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Are You Ready To Rock?

17 Tuesday Mar 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in ANV, Austrian school, AUY, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, bull market, CDE, CEF, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, deflation, Dennis Gartman, depression, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, economic, economic trends, economy, EGO, Federal Deficit, financial, Forex, FRG, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GG, GLD, gold, gold miners, GTU, hard assets, HL, hyper-inflation, IAU, India, inflation, investments, Jeffrey Nichols, Jim Rogers, John Embry, Keith Fitz-Gerald, majors, Marc Faber, market crash, Markets, Michael Zielinski, mid-tier, mining companies, monetization, Moving Averages, NAK, NGC, NXG, PAL, 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, SLW, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, SWC, Technical Analysis, TIPS, U.S., U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, XAU

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ANV, Austrian school, AUY, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, bull market, CDE, CEF, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, deflation, Dennis Gartman, depression, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, economic, economic trends, economy, EGO, Federal Deficit, financial, Forex, FRG, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GG, GLD, gold, gold miners, GTU, hard assets, HL, hyper-inflation, IAU, India, inflation, investments, Jeffrey Nichols, Jim Rogers, John Embry, Keith Fitz-Gerald, majors, Marc Faber, market crash, Markets, Michael Zielinski, mid-tier, mining companies, monetization, Moving Averages, NAK, NGC, NXG, PAL, 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, SLW, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, SWC, Technical Analysis, TIPS, U.S., U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, XAU

As I have mentioned before, we are going to see the calls that the stock market bottom is in place and everybody is going to give up on precious metals. Yesterday, I showed you proof of my predictions on the Stock Market side, today’s articles include proof of the hasty exit of all the so called “Gold Bulls”. Being a contrarian by nature this is a heaven sent gift! So I ask are You, yes You! Ready To Rock? This is the time to BUY, BUY, Buy! Gold, Silver, Platinum and Paladium. Oh- don’t forget to start putting in your positions in Oil too! By the end of the year as I said yesterday, $1250 – $2000 Gold, $25-$75 Silver, I think approximately $250 – $400 Paladium, and Platinum $2250 -$3000. Dare Something Wiorthy Today Too! Buy Precious metals and Oil , all forms from Stocks, to Bullion, to Coins, and to Etf’s. Each one will truly bring you returns you’ll be able to brag about to your children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. Plus even if they all don’t rise so high you still have yourself a nice little hedge against the Hyper maybe even Stagflation! Get in with at least 10% – 30% of your portfolio dollars, cost average if you like, the important thing is to get in and get in now! Are You Ready To Rock? As Always, Good Investing! – jschulmansr

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

Claim a gram of FREE GOLD today, plus a special 18-page PDF report; Exposed! Five Myths of the Gold Market and find out:

·        Who’s been driving this record bull-run in gold?

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold…

·        When and How to buy gold — at low cost with no hassle!

Get this in-depth report now, plus a gram of free gold, at BullionVault

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

 A new site that is in pre-launch state that will become a virtual world – chat, shop, play, videos, etc. Anyways they are giving free shares (that should become actual company shares) to anyone who signs up and more shares if you refer people.

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

Follow Me on Twitter and be notified whenever I make a new post!

 

 

 

Schedule automatic tweets, Thankyou for following me messages and much more! Be More Productive- Free signup… TweetLater.com

 

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Gold Timers are Running for the exits, which is a good sign – MarketWatch

By: Mark Hulbert of MarketWatch

ANNANDALE, Va. (MarketWatch) — Call it the retreat of the gold bugs.

 

Over the past three weeks, the editor of the average gold timing newsletter I monitor has hastily jumped off the bullish bandwagon. And a not insignificant number have taken the occasion to furthermore jump onto the bearish bandwagon.
At least from the point of view of contrarian analysis, this is good news for gold.
           Chart of 38099902
Consider the Hulbert Gold Newsletter Sentiment Index (HGNSI), which reflects the average recommended gold market exposure among a subset of short-term gold timing newsletters tracked by the Hulbert Financial Digest. The HGNSI’s latest reading is minus 16.5%, which means that the editor of the average gold timing newsletter is recommending that his subscribers allocate 16.5% of their gold portfolios to shorting the market.
Three weeks ago, in contrast, the HGNSI stood at 60.9%. So in just 15 trading sessions, the average recommended gold market exposure has fallen by more than 77 percentage points.
What sins did gold bullion  commit to elicit this huge of a reaction? Failing to rise convincingly above the psychologically important $1,000 barrier, apparently: Spot gold in the futures market was able to close above that level for just one day (Feb. 20), and only barely at that ($1,001.70). And it then dropped.
Still, gold didn’t fall off a cliff. It’s currently just 8% below its Feb. 20 close, after all. Declines of that magnitude typically do not lead to such marked shifts in sentiment from bulls to bears.
Just take sentiment in the stock market. The Dow Jones Industrial Average ($INDU:

To be sure, the 4.5 percentage point drop in recommended stock market exposure is itself surprisingly modest, which is one of the reasons that contrarians suspect that the bear market is not yet over. (Read my March 2 column.)
But the plunge in gold sentiment has been as exaggerated as the drop in stock sentiment has been muted. Contrarians therefore believe that gold’s recent decline is more likely to prove a correction within a longer-term up move than the beginning of a major bear market. End of Story
Mark Hulbert is the founder of Hulbert Financial Digest in Annandale, Va. He has been tracking the advice of more than 160 financial newsletters since 1980.
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My Note: Are You Ready To Rock? Now for Silver…
Gold bullishly buoyed by news: – Got Gold Report- Stockhouse.com
By: Gene Arensberg of Gold Newsletter.com

Silver taking cues from gold

ATLANTA — Whether or not gold actually responds to it short term, potentially bullish news surfaced for gold and silver this past week. The Swiss National Bank stunned the European capital and forex markets, hammering their own currency in the first salvo of probable competitive currency debasement across the pond. Who would have thought the Swiss – Switzerland! – would fire the first shot in the battle to weaken their own currency?

Apparently the price of chocolate and fine watches is going up in Zurich.  

Swiss currency intervention, along with the U.K. currency printing presses in overdrive are sure to lend more, not fewer investors to seek a safe haven from the paper currencies of the world. Swiss devaluation of the franc is an open invitation to other central banks in Europe to follow suit. 

Sooner or later the purchasing power of government paper of all descriptions should be taking a back seat to gold on such news. Gold, the one pure “currency” and always trusted measure of value for over four millennia, cannot be printed by fiat and can’t be produced fast enough to flood the market with too much of it, no matter the price.       

To add supreme insult to injury, the Swiss are also apparently capitulating to international pressure and will now relax their formerly air-tight bank secrecy regulations to the great consternation of anyone who holds funds there in special, formerly uber-secret, numbered accounts.

China Syndrome meets “Rollover”  

This past week Wen Jiabao, China Prime Minister, reportedly said in remarks following his annual press conference, “We have lent a massive amount of capital to the United States, and of course we are concerned about the security of our assets.” 

So the Chinese prime minister is publicly voicing the obvious. China probably now wishes it had invested a bit larger portion of its nearly $2 trillion in forex reserves in gold metal rather than in government paper promises. Rumors of Chinese gold buying are already crawling around the internet. With statements like that from high Chinese officials those rumors will grow wings.  

Jiabao continued, “To speak truthfully, I do indeed have some worries… I would like, through you (the press), to once again request America to maintain their credit worthiness, keep their promise and guarantee the safety of Chinese assets.” 

China certainly knows that if it were to sell off their U.S. bonds too quickly they would only be hurting themselves, but isn’t it rather bullish for gold to know that the Chinese are openly worried about their approximately $1.4 trillion in U.S. debt instruments? Is it more or less likely that China will be adding a higher percentage of gold to their now tiny reserves knowing that? It won’t be all that much of a wonder should gold seem to have a firmer bid under it for some time to come under the circumstances.

Moving on to other anecdotal news, think people are not changing their behavior during this global financial crises? Well, consider that according to news reports gun sales in the United States are at 20-year highs and some types of ammunition have become scarce as people become more fearful of the potential for civil unrest. We have a bullet bull market underway. 

Among other gold bullish news, last week we saw a confrontation in international waters between a U.S. intelligence gathering ship and the Chinese navy. In yet another test of the new U.S. president Russia provocatively said they “could use bases in Cuba and Venezuela” for their long-range strategic bombers and that’s just a taste of what the wire services were serving up. 

Gold and silver more or less moved sideways over the past week. The Big Markets staged an old fashioned bear market short covering rally up from way-oversold, but the news sure seemed more, not less supportive for precious metals since the last Got Gold Report. It makes one want to dive into the indicators to see what they are, well, indicating.     

Gold ETFs 

Gold once again tested the $890s and was once again repelled upward from that zone. That is the third time in six weeks that gold has tested the $890s and bounced. As we note that, we also have to take note that cash prices turned in a lower high for the week and a slightly lower low. The $890s have now become the gold bull’s defensive zone and the bear’s prime target. (See the gold chart linked below for more technical commentary.)  

SPDR Gold Shares, [GLD], the largest gold ETF, added another 27.83 tonnes of allocated gold bars to its gold holdings over the past week. So far this year GLD has added a stunning 276.59 tonnes of gold to show 1,056.82 tonnes of gold bars held for its investors by a custodian in London. As of the Friday 3/13 close the metal held by the trust was worth $31.5 billion.

Source for data SPDR Gold Trust

Repeating from the last full report two weeks ago: “Clearly the majority of GLD investors are not convinced there is material weakness ahead for gold – at least not yet.”

Indeed, as gold retraced from the $1,000 mark to the $890s, instead of abundant selling pressure forcing GLD to redeem shares and sell gold, we have to take note of the opposite. It is quite clear that investors have so far taken advantage of the dip in gold prices to add more GLD, not less.    

So that the price of each share of GLD tracks very closely with the price of 1/10 ounce of gold (less accumulated fees), authorized market participants (AMPs) have to add metal and increase the shares in the trading float when buying pressure strongly outstrips selling pressure. The reverse occurs when selling pressure overwhelms buying pressure.

Barclay’s iShares COMEX Gold Trust [IAU] gold holdings declined a small 0.92 tonnes to 66.86 tonnes of gold held for its investors. Gold holdings for the U.K. equivalent to GLD, Gold Bullion Securities, Ltd. added 1.23 tonnes over the past week, to show 130.89 tonnes of gold held as of Friday, reversing a similar reduction the week prior. 

All of the gold ETFs sponsored by the World Gold Council showed a collective increase of 29.54 tonnes to their gold holdings to 1,229.42 tonnes worth $36.7 billion USD as of the Friday 3/13 cash market close.

SLV Metal Holdings

Silver consolidated its downward thrust, turning in an “inside week” with a slightly lower high ($13.41) and a slightly higher low ($12.48), while bouncing neatly off the popular 50-day moving average which is currently rising through the $12.40s. The white metal closed the week on an advance with a last Friday 3/13 trade of $13.20 on the cash market. (See the silver chart linked below).  

For the week metal holdings for Barclay’s iShares Silver Trust [SLV], the U.S. silver ETF, held steady at 7,898.37 tonnes of silver metal held for its investors by custodians in London. SLV reported a reduction in metal holdings of 159.42 tonnes the prior week.   

Source for data Barclay’s iShares Silver Trust.

Still no new custodian for SLV

As of Friday, March 13, SLV still had not filed an amendment either naming an additional custodian or increasing the amount of silver storage available under the current custodian agreement with JP Morgan Chase London. 

We remain vigilant, because there is very little “room” under the current custodian agreement for SLV to add additional silver as we reported in the last Got Gold Report. There is no doubt ample silver available in London (for now) from one of the other London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) members with large metal holdings in London warehouses, but so far we don’t know whom SLV will name as the additional custodian or sub-custodian and we don’t know how much silver “storage” that new custodian will be able to provide.    

U.S. banks dominate the COMEX  

While those of us with a long bias can take some comfort in the larger reductions of net short positioning by the commercial traders (covered in the full Got Gold Report), we need to remember that as of right now the short side of the market is literally dominated by just two big U.S. banks. When the regulators, the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), consent to allow just two traders to take overly large positioning on either side of a particular market, it leads to mistrust and angst among the public and market commentators. Such overwhelmingly large positioning also provides ammunition to conspiracy-minded commentators who constantly blame price movements of silver (and gold) on deliberate action by sinister members of a secretive “cartel” intent on suppressing the price of gold and silver.

Some of the individuals advancing the notion of a conspiracy to suppress precious metals prices are bright, articulate and bring compelling evidence and research to the discussion regularly. We’ll undoubtedly have much more about that in future reports, but for now it has become increasingly difficult for the industry and regulators to ignore the so-called “conspiracy camp” and its growing legions of members.     

Regardless if one believes in menacing cartel theories, and regardless of whether or not one takes the opposite view, (that most or all of the very large net short positioning of the two very large U.S. banks in silver futures are actually legitimate hedges offsetting long positions in OTC markets on behalf of the various clients of the banks), the current positioning by the two banks in COMEX silver futures is an example of an enormously concentrated futures position.  

According to the latest Bank Participation in Futures and Options Markets report, as of March 3, 2009, two U.S. banks held zero long and 30,838 contracts short with silver then at $12.83 and with 93,051 COMEX 5,000-ounce contracts open. So, just two banks held net short positions equal to 33.14% of all the open contracts on the largest futures bourse in the world.      The chart below shows the net positioning of the U.S. banks relative to the total number of all open contracts for silver on the COMEX, division of NYMEX. 

According to CFTC COT reports, during that 3/3 reporting week all COMEX commercial traders as a group – all of them – were collectively net short a total of 38,704 contracts, so just two very large U.S. banks held a shocking 79.68% of all the commercial net short positioning on the COMEX. The graph below shows the two U.S. banks net short positioning relative to all COMEX commercials net short positioning since 2006. 

 

 

               One potential problem with allowing overly-large positioning by just a few players is the potential for those elite traders to get into the position of having to trade in a particular direction in order to protect their position. The incentive for a trader running 1,000 contracts to try to move the market with the weight of his own trading would certainly be much less than a trader (or two traders in this case) with 30,000 contracts of one-way exposure.   

Sure, the COMEX is not the only market for silver in the world, but trading on the COMEX does indeed influence the trading for silver on all the other world markets, including the larger OTC markets based primarily in London. And sure, if silver were to be man-handled too low for too long buyers, acting in their own self interest, would step in and buy it back up to reality over time. Haven’t they already done exactly that in the real physical silver markets given the insanely high premiums for most physical silver products? 

One could argue the silver market is relatively small, and therefore prone to manipulation because it doesn’t take all that much capital to move the futures markets. Perhaps over short periods of time it actually is. But, this report leans toward the idea that the silver market is global and deep enough to discourage even the larger players from messing around with it too much or too long. 

On the other side of that silver coin, we also believe that the amount of physical silver available for investment by new investors is rapidly approaching a critical inflection point in the not-too-distant future. If we know it, anyone who would short the market knows it even better. We have to conclude that anyone who would consistently attempt to manipulate the silver market downward in the face of obvious and material supply constriction is either very stupid or is a phantom of coincidence.    

With that in mind, in an era when regulators allowed the Bernard Madoff scam to go unchecked for many years, even though they were handed the scamster on a silver platter by others in the same business eight or nine years ago, a scam ruining hundreds or thousands of innocent investors; in a period when ANY silver product being sold on the street carries with it extremely high premiums due to overwhelming public demand; in a period when investors have had their confidence severely shaken in all markets; can the COMEX continue to allow such one-sided and concentrated trading action to continue? Perhaps more to the point, shouldn’t the COMEX explain publicly why it has allowed that very concentrated short positioning by just two U.S. banks? 

Perhaps with more clarity would come more confidence.  

Got Gold Report Charts

2-year weekly gold

2-year weekly silver

3-year weekly HUI

2-year weekly Gold:HUI ratio

That’s it for this excerpt of the full Got Gold Report. GoldNewsletter.com subscribers enjoy access to all the Got Gold Report technical analysis and commentary as well as Brien Lundin’s timely advice and analysis of specific resource companies.

Until next time, as always, MIND YOUR STOPS. 

The above contains opinion and commentary of the author. Each person should study the issues carefully and, as always, make their own informed decisions.

Disclosure: The author currently holds a long position in iShares Silver Trust, net long SPDR Gold Shares and holds various long positions in mining and exploration companies.  

 

Are You Ready To Rock? – Good Investing! – jschulmansr
=========================================================

Follow Me on Twitter and be notified whenever I make a new post!

Schedule automatic tweets, Thankyou for following me messages and much more! Be More Productive- Free signup… TweetLater.com

A new site that is in pre-launch state that will become a virtual world – chat, shop, play, videos, etc. Anyways they are giving free shares (that should become actual company shares) to anyone who signs up and more shares if you refer people.

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

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

 

Claim a gram of FREE GOLD today, plus a special 18-page PDF report; Exposed! Five Myths of the Gold Market and find out:

·        Who’s been driving this record bull-run in gold?

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold…

·        When and How to buy gold — at low cost with no hassle!

Get this in-depth report now, plus a gram of free gold, at BullionVault

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

 

Dow Jones Industrial Average

$INDU 7,225.89, +8.92, +0.1%) dropped a comparable amount — 8%– between Feb. 26 and March 9. But the average recommended stock market exposure among short-term stock market timing newsletters fell over this period by a grand total of just 4.5 percentage points. That’s a far cry from the 77 percentage points by which gold sentiment fell during its recent 8% decline.

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How to Catch A Fool

16 Monday Mar 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in ANV, Austrian school, AUY, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, bull market, CDE, CEF, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, Dan Norcini, deflation, Dennis Gartman, depression, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, economic, economic trends, economy, EGO, Federal Deficit, financial, follow the news, Forex, FRG, Fundamental Analysis, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GG, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, GTU, hard assets, HL, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, IAU, India, inflation, Investing, investments, Jeffrey Nichols, Jim Rogers, Jim Sinclair, Joe Foster, John Embry, Jschulmansr, Junior Gold Miners, Keith Fitz-Gerald, Latest News, majors, Make Money Investing, Marc Faber, market crash, Markets, Michael Zielinski, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, monetization, Moving Averages, NAK, NGC, NXG, oil, PAL, 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, SLW, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, SWC, TARP, Technical Analysis, Ted Bultler, TIPS, Today, U.S., U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, XAU

≈ Comments Off on How to Catch A Fool

Tags

ANV, Austrian school, AUY, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, bull market, CDE, CEF, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, deflation, Dennis Gartman, depression, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, economic, economic trends, economy, EGO, Federal Deficit, financial, Forex, FRG, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GG, GLD, gold, gold miners, GTU, hard assets, HL, hyper-inflation, IAU, India, inflation, investments, Jeffrey Nichols, Jim Rogers, Joe Foster, John Embry, Keith Fitz-Gerald, majors, Marc Faber, market crash, Markets, Michael Zielinski, mid-tier, mining companies, monetization, Moving Averages, NAK, NGC, NXG, PAL, 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, SLW, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, SWC, Technical Analysis, TIPS, U.S., U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, XAU

A new week and I have a new warning… What I mentioned before in previous posts is starting to happen. We are now starting to hear the “bottom” is coming in place for Stocks and the Economy, everyone from Benanke to many “name” financial advisors are starting to jump on the bandwagon. Sure enough this morning the “sheeple” started to put their money back into stocks. The Dow is currently up 70 points and Gold was down $13.00. Nasdaq hasn’t ever gotten out of the negative yet today. This is how I see it- we will probably have a nice rally at least this morning as smaill investors pile in thinking “we are close to the bottom or at it so lets get in now so we won’t miss it!” My key resistance points for the Dow, are around 7300- 7320 and the S&P 500, 770-775. If those are cleared we have the potential for a really big up day. However if the markets can not successfully get above those points, Bang! the Bear Trap is sprung!. Be careful out there and Buy Gold now while you can still catch the market before we run to $1050, and later by end of year $1250-$1500, maybe even higher as inflation will really be clicking in from all the money flooding the world economies now. I especially like the Precious Metals producers as a whole many good bargains to be found out there. Even bullion bought now should produce minimum $100+ oz. gain over the next few months. Be a wise and prudent investor – not a “fool”. Remember a “fool” and his money are soon parted! Good Investing- jschulmansr 

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

Claim a gram of FREE GOLD today, plus a special 18-page PDF report; Exposed! Five Myths of the Gold Market and find out:

·        Who’s been driving this record bull-run in gold?

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold…

·        When and How to buy gold — at low cost with no hassle!

Get this in-depth report now, plus a gram of free gold, at BullionVault

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

A new site that is in pre-launch state that will become a virtual world – chat, shop, play, videos, etc. Anyways they are giving free shares (that should become actual company shares) to anyone who signs up and more shares if you refer people.

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

 

Follow Me on Twitter and be notified whenever I make a new post!Schedule automatic tweets, Thankyou for following me messages and much more! Be More Productive- Free signup… TweetLater.com

 

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

Guru’s Say Bottom Near – Financial Times

Source: Financial Times

Gurus say bottom near

By Pauline Skypala

Published: March 15 2009 09:36 | Last updated: March 15 2009 09:36

 

He said much the same in October last year, so in a video interview, FTfm asked why he thought he was right this time. Opening with the remark that it is “very difficult” to get market timing right, Mr Bolton said he looked at three factors: the history of bull and bear market cycles; sentiment – how investors are behaving and thinking; and valuations. Those reached an extreme back in November that he thought might have marked the final low, and again in the first week of March.

“That is why I think we are pretty near the end of this pretty awful bear market,” he said.

He is not talking about a bear market rally, he added, but the start of a new bull market. Mr Bolton, and Fidelity International, generally advise against trying to time markets. Investors should hold on through thick and thin to avoid missing out on the best days that often come when the market turns, they have frequently said.

Mr Bolton now appears to be timing markets. He admits to being “a bit foolhardy going against my own advice” but remains consistent in putting out the message that it is hard to time markets and most private investors should employ a buy and hold strategy.

He believes all risk assets are now attractive, not just equities. The only one that looks less attractive is government bonds, where there could be a bubble building, he says.

He is not alone in his assessment. Jeremy Grantham, co-founder of GMO, told clients in a newsletter last week to adopt a reinvestment plan and stick to it.

GMO made one very large reinvestment move in October and has a schedule for further moves contingent on future market declines, he says, in the belief that a few large steps are better than many small ones.

Mr Grantham is not brimming with confidence but says it is vital to have a battle plan, otherwise paralysis sets in. He points out that in June 1933 the US market rallied 105 per cent in six months long before all the bad news had played out. Similarly, in 1974, the UK market jumped by 148 per cent in five months. “How would you have felt then with your large and beloved cash reserves?” he asks.

In common with Mr Bolton, he advises the market is a powerful discounting mechanism. Investors who wait for light at the end of the tunnel will miss the upturn.

The market turns “when all looks black, but just a subtle shade less black than the day before”.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009

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Fed’s Bernanke sees recession ending ‘this year’ – Market Watch

Source: Market Watch

Calls health of banks key, but worries about lack of ‘political will’

By Jeffry Bartash, MarketWatch
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — The chairman of the Federal Reserve said in a rare interview televised Sunday that the U.S. recession will come to an end “probably this year,” but he also warned that the nation’s 8.1% unemployment rate will continue to rise.
Appearing on the CBS network’s “60 Minutes,” Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke told correspondent Scott Pelley that concerted efforts by the government likely averted a depression similar to the 1930s. He also said the nation’s largest banks are solvent and that he doesn’t expect any of them to fail.
At the same time, Bernanke expressed concern the U.S. might lack the political will to take further measures to shore up the financial system. Although he said he believes the largest banks are solvent and that “they are not going to fail,” Bernanke said a full recovery won’t take place until the system is stabilized.
“The lesson of history is that you do not get a sustained economic recovery as long as the financial system is in crisis,” he said. Bernanke noted that banks are unable to raise cash from private investors as is normally the case because of fears about their solvency.
The 15-month recession, which began in December 2007, is set to become the longest in the post-World War II era. The downturn took a sharp turn for the worst last September after the collapse of the Wall Street brokerage Lehman Brothers.
“Lehman proved that you cannot let a large internationally active firm fail in the middle of a financial crisis,” Bernanke said.
The same error was made 80 years ago when the U.S. government let thousands of banks fail, contributing to the Great Depression, said Bernanke, a former economics professor who’s extensively studied the 1930s. Another big mistake the Fed made back then was to let the supply of money contract, he said.
Since the crisis exploded last fall, Bernanke has sought to avoid both mistakes. The Fed and Treasury have committed hundreds of billons to the bailouts of banks, insurers, mortgage lenders and other entities. While Bernanke said he understood the public’s outrage at the cost, he said they were necessary to prevent a more severe contraction and steeper job losses.
Bernanke also pointed out the bailout aid doesn’t come directly from taxpayers and is “more akin to printing money than it is borrowing.” He said the Fed can adopt that approach because the economy is very weak and inflation is low.
Once the economy begins to recover, Bernanke said, the Fed will have to raise interest rates and reduce the supply of money to “make sure we have a recovery that does not involve inflation.”
The Fed chairman said the recovery won’t begin until early 2010 and will take time to gather steam. He reiterated his call for an overhaul of the nation’s financial regulations — the first in decades — to prevent similar financial conflagrations.
Bernanke is the first sitting Fed chairman to conduct a television interview in 20 years. End of Story
Jeffry Bartash is a reporter for MarketWatch in Washington.
=======================================================
What Do Those Who Called The Downturn Think? – MarketWatch
Source: MarketWatch
OUTSIDE THE BOX

A few who got it right

Commentary: What do those who called the

downturn think?

By Howard Gold
ORLANDO, Fla. (MarketWatch) — The financial markets are littered with the broken reputations of so-called “experts” who failed to anticipate the global financial crisis, or the recession and bear market that have followed.
Finance ministers, central bankers, Wall Street strategists, famed economists, hotshot hedge-fund bosses, former star mutual fund managers and, yes, journalists and cable-television bloviators all dropped the ball big time in the years leading up to the current meltdown.
But a handful of brave souls got it right. Economist Nouriel Roubini, analyst Meredith Whitney and some others have gone on to fame and fortune for warning about the disaster to come.
They weren’t alone. Economist Gary Shilling, options specialist Larry McMillan, strategist Sandy Jadeja and market technician Dan Sullivan all saw a big bear market ahead and advised moving money to the sidelines before the roof collapsed. We caught up with them in the midst of this week’s rally to get their take on what’s ahead.
Most believe we’re getting pretty close to a market bottom, but we’ll have to go through more pain before we get there. None thinks the current rally is for real.
Shilling, a longtime Cassandra and publisher of “Insight,” has warned about the housing and credit bubbles for years and repeatedly predicted that the current recession would be deep. His 13 predictions for 2008 were right on the money.
Excess housing
And guess what? He’s still bearish on housing. Shilling estimates there’s excess inventory of 2.4 million homes on the market and “it’s taking a long time to work that [down.]”
That’s why home prices have a way to go before they bottom: He’s looking for a peak-to- trough decline of 40% in housing prices nationwide. As of the fourth quarter, the 20-city Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller home price index had fallen 27% from its high in 2006.
At the bottom, Shilling expects some 25 million borrowers will be underwater on their mortgages. That’s half of all mortgages and one-third of all owned houses in the U.S. Similarly, he doesn’t think the current recession will end until at least early 2010. That would make this the longest recession by far since World War II.
He thinks the market might actually bottom some time this summer at around 600 on the S&P 500 – at 15 times estimated earnings of $40 — six months or so before the economy does. But he doesn’t see prosperity just around the corner.
“It took about 30 years to build up the credit bubble,” he says. “My guess is, five to ten years to unwind this.”
“What it probably means,” he explains, “is longer and deeper recessions and shorter recoveries — and reflecting that, shorter, less exuberant rallies and more frequent and deeper bear markets.”
Thanks, Gary.
Short-term concerns
Options specialist Larry McMillan, president of McMillan Analysis Corp., typically looks at trading patterns over weeks and months rather than years. But he still doesn’t like what he sees.
“I don’t see a bottom in this leg here,” he says. “I find this market to be strangely calm. People have not panicked. All the pros are picking the bottom.”
That, he argues, means investors haven’t capitulated yet, the true sign of a market bottom.
McMillan has been cautious since late 2007, although he has traded in and out of rallies. He can’t say where the ultimate bottom will be. “I don’t have a target,” he says. “I’m looking for a spike in volatility that washes this thing out.”
He’s waiting for the Chicago Board Options Exchange’s volatility index, or VIX, to shoot up into the 60s from the 40s and 50s now, and then fall back. “That to me would be capitulation,” he says.
Until then, he advises being out of the market — or staying short.
Market projections
Technical analyst Sandy Jadeja, chief market strategist for ODL Markets in London, did have a target: 6425 in the Dow Jones Industrial Average. On March 9, the Dow hit 6440 at one point before Tuesday’s massive rally.
He thinks Wednesday’s higher close for the Dow is a good sign for the short run. The Dow was up nicely Thursday morning on retail sales data that were slightly better than expected. He’s looking for a rally that would take the Dow back up to 8300.
But don’t count on much more than that, he cautions.
He says 6400 is “a critical level going back to 1987, the 1930s and the 2002 lows.” He expects it to be retested, and if the market can’t hold that support level, then it could go a lot lower.
He thinks the bear market could hit bottom in 2010 or even 2011 or 2012. “5300 is the most probable low,” he says. But Fibonacci and Elliot Wave analysis — tools used by technical analysts — may point toward 3700-3800 as the ultimate bottom. Ouch.
Less gloomy
Another prominent technician isn’t quite that gloomy. Dan Sullivan, who has published “The Chartist” newsletter for four decades and has beaten the market consistently over the last 25 years, according to the “Hulbert Financial Digest,” advised clients to go 100% into cash as early as January 2008.
He, too, is looking for a 15%-20% rally that would take us into the 800s on the S&P 500, but then he says we’ll retest Monday’s S&P close of around 676.
“I think it’s a bear-market rally, so I’m advising subscribers to sell into the rally [or stay on the sidelines],” he tells me.
Like Shilling, he expects to see a market bottom or new buy signal some time during the summer. But for now, he says, “this is not a good time to buy.”
That’s my take, too. Although the Dow and S&P have lost more than half their value — no doubt the lion’s share of what we’re going to see in this bear market — I think we have more to go on the down side in view of the knotty problems we face.
So, if you’re young and saving for a distant retirement, this isn’t a bad time to make regular contributions to a 401 (k) plan.
But if you’ll need that money sooner, I’d keep my powder dry, and wait for those who really got it right to change their minds.
Howard R. Gold is executive editor of MoneyShow.com. The opinions expressed here are his own. End of Story
=======================================================

Joe Foster: Chemistry Is Good For Gold – Seeking Alpha

Source: SeekingAlpha and The Gold Report


In this exclusive interview with The Gold Report, geologist Joseph M. Foster—a Van Eck Associates portfolio manager who also leads its International Investors Gold Fund—sees nothing but good news for gold in the months and years to come. Joe isn’t holding his breath for mania to set in, but he does see a mix blending that will get gold “firing on all cylinders.” Once a declining dollar, increasing inflation and an improving economy fill the combustion chamber, all it will take is a sustained spark of optimism for gold to forge ahead.
The Gold Report: We appreciate the opportunity to talk with you fresh from site visits in Mexico and the BMO Global Metals & Mining Conference in Florida. What do you see for gold in ’09 and ’10?
Joe Foster: Our outlook is quite favorable. We’re into a new phase of this bull market that’s been going on since 2001. The credit crisis, everything that’s happening to the global economy and the reaction of the governments and the monetary authorities set up a very, very positive environment for gold, not only in the near term, but going out many, many years.
TGR:What launched this the new phase?

JF: Earlier in the cycle, it was more an inverse dollar play. We’ve had a bull market in gold. The dollar had embarked on a bear market and gold reacted to the inverse of that. What’s changed is that the level of risk to the financial system has elevated dramatically and we’ve come into an environment where even if we have a strong dollar, we can also have a strong gold price. Investors are genuinely frightened and it’s brought a whole new dynamic to the gold market.

TGR:Where do you see this taking gold?

JF: I’d have to split it into a near-term and a longer-term outlook. First of all, looking at the near term, gold is finding support now because we are in crisis mode. The financial system has not been fixed yet. The economy is in decline. In that environment, investors are seeking gold as a safe haven. They’re also seeking out the U.S. dollar as a safe haven. So that’s creating investment demand for the metal.

Jewelry demand, however, has fallen off a cliff—it’s almost non-existent right now and a lot of scrap is coming into the market. Two dynamics in the gold market are pulling against each other: strong investment demand and very weak jewelry demand. I would see gold somewhat range-bound as long as we’re in crisis mode, being pulled by these two factors. We test $1,000, we pulled back, we’re sitting here around $940 an ounce. It wouldn’t surprise me to see it range-bound between $800 and $1,100 an ounce for the next six months or so until we see some sort of resolution to the situation.

As we look further out, you have to wonder if everything the government is doing will work and whether the laws of unintended consequences play out down the road. Will all this stimulus create inflationary pressure looking out into 2010 and beyond as the economy starts to get back on track? I happen to think it will. At some point, it will come time for the government to withdraw the liquidity they’ve put in the system. However, I think we’ll be in a slow-growth environment that will make that very, very difficult.

We won’t have the access to credit that we had in the past. Credit creation fueled a lot of the growth over the last decade. That will be missing in the next growth phase, so I think we’ll be faced with a low-growth environment that will make it difficult for the Fed to raise rates and rein in liquidity. As the velocity of money begins to pick up when the economy starts to grow a bit, I think we will see some serious inflationary pressures. That will give gold the next leg to stand on and lift it to the next level, which I think will be much higher than what we’ve seen so far.

TGR: In essence, aren’t we going back to an inverse play based on the U.S. dollar? That was the first phase. Now we’re in this crisis phase. As we move into an inflationary era, aren’t we just hedging against the dollar at that point?

JF: Yes, that’s another aspect of what I’m talking about, too. How does the dollar play out in this scenario? As long as we’re in crisis mode, people think of the dollar as a safe haven. As soon as we see a bit of light at the end of the tunnel, equities and other investments will begin to attract investment dollars. At that point, I think money flows out of the dollar. So the dollar could resume its downward trend with a better economic outlook and that would be positive for the gold market.

TGR:So we’d go back to dollar going down, gold going up.

JF: Yes, back to that situation. And then when you layer some inflationary expectations on that, you get gold firing on all cylinders.

TGR:Is that when we begin to see mania or is that the next phase?

JF: As markets go, there probably will be a mania in the gold market as well, but I would guess that’s a number of years off. Who knows? But at least several years off.

TGR: What will trigger the mania? If we’ve made it through the banking and financial and economic crises, and are looking for money to fly back into equities and devalue the dollar, why is mania several years off? Why wouldn’t it be happening as these other shifts begin to occur?

JF: The economy needs to be doing better. Money is too tight. I just don’t think there’s enough liquidity, frankly, to support a mania in the current environment. We need a more positive economic environment to get a true mania going and pull everybody from mom and pop up to the high net worth investors to the institutions, everybody jumping in with both feet. I don’t think there’s enough liquidity in the system at this point, or perhaps it’s all on the sidelines.

TGR: How interesting. So maybe fear won’t spark the mania. You’re almost saying the mania will start when there’s a little bit more optimism.

JF:That’s right, if it happens it will probably occur with more optimism and more entrenched inflationary expectations.

TGR:When you talk about gold, are you talking about bullion or gold stocks?

JF: I’m talking about both, definitely. There’s a different dynamic playing out with the gold stocks because we have to look at earnings and operating risk and political risk and all these other things, but historically there’s been a very high correlation between gold and the gold shares, and I expect that to continue throughout this market.

TGR:Will we see more of that in inflation or in crisis mode?

JF: As far as gold shares go, their crisis was the second half of 2008. They got caught up in the downdraft of the credit crisis and the equities collapse. The stocks have roughly doubled since they bottomed in October of 2008. Gold is up roughly 25% to 30% and we’re seeing money come into the gold sector. A lot of equity financing amongst the gold companies lately tells you there are investment dollars available to the sector. So I think the gold market and gold equities are out of crisis mode. They’re being recognized as an alternative, as a safe-haven hedge.

TGR:And an inflation play, I imagine.

JF: Yeah. The inflation play, or at least a flavor of it, will be with us. People see the Fed printing money to support the financial system, which creates a level of inflationary fear already—and it’s very, very early days. Then the next phase will be if and when we get evidence that inflation is actually taking place, when we see various economic measures telling us that inflation is starting to pick up. Those fears will intensify then. Even though we’re in a deflationary environment at the moment, the seeds of inflation it are already there.

TGR:How do you see silver reacting relative to gold?

JF: Looking at its performance over the last three or four months, I think it’s shown itself to be a currency hedge and a currency alternative like gold. Silver had a tough time last year. It tumbled with the base metals. But again, since October, the performance has been good and we’re seeing high demand for the silver ETF, a shortage of coins and bars. So it’s acting as a currency alternative just like gold now.

TGR:What do you make of the shortage of the coins and the premiums to the spot price?

JF: It’s a small but growing corner of the market, so to me it’s an indicator of investor sentiment. It’s not that big a demand driver. When you look at the tonnage, it’s modest. But it tells me that the sentiment among investors, especially individuals, is very positive. From what I hear, it’s mainly high net worth individuals who are buying the stuff up with a long-term view. It’s quite a leap to go out and invest in physical gold. If a few are actually doing it, then many, many more are probably considering it.

TGR:Would you like to talk about some companies you currently own and think other investors should be considering?

JF:

Growth is a common theme among the larger companies that we overweight. We like a growth story because good news flow comes with growth. Hopefully, we can find managements that can deliver the growth and meet expectations for production and costs. Among the large caps, one of our favorites in that category would be

Goldcorp

(GG). They’re mining mainly throughout the Americas. Most of their mines are in politically safe areas. They’re great operators and are developing some deposits—one in Mexico, called Penasquito; and the other one in a JV with

Barrick Gold Corporation

(ABX) in the Dominican Republic, called Pueblo Viejo. They’re going to drive Goldcorp’s growth for the next several years, and we see some good numbers coming out of Goldcorp looking forward.

TGR:And moving down the ladder?

JF:Going down into the mid-tier group, I guess Randgold Resources Ltd. (GOLD) would be our favorite in that category. Their operations are in West Africa. Randgold’s growth has come organically, which is really the best kind of growth. They discovered the properties where they’re mining and developing, and that’s the cheapest way to add ounces to the portfolio. Currently they’ve got a developing property in Senegal, which is early days but we see it turning in to a significant mine. Perhaps looking out three or four years, that will add significantly to their bottom line. It’s another internal discovery, so very cheap ounces coming on line for that company. Also, we’ve been to West Africa and Randgold is probably the best connected, knows the Continent probably better than any other company out there. So they’re one of our top mid-tier companies.

Going down to the small caps, we’re seeing exciting plays in several areas with the small caps, mainly in the Americas, particularly Canada. There’s been a resurgence of activity in Canada in some of the old mining camps. We’re seeing new discoveries and new developments that we’re very excited about. Mexico and other parts of Latin America look very favorable to us as well.

In Canada, one of the emerging producers would be Lake Shore Gold Corp (LSGGF.PK). In the Timmins camp, they’ve made a discovery where nobody thought to look before. And Timmins is historically one of the largest producing camps in North America, so there’s still gold to be found there. Lake Shore is developing an underground mine there that we think will be very profitable and should come on line over the next couple of years.

Another Canada small cap is Osisko Mining Corp (OSKFF.PK). They’re in the Val d’Or camp, an old mining camp. They’ve found a very large low-grade deposit that they’re developing there and I guess it will be the first large-scale, low-grade, world-class deposit that’s been developed in Val d’Or. The company just raised enough money to develop it. It’s going to be expensive, costing north of a half a billion dollars, but investors have shown confidence in the company and that they raised over $300 million just this month to build it. They’re well on their way to becoming the next gold producer.

TGR:Does Osisko have a 43-101 on that Val d’Or property?

JF: Yes, it has. After going through several iterations of their resource estimate, more recently they found a new zone they call the Barnett Zone. It’s higher grade than what they’ve found in the past, so it appears to be shaping as a sweetener that will enable them to get a more rapid payback once they begin production. The project is getting better as it moves along.

TGR:Does your website list the stocks you’re invested in?

JF: We publish the full portfolio twice a year with our semi-annual and annual reporting, so for the most recent you’d have to pull up our December 2008 report. Also, our website publishes our top 10 every month.

TGR:Do we do that through the site or we can find that on the site?

JF:Just go to vaneck.com and you can bring up a PDF. (http://vaneck.com/sld/vaneck//offerings/factsheets/IIG_Factsheet.pdf )

=======================================================
Be cautious out there, especially if going back into Stocks (even mining stocks), do your due diligence and stay tuned for more of the best news and views personally handpicked for my most valued readers! – Good Investing! – jschulmansr

=========================================================
Claim a gram of FREE GOLD today, plus a special 18-page PDF report; Exposed! Five Myths of the Gold Market and find out:

·        Who’s been driving this record bull-run in gold?

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold…

·        When and How to buy gold — at low cost with no hassle!

Get this in-depth report now, plus a gram of free gold, at BullionVault
=========================================================

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A new site that is in pre-launch state that will become a virtual world – chat, shop, play, videos, etc. Anyways they are giving free shares (that should become actual company shares) to anyone who signs up and more shares if you refer people.

 

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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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Investment gurus are lining up to call the bottom of the market. Anthony Bolton of Fidelity International did so last week, telling delegates at a pensions conference markets were at or near lows.

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And the Winner Is…

13 Friday Mar 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, agricultural commodities, alternate energy, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, Barack, Barack Hussein Obama, Barack Obama, bear market, bull market, capitalism, CDE, CEF, central banks, China, Comex, Contrarian, Copper, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, deflation, depression, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, Fed Fund Rate, Federal Deficit, Finance, financial, follow the news, Forex, Fundamental Analysis, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, GTU, hard assets, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, IAU, IMF, India, inflation, Investing, investments, John Embry, Jschulmansr, Latest News, majors, Make Money Investing, market crash, Markets, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, NAK, oil, palladium, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, prices, producers, production, rare earth metals, recession, risk, safety, Saudi Arabia, silver, silver miners, Silver Price Manipulation, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, TARP, Technical Analysis, The Fed, Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3, TIPS, Today, U.S. Dollar, uranium, Uranium Miners, XAU

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Wow! again what a week in all of the markets. Gold is continuing to slowly build into a major rally, look for $1050 to go down this time! We have seen the retracement in the stocks (normal retracement) in a very bear marketas I also mentioned earlier. I still have my 720 Sp 500 puts and look for a nice pop before next weeks expiration. Continue to accumulate more mining stocks and I hope you got in to DGP when I did and let you know via twitter on Monday. The winner if you haven’t guessed is Gold! We have a new player entering into the melee. Crude Oil has finally flashed it’s first buy signal in 18 months. Look for strong resistance at the $50 mark. If it clears then we’re back to $80 minimum, probably $100 in the first leg. I would play this one slowly as there still is a huge pool sitting out there in tankers to be used up first before we can get into a serious rally in Crude Oil and distillates. One thing to mention is our President Obama, at least he waited until the close of markets before speaking yesterday, it almost seems he is determined to drive the stock markets down. If the Dow doesn’t hold here then the 5000 range for the Dow is not out of the question in fact a very real possibility; a full 70% retracement would actually take us down to the 4500 level. Protect yourself and Buy Gold any form and BUY it NOW! Good Investing! jschulmansr

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Claim a gram of FREE GOLD today, plus a special 18-page PDF report; Exposed! Five Myths of the Gold Market and find out:

·        Who’s been driving this record bull-run in gold?

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold

·        When and How to buy gold — at low cost with no hassle

Get this in-depth report now, plus a gram of free gold, at BullionVault here…

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

A new site that is in pre-launch state that will become a virtual world – chat, shop, play, videos, etc. Anyways they are giving free shares (that should become actual company shares) to anyone who signs up and more shares if you refer people. me2everyone.com

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

 

 

Can the U.S. survive $80 crude oil?- INO.COM
 

Source: INO.com

For the first time since September of 2007, the crude oil (NYME_CL) market has flashed a positive signal that it is headed higher. This is the first buy signal that we have seen in over 18 months in the energy markets. 

 

The big question is, if crude oil is headed higher, how much of a price increase can the US economy afford and withstand?

Here is a raw commodity that is used by everyone and the US has no control over. This key commodity to commerce just happens to be in areas that are normally hostile to the US. If we see a hiccup in the supply chain that changes this market dynamic, even for a short time period, we could see oil move back to the $80/barrel range in a heart beat.

So how will this affect the US equity markets? If crude oil heads back to the $75-$80 range, I expect that the major indices will head south. I call it the 551 syndrome. 5000 on the Dow, 500 on the S&P 500, and finally 1000 on the NASDAQ.

In this short video I will share with you the potential target zones we could see in the next 6 to 12 months in crude oil.

So with the trend in crude oil in a positive trajectory and the trend in the US equity markets in a negative trajectory, I think the two will feed off themselves. Look for traders and hedge funds to move aggressively in both these areas with abandon.

Lastly with no reinstatement of the up-tick rule, expect stocks to once again get pummeled to oblivion.

Enjoy the video and all the best in trading,

Adam Hewison
President, INO.com
Co-founder, MarketClub

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

Sell the Swiss Franc, Buy Gold- Seeking Alpha 

Source: FP Trading Desk

“Forceful relaxation” – it brings to mind a trader at a Mexican beach resort, not Swiss monetary policy, but that is exactly what the Swiss National Bank (SNB) announced in its Monetary Policy Assessment Wednesday, joining a growing chorus of central banks engaging in quantitative easing. Sell the franc and buy gold.

The SNB cut its target range for three-month Libor by 25 basis points to a range of 0–0.75% and announced plans to purchase domestic bonds from the private sector and sell francs in the open market. The resulting biggest ever one-day drop in the franc versus the euro and dollar is likely to be followed by franc depreciation over the next year.

Swiss lending to foreigners brings new meaning to Lord Polonius’s advice to Laertes to “neither a borrower nor a lender be.” The Swiss risk losing more than the friendship of the Hungarians who borrowed extensively in Swiss Franc between 2006 and 2008. They also risk losing their money as Eastern Europe struggles under a mountain of debt. All told, Swiss banks claims on foreigners rose from five times Swiss GDP in 2000 to roughly eight times GDP in mid-2007, according to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS).

The majority of these claims are denominated in US dollars, and that factor will continue to put pressure on the franc versus the dollar over the next year. Swiss banks’ net US dollar books approached $300 billion by mid-2007, according to the BIS.

Now that the SNB is actively trying to push the franc down to raise inflation expectations in Switzerland, watch out. This policy raises the prospects for franc depreciation and increases the case for owning gold versus all reserve currencies.

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

Related: This is one of a multitude of reasons to Buy Gold-see next article below – jschulmansr

Swiss Action sparks talk of ‘Currency War’ – Financial Times

Source: Financial Times

By Peter Garnham in London

Published: March 12 2009 20:14 | Last updated: March 12 2009 20:14

The Swiss National Bank moved to weaken the Swiss franc on Thursday, the first time a big central bank has intervened in the foreign exchange markets since Japan sought to weaken the yen in 2004.

The bank’s move, which sparked fears that other countries could follow suit, comes as the value of the Swiss franc has soared as investors seek a haven from the recent market turmoil. In October, after the collapse of Lehman Brothers, it rose to a record high of about SFr1.43 against the euro, a level it has come close to again in recent weeks.

 

But it fell to its lowest level this year on Thursday after the SNB said the currency’s strength represented an “inappropriate tightening of monetary conditions” as it battled against a slowdown in the Swiss economy.

“In view of this development, the SNB has decided to purchase foreign currency on the foreign exchange market to prevent any further appreciation of the Swiss franc against the euro,” the central bank said.

The Swiss franc dropped 2.6 per cent to SFr1.5192 against the euro and dropped 3.2 per cent to $1.1894 against the dollar.

Analysts said the move was likely to increase talk that countries were set to engage in a bout of competitive devaluation.

“Let the currency wars begin,” said Chris Turner at ING Financial Markets.

Countries around the world faced with the constraint of zero interest rate levels might feel it was acceptable to intervene to weaken their currencies in order to ease monetary conditions, he said, adding that other export-dependent economies such as Japan would “probably be at the head of the queue”.

Michael Woolfolk at Bank of New York Mellon agreed.

“Market intervention by a major central bank such as the SNB opens up the door for other central banks, namely the Bank of Japan, to follow suit,” he said. “The yen is widely perceived in Japan to be overvalued.”

The SNB also cut its interest rates by 25 basis points, taking its three-month Libor target range down to zero to 0.75 per cent, and announced plans to adopt a quantitative easing approach to monetary policy.

Analysts said the move towards quantitative easing was sparked by a drastic revision to the central bank’s forecast for growth, which is now expected to fall between 2.5 and 3 per cent in 2009, much worse than its previous forecast of a drop of between 0.5 and 1 per cent.

The SNB said economic conditions had deteriorated sharply since its last policy meeting in December and that there was a risk of deflation over the next three years.

“Decisive action is thus called for, to forcefully relax monetary conditions,” the central bank said.

Additional reporting by Haig Simonian in Zurich

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009

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John Embry: Gold and Silver Are the Ultimate Insurance Policy- Seeking Alpha

By: Andrew Mickey of Q1 Publishing

John Embry: Exclusive Interview with Canada’s Foremost Gold Investor

Is gold the next “hot” investment? Or will it never break through the $1,000 threshold?

Some of the world’s leading investors are currently placing their bets.

For instance, hedge fund manager David Einhorn recently bet big on gold. Einhorn manages $6 billion at Greenlight Capital and has averaged a 20% annualized return by booking only one losing year since 1996 (last year). His fund recently bought more than $200 million of SPDR Gold Trust ETF (NYSE:GLD) and more than $75 million worth of Market Vectors Gold Miner ETF (NYSE:GDX).

On top of that, the big money managers have already pumped billions of dollars directly into gold mining companies to fund takeovers and new mines and expansion.

It’s looking like a lot of smart and big money is betting on gold. And as the financial markets, economy, and future outlook worsen, gold is holding up as a last bastion of hope for many investors.

How can you get in on it? Is it just gold? What about silver? Where are the real values to be had? What about other hard assets – water, agriculture, etc.?

It’s best to start getting prepared now.

Most recently, Q1 Publishing’s own Andrew Mickey, editor of the Prosperity Dispatch, had a private one-on-one conversation with John Embry, one of the leading gold investors in the world.

Embry has been following the gold sector for 35 years (that’s since the early 1970’s) and is one of the leading authorities on gold. Embry is currently the Chief Investment Strategist for Sprott Asset Management – a legendary name to long-time gold investors.

Prior to joining Sprott, Embry oversaw more than $5 billion in assets including the Royal Precious Metal Fund as VP, Equities and Portfolio Manager for RBC, a top-tier Canadian bank. Under his watch, the Royal Precious Metals Fund returned 153% in 2002 and was ranked #1 across all funds in Canada (remember 2002 was a horrible year for stocks as tech stocks continued to fall).

Andrew Mickey: Precious metals have been getting a lot of attention lately. But it seems like there has been a divergence between gold and silver. We’ve been watching the gold to silver ratio (the number of ounces of silver which can be bought for an ounce of gold) get wider and wider. Gold to platinum too. Do you see the divergence tied to the industrial aspect of metals like platinum and silver, gold is the supreme precious metal, or is there something else going on behind the scenes?

John Embry: No – it’s a very strong manipulative aspect at work. If you go to the COMEX and look at the trading patterns and the short positions and such, clearly the prices are being messed around with.

Silver is a smaller market and can be messed around with more easily. I think silver probably has a bit more upside potential because the price is so far behind where it should be.

Andrew Mickey: So do you see silver as one of the bright spots?

John Embry: Oh yeah, it’s an extreme bright spot. I could easily see it three times where it is now in the not-that-distant future.

Andrew Mickey: As far as gold supply, there is one period in the world gold supply where gold production kind of crested around 2007 or 2008. Are we facing a “Peak Gold” kind of situation?

John Embry: Yeah, we have most assuredly crested in terms of mine supply without question.

Andrew Mickey: So, when you look at five, ten years out…let’s say in a world where gold is $2000 or $3000 or higher, how much more gold can realistically be produced in a year?

John Embry: Zero, I think. In fact, I think you probably need a lot more lead time – maybe five to ten years.

Just look at what happened in the ‘70s. The gold price went from $35 to $800 and, believe it or not, gold production was at a lower level worldwide after that 10-year period.

Now, the big question is what will happen this time? Number one, a lot of the existing mines are being depleted quite rapidly. Number two, when the gold price goes up a lot, mines generally tend to sort of drop the grade they mine because they can make a lot of money with lower grade and they can keep the good stuff for the bad times.

So by definition, they will be mining in the same number of tons but they will be taking the gold grade out of it, so collectively they will be mining less gold. They will make more money because the price is up but they will be mining less.

The other problem is that so many of the new interesting deposits that may or may not be developed in the future are located in these God-awful third world countries. They are having a real battle now with the governments, getting permitting, deciding who makes the money out of the mine, environmental issues etc. The gold deposits are all over the place and the governments are going to delay projects.

Say you find an ore body today. It would probably take a minimum of five years before the gold hits the market with all the attendant problems there are getting it into production. So all that’s already baked in the cake. The gold price could be doing anything it wanted for the next four or five years…gold production isn’t going to increase much – if any – at all.

Andrew Mickey: Amazing, gold production declining in the last great bull market for gold. So what does this mean for gold stocks, from your perspective? Where should we focus our investments across the whole range – from explorers all the way up to the majors?

John Embry: Right now, I think the majors are reasonably priced compared to the overall list. People have sort of focused on liquidity so they have gone after the majors and they bid them up aggressively and left a lot of the more illiquid situations behind.

That will all change. As gold becomes more popular and the price rises, at that point, money will filter down the food chain from the larger companies and they will go looking for the good quality smaller ones.

I particularly like some of the smaller producers now for a lot of reasons.

For one, they are going to make a ton of money in the current environment, particularly if they are producing outside the United States. Like some of the ones that are producing in Canada. The gold price yesterday was I believe $1,230 Canadian.

Another reason is because all of the costs of gold mining are dropping right now. Energy costs, steel prices, and all the things that went up so much and really hurt gold miners’ profitability. They are all going the other way now and at the same time the price of gold is going up. So I think that people are going to be pleasantly surprised going forward by the profitability of some of these mines, which have struggled up until recently.

So I am pretty bullish on small producers and anybody who has got a legitimate ore body that can be exploited sometime within the foreseeable future. I think they are going to be viewed positively too.

But the key thing to focus on is when their production will begin. If they don’t have to worry about getting through the environmental hurdles and getting the finance and et cetera, et cetera, they are going to make a lot of money.

Andrew Mickey: What do you see as the potential risks of politics and environmental concerns preventing anyone from starting production?

John Embry: They are not necessarily preventing a company from going into production, but they are certainly delaying it.

My favorite example is that probably the best ore body that’s been discovered in the last 10 years is Aurelian’s in Ecuador; which was subsequently acquired by Kinross (KGC). But the fact is, as long as the current government in Ecuador stays in power…I just don’t see the thing entering production.

So that’s what I am talking about. It’s such a fabulous mine if it were in a good geopolitical environment. It would be being built as we speak, but there is no progress towards building it at this point.

Andrew Mickey: The gold ETF (like the GLD) has been the number one recommended way to invest in gold in the U.S.

It’s a hot subject of debate by those who are new to gold and those which have been following it for while. The new people to gold always recommend the GLD. What are your thoughts?

John Embry: Well, they are just plain wrong in my opinion.

I think gold and silver are the ultimate insurance policy. When things got really bad in the system you want to make sure the vehicle you own has the gold and silver that it allegedly is supposed to have.

Now, I may buy gold and have it in my own possession. I know I have it. And then there are other gold and silver vehicles like Central Fund of Canada (NYSE:CEF) or Central Gold-Trust (NYSE:GTU), to cite a couple, where the gold is allocated. It’s in a vault and there are regular audits to prove everything that’s behind the vehicle is in fact there. So you are getting what you pay for.

Now, in the case of the ETF I am not totally sure. I mean if you read their prospectuses closely enough you’ll see there is some wiggle room. What they are trying to do is just track the gold price so you don’t necessarily need the physical gold. They could be using paper derivative types of products to back the stock.

What really made me kind of uncomfortable recently, was there was this dramatic ramp up in the amount of money going into the GLD ETF in particular. I looked around and I am going like, where is gold coming from?

As you know, the gold market is acknowledged by virtually everybody to be tight. I know mine supply is falling, I know that – I didn’t see any appreciable change in any of the inventory levels or any of the recognized exchanges like COMEX etc., and there was no particular acceleration in the Central Bank dispositions. So my question is, if suddenly all this new buying appeared because of the ETF having to sort of stock up, where did the gold come from?

I am not sure it bought any gold. I think they might have gone to COMEX and just bought a paper contract.

I don’t know. I just think there are better vehicles than ETFs.

Andrew Mickey: Switching gears a little bit here, let’s talk about the big picture. Everyone wants to know what’s going on.

It’s a crazy time. What’s your take? What going on in the general markets and where are we headed?

John Embry: I think we are probably headed for the worst economic debacle since the Depression – if not worse than that.

And the response for that by governments around the world is going to be, I think, a blizzard of paper money creation. They will run massive deficits, trying to prop up these economies.

So I think the major development is going to be ongoing issues of currency debasement. The value of paper money against real tangible assets is going to fall considerably. Right now, we are going through this deflationary scare. It won’t last. It will change into a hyperinflationary environment in the not too distant future.

Andrew Mickey: A kind of stagflationary situation like we saw in the 1970’s?

John Embry: No, worse than that. I think the inflation would be more intense. The decline in economic activity will probably be worse.

Andrew Mickey: What are the kinds of conditions that bring us to that state? Is it avoidable?

John Embry: Basically, we have already put the conditions in place. We ran economies with constantly too much leverage and debt.

Eventually, you reach a certain point where you can’t really add any more debt because the capacity for the system to handle it has been exhausted. Once it reverses, it’s very hard to change. They are going to try to change it by simply debasing the money.

Andrew Mickey: You seem to focus on the debasement of currencies as a government “solution” – for lack of a better term – to the problem. What are some of the best ways to protect ourselves from this situation? Which are you employing?

John Embry: Our strategy is pretty simple. What we really like is the monetary precious metals gold and silver. We don’t like anything in the financial sphere at this time. The companies that we like are the more solid companies providing basic services and what have you. We like the ones which don’t have overly leveraged balance sheets.

Andrew Mickey: What about other real asset classes. There are other sectors I know you follow outside of precious metals like agriculture. That’s the one thing that I’ve been completely excited about for years, but had to turn and run from over the summer. What’s your take on it now? Is it time to wade back in?

John Embry: Well, I am with you on agriculture. It’s a necessity that we must eat.

I guess one of the positive aspects of global growth is that the third world became a bit more affluent. Improvement in their diets put more demand into the world for basic food stuffs. Now that’s slowed down a bit.

I think the real arbiter in the short run might be the climate. I see a lot of industry people bringing this up, changing sunspots. These changes in the sunspots suggest that we may be facing drought conditions in a lot of the world all at the same time.

If that’s the case, I think you are going to see massive food shortages which would underrate a considerable price appreciation in the food because there will be a real fight for it.

Andrew Mickey: So, I don’t want to get too technical with this subject, I assume that you’re referring to increasing activity in sunspots?

John Embry: Yes, there is increasing activity in sunspots; which apparently, sort of cools the world out. It’s really interesting because there has always been, as you know, there is debate about global warming.

I do believe that all this carbon release is creating global warming, but at the same time, we have this mass of long cycles in nature which sort of move from the ice age then back to a period where it gets too hot. In that cycle, we are headed towards cooling again and the sunspot is just one aspect of it.

Andrew Mickey: Can the sunspots cause some of the farming areas to change?

John Embry: Yes, they do. They have a role – for whatever reason – they have a major impact on increasing odds of getting hit by a drought. We have a lot of droughts going on in the world currently. There are droughts in Australia, South America, Northern China and Africa. But Africa has always had a drought.

There is a lot of food supply interruption. If a drought were to strike North America then that would really create a problem. I have seen some work suggesting that we are due for a drought based on certain cycle work.

Andrew Mickey: Okay, this is more or less an agricultural cycle that you are referring to I imagine. How long is this kind of agriculture cycle? Is it like an 80-year almost Dust Bowl scenario type?

John Embry: Well, yes…I hesitate to go there because…it’s like Murphy’s Law, “everything goes wrong at the same time.” And with the financial world right now in a mess the last thing we need is a sort of replay of the ‘30s in the agricultural space.

The pessimists among us think that there is a good probability that drought conditions could strike North America, and that would be the last thing I want to see.

Andrew Mickey: What about farmland then? It’s an asset class which has had extremely consistent returns over the past 50 to 60 years. But, we’ve been waiting for a time like this.

John Embry: Farmland prices have fallen off a cliff. I just saw a guy in Minneapolis; again, he was saying that farmland is on offer everywhere right now.

This is a great thing. I am now in favor of buying farmland at the right price and that price is probably – as we are cleaning this whole mess up – the right price is going to be reached.

Andrew Mickey: The same is true for all kinds of natural resources. Oil, natural gas, copper, iron ore, uranium, etc. They’re all over the world and the government s which control them are in position to really inhibit or assist private companies who want to exploit them.

Recent US policy changes favor certain alternative energies. The one that really concerns me is uranium. In your opinion, when we look at uranium, should we look at it as declining uranium supply from current mines and or how new power plants can come on line if they can’t get it? Which is the real problem? Or is it both?

John Embry: Excellent question. I do think there is a problem. The Cigar Lake up in Northern Saskatchewan has gone through all sorts of problems. Another major problem area is with the Olympic Dam mine in Australia. It has been having problems too.

So again, there’s an issue with existing production.

In that light, I think that’s going to make new discoveries. Quality discoveries in uranium which are really worthwhile and the problem, again, is how long it’s going to take to exploit them. There just aren’t too many good deposits. We had that huge run in uranium a couple of years ago, but a lot of the deposits were really junky.

The great advantage in uranium is that the true cost of producing the power, is in building the reactor. So, there’s a lot of flexibility there. They don’t care about what they have to pay for uranium just as long as they can get it.

So I think that’s one of the aspects I like about uranium. The price is sort of inelastic in that sense. Just because the price goes up doesn’t mean it’s going to start to reduce demand.

Andrew Mickey: With respect to potash, nitrogen and phosphate, where do you see opportunities there? Most people are familiar with potash, the high capital costs to build a mine and the like. Are there any opportunities in nitrogen and phosphate because it’s too easy, how do you guys kind of look at those

John Embry: Well, we actually – we meaning our Sprott Resource Corp – have been looking around for interesting opportunities in phosphate and what have you. We believe that as this whole agricultural thing unfolds that it will be a good business.

But right now, farmers are having trouble getting money like everybody else is. So really, there is a bit of a low in the fertilizer business. Looking for longer term opportunities, the short term is going to be a little problematic.

Andrew Mickey: Are there any other things that you think individual investors should keep in mind as this is the first time in a long time that any of us had to go through a downturn like this?

John Embry: Well, it’s downright ugly out there. I was born in United States and I am a huge admirer of the U.S. I think what’s happened is tragic. Consequently, people are looking to protect themselves and I really do think that precious metals in particular and solid commodity opportunities are going to be one way that’s going to pay off in the end.

Andrew Mickey: What’s your take on all the stimulus packages and infrastructure building and everything that’s going on there?

We have been really bearish on infrastructure companies. How can the government support these businesses which are mostly private?

John Embry: I think that you are right. Typically, the market overacts to these things and obviously the infrastructure spending is partly implied; because, it’s been neglected to such a great extent in North America.

We have the same problem in Canada. Our roads are falling apart. Really, they could spend a ton of money in the sector. Problem is, they don’t have the money. They are going to have to create it out of thin air.

Andrew Mickey: One last thing. Are you currently looking at or investing in water? If so, would you be looking into water rights or a pipe manufacturer for example?

John Embry: We haven’t done as much as we should have. I think water is going to be a major issue going forward.

As for ways to invest in water, I’m more interested in water rights. The good thing about Canada is, there is lots of water up here. The problem is going to be down in the U.S., particularly in Southwest and other areas. I just look at that and I shake my head.

Andrew Mickey: Well, thanks very much for spending some time with us. Is there anything else that you would like to add?

John Embry: Just that I think that it’s important that your readers know all this. The world is a lot different than it was 10 years ago.

Andrew Mickey: And probably it will be a lot different in another 10 years.

John Embry: Well, it would be a lot different looking back from five years from now too, you bet, but I think we will be stood in good stead, certainly being in precious metals and end products, I think those are the two that I like the best.

Andrew Mickey: Well, thanks for your time, I appreciate it.

John Embry: My pleasure. Anytime.

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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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A Challenge! What is Gold going To Do?

27 Friday Feb 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, Barack Obama, Brad Zigler, bull market, capitalism, China, Comex, commodities, Contrarian, Copper, Credit Default, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, depression, DGP, DGZ, 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 Bubble, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, Gold Price Manipulation, hard assets, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, IAU, IMF, India, inflation, Investing, investments, Junior Gold Miners, Latest News, majors, Make Money Investing, manipulation, Market Bubble, market crash, Markets, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, monetization, oil, palladium, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, recession, risk, run on banks, silver, silver miners, Silver Price Manipulation, small caps, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, TARP, Technical Analysis, The Fed, Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3, Today, U.S., U.S. Dollar, warrants, XAU

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ANV, Austrian school, AUY, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, bull market, CDE, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, deflation, Dennis Gartman, depression, DGP, DGZ, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, economic, economic trends, economy, EGO, Federal Deficit, financial, Forex, FRG, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GG, GLD, gold, gold miners, hard assets, HL, 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, NGC, NXG, PAL, 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, SLW, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Technical Analysis, TIPS, U.S., U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, XAU

This morning  I posted a challenge to Brad Zigler of Hard Assets Investor, I asked him point blank, “Pontificating aside, where do you stand in relation to Gold? Both short term and long term? No charts or arguments just a simple statement I believe Gold will…”. This was in relation to the 1st article below and comments (included); our answers back and forth (highlighted).

Today Gold is trading currently up $4.40 at $947 (April Contract). It has been as high as $17 up and as low as $946 currently trading at the lower end. We have strong support at the $930 level and if we close above $950 today then I believe next week we’ll see a return to test the $1000 level again.

The 2nd article is from GATA and government intervention/supression of Gold prices. Read my comment after Brad’s article for my short to long term call for Gold. I am getting ready to re-enter my DGP trade again and will be watching the market closely. If we do break resistance here then I will actually go short (buy DGZ) on the Gold market for a very short term trade as I think (if the resistance is broken) then we will go back and test support at $925 and then $880-$890 level. If we close above the $955 level then I will go long for the test of the $1000 level then the next test at $1033 all time high.

Disclosure: I am long in a couple of Precious Metals Mutual Funds, long Gold and Silver Bullion, and many of the Tier 1, 2, and junior mining stocks. Otherwise,as you can see I use DGP or DGZ for the short term moves in gold. 

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Gold’s Devilish Advocate – Seeking Alpha

By: Brad Zigler of Hard Assets Investor.com

In certain circles I’m known as a curmudgeon. Yeah, that’s right. Crusty, irascible and cantankerous. Hard to believe, isn’t it?
The funny thing is that people on both sides of the hard assets spectrum share that point of view. To so-called gold bugs, my under-exuberance for wildly optimist gold forecasts is anathema. Monetarists, on the other hand, grouse about my metering of the dollar’s value against bullion.
No matter what side you line up on, you can’t have ignored the $300 rally in gold prices since late October. For the February COMEX contract, that amounts to a 46% increase; pretty much a replay of the run-up that ended last March. That should prompt you to wonder about the odds of gold topping out again.
No doubt, the answer to that depends upon your gold Weltanschauung. But let’s play devil’s advocate for the moment. What factors argue for a gold sell-off? Or, at least, for keeping a lid on the metal’s ascendance?
The Dollar/Gold Dyad
This year, the dollar’s provided as much refuge for worried investors as gold. Ordinarily, there’s an inverse relationship between gold and the dollar. In the current global disinflationary environment, though, the greenback is proving to be the best nonmetallic haven for global capital. Rising dollar interest rates will enhance the buck’s attractiveness. At least until a cyclical reflation of the currency. Yes, there will be a lot of dollars out there. But right now, there are a lot of representations of the dollar-bills, notes and bonds-awaiting redemption.
The dollar’s prior inflationary pace was braked well before the price of gold peaked last March. We’ve yet to see the leading edge of reflation.

U.S. Monetary Inflation And Gold

U.S. Monetary Inflation And Gold

Dollar interest rates bottomed just before the Obama inauguration and have steadily gained ground since then. Rising rates are like lipstick: A judicious dose can enhance the beauty of a currency; too much, and it looks tawdry. There’s nothing tawdry, though, about the 18-point rise in the dollar LIBOR over the last month. It’s sustainable and makes the buck even more attractive.

Dollar Interest And Gold Lease Rates

Dollar Interest And Gold Lease Rates

Gold Liquidity

The gold lease market belies the shortage scenario played up by many market pundits. Gold lease rates have been falling precipitously as the contango reflected in forward rates has been rising. Contango exists when supplies are plentiful. The current oil market provides testimony of that. The gold market – at least the commercial gold market – gives every indication of being well-supplied.

Overbought Market

Relative strength in gold futures crossed into overbought territory when the spot contract topped $1,000 last week. The peak, if not exceeded, would represent an interim double top and confirmation that the March 2008 high is likely to hold.

COMEX Futures Open Interest

COMEX Futures Open Interest

Speculative Aggressiveness

Commercial hedgers are still driving gold futures pricing. Aggressiveness on the part of large speculative buyers has actually waned as prices moved higher. Over the past month, net long speculative positions rose 34% while commercial net shorts picked up 40%.

Essential Question

Think back to the events surrounding gold’s March 2008 peak and ask yourself this: “Have economic conditions improved or worsened since then?” I think it’s fair to say our financial troubles have deepened. If that’s true, and if gold is a safe haven, why hasn’t the metal made new highs?

This is by no means an exhaustive analysis, but it does raise essential questions that gold bulls should be prepared to address when making their case for higher prices.

Don’t expect to hear the answers in the late-night infomercials hawking gold, though.

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Comments:

 

 JudeJin

 

 

 

    • Comments
    • one cannot decipher a puzzle without having all the pieces.i think you lack a lot of other data to put together a whole picture of where gold stands.there are quite a few people in the world who have collected the all pieces of the puzzle and deciphered the truth behind gold! you are obviously not one of them.i think either you purposely hand-pick the set of charts with very limited time frame to drive your point home or ……    

       

       

    Feb 27 06:10 AM
     
    • Brad Zigler
    • 60 Comments
    • Website
    Look at the article’s premise: to play devil’s advocate against a widely held bullish sentiment.
    Feb 27 07:13 AM |Report abuse| Link | Reply
    +30

    You’re offering a complaint, not a refutation. What, specifically, is wrong with the arguments advanced?

    On Feb 27 06:10 AM JudeJin wrote:

    > one cannot decipher a puzzle without having all the pieces.
    >
    > i think you lack a lot of other data to put together a whole picture
    > of where gold stands.
    >
    > there are quite a few people in the world who have collected the
    > all pieces of the puzzle and deciphered the truth behind gold! you
    > are obviously not one of them.
    >
    > i think either you purposely hand-pick the set of charts with very
    > limited time frame to drive your point home or ……

  •  
    • doubleguns
    • 123 Comments
    JudeJin—– I would be interested (very interested) to hear all of the pieces if you would please. If you are one of those people please enlighten us.
  •  
    • huangjin
    • 310 Comments
    I would add the deflation/economic contraction argument. People have less money to spend and they will spend less on everything, including gold.
  •  
    • manya05
    • 11 Comments
    I do not have all the pieces of the puzzle, and I am no expert either, but a few things catch my eye and beg an explanation (or maybe they are the explanation). I see all fiat currencies devaluing, all at the same time more or less, and all for different reasons. For instance, the dollar and euro are devaluing as governments print money like there is no tomorrow, while the yuan and yen devalue to keep the economies from drowning as exports shut down. So everyone is sinking to the bottom. You would expect in that scenario that “something” would retain value. I see why gold bugs may think it is gold (finite amount in existence, finite production, and no use whatsoever other than financial instrument). And that is the clincher, why would something with no other use keep value? how about things that are useful and very much needed? shouldn’t those be appreciating? water, food, energy…why are they not? Sometimes I feel we are all watching the wrong movie and trying to interpret what is happening through the wrong lens…I think this is a systemic readjustment as the value/remuneration among nations in a globalized economy takes its course…but that is the subject for another post…..
  •  
    • craigdude
    • 6 Comments
    Brad- your article really opens my eyes- but I am not clear on a few things and I hope you will school me- you say at the Gold top a few days ago that there were signs the price would drop after the high- you said gold futures were in overbought territory- how did u know this and how do people know to sell at this high? I certainly want to learn how to sell my gold before it turns down? What do you mean the peak if not exceeded- double top etc? does it mean that gold will hold at this high? Please explain how a person can know gold will drop after reaching the $1000 price. Also I have noticed that gold has not dropped enough for me to buy back in if I sell at today’s price- I have to sell at $950 to be at least even and then I have to believe gold will go higher in order for me to buy back in. Where do you think gold will go in the next 6 months as Obama’s money plan reveals itself to be a failure-? If Jim Rogers thinks gold will continue higher because of fundamentals- what do you think of the fundamentals in a 1 or 2 year time frame?
  •  
    • craigdude
    • 6 Comments
    Brad- could gold be controlled by governments leasing gold and selling to keep lid on prices?–please explain double top and overbought
  •  
    • scotty1560
    • 155 Comments
    Brad.. listen gold has held up better than any commodity like oil or
    and any equity or real estate investment.

    It could drop.. I’m not that smart to predict.
    IMO the drop is after the economy recovers and that could take years at
    this point. It’s a safe haven and a trade against the dow.. I see the dow
    much lower.. so gold should at minimum hold it’s ground and perhaps
    rise towards 1500-2000, based on historical trends.
    In troubled times we humans tend to get religion and go back to
    ancient methods of survival.. gold fits that scenario.

    • Alex Filonov
    • 397 Comments
    • Website
    Couple more data points:

    1. NYMEX open interest for April exceeds open interest for all other months. ETF effect?

    2. India is not importing gold anymore. Regular buyer of 30% physical gold is out of the market.

  •  
    • jschulmansr
    • 7 Comments
    • Website
    Brad; Pontificating aside, where do you stand in relation to Gold? Both short term and long term? No charts or arguments just a simple statement I believe Gold will…

    Thanks!

    Jeff Schulman Sr aka jschulmansr

  •  
    • Brad Zigler
    • 60 Comments
    • Website
    No one, of course, “knows” gold will drop or rise from any particular price level. T

    here are, however, technical indicators such as the Relative Strength Index and stochastics which identify certain market levels as overbought or oversold.

    A double top is a price level reached a couple of times by a market as it attempts to rally higher but can’t be hurdled. The failure sets up a decline.

    About gold leases. Often, nefarious intente is ascribed to central bank swap activity. But leasing can be simply a way to garner a return on an otherwise sterile asset as well as a way to stimulate lending and investment activity.

    Outright borrows of bullion by bank customers tend to increase when bearish sentiments prevail. In essence, the borrower doesn’t want to face the prospect of buying back gold at a higher price to close out the loan.

    With that in mind, the market may already favor shorts BEFORE leasing.

    On Feb 27 09:25 AM craigdude wrote:

    > Brad- could gold be controlled by governments leasing gold and selling
    > to keep lid on prices?–please explain double top and overbought

  •  
    • jschulmansr
    • 7 Comments
    • Website
    Brad;
    Ps- I guess I should have added I think your articles are very well written and thought provoking. I make mention of and use your stuff on my blog quite often, but recently I have not heard your outlook for Gold. I do agree we are at a crossroads here, we may see more retracement. I think we are about to see Gold go and test it’s all time highs. Failure there I think will mean a retracement potentially as low to $880 to $890. If we clear due to manipulaton and where the short interest got in at there will be sttrong pressure to bring down prices at the $1050 level. If that hurdle is cleared I think that the banks who are short will give up and cause a very violent spike upwards “shortcovering rally”. After all they can afford to give in now as they figure they can get their money back thru Government stimulus, TARP, and bailout funds. Long term however, I do feel with inflation runnng a tad higher than what you are currently stating,and the fact that the monetary printing presses are running full steam round the clock; that longer term we will see inflation even hypr and/or stagfaltion. In other words get your wheelbarrow to haul your money around to go shopping for a “loaf” of bread. I truly think that prices of $2000 to $3500 oz are not unrealistic given the aforementioned scenario. What is your opinion in regards to this? Maybe even a special article?- Thanks Again- Jeff Schulman Sr aka jschulmansr
    Feb 27 11:29 AM |Report abuse| Link | Reply
    +10
  •  
    • Brad Zigler
    • 60 Comments
    • Website
    Don’t read too much into the large open interest in April futures. There are certain delivery months for gold that are traditionally more active than others. April is one of them (February, June, August, October and December are the others).
    Feb 27 11:31 AM |Report abuse| Link | Reply
    +10

    As February’s expiry approached, open interest rolled to the next active month in the cycle–April. Yes, some of that is ETF interest (namely, DBG, the PowerShares DB Gold ETF). It doesn’t, however, include the SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) or the iShares COMEX Gold Trust (IAU). These trusts hold physical metal, not futures.

    On Feb 27 10:31 AM Alex Filonov wrote:

    > Couple more data points:
    >
    > 1. NYMEX open interest for April exceeds open interest for all other
    > months. ETF effect?
    >
    > 2. India is not importing gold anymore. Regular buyer of 30% physical
    > gold is out of the market.

  •  
    • TexasER
    • 21 Comments
    Speculating on the price of gold has always been risky, never more so than now. If you’re in this trade to turn a quick profit, you have more guts or brains than me.
    Feb 27 11:48 AM |Report abuse| Link | Reply
    +10

    But as “melt-down” insurance, gold has performed exactly as advertised. I see no indication that it will somehow stop acting this way. If the markets fall off another cliff, obviously gold will do well.

    Diversification has always been a prudent strategy. That hasn’t changed, but gold’s importance to a diversified portfolio has changed. Some investors have recognized this out of prudence, not panic, and acted accordingly.

    I’m long, but if gold goes to $500 from here, you won’t hear me whining about it.

  •  
    • jschulmansr
    • 7 Comments
    • Website
    Brad; Thanks for your answer, I am sure you are aware of GATA, that is really were one of my main concern lies. The continued manipulation of prices by both governmental and banks. It will be very interesting to see what the CFTC and Comex are going to do with their investigations in both the Silver and Gold markets. Also long term I think we have a couple of big plays coming up with Silver and Oil. That’s what I love about the markets, sheer boredom puncuated by moments of either sheer elation or sheer terror! Thanks again! – Jeff Schulman Sr aka jschulmansr
    Feb 27 12:03 PM |Report abuse| Link | Reply
    +10
  • ========================================
    Now to “Market Price Manipulation…
    Ex-Treasury official Confirms Gold Suppression Scheme – Gata
    Source: Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (Gata)
    Home » Daily Dispatches

    Ex-Treasury official confirms gold

    suppression scheme

    Submitted by cpowell on Tue, 2009-02-24 22:13. Section: Daily Dispatches

    5p ET Tuesday, February 24, 2009

    Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:

    In an essay published today at Counterpunch.org, former Assistant Treasury Secretary Paul Craig Roberts confirms that the U.S. government has been leasing gold to suppress its price and support the dollar. The admission is made in the last paragraph of the essay, which is appended.

    CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer
    Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.

    * * *

    Doomed by the Myths of Free Trade: How the Economy Was Lost

    By Paul Craig Roberts
    Tuesday, February 24, 2009

    http://www.counterpunch.org/roberts02242009.html

    The American economy has gone away. It is not coming back until free trade myths are buried 6 feet under.

    America’s 20th century economic success was based on two things. Free trade was not one of them. America’s economic success was based on protectionism, which was ensured by the union victory in the Civil War, and on British indebtedness, which destroyed the British pound as world reserve currency. Following World War II, the US dollar took the role as reserve currency, a privilege that allows the US to pay its international bills in its own currency.

    World War II and socialism together ensured that the US economy dominated the world at the mid-20th century. The economies of the rest of the world had been destroyed by war or were stifled by socialism [in terms of the priorities of the capitalist growth model: Editors.]

    The ascendant position of the US economy caused the US government to be relaxed about giving away American industries, such as textiles, as bribes to other countries for cooperating with America’s cold war and foreign policies. For example, Turkey’s US textile quotas were increased in exchange for overflight rights in the Gulf War, making lost US textile jobs an off-budget war expense.

    In contrast, countries such as Japan and Germany used industrial policy to plot their comebacks. By the late 1970s, Japanese auto makers had the once dominant American auto industry on the ropes. The first economic act of the “free market” Reagan administration in 1981 was to put quotas on the import of Japanese cars in order to protect Detroit and the United Auto Workers.

    Eamonn Fingleton, Pat Choate, and others have described how negligence in Washington aided and abetted the erosion of America’s economic position. What we didn’t give away, the United States let be taken away while preaching a “free trade” doctrine at which the rest of the world scoffed.

    Fortunately, the U.S.’s adversaries at the time, the Soviet Union and China, had unworkable economic systems that posed no threat to America’s diminishing economic prowess.

    This furlough from reality ended when Soviet, Chinese, and Indian socialism surrendered around 1990, to be followed shortly thereafter by the rise of the high speed Internet. Suddenly American and other First World corporations discovered that a massive supply of foreign labor was available at practically free wages.

    To get Wall Street analysts and shareholder advocacy groups off their backs, and to boost shareholder returns and management bonuses, American corporations began moving their production for American markets offshore. Products that were made in Peoria are now made in China.

    As offshoring spread, American cities and states lost tax base, and families and communities lost jobs. The replacement jobs, such as selling the offshored products at Wal-Mart, brought home less pay.

    “Free market economists” covered up the damage done to the US economy by preaching a New Economy based on services and innovation. But it wasn’t long before corporations discovered that the high speed Internet let them offshore a wide range of professional service jobs. In America, the hardest hit have been software engineers and information technology (IT) workers.

    The American corporations quickly learned that by declaring “shortages” of skilled Americans, they could get from Congress H-1b work visas for lower paid foreigners with whom to replace their American work force. Many US corporations are known for forcing their US employees to train their foreign replacements in exchange for severance pay.

    Chasing after shareholder return and “performance bonuses,” US corporations deserted their American workforce. The consequences can be seen everywhere. The loss of tax base has threatened the municipal bonds of cities and states and reduced the wealth of individuals who purchased the bonds. The lost jobs with good pay resulted in the expansion of consumer debt in order to maintain consumption. As the offshored goods and services are brought back to America to sell, the US trade deficit has exploded to unimaginable heights, calling into question the US dollar as reserve currency and America’s ability to finance its trade deficit.

    As the American economy eroded away bit by bit, “free market” ideologues produced endless reassurances that America had pulled a fast one on China, sending China dirty and grimy manufacturing jobs. Free of these “old economy” jobs, Americans were lulled with promises of riches. In place of dirty fingernails, American efforts would flow into innovation and entrepreneurship. In the meantime, the “service economy” of software and communications would provide a leg up for the work force.

    Education was the answer to all challenges. This appeased the academics, and they produced no studies that would contradict the propaganda and, thus, curtail the flow of federal government and corporate grants.

    The “free market” economists, who provided the propaganda and disinformation to hide the act of destroying the US economy, were well paid. And as Business Week noted, “outsourcing’s inner circle has deep roots in GE (General Electric) and McKinsey,” a consulting firm. Indeed, one of McKinsey’s main apologists for offshoring of US jobs, Diana Farrell, is now a member of Obama’s White House National Economic Council.

    The pressure of jobs offshoring, together with vast imports, has destroyed the economic prospects for all Americans, except the CEOs who receive “performance” bonuses for moving American jobs offshore or giving them to H-1b work visa holders. Lowly paid offshored employees, together with H-1b visas, have curtailed employment for older and more experienced American workers. Older workers traditionally receive higher pay. However, when the determining factor is minimizing labor costs for the sake of shareholder returns and management bonuses, older workers are unaffordable. Doing a good job, providing a good service, is no longer the corporation’s function. Instead, the goal is to minimize labor costs at all cost.

    Thus “free trade” has also destroyed the employment prospects of older workers. Forced out of their careers, they seek employment as shelf stockers for Wal-Mart.

    I have read endless tributes to Wal-Mart from “libertarian economists,” who sing Wal-Mart’s praises for bringing low price goods, 70 per cent of which are made in China, to the American consumer. What these “economists” do not factor into their analysis is the diminution of American family incomes and government tax base from the loss of the goods producing jobs to China. Ladders of upward mobility are being dismantled by offshoring, while California issues IOUs to pay its bills. The shift of production offshore reduces US GDP. When the goods and services are brought back to America to be sold, they increase the trade deficit. As the trade deficit is financed by foreigners acquiring ownership of US assets, this means that profits, dividends, capital gains, interest, rents, and tolls leave American pockets for foreign ones.

    The demise of America’s productive economy left the US economy dependent on finance, in which the US remained dominant because the dollar is the reserve currency. With the departure of factories, finance went in new directions. Mortgages, which were once held in the portfolios of the issuer, were securitized. Individual mortgage debts were combined into a “security.” The next step was to strip out the interest payments to the mortgages and sell them as derivatives, thus creating a third debt instrument based on the original mortgages.

    In pursuit of ever more profits, financial institutions began betting on the success and failure of various debt instruments and by implication on firms. They bought and sold collateral debt swaps. A buyer pays a premium to a seller for a swap to guarantee an asset’s value. If an asset “insured” by a swap falls in value, the seller of the swap is supposed to make the owner of the swap whole. The purchaser of a swap is not required to own the asset in order to contract for a guarantee of its value. Therefore, as many people could purchase as many swaps as they wished on the same asset. Thus, the total value of the swaps greatly exceeds the value of the assets.* [See footnote.)

    The next step is for holders of the swaps to short the asset in order to drive down its value and collect the guarantee. As the issuers of swaps were not required to reserve against them, and as there is no limit to the number of swaps, the payouts could easily exceed the net worth of the issuer.

    This was the most shameful and most mindless form of speculation. Gamblers were betting hands that they could not cover. The US regulators fled their posts. The American financial institutions abandoned all integrity. As a consequence, American financial institutions and rating agencies are trusted nowhere on earth.

    The US government should never have used billions of taxpayers’ dollars to pay off swap bets as it did when it bailed out the insurance company AIG. This was a stunning waste of a vast sum of money. The federal government should declare all swap agreements to be fraudulent contracts, except for a single swap held by the owner of the asset. Simply wiping out these fraudulent contracts would remove the bulk of the vast overhang of “troubled” assets that threaten financial markets.

    The billions of taxpayers’ dollars spent buying up subprime derivatives were also wasted. The government did not need to spend one dime. All government needed to do was to suspend the mark-to-market rule. This simple act would have removed the solvency threat to financial institutions by allowing them to keep the derivatives at book value until financial institutions could ascertain their true values and write them down over time.

    Taxpayers, equity owners, and the credit standing of the US government are being ruined by financial shysters who are manipulating to their own advantage the government’s commitment to mark-to-market and to the “sanctity of contracts.” Multi-trillion dollar “bailouts” and bank nationalization are the result of the government’s inability to respond intelligently.

    Two more simple acts would have completed the rescue without costing the taxpayers one dollar: an announcement from the Federal Reserve that it will be lender of last resort to all depository institutions including money market funds, and an announcement reinstating the uptick rule.

    The uptick rule was suspended or repealed a couple of years ago in order to permit hedge funds and shyster speculators to ripoff American equity owners. The rule prevented short-selling any stock that did not move up in price during the previous day. In other words, speculators could not make money at others’ expense by ganging up on a stock and short-selling it day after day.

    As a former Treasury official, I am amazed that the US government, in the midst of the worst financial crises ever, is content for short-selling to drive down the asset prices that the government is trying to support. No bailout or stimulus plan has any hope until the uptick rule is reinstated.

    The bald fact is that the combination of ignorance, negligence, and ideology that permitted the crisis to happen still prevails and is blocking any remedy. Either the people in power in Washington and the financial community are total dimwits or they are manipulating an opportunity to redistribute wealth from taxpayers, equity owners and pension funds to the financial sector.

    The Bush and Obama plans total 1.6 trillion dollars, every one of which will have to be borrowed, and no one knows from where. This huge sum will compromise the value of the US dollar, its role as reserve currency, the ability of the US government to service its debt, and the price level. These staggering costs are pointless and are to no avail, as not one step has been taken that would alleviate the crisis.

    If we add to my simple menu of remedies a ban, punishable by instant death, for short selling any national currency, the world can be rescued from the current crisis without years of suffering, violent upheavals and, perhaps, wars.

    According to its hopeful but economically ignorant proponents, globalism was supposed to balance risks across national economies and to offset downturns in one part of the world with upturns in other parts. A global portfolio was a protection against loss, claimed globalism’s purveyors. In fact, globalism has concentrated the risks, resulting in Wall Street’s greed endangering all the economies of the world. The greed of Wall Street and the negligence of the US government have wrecked the prospects of many nations. Street riots are already occurring in parts of the world. On Sunday February 22, the right-wing TV station, Fox “News,” presented a program that predicted riots and disarray in the United States by 2014.

    How long will Americans permit “their” government to rip them off for the sake of the financial interests that caused the problem? Obama’s cabinet and National Economic Council are filled with representatives of the interest groups that caused the problem. The Obama administration is not a government capable of preventing a catastrophe.

    If truth be known, the “banking problem” is the least of our worries. Our economy faces two much more serious problems. One is that offshoring and H-1b visas have stopped the growth of family incomes, except, of course, for the super rich. To keep the economy going, consumers have gone deeper into debt, maxing out their credit cards and refinancing their homes and spending the equity. Consumers are now so indebted that they cannot increase their spending by taking on more debt. Thus, whether or not the banks resume lending is beside the point.

    The other serious problem is the status of the US dollar as reserve currency. This status has allowed the US, now a country heavily dependent on imports just like a third world or lesser-developed country, to pay its international bills in its own currency. We are able to import $800 billion annually more than we produce, because the foreign countries from whom we import are willing to accept paper for their goods and services.

    If the dollar loses its reserve currency role, foreigners will not accept dollars in exchange for real things. This event would be immensely disruptive to an economy dependent on imports for its energy, its clothes, its shoes, its manufactured products, and its advanced technology products.

    If incompetence in Washington, the type of incompetence that produced the current economic crisis, destroys the dollar as reserve currency, the “unipower” will overnight become a third world country, unable to pay for its imports or to sustain its standard of living.

    How long can the US government protect the dollar’s value by leasing its gold to bullion dealers who sell it, thereby holding down the gold price? Given the incompetence in Washington and on Wall Street, our best hope is that the rest of the world is even less competent and even in deeper trouble. In this event, the US dollar might survive as the least valueless of the world’s fiat currencies.

    *(An excellent explanation of swaps can be found here.)

    —–

    Paul Craig Roberts was assistant secretary of the treasury in the Reagan administration. He is coauthor of “The Tyranny of Good Intentions.” He can be reached at PaulCraigRoberts@yahoo.com.

    * * *

    Help keep GATA going

    GATA is a civil rights and educational organization based in the United States and tax-exempt under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. Its e-mail dispatches are free, and you can subscribe at http://www.gata.org/.

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

    Have a Great Weekend! Keep your eyes open for a special weekend post. Good Investing! jschulmansr

    Follow Me on Twitter and be notified whenever I make a new post!

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

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

    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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    Need A Second Chance?

    19 Thursday Feb 2009

    Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, Bailout News, banking crisis, bull market, capitalism, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Credit Default, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, deflation, depression, 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 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, Iran, Israel, Jschulmansr, Junior Gold Miners, Keith Fitz-Gerald, Latest News, majors, Make Money Investing, market crash, Markets, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, palladium, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, recession, risk, silver, silver miners, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, TARP, Technical Analysis, The Fed, Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3, Today, U.S., U.S. Dollar, volatility

    ≈ Comments Off on Need A Second Chance?

    Tags

    ANV, Austrian school, AUY, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, bull market, CDE, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, deflation, Dennis Gartman, depression, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, economic, economic trends, economy, EGO, Federal Deficit, financial, Forex, FRG, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GG, GLD, gold, gold miners, hard assets, HL, 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, NGC, NXG, PAL, 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, SLW, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Technical Analysis, TIPS, U.S., U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, XAU

    Gold today is trading on Feb Contract between $975 – $985 oz, a little more consolidation and base building before the launch to $1000+.  Currently Gold is up $3.80 at $982.00. The push to $1000 could come as early as today. Do you need a second chance? Well here it is- get into Gold now or you’ll be kicking yourself later.  If Gold breaks the $1003 all time high then we’ll see at least $1050 gold, if it breaks that we have a straight shot to $1100 – $1250. This is without any major news, such as Israel attacking Iran nuclear facilities, or China moving in and taking back the disputed territories in India, or a major terrorist attack event like 911. If any of those happen then $1500 or greater. True Inflation Rate while still roughly 7-8% could easily jump to 12 – 18% or higher, as the printing presses around the world are spinning out of control around the world. This eventually will lead to even more devaluation of all the currencies as Governments are madly trying to stop Deflation. The Gold market is saying the stimulus packages around the world are failing. Buy a wheelbarrow to haul your cash around and Gold to preserve the buying power of your Dollars. Even if you only allocate 10% of your portfolio- BUY GOLD NOW! As Always Good Investing – 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 just for opening account!, no minimums – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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

    Gold Continues to Climb as Economic Catastrophe Looms – Seeking Alpha

    By: John Browne of Euro Pacific Capital

     

    Last week, when Congress passed its $787 billion stimulus package, the size of the plan caused many observers to forget the water that has already passed under the bridge. Fewer still are wondering what havoc will erupt when all this liquidity eventually washes ashore.

     

     

     

    With gold prices only 7% away from their record highs and the main equity indices 45-50% below their highs, an analysis of the equity/gold ratio is amid the many rationalizations for prolonged gains in the precious metal. The equity/gold ratio highlights a commonly used measure of corporate market value versus a decades-long measure of real asset value. Gold is known as a measure of real assets value because of its ability to preserve value during inflationary times. But during these disinflationary times, the current global growth/demand landscape also supports the notion of too many dollars chasing too few gold ounces.

     

     

     

    The questions can be separated into three general topics: Corporate, Projects, and Capital.

     

     

     

    • How did the company get started?
    • What are the company’s near-term, mid-term, and long-term goals?
    • How much experience does the management, board of directors, and technical team have in achieving the company’s goals? Is there a past history of success?
    • How does management plan to market and promote the company? Does the company plan to go on road shows? Do they plan to do newsletter, magazine, or website advertising?
    • How much of experience does management have in promotion?

    Projects

    • How many gold projects does the company have? Are all of the gold projects considered assets?
    • Where are they located? Are they located in geopolitically safe regions? Are they easily accessible? Is there a labor force nearby? Is there easy access to power and water?
    • What stage is each property in: Grassroots? Exploration? Development? Production?
    • For grassroots stage projects, why does the company wish to pursue exploration? Has there been any historic evidence of gold on or near the projects? What does the company have planned for the future of its grassroots projects?
    • For exploration stage projects, what kind of exploration progress have been made so far? How much has the company drilled? What have been the results? What kind of exploration is planned for the future? Is there currently a resource estimate? Will there be one in the future?
    • For development stage projects, what is the status of development? When will the project become a gold producing mine?
    • For production stage projects, how much gold does the mine produce? What are the future production and revenue expectations? How long is the life of the mine?
    • What is the resource or reserve status of each property?
    • What, if any, royalties are or will be due?

    Capital

    • What is the company’s cash flow, if any?
    • What is the company’s cash position?
    • Does the company have any debt? How much and what kind of debt does the company have?
    • Will the company need to raise new capital for future projects? How much money will the company need to raise? How much experience does management have in raising new capital?
    • How much capital will the company need to reach its 12-month goals? How will they get the money?
    • What is the company’s monthly burn rate? Are they being responsible spending it?
    • How many shares of the company’s stock are issued and outstanding?
    • How many shares of the company’s stock are there fully diluted? At what price are the warrants and options set?

    This is not a stock-specific list, so these questions are best used as a guideline to form your own questions for investor relations.

    This is also not a complete list, but should definitely be enough to get you started. If you like a company’s answers to the questions above, it should be more seriously considered as a position in your junior gold stock portfolio.

    Good Investing,

    Luke Burgess and the Gold World Staff

    P.S. The opportunities in the gold market have already proven to be huge winners for readers of our Mining Speculator advisory service. As a matter of fact, for five years running the Mining Speculator portfolio had an average gain of 212%! Most of these gains can be attributed to Greg McCoach’s expertise in picking junior gold mining stocks, which, as we’ve just discussed, are getting ready to explode. And we’re expecting even bigger gains from the gold mining stocks in the Mining Speculator portfolio over the next 24 months. That means there’s never been a better time to become a member of Mining Speculator and get in on the tips and information for which some people invest millions of dollars with hedge funds. Click here to find out how you can join us in the Mining Speculator for as little as $25.  

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

    EGO: A Particularly Healthy Gold Stock – Hard Assets Investor

    By: Brad Zigler of Hard Assets Investor

    Real-time Inflation Indicator (per annum): 7.5%

    We wrote about gold stocks last week (“Whither Gold Stocks”) , waving a $38 red cape for the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (NYSE Arca: GDX) in front of a four-month-old bull market. Yesterday, as gold picked up $10, GDX’s horns got close. Very close.

     Intraday, the ETF traded as high as $37.80 before falling back to close at $37. The fund is working itself into the target area nicely, thankyewverymuch. One of GDX’s better-performing component stocks, in fact, might be a herald of the fund’s future.

     El Dorado Gold Corp. (NYSE Alternext: EGO) has risen 11.4% this year, just barely ahead of the 9.2% gain posted by GDX. Oh sure, a 2.2% performance difference may seem significant now, but given the relatively low volatility in both securities, the spread seems unlikely to widen much. Barring something unforeseen, of course.

     

     

    Gold Miners ETF (GDX vs. El Dorado Gold (EGO)

     GDX Graph

    The good news for EGO and, indirectly, GDX, is EGO’s cost structure. For fiscal 2008, EGO’s cash cost of gold is only $257 an ounce. Volatility in bullion prices is least likely to impact EGO,  compared to its peers.

    E-G-O could spell peerless performance for GDX. 

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

    My Disclosure: Long EGO (El Dorado Gold)- jschulmansr

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

    Gold Breaks from Traditional Trading Versus Oil and USD, Looks Strong – Seeking Alpha

    Source: Financial Post Trading Desk

    Safe haven demand and a lack of investment alternatives continues to help gold break from its traditional trading relationships, rising despite a strong U.S. dollar and weak crude oil prices. In fact, analysts at Genuity Capital noted that gold is more than $200 per ounce above its normal value relative to the greenback.

    Meanwhile, sustained investor interest in gold throughout 2008 helped push dollar demand for bullion to $102-billion, a 29% annual increase, according to World Gold Council’s Gold Demand Trends. The organization also said identifiable investment demand for gold, which incorporates exchange traded funds (ETFs), bars and coins, rose 64% last year. This is equivalent to an additional inflow of $15-billion.

    Genuity also pointed out that the opportunity cost of holding bullion has diminished, with treasury yields at record lows and demand fundamentals deteriorating in the broader commodity and equity markets.

    Concerns about the stability of the global banking system and credit rating of the U.S. Treasury has been a major driver of physical demand for gold. Until clear evidence of stabilization in the global financial system emerges, analysts at Genuity expect this trend to continue.

    “If the U.S. dollar weakening resumes in the medium term, as we believe it shall, and oil prices improve, gold should continue to prosper,” they said in a research note. As a result, Genuity continue to recommend gold over base metals in the near term.

    Aram Shishmanian, CEO of World Gold Council, said:

    The economic downturn and uncertainty in the global markets, that has affected us all, is unlikely to abate in the short term. Consequently, I anticipate that gold, as a unique asset class, will continue to play a vital role in providing stability to both household and professional investors around the world.

    North American gold equities have risen more than twice as much as gold itself in the past month, showing stronger than typical leverage. Silver has also begun to outperform.

    Genuity highlighted Silver Wheaton Corp. (SLW) was a name that provides leverage to the metal and has the potential for a re-rating.

    The firm’s top gold picks in the intermediate space are Allied Nevada Gold Corp. (ANV), IAMGOLD Corp. (IAG) and Northgate Minerals Corp. (NXG). It also favours seniors Goldcorp Inc. (GG) and Yamana Gold Inc. (AUY). The firm also raised its target prices for gold stocks by an average of 28% to reflect higher price assumptions for the metal.

    Genuity said:

    While our target multiples are now mainly near the top of the typical valuation range (1.0x to 1.7x), we believe that continuing positive momentum in the gold price should support further outperformance from the gold equities.

    With the arrival of fourth quarter and year-end earnings season, one area of reporting that will see additional focus is the updates on gold reserves.

    RBC Capital Markets expects gold producers to increase the gold price assumption used to calculate reserves from the previous range of $550-$575 per ounce to $675-$725. This will better match the three-year historical gold price as suggested for use by the SEC.

    “With this increase, we expect most producers should be able to more than replace gold reserves mined during 2008, and show net gains from the end of 2007,” RBC analysts told clients.

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

    My Disclosure: Long AUY, NXG, SLW – jschulmansr

    Need a Second Chance? – Well Here It Is – Buy Gold and Invest In Yourself…

    Good Trading! -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

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


    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

     

    Gold prices are quickly on their way to breaking another all-time high this year.

     

     

     

    “uhhh…yeah…sure….this is investor relations” 

    In whatever form you find investor relations, they should be able to give you all of the most up-to-date information. Or they should at least be able to tell you where to find any information they don’t have.

    To help you get the most out of speaking to investor relations of junior gold companies, Gold World has made a basic list of questions that you should be sure ask.

    And an expected parabolic rise in investment demand will throw the gold bull market into the long-awaited mania buying phase, which should last between 6 and 12 months and could push gold prices as high as $3,000 to $5,000 an ounce, maybe higher.

    That means right now is the time to start seriously researching and buying back all those quality junior gold stocks that have collapsed over the past few months.

    How To Pick the Right Junior Gold Stocks

    The best place to start research on a company is its website. There, you’ll generally find most of the information that you need. However, more often than not, you won’t be able to find all of the detailed information. And that’s when you need to call the company’s investor relations department.

    Investor relations for junior gold companies are sometimes one or two in-house employees of the company. Other times investor relations is contracted out to a third party. Or sometimes it will be a member of management. And sometimes there is no formal investor relations at all; sometimes investor relations is just whoever picks up the phone…

     

    Corporate

     

    click to enlarge

     

    The equity/gold ratio (using the Dow or S&P500) has fallen about 85% from its 1999 peak, which occurred when gold stood at 20-year lows and equities reached their highs at the top of the dot-com bubble. Since the 1920s, the equity/gold ratio has peaked twice at nearly 35-year intervals: 1929 to 1965, and 1965 to 1999. After each of those three peaks, stocks descended in multiyear sell-offs, accompanied by a rally in gold. But the converse was not true when stocks recovered in 2003-2007. As the above chart shows, the 2002-3 start of the commodity-wide bull market failed to prevent the equity/gold rally from extending its decline.

    The 100 years of equity/gold analysis indicate each peak in the ratio was followed by a full retracement back to the preceding lows. The emerging fundamentals indicate a recurrence of this trend and the equity/gold ratio has further declines ahead until a possible recapture of the 1980 lows. In 2002-2007, the falling ratio emerged on a rally in both equities and gold, albeit a faster appreciation in the latter. From 2008 to the present, the persistent decline in the ratio emerged on a combination of a divergence in the pace of declines (slower fall in gold than in equity indices) or divergence in the direction (rising gold and falling/neutral equities).

    In assessing the interaction between gold and monetary assets, it is worth weighing in on the current gold rally by comparing the amount of gold available versus the creation of monetary assets. Just as the equity/gold ratio stands at 18-year lows, the ratio of total financial assets to physical gold is near the low end of its historical range. Additionally, The world’s available gold stock stands at a mere 5-6% of total global stock and bond market valuation, which is about 4 times lower than in the 1980s. It is no coincidence that the difference between today’s gold/equity ratio and that of the 1980 low was also 6 times greater.

    The Road Ahead

    A return in the equity/gold ratio towards the cyclical lows of 1980 is highly plausible. Rather than simply arguing this point on the basis of further declines in equities (see Tuesday’s note in my website on long term equity cycles), the prospects for prolonged gold rallies are emboldened by the refuge towards the metal as a yield substitute resulting from emerging depreciation in the secular value of currencies. And as we have seen in 2005-7, returning rate hikes pose no challenge to gold.

    Instead, higher rates are accompanied by improved global growth, resurging demand for industrial commodities and a broader backdrop for the precious metal. The all time lows of 1980 in the Dow/gold and S&P500/gold ratios stood at 1.33 and 0.18 respectively, compared to the current levels of 7.8 and 0.81. Assuming a return in the ratios to their 1980 lows, these would have to fall by another 75%-80%. Taking a more conservative scenario of a 50% decline in the equity/gold ratio and a target gold price of $1,250-1,300/ounce, the implied value of the Dow and the S&P500 would stand at 4,500-5000 and 500-520 respectively.

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

    How To Pick Junior Gold Stocks – GoldWorld

    Source: GoldWorld.com

     

    The latest spending, signed into law yesterday by President Obama, came on top of $300 billion committed to Citigroup (C), $700 billion for TARP 1, $300 billion for the FHA, $200 billion for TAF and some $300 billion for Fannie (FNM) and Freddy (FRE). Just over the last six months, which excludes the initial Bush stimulus and several massive, unfunded Federal guarantees, nearly $5 trillion has been committed by the government to the financial industry. Rational observers cannot be faulted for concluding, despite Administration claims to the contrary, that the government is merely throwing money at the problem.

    Although the rhetoric has managed to convince many observers of the possibility of success, the gold market appears to clearly understand the implications of this unprecedented spending.

    The feeling that the government has no idea how to proceed has created palpable panic. In response, pragmatic investors are seeking the ultimate store of wealth. In 2009, as has occurred countless times throughout history, that store will be stocked with gold. Thus, whether the Federal government’s interventions will succeed or fail will be anticipated by the price of gold. Right now, the market is screaming failure.

    Prior to the latest round of Federal spending, the Federal government had committed $4 trillion to postpone bank collapses and to lay the groundwork for subsequent restructuring. But has any of this activity actually rescued the banking system? In light of the evidence of deepening recession, is it likely that the additional $787 billion in the latest stimulus will instill enough confidence to restore economic growth? If not, what damage will it do to the eventual recovery?

    Congressional rescue packages rarely work. Nevertheless, Congress is turning up the heat with previously unimaginable increases of government debt to fund stimulus and rescue packages. Senator McCain rightly describes the scheme as “generational theft”. Each package of debt will encumber many future generations, halt restructuring and also threaten latent hyperinflation.

    While Congress claims that the seriously over-leveraged economy is in desperate need of restructuring, it appears blind to the fact that deleveraging will encourage such restructuring. Instead, Congressional leaders actively seek to increase leverage and add debt. They warn of fire, while pouring petrol on the flames.

    The seriousness of the situation is magnified by the rapidly increasing scale of the problem. Just today, the release of the latest minutes of the Federal Reserve confirmed that even that bastion of eternal optimism is sobering. The American economy, which shrank by 3.8 percent in the last quarter of 2008, is forecast to decline by some 5.5 percent in the first quarter of this year. In some pockets, the unemployment rate is already in double figures. Despite massive Government spending on rescue and stimulus, the American consumer clearly is becoming increasingly nervous, and the credit markets show few signs of recovery.

    With bad news only getting worse, investment markets are turning into quagmires. The Dow Jones Average is testing new lows, and the commodities markets show few signs of life. In such times, the price of gold should fall along with the prices of other assets and commodities. But, the reverse has occurred. In the past two months, gold has staged a remarkable rally. This is despite the activity of price-depressants such as official gold sales by the IMF and official ‘approval’ for massive naked short positions to be opened by new ‘bullion’ banks.

    Not only have gold spot prices risen in the face of such selling pressure, but the price of physical gold is now some $20 to $40 per ounce above spot. This would indicate that investors are now so nervous that they are insisting on taking physical delivery.

    Make no mistake, the economy will not turn around soon. When the recovery fails to materialize, look for governments around the world, and especially in the U.S., to send another massive wave of liquidity downriver. When it does, the value of nearly everything, except for gold, will diminish. Don’t be intimidated by the recent spike in gold. Buy now while you still can.

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

    As I have been saying Buy Gold Now! – 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

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

    Equity / Gold Ratio’s 40 Year Cycle – Seeking Alpha

    By: Ashraf Laidi of AshrafLaidi.com

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    Twitter and Tweeting – The Basics plus Gold Update

    18 Wednesday Feb 2009

    Posted by jschulmansr in Bailout News, banking crisis, bull market, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, Finance, financial, Forex, futures markets, GDX, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, hard assets, How To Invest, How To Make Money, IAU, inflation, Investing, investments, Junior Gold Miners, Latest News, majors, Make Money Investing, market crash, Markets, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, palladium, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, recession, resistance, risk, run on banks, silver, silver miners, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, TARP, Technical Analysis, The Fed, Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3, TIPS, Today, Tweeting, Twitter, U.S. Dollar, XAU

    ≈ Comments Off on Twitter and Tweeting – The Basics plus Gold Update

    Tags

    #(subject), @replies, advertising, appscout, ask for help, Austrian school, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, bull market, categorize your tweets, cell phone, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, deflation, Dennis Gartman, depression, desktop client, DGP, direct-messaging, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, economic, economic trends, economy, Federal Deficit, financial, follow the news, Forex, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, gearlog, GLD, gold, gold miners, hard assets, how to use twitter, 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, mobile client, monetization, Moving Averages, palladium, pcmag, Peter Grandich, Peter Schiff, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, pockettweets, pr, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, promote, promotion, protection, recession, risk, RT, run on banks, safety, Sean Rakhimov, search, search twitter, search.twitter.com, silver, silver miners, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, tag, tag and search, Technical Analysis, text message, tiny url, TIPS, tricks, tweet from your phone, tweetdeck, Tweeting, tweets, twhirl, twidroid, twitpic, Twitter, twitter for beginners, twitterberry, TwitterFox, twitterific, twitterverse, U.S., U.S. Dollar, use @, volatility, warrants, XAU

    Have you ever Tweeted? In this Special Edition of Dare Something Worthy Today Too!, In this special edition I am including articles dedicated to Twitter and Tweeting Basics. In my earlier post today I stated Gold was consolidating for another thrust to test the All Time High of $1003 an oz. Gold was trading around the $965 level. Now checkout what happened… – Good Investing and Good Tweeting! -jschulmansr

    ps-after today’s action it seems like every “forecaster” is now finally heralding a “New” Bull market in Gold. How much money do these guys charge? If you have been following this blog and my notes you would be up $150+ oz in Physical Gold, not to mention some excellent gains in Gold Stocks too, and for Free! Remember you heard it here first! – jschulmansr

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

    Gold tops $980 as safety buying continues – MarketWatch

    Source: MarketWatch

    METALS STOCKS

    Gold up for second day as safety

    buying continues

    By Moming Zhou, MarketWatch
    Last update: 2:24 p.m. EST Feb. 18, 2009
     
    NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — Gold futures rose Wednesday for a second session, ending at the highest level in seven months after briefly hitting $980 an ounce, as safe-haven buying continued.
     
     
    Meanwhile, holdings in the biggest gold exchange-traded fund surpassed 1,000 tons for the first time ever, according to latest data.
     
    Gold for February delivery ended up $10.70, or 1.1%, at $977.70 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, the highest closing level for a front-month contract since July 15, when gold closed at the same price.
     
    The February contract, which expires on Feb. 25, rose to $980.80 earlier. Trading more actively, the April contract also ended higher at $978.20.
    Gold is now about $26 below its all-time high above $1,003 an ounce, hit in March 2008. Talk of “gunning for the $1,000 level” should keep buyers at the helm, said Jon Nadler, senior analyst at Kitco Bullion Dealers.
     
    Helping gold prices hold firm Wednesday was more gloomy news from the U.S. economy.
     
    Construction on new U.S. housing units plunged 16.8% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 466,000, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday, with housing starts now far below the weakest levels of construction in the post-World War II era.
     
    Such news tends to boost gold prices, as some investors buy the metal as a safe haven against economic troubles.
     
    Meanwhile, the Obama administration released details Wednesday of a program to help millions of at-risk homeowners modify their mortgages. See full story on Obama housing plan.
     
    Demand surpasses $100 billion
     
    Demand for gold surpassed $100 billion last year for the first time ever, amid increased industrial and jewelry consumption and investors’ purchase of the metal as a safe haven, the World Gold Council reported Wednesday.
     
    Gold demand — including jewelry consumption, industrial demand and identifiable investments such as bars, coins and gold exchange-traded funds — hit $102 billion in 2008, up 29% from a year ago.
    In tonnage terms, gold demand rose 4% to 3,659 tons, the WGC said
    Gold holdings in SPDR Gold Shares, the largest gold exchange-traded fund, rose to 1,008.80 tons Tuesday, surpassing the 1,000 ton level for the first time, according to latest data from the fund. The total was up more than 200 tons from a month ago.
     
    The SPDR Gold Trust GLD 96.44, +0.99, +1.0%) gained 1.1% to $96.45.
     
    In spot trading, the London afternoon gold-fixing price — a benchmark for gold traded directly between big institutions — stood at $964 an ounce Wednesday, down $4 from the previous day.
     
    Other metals, equities
     
    In other metals trading, March copper rose 1% to $1.436 a pound, while March silver gained 2% to $14.29 an ounce.
    March palladium added 0.5% to $219.10 an ounce, and the April contract for sister metal platinum rose slightly to $1,098.90 an ounce.
     
    In equities, shares of Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX 37.88, +0.59, +1.6%) , the world’s largest gold-mining company, added 2.2% to $38.13, while Goldcorp Inc. (GG 32.14, +0.30, +0.9%) gained 1.6% to $32.36, and South Africa’s Gold Fields Ltd. (GFI 11.79, -0.04, -0.3%) was up 0.3% to $11.85.
     
    The Amex Gold Bugs Index (HUI 320.54, +1.35, +0.4%) , which tracks the share prices of major gold companies, gained 0.7% to 321.41.
     
    The iShares Gold Trust ETF (IAU 96.48, +0.94, +1.0%) rose 1% to $96.50, while the iShares Silver Trust ETF (SLV 14.20, +0.21, +1.5%) rose 1.4% to $14.18. End of Story
     
    Moming Zhou is a MarketWatch reporter based in New York.
    =========================

    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

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

     
    Twitter and Tweeting – The Basics
     
    Top 10 Twitter Tips for Beginners – PC Magazine
     
     by Sean Ludwig
     
    Ready to jump into Twitter, but don’t know how to get started? Follow these 10 tips and you’ll fit right in.
     
    Is it finally time to take the Twitter plunge? The free service that lets users micro-blog 140 characters at a time had accumulated around 1.9 million users as of December 2008, according to comScore. If you are just now jumping on the Twitter bandwagon, or are intimidated by your inexperience with Twitter etiquette and acronyms, allow us to share some Twittery tips that will make your experience easier and more enjoyable.
    1. Shrink Your URLs
    Shrink Your URLs
     
     One of the most common uses of Twitter is sharing links. But you only have 140 characters to work with, so instead of sharing a long URL, use one of several URL-shortening services to shrink that link. Some of our favorites include tinyurl.com, is.gd, ow.ly, and bit.ly. 
    2. RT = Retweet
    2. RT = Retweet
    If you want to copy and paste someone else’s tweet, that’s totally accepted and appreciated, as long as you give the original tweeter credit for it. Just put “RT @name” in front of their tweet and post it yourself.
    3. Direct Messaging
    Direct Messaging
    With Twitter’s direct-messaging (DM) function, you can send a private 140-character message to another user, kind of like abbreviated e-mail. However, you can only direct message Twitter users that are following you.
    4. Use the @ Sign
    Use the @ Sign
    To create a reply or to give someone props on Twitter, simply place an @ sign in front of their Twitter name. If it is a reply, the @ sign must be the first character of the tweet. To see replies to your own tweets, click on @Replies from your profile page.
    5. Search For Your Friends
    Search For Your Friends
    Search.twitter.com works well for finding your friends, celebrities, or organizations, or for searching for specific topics you’re interested in.  
    6. Categorize Your Tweets for Added Visibility    
     

    Categorize Your Tweets for Added Visibility
    If you’re tweeting about a popular subject (Obama, Lost, etc) putting a # in front of the subject makes it easy for others to find your tweet, and perhaps they will want to follow you. For example, when the plane crashed into the Hudson River in January, #flight1549 became a popular tag and search term.
    7. Share Pictures
    Share Pictures
    People love sharing their photos with the world, and some even break news with them, like Janis Krums, who used TwitPic to post one of the first up-close photos of Flight 1549 on his Twitter feed. Services like TwitPic let users easily upload their photos and post them directly to Twitter.
    8. Tweet from Your Phone
    Tweet from Your Phone
    Twitter allows you to update your status and receive updates via text message. Under Settings, go to the Devices tab and enter your phone number to start sending and receiving mobile tweets. If your incoming tweets/texts are overwhelming you, disable this option by going back to the same panel and following the instructions.
    9. Pick a Good Desktop Client
    Pick a Good Desktop Client
    With desktop clients such as TweetDeck, Twhirl, and TwitterFox, you can receive tweets in a much more manageable fashion, especially if you follow a lot of people, respond often, and use direct messages a lot. TweetDeck, for example, allows you to create specific groups, if you want to split your feed into individual columns.
    10. Download a Mobile Client
    Download a Mobile Client
    If you have a BlackBerry, an iPhone, or another smartphone with Wi-Fi or 3G access, a mobile client might be a better option than using text messages. Mobile Twitter clients worth checking out include Twitterific, TwitterBerry, PocketTweets, and Twidroid. You can even follow PCMag on Twitter! Find us at http://twitter.com/pcmag, and follow AppScout and Gearlog too!
    =======================
    My Note: you can follow me on Twitter too!
    http://twitter.com/jschulmansr  or click here.
    =======================
    Six Ways to Make Twitter Useful – PC Magazine
    Source: PCMAG.com by Nick Douglas

    02.17.09

    Twitter’s usefulness goes far beyond finding out what strangers ate for lunch. Read breaking news, get customer service, or even chat with your favorite celebrities.

    Twitter is vapid, Twitter is narcissistic—Twitter is actually terribly useful if you can ignore knee-jerk backlash. The casual, instant nature of the service lends itself to solving small problems quickly, distributing live-on-the-scene news reports, and keeping track of people. Here are six easy ways to transform Twitter from a time sink into an indispensable tool.

     

    Follow the News

    In general, the Web at large is still a more complete news source. Twitter is for keeping track of one niche you care about, staying informed on a news-heavy day, and getting live updates from Twitter users on the scene (like from an Apple keynote or a plane crash in the Hudson River). @CNN posts headlines with story links, but I prefer the one-sentence story summaries on the unofficial @cnnbrk. @NYTimes posts headlines and links too, but it also follows the accounts of 80 NYT sections and writers. Other popular news feeds include @BreakingNewsOn, @nprnews, @weirdnews, @macrumors, @MarsPhoenix, @Astronautics, and several feeds from Digg. PCMag offers a feed for tech news, as do Gearlog and AppScout. You can also hand-roll feeds from a news site’s RSS using Twitterfeed, but don’t publicize it too hard lest the site owners complain.

    Get Better Customer Service

    Conducting customer service on Twitter doesn’t make much sense—for the company. It just won’t scale well once Twitter gets another ten million users. But right now you can get more attention than you deserve as a single customer by talking to one of these companies on Twitter: Zappos, Starbucks, Whole Foods, JetBlue, and many, many others. Next time you have a customer complaint, just Google the search string “[Company name] Twitter” to see if you can make your case in 140 characters. Or just post a gripe about the company or product and wait for someone in the Twitterverse to respond.

    Ask for Help

    As with blogs and forums, Twitter is a great place to ask questions you’re too lazy to find the answers for yourself. And the service is absolutely perfect for asking favors (“Can anyone help me move on Friday?”), gathering opinions (“Do organic bananas taste better?”), or getting advice (“How much RAM should I get for my new MacBook?”) Twitter takes a problem you can solve by spending 5 minutes at a computer and makes it solvable in 10 seconds from the produce aisle. Of course, this works best when your real-life friends are following you, as developer Owen Winkler explains. Especially if you ask your followers to help you lose weight. The flip side is that Twitter communication is meant to be two-way. Build your network of followers and your Twitter karma by jumping in with answers and help of your own.

    Promote Your Work/Company

    Again, Twitter isn’t the first service to solve this problem; the immediacy of the service just makes it a good option. If you don’t abuse it, you can use an occasional link to promote an app you’ve built, an article you’ve written, or a longer plea for someone to please, please help you move on Friday. Just keep it to three links a week; any more and you’ll alienate followers who already know about your work or couldn’t care less.

    Keep Up with Friends

    Other than entertaining strangers, this is my favorite use of Twitter. One message at a time, knowing who has a cold or who got in a fender bender is dull. But in aggregate, skimming your Twitter feed gives you a sixth sense about what your social circle is up to, what moods they’re in, whether they’re free for a drink that night and whether you’d better offer to pay. Unlike the more intense location-based services, Twitter still has a built-in casualness: You’re not necessarily asking people to meet you right here right now, you’re just asking if anyone’s free for lunch.

    Meet Celebrities

    Not all of the most-followed Twitter users pay attention to messages from their followers, but Brent Spiner (Star Trek‘s Data) is pretty friendly, as is comedian Stephen Fry. And if you have heroes in the tech media world, you’re set for life here.

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

    Final Note: Get involved in investing in precious metals whatever form, i.e. bullion, stocks, etf’s and etc. NOW!

    I can be tweeted @jschulmansr or jschulmansr

    Enjoy and Have A Great Evening! -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/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

    ≈ 1 Comment

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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

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

     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.
    ===================================

    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

    ===================================
    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.

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

    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

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

    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.

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

    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

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

    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

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

    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

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

    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.

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

    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

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

    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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    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

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    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.
    =========================================

     

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

     

     

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

    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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    Scary, they’re actually Going to Pass This?

    24 Saturday Jan 2009

    Posted by jschulmansr in Austrian school, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, Barack Obama, bear market, capitalism, central banks, Comex, commodities, Copper, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, Federal Deficit, Finance, financial, Forex, Fundamental Analysis, futures, futures markets, gold, gold miners, hard assets, How To Invest, How To Make Money, inflation, Investing, investments, Latest News, Make Money Investing, market crash, Markets, mining companies, mining stocks, platinum, platinum miners, precious, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, recession, risk, run on banks, safety, silver, silver miners, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimilus, Stimulus, Stocks, TARP, Technical Analysis, U.S. Dollar, volatility

    ≈ Comments Off on Scary, they’re actually Going to Pass This?

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    Curious?… to find out what I am talking about? Read On… Congress shouldn’t be allowed to do this! Not only am going to include the TIME magazine article, I am including the actual link to the bill itself, the press release version. The coming runaway Inflation Train and what to do to protect yourself! Read Below…Good Investing! – jschulmansr

    *********************************************************************

    First Here are the links…

    The American Recovery and Reinvestment Bill of 2009

    The American Recovery and Reinvestment Bill of 2009 Press Summary

    *********************************************************************

    A Guide to Reading the America Recover and Reinvestment Bill- TIME MAGAZINE

    Source: Time Magazine

    Brendan McDermid / Reuters

    Brendan McDermid / Reuters

    “Madness is to think of too many things in succession too fast, or of one thing too exclusively” — Voltaire

    The American Recovery and Reinvestment Bill of 2009 should be required reading for every citizen from billionaires to the average person. It was issued by The Committee On Appropriations and is the road map for the $825 billion that the Congress and Administration intend to put into the U.S. economy to jumpstart the economy out of the recession.

    The most important part of the document may be the description of how the country was dragged into the worst economic period in its history. ( See pictures of the Top 10 scared traders.)

    At the beginning of the bill, the authors write: “Since 2001, as worker productivity went up, 96% of the income growth in this country went to the wealthiest 10% of society. While they were benefiting from record high worker productivity, the remaining 90% of Americans were struggling to sustain their standard of living. They sustained it by borrowing … and borrowing … and borrowing, and when they couldn’t borrow anymore, the bottom fell out.”

    If that analysis is true, then two other things must be accurate. The first is that the cause of the recession was Americans becoming overextended in their use of credit. The other one, which is a consequence of the first, is that if the government can facilitate future consumer borrowing, the economy will be righted again in short order. That would mean that more complex methods of solving the problems of the recession, such as spending money on infrastructure, would be unnecessary. It would be simpler to take $825 billion and make it available for home equity loans, enlarge credit card lines, and auto loans.

    But, the authors of the bill are not willing to follow their own logic, so they have crafted another plan. The first assumption of what the program will do, and among the most important of its goals, is only mentioned in passing. “This package is the first crucial step in a concerted effort to create and save 3 to 4 million jobs.” This is a little twist on what is being said in public.

    The general assumption about job creation under the program is that it will add 3 to 4 million jobs. But in the introduction to the bill the assumptions about job loss are laid out quite clearly: “Credit is frozen, consumer purchasing power is in decline, in the last four months the country has lost 2 million jobs and we are expected to lose another 3 to 5 million in the next year.”

    The mathematics of the two sets of employment analysis taken together would show then that no new jobs would be created. The three million or so jobs which will be lost in 2009 will simply be replaced by three million new ones. The jobs lost late in 2008 will not be replaced in this program, leaving a two million job deficit Joblessness will stay at about 7.2%

    Other than those details, the money will be well spent.

    The states need help, and the federal government means to provide it: A sum of $79 billion in state fiscal relief will be provided to prevent cutbacks to key services

    After the plans to help the states, cut taxes, and provide new infrastructure for the nation, the programs get a little off track.

    The bill means to spend $44 million to repair the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s headquarters. About $400 million will go to repairing national monuments in Washington, which are somehow considered essential to national infrastructure.

    Additionally, Congress plans to pay out $200 million to provide financial incentives for teachers and principals to do their jobs better. Another $100 million will be used to establish a set of grants to provide $100 to local governments and nonprofit organizations to remove lead-based paint hazards in low-income housing.

    Perhaps the best investment in the bill is for $80 million to ensure that worker protection laws are enforced as recovery infrastructure investments are carried out. In other words, there will be a police system set up to make sure that no one with a new job working on national infrastructure with money provided by the government will have his or her rights violated.

    The bill calls for over one hundred programs which Congress plans to enact. These include addressing problems as diverse as community block grants, upgrading the forestry service, bridge removal, and NASA research funding. The remarkable thing about the legislation is that almost every program is ill-defined and subject to broad interpretation and a wide variation as to how it might be enacted.

    In a sentence, The American Recovery and Reinvestment Bill of 2009 will have to build a bureaucracy larger than any ever created by the US government in order to manage its many parts.

    The first sentence of the bill reads “The economy is in a crisis not seen since the Great Depression.” If it requires all of these plans to get America back on the road to recovery, the process will take a decade.

    — Douglas A. McIntyre

    See pictures of the global financial crisis.

    For constant business updates, go to 24/7wallst.com.

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

    *** My Cure for the coming runaway inflation train? Read below…

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

    Gold Will Shine Again in 2009 – Seeking Alpha  Part 1

    By: Sean Hyman of mywealth.com

    I think this one may be a shocker to many…that gold is going to be much higher at the end of 2009 than it is right now. I think it will take out its highs just above $1,000 an ounce and will head for at least $1,250 an ounce. (Gold is presently trading around $853 an ounce.)

    When I was a stock broker, I hated gold. To me it was the dumbest investment on the planet. Of course I worked as a broker when gold was in a multi-year bear market.

    But the more that volatile booms and busts have caused the need for more government intervention, the more of a believer I’ve become in gold.

    Let’s look at several of the dynamics that have helped to form my view for gold in 2009.

    South Africa is home to some of the biggest gold mines in the world. In 2008, their gold output shrank as exploding input costs caused them to close some of their most expensive mines. (Produce less of the metal and the speed of the supply shrinks which helps to support the price.)

    This has been one dynamic that has helped to support prices in 2008 and that has kept gold in an 8 year bull market. Even in 2005 and 2008 when the dollar rallied, gold still held its ground. This shows a lot of strength for the metal since the dollar and gold largely trade somewhat opposite of each other (being that gold is denominated in dollars and when the dollar is rising, it tends to calm the fears for the currency which typically dulls the demand for the precious metal).

    In fact, had it not been for tons of hedge fund failures and liquidations, I think gold would actually be much higher than it is right now.

    Helicopter Ben & Obama will do their part to help gold out!

    With the credit crisis in full swing, the Fed has responded by turning on the printing presses at full speed. This enormous increase in the money supply (which is temporarily clogged up in the banks) will eventually be unleashed on the economy. Once this happens, you will quickly see deflation erased and we may actually move into a period of hyper-inflation.

    Why would I go so far as to think that? Heck, the Obama administration may print as much as a few trillion dollars to help out the banks according to former central banker Volcker.

    We’ve also got another stimulus package coming within weeks according to the Obama administration.

    Another reason why I feel that a huge bout of inflation will return is because of interest rates. If you’ll remember, Congress got pretty harsh with Alan Greenspan for taking rates down to 1%. They even went so far as to accuse him of causing the recent bubbles in the economy, which he denies.

    Well, if the “1% cheap money” inflated things into the stratosphere, what do you think will happen with Ben Bernanke’s interest rate range of 0% to 0.25%? Could you say it would have any less of an effect? No, it will have an even greater “bubble effect” in time as the cheap money actually is released out into the economy.

    Tomorrow, I’ll continue with “Part 2” of this “gold story”… So stay tuned!

    Gold Will Shine Again in 2009 Part 2

    by Sean Hyman

    Get ready for the “economic pipes” to be unclogged and for a tidal wave of inflation to head our way!

    I assure you that Obama’s economic advisors will be the “drain-o” that gets the pipes unclogged. When this happens, the Fed knows that it will have to “mop up” this excessive liquidity in the financial system.

    However, here’s what I predict will happen: The Fed, while it wants to be a forecaster of the economy really just ends up becoming a “responder” after the fact to what’s going on in the economy. Therefore, between the time that the Fed starts to see the inflationary signs in the economy and starts the process of draining the excess liquidity from the economy, it will be too late. The hyper inflationary effects will already be in play. They will be “late to the ball game” yet again.

    When all of this starts to happen (and possibly a bit beforehand), savvy gold investors will sense it coming and will buy up gold ahead of time…positioning themselves like a surfer that gets out ahead of the coming wave that will propel him forward.

    The Fed will do its best at that point to drain the money supply and hike rates, but there are delays from when they start to act and when it actually starts to effect the economy. This “lag time” will cause a huge return of inflation in a big way that will propel gold ever higher and will eventually dilute the dollar as well.

    You see, when there’s more of something in existence, it begins to hold less value. So as the money supply is quickly increasing, the dollar will eventually feel the effects of it. Remember, there’s that delayed “lagging” period which is why it hasn’t already been felt even now.

    However, as sure as the sun is coming up tomorrow…it’s coming. So get prepared ahead of time. For, the key to successful investing is to buy just ahead of the massive move. This requires an investor to “think ahead”. You can’t just see what’s happening at present and prosper like you should in your investing. It requires one to be “forward looking” and thus “forward thinking”.

    When all of this unfolds, investors will buy gold (which is essentially exchanging their dollars for gold) as they seek safety, liquidity and an “insurance policy” against runaway inflation.

    Gold production will continue to shrink and Central Banks will hold onto their gold in 2009!

    So with the economy deeply damaged, unemployment claims hitting almost 600k as of this writing, there’s not going to be a huge incentive for investors to sell gold. That’s why gold has only come off of its top by 17.9% and stocks have been 40+% off of their highs on average. You can see its underlying strength just in that fact alone.

    Also, remember that gold supplies will continue to tighten in 2009 just as they did in 2008. Why? Africa’s production of gold sank 14% which was the lowest levels since 1899. That’s serious! But it’s not just a South Africa story. U.S. gold production fell 2% last year. While China (which has now become the world’s biggest producer of gold) had their production rise 3% last year, the “net” result collectively among all countries is a net slowdown in gold production.

    Central bank selling in gold was down a full 42% last year. And you’d be an idiot of a central banker to sell a bunch of gold in 2009 with the U.S. and global economy still hobbling along. Therefore, you can count on these guys not adding to the selling.

    Therefore, get ready to buy gold, sell dollars and buy foreign currencies like the euro and especially the Aussie dollar which is greatly helped by rising gold and other commodity prices.

    Most of the increase in gold and selling of dollars may come more in the 2nd half of the year than the 1st half due to the delayed effect of Fed policy and as the Obama administration starts to get its feet wet in tackling the economic woes.

    But be aware and watch for the change just in case it happens even a bit sooner than I think.

    Gold consolidates its multi-year gains as it catches its breath and prepares to run “ever higher” in 2009!

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

    2009 Gold Outlook

    2009 Gold Outlook

    How To Invest in Gold in 2009

    By Luke Burgess
    Monday, January 5th, 2009

    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.

    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—before a recovery 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

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

    Tomorrow we’ll check on what’s the latest on the Obama eligibility issue.

    Be Blessed and Remember: Dare Something Today Too!


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    Has World War III Started?

    09 Friday Jan 2009

    Posted by jschulmansr in agricultural commodities, alternate energy, Austrian school, banking crisis, banks, Barack Obama, bear market, Bollinger Bands, bull market, capitalism, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, communism, Copper, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, deflation, depression, diamonds, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, economic trends, economy, Finance, financial, Forex, Fundamental Analysis, futures, futures markets, gold, gold miners, hard assets, heating oil, How To Invest, How To Make Money, India, inflation, Investing, investments, Keith Fitz-Gerald, Latest News, Make Money Investing, Marc Faber, market crash, Markets, mining companies, mining stocks, Moving Averages, natural gas, Nuclear Weapons, 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, Siliver, silver, silver miners, small caps, socialism, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stocks, Technical Analysis, timber, Today, U.S. Dollar, uranium, volatility, warrants, Water

    ≈ Comments Off on Has World War III Started?

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    Has World War III already started? According to Marc Faber it has! Check out his interview. Next do you think the government can lose? According to this pundit not only will it lose it is going to lose big! Finally, for years now China has been coming to the rescue by buying Treasuries and US Debt, what will happen when they and other countries stop? Continuation of series from yesterday’s post. Just In! Peter Schiff Interviwed on Russian TV- Get Prepared!  adjust your portfolios and if you own Precious Metals hang on for the ride of your life!- Good Investing!- jschulmansr

    Marc Faber on the Economy, Gold, WWIII – Seeking alpha

    By: Tim Iacono of Iacono Research

    Another good interview with Dr. Marc Faber, this one over at Bloomberg where he’s been a regular for many years (recent appearances at the likes of CNBC are somewhat unusual as he tends to go against conventional wisdom, something that abounds at CNBC).
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    There’s lots of good stuff in this one – the outlook for the global economy, oil, gold, base metals, natural resource stocks, World War III having already started…

    On the subject of alternatives to the government solutions for the current problems, he was asked how he expected the populace to stand for the government doing nothing?

    That’s the problem of society. If people can not accept the downside to capitalism, then they should become socialists and then they have a planned economy. They should go to eastern Europe twenty years ago and to Russia and China for the last 70 years.

    How do you tell that to somebody in Detroit who’s losing his home today?

     

     

     

    Why is he losing his home? Because of government intervention. The government – the Federal Reserve – kept interest rates artificially low and created the biggest housing bubble, not just in the U.S. but worldwide. That is what I’d explain to the worker in Detroit.

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    How the Federal Government will Lose in 2009 – Seeking Alpha

    By: Rob Viglione of The Freedom Factory

    Through a combination of incompetence and greed, the federal government has placed itself in a position of checkmate. There is no way to finance its budget deficits without devaluing the dollar or causing interest rates to rise. With $10.6 trillion in debt, $8.5 trillion in new money created or given away in 2008, and multiple years of trillion dollar deficits planned by Obama, government has no way to fund its extravagances without either printing a lot more money or borrowing unprecedented sums.

    This means that either Treasury bonds will crash, or the dollar will suffer significant devaluation relative to foreign exchange or precious metals, especially gold.

    TV Does Great Interview With Peter Schiff (Russian TV, That Is)

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    Remember Dare Something Worthy Today Too!

     

    Market forces are telling the world to shed unproductive assets and shrink capacity, yet central banks and governments around the world, in particular the U.S., are refusing to listen. Rather than allow markets to snap back to sustainable equilibrium from previously artificial highs, the federal government clings to the notion that forcibly shuffling resources, propping up asset prices, and diluting the money supply will magically save the day.

    There are consequences to everything. The consequences of shuffling resources (taxing productive ventures and doling out those resources to failing ones, i.e. bailouts) are stunted growth for good businesses and propagation of bad ones. Artificially propping up asset prices means that those who are generally less competent remain the custodians of society’s capital, and diluting the money supply inflates aways everyone’s wealth over time, particularly harming the poor and middle class.

    For decades the federal government has gotten away with this reshuffle and inflate game, but the pawns are drowning, the rooks helpless, and the knights ready to turn on the King. Perhaps this is overly dramatic. Clearly, I doubt the capability of the Federal Reserve, Congress, and Obama to “fix” the economy; rather, I strongly believe they are destroying it by forcing us all to drink this Keynesian Kool-Aid. However, whether or not the economy recovers amidst this historic central government action, there are two phenomena we can exploit to our advantage:

    • Short the US dollar
    • Short US Treasuries

    In “When will the great Treasury unwinding begin?” I show how government debt has been bid to unsustainable levels and will likely fall. The one concern I see stated all too often is that the Federal Reserve will keep buying Treasuries to artificially depress interest rates. This will, it is claimed, keep bond prices inflated. The one undeniable counter to this is that government must somehow fund its $1.2 trillion estimated 2009 deficit. It cannot do this by issuing and then buying the same bonds. It can only raise revenue by selling bonds to other parties, or by diluting the money supply by cranking up the printing presses. There are no other options. There you have it – we have the government in checkmate!

    The likely outcome is that they will try to do both. That is why I am heavily shorting both 30-Year Treasury bonds and the dollar. Both assets will likely lose as the government becomes increasingly desperate and the world’s biggest buyers realize there are better alternatives available. Make your bets now before it becomes treasonous to bet against Big Brother!

    Disclosure: Long UDN, short TLT, long GLD.

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    Five New Forces to Drive Gold Higher – Seeking Alpha

    By: James West of The Midas Letter

    Gold naysayers habitually point to the relatively weak performance of gold relative to the broader market over the last 5 years. Given the market today, that argument is increasingly wrong, and the naysayers are soon to either admit their mistake, or pretend that they were never naysayers at all. That’s because during the last 3 months, five major new forces have emerged to compound the previous strong drivers of the gold price up to now.

    These new forces are as follows:

    1. China has stopped buying U.S. debt.
      An interesting piece in the New York Times today signals that China, up until now the biggest buyer of U.S. Treasuries and bonds issued by Fannie and Freddie, is moving towards an end to that policy. China holds over US$1 trillion of such paper, and as interest rates collapse, there is less and less incentive for them to buy American.China has made several adjustments to programs that used to give banks and other financial institutions within the country incentive to buy U.S. assets, which means essentially that these same customers for assets will now be looking for Chinese products.The effect this will have on gold is two-fold. In the first place, reduced demand for U.S. debt will hamper Obama’s plans to keep printing money, because the one limiting factor that still seems to be respected in terms of how much paper can be printed, is the idea that there must be a counterparty to every issuance of T-Bills to warrant continued printing. Theoretically, less demand for T-Bills will force a rise in interest rates to attract investors. But that does not appear forthcoming, which will make the U.S. dollar weak relative to other currencies – especially gold.The second effect is that by eliminating incentives for Chinese banks to acquire U.S. denominated assets, investors there will divert more funds to holding gold as a hedge against their current U.S. dollar holdings, which will be diminishing in value.
    2. Future discoveries of gold deposits will diminish dramatically.
      The biggest source of gold ounce inventory for major gold producers is the discoveries made by the several thousand juniors who scour the earth in search of favorable geology. With the collapse in base metals prices, many of these juniors are under increasing pressure to consolidate and downsize, and many more will disappear altogether.That means less money going into gold exploration, and that means the number of new discoveries that can be acquired by majors is going to go down sharply in the coming years. In theory, as gold continues to outperform all other asset classes, there will be a rush back into junior gold exploration, but that won’t happen until gold is taken much higher and investment demand for it soars.
    3. Existing by-product gold production will fall sharply
      In copper, zinc and other base metals mines around the world, gold occurs in metallic deposits as a by-product of some other dominant mineral. In the United States, 15 percent of gold production is derived from mining copper, lead and zinc ores.With the collapse in prices for these metals, the by-product production of gold is most often insufficient to justify the continued operation of the mine profitably, and it is likely that a significant amount of this by-product gold production will cease along with the shutdown of these operations. The result will be less gold production from existing operations, contributing to the now even faster growing gap between supply and demand.
    4. Gold is becoming mainstream
      One of the biggest contributors to gold’s unpopularity as a main street investment is that it has been mercilessly derided and ridiculed by mainstream investment media and institutions. There is very little opportunity for an investment advisor to insinuate himself into a gold purchase transaction, since most anybody who wants to hold the metal can visit their local bullion exchange or mint and buy as much as they’d like. Because the massive investment institutions that dominate the investment advisory business can’t make a fee out of advising you to buy gold, they try to convince you to purchase other asset classes which their firm has either originated or is a participant in a syndication of investment banks selling such products.Thanks to the widespread coverage of the questionable integrity of these complex securities, and since many main street investors have been burned by their investment advisors (they feel), there is increasing main street advice being doled out to buy gold. One need only search Google news on any given day to discover that headlines critical of gold are now replaced with headlines singing its praises.
    5. Gold is the best performing asset class of the decade
      Now that the global financial meltdown has got up a head of steam, investors are hard pressed to find any investment that has performed well over the last ten years as consistently as gold. The chart below outlines this performance and appears here courtesy of James Turk’s GoldMoney.com.
    Gold Performance: 2001-2008 (click to enlarge)
    Gold Performance 2001 - 2008

    As you can see, any investment still returning an average of 10 – 17 percent is a winner, compared to everything else you can generate a chart for. As this intelligence permeates the none-too-quick popular investment imagination, and, combined with the other 4 factors, gold is going to be where the world’s next crop of millionaires is minted.

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