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Category Archives: Technical Analysis

Gold is Starting to Move Up!

17 Wednesday Dec 2008

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

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

Jeffrey Christian: Foreseeing Bright Days for Metals – Seeking Alpha

By:  Jeffrey Christian of The Gold Report

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

TGR: You were talking about Volcker, who issued something like $300 billion of debt—Treasuries— in the ’80s and sold them to cover it and continued to do more of that. At some point, don’t we have to pay that back? Isn’t there a Piper to be paid?

JC: In theory, yes. But there’s a problem with the doomsayers. Look at Jim Grant, who publishes the Interest Rate Observer. I think it was in 1980 that he said, “Oh, my God, look at this $37 billion debt that Carter’s ramping up. This is unsustainable; the Treasury market is going to collapse.” At some point, he probably will be right and the Treasury market will collapse. But in the meantime, we’ve had 28 years that make a $37 billion deficit pale. We wish we could have a $37 billion deficit.

In the meantime, several things mitigate against any imminent collapse. One is the fact that the world economy basically always has been and always will be a giant confidence game, in the sense that there has to be a certain level of confidence to keep things going. The other thing is that for the dollar to collapse, some other currency has to rise very sharply. The problem that the world’s in right now is that for the dollar to fall sharply, investors have to have greater confidence in some other currency. This is really great for gold. It makes you really bullish for gold. Another currency has to rise if the dollar’s going to fall. Ask people “Which one do you have more confidence in?” There’s silence in the room and then people buy gold. No one has any confidence in any of the other currencies or the governments behind them—the Euro, the Yen, the Swiss Franc or anything else.

In a speech a few weeks ago, I said, “The dollar is like your mother. You’ll sit around and complain about her and how she’s so mean and nasty and you’ve got to get away from her. But as soon as you cut your knee, you go running back to her crying.” That’s what’s happening right now in the world economy, in the financial markets. Everybody has been saying for five years that the dollar is toast and the dollar is no good and the U.S. debt is unsustainable. But as soon as you get into a banking panic, everybody converts their money into dollars and Treasuries and CDs held by banks that are guaranteed by the FDIC. Why? Because even though we’ve lost a tremendous amount of faith in the U.S. Treasury, we still have more faith in the U.S. Treasury than we do in, say, the European Central Bank or the Bank of Japan or the Bank of England.

TGR: So if the dollar devalues and some other currency has to rise, it bodes really well for gold. But considering the trillions of dollars of debt out there, is there enough gold for it to be a viable alternative currency? Or will the price for every ounce of gold become something cataclysmic like $3,000 or $4,000?

JC: Yes. If you tried to monetize the debt in gold, or if you tried to go back to a rigid gold standard, you would either have to have $3,000 or $4,000 or $5,000 or $6,000 gold, or you would have to severely contract the world economy back to where we were in, say, the 17th century. But I don’t think that’s what you’re looking at. Rather, you’re looking at some portion of the world’s assets moving into gold as an alternative to currencies. In that situation, you “only” see $1,000 or $2,000 gold.

TGR: Some of us might like $5,000 or $6,000 gold, but maybe not everything else that would be going on with gold prices at that level.

JC: Right. You definitely wouldn’t like everything else going on. It’s interesting. It depends on how a gold standard would be created. The last time we had a “serious” discussion of a gold standard in the United States was during 1980 election campaign. The Republicans actually had a platform plank written by Arthur Laffer to return to a gold standard. What Laffer said was that for the U.S. Treasury notes in circulation, you would have to have 40% of the value of the Treasury notes in gold held by the U.S. Treasury, or a 40% cover. It sounded really stringent, but then you realized that since the 1960s almost all of the bills printed actually had been Federal Reserve notes—not Treasury notes. When asked about that, Laffer said that’s right. What you need from a gold standard is the public’s sense of confidence in it. If you tell them Treasury notes are backed by gold, they’ll be more confident in the value of the dollar. They won’t bother looking at the fact that we’re printing Federal Reserve notes ’til the cows come home. It was a very disingenuous and cynical approach to the American voters.

TGR: So we may see some rush to gold, which may lift it up to $1,000 or $2,000. What about other precious metals like silver? Will that tail along with gold?

JC: I’m actually now in a situation where I like silver, platinum, palladium and the other platinum group metals as well as gold. I like silver for a couple of reasons. One is it’s a financial asset like gold, it is benefiting from the move of investors into silver and gold, and it will continue to benefit from that. But you’ll also see several other things. First off, there is not a lot of metal in the silver market, half a billion ounces in bullion and maybe a half a billion ounces in bullion coins. In gold you have a billion-plus ounces that investors own and another 980 million ounces that central banks own. There aren’t those large enormous stockpiles of silver if you’re looking at it on a dollar value basis. In addition, silver is an industrial metal with some very interesting new uses coming up. It’s losing some of its traditional uses such as photography; but in other uses, such as batteries and electronics, it’s actually growing very sharply and could grow more sharply over the next few years. So I think silver’s got a lot of good things going for it. It’s an alternative financial asset like gold. It’s a smaller, less liquid, more volatile market than gold. And it has the industrial base that gold doesn’t have. So I like silver for those three reasons.

TGR: What brought silver down so much? It got up to $21; now we’re at $9 and change.

JC: The massive amount of leveraged investment in these things has brought all of these metals down. Everybody keeps talking about de-leveraging, but if you ask them to explain it, they can’t. But let me try to explain what I mean when I say leveraged investment. You had hundreds of billions of dollars of institutional money invested in gold and silver forwards, gold and silver over-the-counter options, and gold and silver indexed notes—all written by banks and all with major leverage factors. Some were 10:1; some of them were actually 30:1 or 40:1. As the financial crisis occurred, institutional investors had their credit lines pulled back. Consequently, they had to reduce the amount of investments that they’d borrowed money to make. So a hedge fund that has $10 billion under management and a leverage factor of 20 might have $200 billion of leveraged trades. Then suddenly you don’t have the money to support $200 billion worth of leveraged trades. You have to liquidate most of them because you really only have $10 billion—which is going down in value fast. So there’s been this massive sale of leveraged products. It’s like running for the exit in a theater when somebody yells fire. It’s a very small door, a very illiquid market, and all of a sudden there’s no provision of credit. Everybody’s trying to get rid of their leveraged exposure all at once and these prices have just plunged down. That’s really what it’s been.

TGR: But silver has lost nearly half, while gold is down less.

JC: Silver prices are always more volatile than gold prices. That’s just a fact of life. It has to do with the fact that the silver market is about one-twelfth the size in dollar terms. The other thing is that gold is money and silver is like money. Silver has this schizophrenic personality. It is an industrial commodity, but it’s also a financial asset and you do see more people investing in gold than in silver worldwide right now. As the prices plunged, you have seen an unprecedented volume of physical gold and silver being purchased by investors around the world. So you have this dichotomy, where the price is being hammered down by de-leveraging in the paper market, while people—in some cases the same people—are taking what’s left of their chips and putting them into physical gold. One of the things I think you will see going forward over the next many years is a lot of institutional investors, including sovereign wealth funds and government funds, wanting exposure to gold and silver but not on a leveraged basis where they’re really owning IOUs issued by major banks. They are wanting the physical material.

TGR: Does that hold true for retail investors too? So rather than buying ETFs or Central Fund of Canada (AMEX:CEF), should they be buying actual physical?

JC: It really depends on the investor and their perspective. The high net worth individuals we deal with own some physical gold and silver and maybe platinum group metals that they actually store in their own vaults. They own other material that’s being held for them in depositories in various parts of the world. They also own some ETFs, some options, some mining companies and some exploration companies. So it’s really a diversified portfolio.

Except for these high net worth individuals, we don’t deal with retail investors directly as customers at CPM Group. We talk to them, though, and we do deal with people who supply the retail market. A lot of people are moving into the physical material. Demand in the ETFs also has been strong over the last few months and some of that demand comes from people who can’t get their orders filled for one-ounce coins or 100-ounce silver bars. They’re buying ETF shares instead because they’re the next best thing.

TGR: Does that carry implied leverage?

JC: The ETFs do not. The ETFs are ounce-for-ounce and it’s held in an allocated account. If I’m an investor and want to own a 100-ounce bar, I can’t find one in silver. Northwest Territorial Mint will sell me one if I want to wait 16 weeks for delivery. Silver Recycling Company [TSX.V:TSR] is also selling them and they have it for relatively prompt delivery, but that’s a very new development just in the last few weeks, in response to this market. If I’m an investor and I want to buy 100 ounces of silver and can’t find Maple Leafs or Eagles and I can’t find a 100-ounce silver bar, I can buy a share of an ETF and have it stored for me on an allocated basis through the ETF mechanism.

TGR: Suppose the economy actually does start to turn around, as you’re projecting maybe in the second half of 2009, and you have all this money on the sidelines, which you indicated might flow back into the marketplace rapidly. Does that mean gold will rise through the recovery and then go back down?

JC: Because gold is money and an alternative asset, gold and silver probably will rise in the first half of 2009 in response to the economic distress that we expect at that time. And then as the economy recovers—let’s be hopeful and say it starts in the second half of 2009—you actually might see gold and silver come off some. Platinum group metals, which we’ve only mentioned in passing, are the other way around. They’re really industrial metals, heavily tied to auto sales and so probably will remain weak until auto sales recover. But when that happens, expect platinum group metal prices to rise sharply.

TGR: You mentioned Silver Recycling starting to sell physical silver. What else can you tell us about this company?

JC: For purposes of full disclosure, I personally own some stock in Silver Recycling and they are a CPM Group client. We are financial advisers to them. I can talk about who they are and what their ideas are, what their plans are. I like the company a lot because they’re basically a consolidation play to create a publicly traded company in refining silver from scrap. They’ve identified three initial targets of small privately owned silver recyclers in the United States and are working with them. They have agreements with all three to acquire them and bundle them together, consolidate them and benefit from the economies of scale. And then there are other companies they can target later. It’s a very interesting operation. If you compare them to a silver mining company, they have the capacity to produce silver from scrap without any of the capital costs, country risks and operational risks that are common with a mine. So lower costs, less capital, fewer risks, still producing silver.

TGR: What sort of volume are we talking about?

JC: The first company they have an agreement with has 5 million ounces of production a year. The others have somewhat less. I don’t know the numbers off the top of my head, but I believe that the three companies combined would be producing something in excess of 10 million ounces a year.

TGR: Using that as rough estimate, what publicly traded silver producers come up with 10 million ounces a year?

JC: I think Coeur d’Alene Mines Corp.(NYSE:CDE) is slightly less than that this year, but maybe more than that next year. Apex Silver Mines (AMEX:SIL) and Pan American Silver Mines (Nasdaq: PAAS) probably produce more than that. Silver Standard Resources (Nasdaq: SSRI), which is moving toward opening its Pirquitas mine, will produce more than that when they’re up. There are probably a few other companies—Hecla Mining Company (NYSE:HL), maybe—that I’m going to anger people for forgetting. And then there are some larger diversified mining companies that produce much more than that. Penoles [MX:PE&OLES] is a good example. A lot of people think of Peñoles as a silver mining company and it does produce an enormous amount of silver, but it also produces lead, zinc, copper and gold. Also KGHM and BHP, but they’re not silver companies per say, either.

TGR: What other companies, either in silver or gold, would you recommend our readers take a look at?

JC: Well, we’re really commodities analysts. I’m proud to say I am not an equity analyst. I don’t sit there and tell people which equities to buy on any given day. I won’t tell anybody what to do with their equity investments, but I’ll tell you what I do with mine. I have a diversified portfolio.

Let’s look at the gold market. I have physical gold. I sometimes have futures and options in gold. In the equity side, I have AngloGold Ashanti Ltd (NYSE:AU) shares. I have Goldcorp (NYSE:GG) right now. I don’t have Barrick Gold Corp (NYSE:ABX) right now. I have in the past. I like Barrick a lot. And I have some smaller exploration and development companies in my portfolio. I tend to look for really well managed large companies that are cash flow generators, like Goldcorp, and I also look for exploration and development companies that have the capacity to bring production on stream within a couple of years, they have attractive mines, and management that I find good. So that’s it in gold.

TGR: What are some of these other companies?

JC: It’s not an exploration company along the lines of that, but one name I’ll throw out is Tanzanian Royalty (AMEX:TRE), Jim Sinclair’s company. It’s been hammered down along with everything else lately, but I still like it a lot.

TGR: And switching to silver?

JC: I like Silver Standard. I like Silver Standard’s management a lot. I think this Pirquitas mine that’s coming on stream will be a company maker. I also like Apex Silver Mines; I’ve been involved with Apex since before it actually was officially organized as a company. I think that’s good. Pan American is a very interesting growth story. Coeur d’Alene has been hammered in this market, but it has some very interesting properties, so it could do well. And Hecla is probably a tremendous turnaround story. Management over the last several years has done a remarkably good job in rebuilding Hecla Mining.

TGR: Gosh, they’ve been beaten up, too.

JC: Yeah, everybody’s beaten up. I spend a lot of time these days talking to clients about the difference between value and price. Six months ago we were talking about the fact that the price was over the value of a lot of mining assets and now we’re talking about the fact that the prices are woefully under the value of a lot of these companies. A company like Great Panther Resources [TSX.V:GPR] is a pretty interesting story. Fortuna Silver Mines [TSX.V:FVI] I like a lot. Endeavour Silver Corp (AMEX:EXK) is a good company, an emerging company. I’m afraid to leave out people. I own some Silvercorp Metals [TSX:SVM], a very interesting company with lead and silver mines in China. What I do is I look at companies from a management perspective and a property perspective. First thing is I’ve got to be comfortable with management.

TGR: What about platinum group metals?

JC: I thought platinum was overvalued years ago and it just kept rising and rising, but now it’s clearly undervalued. The cost of producing platinum or palladium at most mines in the world is higher than the current prices. About 50% of platinum in the world goes into auto catalysts, 60% of palladium and 80% of rhodium. With the auto industry and the auto market on their back in North America and Europe, these markets have spiraled down. A lot of investors who poured into the platinum markets partly based on the auto story are now pouring out. I think platinum group metals prices will rise sharply once the auto industry turns around.

And, the auto industry will turn around. Not necessarily because of the situation in the United States, but if you look at the BRICs, for example, you have a tremendous growth in auto sales and it’s fallen. In China it’s gone from 15% per year down to about 8% per year, but that’s a cyclical thing. It will turn itself around and people will start buying more. An interesting thing about platinum is that you don’t have the share market similar to what you have in gold and silver. In North America you have North American Palladium Mines (AMEX:PAL) and you have Stillwater Mining Company (NYSE:SWC). Both are having problems right now.

TGR: With costs exceeding current prices, the issue on the production side is clear, but what’s the problem on the exploration side?

JC: They can’t get financing. And insofar as some of these companies are exploring in South Africa, problems related to electricity and electricity allocations predate the bank panic. South Africa basically has not really invested in electricity-generating capacity for a decade. Those power shortages and outages are going to take many years to solve. They’re saying they’ll pay attention to existing mining companies, existing corporations, existing consumers of electricity. When you’re building a mine, you have to go to Eskom, the state electrical utility. Unless you’re already in the construction phase and have your electricity allocation, they’re just going to say they don’t know when they will be able to supply you electricity. That’s going to delay exploration and development. On top of that, the financial freeze will delay a lot of new capacity coming on stream. That will make the platinum group metals that much tighter.

TGR: As we come out of this recession, many people say certain sectors will emerge faster than others. You talked about how gold’s going to have a nice run up while we’re in recession. What commodities should we expect to come out of the recession first?

JC: I think gold and silver come out first. We’re looking at some specialty metals like ferroalloys—vanadium and molybdenum—because those markets are much tighter. The prices have been beaten up, as have the prices of larger metals like aluminum and copper. But if you look at molybdenum, for example, a lot of its uses are in transmission pipelines for gas and oil, offshore platforms for gas and oil production, and drilling pipe and production pipe for oil and gas. Even with lower oil and gas prices, these areas are going to be very strong over the next five, 10, 20 years. So we think you’ll see a relatively fast turnaround for a lot of these specialty metals, things that are harder to come by, but generally speaking are indispensable in critical economic applications. I think steel will also do very well because I expect the new government in the United States to undertake a major new program to rebuild all of these bridges that are about to fall down. I think you’ll see steel do very well from that perspective.

A graduate of the Missouri School of Journalism (University of Missouri, BJ, 1977), Jeffrey M. Christian chose his course of study because he was interested in chronicling developments in places such as Africa, Asia, Latin America and Central and Eastern Europe (well before they emerged as significant world economies). In 1980, Jeff left his job as an editor at Metals Week, an industry publication—having decided that metals markets he wrote about appealed to him more than journalism did. A year before Goldman Sachs acquired it, J. Aron and Company brought him on board and he soon managed the Commodities Research Group’s precious metals and statistical work there. In 1986, he engineered a leveraged buyout of this group—of which he was then VP—to create CPM Group, which he has led to become a world-class research, consulting, investment banking and asset management company that focuses on the fundamental analysis of global commodities markets. Jeff continues to write extensively.

 

Since the late 1970s, he has authored many pieces on precious metals markets, commodities and world financial and economic conditions. In 1980, he wrote World Guide to Battery-Powered Road Transportation: Comparative Technical and Performance Specifications. Now out of print, it remains a great index of many of the earliest electric cars. In 1981 he wrote one of the first market reports on the platinum metals group. Fast-forward to the 21st century, he and his staff of analysts write six major reports per year for publication and 12 monthly reports plus several more weekly reports and special reports. He published Commodities Rising in 2006. Jeff has pioneered application of economic analysis and econometric studies to gold, silver, copper, and platinum group metals markets, as well as efforts to improve and extend the quality of precious metals and commodities market statistics and research overall. As passionate about his work today as he was 22 years ago, he loves the fact that it gives him a tremendous network of contacts at high levels and a tremendous amount of discretion as to the work CPM Group undertakes. CPM counts among its clients many of the world’s largest mining companies, industrial users of precious metals, central banks, government agencies and financial institutions.

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The Safest Ways To Invest in Gold and Silver

By: Jason Hamlin of Gold Stock Bull

I am often asked what is the best or safest way to get exposure to precious metals. To be sure, there is a dizzying array of options from owning and storing the physical metal yourself to buying junior mining stocks. But the current crisis of confidence, brought on by the collapse of institutions that nobody thought could fail and the most recent $50 billion Ponzi scheme, has investors looking at safety and wealth preservation more than ever.

Buying physical gold and silver gives the owner definite possession, but comes with high premiums and the necessity to store and protect the metal. This can be done via a bank safe deposit box, but adds to the cost of owning the metal and doesn’t provide total peace of mind for many investors that have lost trust in the banking system. Others might prefer to store the gold on their property, hiding it in the floorboards or purchasing a safe. But this potentially puts you and your family members in harm’s way and again does not offer 100% security.

For investors that prefer not to hold the physical gold, yet place a high value on the safety of their investment vehicle not to default, I recommend the Central Trust of Canada (CEF) or its all-gold counterpart, the Central Gold Trust (GTU). Unlike the popular ETFs such as GLD and SLV, these funds do not lease out your gold and they always maintain 90% or more of assets in unencumbered, segregated and insured, passive long-term holdings of gold and silver bullion. Trace Mayer of Runtogold.com, recently published an article detailing the risk of investing in GLD and SLV. James Turk and others have also covered the unanswered questions about these ETFs in earlier articles.

Setting itself apart from the competition, the stated investment policy of the Board of Directors requires Central Fund to maintain a minimum of 90% of its net assets in gold and silver bullion of which at least 85% must be in physical form. On July 31, 2008, 97.6% of Central Fund’s net assets were invested in gold and silver bullion. Of this bullion, 99.3% was in physical form and 0.7% was in certificate form.

Central Fund’s bullion is stored on an allocated and fully segregated basis in the underground vaults of the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CM), one of the major Canadian banks, which insures its safekeeping. Bullion holdings and bank vault security are inspected twice annually by directors and/or officers of Central Fund. On every occasion, inspections are required to be performed in the presence of both Central Fund’s external auditors and bank personnel. Central Fund’s chief executive comments:

Our bullion is stored in separate cages, with the name of the owner printed on the cage, and on top of each pallet of bullion it states Central Fund or Central Gold-Trust. This disables the bank from using the asset from any of their purposes. We also pay Lloyds of London for coverage of any possible loss.

Adding to investor peace of mind, CEF has been around since 1961, is based outside of the U.S. (Calgary, Canada) and is run by a board that is respected in the precious metals community, not a bunch of corrupt Wall Street cronies. Demonstrating transparency that is much needed in today’s investment climate, Central Fund makes regular trips to visit the assets and takes their auditors with them. And you get the sense that you are dealing with honest gold investors and not slick marketing or public relations specialists by taking a quick perusal of the CEF website. While they aren’t going to win any design awards, the website is packed with all of the investor information necessary for due diligence.

On the downside, CEF does come with a hefty premium (currently at 16% to NAV). But this premium is less than the premium you are likely to pay on physical bullion, so it is a non-issue for me. And while it is a greater premium than GLD or SLV, I am willing to pay it since I have about as much faith in those ETFs as I do in the Comex.

Tax implications are another deciding factor. Ian McAvity, founding director and advisor to CEF, said there are definite tax advantages to CEF as opposed to an open-ended ETF. Long term gains in the gold ETFs (and presumably Barclays’ silver ETF) would be taxed as collectibles at 28%, according to the Gold ETF prospectus. As a passive foreign investment company with shares not convertible into bullion, CEF is believed to qualify as a passive foreign investment company [PFIC] to enable the 15% capital gains tax treatment, which can be an important factor for investors with long-term ambitions and taxable accounts, said McAvity.

Lastly, we should consider the performance of the various investment options. Year-to-date CEF underperformed by 3 points versus GLD, but this is largely due to the silver exposure. A more fair comparison would be to use Central Gold Trust. GTU significantly outperformed GLD (14 point gap), which should ease any concerns investors have about a higher premium. CEF and GTU offer not only more peace of mind, but better returns compared to the “trust us, the gold/silver is there” approach from iShares or SPDR. It is also interesting to note that the Gold Miners ETF (GDX) is the worst performer year-to-date. This could change as precious metals prices take off in 2009, but I am inclined to park at least half of my gold/silver investments in a safer place than stocks or funds that can’t prove that they actually have physical gold to back my investment dollars. Year-to-date returns are as follows:

click to enlarge

ETF Chart_1.png

While GTU has outperformed CEF during 2008, I expect silver to outperform gold during the next upleg and thus I own and favor CEF for 2009. Regardless, both of these funds represent sound investment choices during a time when there are fewer and fewer safe places to park your assets. Peace and prosperity to all.

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

Mickey Fulp, “Mercenary Geologist”: Look for the Right Share

Structure, People, and Projects

 

Sourcee:  The Gold Report

 

 “Mercenary Geologist” Michael S. (Mickey) Fulp’s 29 years of field experience as an economic geologist evaluating exploration and mining projects throughout the Americas and China make him uniquely qualified to give The Gold Report an intriguing overview of what’s happening now in gold, precious metals and rare earths, and uranium. Mickey, always on the lookout for companies with the right share structure, people, and projects, is a proponent of the “Boot Leather and Drilling” style of exploration. He gives us a quick tour of his take (and favorite stocks) in the sector.

The Gold Report: On your website, it says you look for stocks that can double share price in 12 months or less. Is that still true in this bear environment?

Mickey Fulp: Most definitely. It’s not so easy to pick those doubles now, but I certainly think that should always be the goal in speculative resource stocks. I’ll pick stocks that I think will double in 12 months or less and stick to the way I’ve always traded; that is, when those stocks double, I sell half of my position plus enough to cover my brokerage fee; then I’m playing with the house money with a zero cost basis and half my original position. Then I take that money and do it again on another stock.

TGR: I know that you wear several hats, and I want to start with your global economy hat. What are you seeing in terms of precious metals, and how they’ll be reacting in the bear environment? Can you give me an overview of what you see happening in gold?

MF: I’m looking here on my KCAST (Kitco) gold, and it’s $753 an ounce as we speak. I think $750 is a viable price for legitimate gold producers. It’s unknown how gold will react in a deflationary environment. We’ve never really experienced a deflationary environment in modern times when the price of gold was floating because, when the Great Depression started, gold was $20.67 an ounce. Roosevelt raised that to $35 an ounce in 1933, made it illegal to own privately, and the price of gold was fixed throughout the Depression and until Nixon’s debacle in 1971.

Arguably, we are in a deflationary environment right now. I personally think we’re in a depression. At some point, with the Fed creating money willy-nilly and the U.S. government bailing out all the failed financial institutions, we’re going to look at a hyper- inflationary environment; and we all know that bodes well for the price of gold.

TGR: We’ve talked about the bailout here in the U.S., but there are also forms of bailouts happening in Europe and China. If every government is inflating its currency …

MF: That’s very true.

TGR: Worldwide, doesn’t that kind of equalize?

MF: Well, you can make that argument, but it’s hard to know which currency is going to come out on top on this. Probably none because they are all fiat with no hard asset basis. Certainly, fiat currencies in nearly every country are in a world of hurt right now. We just saw the Chinese devalue its currency—what was it—6% this week? Yes, it does even out, and the price of gold will rise with hyper inflation.

TGR: Let’s switch over to silver and other precious metals. Are you focusing just on gold or do you think there’s also a play for silver, palladium, platinum?

MF: I don’t have a strong opinion on platinum and palladium because they are so driven, no pun intended, by the auto catalyst market and with the downturn in automakers worldwide, that does not bode well for those two metals. On the other hand, they certainly have value as precious metals. Silver is also a bit of both. It’s both an industrial metal and has some value as a store of wealth. One thing I’ve looked at lately (and I’ve actually been a buyer of physical silver for the last couple of months or so), is the gold-silver ratio. Whenever it gets high, as it is right now, I consider that a buying opportunity in silver.

There’s been a lot of press about silver not being available, but silver is available in large bars. You can buy a 1,000 ounce bar through COMEX and take delivery on a January contract now—for somewhere around 25 cents over the spot price, if you pick the right broker. When I see the gold-to-silver ratio go above 80, I consider that a buying opportunity for physical silver.

TGR: We always hear that silver has more swings than gold and it will lag gold when gold starts to go up.

MF: It does have wider swings and that gives it some more volatility on both the upside and the downside. I look at that as a way to make money. Because of its volatility, it could lag gold on the way up; if it does, then the ratio gets out of whack. Historically, the ratio was 16:1. When gold and silver were both floated on the open market that ratio grew. Over the past 10-15 years it has been somewhere between about 40 and 70. As we speak right now, it’s 80.

So you can play sort of an arbitrage; the increased volatility of silver compared to gold gives you some leverage, much the same as playing junior resource stocks gives leverage on both the upside and the downside vs. the price of gold. Junior resource stocks will go up and down with much more volatility than the price of gold, so that’s how we end up with the proverbial five or ten baggers. In this environment, those five and ten baggers can be negative five and ten baggers. But at some point, resource stock valuations get so low that good companies—especially those with current gold production or near-term production, positive cash flow, and in particular, takeover targets—are ridiculously undervalued.

TGR: In your newsletter, Mercenary Musings, do you talk about buying physical gold and silver or do you focus on equity investments?

MF: I focus on many things, including stocks, educating investors, markets and macroeconomics, commodities, libertarian ideals, my field adventures, etc. I’m not a certified financial analyst. I’m a geologist with nearly 30 years experience. I basically tell people what I have done, or am doing, in the market. For instance, when I find a stock I like, I may say I’m accumulating this right now; I like this about that, etc. So my newsletter is quite varied.

TGR: We were talking earlier about palladium and platinum and I noticed that one of the companies you have in your technical analysis is Avalon Ventures Ltd. (AVL: TSX-V). I believe that’s a rare metals company.

MF: Yes, it is.

TGR: Would you talk a little bit about your viewpoint of rare earth elements, kind of global economics, and the importance it will play or the downside it will face given the recession that we’re all going through?

MF: That’s a very good question. Rare earth elements are increasingly used for high-tech applications, specifically super magnets and batteries. They are in short supply because in the late ’80s and early ’90s, the Chinese developed a very robust deposit in Northern China and, basically, they cut out all the established world producers by drastically lowering prices. They now supply over 90% of the world’s rare earth elements. These metals are critical for hybrid cars and large commercial air conditioning systems; they’re also used extensively in high-definition LCD TVs and electronics technology. For example, cerium provides the red color for your little LCD headlamp. So there’s a bunch of varied high-tech uses for these metals. Certainly demand for those things is dependent on a viable world economy.

Avalon’s in an interesting position, as it has a unique deposit in the Northwest Territories about hundred kilometers East-Southeast of Yellowknife. The Thor Lake deposit is concentrated in the heavy rare earth elements. Rare earth elements are kind of a mixed bag of 16 elements (15 plus yttrium), and they always occur together. Avalon’s deposit is unique in the fact that, in this series of 15 elements on the periodic chart from atomic number 57 to 71, the heavy rare earth elements are much more rare than the light rare earths.

As a result, they are in greatly increased demand and they trade at very high values, hundreds of dollars per kilogram in some instances. So I’m bullish on the long-term prospects for Avalon. It’s really been beaten up lately with a year high of $1.97, a year low of about 35 cents; currently it’s at 40 cents. It made a rally a couple of months ago and has gone south since then. The key to Avalon is they have a deposit that is potentially economic outside the Chinese supply monopoly. They are being courted as we speak by Japanese auto makers because the Japanese cannot depend on the Chinese for a supply of rare earth elements. The Chinese have put on export quotas and taxes because, as much as possible, they want to keep all their production in China and develop processing facilities there. They consume about 60% of the world’s rare earths.

TGR: You said earlier the key to the deposit of Avalon is to make it viable outside the Chinese monopoly. It sounds to me that, given the two facts you stated immediately afterward, it’s going to be clear imminently.

MF: It’s going to be clear soon because Avalon is working on a resource estimate as we speak that will include drilling through last winter. They drilled this summer with great success, and they will come back with a second resource estimate and a process metallurgical report, probably by the end of the first quarter of next year, and then move on to a pre-feasibility study. So, assuming we have a viable world economy—and, arguably, that’s questionable right now—I would look at Avalon as in play, if you will, or looking to secure an off-take agreement for its production with a Japanese company sometime in 2009.

TGR: When will it start producing?

MF: I think they’re still about four years away from actually constructing a mine and getting it into production. The climate up there is northern boreal forest and water or ice, so for the construction phase, it’ll be a seasonal operation.

TGR: Are there other potential prime geological territories that might produce these rare earth metals?

MF: The area that comes to mind, of course, is Mountain Pass, which is in southeast California. It dominated world production until it was cut out by the Chinese. It’s just sitting there, held by Unocal with something like 20 million tons of nearly 8% to 9% in dominantly light rare earths, so this is a bit of a different market than what Avalon would be courting because Thor Lake is a heavy rare earth element deposit. There’s also a deposit in Australia, Lynas Mining’s Mt. Weld, concentrated in neodymium and it could dominate the supply of neodymium.

TGR: Is that in production?

MF: No, but it is in development and pending completion of concentrating and materials plant facilities. The rare earth elements themselves are not particularly rare, but the deposits that concentrate them in minable quantities are extremely rare worldwide.

TGR: I also see, when looking at your Mercenary Musings online, that you had a recent Musing regarding Animas Resources (TSX.V:ANI). What caused you to write about that specific company?

MF: Well, as with most of the things I cover, I put my Mercenary money where my mouth is. I was an IPO investor of Animas Resources. I still hold the warrants. It’s a story I have followed since inception. I have a bit of a mantra about a good company; it’s got to have the right share structure, people, and projects. And, in my view, Animas has all three of those.

It’s a Carlin-type system in Northern Mexico, having produced 650,000 ounces of gold in the 1990s, and then shut down in 2000, because of a depressed gold price of $300 an ounce. It shut down with an historic resource, not 43-101 qualified and I need to make that clear, of 718,000 ounces. It has the geologic characteristics of Carlin-type systems in northeast Nevada and, in my Musing, I list 10 of those.

It’s never been drilled deep, and it’s never been drilled systematically under gravel cover adjacent to the 12 small deposits that were mined in 22 separate pits. So it’s historically been a district—and Animas controls the entire district—that has produced from small deposits. Management at Animas includes a “who’s who” of senior-level geologists who have worked for major mining companies. One of its consultants is Odin Christensen. Odie was Chief Geologist for Newmont Mining Corp. (NYSE:NEM) in the Carlin Trend when it first was drilled deep. And huge, deep high grade gold deposits were found, which really made the Carlin Trend. I see the same geological characteristics at Santa Gertrudis. The management is good; low number of shares outstanding—less than 27 million shares; very tightly held. It hit an all-time low at 29 cents today; it’s very encouraging that the entire management and controlling group of this company has never sold shares or exercised options. They obviously like the project and intend to play it out.

It’s strictly an exploration play. I don’t like very many exploration plays right now; but, with working capital at $4.5 million, they can go at least to early 2010 and give Santa Gertrudis their best shot. If they find big, deep, high-grade Carlin-style deposits, they will be in play as a takeover candidate. If they don’t, they have other options. There are lots of small miners in Mexico, small junior companies mining less than 100,000 ounces a year in that region. Animas has six different projects in the district and it could JV some of them out to people that want to mine on a smaller scale.

TGR: We covered gold, precious metals and rare earths, and uranium. It’s been quite a tour around the world here very quickly.

MF: I have one other gold company that I like—PDX Resources Inc (TSX:PLG), formerly called Pelangio Exploration.

TGR: What’s caused you to focus on this one?

MF: I followed the story for quite some time, did my detailed due diligence, and became a shareholder. PDX owns 19 million shares of Detour Gold (TSX:DGC); the Detour Lake gold property in Northern Ontario. Detour Gold, at a $700 gold engineered pit, has 10.75 million ounces of gold resource. That’s measured and indicated resource. That’s always important—measured and indicated. It has some additional inferred, but I don’t pay much attention to inferred resources.

If you do the math, Detour Gold is now being valued at over $15 per ounce of contained gold. PDX Resources owns 42.4% of Detour Gold shares and their valuation now is $10.50 an ounce. Detour Gold is in the final throes of a feasibility study. It was scheduled to be out by the end of this year; I do not know if they’re presently on schedule for that, but they become a takeover candidate with a positive feasibility. You have leverage there for PDX shares vs. Detour Gold shares, at a 30% discount per ounce of gold in the ground.

TGR: But you’re saying Detour is the potential takeout candidate?

MF: Yes, it is.

TGR: Isn’t this what you mentioned earlier, where the only potential company that would take them out because of their share structure is PDX?

MF: No, PDX Resources originally spun out 50% of the deposit to a new entity, Detour Gold, a Hunter-Dickinson company and now exists only as a shareholder of Detour Gold. It is the minority shareholder, and is comprised of expert explorationists. So recently in September, it spun out all its other properties into a new exploration company, which is Pelangio Exploration; thus PDX holds its Detour Gold shares solely for investment purposes. With 10.75 million ounces, this is a huge deposit; it was a past producer of Placer Dome. It failed because of a low gold price in the previous downturn in the gold business. I think you’re probably looking at a bidding war for Detour Gold.

Goldcorp (TSX:G) (NYSE:GG) is the obvious candidate and we saw what Goldcorp did with its acquisition of Gold Eagle in the Red Lake District. Kinross Gold Corp (K.To) (NYSE:KGC) is a possible suitor. With this size of deposit, you’ve got to throw in the big boys—Barrick Gold Corp (NYSE:ABX), Newmont, Anglo, Gold Fields Ltd. (NYSE:GFI)—and some of the mid-tier gold companies looking to become major producers. It’ll get taken out at the Detour Gold share price, which is now trading at $15 per ounce of gold in the ground, while PDX is currently trading at $10.50. That’s 30% discount, so you have leverage to the upside with PDX Resources. Make sense?

TGR: That’s a great and very interesting play. Mickey, thank you for your time.

Michael S. “Mickey” Fulp, who launched MercenaryGeologist.com in late April 2008, brings more than 29 years of experience to his role as an exploration geologist. Specializing in geological mapping and property evaluation, Mickey has worked as a consulting economic geologist and analyst for junior explorers, major mining companies, private companies and investors. Check out his website for free access to the Mercenary Musings newsletter, as well as technical reports. Future offerings will include a premium paid subscription service that provides early and special access to subscribers. You may contact him at mailto:Mickey@MercenaryGeologist.com.

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

Now Gold is currently up over $35/oz. What are you waiting for? Time to get on board- Good Trading! – jschulmansr

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TIME TO BUY PRECIOUS METALS? – DARE SOMETHING WORTHY TODAY TOO!

15 Monday Dec 2008

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

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TIME TO BUY PRECIOUS METALS? – DARE SOMETHING WORTHY TODAY TOO!

Gold and Silver: Backwardation and Manipulation – Seeking Alpha

By: Jake Towne of Yet Another Champion Of The Constitution

In this article we will take a look at some alternate but constructive views of Fekete’s recent articles on gold backwardation, covered in earlier articles in this series. I want to note it appears to be a perfect storm shaping up, although it not yet outside the grasp of short-term government manipulation, especially if there is the hint of a panic, or “gold fever” developing. The price of gold and silver are both up over the past week as both metals are in (temporary for now) backwardation, but the price does not have a high degree of relevance. All eyes are on the gold basis will probably drive the price which you can learn about by reading the below mini-series.

Part I: “The End for the Dollar and all Fiat Currencies (1/5)“Part II: “The Next Bubble to Pop! (2/4)“Part III: “On Gold and Market Manipulation (3/5)“Part IV: “The Significance of Gold Backwardation Explained (4/5)“Supplement to explain futures market basics and backwardation: “The Money Matrix – What the Heck Are Derivatives? (PART 10/15)“

Now some news. Three-month Treasuries slipped negative for the first time ever on December 9 per Bloomberg. The UBS banker “analyst” cheerleading the masses towards buying Treasuries sounds like he is smoking crack. “Everyone wants to be in bills going into year-end. Buy now while the opportunity is still there.” Let’s see, no interest and I will actually lose money by buying? No thanks! Even gold’s naysayers realize holding paper cash is smarter.

A wild rumor of the IMF* dumping 3,000 metric tons of gold around December 10 was unleashed at the gold world on December 8. This is probably just a hoax similar to many prior IMF scares, though the size of it is shocking; the last hoax** was 400 tons, but the IMF only claims to have 3,217 total tons. However:

  1. The IMF (for all intents and purposes a US puppet) does not have the required Congressional permission to sell (although the recently discovered bailout principle spells out this could happen quickly),
  2. The IMF probably does not have that much gold, or perhaps any gold per the research and correspondence with the stalwart yet “fringe” GATA (Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee),
  3. The IMF itself has criticized its own fallacious accounting practices, and
  4. There is a huge difference between the IMF selling on the open market, or completing an international transaction with China, which would be dollar-bearish and gold-bullish, respectively. [FYI, China is ALWAYS rumored to be searching for… you guessed it! 3,000 tons of gold! See this 2005 article from the nation’s mouthpiece, the People’s Daily and this November 2008 article from HK’s The Standard.]

*[Under the IMF’s Articles of Agreement Schedule C, item 1 (p49/85), linking of a member’s currency (its “par value” or face value) to gold is prohibited. This means that the IMF is in direct violation of the Constitution of the United States of America (which actually also forbids the existence of the doomed Federal Reserve Note) by stating in Article 1, Section 10 that our country can not “make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts.” Today’s Keynesian economists and investors should read these documents. The IMF Articles of Agreement is a relic of a bygone age (1970s) plagued by its refusal to acknowledge gold as money. For instance, note iron reporting rules required of members in Section 5(a), p19-20, are morbidly focused on monitoring and controlling gold. (Why? Gold is Money.) The Constitution is a shining if neglected example of how the government’s role in a free market economy (last seen in the early 1900s) is confined to an honest monetary system and setting up anti-fraud laws.]

**[An example of a hoax and blatant attempt “The International Monetary Fund will probably sell 5-10 million ounces of gold to fund a program of debt relief, but will not disrupt the markets with its sales.” ex-Goldman Sachs, ex-Citigroup, ex-Secretary of Treasury, now close Obama advisor Robert E. Rubin, on March 17, 1999. No gold was sold, although the market price of gold sure suffered! Rubin is Director and Senior Counselor of Citigroup (C), where he was the “architect” of Citigroup’s strategy of taking on more risk in debt markets, which by the end of 2008 led the firm to the brink of collapse and an eventual government rescue. From November to December 2007, he served temporarily as Chairman of Citigroup. From 1999 to present, he earned $115 million in pay at Citigroup. Obama: “Change” We Can Believe In.]

(Sources for the above: IMF Articles of Agreement (1978) and Gold Wars by ex-Rothschild Swiss banker Ferdinand Lips (2001), pages 135 and 178.)

Ex-Chase Manhattan banker and owner of goldmoney.com, James Turk issued a helpful letter, stating what the Reader should already realize from this series. “Backwardations are no big deal in most commodities, but they are indeed a very big deal for gold.”

Turk uses the London Bullion Market Association’s Gold Offered Forward (GOFO) rates here to determine technical backwardation, while Fekete was looking at intraday trading sessions. My thoughts are that it’s ok to disagree, but geez guys, the overall message is the same. Analyst Rob Kirby understands this as well and issued an article “Backwardation: Facts from Fiction” that may be useful to the Reader.

[For the Reader, NYMEX Gold Session Futures chart, Silver Session Futures chart. Gold spot price chart. Silver spot price chart. When the spot price is greater than the futures price, backwardation exists.]

Trader Dan Norcini of jsmineset.com also reviewed Fekete’s note and issued a statement and charts here on December 5. Again gold is unlike wheat or copper, it has a fixed supply of bars mined from the earth for the past 6,000 years plus new supply from the mines at 1-2% of the total and are just traded back-and-forth on the COMEX. People do not save wheat; they eat it. People do not save copper; they use it for electrical conduits and other industrial uses. People DO save gold. Norcini explains why for gold backwardation is unusual:

If spot gold is trading at $750 and the futures market is trading at $745, that is a $5.00 per ounce risk free profit just sitting there waiting for a type of arbitrage. One could immediately sell his physical gold at the $750 price and immediately buy it at $745 in the futures market with the intent of taking delivery to meet his contractual obligations and pocket $5.00 ounce for however many ounces one wished. Buy 5 million ounces of gold at $745 and sell that same amount of gold for $750 and you have gotten yourself a cool $25 million profit less the delivery expenses, etc. Not bad. That is why such a thing does not occur very often nor does it last for long. Too many would jump on the chance for a no-risk trade of such nature. Why then are they not doing so? Antal has answered that question they are not willing to part with their gold for paper profits! That is what makes this development so noteworthy.

If you prefer talking heads, here is a Business News Network video where the analyst concluded that the reason behind the “desire of protection of wealth.” [Note: This YouTube user “GoldtotheMoon” has an incredible amount of goldbug videos, many helpful.]

Now for more on the alleged market manipulation of both gold and silver. For gold, the authority is the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (GATA). You can visit their site here. On silver, use the silverseek.com link below; the chief source I follow is Theodore Butler. Although I take exception to details (so picky!), I have bought into both overall theories since August, which was when global physical coin markets starting going haywire. No other explanation made any sense then or now. Since then, of course, the cover on government intervention in the economy has blown off for all to see, to put it mildly. As I wrote in “A Money Matrix Addendum: Citigroup and GATA Call for an End to the Suppression of the Gold Market“:

Fiat currency is a scheme perpetrated by central banks and the tacit (or is it helpless?) permission from their governments. Fiat currency is almost completely worthless and has no intrinsic value. Ultimately electronic and paper fiat money will be worthless. All of the world’s fiat money is actually a form of debt, and it results in never-ending currency debasement, of which one way is expanding the money supply, aka “printing more money,” aka inflation. To make their scheme work, they intervene in the precious metal markets to manipulate the prices of silver and especially gold. By keeping the prices of real honest money suppressed, they try to make their fiat currency look stronger.

I want to highlight an enlightening article that supports the above theory from Gene Arensberg of www.resourceinvestor.com. In his article “‘On the Fly’ Gold and Silver COT Information” on December 10, Arensberg has done a masterful job of demonstrating the control of the gold and silver markets. [COT stands for “Commitments of Traders” which report open interest and trading positions for the futures and options markets in the US. The reports are issued by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), a government agency. The CFTC’s mission is “to protect market users and the public from fraud, manipulation, and abusive practices related to the sale of commodity and financial futures and options, and to foster open, competitive, and financially sound futures and option markets.” As you will shortly see, they are doing a horrible job, similar to the SEC missing the Madoff collapse. Here is why the CFTC motto is: “NOTHING TO SEE HERE! Please disperse!”

On gold, Gene Arensberg writes:

As of December 2, as gold closed at $783.39, the CFTC reported that 3 U.S. banks had a net short positioning for gold on the COMEX, division of NYMEX, of 63,818 contracts. The CFTC also reported that as of the same date all traders classed by the CFTC as commercial held a collective net short positioning of 95,288 contracts. That means that justthree U.S. banks accounted for 66.97% of all the commercial net short positioning on the COMEX for gold futures. Here’s what the three U.S. banks’ positioning looks like on a graph: (chart courtesy Arensberg)

gold

 

 

 

Arensberg then concludes with the revelation that the current short position totals over twice the contents of the COMEX warehouses. Do they really have this gold and why is the “market” concentrated in the hands of so few banks? [Here we learned short positions are the “deliverers” or sellers of gold, while the longs are the “receivers” or buyers.] My comment is to look at the dip into the “long” side by these banks in roughly June 2008. See how the price fell? Nothing to see here! Disperse, disperse!

Let’s look at silver: Arensberg continues:

For silver, it’s even more startling. On December 2, as silver closed at $9.57, exactly 2 U.S. banks held a net short positioning of 24,555 contracts. The CFTC reports that as of the same date all traders classed as commercial held a net short positioning of 24,894 contracts. So, the 2 U.S. banks, with one particular Fed member bank probably holding almost all of it, held a sickening 98.64% of all the collective commercial net short positioning on the COMEX, division of NYMEX in New York. (chart courtesy Arensberg)

silver

Arensberg comments that these two banks’ (cough JP Morgan Chase cough those-damn-corporate-raiders-from-the-Great-Depression cough cough) “net short positioning is equal to about 153% of the amount of deliverable silver in ALL the COMEX members’ accounts.” Sure looks like total control to me! The above is a big reason why the gold and silver markets are so tight now. Who in the right mind would enter the market to play with these giants? Again, where is their silver? So the silvers futures market is not a real “market.” More like a banker’s paradise!

Arensberg also has a section on the coin market in terms of the premium paid. Historically speaking, the premiums have been within a few percentage points of the spot value. Not anymore, gold is about 6%, and the silver premium is pretty amazing, roughly 50% over spot! Try using the law of supply and demand to explain that!

Let me finish with a respectable opinion to the contrary from Mish Shedlock’s blog. Try “No Fever Like Gold Fever: Response“, “Nonsense About Gold Backwardation, Ameros,Yuan Devaluations, etc.“, “Double Standard in Gold Hedging?“. I already laced into these articles in the comments field in Part 4, but decide for yourself. Feel free to leave any comments or questions below.

[Update 12/14 – Fekete just posted another update entitled “Backwardation that Shook the World.”]

My Note: It is time to load up the applecart – Buy Gold and Silver Now!- jschulmansr

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

The Significance of Gold Backwardation

By Jake Towne of Nolan Chart

I’ve written a short series on what is, in my opinion, the major economic event of gold going into backwardation and what this will mean. Due to recent interest, particularly email comments, in this article I would like to further describe this event and in the next part share links to more gold and silver news on this topic with you (as well as some objective criticism of Fekete).

I think it is also important to note that I am no expert. I fully realize I could be wrong for now, or misjudge how the government forces will intervene. It is far from clear whether this backwardation will become permanent. That said, I do believe that the resistance shackling gold and silver will be eventually be overwhelmed; it’s just a question of when. In the final analysis, Gold is the world’s greatest chance at economic liberty and a world with far less war.

Part I: “The End for the Dollar and all Fiat Currencies (1/5)” Part II: “The Next Bubble to Pop! (2/4)” Part III: “On Gold and Market Manipulation (3/5)” Supplement to explain futures market basics and backwardation: “The Money Matrix – What the Heck Are Derivatives? (PART 10/15)” Part V: “More on Gold and Silver Backwardation and Manipulation (5/5)”

Let’s return to the rice example I used in an earlier article, which is traded on commodity futures markets in a similar fashion as gold and silver are today. Let’s say I absolutely must have 1000 bushels of rice 1 month from today. At the futures market, I have two options – I can buy a 1-month futures contract and take delivery right before I need it, or I can buy at the immediate market price (or spot price) and store it for a month.

Now, let’s say rice goes into backwardation. This means that the spot price is more expensive than the 1-month futures price. So, normally I would buy the futures contract since it is cheaper and the storage cost is borne by the other party. And if enough people did this, backwardation would quickly disappear. Now why would I buy at spot price?

I would buy at spot only if I feared that within a month the other party would not have any rice to deliver. Now the strange thing is that for backwardation to continue to exist, all rice traders at the market need to believe the same thing. Why?

If other traders holds surplus rice and do not need it for a month, and believe they will get delivery 1 month later, they will release this stock into the market (driving the spot price down and the futures price up) and take delivery in a month’s time, which would give a tidy basis profit (spot price minus the futures price), plus the savings of not storing the rice for a month.

So therefore, backwardation is the sign of a very tight market, and a market that will be tight for sometime into the future – either 1) current supply is very tight, 2) future supply is projected to be very tight, or 3) there is a severe distrust in counterparties – that the short positions can deliver the goods on time per the contract, or vice versa that the long positions will not have the cash.

That said, backwardation in seasonable, weather-dependent perishable commodities like rice or corn is certainly not unheard of. It even sometimes occurs with industrial commodities like lead or copper. Sometimes it can even be the natural state of the market.

However, gold futures are completely unlike these other commodity markets. Gold is mostly traded solely as a “store of value”; the jewelry or electronics or dentistry demand pales in comparison to the quantities of the yellow metal traded as a store of value (even an “anti-dollar” if you wish). In other words, gold is not a consumable market.

And here is the final piece to the above from South African Daan Joubert, quoted at lemetropolecafe.com. Gold backwardation can only mean that either “a) There are enough people so concerned about non-delivery that they will pay a large premium to get their hands on gold right now” or “b) There are no large holders of gold who have sufficient faith in the futures exchange to exploit the [backwardation].”

Dr. Fekete has issued two recent updates, “Has the Curtain Fallen on the Last Contango in Washington” and “There’s No Fever Like Gold Fever.” I consider both must-reads, especially the conclusion to the “Gold Fever” article. I will freely admit to you that for some of the reasons Fekete mentions in the “Gold Fever” article I considered not writing this series under my own name (perhaps I may later regret it) but there is something about sharing the truth as I see it that forbids me what ultimately amounts to cowardice. Anyways, here is the intro to “Gold Fever”:

 

Here is an update on the backwardation in gold that started on December 2 at an annualized discount rate of 1.98% and 0.14% to spot in the December and February contracts. It continued and worsened on December 8, 9, and 10 as shown by the corresponding rates widening to 3.5% and 0.65%. It is nothing short of awesome. This is a premonition of a coming gold fever of unprecedented dimensions that will overwhelm the world as soon as its significance is fully digested by the doubting Thomases.

 

Keynesian economist John Keynes once pessimistically noted, “In the long run, we are all dead.”

I say, YES, the day when gold or silver breaks the COMEX IS death.

Death to the Keynesians for all the havoc they have wrought.

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

Is The Second Great Depression Imminent?

By: Lionel Badal

The world is currently facing the most serious financial and economic crisis since the Great Depression of 1929. How have countries responded to the crisis? Well as we know it, by lending huge amounts of money through bailouts and other tax cuts. So while the current crisis was caused by excessive lending, such as the subprimes, the only answer our governments and financial elites found was lending even more and making money out of nothing.
My Note: Wake Up Indeed! Time To Buy Gold and Silver- Ya Think???-jschulmansr

Dollar Down, Gold Up

By: Dr. Duru of Dr. Duru’s One Twenty 

I have been and remain a bear on the dollar. Back in mid-August, I conceded that the gathering momentum in the dollar trade would postpone the weak dollar scenario until 2009. I was wrong on a few of my reasons for expecting continued strength in the dollar, but a stronger dollar is what we have.

I know a lot of dour folks have explained why they expect America’s “well-intentioned” borrowing and printing binge to lead to rampant inflation in the future (Peter Schiff is one of many examples). I have also tried to make the case. The main crux of my current opinion is that America will win its fight against deflation, sooner rather than later, and will be too slow to remove the monetary (and fiscal) injections into the economy to stave off the high inflation we will get as our reward.

The first signs of fresh dollar weakness are finally showing up. The chart below (click to enlarge) shows a potential double-top in the dollar. Some technicians may prefer to call it a head-and-shoulders pattern.

Dollar double-top

It is at these kinds of critical transition points that people who want to cling to the former trend will proclaim the loudest that all is well. Dollar bulls surely believe that the fundamentals of the currency have never been better given the world’s belief that the dollar represents a safe place to park in a world of turmoil. Maybe major global governments borrow and print even faster and harder than we are doing. If that happens, I will have to like gold even more since its global supply will not increase nearly as fast as the supply of global money. Regardless, we should all know by now what results when a massive crowd jams into one side of a trade – short-term Treasuries represent the powder keg du jour.

Until recently, it has been difficult to play commodities in anticipation of reflation given prevailing downtrends. Gold has held up better than most but it too is still caught in a downtrend of lower lows and lower highs. The recent weakness in the dollar has perked gold back up, and I am sticking to it as one of my favorite places to be for 2009.

Gold

*All charts created using TeleChart:
The dollar down, gold up scenario gets delayed again if the dollar manages to make a new high above the recent double-top and gold makes another lower low.

Be careful out there!

Full disclosure: long GLD. For other disclaimers click here.

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

Will We See A Big Upward Move in Gold?

By: Mark Courtenay of  Check The Markets.com

Did you know that the Federal Reserve Bank owns gold certificates? Mounting evidence suggests the Fed intervenes in and participates in the gold and silver markets on a regular basis.

Interviewed Monday last week on the “Trading Day” program of Business News Network in Canada, former Federal Reserve Governor Lyle Gramley hinted that a big upward revaluation of gold may figure heavily in the Fed’s attempt to rescue the U.S. economy.

The program’s guest host, Niall Ferguson, an author and history professor at Harvard, asked Gramley, now senior adviser at Stanford Group in Houston, about the seemingly grotesque expansion of the Fed’s balance sheet in recent months.

Ferguson asked: “I’ve heard it said that the Fed has turned into a government-owned hedge fund, leveraged at 50 to 1. Do you feel nervous about what this might actually do to the Fed’s reputation?”

Gramley replied: “I think you have to reckon with the fact that one of the Fed’s assets is gold certificates, which are priced, as I remember, at $42 an ounce, and if we were to price them at market prices, the Fed’s leverage would look a lot less than it is now.”

While valuing the U.S. government’s claimed gold reserves at today’s Comex closing price of around $822 per ounce instead of the government antique bookkeeping entry of $42.22 per ounce would indeed vastly expand the government’s monetary assets, it might not be enough to offset the liabilities and guarantees the government lately has taken on.

But the job might be done by revaluing the gold to $5,000 or $10,000 per ounce, as the British economist Peter Millar speculated two years ago might be necessary to prevent debt deflation: yet this is admittedly speculation.

What did Gramley mean by “…the Fed’s leverage”? That would suggest that the Fed not only owns “gold certificates” but also future contracts and options on futures. They might be big benefactors in a gold squeeze.

Speaking of a gold squeeze, I read another report from the Gold Anti-Trust Actioin committee (GATA) saying that the Comex is warning brokers of a December gold squeeze.

Yes, the Comex is alerting various futures firms about the potential of a squeeze on the December contract and is advising the $840 December shorts to exit their positions. That is the remaining open position.

There have been 12,636 notices of delivery. The shorts have until December 31 to make delivery. Normally they deliver early to take in cash and earn the interest. They must be delaying.

As I understand the situation, that represents about 40 percent of the gold available at the Comex, and of course someone could enter the scene late, buy February gold, and then spread into December, which would stun the shorts.

My broker friend said his back office said this sort of alert is highly unusual and that the concern is real, not only for gold, but for other commodities too, like copper and palladium, as there is a good deal of talk of taking deliveries there too. But gold is the one for which the advice to cover went out.

This is an extremely productive development and could spur the price of gold up quickly as word spreads. As we all know, buying Comex gold and silver (the cheapest way to buy precious metals) makes all the sense in the world in this financial environment.

This might just be reason enough to begin “stocking up” on some of the ETFs that would be beneficiaries like (GLD), (SLV) and The PowerShares DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund (DBC). The 1-year chart below is instructive.//seekingalpha.com/symbol/dbc' title='More opinion and analysis of DBC'>DBC</a>)

Some interesting names in the copper business to keep an eye on and begin accumulating on any meaningful pullbacks are Freeport McMoran (FCX), Southern Copper Corp (PCU) which as of this writing still pays a dividend, unlike FCX, and Sterlite Industries (SLT) which is India’s bigger copper producer and is poised to benefit from any resurgence of copper demand in Asia.

It might be one of those “ready, get set, not yet” approaches to what an investor should do. The economic news and the relapsing into the next and possible worse phase of this credit crisis, great-recession, and deflationary mess might delay the upside potential on commodities.

But if you’re a trader (a.k.a. “gambler”) there might be a short-term pop in at least gold over the next couple of weeks…maybe spilling into January 2009 where quick profits could be made….as well as some quick and disappointing losses.

Are you an investor, a short-term gambler, or both? No matter what the answer, if you know yourself well then you know how you might respond to all this news and the rumor mill. Best of luck!

When FCX dipped back down near $16 after the suspension of their dividend I decided to pick up a few shares for a quick trade. I’m fortunate that it worked out.

I firmly believe that there will be a trading range for all the better commodity stocks and ETFs that will give us several chances to buy low and sell high over the months directly ahead. Your comments on that will be appreciated. Happy holidays to you all.

Disclosure: Long GLD, SLV, FCX, SLT.

 

All of these measures will have an impact on economies, no doubt on that. Before the end of 2009 an –artificial- recovery will take place. Good news you may think? Not at all…

In parallel to the recovery, global oil demand will increase next year as mentioned recently by the IEA. This is where the collapse will occur. Global oil production is about to decline, as major oil fields in Mexico and the North Sea have passed their peak… the rate of decline is staggering (check the latest IEA annual report).

Additional energies and non-conventional oils which should have been here do not exist; why? Very simple to understand, with the financial crisis and oil prices back to the low 40s, major energy investments are either cancelled or postponed (they no longer look profitable). In short, when the demand will go up, oil production will be declining; logically prices will explode. Dr. Faith Birol, IEA’s Chief-Economist, well aware of the seriousness of the situation declared on Peak Oil:

What I can tell you is that one day global conventional oil will peak… I think it is going to peak very soon. The main problem here is that the existing fields, many mature fields, are declining.

While you may have found this explanation shaky or over-pessimistic, as early as 2005 the geologist Dr. Colin Campbell (founder of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil-ASPO) declared:

Expansion becomes impossible without abundant cheap energy. So I think that the debt of the world is going bad. That speaks of a financial crisis, unseen, probably equalling the Great Depression of 1930; it’s probable we face the Second Great Depression. It would be a chain reaction, one bank would fail, and another one would fail, industries will close…

What is commonly known as Peak Oil, a decline in global oil production is about to happen: you can ignore it, fight it, but to be sure, you will not escape from it. I will not enter into the details of the Peak Oil debate, an endless one. Nevertheless, here are statements on Peak Oil held by some of the most authoritative groups:

Peak oil is at hand with low availability growth for the next 5 to 10 years. Once worldwide petroleum production peaks, geopolitics and market economics will result in even more significant price increases and security risks. To guess where this is all going to take us is would be too speculative.

US Army, Corps of Engineers (September, 2005)

The end-of-the-fossil-hydrocarbons scenario is not a doom-and-gloom picture painted by pessimistic end-of-the-world prophets, but a view of scarcity in the coming years and decades that must be taken seriously.

Deutsche Bank (December, 2004)

More recently, a British Industry Taskforce (e.g. Shell (RDS.A), Yahoo (YHOO), Virgin, and Solarcentury) conducted a vast study on oil production. They concluded that, “peak oil is more of an immediate threat to the economy and people’s lives than climate change, grave as that threat is too” and added “the risks to UK society from peak oil are far greater than those that tend to occupy the Government’s risk-thinking, including terrorism” before asking the government to urgently take action.

Here is the “recipe” for the greatest disaster ever. What cheap and abundant oil created, Peak Oil will destroy; our failure to invest in alternatives 10 or 20 years ago is about to fall on us. Michael Meacher, a former British Environment Minister and current Labour MP similarly declared on what is coming:

This is an apocalyptic scenario. In terms of industrial production, in terms of the food supply but above all in the terms of the transportation sector, we cannot continue as we now are.

Like in 1929, this Second Great Depression, caused by hyperinflation (within 3 years) will have dramatic political consequences:

As oil prices rise, it will be millions who suffer, millions of ordinary people who are just trying to get on with their lives, millions of ordinary decent people will be forced into states of anxiety, depression, fear and anger.

Voters take to new ideas, even radically new ideas when the system that they have trusted, worked with, admired and felt comfortable with falls apart.

Peak Oil may well be an important catalyst that helps us to win political power because we are the ones talking about it now.

The British National Party and its leader Nick Griffin are well aware of the seriousness of the coming crisis, yet for them it is seen a unique opportunity. History is here to remind us that dramatic changes can happen so fast that we don’t even see them until they have happened. Nick Griffin, who is passionate about Peak Oil as one of the BNP permanent staff member told me, is also a racist, holocaust denier. Make no mistake, in a post-Peak Oil world Mr. Griffin and his look-a-likes throughout the world will do all they can to apply their heinous political agenda.

The process has started and once again Europe will face its old demons, fuelled by populism, unemployment and incompetence from mainstream leaders. As mentioned in a recent Newsweek article, un-favourable views on Jews has climbed from 20% in 2004 to 25% today in Germany, in France from 11% to 20% and in Spain from nearly 21% in 2005 to about 50% today[16]. Yet the worst of the crisis is just a few years away and nobody seems to perceive the seriousness of the situation. In fact, the current crisis will soon be seen as no more than a gentle prelude or the “good old days”. Denis MacShane the author of the Newsweek article similarly observed that “the BNP was now the fastest growing political party in Britain”[17].

Wake up!

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

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Gold Supply and Demand + Troubling Questions For Obama

12 Friday Dec 2008

Posted by jschulmansr in 2008 Election, Barack Obama, capitalism, commodities, Copper, Currency and Currencies, deflation, Electoral College, Finance, Free Speech, Fundamental Analysis, gold, hard assets, id theft, inflation, Investing, investments, Markets, mining stocks, oil, Politics, precious metals, Presidential Election, silver, small caps, socialism, Stocks, Technical Analysis, Today, u.s. constitution, U.S. Dollar, Uncategorized

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Gold Supply and Demand

By Luke Burgess of  Gold World

Jesse Lauriston Livermore is perhaps the most famous stock trader of the early 20th century.

Famous for amassing and subsequently losing several multi-million dollar fortunes, Livermore also shorted the stock market heavily during the crashes of 1907 and 1929.

Livermore, who was also known as the Boy Plunger, is famed for making—and losing—several multi-million dollar fortunes and short selling during the stock market crashes in 1907 and 1929.

One of Livermore’s core trading rules was…

Be Right and Sit Tight

It’s simple…

Invest in a growing trend and have the courage to hold long-term for really big gains.

Clearly, the gold bull market is one such growing trend. And investors who “sit tight” will undoutbly see big gains by owning the precious metal now.

Buy Gold Now

The bull market has already pushed gold prices over 300% higher since 2001. And now with the world’s demand for gold is starting to significantly outpace supplies, even higher prices are on the horizon.

During the third-quarter there was a colossal 10.5 million ounce deficit (worth $8.5 billion) in world’s supply and demand of gold. World gold demand increased over 50% since the second-quarter while supplies dropped 64% year-on-year.

Gold demand, particularly in the investment sector, is currently at all-time highs. But estimates suggest that the world will only produce 76.8 million troy ounces during 2008. This represents a 9% decline in world gold production since 2001.

20081208_world_gold_production.png

Gold Mine Supplies to Continue Falling

The world financial meltdown has forced the shut down of hundreds of gold mines around the world and slashed exploration and development budgets across the board. And the near-term future of new investment still looks pretty grim.

The effects of these budget cutbacks won’t be felt in the gold market for several months to years. But the lack of investment money going into gold mines right now-and probably for over the next several months-will certainly have an effect on global gold supplies in the future.

 

And the lack of these supplies will positively affect gold prices.

The global economic crisis has motivated miners of all metals to cut back on exploration and development activities. Below is a just partial list of mine closures and delays that have been announced over the past several weeks:

August 21
HudBay Minerals [TSX: HBM] closes its Balmat zinc mine and concentrator.

October 13
Intrepid Mines [TSX: IAU, ASX: IAU] postpones the development of the Mines Casposo gold/silver project.

October 20
Polymetal, Russia’s largest silver miner, cuts its production forecast and says it will consider revising its investment plan for next year.

October 20
First Nickel [TSX: FNI] suspends production at its Lockerby nickel mine.

October 21
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold [NYSE: FCX] announced that the company will defer mine expansions and put off restarting at least one operation.

October 21
North American Palladium [AMEX: PAL, TSX: PDL] temporarily closes its Lac des Iles platinum-group metals mine.

November 6
Thompson Creek Metals [NYSE: TC, TSX: TCM] postpones the development of its Davidson molybdenum mine.

November 10
Rio Tinto [NYSE: RTP, LON: RIO] cut its Australian iron-ore production by about 10%.

November 10
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold [NYSE: FCX] cut molybdenum production at its Henderson mine by 25%.

November 10
Platinum and chrome producer Xstrata Alloys and its South African joint-venture partner, Merafe Resources, temporarily suspends six furnaces of the Xstrata-Merafe chrome venture.

November 11
Arehada Mining [TSX: AHD] temporarily shut down of operations at its zinc/lead/silver mine and plant.

November 11
Frontera Copper [TSX: FCC] suspends mining activities at its Piedras Verdes operation.

November 13
Lundin Mining [NYSE: LMC, TSX: LUN] suspends zinc production from its Neves-Corvo copper/zinc mine, and put another operation, Aljustrel, on care and maintenance until metal prices recover.

November 13
Anvil Mining [TSX: AVM, ASX: AVM] suspends the fabrication and construction works for its Kinsevere Stage II solvent extraction-electrowinning plant.

November 14
Geovic Mining [TSX: GMC] delays construction and financing for its Nkamouna cobalt project.

November 17
Teal Exploration & Mining [TSX: TL] cut output at the Lupoto copper project’s small-scale mining operation

November 18
Stillwater Mining [NYSE: SWC] scales down operations at its East Boulder mine, reduces capital expenditure and cut jobs.

November 18
The world’s third-largest platinum-miner, Lonmin, announces the closure of South African mines, and says it will halt growth projects.

November 19

First Majestic Silver [TSX: FR] temporarily suspends all activities at its Cuitaboca project.

November 19
Weatherly International [LON: WTI] announces the closing two of its copper mining projects in Namibia.

November 20
Hochschild Mining [LON: HOC] announces that the company will delay its San Felipe zinc project.

November 21
Katanga Mining [TSX: KAT] temporarily halts mining operations at the Tilwezembe open pit and ore processing at its Kolwezi concentrator.

Novmeber 21
Apogee Minerals [TSX-V: APE] halts production at its La Solucion silver/lead/zinc mine, in Bolivia.

November 24
Norilsk Nickel put its Waterloo and Silver Swan underground mines into care and maintenance.

November 26
Bindura Nickel announces the closure of two nickel mines, and its smelter and refinery operations.

December 1
The Xstrata-Merafe joint venture suspends operations at another five ferrochrome furnaces, bringing the company’s offline capacity to 906,000 tonnes per year, or more than half of its annual production capability.

December 3
BHP Billiton [NYSE: BHP, ASX: BHP] reduces manganese and alloy production.

December 8
Companhia Vale do Rio Doce, the world’s biggest iron-ore producer, has suspended operations at two pellet plants.

With demand soaring and supplies plummeting, there’s never been a better time to own gold. Gold prices could go to as high as $5,000 once this gold bull market plays out.

Be right and sit tight.

Buy gold.

Good Investing,

Luke Burgess
Managing Editor, Gold World

P.S. It’s simple, really. Demand is soaring. Supplies are plummeting. And if you don’t buy gold now, you may not get the chance to later.

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

Troubling Questions For Obama Team

By: Linda Chavez of GOPUSA

A corruption scandal in President-elect Obama’s backyard is the last thing this country needs. But like it or not, that’s exactly what we have in the unfolding drama of Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich’s arrest earlier this week for trying to sell Barack Obama’s Senate seat. The federal prosecutor in the case — Patrick Fitzgerald, the man whose investigation of the Valerie Plame leak case nearly paralyzed the Bush White House for a time — has made it clear that nothing ties Obama directly to the Blagojevich scheme. But the timing of Fitzgerald’s announcement raises some serious questions.

Apparently, Fitzgerald knew that Blagojevich was trolling for bidders for the Obama seat in the waning days of the general election. Before the first votes were counted to elect Obama president, Blagojevich was so confident in Obama’s victory he was already soliciting bids for the seat. And Fitzgerald already had substantial evidence that Blagojevich was engaged in major corruption before the governor put a “for sale” sign on the Senate seat. So why didn’t the federal prosecutor act prior to the election? Had he done so, of course, it could have damaged Obama.

Many would argue that bringing down another Illinois Democrat before the election would have smelled like a dirty trick. The federal prosecutor, after all, was a Republican appointee, and the McCain campaign had already run ads trying to tie Obama to political corruption in Chicago. One of Obama’s early financial supporters, land developer Tony Rezko, was convicted on corruption charges earlier this year, and Rezko figures prominently in the Blagojevich scandal. Had Blagojevich been forced to do a perp walk before Election Day, voters might have asked why Obama had endorsed Blagojevich just two years earlier, considering the governor was at that time under investigation for taking bribes. The endorsement would have been yet another example of Obama’s bad judgment in his associations from Rezko to the Rev. Wright to Bill Ayers.

But even if Fitzgerald acted fairly and prudently by not moving against Blagojevich in the heat of a political campaign, why did he decide to act this week? His explanation was that he was trying to stop “a political corruption crime spree.” Under existing Illinois law, the governor has final authority to appoint someone to fill a vacant U.S. Senate seat and wiretaps suggest Blagojevich was about to do just that. According to the criminal complaint, Blagojevich had found at least one bidder — identified only as Senate Candidate 5 — who offered to raise the governor $500,000 and another $1 million if he got the appointment. Perhaps Fitzgerald simply wanted to go public before Blagojevich sealed the deal.

But there are other possible explanations. Fitzgerald’s hand may have been forced by the Chicago Tribune, which reported Dec. 5 that Blagojevich’s phone lines were being tapped. This information signaled everyone — the governor and anyone talking to the governor or his aides — that they could become ensnared in a huge criminal investigation leading to indictments.

President-elect Obama has emphatically denied that he ever talked to Blagojevich about his Senate replacement. And certainly Fitzgerald has done everything he can to confirm that Obama is not implicated in any way. But there are a number of unanswered questions about what contact members of the president-elect’s team might have had with the governor or his aides, directly or through intermediaries. A number of aides, including the incoming White House Chief of Staff, Rahm Emmanuel, and former campaign leader David Axelrod, have long-standing ties to Blagojevich. And Axelrod has already had to revise his earlier assertion that Obama had spoken with Blagojevich about candidates to replace him in the Senate.

The president-elect has said “I want to gather all the facts about any staff contact that may have taken place. We’ll have those in the next few days and we’ll present them.”

The president-elect’s credibility is on the line. For the good of the country, we must all hope this scandal doesn’t infect anyone in the new administration. The best way to ensure that is for the president-elect and his aides to be forthcoming quickly.

—

Linda Chavez is the author of “An Unlikely Conservative: The Transformation of an Ex-Liberal.”

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

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Chicago Politics Stains Obama 

By: Michael Barone of US News And World Report

I have not seen it recorded whether John F. Kennedy, after he was elected president in 1960, held conversations with Massachusetts Gov. Foster Furcolo as to who would be appointed to fill his seat in the Senate. History does record that Furcolo, just nine days before turning the governorship over to the Republican elected to succeed him, appointed one Benjamin A. Smith II, a college roommate of Kennedy’s and former mayor of Gloucester, who chose not to seek the seat in the next election in 1962, which happened to be the year in which Edward Kennedy turned 30 and was therefore old enough to run for it.

Memory tells me that there was little fuss made of this at the time. Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy obviously wanted someone appointed to keep the seat warm for Teddy, and so it was done. And Edward Kennedy has turned out to be an able and accomplished senator.

That was a different tableau from the one we have seen unfold in Chicago this past week. Furcolo was an intelligent man, disappointed to have failed to win the state’s other Senate seat and destined not to win elective office again. But he knew that it would not pay to buck the Kennedys.

Rod Blagojevich, the governor who under Illinois statute has the power to appoint a senator to fill out the remaining two years of Barack Obama’s Senate term, is made of different stuff. He was arrested last Tuesday, and the U.S. attorney filed a criminal complaint and made public tapes of Blagojevich seeking personal favors in return for the Senate seat.

Obama denied having conversations with Blagojevich about his choice, though his political strategist David Axelrod said last month that Obama had. Obama declined further comment when asked whether his staff members had discussed the matter with the governor, but he then promised to reveal the details later.

In the ordinary course of things, there would be nothing wrong with such conversations (did Foster Furcolo decide on Benjamin A. Smith II without prompting?). And the construction of the evidence most negative to Obama one can currently make is that someone in Team Obama suggested nominating Obama insider Valerie Jarrett, Blagojevich simply refused or asked for something improper in return and Team Obama promptly broke off communications. Any impropriety in this version was on Blagojevich’s part, not on Obama’s.

Still, these are not headlines the Obama transition team wants. So far, the president-elect has won wide approval for his performance since the election, with poll numbers significantly higher than George W. Bush or Bill Clinton got in their transition periods. His leading foreign, defense and economic appointments have won high praise from all sides, in some cases more from conservatives than liberals. And in a time of financial crisis and foreign threats, he has seemed to keep a clear head and a steady hand.

He has appeared to avoid all but small mistakes, and his theme of unifying the nation — muted perhaps necessarily in the adversary environment of the campaign — has come forth loud and clear.

From all this the Blagojevich scandal is an unwanted distraction. It is a reminder that, for all his inspirational talk of hope and change, Obama, like Blagojevich, are both products of Chicago Democratic politics, which is capable of producing leaders both sublime and sordid.

Obama has not always avoided the latter. For 20 years he attended the church of the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, now thrown under the bus, and for more than a decade engaged in mutually beneficial exchanges political and financial with the political fixer Tony Rezko, now in federal custody.

Blagojevich, never a close political ally, has now been thrown under the bus, too, and seems likely to share Rezko’s fate. Obama fans can point out, truthfully, that other revered presidents had seamy associates and made common cause on their way up with men who turned out to be scoundrels. Franklin Roosevelt happily did business with Chicago Mayor Ed Kelly, though warned that he was skimming off money from federal contracts. John Kennedy no more thought to deny a request from the Mayor Daley of his day than Obama has thought to buck the Mayor Daley of his.

But as Kennedy supposedly said of a redolent Massachusetts politician, “Sometimes party loyalty asks too much.” The man in question was the Democratic nominee for governor and was not elected. Until Patrick Fitzgerald released his tapes, Barack Obama never said the same of Rod Blagojevich.

Obama has profited greatly from his careful climb through Chicago politics. But there is an old saying that in politics nothing is free — there is just some question about when you pay the price. Obama is paying it now.

To read more political analysis by Michael Barone, visit http://www.usnews.com/baroneblog

COPYRIGHT 2008 U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.

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Kinross Gold Leads Gold Sector Rebound – Seeking Alpha

10 Wednesday Dec 2008

Posted by jschulmansr in Bollinger Bands, commodities, Copper, Currency and Currencies, diamonds, Finance, Fundamental Analysis, gold, hard assets, inflation, Investing, investments, Latest News, Markets, mining stocks, oil, precious metals, silver, small caps, Stocks, Technical Analysis, Today, U.S. Dollar, uranium

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Kinross Gold Leads Gold Sector Rebound – Seeking Alpha

By: Sam Kirtley of Gold-prices.biz

Sam Kirtley has been involved in investment in the financial markets for a number of years and has experience in stock investment and analysis as well as options trading. He is now a writer and analyst for various websites including uranium-stocks.net, gold-prices.biz, and silver-prices.net.

Gold stocks have been bouncing back recently, but few can challenge the extraordinary recovery of Kinross Gold (KGC), which has more than doubled since its low below $7. This is a sign that KGC is indeed one of the best gold mining companies in the world, since it has bounced back the furthest and the fastest.

(click to enlarge)

Technically some good signs from KGC are that the Relative Strength Index is moving higher having bounced up off the oversold zone at 30. Similarly, the MACD is trending northwards and is now in positive territory, but can still rise a lot further before giving an oversold signal.

If one is to have favourite shares, Kinross Gold Corp would certainly be one of ours, as it has been a holding of ours for years now, although we have traded the ups and downs when the opportunities presented themselves.

Having originally acquired Kinross at $10.08, after a large rally Kinross then went through a bit of a pull back so we signalled to our readers to “Add To Holdings” at discounted levels of around $11.66. We also gave another ‘Kinross Gold BUY’ signal when we purchased more of this stock on the 20th August 2007 for $11.48. On 31st January, 2008, we reduced our exposure to this stock when we sold about 50% of our holding for an average price of $21.96 locking in a profit of about 93.60%. On the 24th July, 2008, we doubled our holding with a purchase at $18.28 giving us a new average purchase price of $14.50.

As well as trading the stock, we have also dabbled in options contracts with Kinross, buying call options in KGC on the 16th June, 2008, paying $2.68 per contract and selling them on the 28th June 2008 for $5.30 per contract generating a 100% profit in two weeks. We then re-purchased them after they dropped for $2.50, and we are still holding them, although at a significant paper loss.

The reason we like Kinross Gold Corp so much is that it fits our criteria almost perfectly. When we look for a gold stock to buy, we are looking for solid fundamentals, a stable geopolitical situation and most importantly, leverage to the gold price itself.

As far as the fundamentals go, Kinross is a mid to large cap gold producer with a market cap of $9.47 billion. Some may consider this too large a company to offer decent leverage to the gold price, but as shown by the recent performance of the stock price, Kinross is definitely providing that leverage.

As well as leverage to rising gold prices, Kinross is also growing well as a company in its own right. Having made a gross profit of $390.40M in 2006 and then $501.80M in 2007 and with the Sep 08 quarterly profits at $269.80M, Kinross appears to be on track for another good year of record profits. There is also something in the financials that is particularly helpful in the present credit environment. In the last report from KGC, out of the $1284.80M in current assets, Kinross has a massive $322.90M in cash. This means it is well positioned to face any liquidity issues and will not be forced to try and raise money in the current difficult credit conditions.

Therefore, we continue to like Kinross and maintain our stock and option position in the company. Kinross Gold Corp is not only well positioned to benefit from rising gold price, but it is also a great company in its own right, with good growth potential. A full list of the stocks we cover can be found in our free online portfolio at http://www.gold-prices.biz.biz.

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Goldcorp Expected to Get 40% Gold and Silver Reserve Boost at Penasquito

Source: Financial Post Trading Desk

By: Jonathan Ratner

 Goldcorp provided an update for the Penasquito project in Mexico on Monday, a day ahead of its tour for analysts and shareholders.

The miner said its capital cost estimate is less than 10% higher than the original estimate of US$1.494-billion and construction continues to progress well.

When engineering work is complete, Goldcorp expects an approximate increase of 30% in gold reserves and a 15% to 20% increase in silver, lead and zinc reserves for year-end reporting.

There is also the potential for initial resources to be declared for bulk mineable and high-grade underground zones, as well as the Noche Buena property nearby, noted Canaccord Adams analyst Steven Butler. He assumes reserve additions will be roughly 40% for gold and silver and around 16% for lead and zinc.

Concentrate shipments are scheduled to being in the fourth quarter of 2009 and commercial production is expected for the following quarter. Meanwhile, shipments of large trial lots are anticipated in 2009 now that concentrate samples have been provided to select smelters, Mr. Butler said in a research note.

The analyst also noted that Goldcorp’s optimization efforts are underway. They include the possibility of recovering precious metals from low-grade lead ore that was previously considered uneconomic, the potential for underground bulk mining beneath currently defined open pits, and the possibility of cheaper power from a dedicated facility through a partnership with an independent provider.

Canaccord rates Goldcorp a “buy” with a price target of US$32 per share.

Jonathan Ratner 

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The Fed Still Manipulates Gold and The Markets

By: Jake Towne of Yet Another Champion of the Constitution

In a dynamic duo of articles published last weekend, I predicted the fall of the Dollar via a Gold-based perspective, and a US Treasury-based perspective. I want to round off and perhaps even reinforce my theory with a few more opinions and thoughts, which of course may be faulty as the major decisions are still at the mercy and discretion of the Fed, whom I have learned to never underestimate. To be a real “expert” in economics today requires one to be an “expert” in predicting government interventions, so it is all guesswork unless one is an insider. I am highly interested if there are any crucial facts I am missing by the way, please leave any counterarguments below.

I own some gold and if gold goes down I’ll buy some more and if gold goes up I’ll buy some more. Gold during the course of the bull market, which has several more years to go, will go much higher. – Jim Rogers, famed commodities trader, last week

I have written previously how the Fed creates and destroys money, but the example I used of open market operations (OMOs) has changed dramatically in 2008. The Fed is, on a daily basis, still altering its Treasury holdings, but more importantly propping up other assets by buying them, such as mortgage-based securities, Citigroup (C), AIG, etc. The Fed balance sheets have plunged from its historical levels of ~95% Treasury securities to less than 32% Treasuries, which hampers OMOs since the assets purchased will likely find no willing buyer on the market.

It may seem like the Fed is creating lots of money (and they are) but remember that $7.76 trillion, $8.5 trillion, WHATEVER the new number will be by the end of this week, pales in comparison to the amount of financial derivatives in existence, which per the BIS at last count (and just over-the-counter!) was $684 trillion. I am not sure if I ever wrote this phrase in this column before, but I’ve always viewed the financial crisis as a “Triple-D” crisis. Dollar. Debt. Derivatives.

There is another method of money destruction that I have not overlooked and want to mention. In an economic “disintegration” or a monster of a recession, money can also be destroyed by corporate, government and private bankruptcies.

In the debt-based world we live in, I think money destruction could be seen in shocking scales far exceeding the imaginations of the Keynesian-economics-based minds of the Fed and other central bankers. For instance, comparatively there has been much less noise in the commercial mortgage markets. However, if a lot of businesses fail, which has been known to happen in any recession, how do you suppose those mortgages will be repaid to the banks? In such a scenario, central bankers have just two options: create replacement money to re-inflate supply, or revalue the currency to an asset (very likely gold, after all central bankers do not hold at least some gold for their collective health, the yellow stuff is nice life insurance for fiat currency, ain’t it?).

In this eye-popping December 4 essay by James Conrad, he reasons the central bankers will revalue to some sort of a gold standard to escape oblivion, and the price of gold will go from $750 per ounce to $7500-9000. [Remember the “price” is not REALLY going up, after all 1 ounce of gold is the same from day to day. What it really means is that all fiat currencies are going to be massively devalued as the worthless scraps of paper and electrons they really are!]

There is a legal requirement that, in every futures contract that promises to deliver a physical commodity, the short seller must be 90% covered by either a stockpile of the commodity or appropriate forward contracts with primary producers… Things, however, are changing fast. As previously stated, the first major mini-panic among COMEX gold short sellers happened last Friday. As of Wednesday morning, about 11,500 delivery demands for 100 ounce ingots were made at COMEX, which represents about 5% of the previous open interest. Another 2,000 contracts are still open, and a large percentage of those will probably demand delivery. These demands compare to the usual ½ to 1% of all contracts.

Time for Captain Calculator! On December 5, the open interest was 264,796 contracts (at 100 troy ounces per bar). This equates to 823 tonnes, a very significant amount equal to about 10% of the total gold reserves claimed by the United States, the world’s largest holder. There are 26.5 million ounces in contracts and only 2.9 million ounces in COMEX warehouses to cover deliveries as Dr. Fekete notes here. Over 40% of the warehouse totals will be delivered before January 1.

Where is the gold to cover the rest of the contracts? In the ground? In central bank vaults? At the GLD London vault? I do not know the answer, but I agree with Fekete’s comment on gold’s recent backwardation and Conrad, the traders requesting delivery are skeptical there is enough.

Conrad then proceeds to outline a very convincing (to me) proof that ends with:

It is only a matter of time before gold is allowed to rise to its natural level. Assuming that about half of the current increase in Fed credit is eventually neutralized, the monetized value of gold should be allowed to rise to between $7,500 and $9,000 per ounce as the world goes back to some type of gold standard. In the nearer term, gold will rise to about $2,000 per ounce, as the Fed abandons a hopeless campaign to support COMEX short sellers, in favor of saving the other, more productive, functions of the various banks and insurers.

Revaluation of gold, and a return to the gold standard, is the only way that hyperinflation can be avoided while large numbers of paper currency units are released into the economy. This is because most of the rise in prices can be filtered into gold. As the asset value of gold rises, it will soak up excess dollars, euros, pounds, etc., while the appearance of an increased number of currency units will stimulate investor psychology, and lending and economic output will increase, all over the world. Ben Bernanke and the other members of the FOMC Committee must know this, because it is basic economics.

 

Hyperinflation is nasty stuff. I first wrote about it in my July article “Calling All Wheelbarrows: Hyperinflation in America? (Part 2/2)” and a fellow Nolan Chart columnist, Republicae, with far more experience than I wrote “The Hyper-Inflationary Trigger.”

Jim Sinclair, precious metals expert, comments here:

I recently completed the same mathematics that helped me so much in 1980 to determine the price that would be required to balance the international balance sheet of the US.

Balancing the international balance sheet is gold’s mission in times of crisis.

I recently did the math again and was sadly shocked to see what the price of gold would have to be to balance the international balance sheet of the USA today. That price for gold is more than twice Alf’s projected maximum gold price.

 

Alf Field’s maximum projection is $6,000 per troy ounce. Wow, guess Captain Calculator can take a vacation! On that note I would like to end with a reminder to the republican, Republican, and the third person who is reading this:

“We renew our allegiance to the principle of the gold standard and declare our confidence in the wisdom of the legislation of the Fifty-sixth Congress, by which the parity of all our money and the stability of our currency upon a gold basis has been secured.”

– Republican National Platform, 1900

“We believe it to be the duty of the Republican Party to uphold the gold standard and the integrity and value of our national currency.”

– Republican National Platform, 1904

“The Republican Party established and will continue to uphold the gold standard and will oppose any measure, which will undermine the government’s credit or impair the integrity of our national currency. Relief by currency inflation is unsound and dishonest in results.”

– Republican National Platform, 1932 [Above are sourced from H.L. Mencken, A New Dictionary of Quotations on Historical Principles from Ancient and Modern Sources (1985, p. 471)

“We must make military medicine the gold standard for advances in prosthetics and the treatment of trauma and eye injuries.”

– the only mention of gold in the Republican National Platform, 2008. Try searching for ‘gold’ or ‘dollar’ here.

Well, the Gold Standard ended in the US in 1914 when the first unbacked and “unsound” Federal Reserve Notes were printed. Ok, I hate the Fed, but fellow columnist Gene DeNardo phrased it best in his intriguing article “MV=PT A Classic Equation and Monetary Policy“:

When the economy grows in a healthy way, we all share in the profit as our currency becomes stronger and is able to purchase more.

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

Inflation on Sale as Deflation Dominates Markets

By:  Eric Roseman of  The Sovereign Society

The time to start building fresh positions in oil, gold, silver and TIPs has arrived. Even distressed real estate should be accumulated if credit can be secured.

Over the next 6-12 months the United States, Europeans, Japanese and Chinese will eventually arrest deflation. And long before that materializes, hard assets will begin a major reversal following months of crippling losses.

Since peaking in July, the entire gamut of inflation assets has collapsed amid a growing threat of deflation or an environment of accelerated price declines. The last deflation in the United States occurred in the 1930s, purging household balance sheets, corporations, states, municipalities and even the government following two New Deals.

Thus far, U.S. CPI or the consumer price index has not turned negative year-over-year. Yet as oil prices continue to lose altitude and other commodities have been crushed, input costs and price pressures continue to decline dramatically since October. The only major component of CPI that continues to post modest year-over-year gains is wages. And with unemployment now rising aggressively this quarter it’s highly likely wage demands will also come to a screeching halt.

Plunging Bond Yields Discount Danger

In the span of just six months, foreign currencies (except the yen), commodities, stocks, non-Treasury debt, real estate and art have all declined sharply in value in the worst panic-related sell-off in decades. More than $10 trillion dollars’ worth of asset value has been lost worldwide in 2008.

What’s working since July? U.S. Treasury bonds and the U.S. dollar as investors scramble for safety and liquidity.

On December 5, 30-day and 60-day T-bills yielded just 0.01% – the lowest since the 1930s while the benchmark 10-year T-bond traded below 2.55% – its lowest yield since Eisenhower was president in 1955. Even 30-year bonds have surged as the yield recently dropped below 3% for the first time in more than four decades.

The market is now pricing a severe recession and – possibly – another Great Depression. Despite a series of formidable regular market interventions by central banks since August 2007, the credit crisis is still alive and kicking. The authorities have not won the battle …at least not yet.

Heightened inter-bank lending rates, soaring credit default swaps for sovereign government debt and plunging Treasury yields all confirm that the primary trend is still deflation.

To be sure, credit markets worldwide have improved markedly since the dark days of early October. Investment-grade corporate debt is rallying, commercial-paper is flowing again and companies are starting to issue debt once more – but only the highest and most liquid of companies. For the most part, banks are still hoarding cash and borrowers can’t obtain credit.

The real economy is now feeling the bite as consumption falls off a cliff, foreclosures soar and the unemployment rate surges higher. These primary trends are deflationary as broad consumption is severely curtailed, with consumers preparing for the worst economy since 1981 and rebuilding devastated household balance sheets.

But at some point over the next 12 months, the market might transition from outright deflation or negative consumer prices to some sort of disinflation or at least an environment of stable prices. That’s when inflation assets should start rallying again.

Inflate or Die: The Name of the Game in 2009

The battle now being waged by global central banks, including the Federal Reserve is an outright attack on deflation. Through the massive expansion of credit, the Fed and her overseas colleagues are on course to print money like there’s no tomorrow to finance bulging fiscal spending plans, bailouts, tax cuts and anything else that helps to alleviate economic stress.

Earlier in November, the Fed announced it would target “quantitative easing” and “monetization,” unorthodox monetary policy tools rarely or never used in the post-WW II era.

Without getting too technical, the term “quantitative easing” means the Fed will act as the buyer of last resort to monetize Treasury debt and other government agency paper in an attempt to bring interest rates down. Quantitative easing aims to flood the financial system with liquidity and absorb excess cash through monetization or purchasing of government securities.

Through monetary policy, the Fed controls short-term lending rates but cannot influence long-term rates that are largely set by the markets; the Fed now hopes it can influence long-term rates through quantitative easing. And since its announcement two weeks ago, long-term fixed mortgage rates have declined sharply.

These and other open market operations directed by the Fed and Treasury will eventually arrest the broad-based deflation engulfing asset prices. It will take time. Inflation is the desired goal and is the preferred evil to deflation, a monetary phenomenon that threatens to destroy or seriously compromise the financial system. Policy-makers have studied the Great Depression, including Fed Chairman Bernanke, and the consequences of failed central bank and government intervention in times of severe economic duress are unthinkable.

Ravenous Monetary Expansion

According to Federal Reserve Board data, the Fed is now embarking on a spectacular expansion of credit unseen in the history of modern financial markets.

Lichtensteins Banner

The total amount of Federal Reserve bank credit has increased from $800 billion dollars to $2.2 trillion dollars (or from 6% to 15% of gross domestic product) as the central bank expands its various liquidity facilities in an attempt to preserve normal functioning of the financial system.

The Fed’s ongoing operations to arrest falling prices are targeted namely at housing – the epicenter of this financial crisis. It is highly unlikely that the United States economy will bottom until housing prices find a floor. Quantitative easing hopes to stabilize this market.

Buy Gold Now

Relative to other assets in 2008, gold prices have declined far less. The ongoing liquidity squeeze has forced investors to dump assets, including gold to raise dollars. I suspect this short-term phenomenon will end in 2009 once the ongoing panic subsides and credit markets become largely functional again.

Gold should be accumulated now ahead of market stabilization. As the financial system gradually comes back to life over the next several months or sooner, the dollar should commence another period of weakness; there will be little incentive to hold dollars with short-term rates at or close to zero percent. The Fed will be in no hurry to raise lending rates.

Still, the Japanese experience in the 1990s warns investors of the travails of long-term deflation.

The Japanese, unlike the United States, only started to seriously attack falling prices in the economy in 1998 through massive fiscal spending. In contrast, the U.S. is already throwing everything at the crisis after just 17 months.

I expect the United States to print its way out of misery and, over time, and conquer deflation. But the cost will be humungous and at the expense of the dollar, U.S. financial hegemony and calls for a new monetary system anchored by gold.

It’s literally “inflate or die” for global central banks. Inflation will win.

My Note: If you haven’t START BUYING PRECIOUS METALS NOW! Especially GOLD -I AM!    jschulmansr

 

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Gold (H)edges Gold Stocks + New CBOE Gold and Silver Options

09 Tuesday Dec 2008

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

≈ Comments Off on Gold (H)edges Gold Stocks + New CBOE Gold and Silver Options

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Gold (H)edges Gold Stocks – Features and Interviews – Hard Assets Investor

By: Brad Zigler of Hard Assets Investor

This is an excellent teaching article- jschulmansr

I suppose I shouldn’t have been surprised by the number of visitors to the San Francisco Hard Assets Conference who wanted to talk about wrestling the risk of their gold stock investments. After all, 2008 has turned out brutal for gold miners. Witness the AMEX Gold Miners Index off by 46% for the year.

Some of the conferees have been puzzling over their hedging options. And there are plenty of them: options, futures and exchange-traded notes, to name a few. This array leaves many wondering which hedge is optimal.

If you’re pondering that question yourself, you first have to ask yourself just what risk you want to hedge. In a so-called “perfect” hedge, price risk is completely checked, effectively locking in the present value of an asset until the hedge is lifted.

Is that what you really want, though?

A less-than-perfect hedge neutralizes only a portion of the risk subsumed within an investment. Gold stocks, for example, provide exposure to both the gold and equity markets. Hedging a gold stock with an instrument that derives its value solely from gold may dampen the volatility impact of the metal market upon your portfolio, but leaves you with equity risk. This may be perfectly acceptable if you feel stocks in general – and your issues in particular – are likely to appreciate. Hedge out the gold exposure and you’re more likely to see the value that the company’s management adds. If any.

We touched on this subject in recent Desktop columns (see “Gold Hedging: Up Close And Personal” and “More On Hedging Gold Stocks“).

More than one Desktop reader asked why the articles proposed a hedge strategy employing inverse gold exchange-traded notes – namely, the PowerShares DB Gold Double Short ETN (NYSE Arca: DZZ) – instead of stock-based derivatives such as options on the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (NYSE Arca: GDX).

Well, we’ve mentioned one of the advantages of a gold-based hedge already, but the question deserves a more detailed answer. Let’s suppose, for illustrative purposes, you hold 1,000 shares of a gold mining issue now trading at $50 and are concerned about future downside volatility. [Note: The prices shown in the illustrations below are derived from actual market values.]

AMEX Gold Miners Index And ETF

The AMEX Gold Miners Index is a modified market-capitalization-weighted benchmark comprised of 33 publicly traded gold and silver mining companies.

While price movements in the index are generally correlated with the fluctuations of its components and other mining issues, the relationship isn’t perfect. Close, but not perfect. The Gold Miners Index represents the market risk, or beta, specific to gold equities. Any hedge that employs an index-based derivative will need to be beta-adjusted to compensate for any differences in the securities’ volatilities.

You have to consider the proper index-based derivative to be used in the hedge. The GDX exchange-traded fund could be shorted, but that would require the use of margin, something that some investors might abhor.

If you’re not put off by margin, you’ll first need to size your hedge. And for that, you’ll need a beta coefficient for your stock. A quick-and-dirty beta can be approximated by taking the quotient of the securities’ volatilities or standard deviations (you can get a stock’s standard deviation through Web sites such as Morningstar and SmartMoney, or you can derive a beta more formally through a spreadsheet program such as Excel).

Gold Stock Volatility ÷ ETF Volatility = 94.8% ÷ 81.8% = 1.16

The ratio tells you how to calculate the dollar size of your hedge. If your stock is trading at $50, your $50,000 position would require $58,000 worth of GDX shares sold short. If GDX is $23 a copy, that means you‘ll need to short 2,522 shares.

Once hedged, you’ll still carry residual risk. The volatility correlation could shift over the life of the trade, leaving you over- or underhedged. So you’ll need to monitor the position for possible adds or subtractions. Hedging is not a “get it and forget it” proposition.

You’ll also need fresh capital to place and maintain the hedge. There’s the initial cash requirement of $29,000 (50% of $58,000) and possibly more if you hold your hedge through significant rises in GDX’s price.

GDX Options

You can avoid margin altogether by using certain GDX options instead of a short sale. Purchasing puts on GDX, for example, gives you open-ended hedge protection against declines in gold equities like a GDX short sale but with a clearly defined and limited risk. There’s no margin required, but you’ll have to pay a cash premium to buy the insurance protection. And, like an insurance contract, the coverage is time-limited.

Let’s say you can purchase a one-month option that permits you to sell 100 GDX shares, at $22 a copy, for a premium of $245. Keep in mind that the put conveys a right, not an obligation. You’re not required to sell GDX shares. At any time before expiration, you can instead sell your put to realize its current value, or you can allow the option to expire if it’s not worth selling.

Just how does the put protect you? Let’s imagine that, just before expiration, GDX shares have fallen to $10. Your put guarantees you the right to sell GDX shares at a price that’s now $12 better than the current market. That’s what your option should be worth: $12 a share, or $1,200. If you sell it now, you’d realize a $955 gain that can be used to offset any concomitant losses on your gold stock.

To figure out how many puts are necessary to fully hedge your stock position, you’ll need to extend the ratio math used previously.

Option prices only move in lockstep with their underlying stocks when they’re “in the money” like the put illustrated above. The expected change in an option premium is expressed in the delta coefficient. If the delta of the $22 put, when GDX is $23, is .40, the option premium is expected to appreciate by 40 cents for every $1 GDX loses.

The arithmetic used to construct the full hedge is:

[Stock Value ÷ (Delta x 100 Shares)] x Beta = [$50,000 ÷ (.40 x 100)] x 1.16 = 1,450 puts

Here’s where the efficacy of the GDX options hedge really breaks down. GDX’s high price volatility has inflated the cost of hedge protection to impractical levels. The hedge would cost $245 x 1,450, or $355,250; much more than the potential loss that would be incurred if you remained unprotected. Clearly, the cost of hedging gold equity market risk, like the cost of insurance after a catastrophe, has been puffed up to protect the insurer.

Of course, you can elect to hedge only a portion of your stock position, but the high premium necessitates a large “deductible” on your market risk.

Wrapping Up

You’ll note that some gold mining issues have options themselves. Using these as hedges in the current market presents another set of problems.

Given that the volatilities for individual issues are higher than that of GDX, the stock contracts are even more expensive than index options. Using stock options, too, would hedge away management alpha. Individual options, as well, are inefficient if you hold multiple mining issues in portfolio.

Now, consider the contrasting benefits attached to using the DZZ double inverse gold notes in your hedge: 1) no overpriced insurance cover, 2) you get to keep your stock’s equity and management risk; you’re only hedging out gold’s volatility, 3) a single purchase can hedge any number of mining issues in portfolio, and 4) your insurance doesn’t expire.

Seems to me that DZZ has the edge.

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

Today’s Grab Bag- Brad Ziegler Hard Assets Investor

Cheaper Oil and Silver + Gold Options 

Real-time Inflation Indicator (per annum): 7.9%

A couple of quick items for your consideration this morning.

Merry New Year from the EIA

The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) has issued its monthly short-term forecasts for oil prices. In the words of this little corner of sunshine in the Department of Energy:

 “The current global economic slowdown is now projected to be more severe and longer than in last month’s Outlook, leading to further reductions of global energy demand and additional declines in crude oil and other energy prices.”

The EIA has set an average price forecast for West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude oil at $100 per barrel. That’s the average for all of 2008. Keep in mind that, year-to-date, WTI has traded at an average barrel price of about $104. Now, we’ve only got 15 trading days left in 2008. To bring the current average price down $4 in that time, the sell-off pace has to quicken some.

In essence, the EIA – if you put any faith in its forecasts – is telling you to short oil. And this while the quarterly NYMEX oil contango has ballooned to a record $7.21 a barrel (need background on contango? See “Oil Demand Perking Or Peaking?”).

 NYMEX Crude Oil Quarterly Contango 

NYMEX Crude Oil Quarterly Contango

Back in November, the EIA eyed a $112 average price for 2008. Do I need to tell you that they missed the mark on that one?

Looking ahead, the EIA thinks WTI crude will average $51 a barrel in 2009.

Never let it be said that your stingy government didn’t give you something for the holidays.

And now, ladies and gentlemen, SLV options

Frustrated that you haven’t been able to play your favorite option trades in the silver market? Be vexed no longer. The Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) has come to your rescue. Yesterday, CBOE launched option trading on two metals grantor trusts, the iShares COMEX Gold Trust (NYSE Arca: IAU) and the iShares Silver Trust (NYSE Arca: SLV). Both trusts hold physical metals.

This is both a first and a “two-fer” for the options bourse. Back in June, CBOE inaugurated trading in the SPDR Gold Shares Trust (NYSE Arca: GLD); options on a silver grantor trust haven’t been traded on an organized exchange before.

The American-style options will trade on the January expiration cycle, initially with contracts maturing in December, January, April and July.

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Time to Revise Our Gold Expectations – Seeking Alpha

08 Monday Dec 2008

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

≈ Comments Off on Time to Revise Our Gold Expectations – Seeking Alpha

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Time to Revise Our Gold Expectations – Seeking Alpha

Source: FP Trading Desk

The price of gold is showing signs of stability after gold stocks got crushed in the commodity sell-off early this fall. However, we are clearly not in the $1000-plus gold price environment many had anticipated under these dire economic conditions, nor have traditional multiples returned, says Credit Suisse analyst Anita Soni.

Apart from a brief period earlier this year, when gold hit an all-time high above $1030 an ounce, the yellow metal has not performed true to course. The first quarter advance proved to be a bubble with large-scale institutional speculators driving the price sharply higher… and then sharply lower over the next seven months, according to Jeffrey Nichols, managing director at American Precious Metals Advisors.

Mr. Nichols told the China Gold & Precious Metals Summit in Shanghai on Thursday:

In spite of the lack of direction and day-to-day price volatility in the gold market this year, at least we can say that no other asset class has held its value quite so well.

“Clearly the standard 1 to 2 times price-to-net asset value [NAV] paradigm no longer applies, particularly for the more junior stocks,” Ms. Soni said in a research note, adding that exposure to base metal by-products is no longer a guarantee of lower cash costs. For senior producers, P/NAV multiples are around 0.5 times, while they range for 0.66x for mid-tier names and as much as 1x for small market cap companies.

Until longer-term valuation fundamentals matter again, Ms. Soni believes she has determined an appropriate near-term basis for valuing gold equities. It uses spot commodity prices plus 10% to determine net asset values: $850 per ounce for gold, $10.50 for silver, $1.80 per pound of copper and $0.58 for zinc.

This produces returns between 30% and 60%, which she considers a reasonable near-term basis for valuation until gold moves upward again. Ms. Soni has also produced target prices and net asset values for the long term, with an extra 10% for gold again, or $930, a level she said is “imminently achievable.”

As a result of these changes, Credit Suisse has upgraded its rating on Kinross Gold Corp. (KGC) to “outperform,” while Yamana Gold Inc. (AUY) and Northgate Minerals Corp. (NXG) have been downgraded to “neutral.” Target price reductions for the miners it covers range from 18% to 80%.

“The issues in the mid-tier space are those of operational risk and to a lesser extent, the spectre of potential funding shortfall,” Ms. Soni said. Yamana’s recent production and cost revisions have not been well-received, sending its share price multiple from near-senior levels to the discounted mid-tier level.

She cited several other near-term issues that could weigh on the stock. Its production ramp-up will likely be slower than expected and the market may show a lack of patience with this.

Yamana’s capital program funding could get very tight if current market conditions and commodity prices persist, which may make it very hard for the company to resist issuing equity given the success Agnico-Eagle Mines Ltd. (AEM) and Red Back Mining Inc. (RBIFF.PK) have had with their recent financings.

Cut-backs to preserve capital will hurt its value in terms of adding exploration and growth opportunities, and Yamana currently has significant exposure to copper.

And while Ms. Soni suggested that Yamana is perhaps the best candidate for a takeover given its low valuation and a few very good assets, particularly El Penon in Chile, she says this is not enough to recommend it as an “outperform.”

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IAMGOLD: Expect a Move Higher – Seeking Alpha

08 Monday Dec 2008

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

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IAMGOLD: Expect a Move Higher – Seeking Alpha

By: Glenn Cutler of The Winners Forum.com

IAMGOLD Corp (IAG) is a Canadian based mining company that participates in worldwide exploration and development of mineral resources and produces roughly 1 million ounces of gold annually from eight property locations on three continents: North America, South America and Africa. The company boasts the largest cash flow ratio on investment in the entire industry and is second among top mining companies in terms of achieving earnings per $1000 invested. Revenue, adjusted net earnings and cash flow have all risen sharply through the first 9 months of 2008.

IAG MAINTAINS STRONG FINANCIAL POSITION

Given recent concerns about the economy and in particular, debt and leverage, stocks which are most likely to attract investor attention are those of companies that have bullet proof balance sheets, stable or growing cash flow and access to capital. IAG is a gold star candidate, with a low Debt/Equity Ratio and recent liquid assets as published in their 2008 TWP Presentation document as follows:

  • CASH and CASH EQUIVALENTS – $153 million
  • GOLD BULLION (at market value) – $154 million
  • 5-YEAR UNDRAWN CREDIT FACILITY – $140 million
  • TOTAL FUNDS AVAILABLE – $447 million
  • YTD 9 MONTH OPERATING CASH FLOW – $189 million

GOLD PRODUCTION/GEOGRAPHIC DIVERSIFICATION – This company produced 253,000 ounces, a 5% increase in the latest quarter. They are on track to produce 950,000 ounces in 2008. Production costs are $476/ounce slightly below the estimated $480-490 range. Geographic diversification is another important factor for investors. IAG has production at 8 different facilities which breaks down as 51% (Africa), 30% (Suriname) and 19% (Quebec). Its current goal is to double total production to 1.8 million ounces in 2012.

RESERVES and RESOURCES

Mines Proven & Probable Measured & Indicated* Inferred
Rosebel 3,233,000 8,283,000 79,000
Doyon Division* 206,000 662,000 576,000
Mupane 311,000 792,000 7,000
Tarkwa 2,307,000 2,752,000 733,000
Sadiola 394,000 1,609,000 325,000
Yatela 200,000 234,000 103,000
Damang 274,000 468,000 266,000
Total 6,925,000 14,800,000 2,089,000

IAMGOLD Acquires 71.6% of EURO RESSOURCES S. A. (EUR.TO) for $1.20 / Reopens Offer

On December 3rd, IAMGOLD Corp announced results of its $1.20/share tender offer for French company Euro Ressources S.A. That company’s principal asset is a 10% royalty interest in the Rosebel Gold Mine in Suriname which is operated by IAMGOLD. This mine which is estimated to have 10 million ounces, achieved record throughput and the $44 million expansion and optimization project in on target for completion in early 2009. According to the CEO of IAMGOLD, this strategic purchase will reduce cash costs by about $45 per ounce produced at this specific property.

With the recent decline in the foreign exchange rate of the Euro currency, IAG was able to move quickly to purchase Euros and lock in the transaction cost at an average rate of 1.27, approximately 15% below the 1.47 exchange rate the date they announced the deal. Regulations require the offer be reopened for an additional 10 days at the same price, until December 17th.

IAG STOCK – Recent Price Activity

Typical of most mining stocks, IAG has been in a steady downtrend over the past year. Shares were banging around $10 when the year began and then gradually declined. The price stair-stepped its way down, spending time in each support zone before breaking down to the next area where buyers would regroup. The $5-6 range held from April through most of September, and then when financial markets cracked the price tumbled hard and fast to print a recent new low around $2.22 a share. Shares have been trending modestly higher since hitting their lows, and it’s possible we could see a new pattern of higher lows and higher highs on a recovery.

Given its outstanding balance sheet and strong positive cash flow, downside investment risk is small. Technical patterns indicate a high probability for shares to move up into their recent congestion zone between $5.50 and $6.50, where there will be overhead supply to work through before the stock could continue higher. As with all mining stocks, performance relates directly to how the underlying precious metals perform, so it’s critical that gold move in either a sideways manner where mining stocks can consolidate and base build or trend modestly higher. Or, if the gold market can rally strong, there is no doubt shares of mining stocks will also rise nicely.

Based on a multi-decade chart of gold, there is reason to believe a move higher is not far off. A more detailed discussion of the technical outlook for gold is available in a published report at TheWinnersForum.com – Cutler’s Stock Market Blog.

OTHER FUNDAMENTAL FACTORS – Considerations for Investment

UNDERVALUED MARKET VALUATION VERSUS PEERS – The slide in the share price to below $4 now values the entire company at $1.2 billion, which is now only 1.5x trailing 12-month revenue, far below industry peers. To compare: Agnico-Eagle Mines (AEM) trades at 10x, Kinross Gold (KGC) trades at 6.5x, Newmont Mining (NEM) trades at 2.2x and Barrick Gold (ABX) trades at nearly 3x revenue.

RECENT ACQUISITION OF DOYON ROYALTY – In July, with a focus on reducing cash costs, the firm acquired the participation royalty in the Doyon/Westwood Property located in Quebec from Barrick Gold for $13 million. The acquisition eliminated royalty payments which was 25% of gold prices above $375 an ounce. The savings was about $140 an ounce. The participation royalty also extended to the Westwood Development Project, about 2 kilometers from the Doyon mine. Westwood production was also freed from royalty obligations.

Other Mining Activities / Projects

Niobium Mine in Quebec – Through its Niobec Mine in Quebec the company mines a lesser known metal called Niobium. Originally known as Columbium, this 41st element is a paramagnetic metal which has a high melting point and low density. One of its noteworthy characteristics is that it is corrosion resistant. It has superconductivity properties. It is used as an alloy in the steel industry because it increases the toughness strength and weldability of steel. It is also used in producing commemorative coins. According the company, the addition of $4 of niobium can reduce the weight of mid-sized cars by 100kg which save .05l/100 km in fuel consumption. It is also used in construction and land based turbine and jet engines. They company forecast to produce 4300 tons in 2008.

Quimsacocha gold Project in Ecuador – A new constitution took effect in Ecuador in October which received 64% of a referendum vote. This is a positive development that will enable a new mining law to allow responsible mining in the country. The 100% owned 3.5 million ounce Quimsacocha Project will complete its feasibility study in 2009.

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Gold Report: Sean Rakhimov: Stock Market Will Recover; Economic Crisis Far from Over

02 Tuesday Dec 2008

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

≈ Comments Off on Gold Report: Sean Rakhimov: Stock Market Will Recover; Economic Crisis Far from Over

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Gold Report: Sean Rakhimov Stock Market Will Recover; Economic Crisis Far From Over

Souce: The Gold Report

By: Sean Rakhimov of Silver Strategies.Com

 

As SilverStrategies.com editor Sean Rakhimov tells us in this exclusive interview with The Gold Report, the economic crisis may go on for a generation but the market is a separate animal that will stir back to life sooner. He expects physical gold and silver to lead the parade, with base metals lagging 12-18 months behind, followed by share price recovery for the majors and on down the line. When picking stocks to buy now, he says investors have to decide for themselves whether a company will survive the washout; it may be tough going from here to there, but sticking with survivors should prove beneficial in the long run.The Gold Report: Let’s start with your take on where are we today, what has happened, and where we’re going from here.

Sean Rakhimov: Basically we’re in a situation that we’ve long expected. We all anticipated a big financial crisis, all sorts of problems, an end-of-the-world type of scenario—not literally, but the world as we know it. And I think we’re there. This is the big one and it’s for real. Where we go from here is largely a function of what the powers-that-be will do. We have some idea of what they will do; they will do all the things that will make it worse. I go by the theory that they will always do the right thing, but only after they exhaust all other options.

TGR: When you say the big one, how much further are you expecting both the markets and the international financials to erode?

SR: The markets are a separate story. Don’t confuse what the markets will do with the general crisis or economic situation. Markets are a different animal; they can do all kinds of things that do not fit into your thinking or should not have happened given the economy or the political situation, or what-have-you. I want to be clear on that so that people don’t assume that if I say, “Oh, this is going to last a while, that automatically means the market is going to not recover for a long time.” The economic crisis, I think, is going to last for a generation. I foresee a twofold crisis here, or maybe three stages. The first one is what we’re going through right now – a debt crisis.

At some point down the line we’re going to have a currency crisis, where the dollar will stop being the reserve currency of the world. I don’t know how long before that happens. It’s a matter of whoever runs first to the door, basically. I was just reading some articles. Iran is converting their foreign exchange reserves into gold. China is trying to do some of that. It only takes a few of these until there’s a domino effect and when that happens, things should play out quickly.

TGR: What do you mean “play out quickly”?

SR: This crisis, I think, has been a good example, where within three months we ended up in a completely different environment. If the dollar stops being the reserve currency of the world tomorrow, I expect things to happen quickly. It may take a decade until it gets started, but once it starts, I expect things to unravel quickly. The reason for that is we have maybe 20 to 30 major players in the world that can make a difference. I’m talking about countries and maybe some other entities such as sovereign funds. And I believe it’s going to be very difficult to bring everybody to the table and get them to agree on a plan that everybody would sign on to. Even if they did sign on, I think it’s going to be very difficult to make sure everybody sticks with it.

 

As soon as they break ranks, I think within six months the whole thing is going to break apart. Whatever accord they come up with, if it’s going to be Russia or China or somebody of that size, things are going to happen even quicker. If it’s going to be a smaller player like Iran or Venezuela, that may take a bit longer. The significance of it may be downplayed for a period of time. But ultimately I think most people understand the dire straits we’re in. At some point it’s going to be “everybody for themselves” and that’s when I think the current system is going to fall apart.

TGR: You’re suggesting the dollar will stop being the world currency and countries will make some attempt to come together to create the new world currency. Might that be gold or precious metals?

SR: I don’t think the adoption of gold or a derivative thereof as a reserve currency is going to come from governments, at least not voluntarily. Eventually, I think they will be forced to.

TGR: Wasn’t that the original part of the Bretton Woods agreement?

SR: Yes, it was, where the U.S. dollar was as good as gold and was convertible to gold, but we know how that ended.

TGR: You said this crisis could go on for a generation. That’s a long time.

SR: I foresee maybe several stages of this crisis unraveling and that’s why I say it’s going to take about a generation. As I said, the first one is the big debt crisis we have now. Maybe an extension of it will be some sort of a currency crisis. It’s not just a dollar that won’t be worth anything, but most other currencies as well. And then I believe what’s going to really, really change the environment and exacerbate the situation will be an oil crisis. I do expect oil to hit a new all-time high, say, by 2011. So within two to three years I would think that’s going to happen.

TGR: How low will we see oil go this time around?

SR: I don’t have a number on that because I don’t “buy these prices” on anything. These prices are largely a function of paper transactions, and yes, some transactions are taking place at these prices. Look at your Blackberry; a pound of copper is a brick that size. How much work, how much effort, how much energy goes into that and you can buy it for $1.50 or something in that range. Think to yourself, what else can you buy for $1.50? I was in Europe a few weeks ago. You can buy a bottle of water for €3, which is about $4. A cup of coffee costs that or more. I don’t know what you can get for $1.50 anymore; whereas you can get a piece of copper the size of your Blackberry for $1.61 today. The prices today are completely, absolutely bogus. Companies have to mine and sell their products at these prices. But if you recall our conversation in the last go-round, I said at some point I expect a complete reevaluation of most things, but commodities in particular. (Go to http://seekingalpha.com/article/84220-sean-rakhimov-3-digit-silver-ahead)

TGR: When you say commodities, are you doing base metals, precious metals?

SR: Everything. Everything that has an intrinsic value. Here’s the situation. Suppose three of us represent countries. One has oil, the other has wheat, and I have copper. If I want to buy your oil, I go back to my printer and print up as much money as I can and buy your oil. Well, the one with the wheat will do the same thing, print up as much money as possible and try to buy your oil. At some point people will stop accepting these currencies, whatever they are, because there’s no limit to them. Money is printed like leaflets. There’s no backing to it. When we get to the stage where there isn’t enough to go around—like you go to a gas station and you can’t get all the gas you need—the reevaluation will be forced on the market and will be forced on all the players. So, unless you have something else to offer, something of substance other than your paper money, I don’t think you’re going to get any of whatever it is you’re looking for.

So I do expect some time in the next decade that the oil market will fall apart. Whenever the deficit between production and consumption reaches a level where it’s going to start to have severe impact on availability and price, I think countries will go to direct contracts. That would be nothing new; such markets exist today, say, in uranium, where direct contracts are the main market and the futures market is basically an addendum. It’s more of a financial management tool for participants, rather than the market that determines anything significant.

TGR: At what level might the supply deficit trigger direct contract transactions in oil?

SR: Right now the supply and demand is about 85 million barrels a day supply against 87 million roughly in consumption. Suppose those numbers get to 90 and 95 (million barrels a day of consumption). At some point the shortage will become so severe that it’s going to wreak havoc in the marketplace. Those who have the oil will start to choose who they sell it to and in exchange for what. And I don’t think it’s going to be paper. That’s my longer term outlook.

TGR: What should investors be doing?

SR: It depends on the timeframe. If you’re talking about stocks, investors should take a hard look at their portfolios and ask themselves one question. Go through each stock and say, “Is this company going to be around on the other side of this financial crisis?” It may take six months; it may take three years for all I know. But if the company survives this current situation, I believe the benefits are going to be tremendous. Unfortunately, getting from here to there will be tough. It is already very, very difficult to get any kind of financing. And as we know, the mining (exploration) sector lives by it for the most part. A lot of these projects require large capital expenditure, either for exploration or development. Otherwise, they can’t do it.

TGR: Have you gone through your grid and come up with a list of companies that make the grade?

SR: I would be reluctant to discuss specific companies, particularly because investing is about the investor. If you want a simple version, stick with the major blue chips—but even then, survival is not a given. For instance, a company like Teck Cominco Ltd. (TSX:TCK.A) (TSX:TCK.B) (NYSE:TCK) is in a serious situation and the stock has plunged dramatically; it’s been one of the blue chips for the longest time and they’re a very conservative company.

TGR: Any other suggestions?

SR: If you need a guideline, the way I expect the market to play out going forward is for gold and silver to come back first. Base metals will probably lag behind by about a year to 18 months. When I say “come back,” I mean this downtrend in their price in the marketplace will reverse. Within two or three quarters after that, majors such as Newmont Mining Corp. (NYSE:NEM) and Barrick Gold Corp. (NYSE:ABX) will start making profits, good profits, large profits. Through that, I think their share price will come back and then they will turn around and buy juniors that survive this crisis on the cheap to justify those share prices. That’s the basic scenario I’m going by.

TGR: So you say first the bullion itself.

SR: First the bullion itself. You can never go wrong with that.

TGR: Despite the pullback we’ve encountered? Both gold and silver suffered during this asset devaluation.

SR: Well, yes and no. In retrospect in a perfect world it would have been wise to sell our gold and silver and their stocks and go into cash and try to buy them later on the cheap. In the real world, it doesn’t work like that. One thing to remember is gold and silver are the only markets that are driven by fear. We saw a good manifestation of that a couple of months ago, when gold shot up $90 in one day. We’ll see more days like that. In fact, it could be tomorrow for all I know, or the day after.

TGR: Do you see a specific catalyst for this?

SR: Not specific. It can be anything—war with Iran; some big banks going under; another country defaulting on its obligations. It can be a major investor like a sovereign wealth fund going to 50% gold or something. It can be absolutely anything. Now the trick here is gold and silver markets are not based on large amounts of buying. Let’s say tomorrow Warren Buffet says he’s going to buy $10 billion worth of gold. Immediately the supply is going to dry up. People who have gold will say, “Wait a minute, we’re not selling. The price is going up.” So the effect of a single event like that in the gold and silver space can reach far beyond what it would in any other market.

It is important to remember you don’t want to be in and out of assets of this type on a whim. Even if it takes a year, even if you have corrections like this, for my investment strategy I do not believe that gold and silver are amenable to buying and selling as are assets in other markets. Better to treat them like insurance, where you have it in good times and bad times. It won’t take a lot of buying to push these metals back up. And even though the metal prices have come down, if anything, demand for gold and silver has increased.

TGR: Evidenced by trying to find some coins.

SR: Absolutely and on any level. A week or two ago I was talking to a gentleman in London who runs a business that basically allows people to invest in gold. He told me that the gold he has in storage for his investors has reached some 11.5 tons in about 2.5 years. This is just one market participant out of who-knows-how-many and he deals mostly with retail investors. I believe the demand is there now and is only going to increase. Our current situation is going to add to that, not subtract from it.

Today’s metals prices are absolutely bogus, as is the price for oil. Yes, you can buy it at that price, but that is not what it’s worth. Right now oil is trading much, much cheaper than water, maybe one-third of the price of water. It should not be possible. I don’t believe in the rational market theory. I think the market is always wrong in the short term.

TGR: If people are looking at rolling money back into investments once the craziness stops, you say a logical sequence is to put some in bullion first and wait a little bit, buy some majors and wait a little bit, and then look at the juniors?

SR: That’s always been the theory. My views have not changed. If you asked me a year ago, I would have told you the exact same thing, so this is not trying to adjust my position based on current developments in the market. But in my opinion, that progression is how the market is going to move forward.

TGR: Doug Casey’s current philosophy is one-third cash, one-third bullion, one-third stocks. Would you agree, or are you saying to get it all in bullion for right now? Let’s say you have a high tolerance for speculation, risk taking. Where would you be?

SR: If you can get bullion at anything close to spot prices, you should buy as much as you plan to buy. I don’t endorse investors paying 50% premium, but I do believe in percentage terms the premiums will shrink at some point.

TGR: So would you buy Central Fund of Canada (AMEX:CEF)? Maybe half physical and half stock?

SR: Yes, I would, absolutely. And as far as stocks are concerned, it goes back to asking yourself that one question: “Is this company going to be around on the other side of this financial crisis?” If it is, by all means, buy some. I would recommend—as always, this is nothing new for me—dollar cost averaging. Whether you want to buy 1,000 shares or 10,000 shares, split it into five or six segments and buy one part every month or so.

The other thing is to reexamine your outlook or your investment horizon. You have to be prepared to not make any money for maybe about three years at least. I’m not saying that’s what’s going to happen, but you have to be prepared for that. Going in, you have to believe in this. I often use marriage as an example. You marry for the rest of your life, even if you end up getting divorced next year.

TGR: Things can change.

SR: Things can change. You can learn things you didn’t know. You may have other factors to deal with that don’t have to do with your position. But ultimately you have to believe in the company or the investment you’re making, and you have to give yourself at least three years to sit on it and maybe take some severe losses.

TGR: Speaking of severe losses, seeing billions evaporate this year has been a humbling experience.

SR: It is and it isn’t.

TGR: Tell us about the “isn’t.” We know about the “is.”

SR: The “isn’t” part is we all knew big problems would be coming down the line. And we knew why. Some of us discussed doomsday scenarios. I think where we went wrong is we did not prepare accordingly. A couple of months ago I wrote an article to that effect. It was called The Trouble with Forecasting. Basically the argument I was making is we knew that things would get bad, really bad. We should have believed our own predictions. There would have been no downside if we had been more conservative, more careful.

TGR: Can you give us any names based on various categories—senior producers, junior producers, exploration?

SR: I can flip that and tell you which companies I own. I own a good position in Pan American Silver Corp. (Nasdaq:PAAS) (TSX:PAA). I own a position in Silver Wheaton Corp. (NYSE:SLW), Hecla Mining. Those three I am comfortable will survive this crisis. One step down in terms of size and presence in the market, I own shares of First Majestic, IMPACT Silver and Minera Andes. Then if you go one step down below from that, companies with no production, I own shares of Esperanza and Silvercrest. I’ll leave it at that. Obviously, I own a lot of other different stocks, but I am trying to protect potential investors so I’m trying to be conservative here.

TGR: Tell us first about the one you mentioned last. What do you like about Silvercrest Mines Inc. (TSX.V:SVL)?

SR: The best thing about Silvercrest is management. And they do have a sizeable deposit, something on the order of 100 million ounces in Mexico. They have advanced studies, including, I believe, a feasibility study. They do need to build a mine. I don’t think it’s going to be an overly expensive mine and they don’t need too much lead time. They probably can be in production sometime in 2010, or maybe even sooner. But management is the key. I did buy that stock at well over $1. It’s probably half that today, maybe lower. But this is the type of company I believe will survive this crisis, come out on the other side and be one of the beneficiaries of whatever turnaround we see.

TGR: Esperanza Silver Corp. (TSX.V:EPZ)?

SR: Esperanza is a similar story. I like the management, very conservative. This is a pure exploration company. They do not plan to be in production, not that I know of. They have discovered two deposits: one in Peru and one in Mexico. I think the deposit in Mexico is about a million ounces of gold. In Peru, which should be roughly three quarters of a million ounces of gold, they have a JV with Silver Standard. That one is a higher grade. This is a grassroots exploration company, they like finding deposits. They found two in the recent past, so I expect more good things from them.

TGR: Minera Andes Inc. (TSX:MAI) (OTCBB:MNEAF)?

SR: Minera Andes is one of the companies that doesn’t have a high profile, but one of my favorites. It’s been my favorite for about five years now. Again, very good management, very low key. They focus on getting things done and not talking big, not too promotional. They have a mine in production that’s joint-ventured with Hochschild Mining (LSE:HOC) (which is a large silver producer) in Argentina. They have another project that they recently put out a resource calculation for—a copper project, which is a joint venture with Xstrata. Xstrata is a very large company, so this is another team that knows how to come up with good assets. I think they’ll also survive this crisis and will benefit from whatever upside in the future.

TGR: What about Minera Andes makes it one of your favorites?

SR: The management. Again, the management is very conservative, very low key, very non-promotional, very down to business. You just get a feeling for people; you see them so many times, talk to them, see how they go about their business and how they deliver. If they get where they plan to get and what they do to get there, it gives you a level of comfort. Minera Andes is one of those that has been through thick and thin and I think they’re definitely out of the woods in terms of whether they’re going to survive.

TGR: IMPACT Silver (TSX.V: IPT). What’s the story there?

SR: I should mention that I am somewhat biased, in that I am a consultant to the company. But on the flip side, I like them for reasons other than that. It’s one of my largest silver holdings. They’re in production in Mexico, very conservative management. They have a good cash position, one of the lowest costs of production. It’s a small producer, at this time. They produce about a million ounces of silver equivalent. But management is seasoned, been around for quite some time and they know how to operate a mine. Their motto is: “a business has to make money, otherwise it’s a hobby”. They bought an old mine in Mexico, and been profitable from day one. They’re still profitable, even in this environment, and I also believe they are going to be one of the ones that will come through this.

TGR: I’ve been hearing a lot about First Majestic (TSX:FR) (PK SHEET:FRMSF).

SR: First Majestic, I think, is one that has the highest chances of surviving this crash or this downturn, however you want to call it. I also think this is one that will get bigger, either through acquisitions or organic growth. I know the gentleman who started this company, Keith Neumeyer, very well, known him for years. Very ambitious and aggressive in executing his business plan. This company should produce on the order of about 5 million ounces of silver equivalent this year, maybe just under that. This has been accomplished in about four years. It’s no small task to get from zero to 5 million ounces in about four years. I also like First Majestic’s other principal, Ramon Davila, who is the most dynamic mining executive I’ve seen by far. He is the one who oversees the operations in Mexico, and is the one who built up Mexican operations for Pan American Silver in the past.

TGR: He’s got experience.

SR: Experience, knowledge and contacts; a very, very successful mining executive. First Majestic is going to be around for quite some time unless, of course, it’s going to be taken over by a major, which would be a compliment to get to a point where you are an attractive target to a major. For juniors that’s often of the ultimate goal. I’m not saying that’s the goal for First Majestic, but it’s like Rick Rule says, you build a company to keep and somebody else will want it. So I think First Majestic is going places.

TGR: And they’ve got the capital to weather the storm.

SR: I believe they have about $26 million in the bank. It’s a well established company in terms of production and operations. They have about 300 million ounces in resources. They’ve done their drilling, they’ve got four mines in production right now. They’re undertaking a major expansion at one of the projects in Northern Mexico. They’re basically going about their business according to plan. Maybe they’re making some minor adjustments to cut costs here and there, but ultimately this company is going to grow.

TGR: What’s going on with Hecla Mining Company (NYSE:HL)? Is it just silver and the industrial metal and, therefore, demand is off and prices are off?

SR: All of the above, but I think one of the reasons that is not well understood is that Hecla is one of the very few companies in this space that’s listed on the New York Stock Exchange. So it’s one of the more visible ones and I think they take it on the chin harder than the rest, particularly because of that listing. The way mainstream investors work is, “Everything is going down, so let’s short commodities. What do we have to play with?” And Hecla inevitably pops up on that list. I think that’s part of the reason it’s been beaten down so badly. Hecla is one of the best underground mine operators, so I think they will survive. The company’s been around for 100 years, so I’m sure they can weather this one—at least that’s the way I’m betting. If I’m wrong, then so be it.

This is why I am reluctant to discuss specific companies. If you’re investing in the mining sector, you have to be prepared to make mistakes and you will definitely make mistakes in many of them. The question is, of course, in the grand scheme of things, are you making progress or not, are you making money or not. So long as your portfolio is growing, you could do much, much worse than Hecla.

TGR: Wouldn’t you think the darling of the sector would hold up better?

SR: It works both ways. It would have been darling in good times and I think it will be again. At some point they will benefit from that New York Stock Exchange listing. But in bad times, they take it on the chin harder than the rest.

TGR: Another company that’s getting some conversation is Silver Recycling Company(TSX.V:TSR), which is a different play than mining. What do you know about them?

SR: Silver Recycling has been another favorite of mine. The businesses they currently control are profitable and they’re still doing okay. This has been one of the attractions when we first looked at it. Unfortunately, they’ve been one of the victims of the current credit environment. While they do have self-sustaining operations, they need to raise capital to make acquisitions. If they are successful in that task, and I have to believe they will be, it’s going to be a very, very pleasant surprise. It’s beaten down with the rest of the sector right now, but the business plan is sound. I am still optimistic about this company. In fact, I’m trying to help them get through this. By the way, chances are you can buy some silver from them because they’ve responded to the market demand and produce 100-ounce silver bars and silver rounds, which they sell to investors.

TGR: Right. At a premium to spot, right?

SR: Yes, at a premium to spot, I bought some myself, so I don’t think the premiums are outrageous at all or out of line with the market.

Not all of Sean Rakhimov’s dot-com dabblings paid off, with at least one important exception. He traces his interested in financial markets to that era, when he joined a software development company in 1996. In the years that followed, he designed financial systems to support different areas of the investment banking business. He seized the opportunity to learn about options trading, securities lending, payments processing, clearing and settlement, fixed income securities and margin transactions. He’s not only been putting those learnings to work ever since, but also sharing them with others, with writings published on such internet portals as Le Metropole Café, 321Gold.com, SilverMiners.com and—of course—The Gold Report. Sean, who has been involved in a number of research projects for renowned silver guru and newsletter writer David Morgan, now publishes and edits his own website, SilverStrategies.com.

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GoldMoney – Alert!

02 Tuesday Dec 2008

Posted by jschulmansr in Bollinger Bands, capitalism, commodities, Copper, Currency and Currencies, deflation, Finance, Fundamental Analysis, gold, inflation, Investing, investments, Latest News, Markets, mining stocks, Moving Averages, oil, precious, precious metals, silver, Stocks, Technical Analysis, Today, U.S. Dollar, Uncategorized

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GoldMoney – Alert!

James Turk

A Successful Test of Support

In the last alert I referred to “the growing body of evidence” indicating that “the correction in gold that began after making a new record high in March above $1020 is ending.” Importantly, this point is confirmed by the following monthly chart presenting gold’s rate of exchange against the US dollar.

To explain this key development in technical terms, after making a new record high this past March, gold retraced back toward its previous record (marked in the above chart by the dashed line). Gold did the same thing back in 1978 after breaking above $200 in July that year (marked by the red circle), its previous record high. Gold climbed another 17% through October 1978, and then corrected the following month by testing $200. Support at that level held.

From there gold never looked back. It began a stellar advance that took it to $681.50, its month-end close in January 1980, the level that was just successfully tested.

The big difference between now and back then is the time needed to re-test support. The correction lasted only one month in 1978, but is now already eight months old. There are a number of reasons for this different result, but one is not the gold cartel. It was active back in the late 1970s too, dishoarding 775 tonnes from the International Monetary Fund in a vain and useless attempt to make the dollar look better by trying to cap the gold price.

The clear conclusion is that governments, even when they coordinate their effort, cannot in the end stop the market from bidding up the price of gold. So it is logical to expect a new record high for gold soon against the US dollar. It is noteworthy that gold closed this past month at new record highs against the British pound, Canadian dollar, Indian rupee and South African rand.

The driving force to exit national currencies and to buy gold is the same now as it was in the 1970s. Gold is better money than national currencies.


Published by GoldMoney
Copyright © 2008. All rights reserved.
Edited by James Turk, alert@goldmoney.com

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Don’t Give Up on Gold Just Yet!+ Peter Schiff Bonus!

02 Tuesday Dec 2008

Posted by jschulmansr in capitalism, commodities, Copper, Currency and Currencies, deflation, Finance, Fundamental Analysis, gold, hard assets, inflation, Investing, investments, Latest News, Markets, mining stocks, Moving Averages, oil, precious metals, silver, Stocks, Technical Analysis, Today, U.S. Dollar, Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on Don’t Give Up on Gold Just Yet!+ Peter Schiff Bonus!

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Don’t Give Up on Gold Just Yet – Seeking Alpha

By: Keith Fitz-Gerald of Monday Morning

If you were counting on gold to boost your returns this year, chances are you’ve been cruelly disappointed. In fact, when it comes to gold-related investments, virtually every category is down, making this one of the worst years in history for gold investors.

So, why is it that the largest of the large futures traders have some of the lowest net short positions in years? And what does this tell us about gold prices in the near future?

I’ll get to that in a minute. But first …

What Went Wrong?

In my analysis, I’ve identified the three missteps most investors made. First, investors did what they’d been told to do. But in their panic, they flocked to gold on the assumption that the yellow metal would perform as advertised. They forgot the “safety first” strategy that we’ve emphasized this year – one that included a safer, more-conservative way of buying gold.

Strike one.

Adding insult to injury, very few investors (Money Morning readers aside) failed to understand that the massive “de-leveraging” process that’s been part and parcel of the global financial crisis would put downward pressure on virtually every asset class at the same time. And that includes gold. As we’ve seen in the last few months, during times of global panic, investors around the world want the safety of U.S. dollars – and a lot of them – even more than they want gold right now.

Strike two.

But, above all else, most investors failed to realize that gold, just like any other asset, produces the best returns when it is attractively priced. So most investors made the classic mistake of piling in on the basis of performance. In other words, they bought in at the top.
Strike three.

What’s Changed?

During times of crisis, investors have been taught to latch onto those asset classes with the highest relative stability – including gold and precious metals. More often than not, investors who have followed these time-proven practices have been handsomely rewarded for doing so.

This time around, however, the parameters have changed, as the increased use of such “derivative” securities as “credit default swaps” has exacerbated the fallout from the global financial crisis, and touched off the aforementioned de-leveraging process. As asset markets have melted down, hedge funds, financial institutions worldwide, and even government-controlled sovereign wealth funds have taken heavy losses, forcing them to deal with unprecedented margin calls and redemption requests. Because this has never before been part of their crisis-management process, institutional investors have engaged in a massive, concerted effort to sell anything that’s at all liquid – including gold.

Making matters worse, the so-called “carry trade” unwound with a vengeance, forcing offshore investors to buy U.S. dollars in order to offset the sell-off of dollar-denominated assets. In contrast to what you’re hearing on the news, this really is not a sign that the dollar is any stronger than other currencies. Instead it signifies that the greenback is still the global currency of choice – much to the chagrin of Russia, Venezuela and others who begrudgingly tie themselves to it.

It also highlights something that most investors forget, or perhaps never knew in the first place. For better or worse, the dollar is the most liquid of the world’s reserve currencies. Part of that’s because many assets – especially oil – are still predominately traded in dollars.

The problem is that the dollar’s healthy appearance may be just that – an appearance that covers up an inner ill health. These still-hidden maladies have been worsened by the recent machinations of “Bailout Ben” – U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke – and U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry M. “Hank” Paulson Jr., whose fix-it programs have created a financial Frankenstein that will chase American taxpayers for years.

When the dollar was rallying back in May, and many experts were lauding the move as a turnaround in the making for the long-languishing U.S. currency, we warned investors not to be taken in by the market’s head fake. There were just too many underlying problems for the dollar’s rally to be sustainable. Ultimately, that rally sputtered, and the dollar reversed course and continued its decline.

This time, we again suspect that the dollar is rising too far too fast and that the spike we’ve seen in recent months may be nothing more than a flameout in the making.

However, given the relationship between the greenback and the yellow metal, this leads us to believe that gold could move higher next year if investors lose faith that the dollar merits their nearly exclusive attention right now.

Two pieces of closely related information appear to support this theory:

First, even though gold prices have tanked – a reality that under ordinary circumstances would mean more supply is available – dealers of gold bullion have experienced widespread physical shortages during the third quarter, according to the World Gold Council, a top trade association for the gold-mining industry. That, in turn, led dealers to both charge more and pay more than the spot price would indicate. Particularly strong demand was noted in China, India and the Middle East.

According to a Nov. 19 press release, the World Gold Council also noted that identifiable investment demand for gold in the third quarter was up $10.7 billion to 382 tons – double the levels of a year ago. At the same time, retail investment demand rose 121% to 232 tons, with especially for gold bars and gold coins reported in the Swiss, German and U.S. markets.

At the same time, the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) – the largest exchange-traded fund (ETF) that invests in the yellow metal – noted that it now holds 755.06 tons of gold in trust, up 6.12 tons from the prior week. This is significant because authorized market participants like GLD have to add metal and increase their trading float when buying pressure is higher than selling pressure. This suggests that gold may be reaching the end of its downside run and that it may behave more like investors expect it to in the months ahead.

Second, we find it especially interesting that the largest of the commercial futures traders now hold the smallest net short positions they have held in several years. According to the U.S. Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), large commercial traders combined net short positions reflect only 71,116 contracts net short, one of the lowest net short positions the CFTC has reported since January 2006.

Historically, low net short positions have proven to be bullish influences. And net short levels of less than 30% total open interest have proven to be especially bullish.

The wild card here, of course, is that the markets are working through a de-leveraging process that’s far from over, meaning that normal supply and demand relationships are out of whack. Longer-term, however, everything we know about those relationships still appears to be intact.

That’s why we suggest that investors make gold a part of their investment program – if for no other reason than we are approaching levels typically associated with higher, rather than lower, returns.

But we can’t just pile in.

Short-term market conditions will transform anything other than a measured approach into a hazardous foray.

That’s why, when it comes to gold, we’ve repeatedly recited the market mantra: “Gold works over time, but not all the time.” [For insights on actual gold-investing strategies, check out the Money Morning special investment research report, “The Best Way to Use Gold to Protect Your Portfolio and Profit.” The report is free of charge.]

[Editor’s Note: Money Morning Investment Director Keith Fitz-Gerald is one of the top investment commentators in the global marketplace today. A noted columnist and a highly sought after speaker, Fitz-Gerald is also a gifted forecaster. Indeed, he’s especially distinguished himself during the current financial crisis, having told investors to expect historic levels of market volatility and having accurately predicted such crisis “aftershocks” as the big spike in energy and commodity prices that took place earlier this year. A new Money Morning report identifies five such aftershocks that are still to come, and explains how savvy investors can employ such “trigger events” as potential gateways to major profits. To read this report, which details all five of the aftershocks to expect, please click here. And don’t forget to check out Fitz-Gerald’s recently published 2009 stock market forecast, part of Money Morning’s ongoing “Outlook 2009” economic forecast series.]

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Dare Something Worthy Today Too! Bonus! Peter Schiff

Peter Schiff Was Right!

Peter Schiff Analogies

 

$2000 Gold in 2009 says Peter Schiff

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Golden Choice For Bailout Inflation Protection – Forbes.com

28 Friday Nov 2008

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

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Golden Choice For Bailout Inflation Protection – Forbes.com

John Dobosz, 11.26.08, 11:50 AM EST

Gold and gold miners have taken flight in recent days as the world begins to focus on an inflationary future.

Since the problems associated with the current financial crisis began to take on a particular menace last summer, the response of our monetary institutions has involved moves that most students of economics would call inflationary, like aggressive reduction in targeted short-term lending rates and credit creation at a feverish pace.

Thanks to the deflationary forces that accompanied the unwinding of leverage in the financial system and in the flagging economy at large, the dollar actually rallied and gold suffered big time. From a post Jimmy Carter high of $1,011 in March, spot gold tumbled 30% down to $712 an ounce.

Now, however, investors seem to be awakening to the inflationary impact of the moves by the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department. Over the past three weeks, gold has staged a rally, and over just the past week, it has looked more like a lift-off. Spot gold was above $830 for much of this holiday-shortened trading week, a gain of more than 15% from lows earlier this month, with most of that coming just since Thursday.

Moving higher more rapidly than gold bullion itself are shares of gold miners. The Philadelphia Gold and Silver Mining Index (XAU) added nearly 43% in just the past three days. This could indicate simply that the miners were more deeply oversold, or, if it persists, it could mean that investors are looking for escalating gold prices down the line. Either way, it looks like gold and the miners are staging a decent rally that could last until the first quarter of next year, according to Curt Hesler, editor of Professional Timing Service.

Hesler has several mining stocks that he likes for playing the new buoyancy in gold shares, from blue chips like Goldcorp (nyse: (GG) – news – people ) to smaller names like Yamana Gold (nyse: (AUY) – news – people ) and the tiny like US Gold Corp. (amex: (UXG) – news – people ). For smaller investors, perhaps it’s best to buy a basket of miners and jump on the train.

A great way to get into gold miners is through the Fidelity Select Gold (FSAGX) fund, a diversified grab bag that holds a small amount of gold bullion and a long roster of mining companies. Its biggest holdings are in Barrick Gold (nyse: (ABX) – news – people ), Goldcorp and Newmont Mining (nyse: (NEM) – news – people ) and Agnico Eagle (nyse: (AEM) – news – people ).

The expense ratio of FSAGX is one of the things to like most about this fund. At 0.81% it’s nearly half the 1.47% charged by most precious metals funds. Another nice feature is that it trades throughout the day, and you can get in and out when you like and even use limit orders when buying.

Lately the fund has been volatile, but it’s going in the right direction for the bulls. It’s up 40% in the past month. Of course, prior to that, it lost half of its value from late September through late October, overshooting even the steep correction in gold. Many advisers recommend an allocation of 5% to 10% in your portfolio to inflation hedges, like gold.

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Ten investing rules that will help you weather this stormy market – MarketWatch

28 Friday Nov 2008

Posted by jschulmansr in capitalism, commodities, Currency and Currencies, deflation, Finance, Fundamental Analysis, gold, inflation, Investing, investments, Latest News, Markets, mining stocks, Moving Averages, precious metals, small caps, Stocks, Technical Analysis, Today, U.S. Dollar, Uncategorized

≈ Comments Off on Ten investing rules that will help you weather this stormy market – MarketWatch

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Ten investing rules that will help you weather this stormy market – MarketWatch

By Jonathan Burton, MarketWatch

LIFE SAVINGS

Learn a lesson — before you get one

Ten rules to remember about investing in the stock market

Especially now. Investment rules are tailor-made for tough times, allowing you to stick to a plan just when you need it most. Indeed, a rulebook is important in any market climate, but it tends to get tossed when stocks are soaring. That’s why sage investors warn people not to confuse a bull market with brains.
So with the economy looking more and more like the oil-shocked, stagflation-strapped 1970s, and stocks recoiling from rising unemployment, record energy prices and falling home values, it makes sense to dust off the old playbook and see how it applies today.
One of the most relevant lists of rules, from a legendary Wall Street veteran, is also among the least known. Beginning in the late 1950s, Bob Farrell pioneered technical analysis, which rates a stock not only on a company’s financial strength or business line but also on the strong patterns and line charts reflected in the shares’ trading history. Farrell also broke new ground using investor sentiment figures to better understand how markets and individual stocks might move.
Over several decades at brokerage giant Merrill Lynch & Co., Farrell had a front-row seat to the go-go markets of the late 1960s, mid-1980s and late 1990s, the brutal bear market of 1973-74, and October 1987’s crash. Out of those and other experiences came Farrell’s 10 “Market Rules to Remember.”
These days, Farrell lives in Florida, and efforts to contact him were unsuccessful. Still, the following rules he advocated resonate during volatile markets such as this:
1. Markets tend to return to the mean over time…
By “return to the mean,” Farrell means that when stocks go too far in one direction, they come back. If that sounds elementary, then remember that both euphoric and pessimistic markets can cloud people’s heads.
“It’s so easy to get caught up in the heat of the moment and not have perspective,” says Bob Doll, global chief investment officer for equities at money manager BlackRock Inc. “Those that have a plan and stick to it tend to be more successful.”
2. Excesses in one direction will lead to an opposite excess in the other direction…
Think of the market as a constant dieter who struggles to stay within a desired weight range but can’t always hit the mark.
“In the 1990s when we were advancing by 20% per year, we were heading for disappointment,” says Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at Standard & Poor’s Inc. “Sooner or later, you pay it back.”
3. There are no new eras — excesses are never permanent…
This harkens to the first two rules. Many investors try to find the latest hot sector, and soon a fever builds that “this time it’s different.” Of course, it never really is. When that sector cools, individual shareholders are usually among the last to know and are forced to sell at lower prices.
“It’s so hard to switch and time the changes from one sector to another,” says John Buckingham, editor of The Prudent Speculator newsletter. “Find a strategy that you believe in and stay put.”
4. Exponential rapidly rising or falling markets usually go further than you think, but they do not correct by going sideways…
This is Farrell’s way of saying that a popular sector can stay hot for a long while, but will fall hard when a correction comes. Chinese stocks not long ago were market darlings posting parabolic gains, but investors who came late to this party have been sorry.
5. The public buys the most at the top and the least at the bottom…
Sure, and if they didn’t, contrarian-minded investors would have nothing to crow about. Accordingly, many market technicians use sentiment indicators to gauge investor pessimism or optimism, then recommend that investors head in the opposite direction.
Some closely watched indicators have been mixed lately. At Investors Intelligence, an investment service that measures the mood of more than 100 investment newsletter writers, bullish sentiment rose last week to 44.8% from 37.9% the week before. Bearish sentiment slipped to 31.1% from 32.2%. Meanwhile, the American Association of Individual Investors survey was less positive, with bearish sentiment at 45.8% and bulls at 31.4% .
Learn a lesson — before you get one!
6. Fear and greed are stronger than long-term resolve…
Investors can be their own worst enemy, particularly when emotions take hold.
Stock market gains “make us exuberant; they enhance well-being and promote optimism,” says Meir Statman, a finance professor at Santa Clara University in California who studies investor behavior. “Losses bring sadness, disgust, fear, regret. Fear increases the sense of risk and some react by shunning stocks.”
After grim trading days like Friday’s nearly 400-point tumble, coming after months of downward pressure on stocks, it’s easy to think you’re the patsy at this card table. To counter those insecure feelings, practice self-control and keep long-range portfolio goals in perspective. That will help you to be proactive instead of reactive.
“It’s critical for investors to understand how they’re cut,” says the Prudent Speculator’s Buckingham. “If you can’t handle a 15% or 20% downturn, you need to rethink how you invest.”
7. Markets are strongest when they are broad and weakest when they narrow to a handful of blue-chip names…
Markets and individual sectors can move in powerful waves that take all boats up or down in their wake. There’s strength in numbers, and such broad momentum is hard to stop, Farrell observes. In these conditions you either lead, follow or get out of the way.
When momentum channels into a small number of stocks, it means that many worthy companies are being overlooked and investors essentially are crowding one side of the boat. That’s what happened with the “Nifty 50” stocks of the early 1970s, when much of the U.S. market’s gains came from the 50 biggest companies on the New York Stock Exchange. As their price-to-earnings ratios climbed to unsustainable levels, these “one-decision” stocks eventually sunk.
Chart of SPX
8. Bear markets have three stages — sharp down, reflexive rebound and a drawn-out fundamental downtrend…
Is this a bear market? That depends on where you draw the starting line. With Friday’s close, the S&P 500 Index (SPX):
(SPX) 896.24, +8.56, +1.0%) is down 13.1% since its October 9 peak. Not the 20%-plus decline that typically marks a bear, but a vicious encounter nonetheless.
Where are we now? A chart of the S&P 500 shows a couple of sharp downs and subsequent rebounds in the past six months, with a tighter trading range since April. It remains to be seen if we can avoid a tortured period of the kind seen from 2000 to 2002, when sporadic rallies couldn’t snap a slow, protracted decline.
9. When all the experts and forecasts agree — something else is going to happen…
As Stovall, the S&P investment strategist, puts it: “If everybody’s optimistic, who is left to buy? If everybody’s pessimistic, who’s left to sell?”
Going against the herd as Farrell repeatedly suggests can be very profitable, especially for patient buyers who raise cash from frothy markets and reinvest it when sentiment is darkest.
10. Bull markets are more fun than bear markets (unless you are shorting the markets)…
No kidding!
DARE SOMETHING WORTHY TODAY TOO! Bonus: Top Performing Precious Metals Mutual Funds
TOP PERFORMING PRECIOUS METALS FUNDS
FUND 1-Month
Return
1-Year
Return
3-Year
Return
ProFunds Precious Metals (PMPIX)

42.6%

-68.8

-21.6%

Fidelity Select Gold (FSAGX)

35.4

-42.4

0.5

American Century Global Gold (BGEIX)

34.8

-48.5

-4.2

OCM Gold Fund (OCMGX)

34.1

-45.6

1.4

Evergreen Precious Metals (EKWBX)
32.5

-43.5

2.4

Franklin Gold and Precious Metals (FKRCX)

32.0

-50.6

-2.6

Van Eck Intl Investors Gold (INIVX)

31.9

-49.4

2.3

USAA Precious Metals & Minerals (USAGX)

31.6

-47.4

3.0

GAMCO Gold AAA (GOLDX)

31.6

-48.6

-1.4

DWS Gold & Precious Metals (SCGDX)

31.1

-49.8

-3.5

 

Through 11/24/08. Source: Morningstar.com

 

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Demanding Gold – Hard Assets Investor

24 Monday Nov 2008

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

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Demanding Gold – Hard Assets Investor

Written by Julian Murdoch of Hard Assets Investor 

Friday night’s headlines were straightforward: “Gold surges to top $800 on safe-haven buying.” And most of the analysis followed a familiar pattern:

  • The price of gold has declined as a result of liquidity selling
  • Once everyone sells the gold, the market will stabilize
  • The price will rally as investors seek a safe haven in the face of monster money-printing by the U.S. government

It’s a convenient story, and one that makes some prima-facie sense. But like any Monday morning quarterbacking (including my own), there’s rarely a way to actually know exactly why something goes up and down. Except, of course, for supply and demand. It’s always about supply and demand.

Which is why I was planning on writing about gold this week even before we saw the metal pop almost 6% Friday, to close at $801.60 (NY Spot), and before we saw the big gold miners like Barrick have monster days, with that company closing up 31%. Pops like that are enough to make anyone sit up and take notice, despite our general concerns about buying miners vs. metals.

Hence my plan to cover gold. The third week in November, you see, is when the World Gold Council releases the supply-and-demand numbers that carry us through the end of the year. And the astonishing thing isn’t so much the numbers, but that they seem to have gone largely unnoticed by the press in describing the rally. Let’s take a look at the charts.

 

 

There are a few points to note here. First, this measures demand in tonnes, not in dollars. We’ll get to dollars in a second.

But the big thing to note here is that the 2008 number is an estimate that we’ve created by applying last year’s Q3-to-Q4 trends to 2008. From Q3 to Q4 2007, gold demand dropped an unexpected 15% on a tonnage basis. The chart above suggests that, even if gold demand falls again, total tonnage demand for 2008 will equal 2007. If Q4’08 demand instead remains steady heading into the end of the year, total 2008 demand will be the biggest in the last five years.

Regardless, however, the strong continued demand, particularly from the investment community, is even more dramatic in dollar terms.

 

Gold Demand ($, Billions

 

In dollar terms, gold is experiencing tremendous demand growth. There’s no rocket science here: The average price of gold in 2007 was just under $700. The average price of gold in 3Q 2008 was $871, down from the first-quarter average of $924. All that means is that that same physical demand is coming at a time of rising prices (or a weak dollar, depending on your perspective).

Gold - London PM Fix 2000 - present

 

To put the demand in perspective, here’s the juicy tidbit direct from the World Gold Council press release:

 

“Dollar demand for gold reached an all-time quarterly record of US$32bn in the third quarter of 2008 as investors around the world sought refuge from the global financial meltdown, and jewelry buyers returned to the market in droves on a lower gold price. This figure was 45% higher than the previous record in Q2 2008. Tonnage demand was also 18% higher than a year earlier.”

 

This dollar demand is driven almost entirely by increased demand from exchange-traded funds and physical coin investments, offsetting a decline in jewelry demand.

 

Gold Demand (Share)

 

To be fair, this continued demand wasn’t entirely unexpected, nor was it completely unreported. Most of the weekend paper hyperbole about the gold rally did pay homage to demand, albeit without citing the nice hard figures we have from the World Gold Council. But what seems really underreported is that the actual supply demand deficit is frankly staggering.

 

Gold Surplus/Deficit

The reasons for this deficit are fairly straightforward: The quarterly demand is high, and one of the major sources of supply over the last few years has dried up – sales by central banks. The Central Bank Gold Agreement, which set limits on gold sales in 1999 to stabilize the market after the foundation of the euro, is set to run its course in 2009, but the 2008 limits on CBGA sales (500 tonnes per year) aren’t even close to being reached, and the reality is that European central banks may simply be done offloading their excess gold reserves.

If true, that means a major source of supply is simply going away. It’s easy to visualize a pathway from the central banks into the hands of investors-a shift in ownership. But that shift in ownership may be complete, and thus, if investor demand continues, it will rely on other traditional sources of gold-namely mines-to get at the stuff.

That would set the stage for continued deficits, higher prices and busy miners. It strikes me that that’s the real story of last week’s rallies.

MY NOTE: Inother simpler words, demand up and increasing = prices increasing!

Disclosure: Long Precious Metals and Stocks

jschulmansr

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Peter Schiff on Fast Money Calls $2,000 Gold in 2009–Gold Stock Bull

24 Monday Nov 2008

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

≈ Comments Off on Peter Schiff on Fast Money Calls $2,000 Gold in 2009–Gold Stock Bull

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Peter Schiff on Fast Money Calls $2,000 Gold in 2009–Gold Stock Bull

By Jason Hamlin of Gold Stock Bull
 
Mr. Schiff was mocked for calling the market collapse before it happened, correctly predicted that gold would reach $1,000 in 2008 and recently schooled the CNBC crew at Fast Money as he predicts the market has much further to drop and gold will hit $2,000 in 2009. If you’ve been a subscriber to Gold Stock Bull for a while, you know we have been making similar calls and are aligned with his views. 2008 may prove to be the last time you will be able to get gold under $1,000 or silver under $10. The liquidation and deleveraging has created a short-term buying opportunity across all commodities and for precious metals in particular. Get some while you still can because when the floor falls out from beneath the dollar, the party is over.



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Precious Metals Will Depose Cash from Its Temporary Throne

18 Tuesday Nov 2008

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

≈ 2 Comments

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Precious Metals Will Depose Cash from Its Temporary Throne

By: Peter Cooper of  Arabian Money.net

‘We have just been in Bahrain and everybody is cashed up!’ one banker told me today. My reply was that if everybody is now in cash, then it just has to be the wrong place to be. There are some very good reasons to worry about a large cash position.

Quite apart from the contrarian argument that the crowd is always wrong, you have to consider what is happening to the supply of cash. We know that with the sell-offs in global capital markets there is plenty of demand for cash, but what about the supply?

Money supply out of control

Another banker today showed me a chart of US money supply growth over the past few months, and highlighted a 111% increase. This compared with something like 15% money supply growth in the early 1930s as the US authorities grappled with the Great Depression.

There is an absolute tsunami of money coming into the system. What happens when the supply of something exceeds the demand? The price drops. And that is exactly what is going to happen to the US dollar – the authorities are about to inflate away their debt problem.

It is so simple: The debt stays at the same nominal amount, you print more money and the real value of the debt falls. Of course, in the real world that also means a bond market collapse as inflation will make both the coupon and real value fall.

I wonder how long it will be until cash is deposed as king of the investment world? My guess is that it will not be long after the sell-off ends. How long will that take? It could be at the end of the year as the hedge funds attempt to square their positions, or it might be next spring after another lurch downwards in stock prices.

The bottom for stocks will be the top for cash and treasury bonds. Then inflation will start to emerge and depose cash from its temporary throne. Who will be the new king?

Gold and silver

Step forward precious metals to take a bow. Everybody knows that gold is inversely correlated to the US dollar and that silver is leveraged against the gold price. But why have precious metals taken so long to claim their crown in this financial meltdown?

The straight answer is that hedge funds have been selling assets across the board and turning gold into dollars, or at least the paper gold of futures contracts into greenbacks. The physical demand for gold and silver has been growing strongly all the time, hence the silver coin shortage and the $3.5 billion Saudi gold purchase.

Once the hedge funds stop selling (you always do eventually run out of assets to sell), then gold and silver prices will rally, and the rush out of cash and into precious metals will do something pretty spectacular to the price. Gold and silver stocks, languishing at a 40-year low, should jump and deliver phenomenal performance for new investors and repay the patience of long-term holders.

 

This article has 9 comments:

  •  
    0 0
    • socrateazz
    • 7 Comments

    Nov 17 08:31 AM

    storms are brewing in the finacial markets. The gales have produced a few waves and troughs. I think the real storm is coming! Unfortunately I think the actions seen so far have mostly added steam to the storm! I see folks finding safe harbor or riding the waves. I see little effort in actually weakening the storm. to weaken the storm one must weaken the cause. What caused the current financial situation? Is it the same things which made life soo good for so long? was it the laziness of many? Was it ignorance of those who think they know? was it greed of those with wealth? was it greed of those who wanted the wealth? was it ignorance of truth? Was it ignorance in beliefs? Was it power abuse? Was it abuse of force? was it special intererest abuse? was it general interest abuse? I could go on A small part ofan ovious problem has been recieving enormous thought while most of the problem is ignored with little concideration of the reasons which can not be blamed on somebody else.
    Reply |Report abuse
  •  
    0 0
    • Diabolo
    • 8 Comments

    Nov 17 08:56 AM

    i think we’ve already seen the worst – from now on, we wont have more high-profile bank failures – already had bear, lehman with merrill, aig, fnme, fdmc saved…

    Reply |Report abuse

    the govt will need to keep pumping these with cash – which at some point will lead to hyperinflation – gold is a great long-term investment… as for short-run, im still bullish dollars… when shit hits the fan, investors flock to dollar and yen!

     

  •  
    0 0
    • bobbobwhite
    • 44 Comments

    Nov 17 12:20 PM

    Gold and platinum are great longer term investments, but most people want more liquidity and shorter term results. However, we are harshly finding out that it is difficult to impossible to gain both at the same time in the same vehicle, but people still seek that nearly impossible(and lazy) dream and lose countless billions in the process.

    Reply |Report abuse

    My advice is to never, ever try to get the same investment advantages in one investment vehicle. Does not work. Have one for one purpose, one for another, etc. For example, gold and cash; stocks, gold and cash; bonds, cash and real estate, real estate, stocks and cash, etc., etc. in many combinations that work right for you(Cash means CD’s or MMF).

  •  
    0 0
    • OilyGasMiner
    • 43 Comments
    • My Website

    Nov 17 01:36 PM

    Peter, it seems our thoughts appear to align very well. Is it no surprise that the money supply is up over 100% over the past few months? According to Obama, TARP has already spent some $300B of the $750B. Hence money is being pumped at a RAPID pace into our withering economy.

    Reply |Report abuse

    I fully agree that this action coupled with the US debt increasing each day, will only result in furthe devaluation of the US. Dollar.

    We must recall that the massive sell offs in hedge funds aren’t usually voluntary and fund managers are being FORCED to sell because many investors believe that they are forced to sell. For example in Canada, investors with RRIFs, must pay taxes on at least $10,000 of their investment. However this value was determined at the start of the year, and with some portfolio’s down by over 50%. They are now actually paying taxes on 20% of their current portfolio. Due to the lack of transparent investment advice, we will continue to sell these massive sell offs take its toll on already undervalued equities. It is only a matter of months IMO before we see a commodity correction.

    And as we know “Concurrently, the U.S. Government runs large operating deficits in circumstances where its National Debt approximated $9.6 trillion at July 31, 2008, up from $9 trillion at December 31, 2007 and $6.2 trillion at December 31, 2006.”
    Quote Source: www.stockresearchporta…/

    The question is with the money supply increasing, debt increasing, unemployment increasing, foreclosures increasing, consumer confidence on the decline. How worse can things really get?

  •  
    0 0
    • User 30121
    • 269 Comments

    Nov 17 02:00 PM

    Sonofabitch! An article that TELLS IT LIKE IT IS! Oohhh, are you gonna catch hell from the nay sayers (anti-goldbugs). Thanks for saying it!
    Reply |Report abuse
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    0 -1
    • Pangaea
    • 71 Comments

    Nov 17 02:13 PM

    A couple of problems with this article.

    Reply |Report abuse

    “The bottom for stocks will be the top for cash and treasury bonds.”

    At that eventual point, it might indeed be good for gold, but by definition it would also be attractive for stocks.

    Also, by any measure of money supply that I follow, it has been stagnant in recent months, not growing at all. This is what the Fed is trying to fight – shrinkage in the supply and velocity of money.

    research.stlouisfed.or…

    www.nowandfutures.com/…

    So until these trends end (money supply stagnation with deflation in all asset classes plus USD and Treasury strength), cash will remain king.

     

  •  
    0 0
    • theoilwizard
    • 1 Comment
    • My Website

    Nov 17 03:49 PM

    “In my opinion, commodity prices can possibly hit new lows in the upcoming months as the recession is still going on. There are a lot of uncertainties that are still at bay and till they have been cleared up, the economy will still be going downhill. Questions pertaining to increasing unemployment? Will the Govt bailout the US Automakers? How much are Corp taxes going to increase next year when Obama is in power? These uncertainties need to be solved before the market actually is stable for investors.

    Reply |Report abuse

    Hopefully you had found my insight helpful, I usually use the following website as a tool to gather all my data. Best of luck to all investors:
    www.stockresearchporta…;

  •  
    0 0
    • Marc Courtenay
    • 66 Comments
    • My Website

    Nov 17 09:16 PM

    We enjoy your articles and more importantly they help us keep things in their proper perspective. Keep them coming Peter, and thank you!!
    Reply |Report abuse
  •  
    0 0
    • huskerbob
    • 49 Comments

    Nov 18 02:18 AM

    pangaea: the coming bottom in the stock market doesn’t necessarily mean a bull market for equities.  The market could bounce along the bottom for the next decade or two (as it did before the last great bull market) while we deal with the consequences of this mess.
    And the Fed and it’s European counterpart are openly trying to weaken their respective currencies. It’s a struggle right now, but they will succeed mightily at some point!
    Gold is the enemy of inflation, and the gold market recognizes this. That is why central banks and their allies continue to fight the gold price, as all central banks must.
    Do yourself a favor and buy some artificially cheap gold. Get out of dollars while the gettin’s good!
    Reply |Report abuse

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Five Ways to Invest in Bottom-Basement Gold – Seeking Alpha

17 Monday Nov 2008

Posted by jschulmansr in commodities, Copper, Currency and Currencies, deflation, Finance, gold, hard assets, inflation, Investing, investments, Latest News, Markets, mining stocks, oil, precious metals, silver, Technical Analysis, Today, U.S. Dollar, Uncategorized

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Five Ways to Invest in Bottom-Basement Gold – Seeking Alpha

By Mike Caggeso  of Monday Morning

By Mike Caggeso

Gold hit two historic milestones in 2008.

First, in early March, the “yellow metal” hit its all-time high of $1,030 an ounce.

Just three months later, the price of gold for December delivery had plummeted to $681 an ounce, a 21-month low and 33.9% drop from its record high.

Most gold bugs were equal parts puzzled and brokenhearted. The world’s stock markets tanked, as did some of its biggest economies. In such an environment, they thought, gold should have risen. After all, gold is widely considered to be a safe-haven investment when everything else is spiraling south. 

However, Money Morning Contributing Editor Martin Hutchinson understood perfectly what other investors did not.

“Gold is not a safe haven against recession,” said Hutchinson. “It’s a safe haven against inflation.”

In the past year, commodities prices skyrocketed – across the board. That was especially true of oil, which hit a record high $147 a barrel. Corn, wheat, and soybeans all hit record highs, as well.

That price escalation tightened household and corporate budgets, and was a primary reason why the U.S. economy posted a gross-domestic product (GDP) decline of 0.3%. With that negative growth, the third quarter was the beginning of what many experts believe will be the nation’s first recession since 2001.

However, the inflation epidemic has waned significantly, as global demand for raw materials has plummeted. Price for such staple foods as corn, soybeans and wheat have all come down from their record highs – in near-lockstep fashion.

Corn futures are down nearly 50% from their summer high of $8 per bushel. The same is true of soybeans and wheat, with each having lost roughly half their value. In fact, wheat hit a 16-month low in mid-October.

As most of us noticed, gas prices have fallen 48% from their July 17 high of $4.114 a gallon.

And not coincidentally, gold has fallen 22% in that same time frame.

However, this report examines the pending commodities rebound – a projected slow-and-steady increase in commodity prices that will reverse the breakneck plunge below fair value that commodities have experienced for much of this year.

Our objective now: To chart the expected path of gold prices in the New Year.

This report also reveals another wild card inflationary indicator that Hutchinson believes will carry gold prices to $1,500 an ounce by the end of 2009.

Two Catalysts For Gold’s Climb

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Oct. 10 Crop Production Report said acreage for a handful of staple food commodities has shrunk:

  • Corn acreage fell 1.2%.
  • Soybean acreage dropped 1.4%.
  • Canola acreage dropped 1.9%.
  • Sunflower acreage shrank 0.8%.
  • And acreage of dry edible beans fell 0.7%.

That naturally translates to higher prices because it squeezes the supply of the particular commodity. And it does so at a time when demand continues to escalate from populations in China, India and Latin America. And higher prices equal inflation.

But Hutchinson – who correctly predicted this last run-up in gold prices – says there’s another catalyst that’s right now inherent in the U.S. economy that could help vault gold prices to $1,500 an ounce by the end of 2009. And it has to do with the much-ballyhooed $700 billion rescue plan.

The philosophy behind the rescue plan is elegantly simple: By providing a portion of the $700 billion to foundering U.S banks, the Treasury Department believed it could provide banks with badly needed capital, and get them to start lending money once again – jump-starting the economy in the process.

Since September 2007, U.S. Federal Reserve policymakers have cut the benchmark Federal Funds target rate nine times – from 5.25% down to the current 1.0% rate – to increase bank-to-bank lending and bank-to-consumer lending.

“The government is pumping money in so many banks, and that money has to come out somewhere,” Hutchinson said.

Right now, banks aren’t boosting lending. Instead, they are using the cash to finance buyouts of other banks. Even so, that money will “come out” into the economy in the form of higher stock prices for banks. That will make consumer/investors wealthier, and could make them more confident in the economy. If they’re more confident, they will spend. As that happens, food prices should begin ticking upward, adding another set of thrusters to gold prices.

“Everybody thinks that because we’re having a horrible recession, we’re not going to have inflation. I think that’s probably wrong,” Hutchinson said. “I think gold has quite good hidden-store value.”

As gold prices increase, count on more investors leaving the sidelines to invest, too, causing the surge in gold prices to accelerate and steepen.

“As gold goes up, it gets more popular and investors start piling into it,” Hutchinson said.  

And if gold gets anywhere near the $1,500 mark, sell. Prices that high will likely fall back or plateau as the Federal Reserve begins raising interest rates and strengthening the U.S. dollar, Hutchinson said.

Five Ways to Play Bottom-Basement Gold

Before we get too far ahead of ourselves, let’s first look at five ways to play bargain-basement gold prices.

The SPDR Gold Trust ETF (GLD) – formerly StreetTracks Gold – is a fund whose shares are intended to parallel the movement of gold prices. Since gold prices started falling along with gas prices, SPDR Gold Trust has stayed within a 0.5% margin of gold prices. This exchange-traded fund (ETF) eliminates any investor concern over storage and delivery while giving them exactly what they want – gold.

Toronto-based Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX) has 27 mines, mostly in North America and South America, and is developing or exploring 11 more. With a market cap of more than $20 billion, it has considerably more liquidity than most mining companies. Barrick is primarily a gold miner, but it also has copper and zinc mining operations. As far as investors are concerned, there are two ways to look at that: It’s not a pure play, per se, but then again, this is a company stock, not a bar of bullion. Also, having operations other than gold can help stabilize the company’s bottom line in case problems arise at a gold mine.

Denver-based Newmont Mining Corp. (NEM) is primarily a gold producer with operations in the United States, Australia, Peru, Indonesia, Canada, New Zealand and Mexico. Its reserves are hovering around 86.5 million ounces. Like Barrick, this is a mining stock play, and is subject to market swings – as well as fluctuations in gold prices. That can be a significant tailwind, especially if you believe the stock market has bottomed out or is close to doing so. Hutchinson – forever a value-oriented investor – warned that Newmont might be a little too pricey now. Investors may want to wait for the company’s stock price to settle before getting in.

Hutchinson thinks the best value for a gold mining stock can be found in Yamana Gold Inc. (AUY), another Toronto-based company that’s small now, but has rapidly expanding production. 

But for investors who just want gold – not an ETF or stock – the best avenue is an EverBank Select Metals Account: EverBank accounts has a minimum deposit that is 98% lower than its competitors, and its commission costs are up to 86% lower than other metals’ brokers and bullion banks. It offers two types of gold accounts: Unallocated (your purchased gold is pooled with that of other investors, eliminating storage and maintenance costs; the minimum deposit is $5,000), and Allocated (you directly own the gold you purchase, held in your own private account; $7,500 is the minimum deposit here).

Both types of accounts can be set up 24/7 online. But if you prefer the phone, call 866-326-6241, and be sure to give them the code 12608 when setting up an account.

We should point out that the publisher of Money Morning has a marketing relationship with EverBank, but that’s because its products are among the best in class.

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Simple Moving Averages Make Trends Stand Out

17 Monday Nov 2008

Posted by jschulmansr in Bollinger Bands, commodities, Copper, Currency and Currencies, deflation, Finance, gold, hard assets, inflation, Investing, investments, Latest News, Markets, mining stocks, Moving Averages, oil, precious metals, silver, Technical Analysis, Today, U.S. Dollar, Uncategorized, uranium, Water

≈ Comments Off on Simple Moving Averages Make Trends Stand Out

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Simple Moving Averages Make Trends Stand Out

By: John Devcic of BK TRADER FX    The 5 Things That Move The Currency Market

Moving averages are one of the most popular and often-used technical indicators. The moving average is easy to calculate and, once plotted on a chart, is a powerful visual trend-spotting tool. You will often hear about three types of moving average: simple, exponential and linear. The best place to start is by understanding the most basic: the simple moving average (SMA). Let’s take a look at this indicator and how it can help traders follow trends toward greater profits.

Trendlines
There can be no complete understanding of moving averages without an understanding of trends. A trend is simply a price that is continuing to move in a certain direction. There are only three real trends that a security can follow:

  • An uptrend, or bullish trend, means that the price is moving higher. 
  • A downtrend, or bearish trend, means the price is moving lower.  
  • A sideways trend, where the price is moving sideways.

The important thing to remember about trends is that prices rarely move in a straight line. Therefore, moving-average lines are used to help a trader more easily identify the direction of the trend. (For more advanced reading on this topic, see The Basics Of Bollinger Bands and Moving Average Envelopes: Refining A Popular Trading Tool.)

Moving Average Construction
The textbook definition of a moving average is an average price for a security using a specified time period. Let’s take the very popular 50-day moving average as an example. A 50-day moving average is calculated by taking the closing prices for the last 50 days of any security and adding them together. The result from the addition calculation is then divided by the number of periods, in this case 50. In order to continue to calculate the moving average on a daily basis, replace the oldest number with the most recent closing price and do the same math.

No matter how long or short of a moving average you are looking to plot, the basic calculations remain the same. The change will be in the number of closing prices you use. So, for example, a 200-day moving average is the closing price for 200 days summed together and then divided by 200. You will see all kinds of moving averages, from two-day moving averages to 250-day moving averages.

It is important to remember that you must have a certain number of closing prices to calculate the moving average. If a security is brand new or only a month old, you will not be able to do a 50-day moving average because you will not have a sufficient number of data points.

Also, it is important to note that we’ve chosen to use closing prices in the calculations, but moving averages can be calculated using monthly prices, weekly prices, opening prices or even intraday prices. (For more, see our Moving Averages tutorial.)

Figure 1: A simple moving average in Google Inc.
Source: StockCharts.com

Figure 1 is an example of a simple moving average on a stock chart of Google Inc. (Nasdaq:GOOG). The blue line represents a 50-day moving average. In the example above, you can see that the trend has been moving lower since late 2007. The price of Google shares fell below the 50-day moving average in January of 2008 and continued downward.

When the price crosses below a moving average, it can be used as a simple trading signal. A move below the moving average (as shown above) suggests that the bears are in control of the price action and that the asset will likely move lower. Conversely, a cross above a moving average suggests that the bulls are in control and that the price may be getting ready to make a move higher. (Read more in Track Stock Prices With Trendlines.)

Other Ways to Use Moving Averages           
Moving averages are used by many traders to not only identify a current trend but also as an entry and exit strategy. One of the simplest strategies relies on the crossing of two or more moving averages. The basic signal is given when the short-term average crosses above or below the longer term moving average. Two or more moving averages allow you to see a longer term trend compared to a shorter term moving average; it is also an easy method for determining whether the trend is gaining strength or if it is about to reverse. (For more on this method, read A Primer On The MACD.)

Figure 2: A long-term and shorter term moving average in Google Inc.
Source: StockCharts.com

Figure 2 uses two moving averages, one long-term (50-day, shown by the blue line) and the other shorter term (15-day, shown by the red line). This is the same Google chart shown in Figure 1, but with the addition of the two moving averages to illustrate the difference between the two lengths.

You’ll notice that the 50-day moving average is slower to adjust to price changes, because it uses more data points in its calculation. On the other hand, the 15-day moving average is quick to respond to price changes, because each value has a greater weighting in the calculation due to the relatively short time horizon. In this case, by using a cross strategy, you would watch for the 15-day average to cross below the 50-day moving average as an entry for a short position.

Figure 3: A three-month
Source: StockCharts.com

The above is a three-month chart of United States Oil (AMEX:USO) with two simple moving averages. The red line is the shorter, 15-day moving average, while the blue line represents the longer, 50-day moving average. Most traders will use the cross of the short-term moving average above the longer-term moving average to initiate a long position and identify the start of a bullish trend. (Learn more about applying this strategy in Trading The MACD Divergence.)

Support and Resistance
Support and resistance, or ceilings and floors, refer to the same thing in technical analysis.

  • Support is established when a price is trending downward. There is a point at which the selling pressure subsides and buyers are willing to step in. In other words, a floor is established.  
  • Resistance happens when a price is trending upward. There comes a point when the buying strength diminishes and the sellers step in. This would establish a ceiling. (For more explanation, read Support & Resistance Basics.)

In either case, a moving average may be able to signal an early support or resistance level. For example, if a security is drifting lower in an established uptrend, then it wouldn’t be surprising to see the stock find support at a long-term 200-day moving average. On the other hand, if the price is trending lower, many traders will watch for the stock to bounce off the resistance of major moving averages (50-day, 100-day, 200-day SMAs). (For more on using support and resistance to identify trends, read Trend-Spotting With The Accumulation/Distribution Line.)

Conclusion
Moving averages are powerful tools. A simple moving average is easy to calculate, which allows it to be employed fairly quickly and easily. A moving average’s greatest strength is its ability to help a trader identify a current trend or spot a possible trend reversal. Moving averages can also identify a level of support or resistance for the security, or act as a simple entry or exit signal. How you choose to use moving averages is entirely up to you.

For further reading on moving averages, check out Simple Moving Averages And Volume Rate-Of-Change and Basics Of Weighted Moving Averages.

by John Devcic, (Contact Author | Biography)

John Devcic is a freelance writer, market historian and private speculator. After investing in a mutual fund right out of high school and losing his initial investment of $350, Devcic began to believe he could do better with his money then the so-called experts could. Over the years a healthy and sometimes unhealthy obsession with how the markets work and how they worked in the past has made Devcic a true market historian. He reminds himself at all times that the market – while ever-changing – always seems to repeat itself.

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