picture can change very quickly so you have to stay on top of it. Be on the lookout for double topping patterns and use it in conjuction with a 15 min of GLD while looking for breakdowns in the ETF.

gold

 

goldgold

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Gold poised, Experts predict $1000 plus – Mineweb

 

HIGHER INFLATION FOR YEARS TO COME

Many analysts and bankers now expect gold to break through $1,000 in the near term and probably go higher on financial instability and potential US dollar weakness.

Author: Pratima Desai
Posted:  Monday , 09 Feb 2009

LONDON (Reuters) – 

Gold prices are set to jump towards $1,000 an ounce and probably beyond to new records as droves of investors fearing financial instability and surging inflation pile into the precious metal.

Expectations of a weaker dollar, which makes gold priced in the U.S. currency cheaper for holders of other currencies, will also help boost prices of the precious metal seen as a store of value during uncertain times.

Strong investor interest in the precious metal can be seen in the record holdings above 867 tonnes of the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, the SPDR Gold Trust.

“The core problem for investors is financial instability, if you look at the IMF numbers, we are only halfway through the non-performing loan cycle,” said Ashok Shah, chief investment officer at fund manager London & Capital.

The IMF last month declared losses on U.S. loans and securitised assets were likely to reach $2.2 trillion (1.5 trillion pounds), up from an October estimate of $1.4 trillion.

These losses replicated in other major developed economies have frozen bank lending to corporates and consumers and led to recession in the global economy.

In an attempt to kick-start bank lending and activity central banks have slashed interest rates. Governments have pumped large amounts of money into the global economy and more is planned.

“Governments are supplying liquidity into the system and unless they sterilise it (issue bonds) they are laying the foundations for much higher inflation for years to come … These are the things gold thrives on,” Shah said.

“More corporate, financial and economic bad news will do the trick. Once it gets a foothold and picks up momentum gold can easily break through to new highs.”

Spot gold hit a record high of $1,030.80 an ounce in March 2008 and is now at around $910, a gain of more than 10 percent since the middle of January.

INSURANCE POLICY

Potential inflationary pressures can be seen in the growth of money supply. January M1 rose about 20 percent year-on-year in the United States where a stimulus plan of about $800 billion is in the works.

“M0 is growing at about 9 percent worldwide,” said Angus Murray, founder of fund manager Castlestone Management.

“People need a real asset to offset inflation. Investors are putting gold into their portfolios as an insurance policy. In 24 or 36 months time, gold will be higher by a minimum of the growth rate in money supply.”

Also on the horizon is a weaker dollar, which in recent weeks has risen against the euro and pound, partly because U.S. investors have been taking their money home, fund managers say.

“When that repatriation reverses the dollar will weaken. Let’s call it 14 or 16 percent — in dollar terms gold will rise by that much again,” Murray said.

UPSIDE RISK

Bank analysts too, for similar reasons have changed their gold price forecasts. But they expect prices to peak this year.

Swiss-based UBS (UBSN.VX: Quote) expects gold prices to average $1,000 an ounce this year from a previous forecast of $700 and $900 in 2010 from $700 an ounce.

“Gold has rallied in most major currencies despite a firm US dollar, a sign of strong buying interest in the metal,” UBS said in a note this week.

Gold priced in euros hit a record of above 726.89 an ounce early this week and in sterling it touched a record above 660 last month.

U.S. bank Goldman Sachs (GS.N: Quote) followed with a forecast of $1,000 an ounce in the next three months from $700 previously.

“If financial risks … remain high, gold prices could remain higher for longer, presenting upside risk to our forecasts,” Goldman said.

“The recent strong demand for gold has not been irrational but rather pretty much in line with the probabilities of financial and sovereign default.”

(Editing by Sue Thomas)

© Thomson Reuters 2009. All rights reserved.

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Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! Bullion Vault.com

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Brian Tang: Bullish on Finite Resources – The Gold Report

Source: The Gold Report

 

Since 2003, Fundamental Research Corp. (FRC) has been focusing on companies not widely followed by brokerage firms, bringing investors and undervalued small and micro cap companies together. In this exclusive interview with The Gold Report, FRC founder Brian Tang and his crew forecast the primary driver of base metal prices in 2009, the future of gold and copper and the infinite upside of investing in finite resources.

The Gold Report: Brian, could you give us a summary of your firm and its business model? You have strong opinions about how individual investors should approach paid-for research.

Brian Tang: Sure. I founded the firm in 2003. At that time, a lot of the investment banks were being scrutinized for producing research that was tied to corporate finance and I was also in corporate finance—but more on the debt side. On the debt side, all research is paid for. Firms like Moody’s and Standard and Poor’s will charge firms money, and then issue a credit rating on them. So given that the corporate finance model was being scrutinized, I thought why not apply the debt model simply to the equity side, where we would charge a fee to issue a rating on the equity of companies?

Of course, there is the potential for a conflict in that type of situation. What we’ve done is instigate policies to mitigate those conflicts; for example, we only charge our fees flat and in advance and we don’t accept stock, so the companies have to pay in full before we get started. We sign agreements with the companies that basically relieve us from any liability for negative reports. They agree that they will not sue us for negative comments. Once we’re engaged, we have to finish the contract. They cannot prevent us from publishing further research. And, if you look at the distribution of our ratings—where 25% of our ratings are hold, sell or suspend—I think you can get an idea that our analysts are truly independent. We’ve issued sell ratings right off the bat, and that company has paid, we’ve done our due diligence, and we didn’t like the company; so we initiated coverage at a sell. So that is the business model. Also, if you look at our performance on Investars, you will see we have done quite well in the past.

In terms of our focus, we focus on small and micro cap companies that aren’t widely followed by brokerage firms. We think by focusing on companies that no other analysts are following, we can add value by discovering these undervalued companies.

Currently, a lot of our coverage is in the natural resource sector—mining, oil and gas—and the other two sectors that we cover are industrials and healthcare. From time to time, we publish special reports, industry reports, on topics of interest that we think investors would like to read about.

TGR: In this market, many people are suggesting that people avoid the micro small caps because of the shakeout in the marketplace. In essence, avoid the juniors and focus on the producers. What insights can you provide to our investors regarding that?

BT: I definitely think that, in this type of environment, the producers or the near-term producers will do better just because there’s less risk to them. Also, it really depends on what type of company you’re looking at. If the company is well financed, we don’t see that as a problem. We have downgraded some companies to sell recently because they were not well financed; we think they might run into some liquidity problems, so definitely I would avoid those kinds of companies. It also depends on what kind of commodity they’re in. I’d look for some commodities that are better than others.

But, also, small caps tend to recover first when a bull market does resume, and they also tend to do worse when a bear market starts, simply because they’re more levered in terms of operating leverage. They’re smaller, so they get affected more by swings in the economy. They recover first, but they falter first, as well. So if you avoid them totally, I would say you would miss out when the economy starts to turn again. And because nobody can predict when that will happen, I would not totally avoid them, but I would be very selective.

TGR: In the research you do and provide to subscribers, do you give specific sell-hold recommendations and pricing?

BT: Yes. We issue buy, hold or sell recommendations. We don’t call it a target price; we call it a fair value, and we also issue a risk rating from very low risk to highly speculative. We’re registered as a securities advisor with the BC Securities Commission.

TGR: Could Siddharth Rajeev, your head of research, give us your global outlook for what will happen in commodities in 2009? Specifically base metals, precious metals, and gold-silver?

Siddharth Rajeev: The primary factor that we believe is going to affect the pricing of base metals is the global GDP growth assumptions; and we believe that in 2009 we are going to see a significant drop in GDP growth. For example, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecasts global GDP growth of 2.2% in 2009; and that was about 5% in 2007 and 3.7% in 2008. And then most of the developed economies like the U.S., Japan, Europe and Canada are expected to be in a recession in 2009, while emerging countries like China, India, Brazil and Russia are not in a recession (but they are expected to have a significant drop in their growth rate). So we believe that these reductions in the GDP growth rates will affect demand growth for most of the base metals.

We have a long-term positive outlook on copper, primarily because we still believe in the Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC) countries’ growth; so we believe that, in the long term, they will achieve growth. Those countries will drive the demand for base metals.

BT: Also, if you look at current commodity prices, they have declined a lot from the peaks—but those peaks were not necessarily based on fundamentals. I think they were based more on speculation. If you look at where the price is today compared to historical averages, the prices are still much higher. For example, we have a long-term forecast (2012+) for gold of $600 per ounce. Even though that’s lower than today’s prices, it’s still double the historical average. Gold has historically averaged only about $300 per ounce, and that’s the same with oil prices.

SR: For gold we expect prices to converge to $600 per ounce in the long term. But in the near term, we are bullish on gold, especially because we expect the U.S. dollar to depreciate due to the slowdown in the U.S. and the negative real interest rates in the U.S. And we expect inflation to creep in once the effects of the large stimulus package are felt. So, it’s because we expect the U.S. dollar to depreciate and we have seen in the past that gold prices have had a negative correlation with the U.S. dollar. Other reasons that we’re bullish include higher cash costs, as well as relatively flat supply. So we’re bullish on gold in the near term; but in the long term, we expect prices to converge to $600 once the global economy improves and the U.S. dollar recovers.

TGR: Do you have some specific companies you can share with us that you feel are getting some good financing and are close to production, which you feel our investors should know about?

SR: One of our top picks is called SilverCrest Mines Inc. (TSX.V:SVL). They have three silver-gold projects in Mexico with 43-101 compliant resources, and then they are planning to put their main project, the Santa Elena project, into production later this year. Based on our evaluation, our valuation of the company is $1.98 per share while the shares are trading at 45 cents.

In terms of comparables, their enterprise value (EV) to resource ratio is just 25 cents per ounce, while our estimate of the average ratio of its peers is over $2. So we like the company, number one, because we have a positive outlook on both silver and gold; number two, they’re closer to production; number three they have a favorable valuation; number four, and most important now, is that they are in a decent cash position. The second company I want to talk about, that we’re currently doing due diligence on, is called Gold Resource Corp. (OTCBB:GORO) (FSE:GIH). They have four high-grade silver-gold projects in Mexico.

They’re planning to put their main project in Mexico into production mid-2009, and their plans are to produce 70,000 ounces of gold in the first 12 months of production. And the best part is that management estimates that their cash cost is going to be just $100 per ounce.

TGR: Wow. For gold?

SR: Yes. So they’re aiming to be one of the lowest-cost producers around. That’s one of the companies that we think investors could track.

TGR: Do they have the management team or the production team to start producing gold there, or will they be joint venturing?

SR: No, no. They have the management team, and they are arranging the financing now. Recently, they had announced a strategic alliance with Hochschild Mining (LSE:HOC). They hold 5% of equity in them and they are planning to do another 10%. So, even though they have to raise capital, we don’t think it will be that tough compared to a lot of companies. Management is also expecting a payback of less than a year, which is pretty good.

TGR: I know one of the companies you’re following is Commerce Resources Corp. (TSX.V:CCE) (PK SHEETS:CMRZF). Can you comment on them?

BT: Vincent, our geologist, will discuss Commerce.

Vincent Weber: With regard to Commerce, they’re focusing largely on their Upper Fir project. They did 131 HQ diameter drill holes totaling just over 26,000 meters in their last phase of drilling, and they’re targeting carbonatites that host tantalum and niobium mineralization. Tantalum is used for capacitors, like those used in cell phones; niobium is used for special alloys for steels. They just put together a 2,000-ton bulk sample on the Upper Fir Carbonatite, which they’re sending to a company in Richmond, B.C., for sampling to characterize the deposit. They’re also going to put together a flow sheet and a pilot test plant to try and determine the appropriate recovery method.

SR: We believe that Commerce is one of the companies that raised capital at the best time—when the market was at a peak, so based on their latest financial statements, they had about $22 million in cash at the end of July 2008 and that’s like 20 cents per share. Share prices are currently 24 cents per share, so the market value is very little for their projects.

TGR: What’s the burn rate?

SR: Burn rate, based on the last financial statement, was around $700,000 per month in the second half of 2008. If they continue to spend at the same rate, we are expecting at least $15 million in cash right now, which is like 13 cents – 14 cents per share; so it shows that the market values their project at 10 cents per share and they have over 100 million shares outstanding, which is like $10 million for their projects.

TGR: You just issued an update on Castle Gold Corporation (TSX.V:CSG). Can you share with us any insights on that company?

SR: Yes, they have two producing projects; and, in our valuation, we actually raised our fair value estimate to $1.67. Currently shares are trading at 46 cents. We like the company because it’s currently producing, generating cash flows and is expecting to reduce operating costs next year. This year, the company had very high operating costs; but they expect to reduce costs in the next year, which will help them generate positive cash flows starting in ’09.

BT: The El Castillo mine experienced operating costs of $685 per ounce, which was higher than expected, and the reason for that was they incurred a high strip ratio of 1.55. They were expecting only .6. This strip ratio is waste to ore. When we spoke to management, the company said that they expect operating costs to decrease in 2009 by improving mine efficiencies, which would include utilizing larger equipment and also using that larger equipment to increase their gold production from the mine.

TGR: Where are they currently producing, and do you expect them to spend a lot on capital investments in ’09?

BT: Guatemala and Mexico. In our models for ’09, we estimated a capex budget of $2.15 million. Our models are showing that, in 2008 and 2009, they should be cash flow positive.

TGR: Are there any other base or minor metals or gold or silver companies that you currently like?

VW: Another project that I’m currently doing some due diligence on, which is an intriguing deposit, is West High Yield Resources (TSX.V:WHY). They have a large magnesium deposit that they’re exploring in British Columbia; that’s a different type of metal from all the other companies.

TGR: What is magnesium used for?

VW: It’s used for lightweight alloys. That’s one of the main uses.

TGR: What is the outlook for minor metals in 2009?

SR: In terms of minor metals, I can give a general idea on where those metals will perform in 2009 – 2010. Basically, for several minor metals, including molybdenum, manganese, chromium, vanadium, these companies serve the steel sector and most of these metals had a good run in 2007 primarily because of a significant increase in steel production in China; and, of course, their forecast at that time of steel production was very optimistic, which is why we believe that those metals had a good run in 2007.

But now, as we expect the global GDP growth to slow down, we expect steel production also to slow down, which will affect the demand side of all these metals. So we are expecting all these metal prices to stay soft in 2009 and 2010, just like our outlook for base metals.

TGR: Do you think the stimulus package that Barack Obama is proposing will have an impact on that?

SR: It will have a positive impact on it, but then we think that in 2009 – 2010 the GDP growth drop will have a stronger effect, which will push down the prices or soften the prices. Beyond that point, once the infrastructure and the BRIC country GDP growth starts to improve, we expect the demand for these metals to improve then.

TGR: Thanks so much for your time today. We really appreciate it.

Brian Tang, BBA, CFA, founded Fundamental Research Corp. in 2003, and has successfully led the firm to be recognized as on of the fastest growing companies in the province of B.C. Prior to Fundamental Research Corp., Brian was an analyst in the corporate banking group of one of the world’s largest international banks where he performed fundamental analysis on Financial Post 500 companies (the Canadian equivalent of the Fortune 500). Prior to this, he worked at a financial advisory firm where he analyzed and published research on Canadian equity mutual funds.

Fundamental Research provides institutional quality equity research coverage on small and micro cap companies through its extensive distribution network. Its major institutional delivery channels include institutional sites such as Reuters, retail sites such as Stockhouse, and subscribers. Fundamental Research’s performance has been highly ranked in the past by Investors.

Want to read more exclusive Gold Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Expert Insights page.

=====================================

Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! Bullion Vault.com

As I said Mr. Murphy is smiling this morning! – I still thing $950 is opur next target, if that level is broken then we are on our way to $1000+. Good Investing!- jschulmansr

Nothing in today’s post should be considered as an offer to buy or sell any securities or other investments; it is presented for informational purposes only. As a good investor, consult your Investment Advisor, Do Your Due Diligence, Read All Prospectus/s and related information carefully before you make any investments. –  jschulmansr

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Gold-History Repeating Itself?

06 Tuesday Jan 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in Bollinger Bands, capitalism, commodities, Copper, Currency and Currencies, Finance, Fundamental Analysis, gold, hard assets, How To Invest, How To Make Money, inflation, Investing, investments, Jschulmansr, Latest News, Make Money Investing, Markets, mining stocks, Moving Averages, oil, precious metals, silver, small caps, Stocks, Technical Analysis, Today, U.S. Dollar, Uncategorized

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agricultural commodities, alternate energy, Austrian school, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands, bull market, capitalism, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, communism, Copper, Currencies, currency, deflation, depression, diamonds, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, economic trends, economy, financial, Forex, futures, futures markets, gold, gold miners, hard assets, heating oil, India, inflation, investments, Keith Fitz-Gerald, market crash, Markets, mining companies, Moving Averages, natural gas, oil, palladium, Peter Schiff, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, protection, rare earth metals, recession, risk, run on banks, safety, Saudi Arabia, silver, silver miners, socialism, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Technical Analysis, timber, U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, Water

Today’s action: Gold opened down by a few dollars and now has reversed itself and is cusrrently up $7-10 oz. Based off of chart formations it would appear that  Gold is breaking out to the upside and getting ready to challenge the $900 level, If it can break that then we are set up for a test of the $950-$975 level. If it fails here, a pullback to the $800 level (support base) will probably occur. Today’s articles include one about a new 2yr gold price cycle that appears to be forming. Next some questions answered about the markets for 2009. Finally a special report from Gold World about Gold Backed Banking. Enjoy and good investing! – jschulmansr

Gold’s 2-year cycle – MineWeb

A Mineweb reader has noticed a recent two-year cycle for gold price behaviour which, if it continues will likely give some guidance to price movements this year and next.

By: Joseph Cafariello

EDMONTON, CANADA –

There seems to be a two-year cycle in the gold price which has been repeating itself since about 2004.  The even years follow one pattern, while the odd years follow another pattern.  The even years tend to reach exaggerated extremes to the upside and to the downside on a percentage basis, while the odd years tend to be a little calmer with less volatility.

For example, 2008 went very much like 2006, with exaggerated highs reached in the spring of each year, and a late start to the traditional autumn-winter-spring upswing, which began around October/November of 06 and 08.  On the odd-number side, 2007 went much like 2005, with moderate highs reached in May of each year, and an early start to the traditional autumn-winter-spring upswing, which began around August/September of 05 and 07.

If this is indeed a reliable cycle, we can expect 2009 to be much like 2005 and 2007 all throughout the year.  The first half of 2009 should see gold follow the same pattern as the first halves of 2005 and 2007.  In the springs of 05 and 07, gold kept hitting its head against the previous year’s high all throughout the spring.  More than once during the spring of 2007, gold topped out at about $690, coming to within about 5% of the 2006 high of $735.  Similarly, the spring of 09 should see gold hitting its head against 2008’s high of $1,035, coming to within 5% of it, or up to about $985.  That will be the high for the first half of 2009 at around the beginning of May, though this will not be the high for 2009 as a whole.

Given the odd-number year pattern, we might also expect the back half of 2009 to be much like the back halves of 2005 and 2007.  In both 2005 and 2007, the summertime pull-backs were modest, and the autumn-winter-spring upswings started early, at around August/September of 05 and 07.  The latter half of 2009, then, should see a modest summer-time pull-back of about 5% to 7% of its spring 09 high, taking gold down from $985 in May 09 to about $925 by August 09.  However, the low for 2009 will still be the upcoming January low of $800, which is now only about a week or two away.  The lows of January 2005 and January 2007 were also “the” or “close to the” annual lows for those years.  So the low of 2009 will be at around $800 in January.

The high for 2009 will come in December.  The traditional autumn-winter-spring upswing in 2009-10 will be much as it was in 2005-06 and 2007-08, with an early start.  The year-end run for 09 will begin around August or the beginning of September, jumping from about $925 in Aug/Sep 09 and rising steadily until the end of December 09.  The annual highs for 2005 and 2007 were hit in or near December of each year, and each high was about 20% higher than the average of their first halves.  Thus, the annual high of 2009 will be hit in or near December, and will be 20% higher than the average of its first half, putting the 2009 high at about $1,150 in December.

The traditional autumn-winter-spring upswing, however, will certainly not end in 2009, but will spill over into the spring of 2010 much as it did in the springs of 2006 and 2008.  The high in the spring of 2008 was about 40% higher than high in the spring of 2006.  Hence, the high in the spring of 2010 will be about 40% higher than 2008’s high of $1,035, putting gold at about $1,450 in the spring of 2010.  Then, the summertime pull back of 2010 will be just as stark as were the summertime pullbacks of 2006 and 2008.

And so the two-year cycle will continue, where even-number years follow a pattern of extremes, while the odd-number years are calmer, but with a nice upward kick at the end.  This two-year cycle with even-number years on the extreme side and odd-number years on the moderate side will continue until the commodity boom is over (say around the year 2030, when the populations of China and India finally achieve a 75% middle-class), and until the US dollar recovers at around the same year (2030), when the rest of the world will be looking to the US as a nice place to shop given its then-to-be dirt-cheap dollar.

The above comment was contributed by Mineweb reader Joseph Cafariello who describes himself as “A raving gold bug and proud of it”

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2009 Market Q&A: Four Questions Answered – Seeking Alpha

Source: Eric Roseman of The Sovereign Society

By Eric Roseman

Over the last several weeks I’ve received numerous questions from Sovereign Society subscribers, including individuals who frequent our daily blog.

As we start 2009, I thought this would be an ideal forum to collect some of these important questions and attempt to give you my best conclusions. I can’t reprint all of these inquiries; but I’ve compiled several excellent questions from our members.

Overall, I don’t like forecasting. I generally believe it’s a total waste of time and most consensus estimates ahead of 2008 ended in the basement with the majority of analysts dead wrong about the economy, the market and just about everything else.

I have to admit that I never expected the markets to crash, the banking system to go bust or the dollar to skyrocket in the midst of the worst financial crisis in 75 years. To be fair, I think most pros failed to make accurate predictions.

Question: I’m a retired investor living on income. Prior to the big rally in Treasury bonds, I held most of my savings in short-term Treasury’s and bank term deposits. But with short-term rates under 1% and government bonds yielding a pittance, I’m nervous. What should I do to supplement my income?

Comment: This is perhaps the most challenging environment for retirees in more than a generation. With money-market funds yielding almost nothing, Treasury bonds yielding around 2% and bank CDs paying under 1%, retirees must supplement their income.

My advice is to take a small portion of your savings, say 20%, and scatter that sum across a dozen or more investment grade corporate bonds. I emphasize “investment grade” and not junk debt. Investment grade debt includes anything rated BBB or better in my book and, to make it easier, I would stick to issues rated A- or higher.

The Dow Jones Corporate Bond Index now yields 6.90% – down from its post-crash high yield of 8.87% in early $100 bill imageOctober. Still, investors can tap into non-financial bonds like IBM, Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), Wal-Mart (WMT) and Kraft Foods (KFT) – all paying 5.5% or more. Or, look at corporate bonds issued by America’s largest banks, including JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Goldman Sachs (GS), Wells Fargo (WFC) and US Bancorp (USB). These banks won’t default.

A good strategy to keep things simple is to buy a laddered portfolio of corporate bonds ranging from two years all the way to seven years. This should at least give your nest egg a boost and if you feel comfortable with this formula, then increase your position to say 35% of your portfolio. But remember, don’t go whole-hog; at some point over the next 12 months, perhaps later, Treasury bond prices will get smashed and long-term rates will head higher as the government expands credit to the moon. Keep your powder dry.

Question: Do you think we’ll avoid another Great Depression? Despite all the money thrown at the markets since late 2007 we’re still in the midst of a severe credit contraction and the global economy has literally fallen off a cliff since October.

Comment: I think we’ll avoid another Great Depression but only because government will nationalize or partially nationalize key industries. Without government intervention, the free market would have resulted in massive failures and a total collapse of the banking system and the broader global economy. There’s no doubt in my mind that the government made a big mistake not rescuing Lehman Brothers last September. Once you’re bailing out major banks, then do it right. But in all honesty, we don’t know what transpires behind the Fed’s walls or the Treasury’s. There’s some crazy buddy system in progress with special interests influencing government policy. The government doesn’t give a damn about you or me. What they care about is protecting their interests. That’s why we must protect our assets and, in the end, I believe gold will triumph above all paper money, especially against the dollar.

I don’t advocate government intervention; but these are not normal times and the consequences might have resulted in the death of capitalism and perhaps the emergence of a new social order, similar to what occurred in post-Weimar Germany in the 1920s. Harsh economic times usually result in a new socio-economic regime. If the Fed and Treasury fail to rescue the credit system, then we might face similar consequences. The world as we know it will come to an end.

It’s hard to know exactly what goes on behind the Federal Reserve’s closed doors and at the Treasury’s. Thus far, government efforts have been bold since the October crash, including major central banks worldwide. Major credit indicators have indeed improved since November but the housing market – the crux of the crisis – is still in a freefall. Housing must stabilize before this severe recession ends.

In my eyes, it seems that bailouts and backstops are not addressing the real problem; most TARP money is ending up in bank coffers again and, in most cases, these institutions aren’t lending. The core of this credit crisis lies with the consumer and with housing. If you’re going to fork out several trillion dollars to fix or remedy this crisis then give the money to the consumer – not the banks. The consumer is in a severe bear market with personal assets plummeting over the last 18 months, including real estate, stocks, most bonds and now, possibly his or her job might be next on the chopping block.

Give consumer households $50,000 or more and allow them to clean-up their busted balance sheets, keep their homes (service mortgages) and pay off installment debt. You might not agree with me and, in all fairness, it’s against the tenets of the Sovereign Individual; but what good will all this money do if it’s basically squandered by government and ending up in the pockets of reckless bankers again? I have serious doubts about how the government is dealing with this crisis and I don’t think Obama’s spending package will help much at all despite perhaps growing the economy for a few quarters.

Question: What about the banks? With governments now standing behind their biggest financial institutions, is the worst over?

Comment: The global banking system, for all intents and purposes, is effectively bust or bankrupt. This is especially the case in the United States, Europe and, to a lesser extent, in Japan. More than a dozen emerging market banks are totally bust, including Iceland, the Baltics, Hungary, Romania, Bolivia, Ukraine, Ecuador, Argentina, etc. Not a pretty picture.

I think we’re more than 75% through the worst at this juncture. Governments now stand behind the largest banks in each country and, in some cases, even guarantee entire deposits until 2010 (e.g. European Union). I wouldn’t worry about the largest banks failing at this point. The worst is now behind us.

Question: I know you’re a big gold bug, but isn’t the euro a strong currency and do you think it’s a better hedge against the dollar than gold? Is it too late to purchase gold coins and, if not, where would you suggest I buy coins?

Comment: I have absolutely zero faith in the U.S. dollar and other currencies, including the euro or yen. In the end, all currencies will decline vis-à-vis gold and, in fact, since 2005 the world’s currencies have been losing their relative value to gold bullion. Despite big moves by the yen and euro over the last several years, they pale against gold.

Increasingly, the average man in the street will realize that paper money is not protecting his purchasing power and will revolt against fiat money. At The Sovereign Society, we’ve driven home this message since our first year of publication in 1997. Gold is the only asset in this world that isn’t someone else’s liability; with U.S. interest rates effectively at 0%, paper money now competes with gold, which also pays 0% interest. In a zero percent world, which asset would you rather own? I think the answer is obvious.

The government’s enormous spending plans to rescue the financial system and bailout almost every ailing industry Gold Coin Imageassures dollar destruction because the Fed is now on course to print money like never before to quash deflation. We all better hope and prey that the Fed can drain excess bank liquidity very quickly when this credit crisis ends. If not, we’ll have some serious inflation – much worse than what we saw prior to July 2008.

I think every investor should hold at least 10% of his assets in physical gold. This means coins, wafers or bars. Getting gold coins today is difficult because the U.S. Mint has stopped selling Eagles since last summer while other dealers are complaining about tight supplies amid booming investor demand. I suggest KITCO or First Federal Coin Corporation.

Also, I would not hold or store all of my physical gold at my home domicile. I strongly suggest parking some of your gold in Switzerland, too. Remember, you must report assets outside of the United States and Canada.

I’m convinced we’ll see some sort of government confiscation of gold again just like we did in the 1930s. Back then, FDR did allow Americans to hold a maximum of 100 ounces. I’m not so sure the next confiscation will be so generous.

I hope you found this helpful.

===============================================

2009 Gold Outlook – Gold World

How To Invest in Gold in 2009

By Luke Burgess

The investment markets are yielding to the fact that the global economy will remain weak for the better part of 2009.

As a result, investors will continue to seek safe havens.

Under normal conditions, these safe haven investments would include land and real estate. These assets have intrinsic value; or in other words, their value will never fall to zero. But with falling prices, investing in real estate is out of the question for most people right now. And there’s little doubt that investors will look elsewhere for safety against financial crisis.

The best safe haven asset in the world right now is still gold because it is never considered to be a liability.

And we believe that safe haven investment demand will drive gold prices during 2009. With this in mind, we would like to present a broad overview of Gold World‘s 2009 gold outlook. But before we get into that, let’s review what happened to gold prices in 2008.

Gold Was One of the Best Investments of 2008

In March 2008, gold prices hit a record high of $1,033 an ounce as the gold bull market entered its seventh year of life. This was followed by a normal 18% correction, which drove gold prices back down to $850 an ounce.

Gold prices subsequently rebounded and were once again closing in on the $1,000 level in mid-July. At the same time, however, the fundamental and psychological effects of the slowing housing and credit markets were just beginning to devalue significantly the investment markets across the board.

As a result, many long gold positions had to be sold in order to cover losses from investments in other markets. Over the next several months, this forced selling pressure pushed gold prices down.

Gold prices were also held down during the second half of 2008 as the U.S. dollar enjoyed a +20% rally. Foreign governments, institutions, and banks began buying the U.S. dollar, which despite a legion of problems continues to be the world’s most important reserve currency, as a hedge against domestic economic turmoil.

20090105_2009_gold_outlook.png

These factors contributed to a significant drop in the price of gold, which officially bottomed out for the year at an intraday low of $683 an ounce in October 2008.

Gold prices have subsequently bounced off of the $700 level as major selling has dried up, and fresh buying has come into the market.

Despite three 20% corrections and serious deflation in the market, gold exited 2008 with a positive 5.4% gain for the year. Although subtle, this gain outperformed every major equity index and commodity in the world. Here are just a few examples…

Index/Commodity
Percent Change During 2008
Dow Jones
-34%
NASDAQ
-41%
S&P 500
-39%
TSX -35%
TSX Venture -74%
Oil
-55%
Silver
-23%
Copper
-54%
Gold
+5%

This made gold one of the best investments of 2008.

And the 2009 gold outlook looks just as strong.

Gold’s 2009 Outlook

Despite a bit of downside in the immediate future, we expect gold to have a stellar year.

Global economic turmoil and deflation will undoubtedly continue to influence gold prices in the near-term. A short-term pullback in gold prices from current levels to $800—maybe even a bit lower—is not out of the question. However, we expect gold prices to break new records during 2009.

For our current perspective, we expect gold prices to reach as high as $1,300 during 2009, which would be a profit of over 50% from current levels.

Gold prices in 2009 will be supported more heavily by supply/demand fundamentals than in the previous years of this gold bull market.

As we’ve previously discussed, during the third quarter of 2008, world gold demand outstripped supply by 10.5 million ounces. This deficit was worth $8.5 billion and was the largest supply/demand deficit since the gold bull market of the 1970s.

Official 4Q 2008 world gold supply/demand figures will be calculated and reported later this month. Gold World will report them to you when the data is released.

In the meantime, though, all estimates suggest that there will be another very large deficit in world gold supplies from the fourth-quarter, with investment demand continuing to drive the market.

We expect that a continuing surge in investment demand could push gold prices as high as $1,300 at one point during 2009.

There will likely be a bit more volatility in the gold market in 2009 as more and more speculators come into the market. It is likely that the gold market will experience three or four price peaks (selling points) during 2009.

How to Invest in Gold for 2009

As we expect a near-term drop in gold prices as a result of continuing deflation, we are advising our readers to hold off on any physical gold buying for the immediate future. As previously mentioned, gold prices could dip back down to $800 before recovering again.

Nevertheless, we expect 2009 to be another great year for gold investors.

Good Investing,

Luke Burgess and the Gold World Research Team
www.GoldWorld.com

=================================================

Gold World Special Report – Gold Backed Banking

Special Report – Here’s How To Get Your Own Copy – Simply Subscribe

January, 2009

Gold Backed Banking

It’s a wonder Americans aren’t rioting in the streets.

Not including the $700 billion blank check issued to the banks and signed by the US taxpayer, the sum of liabilities assumed by the US government from the finance industry in the past 6 months alone exceeds 50% of the GDP.

Despite this unprecedented government intervention, the solvency of other every commercial and investment bank is still at stake!

Recognize this all-but-forgotten quote?

“The central bank is an institution of the most deadly hostility existing against the Principles and form of our Constitution. I am an Enemy to all banks discounting bills or notes for anything but Coin. If the American People allow private banks to control the issuance of their currency, first by inflation and then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the People of all their Property until their Children will wake up homeless on the continent their Fathers conquered.”
— Thomas Jefferson, Founding Father, Third President of the United States, and the principal author of the US Declaration of Independence

How bout a drink from the cup of truth…

The Bush administration’s $700 billion bailout plan may keep some banks afloat for the time being. But fundamental problems are still deeply rooted within the financial markets that threaten to bring down the whole system.

The hard truth is that there is no 100% safe place to keep your money.

Physical cash and gold are the safest places to hold your wealth right now. Anyone who tells you otherwise has either a motive or no clue.

Those with the means to do so should be holding at least some physical cash and gold.

Of course, people will debate why you should hold these assets…

Gold is the ultimate in hedging against financial turmoil. But as it stands today, it’s quite rare to find someone willing to trade a product or service for gold. In other words, it’s difficult to spend gold like money, which has been a criticism of owning physical gold for decades.

Today’s digital age allows consumers to move electronic fiat money around at speeds exponentially faster than ever before. This morning I paid my cable bill with my check card. The entire transaction was completed within 5 minutes. Had I paid by mailing a check, it could have taken up 1-2 days to reach the cable company and 3-5 days to clear my account.

So what if there was a way gold could be used as easily as electronic money?

The World’s Only “100% Backed-by-Gold Bank”

You might have a hard time believing this, but you can actually put yourself on a personal gold standard with a new kind of currency, and it’s rapidly growing among gold bugs.

Understand first, this new currency is not legal tender issued by any government. That means there’s no debt, inflation, geopolitical turmoil, or any other considerations normally associated with government-issued currency.

The currency comes in electronic form, but can be used like any other currency in the world today to pay for goods and services, and even settle debt. But there’s one major difference that sets this currency apart from every other in the world:

It’s 100% backed by gold.

In fact, in most cases you can instantly exchange this currency for physical gold at any time… a feature taken away from the US dollar decades ago.

This currency has a new system fully established, making it as easy to use as the current banking industry’s electronic money. Right now, in fact, there are already over 3,000 outfits—and climbing—in which you can pay online using this currency.

How the “Gold Bank” Works

Customers transfer funds from traditional bank accounts into these unique gold-backed bank accounts, and earn interest on their funds prior to placing an order.

Meanwhile, for customers already holding gold and silver in secured (and insured) vaults, their metals are insured and held in specialized bullion vaults. Their metals assets go through an annual audit, and are fully reported to customers.

Once customers’ funds are in the database, customers’ orders are made through its secure online system. Database servers record all transactions and store currency and metal balances.

The Advantages of Using this Currency?

Being backed by gold, the purchasing power of this currency fluctuates in relation to the price of gold.

This means that as the price of gold increases, the purchasing power of the account increases. On the flip side, however, if the price of gold falls, so does the value of the account. Nonetheless, the risk of significant price fluctuation in gold is small compared to the risk of value fluctuations among fiat currencies, especially the US dollar.

And despite a short-term correction, the price of gold has increased significantly over the past five years. So this factor has worked out to the advantage of anyone holding this currency over that period. And with +$2,000 gold on the horizon, holders of this currency should do quite well in the future.

Now you should know that I’m in no way affiliated with this service, nor do I receive any compensation from it. That said…

I Recently Put the Final Touches on my New Research Report…

This report shares all the details about the new gold-backed electronic currency, and it’s yours free after you take a risk-free trial of the Mining Speculator service.

It’s your chance to get in on the biggest and best buying opportunity in junior gold and silver stocks… ever.

That’s right. The junior gold market is about to blast off, after a brutal beat-down sparked by the financial crisis. Truth is, it’s pushed many gold and silver stocks to new lows…

… Which is why you don’t want to wait a minute longer to position yourself in the Mining Speculator’s mining and precious metals portfolio. Our team of analysts scour the earth for opportunities in gold, as protection against the financial uncertainties engulfing the U.S. and world markets.

It’s the ultimate opportunity in a period of great crisis.

You see, as our government continues to lose control of its ability to manage and prop up markets, gold and silver will undoubtedly make meteoric moves that will stun the populace.

And just in case you still harbor doubts about gold, consider this… reported last week in the Financial Times…

“… Investors in gold are demanding ‘unprecedented’ amounts of bullion bars and coins and moving them into their own vaults as fears about the health of the global financial system deepen.”

And since gold bullion is getting harder and harder to come by, more investors are looking for the next best alternative, and that’s…

Precious Metals Mining Stocks

Bottom line: Junior mining stocks will begin to make major moves to the upside, rewarding those who got in early and held on… and those who get in now at what are, frankly, bargain share prices.

You see, nothing can keep gold from doubling up and hitting $2,000 an ounce… causing shares in our mining exploration companies to skyrocket.

I’m talking about junior mining stocks with the potential to double, triple—even quadruple!

Of course, many people have trouble accepting gold as an investment—even now that they’ve witnessed a financial upheaval that’s shaken our country by the shoulders.

But I also know that those who have heard me out-and followed through with my research and recommendations-have made extraordinary, life-altering returns.

Which is why I maintain…

There’s never been a better time-a more crucial time-to protect your portfolio with gold and precious metals.

And for a brief time, we’re making it easy to do just that… for as little as $25.

To get immediate inside access to the junior mining companies poised for major run-ups – the ones I’ve visited firsthand and carefully selected after exhaustive research and quality controls – simply take a trial of my Mining Speculator advisory.

When you sign up for Mining Speculator, I will immediately send you the free report on the new gold-backed currency mentioned in this editorial.

So, for only $25 you’ll begin to receive my Mining Speculator junior stock advisory… one that held an average 212% gain over five years… plus you’ll get our new special report on “The World’s Only 100% Backed-by-Gold Bank.”

All you have to do is click here to get started.

Good investing,

Greg McCoach, Investment Director, Mining Speculator
Luke Burgess, Editor, Gold World

====================================================

My Note: I do not receive any renumeration or commissions for recommending either the Gold backed banking or the Mining Speculator. As Always be sure to do your own due diligence and read the prospectus before making any investments or deposits into financial institutions.-jschulmansr

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Market Alert! Gold and Silver and More…

19 Friday Dec 2008

Posted by jschulmansr in commodities, Copper, Currency and Currencies, Finance, Fundamental Analysis, gold, hard assets, inflation, Investing, investments, Jschulmansr, Markets, mining stocks, Moving Averages, oil, precious metals, silver, small caps, Stocks, Technical Analysis, U.S. Dollar

≈ Comments Off on Market Alert! Gold and Silver and More…

Tags

agricultural commodities, alternate energy, Austrian school, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands, bull market, capitalism, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, communism, Copper, Currencies, currency, deflation, depression, diamonds, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, economic trends, economy, financial, Forex, futures, futures markets, gold, gold miners, hard assets, heating oil, India, inflation, investments, Keith Fitz-Gerald, market crash, Markets, mining companies, Moving Averages, natural gas, oil, palladium, Peter Schiff, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, protection, rare earth metals, recession, risk, run on banks, safety, Saudi Arabia, Sean Rakhimov, silver, silver miners, socialism, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Technical Analysis, timber, U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, Water

My Note: Gold is testing it’s new base of $825 to $840 level, if Gold Hold here then our next target will be $900-$940. After it clears that and yes I am bold enough  to make that prediction, then watch out! I have heard predictions of $1000, $1200, $1600, even $2000 and above. On a seasonal basis Gold usually makes it’s low in Nov. and then has a great rally through the 1st and even 2nd quarters of the following year. My prediction is that we should see Gold somewhere in the $1250 range on this next leg of the rally. Next, the Gold to Silver Ratio is 80-1, historically it has been averaging 50-1. If the ration tightens only to 60-1, then at $1250 gold we should see $25 silver. Platinum, not to be forgotten will resume it’s normal premium to Gold level (see article below) and I think with $1250 Gold we will see $2200 to $2500 Platinum. Bottom line if you haven’t gotten in (invested), NOW would be an excellent time! Now for the latest news… Enjoy! – jschulmansr

Gold and Silver Forcaster Market Alert!

By: Julian D. Phillips of Gold/ Silver Forcaster.com- Global Alert!

Gold has now entered the next and major leg of the long-term gold bull market after correcting down from $1,035.   We believe it is now targeting $1,000, initially.   This will be achieved with pullbacks and periods of consolidation.

 

We believe, too, that gold shares will benefit to a greater extent than gold itself, in the next moves up.  In particular, we feel that soundly based gold “Junior” mining companies will benefit strongly.

 

Please refer to our latest issues for our preferred shares.

 

The move has been triggered by the clear signal from the Fed that the deflationary spiral gripping the global economy is far more serious than realized until now.   The initial impact has already been seen in the precipitous fall of the U.S.$ to over $1.41 so far.   As repeated attempts to re-invigorate the flow of liquidity have failed, the U.S. Federal Reserve had to do more, much more. 

 

q       The Fed’s interest rate cuts and ‘Quantative Easing” will soon be followed by central banks across the world.  

q       The swamping of the global economy with liquidity will stem deflation, but will also badly damage confidence in the world’s monetary system and give rise to explosive inflation.  

q       The time it takes to reflate the global economy will be far shorter than most commentators expect.  

q       The strains that the world will now feel, particularly in the different world economies, will become in many instances, unbearable, so we expect to see restrictive local action in those economies to manage the huge capital flows that will be experienced.  

 

All of these prospects are very positive for gold.

 

We last issued a similar Alert early in September in 2007.   History shows how correct we were!     

 

This alert is to prompt you to act now before the market really takes off.

====================================================

Gold Stock On The Move

By: Brad Zigler of Hard Assets Investor / Brad’s Desktop

Real-time Inflation Indicator (per annum): 10.5%

====================================================

Why The Bull Market is Far From Over

Source: Gold Forecaster.com

 


Some talk of the end of the credit crunch. Some say that the gold bull market has suffered severe damage, which will affect its long-term prospects. If we were to accept these statements then it would appear that the gold ‘bull’ market is over. But are these statements acceptable and do they reflect the true picture underlying the gold [and silver] markets?

To get the proper perspective let’s stand back
and look at the ‘BIG’ picture.


Is the Worst Over?
Credit Crunch Not according to the I.M.F. An assessment by the International Monetary Fund says potential losses as a result of the credit crisis could exceed US$1 trillion. The assessment includes warnings that further losses and write-downs on prime mortgages, commercial real estate, leveraged loans, and consumer finance were likely. The IMF’s Global Financial Stability report put credit market losses at USD945bn, as of mid-March, with more losses expected for months to come.
The report also stressed the fact that the credit crisis was impacting the full spectrum of the financial market in one way or another, with losses distributed between banks, insurance companies, pension funds, hedge funds, and other investors. We note that credit card finance alonside car finance has been included in assets acceptable to the Fed as collateral, which tells us it is not over by a long shot.

U.S. Trade Deficit February recorded a Trade deficit of $62.3 billion against a January deficit of $59.0. This still looks like a $720 billion deficit to us and with oil prices now at over $120 a barrel and Chinese imports still cheaper than local products and flooding in, the prospects are for a worse annual Trade deficit than ever before. And there is no real sign that this deficit is dropping.

 


Oil Prices With OPEC talking of a potential oil price of $200 a barrel something has to be done to stop more than a decline in the $; a stop must be put to the massive global scramble for resources by a combination of the developed world and the emerging world, because prices will continue to rise until they are so high that some will have to do without. This problem is about the massive rises in demand with far greater ones to come.
 
So are there solutions in the pipeline? It seems that the only solutions available to the authorities are existing market controls and proposed market controls on all types of markets, but not on a globally coordinated front. Unless there is global coordination such control will be completely inadequate.

Control of the Markets
Little has been published on the proposed actions by the Treasury department, the Fed and the G-7. But they are actions that will attempt to place important markets under the control of monetary authorities of the G-7. They do not, however, include the interests of the emerging nations on important fronts.

The plan of Treasury Secretary Paulson to overhaul the financial system included a crucial proposal: it would officially transform the Federal Reserve into a “market stability regulator.” The U.S. Treasury has indicated that the Fed could use proposed new regulatory powers to stop, “credit and asset market excesses from reaching the point where they threaten economic stability.” David Nason, assistant secretary for financial institutions, said the Fed could even use its proposed “macro-prudential” authority to order banks, hedge funds and other entities to curtail strategies that put financial stability at risk.

Treasury wants to merge the Securities and Exchange Commission, the US markets watchdog, with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission that is charged with overseeing the activities of the nation’s futures market. A conceptual model for an “optimal” regulatory framework focused was being put forward to achieve three objectives: market stability, safety and soundness with government backing, and business conduct.

A working group was being established between Britain and the United States to sketch out the best way to tackle financial market turmoil. The British government said that it wants to work closer with the US and our other major international partners in dealing with the global financial turbulence. This is a global issue that requires a global response, it said. While it appears the intentions are noble, they are without a doubt ways and means to control markets as the Fed deems fit, inside the USA and the UK.

“The G-7 group of nations agreed to “calm markets showing irrational moves”. But this message did not have enough emphasis or was it ignored as a threat? To reinforce the statement, Jean-Claude Juncker, Luxembourg’s premier and the chair of Europe’s finance ministers, announced on April 23 “financial markets and other actors [had not] correctly and entirely understood the message of the [recent] G7 meeting.” In other words, markets were put on notice that the world authorities may [will and are?] take action to halt the collapse of the US$ and undercut commodity speculation by hedge funds.”

“French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde likened the recent G-7 stance to the 1985 Plaza Accord when the industrialized nations agreed to “coordinated intervention” to drive down the US$.

“Could this be a joint effort by the States and Europe to try to impose a tight trading range on the €: $ movements in the future? We think it is as the €: $ exchange rate moves of the last few weeks have shown [trading between $1.54 and $1.59 against the €]. Much as Central Banks don’t want to ‘intervene’ in foreign exchange markets, it seems that they will do so. Threats will be ignored until turned into action.

“Now we have food crises; governments in the emerging world are proposing other market controls. The issue of food inflation has led some governments to contemplate provocative strategies to lower food prices. India is reported to be considering a ban on trading in food futures, a move designed to stifle what the Indian government regard the speculative influence of hedge funds and financial market traders in the recent surge in commodities prices. As food shortages build up food protectionism is starting in some nations, curtailing exports of food needed internally. This type of control has to become more widespread as food prices hurt nation after nation going forward. With food as well as resource prices running up dramatically action to restrain them will have to be taken on a national basis, which we do not see being followed through on an international front.


“It seems inevitable that more and more controls will have to be imposed on more and more markets. It is inevitable that global movements of capital will have to be retrained at national levels. The world just cannot afford to have the huge wealth funds and trade surpluses running through constrained exchange rates, spreading inflation through higher prices, until local capital and trade markets demand drastic exchange controls. Attempts at intervening in foreign exchange markets to contain exchange rates will attract the switching of huge surpluses into currencies other than the US$. US-based funds can be controlled for sure, but can Asian and Middle Eastern ones? History well testifies that it takes the full impact of a crisis to give good political cause to trigger draconian measures, such as Capital and Exchange Controls.

The Impact on Gold and Silver Prices
While monetary authorities may not be happy to see a resurgence of global demand for gold and silver, those who are able to, will see these mounting controls as a threat to the true measurement of value, which currencies have provided since the last world war. As the dangers become more apparent, the $: € exchange rate will not serve as a determinant of the gold and silver prices, but the falling macro-confidence, fear of more instability, doubts about the value of global currencies, both ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ and uncertainty on a broad global front, will prompt a broadening of the type of global investors attracted to these metals to reflect these fears over time, to ensure that the gold and silver prices reflect global values and counter those measured against controlled values [managed currencies] in other markets.

Certainly, the ‘bull’ market in gold and silver is far from over. The market is metamorphosizing into a new phase promising far higher prices than we even contemplate now.

What prices will gold and silver have then?

“The actual prices of gold and silver will become simply academic.”

============================================================

Gold Marks Two Important Milestones!

By: Martin Zielinski of 8 Stock Portfolio.com

In the past week, gold quietly marked two important milestones.

First, as of Monday the price of gold is now showing a gain for the year. The closing price of gold on December 31, 2007 was $833.75. The price of gold today is $854.60. That makes gold up 2.5% for the year to date. If gold can hang onto this gain into the end of the year, this will also mark the eighth year in a row that gold has had a positive return. For the year and for this decade, gold has humbled its naysayers and rewarded its investors.

Second, on Tuesday the price of gold exceeded the price of platinum. The two metals now trade within a few dollars of each other with gold at $854.60 and platinum at $858. This is a big change from earlier in the year when platinum was trading over $2,200 per ounce, more than double the price of gold. If I’m not mistaken, the price of platinum has been higher than the price of gold for this entire decade. Not since the 1990s has gold been more expensive than platinum. Considering that platinum is thirty times scarcer than gold, this makes a strong statement about the demand for gold.

Disclosure: Author is long physical gold and platinum

=====================================================

A New Place For Investors To Find Silver

By: David Morgan of Silver Investor.com

received a phone call from Tarek Saab, a former finalist on Donald Trump’s television show, The Apprentice. At first I was a bit suspicious because, believe it or not, there are a few flakes floating around the gold and silver arena, and having someone claim to be associated with The Donald did send up warning flags. I must state, however, that perhaps to an outsider, all gold and silver bugs probably seem nuts!

Tarek’s call was followed by an e-mail and this gentleman sounded as bullish on the precious metals as anyone I have met. In fact he began something that many of my friends and associates have talked about for years. He began a peer-to-peer network where buyers and sellers can find true price discovery and deal in physical silver and gold.

His company, GoldandSilverNow.com, is helping solve a “shortage” problem in the precious metals market by linking buyers and seller directly. In a previous article, I mentioned that one of my colleagues in Belgium has put together a method of tracking eBay (EBAY) prices; see Precious Metals Price Discovery.

The current situation is a huge spread between the paper derivative price on COMEX and the actual price paid for silver and gold by retail investors. This was discussed in my article “Silver Arbitrage.” People can take advantage of a price differential between two or more markets, striking a combination of matching deals that capitalize upon the imbalance, the profit being the difference between the market prices.

There is without a doubt a price differential between retail silver product, such as 100-troy-ounce silver bars, and the spot price for silver on the Futures Exchange. In fact, this presents a very good arbitrage opportunity for those willing to take the risk. This is accomplished by selling lots of 1000 troy ounces in 100-ounce-bar increments and locking in the 1000-oz. COMEX bars for delivery. This process is achievable and, as with all arbitrage situations, will find some market participants willing to take advantage of this opportunity.

But GoldandSilvernow.com is not an auction house. The company, described by Saab as a “virtual bullion dealer,” has a simple transaction process: A seller registers and sends a picture of his inventory. The buyer, who must purchase a minimum of 500 ounces silver and 10 ounces gold, wires funds directly to the company, which acts as escrow. When the funds clear, the seller ships his bullion via registered mail, according to strict packing instructions.

Now it must be impressed that this seems to be a rather simple idea, and in fact it is, but to my knowledge it is just beginning to be implemented. Saab’s is not the only one, however; we are seeing more and more Web sites pop up that are selling precious metals.

There is another Web site that has begun business recently that is known as seekbullion.com and has some of the expertise from goldseek.com and silverseek.com. The founder of goldseek.com came to one of my first appearances at the Wealth Protection Conference in Phoenix, Arizona, and we have been friends ever since.

According to their Web site, “SeekBullion.com™ is an online precious metals/bullion auction Web site that deals with trusted pre-screened authorized dealers (sellers). SeekBullion.com™ is a division of GoldSeek.com and SilverSeek.com, Gold Seek LLC, founded in 1995. SeekBullion.com™ aims to create a new marketplace for bullion products at competitive rates, whereas other auction Web sites will charge several percent on auctioned products which increases the cost to both parties. SeekBullion.com™ aims to greatly reduce the cost of bullion auctions with the trust and integrity of Gold Seek LLC, the premier global leader in precious metals information and financial truth.”

A third Internet site that deals in silver is FlettExchange.com. According to its Press Release:

Flett Exchange LLC is introducing a new silver market. 100 oz and 1,000 oz silver bars are now listed on Flett Exchange, LLC, to buy and sell. For hundreds of years silver has been recognized as a superior form of monetary currency and is internationally accepted. It has retained its intrinsic value by backing paper currencies and has many versatile industrial uses. Our 100 oz and 1,000 oz silver bar markets will allow participants to convert cash into silver and silver into cash.

100 oz and 1,000 oz silver bars are proficient way for investors to gain access to a growing silver market. These premium bars are easily shipped, conveniently stored, uniformly stacked and are dependable forms of financial liquidity. Our silver bar markets are live, anonymous, two-way market determined by Flett Exchange, LLC, users. Customer price-negotiation eliminates the premium buyers pay and the discount sellers incur, when transacting with major bullion houses and other auction platforms.

These are just three of the recent websites that have seen an opportunity and capitalized upon it. To be clear I have not personally dealt with any of them, so I am not necessarily endorsing any of them but do find it interesting that market participants and proving the free market still exists. In closing, this will be the last weekly article in the public domain as we are working overtime on the January issue which is by far the largest issue of the year. Those interested in viewing our work in full can click here.

Some readers outside of the U.S. have asked us where can I buy without huge premiums and one place that works with industrial size bars can be found by clicking here.

So, in closing out another year, I wish everyone Peace in the New Year

My Note: If you go to these websites please due your due diligence and check them out before investing or buying- A word to the wise!- jschulmansr

=====================================================

In light of what I just mentioned above, here are some tips-jschulmansr

Ponzi Red Flags!

By: Andy Abraham My Investors Place

It is front page news that Bernie Madoff created one of the largest Ponzi schemes ever….How could sharp investors get sucked in… it is really unbelievable…The question is what can you do to protect yourself…Here are some of my quick thoughts…as well open the floor to all to add their thoughts..

1.Avoid managers who are unknown, or unregulated, or come without good referrals, or haven’t been in the industry long.
2.Look out for an investment manager who wants complete control of your money and does not fully detail what EXACTLY he does… it has to be simple enough that anyone could understand.
3.Check Finra (I added the link-jschulmansr)
4. Understand the EXACT strategy
5. Don’t rely on black box ideas
6. If the returns are too good to be true…( it goes without saying)
7.Have a broker dealer have custody and get copies of your statements directly from the broker.
8.Ask for recent audits…and make sure the accounting firm is a reliable entity…

Some of these basic ideas would have kept you from investing with Madoff… but with consistent 10% returns for years… it almost becomes a self fullfilling prophecy…and as other investors plow money into the idea… the safer you might feel… but look at this list…and I would like to hear your opinions as well…

Andy

 

===================================================
Have a Great Weekend! –jschulmansr
DARE SOMETHING WORTHY TODAY TOO!

 

Noticed something? Take a look at the inflation number in the subhead. The indicator’s gone into double digits as the result of the Fed’s recent move to cheapen the dollar. Gold, not surprisingly, responded with a gap-higher opening Wednesday and a fill-in trading session Thursday.

February COMEX gold has set itself up for a test of the $880 level, a price visited but not held on Tuesday. A close above $880 would be convincing evidence of bullish resolve to work toward the October reaction highs above $900. On the other hand, a close below $803 would indicate that a short-term top is in.

 

COMEX Gold (Feb. ’08)

 

 

It’s that “other hand” stuff that’s so worrisome to gold aficionados.

There’s been a lot more enthusiasm for gold stocks recently. Over the past trading week, mining issues proxied by the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (NYSE Arca: GDX) have gained 6.5%, while bullion has risen just 4%. The performance edge, in fact, has been held by gold equities for more than a month as bullion formed a base and started working higher. That can be visualized by comparing the relative performance of the SPDR Gold Shares Trust (NYSE Arca: GLD) to the Market Vectors portfolio. The bullion trust’s price multiple has fallen from 4.1 to 2.8 since late November.

 

Bullion (GLD)/Gold Equities (GDX) Ratio

 

 

Of the Market Vectors ETF’s three dozen components, Royal Gold Inc. (Nasdaq: RGLD) has been the strongest. And for good reason. Denver-based Royal Gold acquires and manages royalty interests in a variety of production, development and exploration stage projects worldwide. Strong fundamentals such as industry-beating cash flow-to-sales and current ratios, together with a steady dividend stream, have attracted interest in the stock. So much so that Royal Gold shares have appreciated nearly 38% for the year, with 20% less volatility than the Market Vectors portfolio.

 

Royal Gold Inc. (RGLD)

 

 

So, the big question remains:. If Royal Gold has been noticed by investors, is its stock now fully valued?

If you’re a “glass half empty” investor, you’d have reason to be concerned. After all, a 38% return in a market like 2008’s is a gift. The “glass half full” folks, though, are looking at a short-term price objective of $51, another 18% in upside potential.

You can either raise your half-empty glass to bid farewell to 2008 or toast the new year with your half-full glass.

Enjoy your holidays.

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Gold is Starting to Move Up!

17 Wednesday Dec 2008

Posted by jschulmansr in capitalism, commodities, Copper, Currency and Currencies, Finance, Fundamental Analysis, gold, hard assets, Investing, investments, Jschulmansr, Latest News, Markets, mining stocks, precious metals, silver, Stocks, Technical Analysis, U.S. Dollar, uranium

≈ Comments Off on Gold is Starting to Move Up!

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agricultural commodities, alternate energy, Austrian school, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands, bull market, capitalism, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, communism, Copper, Currencies, currency, deflation, depression, diamonds, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, economic trends, economy, financial, Forex, futures, futures markets, gold, gold miners, hard assets, heating oil, India, inflation, investments, Keith Fitz-Gerald, market crash, Markets, mining companies, Moving Averages, natural gas, oil, palladium, Peter Schiff, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, protection, rare earth metals, recession, risk, run on banks, safety, Saudi Arabia, Sean Rakhimov, silver, silver miners, socialism, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Technical Analysis, timber, U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, Water

 

As I make this post Gold is up another $20/oz this morning. As mentioned in yesterdays post this does not bode well for the “short sellers” in the Gold market especially if traders start taking physical delivery off Comex. Is this the beginning of the Short Squeeze? Only time will tell, but I find it very interesting that Gold is continuing to rise as we approach the end of the Dec. contracts. In addition with the Fed’s latest round of intrest rate cuts which show its’ resolve to keep deflation from occuring and to free up the credit markets, Of course long term this will spell inflation even hyper-inflation, which in turn makes Gold in any form the obvious investment choice. Personally I am looking to increase my positions in many of the mid-tier and juniors in the gold mining sector, These companies even with the recent move in Gold are still trading at extremely low levels, and many are trading below book value!  Here are some excellent articles for you today, ENJOY and Buy Precious Metals! Your  children and grandchildren will thank you! – jschulmansr

Jeffrey Christian: Foreseeing Bright Days for Metals – Seeking Alpha

By:  Jeffrey Christian of The Gold Report

A foremost authority on the precious metals markets and a leading expert on commodities markets, CPM Group founder and Managing Director Jeffrey Christian brings some holiday cheer to The Gold Report readers. In this exclusive interview, he debunks doomsayers who await the dollar’s demise, anticipates what may well be a more powerful recovery from recession than most pundits do and foresees bright days for gold, silver, PGMs and specialty metals.

The Gold Report: Perhaps you could begin by giving us your macro overview of the world economy and the outlook as you see it.

Jeffrey Christian: If you go back to 2006 or 2007, our view had been that we would see a relatively short and shallow recession in the first half of 2009. Beginning in late 2007, we said maybe the recession would start earlier, maybe in the fourth quarter of 2008. And then we said maybe the third quarter of 2008. Now we find from the National Bureau of Economic Research that the recession officially started in December of 2007.

We still see it ending around the middle of 2009. But it’s obviously going to be much longer and much deeper than we had expected a year or two ago. Economic problems are much worse. What we really have is a financial crisis, a freezing up of credit availability, which has led to a domino effect of reducing demand for products. We started with a bank panic and a freeze-up in the credit market that has now spilled over into final demand for goods and services across the real economy. It’s proving extremely difficult to treat. I happen to think that the U.S. government policies pursued in September, October and November have not necessarily been the best policies to resolve these issues. We’re looking to see what the new government does after January; a different approach may be more palliative to the economy.

But the bottom line for the overall economy is things are bad, they probably will get a little bit worse, and we’re probably looking at a pretty weak first half of 2009. Our view is that by the second half of 2009, maybe early 2010, you’ll see an economic recovery come along. That economic recovery may be a lot more powerful on the upside than a lot of people expect. One of the things that we’ve seen and have written extensively about over the last few years—and it’s become even more prominent with the government largesse—is an enormous amount of money sitting in cash and cash equivalents waiting for a signal that it’s safe to invest again. All of this money is standing by, ready to invest in precious metals, invest in commodities, invest in real estate, equities and corporate debt. So we think that in the second half of 2009, or whenever the recession ends, you could see a rather rapid recovery in overall economic activity globally.

So that’s our economic overview. I will say this. Everybody in the world is looking at the amount of money the governments have pumped into the market, saying it spells death and destruction for the U.S. dollar and inevitably will lead to hyperinflation. I’m not convinced that’s true and I think that’s a very important point. When you look at all of the monetary liquefaction that’s occurred, it’s definitely going to lead to a lower dollar and higher inflation than we’ve seen over the last 25 years. Still, we may well avoid a total collapse of the dollar and hyperinflation if the monetary authorities of the world effectively are able to sterilize the inflationary implications of this once the recovery starts. We won’t know that for a year or so.

TGR: What do you mean by “sterilize the inflationary implications”?

JC: It means suck the inflationary money creation out of the economy. I’ve spent a lot of time looking at what happened in the period of 1979 to 1983; the really critical point here is in the middle of 1982 we were two years into a double dip recession. At the time it was the deepest recession in the post-war experience. In the middle of 1982, Brazil, Argentina and Mexico were about to default on their government bonds. Paul Volcker called the central bankers of the world together and said, “We have to monetize ourselves out of this recession because it’s about to become something much deeper and harder to solve.”

The governments of the world opened the sluices and flooded the world with money. By December of 1982, the world was out of a recession, auto sales had rebound sharply, Geoffrey Moore’s leading index of inflation indicators, which was basically money supply, had gone off the chart. Gold had risen from $290 in July of 1982 to $500 by the end of the year because everybody was convinced that this was going to be inflationary and that the dollar was going to collapse. By the end of ’82, early ’83, it was clear that we were out of the recession.

Fortunately for Volcker, Reagan (Ronald) and an associate named Regan (Donald Regan, Reagan’s Treasury Secretary) had taken a $40 billion Carter (Jimmy) deficit and turned it into a $200 billion Reagan deficit and needed to finance it. So Volcker said, “That’s easy; Let’s sell $300 billion worth of T-bonds and suck $300 billion out of the economy.” And they did it. So they started selling a tremendous amount of bonds to monetize the debt that the government was racking up and thus sterilized the inflationary implications of their earlier monetary creation.

Then oil prices fell 15% in the first quarter of 1983, from $34 to $29 per barrel, gold prices fell $100, inflation went from about 7% to 3% and is only now getting back up there. We entered a 25-year period of the lowest inflation in a long, long time right when everybody was convinced that all of that money creation would lead to hyperinflation. The government has followed that model every time we’ve gone into a financial crisis since 1982. This time around everything is much bigger and the question is, “Can they do it again on an even grander scale?”

TGR: We didn’t have the fundamental problems back then that we have today. We didn’t have all these derivatives. So many things are so different, and we’ve seen nothing of this magnitude.

JC: Actually, the two biggest and most important differences are that we had extremely high U.S. interest rates then, and a very strong and persistently rising dollar. The dollar was rising then, as it is now, but it has been weak from 2003 until the middle of this year. You’re right—we didn’t have the derivatives and all of this enormous financial liquidity that we have now. And as I said, we’re playing a much higher-stakes game this time around and we’re doing it in a situation with low interest rates and a fundamentally weak dollar. People talk about how strong the dollar has been in the last few months, but it’s still very low compared to what it had been.

Funny, I just got an email from someone who attended a conference I spoke at in Zurich about a year ago. He said this is amazing, that a year ago everybody laughed at me because I said the dollar would be strengthening—but I didn’t say what kind of environment it would be strengthening in.

TGR: Isn’t another difference between the current situation and the one 30 years ago the fact that back in ’79 it was basically the U.S. and the Banana Republics that were having problems? It wasn’t Germany, France, Switzerland—it wasn’t everybody, was it?

JC: No. It was everybody. The U.S. was in a deep recession, Europe was in a deep recession. That’s when they coined the term “Eurosclerosis.” I was at J. Aron at the time and we were doing a lot of gold loans with Eastern European governments, because they needed the money. We found ourselves in workout situations with sovereign debt in Eastern Europe in 1981; whereas Latin America didn’t erupt until 1982. But it was pretty much universal. The U.S. was a bigger part of the world economy back then, too.

TGR: So a decoupling, when you look at the BRIC countries, will help carry us through or avoid an international recession this time around?

JC: I don’t think so. I think we’re in an international recession. The IMF seems to think so. When everybody started talking about how the economies of the world could decouple from the U.S., I said it’s just one of those pater nosters that makes no sense and doesn’t stand up to statistical scrutiny. You’re seeing that. You’re seeing India, China, and all of the other emerging countries really suffering from a decline in demand for their products, much of which are exported into the United States and Europe, and it’s having catastrophic consequences. Granted, there is a movement away from being dependent on the American consumer on a worldwide basis, but it’s a very slow movement and hasn’t progressed far enough to insulate the rest of the world from the problems in the U.S.

TGR: You were talking about Volcker, who issued something like $300 billion of debt—Treasuries— in the ’80s and sold them to cover it and continued to do more of that. At some point, don’t we have to pay that back? Isn’t there a Piper to be paid?

JC: In theory, yes. But there’s a problem with the doomsayers. Look at Jim Grant, who publishes the Interest Rate Observer. I think it was in 1980 that he said, “Oh, my God, look at this $37 billion debt that Carter’s ramping up. This is unsustainable; the Treasury market is going to collapse.” At some point, he probably will be right and the Treasury market will collapse. But in the meantime, we’ve had 28 years that make a $37 billion deficit pale. We wish we could have a $37 billion deficit.

In the meantime, several things mitigate against any imminent collapse. One is the fact that the world economy basically always has been and always will be a giant confidence game, in the sense that there has to be a certain level of confidence to keep things going. The other thing is that for the dollar to collapse, some other currency has to rise very sharply. The problem that the world’s in right now is that for the dollar to fall sharply, investors have to have greater confidence in some other currency. This is really great for gold. It makes you really bullish for gold. Another currency has to rise if the dollar’s going to fall. Ask people “Which one do you have more confidence in?” There’s silence in the room and then people buy gold. No one has any confidence in any of the other currencies or the governments behind them—the Euro, the Yen, the Swiss Franc or anything else.

In a speech a few weeks ago, I said, “The dollar is like your mother. You’ll sit around and complain about her and how she’s so mean and nasty and you’ve got to get away from her. But as soon as you cut your knee, you go running back to her crying.” That’s what’s happening right now in the world economy, in the financial markets. Everybody has been saying for five years that the dollar is toast and the dollar is no good and the U.S. debt is unsustainable. But as soon as you get into a banking panic, everybody converts their money into dollars and Treasuries and CDs held by banks that are guaranteed by the FDIC. Why? Because even though we’ve lost a tremendous amount of faith in the U.S. Treasury, we still have more faith in the U.S. Treasury than we do in, say, the European Central Bank or the Bank of Japan or the Bank of England.

TGR: So if the dollar devalues and some other currency has to rise, it bodes really well for gold. But considering the trillions of dollars of debt out there, is there enough gold for it to be a viable alternative currency? Or will the price for every ounce of gold become something cataclysmic like $3,000 or $4,000?

JC: Yes. If you tried to monetize the debt in gold, or if you tried to go back to a rigid gold standard, you would either have to have $3,000 or $4,000 or $5,000 or $6,000 gold, or you would have to severely contract the world economy back to where we were in, say, the 17th century. But I don’t think that’s what you’re looking at. Rather, you’re looking at some portion of the world’s assets moving into gold as an alternative to currencies. In that situation, you “only” see $1,000 or $2,000 gold.

TGR: Some of us might like $5,000 or $6,000 gold, but maybe not everything else that would be going on with gold prices at that level.

JC: Right. You definitely wouldn’t like everything else going on. It’s interesting. It depends on how a gold standard would be created. The last time we had a “serious” discussion of a gold standard in the United States was during 1980 election campaign. The Republicans actually had a platform plank written by Arthur Laffer to return to a gold standard. What Laffer said was that for the U.S. Treasury notes in circulation, you would have to have 40% of the value of the Treasury notes in gold held by the U.S. Treasury, or a 40% cover. It sounded really stringent, but then you realized that since the 1960s almost all of the bills printed actually had been Federal Reserve notes—not Treasury notes. When asked about that, Laffer said that’s right. What you need from a gold standard is the public’s sense of confidence in it. If you tell them Treasury notes are backed by gold, they’ll be more confident in the value of the dollar. They won’t bother looking at the fact that we’re printing Federal Reserve notes ’til the cows come home. It was a very disingenuous and cynical approach to the American voters.

TGR: So we may see some rush to gold, which may lift it up to $1,000 or $2,000. What about other precious metals like silver? Will that tail along with gold?

JC: I’m actually now in a situation where I like silver, platinum, palladium and the other platinum group metals as well as gold. I like silver for a couple of reasons. One is it’s a financial asset like gold, it is benefiting from the move of investors into silver and gold, and it will continue to benefit from that. But you’ll also see several other things. First off, there is not a lot of metal in the silver market, half a billion ounces in bullion and maybe a half a billion ounces in bullion coins. In gold you have a billion-plus ounces that investors own and another 980 million ounces that central banks own. There aren’t those large enormous stockpiles of silver if you’re looking at it on a dollar value basis. In addition, silver is an industrial metal with some very interesting new uses coming up. It’s losing some of its traditional uses such as photography; but in other uses, such as batteries and electronics, it’s actually growing very sharply and could grow more sharply over the next few years. So I think silver’s got a lot of good things going for it. It’s an alternative financial asset like gold. It’s a smaller, less liquid, more volatile market than gold. And it has the industrial base that gold doesn’t have. So I like silver for those three reasons.

TGR: What brought silver down so much? It got up to $21; now we’re at $9 and change.

JC: The massive amount of leveraged investment in these things has brought all of these metals down. Everybody keeps talking about de-leveraging, but if you ask them to explain it, they can’t. But let me try to explain what I mean when I say leveraged investment. You had hundreds of billions of dollars of institutional money invested in gold and silver forwards, gold and silver over-the-counter options, and gold and silver indexed notes—all written by banks and all with major leverage factors. Some were 10:1; some of them were actually 30:1 or 40:1. As the financial crisis occurred, institutional investors had their credit lines pulled back. Consequently, they had to reduce the amount of investments that they’d borrowed money to make. So a hedge fund that has $10 billion under management and a leverage factor of 20 might have $200 billion of leveraged trades. Then suddenly you don’t have the money to support $200 billion worth of leveraged trades. You have to liquidate most of them because you really only have $10 billion—which is going down in value fast. So there’s been this massive sale of leveraged products. It’s like running for the exit in a theater when somebody yells fire. It’s a very small door, a very illiquid market, and all of a sudden there’s no provision of credit. Everybody’s trying to get rid of their leveraged exposure all at once and these prices have just plunged down. That’s really what it’s been.

TGR: But silver has lost nearly half, while gold is down less.

JC: Silver prices are always more volatile than gold prices. That’s just a fact of life. It has to do with the fact that the silver market is about one-twelfth the size in dollar terms. The other thing is that gold is money and silver is like money. Silver has this schizophrenic personality. It is an industrial commodity, but it’s also a financial asset and you do see more people investing in gold than in silver worldwide right now. As the prices plunged, you have seen an unprecedented volume of physical gold and silver being purchased by investors around the world. So you have this dichotomy, where the price is being hammered down by de-leveraging in the paper market, while people—in some cases the same people—are taking what’s left of their chips and putting them into physical gold. One of the things I think you will see going forward over the next many years is a lot of institutional investors, including sovereign wealth funds and government funds, wanting exposure to gold and silver but not on a leveraged basis where they’re really owning IOUs issued by major banks. They are wanting the physical material.

TGR: Does that hold true for retail investors too? So rather than buying ETFs or Central Fund of Canada (AMEX:CEF), should they be buying actual physical?

JC: It really depends on the investor and their perspective. The high net worth individuals we deal with own some physical gold and silver and maybe platinum group metals that they actually store in their own vaults. They own other material that’s being held for them in depositories in various parts of the world. They also own some ETFs, some options, some mining companies and some exploration companies. So it’s really a diversified portfolio.

Except for these high net worth individuals, we don’t deal with retail investors directly as customers at CPM Group. We talk to them, though, and we do deal with people who supply the retail market. A lot of people are moving into the physical material. Demand in the ETFs also has been strong over the last few months and some of that demand comes from people who can’t get their orders filled for one-ounce coins or 100-ounce silver bars. They’re buying ETF shares instead because they’re the next best thing.

TGR: Does that carry implied leverage?

JC: The ETFs do not. The ETFs are ounce-for-ounce and it’s held in an allocated account. If I’m an investor and want to own a 100-ounce bar, I can’t find one in silver. Northwest Territorial Mint will sell me one if I want to wait 16 weeks for delivery. Silver Recycling Company [TSX.V:TSR] is also selling them and they have it for relatively prompt delivery, but that’s a very new development just in the last few weeks, in response to this market. If I’m an investor and I want to buy 100 ounces of silver and can’t find Maple Leafs or Eagles and I can’t find a 100-ounce silver bar, I can buy a share of an ETF and have it stored for me on an allocated basis through the ETF mechanism.

TGR: Suppose the economy actually does start to turn around, as you’re projecting maybe in the second half of 2009, and you have all this money on the sidelines, which you indicated might flow back into the marketplace rapidly. Does that mean gold will rise through the recovery and then go back down?

JC: Because gold is money and an alternative asset, gold and silver probably will rise in the first half of 2009 in response to the economic distress that we expect at that time. And then as the economy recovers—let’s be hopeful and say it starts in the second half of 2009—you actually might see gold and silver come off some. Platinum group metals, which we’ve only mentioned in passing, are the other way around. They’re really industrial metals, heavily tied to auto sales and so probably will remain weak until auto sales recover. But when that happens, expect platinum group metal prices to rise sharply.

TGR: You mentioned Silver Recycling starting to sell physical silver. What else can you tell us about this company?

JC: For purposes of full disclosure, I personally own some stock in Silver Recycling and they are a CPM Group client. We are financial advisers to them. I can talk about who they are and what their ideas are, what their plans are. I like the company a lot because they’re basically a consolidation play to create a publicly traded company in refining silver from scrap. They’ve identified three initial targets of small privately owned silver recyclers in the United States and are working with them. They have agreements with all three to acquire them and bundle them together, consolidate them and benefit from the economies of scale. And then there are other companies they can target later. It’s a very interesting operation. If you compare them to a silver mining company, they have the capacity to produce silver from scrap without any of the capital costs, country risks and operational risks that are common with a mine. So lower costs, less capital, fewer risks, still producing silver.

TGR: What sort of volume are we talking about?

JC: The first company they have an agreement with has 5 million ounces of production a year. The others have somewhat less. I don’t know the numbers off the top of my head, but I believe that the three companies combined would be producing something in excess of 10 million ounces a year.

TGR: Using that as rough estimate, what publicly traded silver producers come up with 10 million ounces a year?

JC: I think Coeur d’Alene Mines Corp.(NYSE:CDE) is slightly less than that this year, but maybe more than that next year. Apex Silver Mines (AMEX:SIL) and Pan American Silver Mines (Nasdaq: PAAS) probably produce more than that. Silver Standard Resources (Nasdaq: SSRI), which is moving toward opening its Pirquitas mine, will produce more than that when they’re up. There are probably a few other companies—Hecla Mining Company (NYSE:HL), maybe—that I’m going to anger people for forgetting. And then there are some larger diversified mining companies that produce much more than that. Penoles [MX:PE&OLES] is a good example. A lot of people think of Peñoles as a silver mining company and it does produce an enormous amount of silver, but it also produces lead, zinc, copper and gold. Also KGHM and BHP, but they’re not silver companies per say, either.

TGR: What other companies, either in silver or gold, would you recommend our readers take a look at?

JC: Well, we’re really commodities analysts. I’m proud to say I am not an equity analyst. I don’t sit there and tell people which equities to buy on any given day. I won’t tell anybody what to do with their equity investments, but I’ll tell you what I do with mine. I have a diversified portfolio.

Let’s look at the gold market. I have physical gold. I sometimes have futures and options in gold. In the equity side, I have AngloGold Ashanti Ltd (NYSE:AU) shares. I have Goldcorp (NYSE:GG) right now. I don’t have Barrick Gold Corp (NYSE:ABX) right now. I have in the past. I like Barrick a lot. And I have some smaller exploration and development companies in my portfolio. I tend to look for really well managed large companies that are cash flow generators, like Goldcorp, and I also look for exploration and development companies that have the capacity to bring production on stream within a couple of years, they have attractive mines, and management that I find good. So that’s it in gold.

TGR: What are some of these other companies?

JC: It’s not an exploration company along the lines of that, but one name I’ll throw out is Tanzanian Royalty (AMEX:TRE), Jim Sinclair’s company. It’s been hammered down along with everything else lately, but I still like it a lot.

TGR: And switching to silver?

JC: I like Silver Standard. I like Silver Standard’s management a lot. I think this Pirquitas mine that’s coming on stream will be a company maker. I also like Apex Silver Mines; I’ve been involved with Apex since before it actually was officially organized as a company. I think that’s good. Pan American is a very interesting growth story. Coeur d’Alene has been hammered in this market, but it has some very interesting properties, so it could do well. And Hecla is probably a tremendous turnaround story. Management over the last several years has done a remarkably good job in rebuilding Hecla Mining.

TGR: Gosh, they’ve been beaten up, too.

JC: Yeah, everybody’s beaten up. I spend a lot of time these days talking to clients about the difference between value and price. Six months ago we were talking about the fact that the price was over the value of a lot of mining assets and now we’re talking about the fact that the prices are woefully under the value of a lot of these companies. A company like Great Panther Resources [TSX.V:GPR] is a pretty interesting story. Fortuna Silver Mines [TSX.V:FVI] I like a lot. Endeavour Silver Corp (AMEX:EXK) is a good company, an emerging company. I’m afraid to leave out people. I own some Silvercorp Metals [TSX:SVM], a very interesting company with lead and silver mines in China. What I do is I look at companies from a management perspective and a property perspective. First thing is I’ve got to be comfortable with management.

TGR: What about platinum group metals?

JC: I thought platinum was overvalued years ago and it just kept rising and rising, but now it’s clearly undervalued. The cost of producing platinum or palladium at most mines in the world is higher than the current prices. About 50% of platinum in the world goes into auto catalysts, 60% of palladium and 80% of rhodium. With the auto industry and the auto market on their back in North America and Europe, these markets have spiraled down. A lot of investors who poured into the platinum markets partly based on the auto story are now pouring out. I think platinum group metals prices will rise sharply once the auto industry turns around.

And, the auto industry will turn around. Not necessarily because of the situation in the United States, but if you look at the BRICs, for example, you have a tremendous growth in auto sales and it’s fallen. In China it’s gone from 15% per year down to about 8% per year, but that’s a cyclical thing. It will turn itself around and people will start buying more. An interesting thing about platinum is that you don’t have the share market similar to what you have in gold and silver. In North America you have North American Palladium Mines (AMEX:PAL) and you have Stillwater Mining Company (NYSE:SWC). Both are having problems right now.

TGR: With costs exceeding current prices, the issue on the production side is clear, but what’s the problem on the exploration side?

JC: They can’t get financing. And insofar as some of these companies are exploring in South Africa, problems related to electricity and electricity allocations predate the bank panic. South Africa basically has not really invested in electricity-generating capacity for a decade. Those power shortages and outages are going to take many years to solve. They’re saying they’ll pay attention to existing mining companies, existing corporations, existing consumers of electricity. When you’re building a mine, you have to go to Eskom, the state electrical utility. Unless you’re already in the construction phase and have your electricity allocation, they’re just going to say they don’t know when they will be able to supply you electricity. That’s going to delay exploration and development. On top of that, the financial freeze will delay a lot of new capacity coming on stream. That will make the platinum group metals that much tighter.

TGR: As we come out of this recession, many people say certain sectors will emerge faster than others. You talked about how gold’s going to have a nice run up while we’re in recession. What commodities should we expect to come out of the recession first?

JC: I think gold and silver come out first. We’re looking at some specialty metals like ferroalloys—vanadium and molybdenum—because those markets are much tighter. The prices have been beaten up, as have the prices of larger metals like aluminum and copper. But if you look at molybdenum, for example, a lot of its uses are in transmission pipelines for gas and oil, offshore platforms for gas and oil production, and drilling pipe and production pipe for oil and gas. Even with lower oil and gas prices, these areas are going to be very strong over the next five, 10, 20 years. So we think you’ll see a relatively fast turnaround for a lot of these specialty metals, things that are harder to come by, but generally speaking are indispensable in critical economic applications. I think steel will also do very well because I expect the new government in the United States to undertake a major new program to rebuild all of these bridges that are about to fall down. I think you’ll see steel do very well from that perspective.

A graduate of the Missouri School of Journalism (University of Missouri, BJ, 1977), Jeffrey M. Christian chose his course of study because he was interested in chronicling developments in places such as Africa, Asia, Latin America and Central and Eastern Europe (well before they emerged as significant world economies). In 1980, Jeff left his job as an editor at Metals Week, an industry publication—having decided that metals markets he wrote about appealed to him more than journalism did. A year before Goldman Sachs acquired it, J. Aron and Company brought him on board and he soon managed the Commodities Research Group’s precious metals and statistical work there. In 1986, he engineered a leveraged buyout of this group—of which he was then VP—to create CPM Group, which he has led to become a world-class research, consulting, investment banking and asset management company that focuses on the fundamental analysis of global commodities markets. Jeff continues to write extensively.

 

Since the late 1970s, he has authored many pieces on precious metals markets, commodities and world financial and economic conditions. In 1980, he wrote World Guide to Battery-Powered Road Transportation: Comparative Technical and Performance Specifications. Now out of print, it remains a great index of many of the earliest electric cars. In 1981 he wrote one of the first market reports on the platinum metals group. Fast-forward to the 21st century, he and his staff of analysts write six major reports per year for publication and 12 monthly reports plus several more weekly reports and special reports. He published Commodities Rising in 2006. Jeff has pioneered application of economic analysis and econometric studies to gold, silver, copper, and platinum group metals markets, as well as efforts to improve and extend the quality of precious metals and commodities market statistics and research overall. As passionate about his work today as he was 22 years ago, he loves the fact that it gives him a tremendous network of contacts at high levels and a tremendous amount of discretion as to the work CPM Group undertakes. CPM counts among its clients many of the world’s largest mining companies, industrial users of precious metals, central banks, government agencies and financial institutions.

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The Safest Ways To Invest in Gold and Silver

By: Jason Hamlin of Gold Stock Bull

I am often asked what is the best or safest way to get exposure to precious metals. To be sure, there is a dizzying array of options from owning and storing the physical metal yourself to buying junior mining stocks. But the current crisis of confidence, brought on by the collapse of institutions that nobody thought could fail and the most recent $50 billion Ponzi scheme, has investors looking at safety and wealth preservation more than ever.

Buying physical gold and silver gives the owner definite possession, but comes with high premiums and the necessity to store and protect the metal. This can be done via a bank safe deposit box, but adds to the cost of owning the metal and doesn’t provide total peace of mind for many investors that have lost trust in the banking system. Others might prefer to store the gold on their property, hiding it in the floorboards or purchasing a safe. But this potentially puts you and your family members in harm’s way and again does not offer 100% security.

For investors that prefer not to hold the physical gold, yet place a high value on the safety of their investment vehicle not to default, I recommend the Central Trust of Canada (CEF) or its all-gold counterpart, the Central Gold Trust (GTU). Unlike the popular ETFs such as GLD and SLV, these funds do not lease out your gold and they always maintain 90% or more of assets in unencumbered, segregated and insured, passive long-term holdings of gold and silver bullion. Trace Mayer of Runtogold.com, recently published an article detailing the risk of investing in GLD and SLV. James Turk and others have also covered the unanswered questions about these ETFs in earlier articles.

Setting itself apart from the competition, the stated investment policy of the Board of Directors requires Central Fund to maintain a minimum of 90% of its net assets in gold and silver bullion of which at least 85% must be in physical form. On July 31, 2008, 97.6% of Central Fund’s net assets were invested in gold and silver bullion. Of this bullion, 99.3% was in physical form and 0.7% was in certificate form.

Central Fund’s bullion is stored on an allocated and fully segregated basis in the underground vaults of the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CM), one of the major Canadian banks, which insures its safekeeping. Bullion holdings and bank vault security are inspected twice annually by directors and/or officers of Central Fund. On every occasion, inspections are required to be performed in the presence of both Central Fund’s external auditors and bank personnel. Central Fund’s chief executive comments:

Our bullion is stored in separate cages, with the name of the owner printed on the cage, and on top of each pallet of bullion it states Central Fund or Central Gold-Trust. This disables the bank from using the asset from any of their purposes. We also pay Lloyds of London for coverage of any possible loss.

Adding to investor peace of mind, CEF has been around since 1961, is based outside of the U.S. (Calgary, Canada) and is run by a board that is respected in the precious metals community, not a bunch of corrupt Wall Street cronies. Demonstrating transparency that is much needed in today’s investment climate, Central Fund makes regular trips to visit the assets and takes their auditors with them. And you get the sense that you are dealing with honest gold investors and not slick marketing or public relations specialists by taking a quick perusal of the CEF website. While they aren’t going to win any design awards, the website is packed with all of the investor information necessary for due diligence.

On the downside, CEF does come with a hefty premium (currently at 16% to NAV). But this premium is less than the premium you are likely to pay on physical bullion, so it is a non-issue for me. And while it is a greater premium than GLD or SLV, I am willing to pay it since I have about as much faith in those ETFs as I do in the Comex.

Tax implications are another deciding factor. Ian McAvity, founding director and advisor to CEF, said there are definite tax advantages to CEF as opposed to an open-ended ETF. Long term gains in the gold ETFs (and presumably Barclays’ silver ETF) would be taxed as collectibles at 28%, according to the Gold ETF prospectus. As a passive foreign investment company with shares not convertible into bullion, CEF is believed to qualify as a passive foreign investment company [PFIC] to enable the 15% capital gains tax treatment, which can be an important factor for investors with long-term ambitions and taxable accounts, said McAvity.

Lastly, we should consider the performance of the various investment options. Year-to-date CEF underperformed by 3 points versus GLD, but this is largely due to the silver exposure. A more fair comparison would be to use Central Gold Trust. GTU significantly outperformed GLD (14 point gap), which should ease any concerns investors have about a higher premium. CEF and GTU offer not only more peace of mind, but better returns compared to the “trust us, the gold/silver is there” approach from iShares or SPDR. It is also interesting to note that the Gold Miners ETF (GDX) is the worst performer year-to-date. This could change as precious metals prices take off in 2009, but I am inclined to park at least half of my gold/silver investments in a safer place than stocks or funds that can’t prove that they actually have physical gold to back my investment dollars. Year-to-date returns are as follows:

click to enlarge

ETF Chart_1.png

While GTU has outperformed CEF during 2008, I expect silver to outperform gold during the next upleg and thus I own and favor CEF for 2009. Regardless, both of these funds represent sound investment choices during a time when there are fewer and fewer safe places to park your assets. Peace and prosperity to all.

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Mickey Fulp, “Mercenary Geologist”: Look for the Right Share

Structure, People, and Projects

 

Sourcee:  The Gold Report

 

 “Mercenary Geologist” Michael S. (Mickey) Fulp’s 29 years of field experience as an economic geologist evaluating exploration and mining projects throughout the Americas and China make him uniquely qualified to give The Gold Report an intriguing overview of what’s happening now in gold, precious metals and rare earths, and uranium. Mickey, always on the lookout for companies with the right share structure, people, and projects, is a proponent of the “Boot Leather and Drilling” style of exploration. He gives us a quick tour of his take (and favorite stocks) in the sector.

The Gold Report: On your website, it says you look for stocks that can double share price in 12 months or less. Is that still true in this bear environment?

Mickey Fulp: Most definitely. It’s not so easy to pick those doubles now, but I certainly think that should always be the goal in speculative resource stocks. I’ll pick stocks that I think will double in 12 months or less and stick to the way I’ve always traded; that is, when those stocks double, I sell half of my position plus enough to cover my brokerage fee; then I’m playing with the house money with a zero cost basis and half my original position. Then I take that money and do it again on another stock.

TGR: I know that you wear several hats, and I want to start with your global economy hat. What are you seeing in terms of precious metals, and how they’ll be reacting in the bear environment? Can you give me an overview of what you see happening in gold?

MF: I’m looking here on my KCAST (Kitco) gold, and it’s $753 an ounce as we speak. I think $750 is a viable price for legitimate gold producers. It’s unknown how gold will react in a deflationary environment. We’ve never really experienced a deflationary environment in modern times when the price of gold was floating because, when the Great Depression started, gold was $20.67 an ounce. Roosevelt raised that to $35 an ounce in 1933, made it illegal to own privately, and the price of gold was fixed throughout the Depression and until Nixon’s debacle in 1971.

Arguably, we are in a deflationary environment right now. I personally think we’re in a depression. At some point, with the Fed creating money willy-nilly and the U.S. government bailing out all the failed financial institutions, we’re going to look at a hyper- inflationary environment; and we all know that bodes well for the price of gold.

TGR: We’ve talked about the bailout here in the U.S., but there are also forms of bailouts happening in Europe and China. If every government is inflating its currency …

MF: That’s very true.

TGR: Worldwide, doesn’t that kind of equalize?

MF: Well, you can make that argument, but it’s hard to know which currency is going to come out on top on this. Probably none because they are all fiat with no hard asset basis. Certainly, fiat currencies in nearly every country are in a world of hurt right now. We just saw the Chinese devalue its currency—what was it—6% this week? Yes, it does even out, and the price of gold will rise with hyper inflation.

TGR: Let’s switch over to silver and other precious metals. Are you focusing just on gold or do you think there’s also a play for silver, palladium, platinum?

MF: I don’t have a strong opinion on platinum and palladium because they are so driven, no pun intended, by the auto catalyst market and with the downturn in automakers worldwide, that does not bode well for those two metals. On the other hand, they certainly have value as precious metals. Silver is also a bit of both. It’s both an industrial metal and has some value as a store of wealth. One thing I’ve looked at lately (and I’ve actually been a buyer of physical silver for the last couple of months or so), is the gold-silver ratio. Whenever it gets high, as it is right now, I consider that a buying opportunity in silver.

There’s been a lot of press about silver not being available, but silver is available in large bars. You can buy a 1,000 ounce bar through COMEX and take delivery on a January contract now—for somewhere around 25 cents over the spot price, if you pick the right broker. When I see the gold-to-silver ratio go above 80, I consider that a buying opportunity for physical silver.

TGR: We always hear that silver has more swings than gold and it will lag gold when gold starts to go up.

MF: It does have wider swings and that gives it some more volatility on both the upside and the downside. I look at that as a way to make money. Because of its volatility, it could lag gold on the way up; if it does, then the ratio gets out of whack. Historically, the ratio was 16:1. When gold and silver were both floated on the open market that ratio grew. Over the past 10-15 years it has been somewhere between about 40 and 70. As we speak right now, it’s 80.

So you can play sort of an arbitrage; the increased volatility of silver compared to gold gives you some leverage, much the same as playing junior resource stocks gives leverage on both the upside and the downside vs. the price of gold. Junior resource stocks will go up and down with much more volatility than the price of gold, so that’s how we end up with the proverbial five or ten baggers. In this environment, those five and ten baggers can be negative five and ten baggers. But at some point, resource stock valuations get so low that good companies—especially those with current gold production or near-term production, positive cash flow, and in particular, takeover targets—are ridiculously undervalued.

TGR: In your newsletter, Mercenary Musings, do you talk about buying physical gold and silver or do you focus on equity investments?

MF: I focus on many things, including stocks, educating investors, markets and macroeconomics, commodities, libertarian ideals, my field adventures, etc. I’m not a certified financial analyst. I’m a geologist with nearly 30 years experience. I basically tell people what I have done, or am doing, in the market. For instance, when I find a stock I like, I may say I’m accumulating this right now; I like this about that, etc. So my newsletter is quite varied.

TGR: We were talking earlier about palladium and platinum and I noticed that one of the companies you have in your technical analysis is Avalon Ventures Ltd. (AVL: TSX-V). I believe that’s a rare metals company.

MF: Yes, it is.

TGR: Would you talk a little bit about your viewpoint of rare earth elements, kind of global economics, and the importance it will play or the downside it will face given the recession that we’re all going through?

MF: That’s a very good question. Rare earth elements are increasingly used for high-tech applications, specifically super magnets and batteries. They are in short supply because in the late ’80s and early ’90s, the Chinese developed a very robust deposit in Northern China and, basically, they cut out all the established world producers by drastically lowering prices. They now supply over 90% of the world’s rare earth elements. These metals are critical for hybrid cars and large commercial air conditioning systems; they’re also used extensively in high-definition LCD TVs and electronics technology. For example, cerium provides the red color for your little LCD headlamp. So there’s a bunch of varied high-tech uses for these metals. Certainly demand for those things is dependent on a viable world economy.

Avalon’s in an interesting position, as it has a unique deposit in the Northwest Territories about hundred kilometers East-Southeast of Yellowknife. The Thor Lake deposit is concentrated in the heavy rare earth elements. Rare earth elements are kind of a mixed bag of 16 elements (15 plus yttrium), and they always occur together. Avalon’s deposit is unique in the fact that, in this series of 15 elements on the periodic chart from atomic number 57 to 71, the heavy rare earth elements are much more rare than the light rare earths.

As a result, they are in greatly increased demand and they trade at very high values, hundreds of dollars per kilogram in some instances. So I’m bullish on the long-term prospects for Avalon. It’s really been beaten up lately with a year high of $1.97, a year low of about 35 cents; currently it’s at 40 cents. It made a rally a couple of months ago and has gone south since then. The key to Avalon is they have a deposit that is potentially economic outside the Chinese supply monopoly. They are being courted as we speak by Japanese auto makers because the Japanese cannot depend on the Chinese for a supply of rare earth elements. The Chinese have put on export quotas and taxes because, as much as possible, they want to keep all their production in China and develop processing facilities there. They consume about 60% of the world’s rare earths.

TGR: You said earlier the key to the deposit of Avalon is to make it viable outside the Chinese monopoly. It sounds to me that, given the two facts you stated immediately afterward, it’s going to be clear imminently.

MF: It’s going to be clear soon because Avalon is working on a resource estimate as we speak that will include drilling through last winter. They drilled this summer with great success, and they will come back with a second resource estimate and a process metallurgical report, probably by the end of the first quarter of next year, and then move on to a pre-feasibility study. So, assuming we have a viable world economy—and, arguably, that’s questionable right now—I would look at Avalon as in play, if you will, or looking to secure an off-take agreement for its production with a Japanese company sometime in 2009.

TGR: When will it start producing?

MF: I think they’re still about four years away from actually constructing a mine and getting it into production. The climate up there is northern boreal forest and water or ice, so for the construction phase, it’ll be a seasonal operation.

TGR: Are there other potential prime geological territories that might produce these rare earth metals?

MF: The area that comes to mind, of course, is Mountain Pass, which is in southeast California. It dominated world production until it was cut out by the Chinese. It’s just sitting there, held by Unocal with something like 20 million tons of nearly 8% to 9% in dominantly light rare earths, so this is a bit of a different market than what Avalon would be courting because Thor Lake is a heavy rare earth element deposit. There’s also a deposit in Australia, Lynas Mining’s Mt. Weld, concentrated in neodymium and it could dominate the supply of neodymium.

TGR: Is that in production?

MF: No, but it is in development and pending completion of concentrating and materials plant facilities. The rare earth elements themselves are not particularly rare, but the deposits that concentrate them in minable quantities are extremely rare worldwide.

TGR: I also see, when looking at your Mercenary Musings online, that you had a recent Musing regarding Animas Resources (TSX.V:ANI). What caused you to write about that specific company?

MF: Well, as with most of the things I cover, I put my Mercenary money where my mouth is. I was an IPO investor of Animas Resources. I still hold the warrants. It’s a story I have followed since inception. I have a bit of a mantra about a good company; it’s got to have the right share structure, people, and projects. And, in my view, Animas has all three of those.

It’s a Carlin-type system in Northern Mexico, having produced 650,000 ounces of gold in the 1990s, and then shut down in 2000, because of a depressed gold price of $300 an ounce. It shut down with an historic resource, not 43-101 qualified and I need to make that clear, of 718,000 ounces. It has the geologic characteristics of Carlin-type systems in northeast Nevada and, in my Musing, I list 10 of those.

It’s never been drilled deep, and it’s never been drilled systematically under gravel cover adjacent to the 12 small deposits that were mined in 22 separate pits. So it’s historically been a district—and Animas controls the entire district—that has produced from small deposits. Management at Animas includes a “who’s who” of senior-level geologists who have worked for major mining companies. One of its consultants is Odin Christensen. Odie was Chief Geologist for Newmont Mining Corp. (NYSE:NEM) in the Carlin Trend when it first was drilled deep. And huge, deep high grade gold deposits were found, which really made the Carlin Trend. I see the same geological characteristics at Santa Gertrudis. The management is good; low number of shares outstanding—less than 27 million shares; very tightly held. It hit an all-time low at 29 cents today; it’s very encouraging that the entire management and controlling group of this company has never sold shares or exercised options. They obviously like the project and intend to play it out.

It’s strictly an exploration play. I don’t like very many exploration plays right now; but, with working capital at $4.5 million, they can go at least to early 2010 and give Santa Gertrudis their best shot. If they find big, deep, high-grade Carlin-style deposits, they will be in play as a takeover candidate. If they don’t, they have other options. There are lots of small miners in Mexico, small junior companies mining less than 100,000 ounces a year in that region. Animas has six different projects in the district and it could JV some of them out to people that want to mine on a smaller scale.

TGR: We covered gold, precious metals and rare earths, and uranium. It’s been quite a tour around the world here very quickly.

MF: I have one other gold company that I like—PDX Resources Inc (TSX:PLG), formerly called Pelangio Exploration.

TGR: What’s caused you to focus on this one?

MF: I followed the story for quite some time, did my detailed due diligence, and became a shareholder. PDX owns 19 million shares of Detour Gold (TSX:DGC); the Detour Lake gold property in Northern Ontario. Detour Gold, at a $700 gold engineered pit, has 10.75 million ounces of gold resource. That’s measured and indicated resource. That’s always important—measured and indicated. It has some additional inferred, but I don’t pay much attention to inferred resources.

If you do the math, Detour Gold is now being valued at over $15 per ounce of contained gold. PDX Resources owns 42.4% of Detour Gold shares and their valuation now is $10.50 an ounce. Detour Gold is in the final throes of a feasibility study. It was scheduled to be out by the end of this year; I do not know if they’re presently on schedule for that, but they become a takeover candidate with a positive feasibility. You have leverage there for PDX shares vs. Detour Gold shares, at a 30% discount per ounce of gold in the ground.

TGR: But you’re saying Detour is the potential takeout candidate?

MF: Yes, it is.

TGR: Isn’t this what you mentioned earlier, where the only potential company that would take them out because of their share structure is PDX?

MF: No, PDX Resources originally spun out 50% of the deposit to a new entity, Detour Gold, a Hunter-Dickinson company and now exists only as a shareholder of Detour Gold. It is the minority shareholder, and is comprised of expert explorationists. So recently in September, it spun out all its other properties into a new exploration company, which is Pelangio Exploration; thus PDX holds its Detour Gold shares solely for investment purposes. With 10.75 million ounces, this is a huge deposit; it was a past producer of Placer Dome. It failed because of a low gold price in the previous downturn in the gold business. I think you’re probably looking at a bidding war for Detour Gold.

Goldcorp (TSX:G) (NYSE:GG) is the obvious candidate and we saw what Goldcorp did with its acquisition of Gold Eagle in the Red Lake District. Kinross Gold Corp (K.To) (NYSE:KGC) is a possible suitor. With this size of deposit, you’ve got to throw in the big boys—Barrick Gold Corp (NYSE:ABX), Newmont, Anglo, Gold Fields Ltd. (NYSE:GFI)—and some of the mid-tier gold companies looking to become major producers. It’ll get taken out at the Detour Gold share price, which is now trading at $15 per ounce of gold in the ground, while PDX is currently trading at $10.50. That’s 30% discount, so you have leverage to the upside with PDX Resources. Make sense?

TGR: That’s a great and very interesting play. Mickey, thank you for your time.

Michael S. “Mickey” Fulp, who launched MercenaryGeologist.com in late April 2008, brings more than 29 years of experience to his role as an exploration geologist. Specializing in geological mapping and property evaluation, Mickey has worked as a consulting economic geologist and analyst for junior explorers, major mining companies, private companies and investors. Check out his website for free access to the Mercenary Musings newsletter, as well as technical reports. Future offerings will include a premium paid subscription service that provides early and special access to subscribers. You may contact him at mailto:Mickey@MercenaryGeologist.com.

=============================================

Now Gold is currently up over $35/oz. What are you waiting for? Time to get on board- Good Trading! – jschulmansr

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Bob Moriarty: Laying Out a Feast for Bears and Gold Bugs-Gold Report

07 Friday Nov 2008

Posted by jschulmansr in commodities, Copper, deflation, Finance, gold, hard assets, inflation, Investing, investments, Jschulmansr, Latest News, Markets, mining stocks, oil, precious metals, silver, Uncategorized

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Bob Moriarty: Laying Out a Feast for Bears and Gold Bugs
Source: The Gold Report  11/07/2008

 In this exclusive interview with The Gold Report, 321gold.com founder Bob Moriarty provides abundant food for thought about the continuing U.S. financial debacle. Unlike many other observers, he foresees a short-term rally in the stock market but paints a bleak longer-term picture. He expects the ship of state to sink like the Titanic, with precious metals holdings and other “things” the only safety nets on board. Not one to whitewash his opinions, Bob seems to be right more often than not but also freely admits it when he makes mistakes. As he puts it, “When my theories don’t match the facts, I revise my theories.” We conducted the interview over a week ago and all of his predictions seem to be coming true. So far.

The Gold Report: When you talked to us in early August, you correctly predicted the market crashing in October. But we’ve also seen gold go since then. When do you think gold and the market will turn around?

Bob Moriarty: In terms of the Australian dollar, the British pound and the Canadian dollar, gold has been hitting new record highs, so gold still has its function as the security of last resort. We’ve had so much deleveraging, with giant hedge funds selling everything they could sell and the only thing left was gold. But the next move in gold is going to be a major move and it’s going to be up.

TGR: When do you see that happening?

BM: October is always a really disastrous month for the market, but I think we’ve seen the bottom in the general stock market, in gold and in gold shares.

TGR: Are you saying that we’re going to see physical gold, gold shares and the market all increase simultaneously?

BM: Correct.

TGR: Wow. At the same rate?

BM: I don’t think so. There’s been something like $3.2 trillion poured into the system. When people think back—I mean, this is an absolute disaster. We have taken the entire banking system, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and AIG, out of the hands of the fools on Wall Street who were running them and handed control over to the fools in Washington. That’s the scariest thing I’ve ever heard. If Wall Street couldn’t run Fannie Mae, why does Washington, DC think it can?

TGR: Given that sentiment, why would you expect the stock market to increase?

BM: You constantly run from one extreme to another. You have extremes of emotion on both the bull side and the bear side. If you look back to 1929, there was a giant crash the end of October. The market recovered 50% of what it lost and then continued down through 1932. The market goes up and it goes down. From the gold and gold shares point of view, the decline is entirely artificial. There are probably 100 gold juniors selling for less than the cash they have on hand. They could close the doors and you’d make a profit.

TGR: One of the things we’re reading as part of the reason gold has fallen is that, amazingly enough, the U.S. dollar has actually been the currency of choice.

BM: It has been, but you have to understand why the dollar is going up. I’ll go back to my favorite figure—$596 trillion in derivatives. Maybe 9,000 hedge funds were operating in derivatives as if it was a giant casino and they were using Monopoly money. Once things turned south and interest rates started going up and mortgages started defaulting, they had to deleverage. This meant selling all of the positions they could and paying off the loans. But to do that, they need dollars.

So it’s entirely artificial. If you look at the rise in the dollar since September 27, it increased 12% or 13% in one month. Nobody can conduct business when the currency you use goes either up or down that much in a month’s time. That’s disastrous to business.

TGR: But it made a fairly rapid downturn earlier in the year. Is going back up now a correction?

BM: The correction is going to be that it will go back down, and I think it’s going to be a catastrophic decline. Barron’s had a piece recently talking about Taiwan now selling Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bonds and Treasury bonds. If that continues or if other countries start doing it, it will be catastrophic for the dollar. I think the U.S. is going to default entirely within the next nine to 10 months. Here’s the situation. The U.S. is bankrupt. As anybody who looks at our debts and obligations should be aware, sooner or later we’re going to have to declare bankruptcy.

TGR: Why wouldn’t we just print more money to pay our way out of it?

BM: If you go into a store and put down $100 bill and the guy says, “We don’t take $100 bills,” what do you do?

TGR: You pull out your credit card.

BM: What if he doesn’t take your credit card? Here’s the flaw and there’s some really scary things going on that nobody thinks about. The U.S. government incurred about $3.2 trillion worth of obligations in the last month and to my knowledge, not a single person asked the really simple question: “Where’s the money going to come from?” There are only three choices. You take it from the taxpayer in taxes and that’s not an alternative. Or you borrow it from the Chinese and that’s not an alternative. Or you print it—but you can only print it as long as people are willing to accept it. The Middle East has already started to talk about not wanting to use the U.S. dollar anymore in currency transactions. It’s too dangerous. So we’re a lot closer to a default than anybody in government wants to admit.

TGR: If we default, what’s the impact on the worldwide market?

BM: Strangely enough, the worldwide market’s going to be fine. The U.S. can become a third-world nation. Everybody acts as if U.S. consumers are the only consumers in the world. Well, the Chinese can consume and the Japanese can consume and the Europeans can consume. For the last 60 years, since Bretton Woods, we in the U.S. have been able to consume by writing checks that we had no intention whatsoever of paying and the rest of the world has woken up to the fact that they’re paying for our excess. We’re waging a $3 trillion war in Iraq; we don’t pay for it; the rest of the world does. We borrowed every cent. And will never pay it back.

TGR: If the U.S. defaults, though, and so many of our bonds are held offshore, those then become illiquid or worth nothing. Wouldn’t that have an impact on the worldwide economy?

BM: Yes, but it will be a temporary thing. If your brother-in-law is a crack addict, doesn’t have a job and his home goes into foreclosure, it’s bad. But it happens. Businesses go bankrupt and countries go bankrupt. Essentially, Iceland went bankrupt a few weeks ago.

TGR: And some of the South American countries have waived their debt entirely.

BM: Argentina did it in 2002. They’re on the verge of doing it again. Believe it or not, Switzerland and Kuwait are on the verge of going bankrupt. It is really bizarre. And it all goes back to derivatives being totally out of control and everyone believing that it was $596 trillion worth of value when, in fact, it was a giant shell game.

TGR: Given your prediction, how does that jibe with the stock market increasing? Are we going to rise through the next nine months until we go bankrupt or what?

BM: Yes. Bonds are paper assets, nothing but a promise of payment. Stocks are not paper assets; when you own a stock, you own a real percentage of a company that hopefully is doing something productive. Inflation is not prices increasing, which is what we’ve been led to believe for many years. Inflation is actually an increase in the money supply. When you start increasing money supply the way the U.S. government has over the last month, it results in higher prices for real goods. So you can have this situation where the stock market is increasing in nominal terms but could actually be losing in real terms. Governments always have two different ways to destroy their currency. They can do it through deflation, which is what we’re going through right now, or they can do it through inflation. The government’s doing their best to inflate the dollar and it will go into hyper-inflation. That is just bizarre to me. A $3.2 trillion increase in money supply in a month. That’s a lot.

You have to deal with a real currency under real rules and real management and provide real products to people who really intend to pay for them. When you get away from that, you create maladjustments or “mal-investments.” There was an enormous investment in U.S. real estate because real interest rates were actually negative. You could borrow 100% of the value of a home. Everybody in the system encouraged people to do this, so they did it. Then instead of getting rid of some of that mal-investment, the U.S. government comes in and says, “We’ll take the very worst cases of management, like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and AIG, and reward them for doing stupid things.” Well, that doesn’t make any sense; it just makes it worse. Everybody on Wall Street’s still going to be getting their Christmas bonus this year, but now it’s courtesy of the American taxpayer.

TGR: If you have anything left in your portfolio, how do you begin to prepare for the scenario you’re laying out, a potential default by the U.S. government?

BM: You stay away from U.S. obligations entirely. A lot of people like Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters) have recommended for years that in times of calamity you go for T-bills and gold. T-bills will be totally worthless someday. No fiat currency lasts forever. They’re not real. I’m suggesting that the financial chaos we’re in now is far worse than anybody can anticipate, even me. And a default by the U.S. government actually would be a good thing because then we could and sit down and say, “Okay, 1) what caused this in the first place? And 2) what do we need to prevent it from happening again?” The solution is quite simple. That’s to go back to a gold standard. But if you go back to a gold standard, you have to have much less government. That would be a really good thing.

TGR: Given that we’re already on a fiat currency and can print more, will our ship just go down with the presses rolling or will it extend itself longer—a slow sinking as opposed to diving straight to the bottom?

BM: There’s a really good chance of a catastrophic failure with some of the things that are happening in the Middle East now. There could be a catastrophic freeze-up of the banking system and they could just close the banks worldwide and say, “Okay, we’ll shut everything down for two weeks and sort it out.” There’s a lot of pressure from France and China to fix the problem. I find it very encouraging that people are calling for a new Bretton Woods because that is the solution, to go back and fix what Bretton Woods didn’t do correctly in the first place—and that was to provide an honest gold system.

TGR: Refresh us a bit on Bretton Woods.

BM: In 1944 representatives of the 44 free countries in the Allies sat down to establish some financial system for economic post-war rebuilding. They met in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire. Their agreement tied the U.S. dollar to gold and all of their currencies to the dollar in fixed exchange rates. It made the dollar literally as good as gold, so all of the other currencies were as good as gold as long as the dollar was good. But then we started inflating the currency because we could. We also exported our inflation to other countries. And then the Vietnam War came along and in 1971 Richard Nixon told foreign governments they could no longer exchange dollars for gold. What they should have done at Bretton Woods was have everybody go to a gold currency and instead of issuing pesos or francs or reals or dollars, issue units in terms of grams of gold. That way, everybody’s one gram note would be a gram of gold and you would have had total interchangeability among currencies.

TGR: If we could have a do-over of Bretton Woods, is there currently even enough gold anywhere to be able to tie it the world’s currencies?

BM: Everybody makes the mistake of thinking that you need a lot of gold for a gold standard. The only thing gold does in a gold standard is give the currency discipline, but that’s why it’s so valuable. If you have discipline with the currency, you don’t have the kind of chaos we have today. Without discipline, you end up with $596 trillion worth of derivatives and nobody in either finance or government saying, “Hey, by the way, that’s a really bad idea.”

TGR: If it’s not tied to physical gold and we rely on people to show discipline, aren’t we setting ourselves up for the same thing happening again?

BM: No. I’m not saying you wouldn’t use gold. To restore confidence in the system, you have to use gold. But let me give you an idea of how out-of-control the system is today. If you took the 80 tons of gold that the U.S. supposedly has on deposit in Fort Knox and West Point, that would be $200 billion worth. We have created $3.2 trillion in paper money, 16 times as much, in just the last month. That means it might take a gold price of $50,000 to $250,000 an ounce to actually clear the system, but we do have to clear the system. We have to go back to honest money. If you’ve ever played poker, and somebody sits down and pulls out a Sears credit card, he’ll bet on every card because he isn’t playing with real money.

TGR: And that’s effectively what’s been going on. So you’re saying you see a rally coming in the Dow, which strangely enough we’re hearing from other people, too, but it’s a short-term rally.

BM: We’re not going to go to new highs. The problem with variable-value currencies is the value of the currency changes every day. The Dow won’t go to new highs in real dollar terms. It will go higher just because it’s way oversold right now in terms of gold and gold stocks. Historically they are the cheapest they’ve ever been. Gold stocks are trading at the same value that they would trade if gold was $200 today. There’s one particular silver stock I know that’s selling for 20 cents on the dollar.

TGR: Who’s that?

BM: Silver Bear Resources Inc. (SBR:TSX). It closed at 20 cents today. It has a market cap of $7.6 million and $32.6 million in the bank. It’s selling at 430% over market cap. I’ve got Triex Minerals at 338% of market cap, International Nickel at 331% of and Uravan Minerals, 300%. These are just unbelievable. Back in 2001, a few stocks—maybe 10 or 20 stocks—sold for less than the cash they had on hand, but now 100 of them selling for less than cash on hand. The value of these stocks is not based on their economic value, but on the fact that everybody’s dumping them like crazy. Look at ATW Gold Corp. (TSX.V:ATW). They have two mines and two mills in Australia, are going into production in March and will produce 50,000 to 100,000 ounces a year and you can buy the gold for about $3 an ounce. That’s nuts.

TGR: So you recommend investors get real gold. Do you like ETFs at this point?

BM: Actually, I’m anti-ETF, whether gold or silver. The financial situation is so dangerous that it’s no longer an issue of market risk, nor of whether they have the physical metal. It’s an issue of counterparty risk; that’s the danger today. Is the institution issuing the ETF going to exist if gold goes up $100 a day? Physical gold in hand, not in the safety deposit box, not where governments can get their hands on it, is an insurance policy. It’s still working today even though gold is cheap. Resource stocks and physical holdings are what you want as we head into hyper-inflation.

TGR: Would you avoid even the Central Fund of Canada (CEF:AMEX)?

BM: No, the CEF is brilliant. I do like that and that is not an ETF. There’s no counterparty risk there that doesn’t exist with any stock. I would even recommend investors have shares in multiple brokerage companies because it’s entirely possible for one of them (like Lehman Brothers) to go bankrupt. You might still have the assets; you just can’t touch them for six months or a year.

TGR: When do you see gold climbing? You say it’s at the bottom now, so it could go any day.

BM: I believe so. It’s going to surprise everybody because it’s been hammered so much, but it’s totally artificial. The price of gold has nothing to do with supply and demand. It’s been hammered by the hedge funds closing their positions and buying dollars to pay off their loans. As soon as the hedge funds let up in their buying, the dollar will tank and gold will go up. A lot of money sitting on the sidelines is looking for a safe place to go. When people start understanding you can buy $100 million worth of mining company for $50 million, they will start doing that.

TGR: So that’s the specific catalyst. It’s not that the hedge funds will stop buying, but will stop selling.

BM: Correct. I think they will do that. The last couple of trading days in October tend to be very positive, so it looks as if we sneaked through the worst of it. If we’re not at the bottom yet, we’re very close to it.

TGR: Some are speculating that the downtrend will continue through the fourth quarter as people readjust for 2008 results.

BM: The reason there are horse races is everybody has opinions. I’m not giving you fact. I didn’t walk down a mountain with it. It isn’t carved on tablets. It’s my opinion and I could be wrong and I’ve been wrong in the past. Just not very wrong. And not very often.

TGR: Would you care to comment on a few of our sponsors? How about Animas Resources (TSX.V:ANI)?

BM: Animas has an entire mining district in Mexico, a very important mining district, and will be releasing assay results any day now. The stock is a third of what it was a month ago and the company’s twice as good as it was a month ago. They will recover. I was encouraging them a year ago was to accelerate plans for getting into production and given today’s environment, I’m sure they’re thinking about that.

TGR: How about Miranda Gold Corp. (TSX.V:MAD)?

BM: I was out there two weeks ago. Miranda Gold is in a very big district in the Cortez Trend in Nevada. If they were a pure exploration company, I would be leery, but they’re not. They use the JV model, so they don’t spend their own money. They have JVs with five or six different major companies who spend the money, so Miranda has the ability to have a piece of the big find, but they’re not spending their money. And they have $9 million in cash and a market cap of $6 million. I told them, “Look, guys, you actually are not using your money wisely. Sitting in Canadian dollar T-bills is dangerous. You need to start buying up some of the juniors that are good plays and you need to start buying your own stock.” But you can buy dollar bills from Miranda for 66 cents.

TGR: How about Rare Element Resources (TSX.V:RES)?

BM: Rare Element’s an interesting situation. Somebody I know who is the expert in rare elements says there are two plays there. An alkaline gold deposit is being drilled by Newmont, who’s the major partner—and again, Rare Element is not spending its own money; Newmont is spending the money. And Rare Element is drilling a rare element deposit that could be economic, with the emphasis on the “could be.”

TGR: When will they know?

BM: Soon, very soon. Rare elements is really a spooky area; the chemistry, the mineralogy—just all kinds of issues. It’s a very difficult field. Even though the demand for rare earths is going through the roof, just because you’ve got a deposit doesn’t mean you have an economic deposit. I can’t say it’s economic, but they’re bringing in the guy I think knows more about rare elements than anyone else in the world, and he will be able to say whether it’s economic. Rare Element is another company that’s real good, well cashed up, and has Newmont spending the money.

TGR: How about Pediment Exploration Ltd. (TSX.V:PEZ) (PEZFF:OTCBB)?

BM: Pediment has three or four really good projects. They’ve got a deposit in the Baja that is absolutely a production story and I’ve been beating on Gary (Freeman) to get this damn thing in production. I think they have about $18 or $20 million in cash, so they’re very well cashed-up. They have another deposit up in the Sonora district, a mine and a mill that I think will be getting into production, too.

TGR: Do they also use the JV model?

BM: They do on some of the projects. They have JVs on two or three deposits that we don’t hear that much about but that have significant potential The project down in the Baja they’re doing strictly themselves, and also the project at La Colorada, although they might use contract miners to put it into production.

TGR: Any comments on First Majestic Silver Corp. (TSX:FR) (PK SHEET:FRMSF)?

BM: One of the best-run, soon-to-be mid-tier silver companies in Mexico and I happen to really like silver and I happen to really like Mexico. First Majestic is a great company.

TGR: One of the companies coming across our radar screen a lot just because people are following it is Great Panther Resources (TSX.V:GPR).

BM: Great Panther. I love them. I was the first newsletter writer to visit the project; I saw it literally as Bob Archer was negotiating for it. They are another good, soon-to-be mid-tier silver producer. They have two or three producing projects there now. They’re increasing their resources, well cashed-up, excellent management, and the same thing’s true of Endeavor Silver.

TGR: What about Evolving Gold Corp. (TSX.V:EVG) (OTCBB:EVOGF)?

BM: Interesting situation. They will be coming out with assays in the next week or two on an alkaline deposit up in Wyoming. It’s a diatreme, which is a fairly predictable volcanic structure and they’ve already had some excellent drill results. If the new drill results confirm the old drill results, they probably have a pretty good size deposit. Alkaline systems like Cripple Creek in Colorado tend to be very big.

Evolving Gold went out and got financed a year ago based on a theory that they had an extension of the Getchell Trend and the Carlin Trend in Nevada. They really over-promoted it, but they did get cashed-up and they brought some new management in. The new management said the problem there in Nevada is that they are very deep and expensive holes. One hole out of 20 actually hits something, but when it hits something, it’s a monster deposit. They decided they would be better off with a JV model on that.

TGR: Do they have a joint venture partner in mind?

BM: Actually, they put the Nevada project on the back burner. They’re doing some drilling, but the deep drilling—sometimes 3,000 or 4,000 feet—is very difficult from a technical point of view and very expensive. They have drilled some holes this year and are still waiting for results, but I would far rather see that as part of a JV.

TGR: When we talked a few months ago, looking forward to see what sectors would emerge or survive, you indicated energy and focused specifically on oil. What do you think today, and where do renewables and alternative energy fit in?

BM: Alternative energy is viable. I had mentioned oil only because our entire system is based around oil. Like natural resources or gold or silver or metals, any energy investment should be safe for the future. Peak oil is very real and the Chinese are expanding like crazy and using more energy all the time. Natural gas is good, coal is good, nuclear is good. Renewables, unfortunately, are a 3% solution. Wind power’s another 3% solution. It’s never going to be anything but a 3% solution. Guys like Boone Pickens can spend millions encouraging people to invest in wind power, but our current infrastructure will not support it. It’s not just a question of investing in the wind power; you have to invest in the infrastructure as well and nobody ever wants to talk about that.

TGR: Where’s a comfortable range for oil?

BM: Somewhere in the $80 to $110 range. But that will be increasing because peak oil, in fact, is real. Oil production peaked in May of 2005 and peak oil also means peak food.

TGR: So you’d say this is a time to hunker down.

BM: It is time to hunker down, but I would like to say there are some very encouraging things. The Fourth Turning, written about 10 years ago, actually forecast this chaos that’s coming. And the fellow’s point of the book was that better times are coming. You go to absolutely insane extremes—which I think everybody can agree we have—and then you go back to sanity. Even during the depression, families came closer together because they had time for each other. They may have not had money to do things they were doing before, but it did bring the families closer together. Money is the journey; not the destination.

Bob Moriarty and his wife, Barb, launched 321gold.com as a private website seven years ago, when they were convinced gold and silver were at a bottom and wanted to help others understand what they needed to know about investing in resource stocks. Since then, they’ve introduced a second resource site, 321energy.com. Bob travels to dozens of mining projects a year. He was one of the first analysts to write about NovaGold, Northern Dynasty, Silver Standard, Running Fox and YGC Resources, among others. Prior to his Internet career, Bob was a Marine F-4B pilot at the age of 20 and a veteran of over 820 missions in Viet Nam. Becoming a Captain in the Marines at 22, he was one of the most highly decorated pilots in the war.

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Share the Wealth / Wealth Redistibution – A New Definition!

27 Monday Oct 2008

Posted by jschulmansr in 2008 Election, Barack Obama, commodities, deflation, Finance, gold, hard assets, inflation, Investing, investments, Joe Biden, John McCain, Jschulmansr, Markets, mining stocks, oil, Politics, precious metals, Presidential Election, psychology, Sarah Palin, silver, U.S. Dollar, Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on Share the Wealth / Wealth Redistibution – A New Definition!

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agricultural commodities, alternate energy, Austrian school, banking crisis, banks, bear market, bear stearns, Biden, bull market, capitalism, central banks, commodities, communism, Copper, deflation, depression, diamonds, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, economic trends, economy, Election 2008, financial, futures, futures markets, gold, gold miners, hard assets, heating oil, inflation, investments, market crash, Markets, mccain, mining companies, natural gas, obama, oil, Palin, palladium, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, Presidential Election, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, protection, recession, risk, run on banks, safety, Share The Wealth, silver, silver miners, socialism, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, timber, U.S. Dollar, volatility, Water, wealth, Wealth Redistribution

Subject: Redistribution of Wealth

Today on my way to lunch I passed a homeless guy with a sign that read
“Vote Obama, I need the money.”… I laughed.
   

Once in the restaurant my server had on a “Obama 08” tie, again I laughed
as he had given away his political preference… just imagine the coincidence.
When the bill came I paid cash but decided not to tip the server and explained
to him that I was exploring the Obama redistribution of wealth concept. He stood
there in disbelief while I told him that I was going to redistribute his tip to someone
who I deemed more in need (the homeless guy outside).
The server angrily stormed from my sight.
I went outside, gave the homeless guy $10 and told him to thank the server inside
as I decided you could use the money more than him. The homeless guy was happy…
and I felt like a successful politician.
 At the end of my rather unscientific redistribution experiment I realized
the homeless guy was grateful for the money he did not earn,
but the waiter was pretty angry that I gave away the money he did earn
even though the recipient clearly needed money more than him.

 

 

I guess redistribution of wealth is easier to swallow in concept than in
practical application!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

LOL TOO FUNNY! – jschulmansr

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50 Reasons Why We Are Living In The END Times

08 Monday Sep 2008

Posted by jschulmansr in bible, Christian, Jschulmansr, Latest News, Prophecy, Religion, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

bible, End Time, End Times, Israel, Jerusalem, Jesus Is Coming, proof, Prophecy, Prophetic, Prophetic News, Scriptural Proof, signs, The Rapture, The Return, truth, Warnings

The Bible says we cannot know the time of the Lord’s return (Matthew 25:13). But the Scriptures make it equally clear that we can know the season of the Lord’s return (1 Thessalonians 5:2-6): Furthermore, the Scriptures give us signs to watch for — signs that will signal that Jesus is ready to return.

read more | digg story

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Dare Something Worthy Today! – Why aren’t We Using This Technology Now?

19 Tuesday Jun 2007

Posted by jschulmansr in Alternate Fuel Sources, Dare, joyner, Jschulmansr, Something, Today, Water, Worthy

≈ Comments Off on Dare Something Worthy Today! – Why aren’t We Using This Technology Now?

Dare Something Worthy Today! – Why aren’t We Using This Technology Now?

This was sent to me from my good friend Mark Joyner.
Mark Joyner’s Atomic Mind Bombs Blog: See his blog post yesterday June 18th 2007:
http://www.markjoyner.name/logs/

I too ask the question if it is as easy as this and it has been proven,
then why aren’t we using this technology now?

Check Out these 2 Videos:

The First Video a toy car and 100% water for fuel…

Now, you should know that there are a great many full-size hydrogen fuel cell cars already in existence, but there are “problems.”

First, the cars are ridiculously-expensive.

Next, many of the hydrogen-based fuel initiatives right now rely on fossil fuels as a source for harvesting the hydrogen from water. (Yeah, I know.)

Finally, there is the issue of distilling the water required for hydrogen production. The fuelling station I have requires distilled water. Tap water will destroy it.

Are these limitations too difficult to surmount?

I don’t think so …

The cost of the cars, obviously, can be brought down radically with mass production.

As for where to get the hydrogen, why don’t we create a massive network of renewable energy generators (solar, wind, hydroelectric, geothermal, etc …), start mass producing hydrogen, and store it?

If you think about it, we could have solar panels on our roofs that are constantly generating hydrogen and storing it. Then your home could run off a fuel cell, too.

As for the distilled water, well, solar powered water distillation technology already exists.

So, what’s the hold up?

Why aren’t we aggressively switching over to a new infrastructure immediately?

I mean – immediately. Not “maybe in 10 years or so …”

The Second Video: Man Runs Normal Car on 50% Water Based Fuel…

Again Source: Mark Joyner’s Atomic Mind Bombs Blog: May 13th 2007:
http://www.markjoyner.name/logs/

I would like to get opinions from as many people as possible about this before commenting further (please pass it on). Please leave replies below:

To head off a few questions …

1. No, I have no financial interest in this company whatsoever (I wish I did!). I heard about them through a local news program and decided to investigate for myself. In the course of getting to know each other we’ve all become fast friends (really cool, super-intelligent, and laid-back guys).

2. Yes, I know this experiment was not ideal, but it’s the best I could do on short notice. We’ll be doing it again in the near future under more controlled conditions (at an ASTM certified lab in the U.S.).

As Mark put it “So, what’s the hold up?

Why aren’t we aggressively switching over to a new infrastructure immediately?”

I mean – immediately. Not “maybe in 10 years or so …”

“Is it the cost?”

“Surely we can all re-allocate some of our “defense” budgets to the creation of an infrastructure that will remove one of the root causes of war?”

“Ah, that’s just crazy talk.”

Not So Crazy if you ask me! – jschulmansr

***This is something I too will keep you updated on in the future!***
jschulmansr

Dare Something Worthy Today – Call for Increased Mainstream Hydrgen Fuel Cell Use!

As Always,Be Blessed,Stay Blessed,Share Your Blessings with All!

Dare Something Worthy Today!

JSchulmansr

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