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Category Archives: U.S.

The Battle is Still Raging!

24 Tuesday Mar 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, ANV, Austrian school, AUY, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, Bollinger Bands, Bollinger Bands Saudi Arabia, Brian Tang, bull market, capitalism, CDE, CEF, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Contrarian, Copper, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, deflation, Dennis Gartman, depression, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, EGO, Fed Fund Rate, Federal Deficit, federal reserve, financial, follow the news, Forex, FRG, Fundamental Analysis, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GG, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, GTU, hard assets, HL, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, IAU, IMF, India, inflation, investments, Jeffrey Nichols, Jim Rogers, John Embry, Jschulmansr, Junior Gold Miners, Keith Fitz-Gerald, Latest News, majors, Make Money Investing, Marc Faber, market crash, Markets, Michael Zielinski, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, monetization, Moving Averages, NAK, NGC, NXG, oil, PAL, palladium, Peter Grandich, Peter Schiff, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, protection, recession, risk, run on banks, safety, Sean Rakhimov, Short Bonds, silver, silver miners, SLW, small caps, sovereign, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, SWC, TARP, Technical Analysis, The Fed, Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3, TIPS, U.S., U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, XAU

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

My apologies for the 2 day gap in posts, was attending some high-level economic conferences and was unable to make any posts. Well the rest of the retracement has occurred for the Stock Market so we are at a citical juncture here. Personally I think this is a huge Bear Trap. It is a pretty normal bull retracement in a bear market. everyone wants to believe the bottom is in and I better get in now while I can before I “miss” it. Everyone keeps forgetting what is about to happen. The dreaded “I” word. The hidden tax on all of our money, inflation. If you listen carefully the ones “in the know” are already preparing for it. Today’s first article shows the fact that inflation is coming and our biggest holder of U.S. debt is growing very concerned. On the gold and precious metals charts we are seeing a drop today which I think is mostly exuberance spilling over from the stock market with investors seeling some of their Gold to play the Stock Market. We may have a head and shoulders forming after a double top which would be bearish for Precious Metals and convince a lot of weak knees to give up and exit out of the markets. However I think this is going to be a reverse of the Stock Market and prices are consolidating while waiting for the buig Inflation shoe to drop. For my own portfolio I am hanging tight and using this as an opportunity to accumulate more shares in the Precious Metals Producers, and also slowing shifing some funds back into Oil related investments. One market that has some real potential soon will be Natural Gas as it has been lagging so far behind Crude and Gasoline. Be Patient and choose wisely! On that note I have recently found and became a member of INO.com. With their patented “triangle  technology” trend analysis has never become easier! INO TV offers free – yes that’s right Free trading courses, news and video delivered right to your computer screen. INO Market Club offers  brand new talking charts- charts that actually talk to you! Awesome! Good Investing! – jschulmansr

Now Check this Out… Talking Charts!

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

Sneak Peek At Our New

MarketClub Charts

March 20, 2009 · By Adam · Filed Under MarketClub Tips & Talk 

This week we have something very special to show you. We are pulling back the curtains to give you a sneak peek at MarketClub’s new charting program.

There’s nothing to buy, so all you have to do is look and listen. Did I say listen? How can you listen to a chart? Well, these patent pending charts include our new “Talking Chart” feature.

Can you imagine a chart that actually talks to you and tells exactly what’s going on in any market you are looking at or following?  Well, now you don’t have to imagine anymore as this is valuable feature is available at no extra cost in the latest version of MarketClub.

In addition to our “Talking Chart” feature, we have also improved our “Trade Triangle” technology so that it is even more powerful than before.

I think you’ll be impressed. Please take a few minutes out of your day to see how our new charts are revolutionary in many ways.

Please feel free to contact us on our blog about these new charts. We expected to go live with them any day now and you’re going to love them.

All the best,

Adam Hewison

President, INO.com
Co-creator, MarketClub

 

 

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

Claim a gram of FREE GOLD today, plus a special 18-page PDF report;

 Exposed! Five Myths of the Gold Market and find out:

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

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold…

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

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

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

Source: Financial Post

Drop U.S. dollar as reserve: China

IMF asset instead

Alan Wheatley, Reuters  Published: Tuesday, March 24, 2009

China proposed yesterday a sweeping overhaul of the global monetary system, outlining how the U. S. dollar could eventually be replaced as the world’s main reserve currency by the IMF’s Special Drawing Right.

The SDR is an international reserve asset created by the International Monetary Fund in 1969 that has the potential to act as a super-sovereign reserve currency, said Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People’s Bank of China.

“The role of the SDR has not been put into full play, due to limitations on its allocation and the scope of its uses. However, it serves as the light in the tunnel for the reform of the international monetary system,” he said.

Mr. Zhou diplomatically did not refer explicitly to the U. S. dollar. But his speech spells out Beijing’s dissatisfaction with the primacy of the U. S. currency, which Mr. Zhou says has led to increasingly frequent global financial crises since the collapse in 1971 of the Bretton Woods system of fixed but adjustable exchange rates.

“The price is becoming increasingly high, not only for the users, but also for the issuers of the reserve currencies. Although crisis may not necessarily be an intended result of the issuing authorities, it is an inevitable outcome of the institutional flaws,” Mr. Zhou said.

Jim O’Neill, chief economist at Goldman Sachs in London, said “over time, as the world is taken off the steroids of the over-leveraged U. S. consumer, you can’t have the same dollar dependence as we have had. But who can provide it? And the answer is, if it functioned properly, maybe the SDR could have a much bigger role,” he said.

A super-sovereign reserve currency would not only eliminate the risks inherent in fiat currencies such as the dollar — which are backed only by the credit of the issuing country, not by gold or silver — but would also make it possible to manage global liquidity, Mr. Zhou argued.

“When a country’s currency is no longer used as the yardstick for global trade and as the benchmark for other currencies, the exchange-rate policy of the country would be far more effective in adjusting economic imbalances. This will significantly reduce the risks of a future crisis.”

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My Note: If you read between the lines, this does not bode well for the Treasury and Fed Debt offerings which will have to be issued to pay for all of the bailout, Tarp, and economic stimulus packages. This also doesn’t bode well for the U.S. Dollar in particular, but the other currencies also. As the largest holder of our debt, China is not happy about their investments losing value as the dollar depreciates. Next, China along with Russia are both buying and adding to their respective gold reserves! They are expecting massive inflation, why are we not hearing any talk about that in the nightly news?-jschulmansr

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Gold Stocks’ Time To Shine- Seeking Alpha
By: Brad Zigler of Hard Assets Investor

Real-time Inflation Indicator (per annum): 8.6%
In a recent column (“Gold Traders Whipsawed” at), we said we’d let you know when the gold/mining stock ratio tipped in favor of the miners. Well, we’re telling you now. The GLD/GDX ratio decisively broke through its 200-day moving average late last week.
The SPDR Gold Shares Trust (NYSE Arca: GLD) is a grantor trust affording its holders an undivided interest in vault bullion. The Market Vectors Gold Miners Index ETF (NYSE Arca: GDX) is a portfolio comprising nearly three dozen mining issues. With GLD’s price in the numerator, a decline in the quotient represents appreciation in gold stocks relative to gold itself.
 

 

Gold (GLD)/Gold Stocks (GDX) Ratio

Gold (<a href=

Both bullion and mining shares are higher for the year – GLD’s up 8.2% and GDX has risen 10.8% – but the momentum, for now at least, is with equities. Buoyancy in the broader equity market is providing lift for the miners, but it’s good to keep in mind that there’s a 75% correlation between GDX and GLD. Gold is, for the most part, gold.

Gold’s rising price has a leveraged effect on the stocks, as every dollar above a miner’s production cost flows to its bottom line.

Back in February, we highlighted one GDX component with very low production costs (“A Particularly Healthy Gold Stock“).

Is this the time to buy miners? Well, if you believe there’s more upside in gold (keep that correlation in mind) and want to ride the draft of the current equity market rally, perhaps. Taking a whack at GDX removes some of the stock-picking risk.

Reflation Update: The Real-time Inflation Indicator spiked 1.3% higher last week, reaching a level not seen since January.

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

Gold Holders – Be Patient – Seeking Alpha

By: Jordan Roy-Byrne of Trendsman Research

In the wake of the Fed’s announced record monetization, some gold bugs remarked about the significance of the date and decision. Moreover, the airwaves were littered with commodity bulls (not the familiar faces). There were a few non-gold bug analysts on live television showing currency from Zimbabwe and relating the Fed decision to what has transpired in Zimbabwe. Hyperbole aside, Fed policy of currency debasement and inflation of the money supply is hardly anything new. News is important in that it highlights and reinforces trends. It doesn’t create them.
Keen market watchers and seasoned Fed observers were hardly surprised at the Fed action. We all knew it was coming. The question was when. Remember, news highlights trends. Commodities had been forming a bottom for five months. Just two weeks prior we wrote about our positive near term view on commodities. How about Gold? It rose from trough to peak over 40% in just four months. It seems that only the shorts were surprised.
Now to expound upon last week’s missive, reflation isn’t always so advantageous for the precious metals, especially gold. That holds true for both the economy and markets. With stocks and commodities now recovering, money is to be put to work in those markets and also potentially diverted away from gold. We aren’t expecting a full-blown correction in Gold but rather a consolidation that, for a matter of time diverts attention (like an idling engine) away from itself as it prepares for major liftoff.
This is a temporary respite in a bear market and in an economy stuck in deflation. The first period of deflation (and strengthening dollar) in the Great Depression lasted three years. The Yen increased nearly 100% from early 1990 to early 1995. This bout of deflation isn’t even one year old yet. In other words, don’t expect commodities to enter a cyclical bull market anytime soon. There isn’t enough demand on the horizon. The recession and accompanying deflation should last into 2010. It may be a while before both run their course, thereby allowing an inflationary recovery to begin in earnest.

In conclusion, be aware that the current rebound in stocks and commodities, though large, is just a temporary recovery. A single news event won’t change that nor alleviate the current deflationary pressures on the economy. Finally, holders of gold and gold shares should be patient. The major breakout will occur this year, though not within the time expectations of the gold bugs.

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My Note: When Gold and Precious Metals prices do take off and they will, it will be faster than anyone has anticipated. Use this time to buy now, increase your holdings. -Good Investing – Jschulmansr

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

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

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

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold…

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

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

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

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Lift-Off for Gold!

19 Thursday Mar 2009

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

≈ Comments Off on Lift-Off for Gold!

Tags

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

It’s here, after the Fed’s decision to leave Interest Rates unchanged and to buy $300 billion in Treasuries, plus another $750 billion minimum in buying mortgage backed securities; the markets woke up this morning to the realization Inflation is coming back. Gold which closed down $29 yesterday but immediately shot up after the announcement on spot pricing. Today the market has caught up and as I speak Gold is up $66.90 at $956 oz. I hope you have been listening to this blog and have gotten in. If you were on the sidelines- this is the time to still get in as $1050 first target. After that $1250 oz so get in while you can. We have Lift-Off! – Good Investing- jschulmansr

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

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

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

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

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold…

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

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

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

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

 

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

 

 

 

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

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Where is the Dollar heading? Part 1 — A Must See!

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

 Gold rallies over 7% as Fed move fuels inflation fears

By Moming Zhou, MarketWatch Last update: 1:14 p.m. EDT March 19, 2009

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Gold futures climbed to top $950 an ounce after
the Federal Reserve pledged to purchase as much as $1.15 trillion in U.S. bonds 
and mortgage-backed securities to encourage lending, sparking worries of inflation 
ahead. "Looking ahead, we fear inflation. It may be that Dr. Bernankenstein has 
created a monster beyond his control," Michael Farr, president of Farr, Miller & 
Washington, said of Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke. 
The U.S. dollar's losses in the wake of the Fed's move also lifted gold prices, 
with investors buying gold as a hedge against inflation and a weaker dollar. 
Gold for April delivery surged $66.5, or 7.6%, to $955.6 an ounce on the 
Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. It climbed to $963.5 
earlier in the session, the highest level in nearly one month. Gold's gain came 
after it lost $27.70 to end at $889.10 Wednesday, the lowest closing level 
in two months. 
Wednesday's floor trading ended before the Fed announced its decision. 
George Gero, a precious metals trader for RBC Capital Markets, called gold's 
quick reverse from an nearly $30 dollars to up more than $60 "shock and awe." 
The Fed's plan "could change [the] inflation outlook and result in a greater 
trading range," he added. 
Silver prices marked an even bigger rally. Silver for May delivery jumped 
12.7% to $13.445 an ounce. 

'Gold is well-placed to re-challenge $1,000 an ounce.'

— -- James Moore, TheBullionDesk.com

The Fed said it would buy longer-term Treasury bonds to help arrest a 
deepening slide in the U.S. economy, a surprise move that also sent stocks 
soaring and triggered violent moves in other markets. 
The Fed's move, one of several actions taken Wednesday aimed at making 
it less expensive to borrow money, doubled the amount of money the central 
bank has poured into the economy to try to stimulate economic activity. 
Read: The Fed Minutes. 
"The Fed's announcement of further quantitative easing triggered renewed 
inflation fears," wrote James Moore, a precious metals analyst at 
TheBullionDesk.com. "Gold is well-placed to re-challenge $1000 an ounce." 
Holdings in SPDR Gold Shares (GLD94.15, +1.06, +1.1%) jumped to 
1,084.33 tons Wednesday, up 15.28 tons from a day ago, according to 
the latest data from the fund. The total is nearly 80 tons higher than 
a month ago. 
In economic news Thursday, the number of people collecting 
state unemployment benefits jumped by 185,000 to a record seasonally-
adjusted 5.47 million in the week ending March 7, while new claims dipped 
by 12,000 to 646,000 in the week ending March 14, the Labor Department 
reported Thursday. See Economic Report on weekly jobless claims. 
On Wall Street, stocks meandered between gains and losses following 
Wednesday's rally. Asian and European stocks also moved higher. In energy 
trading, crude jumped more than 7% to about $52 a barrel. 

 
Moming Zhou is a MarketWatch reporter based in New York.

 

 

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

 

Gold, T-Bonds, and Russia's Tu-160 Bombers -Seeking Alpha


A torrid tale of politics, gossip and a shiny, yellow threat to world peace...
Germany in 1944 could buy materials during the war only with gold. 
Fiat money in extremis is accepted by nobody...

- Alan Greenspan, then-Fed chairman, May 1999


FOR A WORLD-LEADING MARKET turning over $60 billion per day, 
London's wholesale gold dealers sure spook easy sometimes.
"I've just heard central banks have been selling. You hear anything?" 
asked one breathless contact of BullionVault on Wednesday... just 
before the Federal Reserve's $1.25 trillion shot in the arm gamed 
the gold price so hard, so fast, the conspiracy theorists at GATA 
should demand a Congressional hearing into Ben Bernanke's 
long Comex position.
 
More often than not, however, professional dealers get all 
aflutter about rumors of central-bank buying, not selling. In 
late 2008, it was supposed to be the Saudis. Last month it was 
the Russians – or so gossip claimed. Gossip that the Kremlin 
was only too happy to buoy.
 
Come mid-March, the People's Bank of China (PBoC) fired up 
the tittle-tattle – and again, as if on purpose – by forecasting 
that despite "safe haven" demand for the US dollar in 2009, 
gold prices would "fluctuate at high levels...possibly 
breaking through previous highs..."
 
Now this week a report by the oh-so-sexily-named 
Central Banking Publications says that out of 39 reserve 
managers controlling $3.2 trillion in official currency and 
bullion hoards – some 42% of the world total – well over 
one-in-two feels Buying Gold would make a smarter move 
today than it did this time last year.
 
So are the emerging powers hoarding gold today or not? 
What's a private citizen trying to look after his or her own 
to make of this chatter?
 
Well, as a rule, it means little or nothing for the price of gold 
day-to-day. And like GATA's claims – 
highly detailed, much derided – that Western governments 
regularly fix the gold market to cap its ascent, rumors of 
central-bank buying never prove quite as dramatic as 
central-bank action to either defend or debase the 
currencies against which it's priced instead.
 
Raise overnight interest rates to double digits, for instance 
as the Federal Reserve's Paul Volcker did in the early 1980s 
and non-yielding gold will tumble against high-yielding cash. 
 
Cut and hold rates at zero, in contrast...while creating, say, 
$1 trillion of fresh money in a 425-word statement, as Ben 
Bernanke did Wednesday...and you'll send Gold Prices higher, 
just as surely as the Maestro's apprentice strolling into London 
and buying 50 tonnes on his own account.
 
Investment-house analysts, meantime, are more focused on 
the possible 400-tonne sale mooted to help save the world-
saving International Monetary Fund (IMF). Yet the really big 
driver so far this year remains mutual-fund managers buying 
paper-shares in ETF trusts. Western coin buyers paying 
10% mark-ups (or more...!) are meantime wrestling with Asian 
scrap-jewelry sellers as to who can tip the balance of apparent 
supply and demand.
 
Large-scale gold purchases by Beijing or the Kremlin would 
anyway come at the pit-head, rather than on the open market, 
as they look to "slow and steady accumulation" in the words 
of UBS's highly-regarded John Reade recently, quoted by the 
Financial Times. 
 
Buying gold direct from domestic miners was 
how South Africa more than doubled its official reserves in the 
late 1960s. China and Russia now stand first and fourth among 
the world's gold-producing nations. Why announce their 
intentions, sticking a premium onto their dealer's offer, 
by going through the open market?
 
But behind the dealing-room noise, however, the cold facts 
of Asian, Middle East and Russian gold hoarding point to a 
deeper trend – an ugly if grand historical shift that finds its 
last cyclical turn almost 10 years ago to the day.
 
In mid-1999, the Swiss, European and UK central banks 
announced gold sales that did indeed shake the market. 
Back then, the Gold Price had been tumbling for the best 
part of two decades – thanks first to those double-digit US 
rates, and then to the fast-growing number of high-return 
alternatives for investment cash that sprouted worldwide 
as interest rates began to fall back but remained well north 
of the rate of inflation.
 
Prompted by investment-bank advisors and analysts, the 
late 20th century's heavy selling by West European 
governments coincided not only with both a multi-year 
low in the gold price and a bubble in earnings-free tech stocks. 
 
It also came together with Francis Fukuyama's "end of history" 
and Tony Blair – the UK prime minister then guilty of bombing 
neither Belgrade nor Baghdad – declaring his to be "the first 
generation [in Europe] that may live our entire lives without 
going to war or sending our children to war."
 
Put Blair's cant to one side (if you're not retching). Why did 
Europe's central banks have so much gold to sell in the first 
place? As BullionVault has noted before, the continent's 30-
year scrap between its big nation states was preceded and 
worsened by frantic gold hoarding amongst the major players. 
 
Because a government must trust in another's long-term survival 
when accepting its paper as payment. Whereas gold bullion, as 
former Fed chief Alan Greenspan famously said – and just before 
the UK announced its 415-tonne sales back in May 1999 as it 
happens – "still represents the ultimate form of payment in 
the world.
 
"Germany in 1944 could buy materials during the war only with 
gold. Fiat money in extremis is accepted by nobody. Gold is 
always accepted."
 
Why else did the Nazis march straight to seizing the central-bank 
vaults on reaching Vienna, Prague and Warsaw? Why else did the 
United States grow its hoard from 500 tonnes in 1900 to almost 
20,000 by the eve of World War Two...nationalizing privately-held 
gold on pain of a $10,000 fine or imprisonment when F.D.R. took 
office at the depths of the Great Depression? (See 
Hoarding for War, Vaulting for Victory for more...)
 
Now, two generations later, China's official gold reserves remain 
unknown and unknowable to outside observers. But it has become 
the world's No.1 gold-mining state thanks to the collapse in South 
African output. And the fresh deluge of US money debasement only 
confirms why Beijing's bankers "hate you guys" as one policy-maker, 
Luo Ping – director-general of 
China's Banking Regulatory Commission – put it last month.
 
"Once you start issuing $1 trillion or $2 trillion," he said to the 
Financial Times, five weeks before the Fed issued...ummm...$1.25 
trillion of new cash..."we know the Dollar is going to depreciate.
 
"So we hate you guys but there is nothing much we can do. Except for 
US Treasuries, what can you hold? Gold? You don't hold Japanese 
government bonds or UK bonds. US Treasuries are the safe haven. 
For everyone, including China, it is the only option."
 
Further west (but only a little, politically), Russia's official gold reserves 
have swelled by one-half this decade on the IMF's data, with new 
purchases peaking in August 2008 – just as the 58th army rolled into 
Georgia to defend South Ossetia's illegal, breakaway republic.
 
Under Vladimir Putin, the Kremlin said it wanted gold to grow from 
2.5% to fully one-tenth of its foreign currency reserves, meaning 
four-fold growth of its bullion hoard if not a collapse in its paper a
ssets. Just last month, the central bank stated that it was Buying Gold. 
On the available data, it had already added 109 tonnes to its hoard in the 
15 months starting Jan. 2007 at a cost of some $27 billion.
 
Oh sure, that's peanuts compared to the total $4 trillion-worth of gold 
now thought to be above-ground at today's prevailing prices. But the 
vast bulk of that gold is held as jewelry, not monetary units like coins 
or bars. And according to Tsar Putin himself back in 2007, before this 
burst of gold-hoarding really got started, the ratio of 
Russian government debt to its national gold reserves was already 
stronger than for any other state in Europe.
 
Never mind how wide of the mark that metric was; Putin's claim shows 
how much Gold Bullion matters to Russia's political confidence – a 
swagger only called into use when debt and foreign currencies slide 
into crisis. And then this week, the current Kremlin incumbent, Dmitry 
Medvedev, goes and announces that he's "rearming" Russia, using the 
very word – "rearmament" – that Europe fretted over and feared all 
through its short 20-year peace between the first and second world wars.
 
Specifically, "[I will] increase the combat readiness of our forces, first 
of all our strategic nuclear forces," Medvedev declared Tuesday, piling 
historical weight onto Monday's more Cold-War-style news that 
Roscosmos, the Russian space agency, is planning a manned lunar 
mission for 2015.
 
Oh, and then there was Sunday's news from Venezuelan socialist 
crackpot Hugo Chavez that Russia's long-range Tu-160 "Black Jack" 
bombers – each capable of carrying 12 nuclear warheads – are welcome 
to use the Caribbean island of La Orchila. You know, just for re-fuelling, 
cleaning the windscreen, emptying the ash-trays...but not ever as a 
permanent base.
 
So this isn't the Cuban missile crisis. Not yet at least. But the Kremlin's 
new saber rattling must still have caused a shock at the White House – 
just as it shocked anyone not tracking Russia's fast-growing gold reserves. 
Either that, or Team Obama is so smart, they were expecting some kind of 
pre-emptive strike ahead of the Fed's nuclear blast in the T-bond market.
 
"Foreign demand for long-term Treasuries has disappeared over the last 
few months," writes Brad Setser – an ex-US Treasury and IMF official, 
former economist for Nouriel Roubini's doom-and-gloom funsters at RGE 
Monitor, and a visiting or associate fellow pretty much everywhere worth 
having deep thoughts on big subjects. Studying the latest official data 
(released Monday) in his blog for the Council for Foreign Relations, "It is 
striking that for all the talk of safe haven flows to the US, foreign demand 
for all long-term US bonds has effectively disappeared," he explains. 
 
In particular, "Over the past three months, almost all the growth in 
China's Treasury portfolio has come from its rapidly growing holdings of 
short-term bills, not from purchases of longer-term notes...and it is also 
still selling [mortgage] Agency bonds."
 
All told, China continued to buy US Treasury debt; it is "the only 
option" for China, Russia and everyone else at this stage of the game, 
as Luo Ping wailed  to the FT last month. But of the $12.2 billion China 
purchased in January, fully 95% were short-term bills. "Russia also, 
interestingly, added to its holdings of short-term Treasury bills," Setser 
says.
 
And then, with the latest Treasury fund-flow data revealed...BOOM! 
The Federal Reserve explodes the Dollar by printing $300bn to buy 
30-year US debt, plus another $750bn to buy mortgage-agency bonds.
Someone's got to buy this stuff, and the forced buyers of this decade-
to-date are starting to tire. They might just be looking to Buy Gold for 
much more than "portfolio diversification" as well.
 
There. How's that for a gold-market rumor...?

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

Claim a gram of FREE GOLD today, plus a special 18-page PDF report; 

Exposed! Five Myths of the Gold Market and find out:

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

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold… 

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

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

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

Where is the Dollar heading? Part 1 - A Must See!
========================================================

 

My Note:  Rumors or not Gold is up $69.70 On the Day! - 
Good Investing - Jschulmansr

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






 

 

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Scammed Again By Uncle Sam?

18 Wednesday Mar 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, central banks, China, Copper, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, depression, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, Fed Fund Rate, Federal Deficit, federal reserve, Finance, financial, follow the news, Forex, Fundamental Analysis, futures, futures markets, gata, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, Gold Price Manipulation, hard assets, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, IMF, India, inflation, Investing, investments, Japan, Jschulmansr, Latest News, Long Bonds, majors, Make Money Investing, manipulation, Market Bubble, market crash, Markets, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, monetization, oil, palladium, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, recession, Saudi Arabia, Short Bonds, silver, silver miners, Silver Price Manipulation, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, TARP, Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3, TIPS, Today, U.S., U.S. Dollar

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Tags

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

Today Gold dropped $27.70 down to support at the $885 – $890 levels. We need to ask ourselves why? I would like to propose that we are absolutely being “Scammed by Uncle Sam!”. Let me explain… Again today Gold Lease Rates (1 month) are negative. “So what’s the  big deal about that?” you are asking. The big deal is this, when the lease rate is negative it means that someone will actually pay you a fee in addition to giving a Gold loan. Now you or I or anybody with a sane mind is not going to make a loan to you for a fee (they have to pay), to borrow Gold from them. This doesn’t even count the risk of never being repaid and losing the Gold! However, (and you can read more detail in today’s first article); this provides a way for someone to supress Gold prices if they wanted to, and you guessed who – “Scammed Again By Uncle Sam”. While the first article today explains “the how”, I am going to venture the “why”. Right now if you pay attention to what is going on, the U.S. and the Fed desperately need to appease some large holders of our debt and dollars by making a way for them to convert their dollar holdings into Gold. They also realize that their current (US) monetary policies are going to force Precious metals prices (especially Gold) much higher than today’s $1000 level while at the same time deteriorating the value of the U.S. dollar. By supressing the price of Gold temporarily the Fed and Treasury will benefit as follows. First as the foreign holders sell off their Treasuries and Bonds this creates a demand for U.S. Dollars to fulfill the transactions. This in turn brings those Dollars back into our economy helping to create more liquidity. Now depending on the velocity of money, that can be in itself inflationary. However with the velocity of money being dependent on Capital Investment, what are we currently seeing? Right now there is no real demand for new goods and services, which means that there is no real incentive to invest in New Factories, Expanding current production levels, or even opening new businesses. So then what happens? The holders instead of sitting on their dollars look for safe places to park those dollars until the economy turns around again. Where do they park the money, banks have proven to be risky?, the stock market? even riskier still, so they park their money in a “safe haven”, buying up Treasuries and Bonds. This helps to offest the selling pressure on Treasuries caused from the original U.S. Debt holder’s sales, and it also creates further demand for U.S. Dollars. With the unprecendented spending currently going on by Mr. Obama and cohorts, the Fed and the Treasury needs to create an increased demand for all of the new Debt Issuances coming into the market. ( They are also creating further false demand buy buying up their own new debt  (300 Billion purchase just announced today). In my mind these purchase in the long term will also create more inflation. So currently the U.S. government has every reason to keep trying to artificially depress the Gold Prices. Sooner or later however their Gold price manipulation will explode in their faces as already seen in a smaller degree,  the demand for Gold is snatching up all of the physical gold being dumped. That is why we will bounce off of these price levels for the fourth time. When it breaks and when inflation (already here- currently running 8% to 15%) is officially acknowledged,watch out Gold will shoot up like the latest Space shuttle launch! Use this limited time frame to keep adding to and accumulating your long positions in Precious Metals- Good Investing! – jschulmansr

ps- For complete details and Information on how Gold Prices are being manipulated and the Silver market also- go to GATA.org.

pps-****NEWS FLASH****

Gold is now up $26.60 New York Spot at $942.50 after Fed Announcement of Leaving Interest Rates Unchanged!

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

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

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

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold…

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

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

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

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 Gold Price Manipulation More Blatant- Numismaster.com

By: Patrick A. Heller of Numismater.com

On Friday, March 6, gold lease rates turned negative for the day. What that means is that anyone who wanted to lease gold would actually be paid a fee in addition to getting a free gold loan.
No sane person would choose to lose money loaning physical gold, in addition to the risk of never getting the gold back from the other party. However, if someone (such as the U.S. government) wanted to suppress the price of gold, this is one tactic to try to accomplish that purpose.
I can come to no other conclusion than that a large quantity of physical gold surreptitiously appeared on the market on March 6 with the sole purpose to drive down the price of gold. The quantities were large enough that they almost certainly could not come from private parties. With most of the world’s central banks now being net buyers of gold reserves, they would not be the source of this gold. By process of elimination, the suspicion falls upon the U.S. government as the ultimate party responsible for this blatant action to manipulate the price of gold.

Of course, the U.S. government would not want to be identified as the cause of this leasing anomaly. Instead, such manipulation was almost certainly conducted by multiple trading partners of the U.S. government.

This sledge hammer tactic worked at driving the price of gold further away from the $1,000 level – at least temporarily. Last week, spokesmen for a number of troubled U.S. companies were suddenly issuing statements about a return to profitability (such as Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase) or not needing further government bailouts (such as General Motors). Stock values climbed as gold’s price retreated.

But (and there was always a but), these massive efforts to suppress the price of gold seem to be running out of steam. First off, these “positive statements” had serious qualifiers such as the chairman of Citigroup claiming that, ignoring extraordinary items like bad loans, the bank earned an operating income in the first two months of 2009.

Then insurance company AIG bowed to pressure and revealed that a huge portion of the $150+ billion in bailout funds it had received had really been passed along as bailout money to other companies (including Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase). In fact, almost all of this money was redirected to the U.S. government’s trading partners who probably have been complicit in the manipulation of the gold price.

Once the public learned that such companies have received more federal government bailout money that previously revealed, the stock market rally stalled. The price of gold started to recover. Unless the U.S. government can come up with another tactic quickly, I expect the price of gold to generally rise over time.

In the meantime, demand for physical gold has taken off again. The U.S. Mint is so far behind at meeting demand for bullion gold and silver American Eagle issues that it last week announced an indefinite suspension of plans to strike 2009-dated proof and uncirculated versions for collectors. Even further, the U.S. Mint also announced that it would not even accept orders from primary distributors for any gold or silver Eagles this week.

On the wholesale market, supplies of gold and silver American Eagles quickly disappeared. The premiums of these coins shot upward. Some retailers now have to decline orders as they don’t know when they might be able to fill them or what premiums they will have to pay to acquire merchandise. My earlier prediction that by the end of April it would become almost impossible to find any physical gold or silver bullion-priced items for reasonable delivery is starting to come true.

At the American Numismatic Association’s National Money Show in Portland, Ore., this past weekend, demand for U.S. gold $10s and $20s was still solid. With some such collector coins now trading at all-time high prices, however, some dealers are advising their customers to consider selling or swapping for gold bullion. As a consequence, I think most of the surge in prices has already occurred. It might be a good time to take a profit.

 

 

 

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

My Note: Very Interesting Advice! “take profit on collector coins and buy bullion”-jschulmansr

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

What’s Another $1.5 Trillion? – Seeking Alpha

By: Tim Iacono of Iacono Research

The Federal Reserve announced today that they will join the central banks of England and Switzerland, printing money out of thin air to buy long-term government debt so as to keep interest rates low and boost lending in their ongoing attempt to revive an economy that is faltering badly due to an orgy of credit and debt a few years ago.
Apparently the gold market and currency markets have heard the news (the chart to the right will be updated as needed over the next hour or so – update #1 from $925 to $932 already complete).
The printing presses will be working ’round the clock to fund purchases of up to $300 billion in long-term Treasuries over the next six months which, in combination with an increase in purchases of mortgage backed securities and agency debt also announced today (an additional $850 billion total), should see the Fed’s balance sheet swell to once unthinkable levels.

Lest anyone think that any of this is getting a bit out of control, the central bank also provided assuring words that they will keep an eye on the “size and composition” of their balance sheet in light of economic developments.

In what appeared to be just an afterthought, relegated to the third paragraph after occupying the top spot for years, the Fed also announced that short-term interest rates will be left at the freakishly low level of between zero and 0.25 percent and that they won’t be going up anytime soon.

And if this doesn’t work, we might just see the Fed’s balance sheet hit that $10 trillion level that someone mentioned the other day.

 

 

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

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

 

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

My note: Only one answer to being scammed buy more! Please take advantage of the price now, they may try to bump it down one more time, but we are going back and testing all time highs $1050 level, if a “short squeeze” develops then $1250. Jump aboard now! -Good Investing – jschulmansr

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

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

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold…

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

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

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

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

 

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

 

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Are You Ready To Rock?

17 Tuesday Mar 2009

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

≈ Comments Off on Are You Ready To Rock?

Tags

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

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

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

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

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

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold…

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

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

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

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

By: Mark Hulbert of MarketWatch

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

 

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

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

Silver taking cues from gold

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

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

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

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

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

China Syndrome meets “Rollover”  

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Gold ETFs 

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

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

Source for data SPDR Gold Trust

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

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

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

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

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

SLV Metal Holdings

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

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

Source for data Barclay’s iShares Silver Trust.

Still no new custodian for SLV

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

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

U.S. banks dominate the COMEX  

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

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

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

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

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

 

 

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

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

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

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

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

Perhaps with more clarity would come more confidence.  

Got Gold Report Charts

2-year weekly gold

2-year weekly silver

3-year weekly HUI

2-year weekly Gold:HUI ratio

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

Until next time, as always, MIND YOUR STOPS. 

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

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

 

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

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

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

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

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

 

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

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

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold…

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

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

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

 

Dow Jones Industrial Average

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

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

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How to Catch A Fool

16 Monday Mar 2009

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

≈ Comments Off on How to Catch A Fool

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

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

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

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

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

·        What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold…

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

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

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

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

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

 

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

 

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Guru’s Say Bottom Near – Financial Times

Source: Financial Times

Gurus say bottom near

By Pauline Skypala

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

 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009

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

Source: Market Watch

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

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

A few who got it right

Commentary: What do those who called the

downturn think?

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

Joe Foster: Chemistry Is Good For Gold – Seeking Alpha

Source: SeekingAlpha and The Gold Report


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

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

TGR:Where do you see this taking gold?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

TGR:And an inflation play, I imagine.

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

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

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

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

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

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

JF:

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

Goldcorp

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

Barrick Gold Corporation

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

TGR:And moving down the ladder?

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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

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They’re At it Again? – Who’s Going to Win?

10 Tuesday Mar 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, bear market, bull market, central banks, China, Comex, commodities, Contrarian, Copper, Credit Default, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, Finance, financial, follow the news, Forex, Fundamental Analysis, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, Gold Price Manipulation, hard assets, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, IAU, IMF, India, inflation, Investing, investments, Jschulmansr, Junior Gold Miners, Latest News, majors, Make Money Investing, manipulation, Market Bubble, Markets, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, oil, palladium, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, protection, recession, silver, silver miners, Silver Price Manipulation, small caps, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, Technical Analysis, Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3, Today, U.S., U.S. Dollar, XAU

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Sorry, I missed everyone yesterday, it was a very interesting day making this one wonder if we are not seeing more hidden central bank selling in a desperate measure to hold Gold Prices down. Sooner or later the shorts will have to fill which I believe will happen somewhere around the $1050 – $1100 range giving a big pump up. Meanwhile today’s action, we are once again seeing continued downward pressure with Gold holding at the $890 to $900 range. Personally, I think we will hold here at the $880 to $900 level, build strength after the Gold coming on the market is absorbed. If we don’t hold here then $850 is the next very strong support level. We’re having a nice little upward correction in the stock markets and this may be the 20% retracement rally  traders have been looking for. Mark my words we will soon here remarks like the “bottom is in place for stocks” and “now” is the time to get in at these low levels. After they sucker everyone in then we will see the Stock markets continue in their downward channel. In the meantime take advantage of this to load up on your Gold. Especially since we’ll hear the “double top” formation is in place comments and everyone will be giving up on Gold and Silver. I personally think we are forming a new pennant formation like the one that was formed around the $700- $750 level which then took off to $1000+. Based on that this formation should be the launch pad up to the $1250 level. I am aggressively buying  Precious Metals Miners with current or about to come on line production, accumulating some more physical holdings and hanging tight. When I have confirmation I will be re-entering DGP for another ride to at least $1000. I will post when I enter that trade and if you are following me on Twitter you’ll be the first to know. Good Investing! -jschulmansr

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Here you go- Bottom Calling For the Stock Market already!Barron’s Calls a Bottom – Seeking AlphaSure, stocks could slide much further — but they probably won’t. By most measures, they are downright cheap.

 

 

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

 

By: Eli Hoffman Senior Editor Seeking Alpha

Barron’s cover story this weekend basically calls a bottom to the bear, though not in quite so many words.

 After blaming Obama for much of stock market woes (“The lousy economy is the main factor, but stocks haven’t been helped by Obama administration proposals … It doesn’t help that the Street is calling this an “Obama bear market” and that some investors are looking to “Obama-proof” their portfolios…), Barron’s concedes that the president did get at least one thing right: stocks are cheap for investors with patience.

Barron’s says its research bears that out. Here’s why:

  1. Stocks are cheap relative to P/E – a Citigroup economist’s 2009 earnings estimate for S&P 500 components puts their collective P/E ratio at more than 13, which is where a bunch of bear markets bottomed – except 1974, ’82 and ’87 when P/E went as low as 8.5. If we get down to 10, S&P could fall another 25% to 500 and DJIA around 5,000. But that probably won’t happen, because in previous downturns Treasury yields were much higher, and because another Citigroup analyst says he’s seeing signs of panic.
  2. Stocks are cheap relative to GDP – at 60% of the $14T GDP, stocks are their cheapest relative to economic output since the early ’90s. But they’re still well higher than the lows of about 30-35% seen in the ’70s and early ’80s. Stocks are also cheap relative to book value – about 1.3 down from a high of 5 during the dot-com bubble.
  3. Stocks are cheap relative to gold – S&P 500 is now worth about 75% of the price of an ounce, vs. a peak of more than 5x in 2000. Over the past 40 years, the average stocks-to-gold ratio has been 1.6.

There’s also a lot of cash on the sidelines, Barron’s says, noting money-market funds now hold $4T – almost half of the market cap of U.S. stocks, and double the amount in money-market funds two years ago.

Barron’s expects stocks in defensive industries like drugs (PFE, LLY, MRK, BMY, SGP) and consumer goods (HNZ, KFT, PG, KO, GIS) to benefit from a return of confidence.

For those prone to bottom calling, or not, here’s some more food for thought:

  • Babak notes pessimism, as measured by the American Association of Individual Investors’ weekly survey, is at record highs. A contrarian buy signal.
  • Todd Sullivan says that a couple weeks of positive economic data could cause extreme pessimism to make a rapid about-face.
  • Jason Schwartz thinks we’re in another bubble – one of uncertainty. Forget about buy-and-hold, he says – but short term gains on oversold stocks could be massive.
  • Meanwhile Mike Stathis, while noting stocks are very close to “fair value,” for what that’s worth, doesn’t mean the market won’t go lower. In fact, it probably will.

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

Here’s a nice piece with some good info about one of my personal longs (ABX).

Gold Mining or Gold Bullion Stocks for 2009? Seeking Alpha

By: Preston Poulter of PrestonPoulter.com

With Obama’s outrageous stimulus plans where the federal government is going to give out billions of dollars of handouts to the demand side of the economy, it’s no wonder gold is gaining ground while stocks have been falling. However, the question remains when is it time to buy? The answer is now. Gold has been consistently in an uptrend since October of last year. This is shown in the chart (click to enlarge) of a major gold ETF (GLD) [GLD: 90.57, -1.72 (-1.86%)] below. As you can see, gold is making a short short term pullback which signals a time to buy. With more talk of spending, including a world wide stimulus package, there is only further pressure on leading countries, currencies such as the U.S. dollar. These inflationary pressures may push gold to break the 2008 highs of around $1056.

But I’m not content just to park my money in physical gold and leave it at that. The trader in me wants to make a leveraged play to make the most off of gold’s bright future. Gold mining shares would seem an excellent play then. Not only do you get exposure to the gold market, but you get the benefits of stock ownership. In the past, whenever I would introduce the idea of owning gold as a form of investment, people would laugh my suggestion off because they just couldn’t imagine how anything would be better than owning “stocks for the long run.” Of course, they aren’t saying that anymore.

Gold mining shares are a nice compromise in terms of investment philosophy. If the American dollar does fall from grace as we goldbugs suggest, then owning shares of a gold mining company will be a tremendous boon. If the dollar continues to stubbornly hang on, and we somehow manage to resume normal economic growth, then I still own equities and should get the traditional benefits of equity appreciation.

The theory of owning gold mining equities is pretty easy, but the reality can be rather treacherous. Should you chose an established company with a lot of reserves or a junior company that mainly has a lot of promising prospects? One is more dependable and the other has the potential to be far more rewarding. It’s a similar discussion to blue chip versus tech stock debate we saw towards the end of last century.

For myself, I wanted an established company. Junior mining companies need a healthy amount of credit to develop their mining operations, and that wasn’t a chance I was prepared to take given the credit collapse of last year. That narrowed my focus down to just a couple of companies: Newmont Mining (NEM) and Barrick Gold (ABX). I chose Barrick because it was the largest mining operation in the world and because, at the time, it was trading at a lower PE ratio than Newmont. As of this writing, Newmont has held up better over the last twelve months as shown in the graph below.

The relative stock performance of the two companies.
The relative stock performance of the two companies

Really the two companies were performing in tandem until the last month or so. Then Barrick shares had a rather sudden loss of value. Part of this loss of value is probably related to the loss Barrick announced for its fourth quarter. The company was able to sell its gold at a good profit margin, despite the temporary fourth quarter fall in the price of gold, but the company also wrote off a large portion of the value of an oil company it had acquired in the prior year. Like so many decisions that turn out wrongly, it seemed like a good idea at the time. Oil is a significant cost in the mining of gold, so it would make sense to buy an oil company in a rising oil market as a hedge against an increase in the cost of mining. Oil’s subsequent fall caught even Warren Buffett by surprise.

Having to write off the value of an oil company due to a collapse in the oil market seems like a one time event. So let’s instead compare Barrick and Newmont on their forward PE ratios, rather than the past twelve months. Barrick closed yesterday trading at a forward Price-to-Earnings (PE) ratio of 15.71 compared to Newmont’s 16.43, which shows that you’re getting a discount for Barrick’s earnings over Newmont’s. The dividend ratio is even better: Barrick yields 1.4% compared to Newmont’s 1.0%. That’s 40% more money in your pocket for owning Barrick. Looking at these figures suggests Barrick is clearly the better company to own at these prices.

Going forward, it’s only a matter of time before the inflationary policies of the world’s central banks start forcing the gold price higher. However, Barrick will not perform well this year if we don’t see a return in the price of copper. There’s a significant amount of copper tied up in the gold ore that Barrick mines and in the past Barrick has been able to refine and sell it at a nice profit to held reduce the cost of its gold operations. For the year 2006-2008, Barrick was able to sell its copper at over $3 a pound and make a profit of over 50% on the sale. Yesterday copper closed around $1.65. If copper stays at that price the entire year, Barrick’s results will suffer. I’ve run a few simulations in a spreadsheet and here’s the numbers I get:

  • If gold averages the year at $950 an ounce and copper stays at $1.65 a pound, Barrick will earn $.94 a share.
  • If gold averages $1050 an ounce and copper stays at $1.65 a pound, Barrick will earn $1.78 a share.
  • If gold averages $950 an ounce and copper returns to $3 a pound, Barrick will earn $1.51 a share.

As you can see, the return of copper to its former levels is going to be just as significant to Barrick’s earnings as gold appreciating in value.

Since analysts estimate a 2009 EPS of $1.85, Barrick could suffer a significant down year if we don’t start to see copper return soon.

Looking beyond a year, I believe Barrick is positioned well. It is set to make money from an appreciation in copper, oil, or gold. That makes it a great place to be as we feel the effects of inflation, but in the short term gold bullion may represent a better investment.

Disclosure: Barrick common stock represents a significant portion of my investment portfolio.-Preston Poulter

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

Gold Continues to Gain Ground – Seeking Alpha

Source: Bullish Bankers  – Justin DiPietro


Given the massive amount of money being pumped into the global economic system, higher prices down the road are a given. It’s possible that prices may fall in the short term, but no currency can withstand a determined onslaught by its own central bank and national government for long. I consider gold a no brainer in this environment. It’s a store of value that does well both in inflationary times and, as we saw last year, in deflationary times.

gld

-Justin DiPietro

Disclaimer: None.

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

My Note: See the nice little wedge we are forming in the above chart, a little patience and then bang! $1250 here we come! – jschulmansr

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

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

·        Why most investors are WRONG about gold

·          What Happens When Inflation Kicks In?

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

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

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

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

 

 

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It’s Not Over Yet!- Obama Where Is Your Birth Certificate?

02 Monday Mar 2009

Posted by jschulmansr in 2008 Election, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, Barack Obama, China, communism, Conservative, Conservative Resistance, Contrarian, depression, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, Electoral College, financial, follow the news, Free Speech, Fundamental Analysis, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, id theft, Joe Biden, Jschulmansr, Latest News, manipulation, market crash, Markets, physical gold, precious metals, Presidential Election, price, price manipulation, Saudi Arabia, silver, socialism, stagflation, Stimulus, The Fed, Today, U.S., u.s. constitution, U.S. Dollar

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It’s not over yet. Obama where is your birth certificate. I mostly blog about Precious Metals Investing, yet even I have some questions for Mr. Obama. No, while I am a conservative I am not a “radical fringe looney conservative” or even a “sore” loser. I have some legitimate concerns. First we have a new President who has never established eligibility to hold his office, this same man is now embarking on the largest spending spree this country has ever seen!

This is supposed to rescue our economy and set things straight with the American Economy. I have several concerns over this such as how now  Obama is ignoring the “earmarks” in the latest bill, this after a campaign promise “no more earmarks”. Next the way we are going to finance this is thru higher taxes, less tax breaks, and a whole lot more debt which America can sorely afford. Are we not selling off our future to the Chinese and Middle Eastern buyers of our governmental debt? I could go a lot more into these economic matters which we have all heard “ad nauseum” over how bad this is for us and especially for the future generations coming up behind us. One fact remains it is under the direction and orders of Mr. Obama.

My next real concern is the fact that almost unannounced and certainly without the press fanfare or opposition, even the vilification the Mr. Bush for his war in Iraq, notably from even Mr. Obama himself! Mr. Obama is sending even more troops into Afghanistan. Oh I forgot, he is going to announce the timetable of withdrawal from Iraq, so at least we will only be fighting on one front; but is this “withdrawal” actually going to turn into a reassignment for the American troops. Also, these troops will be even more cut off from lines of supply than in Iraq. So realistically how much more will this war cost us? Also, do we even have a plan on how we are going to win? Are we going to take over part of Pakistan too? Don’t get me wrong, I want to see Bin Laden and Al Queda destroyed, but all of this is happening under the command of the Commander in Chief, our President Mr. Obama who has yet to even prove eligibility by providing his Birth Certificate. What is up with That?

I f I have to show my Birth Certificate, I gladly do so, not to mention I am legally bound to do so. Why isn’t our president required as the leader and example of our country. If you or I do not show our Birth Certificates when asked face heavy potential liabilities and punishments. How does Mr. Obama get away with this?

FInally, as a Pecious metals analyst, this is great for the long term prospects of Gold and for my investments. Yet I would rather lose all or have losses with my investments than have my country destroyed by a man who can’t even prove he is a bona fide U.S. citizen!

I will have an update later today on Precious metals, if fact Gold retested support early today and then came back to close about $2.50 down to $940 (April Contact). Below in todays articles: It’s not over yet! Good Investing! -jschulmansr

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 The Birther’s Obama Conspiracy Theory – AOL News

Source: AOL NEWS

‘The Birthers’ Continue to Hound Obama

AOL
posted: 14 HOURS 18 MINUTES AGO
comments: 11534
filed under: Political News, The Obama Presidency
(March 1) – Ever since Barack Obama became a prominent political fixture in the country, he has encountered a large number of rumors and smears concerning him and his family.
There was the one rumor about him being a secret Muslim (he is a practicing Christian). And there was the one allegation his wife, Michelle, was caught on videotape using the word “whitey” (no such clip has ever surfaced).
Most of the charges were, for the most part, put to rest by vigorous responses from the Obama team during the campaign.
But one conspiracy theory lives on — despite overwhelming evidence debunking it.
Politico.com reports that the Birthers — a persistent group of conservatives who believe Obama is ineligible to be president because of alleged questions surrounding his birth status — continue to operate and thrive on the fringe.
“Some individuals and groups who are opposed to Obama’s presidency want an ‘acceptable’ reason to cite to convince other individuals and groups who might be on the fence to join in their way of thinking,” said Patricia Turner, who studies rumors at the University of California, Davis.
For the record, officials in Hawaii declared last October that there was no doubt Obama was born in the state. Officials verified that the health department holds the commander in chief’s original birth certificate.
But others are still undeterred.
A lawsuit filed in California by a group called the United States Justice Foundation seeks records from Occidental College, where Obama attended school for a period, in order to verify his nationality — and thus his presidential eligibility, WorldNetDaily reports.
Get the full story about the Birthers at Politico.com to find out about the group’s possible impact on the White House and weigh in, below, on the controversy.
Go to this site to add your vote in the polls about Obama’s Eligibility
==============================
Obama Eligiblility tops AOL NEWS – World Net Dailey

By Drew Zahn
© 2009 WorldNetDaily

 

Internet giant America Online headlined its daily news coverage today with a story and polls covering the “Birthers,” a group of people it describes as “fringe conservatives convinced that Barack Obama is ineligible to be president because of supposed questions surrounding his birth status.” 

 

The AOL coverage quotes an extensive Politico article and cites WorldNetDaily as the source for news on the United States Justice Foundation’s most recent attempt to demand Obama give legal evidence of his constitutional eligibility to serve as president.
 

Politico’s coverage of the questions that still linger over Obama’s birth, however, is far from kind. 

 

 

“Viewed as irrelevant by the White House , and as embarrassing by much of the Republican Party,” writes Politico blogger Ben Smith, “the subculture still thrives from the conservative website WorldNetDaily, which claims that some 300,000 people have signed a petition demanding more information on Obama’s birth.” 

 

Smith then states unequivocally that there is no basis for questioning Obama’s eligibility, that Obama “was in fact born in Honolulu in 1961” and that “long-settled law” resolves his dual citizenship at birth, another fount of legal questions surrounding the sitting president’s eligibility to serve in the Oval Office. Smith cites Hawaii officials who have testified that there do exist records – though unreleased to the public or the courts – verifying Obama’s American birth.

To add fuel to his argument, Smith then quotes from several sources, including radio host Michael Medved, to compile a list of descriptions for those he brands as conspiracy theorists, including the following: embarrassing, destructive, crazy, nutburger, demagogue, money-hungry, exploitative, irresponsible, filthy conservative imposters, the worst enemy of the conservative movement, weird, demented, sick, troubled and not suitable for civilized company.

Politico quotes David Emery, an urban legends writer for About.com, who suggests those that want to see proof of Obama’s eligibility are fueled by revulsion and rage.

“Thanks to the relentless agitation of the conspiracy theorists and the sheer quantity of hypothetical scenarios and legal arguments floating around,” Emery states, “they’ve clearly succeeded in planting unreasonable doubts in reasonable people’s minds.”

As WND has reported on several occasions, however, none of the so-called “evidence” of Obama’s constitutional eligibility produced thus far is beyond reasonable doubt nor as iron-clad as simply producing an authentic birth certificate, something everyday Americans are required to do regularly, but the president still refuses to do.

As Jerome Corsi, WND senior staff writer, explained, “The main reason doubts persist regarding Obama’s birth certificate is this question: If an original Hawaii-doctor-generated and Hawaii-hospital-released Obama birth certificate exists, why wouldn’t the senator and his campaign simply order the document released and end the controversy?

“That Obama has not ordered Hawaii officials to release the document,” Corsi writes, “leaves doubts as to whether an authentic Hawaii birth certificate exists for Obama.”

In its poll, AOL is asking readers: “Do you have any doubt about Obama’s eligibility to be president because of his birth status?”

With more than 250,000 responses, results were nearly split with 47 percent saying yes, and 53 percent saying no.

Readers were also asked, “How damaging is this conspiracy theory to Obama?”

With more than 178,00 responses, 52 percent said “Not at all,” 28 percent said “Somewhat,” and 20 percent said “Very.”

WND has reported on dozens of legal challenges to Obama’s status as a “natural born citizen.” The Constitution, Article 2, Section 1, states, “No Person except a natural born Citizen, or a Citizen of the United States, at the time of the Adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the Office of President.”

Some of the lawsuits question whether he was actually born in Hawaii, as he insists. If he was born out of the country, Obama’s American mother, the suits contend, was too young at the time of his birth to confer American citizenship to her son under the law at the time.

Other challenges have focused on Obama’s citizenship through his father, a Kenyan subject to the jurisdiction of the United Kingdom at the time of his birth, thus making him a dual citizen. The cases contend the framers of the Constitution excluded dual citizens from qualifying as natural born.

Where’s the proof Barack Obama was born in the U.S. or that he fulfills the “natural-born American” clause in the Constitution? If you still want to see it, join more than 300,000 others and sign up now!

Several of the cases have involved emergency appeals to the U.S. Supreme Court in which justices have declined even to hear arguments. Among the cases turned down without a hearing at the high court have been petitions by Philip Berg, Cort Wrotnowski, Leo Donofrio and Orly Taitz.

The USJF case mentioned in the AOL article was filed on behalf of presidential candidate Ambassador Alan Keyes and others.

As part of the case, a subpoena was served on Occidental College for its records. School officials immediately contacted lawyers for Obama and said the demand would have to be answered unless they intervened.

Obama’s lawyers then submitted a demand to the court arguing the case was moot because the election was over and the correct place to resolve such concerns was in Congress. The lawyers also alleged a variety of procedural errors.

In his response, Kreep pointed out that Obama’s lawyers failed for 27 days to notify the USJF of alleged procedural errors. He said the housing and academic records are of prime importance.

“From those records, statements as to whether MR. OBAMA is, indeed, a ‘natural born citizen’ may be found,” he said.

At the end of February, at least two active-duty soldiers serving in Iraq as well as a retired major general offered to be plaintiffs in a lawsuit challenging Obama’s eligibility.

WND reported earlier when 1st Lt. Scott Easterling confirmed to Orly Taitz that he wanted to be a plaintiff in the legal action she is preparing on behalf of members of the U.S. military, both active and retired. A second soldier who asked that his name be withheld for now became part of the action a day later.

Then retired Maj. Gen. Carroll D. Childers submitted a statement to Taitz and her DefendOurFreedoms.us website, agreeing to be a plaintiff in her pending action.

Taitz explained the issue isn’t resolved as many Obama supporters claim.

The “Certification of Live Birth” posted on the Internet actually doesn’t confirm a birth location, she said.

“[Hawaii] statute 138 allows foreign born children of HI residents to get HI [Certificates of Live Birth] and get them based on a statement of one relative only,” she said.

She also said Hawaiian officials, while they confirmed a birth certificate exists, did not exclude the possibility it was “one obtained for a foreign born child.”

She also cited Obama’s immigration to Indonesia at age 5, when he was considered an Indonesian citizen.

Although Obama officials have told WND all such allegations are “garbage,” here is a partial listing and status update for some of the cases over Obama’s eligibility:

  • New Jersey attorney Mario Apuzzo has filed a case on behalf of Charles Kerchner and others alleging Congress didn’t properly ascertain that Obama is qualified to hold the office of president.
  • Pennsylvania Democrat Philip Berg has three cases pending, including Berg vs. Obama in the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, a separate Berg vs. Obama which is under seal at the U.S. District Court level and Hollister vs. Soetoro a/k/a Obama, brought on behalf of a retired military member who could be facing recall to active duty by Obama.
  • Leo Donofrio of New Jersey filed a lawsuit claiming Obama’s dual citizenship disqualified him from serving as president. His case was considered in conference by the U.S. Supreme Court but denied a full hearing.
  • Cort Wrotnowski filed suit against Connecticut’s secretary of state, making a similar argument to Donofrio. His case was considered in conference by the U.S. Supreme Court, but was denied a full hearing.
  • Former presidential candidate Alan Keyes headlines a list of people filing a suit in California, in a case handled by the United States Justice Foundation, that asks the secretary of state to refuse to allow the state’s 55 Electoral College votes to be cast in the 2008 presidential election until Obama verifies his eligibility to hold the office. The case is pending, and lawyers are seeking the public’s support.
  • Chicago attorney Andy Martin sought legal action requiring Hawaii Gov. Linda Lingle to release Obama’s vital statistics record. The case was dismissed by Hawaii Circuit Court Judge Bert Ayabe.
  • Lt. Col. Donald Sullivan sought a temporary restraining order to stop the Electoral College vote in North Carolina until Barack Obama’s eligibility could be confirmed, alleging doubt about Obama’s citizenship. His case was denied.
  • In Ohio, David M. Neal sued to force the secretary of state to request documents from the Federal Elections Commission, the Democratic National Committee, the Ohio Democratic Party and Obama to show the presidential candidate was born in Hawaii. The case was denied.
  • In Washington state, Steven Marquis sued the secretary of state seeking a determination on Obama’s citizenship. The case was denied.
  • In Georgia, Rev. Tom Terry asked the state Supreme Court to authenticate Obama’s birth certificate. His request for an injunction against Georgia’s secretary of state was denied by Georgia Superior Court Judge Jerry W. Baxter.
  • California attorney Orly Taitz has brought a case, Lightfoot vs. Bowen, on behalf of Gail Lightfoot, the vice presidential candidate on the ballot with Ron Paul, four electors and two registered voters.

In addition, other cases cited on the RightSideofLife blog as raising questions about Obama’s eligibility include:

  • In Texas, Darrel Hunter vs. Obama later was dismissed.
  • In Ohio, Gordon Stamper vs. U.S. later was dismissed.
  • In Texas, Brockhausen vs. Andrade.
  • In Washington, L. Charles Cohen vs. Obama.
  • In Hawaii, Keyes vs. Lingle, dismissed.

WND senior reporter Jerome Corsi had gone to both Kenya and Hawaii prior to the election to investigate issues surrounding Obama’s birth. But his research and discoveries only raised more questions, the biggest being why, if there exists documentation of Obama’s eligibility, hasn’t it been released to quell the rumors.

Instead, a series of law firms have been hired on Obama’s behalf around the nation to prevent any public access to his birth certificate, passport records, college records and other documents.

If you’d like to sound off on this issue, please take part in the WorldNetDaily poll.

Sign the petition

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

Watch for Post later today after Markets are closed- My One Question is simply Mr. Obama why won’t you show us your Birth Certificate?- Good Investing! – jschulmansrHere is where I buy my Bullion, get one free gram of Gold just for opening an account! Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free just for opening account– just click here and then again on the Gold Bar!, no minimums – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.com

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

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

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

 

 

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A Challenge! What is Gold going To Do?

27 Friday Feb 2009

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

Here is where I buy my Bullion, get one free gram of Gold just for opening an account! Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online – Get 1 gram free just for opening account– just click here and then again on the Gold Bar!, no minimums – Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! – Bullion Vault.comNow the article by Brad…

 

 

 

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

 

Gold’s Devilish Advocate – Seeking Alpha

By: Brad Zigler of Hard Assets Investor.com

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

U.S. Monetary Inflation And Gold

U.S. Monetary Inflation And Gold

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

Dollar Interest And Gold Lease Rates

Dollar Interest And Gold Lease Rates

Gold Liquidity

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

Overbought Market

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

COMEX Futures Open Interest

COMEX Futures Open Interest

Speculative Aggressiveness

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

Essential Question

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

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

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

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

Comments:

 

 JudeJin

 

 

 

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

       

       

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

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

    On Feb 27 06:10 AM JudeJin wrote:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Thanks!

    Jeff Schulman Sr aka jschulmansr

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

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

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

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

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

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

    On Feb 27 09:25 AM craigdude wrote:

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

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

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

    On Feb 27 10:31 AM Alex Filonov wrote:

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Ex-Treasury official confirms gold

    suppression scheme

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

    5p ET Tuesday, February 24, 2009

    Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:

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

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

    * * *

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

    By Paul Craig Roberts
    Tuesday, February 24, 2009

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    —–

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

    * * *

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

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

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

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    Is the Glitter Fading?

    25 Wednesday Feb 2009

    Posted by jschulmansr in Austrian school, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, bull market, capitalism, China, Comex, commodities, Contrarian, Copper, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, deflation, depression, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, Doug Casey, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, Fed Fund Rate, Federal Deficit, federal reserve, Finance, financial, Forex, futures, futures markets, GDX, GLD, gold, Gold Bubble, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, Gold Price Manipulation, hard assets, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, IAU, India, inflation, Investing, investments, Jschulmansr, Junior Gold Miners, Latest News, majors, Make Money Investing, Market Bubble, market crash, Markets, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, monetization, oil, palladium, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, run on banks, safety, silver, silver miners, Silver Price Manipulation, spot, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, TARP, Technical Analysis, The Fed, Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3, Today, U.S., u.s. constitution, U.S. Dollar, volatility, warrants, XAU

    ≈ 1 Comment

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

         As I write Gold is down $3.00 at $966 (nearest futures month). It is still holding around the $960 to $965 support levels. However, I want to assert this, Gold is in a long term upward trend. The only thing that would change my thinking would be a close under the $880 which represents the bottom level of the long term uprward channel. We may however in the short term see a correction downward to even as low as $900 to $910. I will be watching very closely as this may be a “bear trap” in an upward market. One thing however I am somewhat of a contrarian. Last week almost every analyst under the sun was touting Gold as the ONLY investment. When I see that I get very nervous and know that a correction is about to happen.  For those who remember the day silver hit $50 oz., Walter Cronkite announced on his evening new that “It’s time for everyone to go out and buy some silver”! The very next day the silver market tanked like a lead balloon. So a little downside action here will be a good thing to shake out the “nervous nellies” and “johnny come lately’s” out of the market. Because I have seen it time and time again as soon as that happens “Kaboom” the market takes of and does not look back. I will be watching very carefully here and will let you (those who have subscribed to this blog and are following me on twitter), when I get out of the DGP trade. I got in at $890 oz and think a little patience here will pay off.  Given the current state of things Gold could still easily hit $1050 this week as well as have a price correction. Be sure to subscibe in the top right corner and/or follow me on twitter to be kept up to date…

         The best investment in my opinion right now is to continue accumulating the Junior and Mid-tier Gold and Precious Metals mining companies. Once again there are many still selling at or near book value levels. Remember to choose companies who currently have production or are about to start producing. One exception might be those companies who have made some big strikes,  are sitting on huge “proven” reserves, and have plenty of cash and financing to bring those reserves into production in the future. Another play is to investigate “Warrants” which give you the right to buy a stock at a given price for a certain timeframe. There are many out there which could give your portfolio a couple of “home runs” gains of 2-3000%. Either way do your own good due diligence, check the companies out, their balance sheets, prospectus/s  and consult your own financial advisors before making any trades.- Good Investing! -jschulmansr

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

    Panic=Gold – Seeking Alpha

    Source: Hard Assets Investors

    It’s axiomatic that gold has a role as safe haven for many investors. That this is largely a matter of collective psychology is irrelevant – it has worked for centuries, and it’s unlikely to stop working tomorrow.

     But lately, gold been more than a mere market hedge; it’s been a panic hedge.

    Current Gold

    Gold briefly nudged over the $1,000 mark to $1006.43 on Friday, February 20, before settling back down to close at $993.25. It was the first time since last March that gold crossed the insignificant but satisfyingly round $1k level. Technical geeks would point out that it’s still below the high of $1012.55 hit March 18th, but that’s splitting hairs.

    Of course, gold didn’t stay above $1,000/ounce for long last March; it quickly reversed course and traded down all year, before bottoming at $712.41 on November 20th. Since then, gold has risen 39.4%; it was up 13.4% in January alone.

    The last time I wrote about gold (Demanding Gold) was just before that November bottom. Back then I discussed the underlying demand for gold – because one of the great things about commodities is that ultimately, they’re always about supply and demand. And with the gold-bug’s most important supply and demand report out for 2008, it’s the perfect time to revisit the subject. (The full link to the World Gold Council’s Supply and Demand Statistics for Q4 and Full Year 2008 report is here.)

    Looking At Demand

    Gold demand can be broken into three main areas of interest – jewellery, which accounted for roughly 58% of identifiable demand in 2008, industrial and dentistry demand, and finally identifiable investment demand.

    On the whole, gold saw demand grow 4% from 2007 to 2008, but the picture is a bit more complex than just that.

    Not everything was rosy for gold in 2008. As we predicted, jewellery demand was down significantly. In 2007 around 68% of gold demand was attributed to jewellery consumption. In 2008, that number dropped to 58%.

    At the end of December, The World Gold Council released a report entitled “What Women Want: Global Discretionary Spending Report 2008“. In it, the WGC details the values and significance different countries attribute to gold jewellery and why people buy it. One new thing the study uncovered is that gold jewellery is now competing with items such as cell phones and other everyday items for discretionary spending.

    The report also states that “confidence that gold will hold its value has waned,” reflecting in part the volatility gold prices have experienced in the past year. With gold rising and falling by 30% in a single year, it’s no wonder people are feeling less comfortable with it as a store of value.

    Demand on the jewelry front appears to be price elastic. In India, the largest consumer of gold jewellery, demand in the fourth quarter more than doubled compared to Q4 of 2007. While this would seem to buck the year-long numbers, it’s likely due to the fact that lower gold prices occurred precisely at the time of the Diwali festival – a peak gold-buying time in India. In 2007, gold prices were high during the festival, which depressed demand. For the full year of 2008, jewellery demand in India dropped 15%.

    China was one of the only countries that posted an increase in demand for jewellery, up 8% from 2007. Much of this demand was for 24-karat jewelry, which commonly implies jewellery purchases that are doubling as investments.

    The Big Stick: Gold Bugs

    According to the World Gold Council report, gold demand for investment rose from 663.7 tonnes in 2007 to 1090.7 tonnes in 2008 – a somewhat staggering year-on-year increase of 64.3%. Retail investment – things like bar hoarding, official coins, medals/imitation coins and other kinds of retail investment – almost doubled, going from 410.3 tonnes in 2007 to 769.3 tonnes in 2008. That gives some credence to the wide scale anecdotal evidence throughout the year that gold coins were virtually impossible to obtain in many countries.

    Exchange-traded funds and similar products also showed a large increase, from 253.3 tonnes to 321.4 tonnes (a 26.9% increase). This trend has continued into 2009. The SPDR Gold ETF (NYSE: GLD) – the largest physical gold trust – now has 1,028.98 tonnes in its vaults. This is a trust that started 2009 with 780.23 tonnes, meaning its gold horde has risen 31.9% in less than two months. To put that in perspective, 249 tonnes is over 10% of the total amount of gold mined in all of 2008. This acceleration happened almost entirely in a dramatic surge mid-February.

    Net-net, however, if you offset the huge rush in gold investments with the significant drop in jewelry demand, the net gain in tonnage terms was just 4%.

    There is, however, another way to look at things. When viewed through the (occasionally depressing) lens of the dollar, gold demand seems endless:

    Gold Supply in Flux

    With the demand part of the picture in hand, it’s time to turn to supply. The third quarter of 2008 saw a huge supply deficit with demand far outreaching supply. In the fourth quarter, supply rose 19%, almost entirely due to an increase in gold scrap. Yes, that’s right: Those late night commercials offering to buy your old tangled gold necklaces were on to something, and people were selling.

    Scrap sales for 2008 ended up 17% higher than 2007, and that along with slightly higher total mine supply just about offset lower central banks sales so that in the end, 2008 ended the year with only 1% less total supply than 2007 – practically even.

    The moral of the story is simple: supply and demand remain incontrovertible laws. The unbelievable demand vs. the stagnant (mine) and dwindling (central bank) supply created a vacuum, and a new source came on line to fill the need. Thus, at least indirectly, gold went from the scrap heap into brand new shiny gold coins, just when the market needed them the most.

    Which brings up the question: how long can consumers fill their own demand through scrap? And what price level is needed to support the tremendous scrap levels already in place?

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

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

     Five Weeks of Silver Backwardation – Seeking Alpha

    By: Trace Mayer of Run to Gold.com

    During an interview with Contrary Investors Cafe on 24 February 2009 I discussed both gold backwardation and silver backwardation. After the interview I was asked why more commentators are not discussing this issue. I do not know.

    Regarding money there are two competing views: (1) money is determined by the market or (2) chartalism which asserts that ‘money is a creature of law.’ Governments can only manage money if they create it. Obviously, the market determines money because money existed before governments were created.

    Regarding gold there are two competing paradigms: (1) gold is a commodity and (2) gold is money. Paradigm (1) asserts that gold is a hedge against inflation and there is no monetary demand for gold. On the other hand, paradigm (2) asserts that gold is a hedge against currency collapse and the primary demand for gold is monetary. I subscribe to the second paradigm and assert that at all times and in all circumstances gold remains money.

    WHAT IS SILVER’S ROLE

    Under which paradigm does silver fall? Is silver a commodity or is silver money? For a commodity to be money its primary demand must be monetary.

    Like gold, for thousands of years silver functioned as money in the market. The term dollar, as used in Article 1 Section 9 Clause 1 and the Seventh Amendment of the US Constitution, is defined as 371.25 grains of fine silver under Section 9 of the Coinage Act of 1792. Governments stockpiled billions and billions of ounces. However, on 24 June 1968 the United States government defaulted on their silver certificates. Over the decades, silver, like gold, has been demonetized in ordinary daily transactions. Supposedly there are large stockpiles of gold in central bank vaults. Unlike gold there are no reported large above ground stockpiles of silver stashed in central bank vaults. Additionally, a large portion of silver demand is industrial as it is used in cell phones, refrigerators, dental equipment, computers, etc.

    Therefore, it appears that silver is confused about its role. In other words, silver functions as a commodity and as quasi-money.

    FIVE WEEKS OF SILVER BACKWARDATION

    While similar, there are differences between future and forward contracts. For example, future contracts are traded on exchanges, use margin and are marked to market daily. In contrast, forward contracts are generally traded over-the-counter (OTC derivatives) and are not marked to market. Therefore, forward contracts are subject to greater counter-party risk than future contracts.

    Because the primary reason backwardation arises is counter-party risk and because forward contracts are impregnated with greater counter-party risk than future contracts, therefore it is highly likely that backwardation would appear in the forwards markets before the futures markets.

    This is precisely what has happened. While the COMEX silver futures contract have not been in backwardation the LBMA Silver Forward Mid Rates have been in backwardation for five consecutive weeks. Of particular interest is the 6 month contract.

    SO WHAT?

    What does all this mean? Well, I think the backwardation reflects the market’s uncertainty of silver’s role as money. The chronic silver backwardation began on 8 December 2009, the same day I wrote about gold in backwardation, and silver was priced about $9.60. Currently silver is trading about $13.82. Predictably, the gold/silver ratio is narrowing. If the backwardation persists it will be interesting to see if silver’s price in illusory FRN$ continues rising.

    In my opinion, as the great credit contraction grinds on and intensifies, the commodity silver will reassert itself as money and eventually currency. As I mentioned during the interview with Contrary Investors Cafe what would be really interesting is if the central banks decide to start hoarding silver!

    In the meantime it may behoove those who are bullish towards silver to increase the pressure on physical silver delivery. For example, I purchased some beautiful Austrian philharmonics at the Cambridge House Investment Conference and Silver Summit over the weekend. The beautiful coin cost $20 which was an amazing $5.50 over spot.

    While there are cheaper ways to purchase physical silver bullion, like GoldMoney, these huge premiums over spot beg the question: What is the real silver price? With the specter of counter-party risk driving silver into backwardation if there is a failure to deliver then it will likely cause the silver price to shift from the COMEX just like a failure to deliver would cause the gold price to shift from the COMEX.

    Bottom line: Do not get caught with your paradigms down!

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

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    Doug Casey: What to Do in “The Greater Depression” — Seeking Alpha

    Source: The Gold Report

     

    Bullion and oil appear in the lineup of power players that Doug Casey thinks investors can count on as the world slips deeper and deeper into what he calls the “Greater Depression.” Despite the raging economic storm and Doug’s doubts that Western civilization’s governments will take the actions needed to quell it, though, the Chairman of Casey Research is nowhere close to calling the game. In fact, he sees silver lining in the clouds of crisis—opportunity—and expresses optimism that technological advances, coupled with capital rebuilding once over-consumption runs its course, will prevail eventually. The Gold Report caught up with the peripatetic author, publisher and professional international investor between polo matches in New Zealand, one of several nation-states he calls home from time to time.

     

    The Gold Report: You’ve been discussing what you’re calling “crisis and opportunity,” and in fact have a summit by that same name coming up in Las Vegas next month. Could you give us a high-level overview of what you foresee?

    Doug Casey: We’ve definitely entered what I describe as the Greater Depression. It’s not coming; it’s here. It’s going to get much, much worse as far as I’m concerned and unfortunately, it’s going to last a long time. It doesn’t have to last a long time, but the root cause is government intervention in the economy and everything they’re doing now is not just the wrong thing, it’s the opposite of what they should be doing. It’s almost perverse.

    The distortions and misallocations of capital and the uneconomic patterns of production and consumption that have been going on for over a generation need to be liquidated and changed, but everything the government’s doing is trying to maintain these patterns. So it’s going to be horrible. In addition, the government is necessarily directing more power toward itself with all of its actions. If I were you, I’d rig for stormy running for a good long time.

    TGR: By “a long time,” do you mean a couple of years, a decade, a generation?

    DC: This is, in some ways, uncharted territory. Let me say that for the long run I’m very optimistic. Why? Two things act as the mainsprings of progress. Number one is technology and that’s going to keep advancing, so that’s very good. Second is capital and savings. Individuals will solve their own problems and, therefore, they will stop consuming more than they produce, which is what they’ve been doing for years, and they’ll again start producing more than they consume. The difference is savings; that builds capital.

    So technology and capital are going to solve the depression. But the government can do all kinds of stupid things to make it worse. Look at the Soviet Union. They suffered a depression that lasted 70 years from its founding. Look at China. The whole reign of Mao was one long economic depression. That could certainly happen in the U.S., too, where the government misallocates capital in such a way that technology doesn’t advance as it could and people can’t build individual capital the way they would. I’m optimistic, but anything can happen.

    TGR: But didn’t China and the Soviet Union have governmental structures very different from those in Western Europe and the U.S., and those structures allowed for more intervention? Are you projecting that we might slip into an era where Western civilization will allow their government to run themselves like the Soviet Union and China did?

    DC: It seems to be going in that direction. Of course, Europe is going to be hurt much worse than the U.S. Europeans are much more heavily taxed and much more heavily regulated. The average European is much more reliant upon the state psychologically as well as economically. So it’s all over for Europe and this doesn’t even count the problems that they’re going to have in the continuing war against Islam, which are much more serious for Europe than they are for the U.S. So, no, Europe is fated to be nothing but a source of houseboys and maids for the Chinese in the next generation.

    TGR: So do you think that societies in Western Europe—and even the U.S.—will allow themselves to be governed in the same fashion as the Soviet Union and China were during their depressions?

    DC: Oh, totally. I don’t see why that would not be the case. Even Newsweek says we’re all socialists now. That seems to be the reigning ideology. In addition, psychologically, the average American—just like the average European—looks to the government to solve things. This is very bad. Most people are unaware that Homeland Security, which is one agency that should be abolished post-haste, is building a 400-acre campus in southeast Washington, D.C., where initially they’re going to put 25,000 employees. That’s as many as the Pentagon has and with 400 acres, Homeland Security has a lot more room to grow. Ironically, the property is at the site of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital, the first federal insane asylum in the United States. Once a bureaucracy has a piece of real estate and builds buildings, it’s game over. They’re just going to accrete and grow and grow, so that’s one indication. The trend is clearly in motion.

    It’s all over for the U.S. In fact, let me say this. America doesn’t exist anymore. What is left is not even these United States. That was decided in the 1860s. It’s the United States. America, which is basically an idea, a concept, is dead and gone. The United States is just another of 200 awful little nation-states that have spread across the face of the earth like a skin disease. There’s no longer any difference that I can tell between the U.S. and any other country.

    TGR: How would you describe the concept that America was based on that is now gone? And is there another country in the world embracing that concept? Will there be a new America?

    DC: No, there is no other place. I’ve been to 175 countries and lived in 12. My feeling is that the best thing that you can do is set your life up so that you’re not to be considered the property of any one government. You might have a passport or several passports and, therefore, that government thinks they own you. But if you don’t spend time in a country, practically speaking, there’s nothing they can do about it.

    So, no, there is no real haven for freedom in the world today. The best you can do is go where the governments are so unorganized that they can’t control you effectively. That’s one reason I like to spend time in Argentina. They have an incredibly stupid government, but they’re also very inefficient and ineffective. So it’s wonderful as a place to live. I also spend time in Uruguay, because it’s a tiny little country with no ambitions to conquer the world. The nice thing about New Zealand, where I am now, is that it’s a small country, only 4 million people, lots of open land. It’s got some severe problems, but it’s pleasant. I think the U.S. is going to be the epicenter of a lot of problems in the years to come.

    TGR: Few of our readers are probably in positions where they could live in 12 different countries, but they have amassed assets here in the United States. What advice would you give them to safeguard those assets?

    DC: The key is to remember that we’re going to have a long and deep depression, so most things that worked well over the last 20 years are unlikely to work well in the future. I’d been predicting the real estate collapse for a long time. It’s still got a way to go, too, because a lot of real estate debt remains that has to be liquidated. There’s a lot of leverage out there and there’s been a huge amount of overbuilding. So it’s far too early to get into real estate, at least in North America or Europe.

    It’s also way too early to get into the general stock market, for all kinds of reasons. Dividend yields are still extremely low. Earnings are going to collapse. Government bonds are perhaps the worst single thing to be in, because with the government printing up money literally by the bushel basket, the dollar is going to start losing value radically and interest rates are going to start going up radically at some point. So you have to rule out most stocks.

    I’m afraid that the most intelligent thing you can do is to own a lot of gold, preferably gold coins in your own possession. And I think speculation in gold stocks makes sense at this point, because gold stocks are about as cheap as they’ve ever been relative to other assets, really, in history. Now is an excellent time to do that as well. But that’s in terms of speculation.

    Investment risk is tough enough, but the biggest problem is political risk. That’s what you have to watch out for. That means you have to diversify internationally. This is harder for most people, harder psychologically, and it takes more assets to make international diversification viable. But if you’re in a position to do it, it’s the most important thing you can do.

    TGR: Since you mentioned having coins in your own possession, should we assume you’re not a big fan of the ETFs or some of these other paper gold promises, if you will?

    DC: ETFs are okay for the convenience that they offer and for significant amounts of money, but gold coins should be first on your list, no question about that. If you’re only talking about $50,000 or $100,000, or $200,000, coins are fine to keep in your own possession. They won’t take up much room and you can put them in some safe place (which, incidentally, is not a bank safe deposit box).

    TGR: Are you recommending putting all of your investment in gold into the bullion or are you also recommending some portion in producing junior and explorations?

    DC: Both, but look at the stocks as being speculative. Most of your money should be in gold with a bit of silver, too. Silver is basically an industrial metal, but it has monetary characteristics. Now is the time to be very overweight in the metals and I think owning gold stocks is a good idea. They’re very cheap.

    TGR: Anything else investors can do to preserve whatever may remain of their wealth?

    DC: Owning real estate in some foreign countries is a very good idea—from a lifestyle point of view, an asset diversification point of view, and a possible capital gains point of view, too. They can’t make you repatriate foreign real estate. Having some U.S. dollar cash while we’re going through this deflationary period is very wise as well, but that’s not going to last. Eventually the U.S. dollar is going to reach its intrinsic value.

    TGR: Not that you have a crystal ball, but how would you see the rest of ’09 playing out?

    DC: Nothing goes straight up or straight down, but it seems that ’09 is going to see much higher gold prices and much lower stock prices and much lower bond prices, too. But remember, the worst is yet to come.

    You haven’t heard an awful lot about people losing their pensions yet, but that’s going to happen because what are pensions invested in? They’re mostly invested in stocks and bonds and commercial real estate. All three of those things are disaster areas, and bonds are the big disaster area yet to come. So I think it’s going to be nothing but bad news in 2009. What happened in 2008 was just an overture to what I think is going to happen in ’09 and ’10.

    TGR: Even into 2010?

    DC: Yes. This isn’t going to be cured overnight, mainly because of what the government’s doing. As I said, it’s perversely exactly the opposite of what they should be doing, which is abolishing all the agencies and freeing up the economy. They’re passing lots of new regulations, they’re going to have to raise lots of taxes eventually, and they’re inflating the currency. So it has to last, at least into 2010. It’s going to be quite dismal, actually.

    TGR: And what happens with the unfunded Medicare liabilities?

    DC: They’re not going to be funded. They’re going to be defaulted on and, actually, that’s the best thing that could happen. That’s one of the things that should be done now; the U.S. government should default on its debt. This is shocking for people to hear, but it wouldn’t be the first time the U.S. government has done that. It did that almost at its founding in continental days.

    This debt represents a tax liability that’s being foisted off on the next generations who have no moral obligation to pay and should not pay. I think as an ethical point, the U.S. should default on this debt. It’s impossible to pay it back, and it won’t be paid back. It’s more honest to acknowledge that bankruptcy now as opposed to pretend it’s going to be paid back. Defaulting even might forestall runaway inflation in the dollar, which would be a catastrophe of the first order. So it’s the smart and moral thing to do, and it’s going to happen eventually anyway. All the real wealth will still be here; a lot of it will just change ownership. The big losers will be those who lent to the State, thereby enabling its depredations, and they deserve to be punished.

    But even a default tomorrow will do no good unless you put the U.S. government into reverse and disband all of these ridiculous, destructive agencies that have grown like a cancer for years. Taxes should be cut 50% to start with, just out of hand. And the defense establishment—it’s a misnomer; it’s not defense at all but rather foments wars around the world—should be cut hugely. Not with a butcher knife; but a chain saw. But none of this is going to happen; in fact, just the opposite. That’s why I’m so pessimistic now that the tipping point’s finally been reached.

    TGR: Are we at the tipping point?

    DC: Yes, we’ve absolutely gone over the edge. The consumer is no longer in a position to consume. Everybody is going to cut consumption to the bone and hopefully find something to produce instead. It would be better for people to start viewing themselves as producers than consumers. That would be a step in the right direction to get them psychologically more in line with reality.

    TGR: In last fall’s meltdown, gold held up, but the stocks didn’t. Quite a few producers and soon-to-be producers, and some companies making discoveries, seem to have bottomed out in November and December. But worry persists in the market. Suppose another shoe drops or another black swan appears? Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters) and others have been talking about the Dow going down to 5,000. What would that do to the gold stocks?

    DC: Gold stocks are also stocks, and the best environment for gold stocks historically has always been when both gold and the stock market are going up. But since the last gold stock bull market came to an end, I think it’s entirely possible to see a bubble develop in gold stocks with all the money being created. I certainly hope so. I’m actually optimistic for gold stocks just because they’re so cheap relative to everything else.

    TGR: They have been beaten down.

    DC: Yes. And that fact, along with the waves of money being printed around the world and the much higher gold prices we are going to see, could cause a speculative mania to develop in the gold stocks. Nobody’s even thinking about that possibility right now, because they’re so battered. But this is the time to get into the right ones because it’s likely to happen in the future.

    TGR: The ’29 crash—which was really the preamble, because ’30, ’31, ’32 and ’33 were certainly bigger—is when gold stocks such as Homestake did their best. How do you see that playing out this time around? Is it different this time or do you expect a similar pattern?

    DC: You know what they say, “History doesn’t repeat itself, but it rhymes.” I think that, first of all, the gold mining industry is a much worse industry now than it’s ever been in the past, because just as all the easily defined light sweet oil basically has been discovered, all the easy-to-find high-grade gold basically has been discovered. Most mines that are going into production are low-grade, which means that you have to move a lot of dirt, which means that they’re much more capital-intensive than in the past. So gold mining’s a worse industry from that point of view.

    Also, politically speaking, with the rise of the green movement, there are people who don’t want any oil burned, any dirt moved, any trees cut. They don’t want to see anything happen. This makes it much harder to do gold from a permitting and political point of view. We’re in a much higher tax environment than in the past. So it’s a tough industry. It really is. It’s just a 19th century choo-choo train type of industry that interests me only as a speculative vehicle. You’ll notice that gold went from lows of about $300 to highs of about $900 and none of these gold companies are making any money because their costs actually went up faster than the price of gold. So I’m not saying gold mining is a great business. It’s not. It’s a crappy business. Still, we could have a bubble in the stocks. I’m hoping we do.

    TGR: Aren’t we going to see a change in that in ’09? Oil, which is one of the large components of that cost, has come down dramatically. A lot of these producers must be locking in oil at these lower prices. Won’t that translate into year-over-year earnings increases for the gold producers?

    DC: That’s possible. The producers actually may show increases for the next couple of years. I don’t doubt that. But I don’t think oil will stay where it is. I think oil’s eventually headed back to $150 a barrel or more.

    TGR: So why wouldn’t you own oil as well as gold?

    DC: It’s a good idea, but we weren’t really talking about oil. I’d say that oil is a good thing to own. Oil is a real buy now. It’s as good a buy at $40 as gold is at $900 right now. Maybe a better buy; who knows?

    TGR: If we go into worldwide depression, will oil continue to be a good buy or will it self-regulate around this $40 a barrel?

    DC: I am bullish on oil. Although I’m philosophically not very sympathetic to the peak oil theory, I think it’s a geological fact. Also, China and India and the other developing parts of the world don’t use a whole lot of oil now. As they develop, they will to want—and almost need—to use a lot more oil. That’s going to keep pressure up on the demand side. But the supply side actually finally is constrained, so it’s going to mean higher prices. In a depression-type environment, U.S. and Western oil consumption could drop a lot, but the third world would take up most of that slack. So I have to be bullish on oil.

    TGR: Are you bullish on any other sectors or commodities?

    DC: I’m bullish on agricultural commodities. They ran way up last year and then collapsed again. I think a good case can be made that most of the soft commodities are quite cheap and will go higher, so I’d look at those, too. I think gold definitely, oil in the years to come has the potential to go much, much higher, and the agricultural commodities have a lot of potential.

    TGR: Gold appears to be uncoupling from the dollar. Historically, when the dollar was strong, gold would be weak. But we’ve had a couple of recent instances in which both the dollar and gold have been strong. Obviously, we’ve seen a total decoupling of gold from oil. It used to be when oil was running, gold was running and vice versa, but that no longer seems to be the case. Is that just an old wives’ tale or is something going on?

    DC: I’ve never seen any necessary relationship between gold and oil, just like there’s no necessary relationship between rice and natural gas, or nickel and soybeans. All these commodities tend to move together, all the currencies tend to move together and stock markets tend to move together, but they all have their own dynamics. I think it makes sense to compare the relative prices of various commodities and see what may be cheap or dear relative to other things based on the fundamentals.

    On any given day, somebody may have to buy or somebody may have to sell a huge amount of almost anything. It’s unpredictable and you can’t tell what constraints are out there in the market. I don’t even pay attention to day-to-day fluctuations because they’re just random noise. I watch the big trend. It’s been shown that if you just made one correct trade and stuck with it at the beginning of every decade for the last four decades, you would have realized something like 1,000 times on your money. To me, this is the proper approach to the markets, not to try to second-guess from day-to-day what’s going to happen. That’s foolish because you get chewed up with commissions and bid-ask spreads and double-thinking your own psychology and so forth.

    I really just like to look at long-term trends. In terms of long-term trends, you’ve got to be long gold, long silver, long oil; you’ve got to be short bonds. I think that’s really all you need to know. The other things we mentioned such as agricultural commodities and so forth are worthy of attention. But, as I said, I’m not a day-to-day trader. I think that’s very foolish.

    TGR: Are these the themes that you and your group of speakers will focus on in Las Vegas?

    DC: They are. I certainly want to invite anybody who reads this interview to join us. We put on very small, very classy seminars. They’re not gigantic mob scenes, so it’s possible to get to know individual speakers and fellow attendees in a very collegial atmosphere. I think it’s something that anybody who’s seriously interested in these kinds of things should consider.

    The Casey Research Crisis & Opportunity Summit, will be held March 20 – 22, 2009, at the Four Seasons Resort in Las Vegas.

    A citizen of the world in more ways than most of us can imagine, Doug Casey, Chairman of Casey Research, LLC, is the international investor personified. He’s spent substantial time in about 200 different countries so far in his lifetime, living in 12 of them (currently New Zealand and Argentina). And Doug’s the one who literally wrote the book on crisis investing. In fact, he’s done it twice. After The International Man: The Complete Guidebook to the World’s Last Frontiers in 1976, Doug came out with Crisis Investing: Opportunities and Profits in the Coming Great Depression in 1979. His sequel to this groundbreaking book, which anticipated the collapse of the savings-and-loan industry and rewarded readers who followed his recommendations with spectacular returns, came in 1993, with Crisis Investing for the Rest of the Nineties. In between, his Strategic Investing: How to Profit from the Coming Inflationary Depression (Simon & Shuster, 1982) broke records for the largest advance ever paid for a financial book. Bill Bonner (The Daily Reckoning) describes Doug as “smart, hard-working, and extremely knowledgeable” with “an instinct about investments that has made him and many of those around him very rich.”

     Doug, who now spends more time as an expatriate than he does on American soil, has appeared on NBC News, CNN and National Public Radio. He’s been a guest of David Letterman, Larry King, Merv Griffin, Charlie Rose, Phil Donahue, Regis Philbin and Maury Povich. He’s been the topic of numerous features in periodicals such as Time, Forbes, People, US, Barron’s and the Washington Post – not to mention countless articles he’s written for his own various websites, publications and subscribers.

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

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

    That’s all for Today- Enjoy! jschulmansr

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

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

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

     

     

     

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    Are you going to let them do this?

    23 Monday Feb 2009

    Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, Austrian school, Bailout News, banking crisis, banks, bear market, capitalism, Comex, commodities, Copper, Credit Default, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, deflation, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, economy, Fed Fund Rate, Federal Deficit, federal reserve, Finance, financial, follow the news, Forex, Fundamental Analysis, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, Gold Price Manipulation, inflation, Investing, investments, Junior Gold Miners, Latest News, Make Money Investing, manipulation, market crash, Markets, monetization, palladium, physical gold, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, run on banks, Short Bonds, silver, silver miners, Silver Price Manipulation, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, TARP, Technical Analysis, Ted Bultler, The Fed, U.S., U.S. Dollar, XAU

    ≈ Comments Off on Are you going to let them do this?

    As I write there is selling pressure or maybe price manipulation on the gold market right now. Are we going to let them do this? Especially with everything else in the markets i.e. the dollar, banks, stock markets in chaos and dissarray? The best way to fight back is to keep buying gold especially on Comex and taking delivery. That would catch them and for once the little guy wins! The Gold price is holding steady at $990 oz after being tested early this morning, Gold bounced right off the $975 – $977 support and is now holding steady. Today’s articles do talk about the manipulation going on in the Gold and Silver markets. To date the largest short positions and majority of the short interest on Comex consists of a few banks who went short in the $750 to $950 range ( I know a large spread but they have been cost averaging their positions). If all the longs would start taking possesion of their gold and silver off of Comex, I am telling you this, we would have one of the largest “Short Squeezes” in history! – Good Investing! -jschulmansr

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

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

     

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

    This is an older article which explains the manipulations which have been going on. The same banks still hold teir positions of as last published Comex reports.– jschulmansr

    Chris Powell: Gold and Silver Market Manipulation Update – Gold Anti Trust Action Committe GATA

    Submitted by cpowell on Fri, 2008-11-14 20:51. Section: Essays

    Good afternoon and thank you for being here. It’s an honor to get to speak with so many interested in silver, especially at such an interesting time in history. I’m going to ramble a bit, and try not to get too detailed and save some time for questions where you can get specific.

    Remarks by Chris Powell, Secretary/Treasurer
    Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
    New Orleans Investment Conference
    New Orleans Marriott Hotel
    Thursday, November 13, 2008

    A year ago it was still a struggle to persuade some people that the gold and silver markets were being manipulated by Western central banks. Now, after months of financial turmoil around the world and constant central bank intervention in the markets, to believe that the gold and silver markets are not being manipulated by central banks you have to believe that those markets are the only markets not being so manipulated.

    Why are the gold and silver markets manipulated by governments and the financial houses that serve as their agents? Because gold and silver are competitive currencies and because their value greatly influences interest rates, which ordinarily governments like to keep low. 

     Last year at this conference I reviewed in detail the official documentations and admissions of the gold price suppression scheme. Those documentations and admissions remain posted at GATA’s Internet site:

    http://www.gata.org/node/5654 

    Today I’d like to review some evidence that has turned up more recently, as well as some related developments.

    Maybe most interesting have been the studies of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission market reports done by silver market analyst Ted Butler and by Gene Arensberg, a market analyst for ResourceInvestor.com. Butler and Arensberg reported that as of August just two banks held more than 60 percent of the short positions in silver on the New York Commodities Exchange. This was an unprecedented and seemingly illegal concentrated short position, and it implied that the smashing down of silver was very much a manipulation by one or two very rich and powerful market participants, a destruction of the free market. Complaints about this concentrated short position prompted the CFTC to undertake still another investigation of the silver market, this time by a different division of the commission, its enforcement division. Further, CFTC Commissioner Bart Chilton has told GATA that the agency is investigating the gold market as well.

    This week Arensberg found that the CFTC’s latest report shows that just three or fewer banks now hold half the short positions in gold on the Comex and more than 80 percent of the silver short positions.

    Also this week Butler obtained a copy of a letter from the CFTC to U.S. Rep. Gary G. Miller, R-California, that sought to explain the concentrated short position in silver. The CFTC’s letter implied that this extreme short position resulted from JPMorganChase’s acquisition of Bear Stearns in March. If we construe the CFTC’s letter correctly, that would make MorganChase the big short in silver now and imply that, in financially underwriting MorganChase’s acquisition of Bear Stearns, the Federal Reserve was also underwriting MorganChase’s assumption of that short position in silver.

    Of course MorganChase was also the bullion banker to Barrick Gold, the biggest gold shorter over the last decade. In 2003 Barrick told U.S. District Court Judge Helen Berrigan right here in New Orleans that, in shorting gold, Barrick had become the agent of the central banks in regulating the gold market and thus should share their sovereign immunity against lawsuits.

    MorganChase is also the world’s biggest issuer of interest-rate derivatives, instruments by which interest rates are suppressed.

    All this causes GATA to believe that MorganChase is in effect an agency of the U.S. government, or rather, perhaps, that the U.S. government is an agency of MorganChase. In any case, MorganChase has had an intimate relationship with the U.S. government since the days of J. Pierpont Morgan himself.

    Incidentally, Jean Strouse’s 1999 biography of Morgan, which won the Bancroft Prize for American History and Diplomacy, recounts that Morgan’s first big triumph in finance was to corner the gold market in New York in 1863 during the Civil War. Nearly 150 years later there really may be nothing new under the sun.

    Also lately raising suspicion about surreptitious government intervention in the precious metals markets has been the refusal of the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department to release to GATA hundreds of pages of government documents about the disposition of the U.S. gold reserve. The Fed has told GATA’s lawyers that the documents are being withheld in part because their release might compromise information that is proprietary to private companies. Why anything about the U.S. gold reserve should be considered proprietary to anyone is beyond those of us at GATA — unless, of course, the reserve is being used to manipulate markets surreptitiously.

    But we at GATA do not feel picked on by the Fed and the Treasury. For the Fed and the Treasury seem to be treating everybody as if the disposition of public assets is nobody’s business but Wall Street’s. This week Bloomberg News Service reported that the Federal Reserve is refusing to disclose how much it has lent to particular banks and exactly what sort of collateral the Fed has accepted for those loans, which have reached hundreds of billions of dollars. For example, is the Fed valuing the same kind of collateral from different borrowers the same way, and lending against it at the same rate? Or is the Fed giving advantages to certain borrowers and not others, depending on their political influence and straitened circumstances? That is, are the Fed and the Treasury Department now being operated as the greatest patronage and market-rigging schemes in history? The government is concealing the evidence.

    Since we last gathered here in New Orleans many of us been cowering under the prospect of more official-sector gold sales, particularly gold sales by the International Monetary Fund, which has approved a plan of selling gold to raise cash to replace the income it is no longer getting from interest on loans to developing countries. But despite more than a year of loud talk about it, the IMF has not sold any gold yet, and GATA suspects that the IMF really does not have the 3,200 tonnes it says it has, only a tenuous claim on the gold reserves of its member nations, particularly the United States, which has a veto on any IMF gold sales and has not approved any yet.

    Back in April I tried to engage the IMF in a dialogue about its gold and I had an exchange by e-mail with an IMF publicist, Conny Lotze.

    My first question was: “Your Internet site says the IMF holds 3,217 metric tons of gold ‘at designated depositories.’ Which depositories are these?”

    Conny Lotze of the IMF replied, but not specifically. She wrote: “The fund’s gold is distributed across a number of official depositories,” adding that the IMF’s rules designate the United States, Britain, France, and India as depositories.

    My second question was: “If you’d prefer not to identify the depositories for security reasons, could you at least identify the national and private custodians of the IMF’s gold and the amounts of IMF gold held by each?”

    Conny Lotze replied, again incompletely: “All of the designated depositories are official.”

    My third question was: “Is the IMF’s gold at these depositories allocated — that is, specifically identified as belonging to the IMF — or is it merged with other gold in storage at these depositories?”

    Conny Lotze replied, still not very specifically: “The fund’s gold is properly accounted for at all its depositories.”

    My fourth question was: “Do the IMF’s member countries count the IMF’s gold as part of their own national reserves, or do they count and identify the IMF’s gold separately?”

    Conny Lotze replied a bit ambiguously: “Members do not include IMF gold within their reserves because it is an asset of the IMF. Members include their reserve position in the fund [the IMF] in their international reserves.”

    This sounded to me as if the IMF members are still counting as their own the gold that supposedly belongs to the IMF — that the IMF members are just listing the gold assets in another column on their own books.

    My fifth question was: “Does the IMF have assurances from the depositories that its gold is not leased or swapped or otherwise encumbered? If so, what are these assurances?”

    Conny Lotze replied: “Under the fund’s Articles of Agreement it is not authorized to engage in these transactions in gold.”

    But I had not asked if the IMF itself was swapping or leasing gold. I had asked whether the custodians of the IMF’s gold were swapping or leasing it.

    This prompted me to raise one more question for Conny Lotze. I wrote her: “Is there any audit of the IMF’s gold that is available to the public? I ask because, if the amount of IMF gold held by each depository nation is not public information, there doesn’t seem to be much documentation for the IMF’s gold, nor any documentation for the assurance that its custody is just fine. Without any details or documentation, the IMF’s answer seems to be simply that it should be trusted — that it has the gold it says it has, somewhere.”

    And Conny Lotze … well, she never wrote back to me again. After all, I had uttered the dirtiest word in government service: A-U-D-I-T.

    That the International Monetary Fund refuses to account for the gold it claims to have should be potential news for the financial media. It would be nice if the financial media pursued that issue before their next attempt to scare the gold market with stories about IMF gold sales.

    But even if such sales by the IMF should be undertaken, they might not be much for gold investors to worry about. For a month ago I happened to attend in New York City the annual fall dinner of the Committee for Monetary Research and Education, and it had an unscheduled speaker, Columbia University Professor Robert Mundell, who, as you may recall, won the Nobel Prize in economics in 1999 and is regarded as the father of the euro. Through great luck I got to sit next to Mundell on the platform and so heard him clearly as he went out of his way to join the discussion of my topic, gold. Mundell remarked that if the IMF sold any gold, China should buy all of it to diversify its foreign exchange reserves. Since Mundell is a consultant to the Chinese government, the Chinese government surely heard this advice from him long before the CMRE meeting did.

    You can do a lot of market rigging when you can print legal tender to infinity, pass out huge amounts of it to your friends, and induce them to use derivatives to siphon speculative demand for real stuff away from actual possession of that real stuff. But in the end printing legal tender and contriving promises to deliver real stuff don’t produce real stuff. With infinite legal tender and derivatives you can push the futures price of a commodity below its production costs and below its free-market price for a while, but you risk causing shortages. And of course that’s what we have in gold and silver right now — falling prices for the paper promises of metal even as little real metal is to be had and the spread between the futures price and the real price grows. Last night a GATA supporter in Bangkok, Thailand, who long has been in the silver business e-mailed me that real silver there is priced at $18 per ounce for orders of 1 kilo or more and $23 per ounce for smaller orders. Our friend in Bangkok added that when he shows silver dealers there the New York silver futures price on the Internet, they laugh at him. Shortages can have various causes but generally they are their own cure. When shortages persist, they well may result from government intervention in markets.

    Of course prices always have been determined to a great extent by the volume and velocity of money and credit, and so the creation of money and credit is, all by itself, inevitably an intervention into markets. But lately money and credit have been disappearing and reappearing in a flash in the billions and trillions. How can so much come and go so quickly? Maybe because what passes for money and credit today is a bit too ephemeral, having little connection to reality and a lot of connection to politics.

    That is why market advice today is more doubtful than ever: Markets have become more politicized than ever. Supply and demand and profitability are no longer the primary determinants of markets. No, the primary determinant of markets is now politics: Which countries will cut interest rates the most? Which countries will subsidize their banks and corporations the most? Which countries will get IMF and World Bank loans? Which countries will be given unlimited currency swap lines and which won’t? Which companies will get bailed out and which won’t? How much more dishoarding of gold will central banks do to keep the price down, and which central banks? When will central banks run out of gold or decide to stop spending it this way? Most importantly, when will the world decide to stop financing the wild irresponsibility of the United States by lending the U.S. money that can never be repaid?

    These are all political questions, and only political decisions will answer them. Some of these questions may be answered as soon as this weekend at the international conference in Washington. Answers to some of the other questions probably will be conveyed in advance to certain insiders — like the financial houses that serve as the market agents of the central banks — and those insiders will get richer. As good as this conference is, you will not be hearing from any of those insiders here.

    But we may gain some confidence from politics too, since we know that governments are no longer shy about intervening in the markets and since central banking was invented precisely to inflate, to avert debt deflation, to devalue the currency when that is deemed necessary or convenient by those in power — which is most of the time. We know that the world is now drowning in debt, and in a research paper published in May 2006 a British economist, Peter W. Millar — founder of Valu-Trac Research in London, formerly an executive with the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority — forecast that to avert debt deflation and to increase the value of their monetary reserves, central banks would need to increase the value of gold by at least 700 percent and maybe by as much as 2,000 percent. This could be done easily, for to increase the value of their monetary reserves central banks need only to stop selling and leasing gold and to stop subsidizing the sale of gold derivatives by their agents, the financial houses. Revalued high enough, gold could cover all government debts and let the world start over again.

    Millar kindly has given GATA permission to post his research paper at our Internet site, and you can find it here:

    http://www.gata.org/files/PeterMillarGoldNoteMay06.pdf

    When Millar made his forecast about such an upward revaluation of gold — 2 1/2 years ago — gold had just reached $700 per ounce, not far from where it is now. Multiplied by 700 percent, that would mean a gold price of about $5,000 per ounce. Multiplied by 2,000 percent … well, if that happens, we may be able to afford to hire someone to do the math for us — if, of course, those of us who do not live in free countries like China and Russia are allowed to keep our gold. But that is still another political question.

     ==========================

     

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

     Gold’s Assault on the Clueless – Rick’s Picks

    By: Rick Ackerman of Rick’s Picks

    We’ve been monitoring gold’s vital signs closely, since any foray above $1000 is cause for nervousness. The yellow stuff has always been free to roam, and even to misbehave, below that threshold; but once above $1000, the bankers regard each rally with a glower of malice.  While it is clear that debt deflation’s overwhelming power has rendered the central banks impotent in their efforts to arrest the collapse of the global economy, the bankers still retain the ability to crush any hint of rebellion by gold bulls who would deign to challenge the monetary order. With their relatively large stocks of physical gold, and the complicity of institutional agents such as JP Morgan to help suppress “paper gold” in futures markets, the bankers and the IMF have enough influence over bullion’s price to temporarily suspend the laws of supply and demand.

     

    panic-small

     

    The politicians are on board, of course, although not as conspirators. They are all knee-jerk Keynesians at the moment, either too stupid and/or lacking in imagination to understand why fiscal spending, no matter how much of it, cannot possibly extricate the economy from a deflationary black hole. They have put their trust in eggheads and MBAs to fix things, even if most of us have begun to suspect that throwing yet more trillions of dollars into the maw of deflation will not solve anything. And although our elected leaders might not feel so strongly about gold as Keynes, who was appalled by the popular appeal of “that barbarous relic,” they are nonetheless dumbfounded as to why anyone would prefer gold-backed currency to the Monopoly money that The Government has empowered as legal tender.

     Concerning our immediate outlook for gold, we have identified 1025.20 as the next significant point of resistance for the Comex April contract. The number is yet another in a series of  Hidden Pivots that have told us unequivocally and at each step along the way whether buyers were ready to forge effortlessly higher. So if 1025.20 gives way easily, as other points of resistance already have, we’re ready to infer that the benighted acolytes of Keynes are about to get fragged by investors who are growing increasingly restless, if not to say panicky, about The Government’s apparent powerlessness to ameliorate economic distress.

     

    (If you’d like to have Rick’s Picks commentary delivered free each day to your e-mail box, click

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    Only Seller Left? – Silver Seek

    Source: Silver Seek  Author: Ted Butler

    Another week, another data release from the CFTC proving manipulation in the silver market. The most recent Commitment of Traders Report (COT) provides additional compelling evidence that the COMEX silver market is manipulated. The new report proves manipulation so clearly, as to make it almost undeniable. In recent weeks and months, it appears that all the additional short sales of COMEX silver futures contracts are coming from one entity. If true, there could be no clearer proof of manipulation.
    I am going to try to make this as simple as possible, but it does involve different facts and figures. It is very clear and simple to me, but that is because I have spent decades studying this data. I hope I can make it clear enough for both you and the CFTC to understand. This is not about whether silver is manipulated, as that’s a given. This is about whether I can explain and prove it.

    The COT, for positions as of the close of business February 10, the total commercial net short position increased by 1864 contracts for the week. However, the net short position of the 4 largest traders increased by 2832 contracts. This means that of all the commercial traders, the only short selling came from the 4 largest traders, with all other commercial traders (the 5 through 8 largest traders and the raptors, the 9+) buying. This was very unusual, in that the commercials generally operate as one cohesive unit, all buying on the way down in price and selling on the way up.

    Even more unusual is that this pattern has persisted back to the December 22, COT report. On an almost $2.50 rise in the price of silver since then, the total commercial net short position has increased by 4357 contracts, yet the big 4 have increased their net short position by 5396 contracts. This means all new short selling in COMEX silver has come from the biggest traders, for the first time in memory. That should be enough for any semi-alert regulator to conclude manipulation, as such concentrated short selling by so few participants should have every alarm and whistle blaring at CFTC headquarters. After all, there could be no clearer motive for such selling – the capping of price for the purpose of protecting already obscenely large short positions.

    But even while it is easy to conclude that all new short selling is coming from the same four or less large traders, where do I get off suggesting it is one entity behind all the new silver short selling over the past 7 weeks? Here we have to look at another CFTC data source, the Bank Participation Report. Since the Bank Participation Report (BP) is a monthly publication, while the COT is weekly, we must make appropriate calibrations between the reports. The two most recent BP reports are as of January 6 and February 3. Using those two reports, plus the COTs of the exact same dates, this is what the reports show. Between those two dates, the COT indicates that the total commercial short position increased by 2253 contracts, with the big 4 category increasing by 2256 contracts, once again accounting for more than the entire increase in the commercial category.

    The Bank Participation Reports corresponding to January 6 and February 3 indicate that the two U.S. banks increased their net short position by 2500 contracts in that same time period. This proves, at least during this specific period of time, that one or two U.S. banks accounted for more than 100% of all the commercial short selling and all the selling in the big 4 category. One or two entities, accounting for more than 100% of all total short selling for more than a month is manipulation. Period. It can only have occurred to attempt to cap the price and protect the existing short position.

    Please remember that while I have been documenting the incremental changes in the concentrated short position of what may be one large trading entity, those changes are small compared to the total short position of this entity, which I estimate to be back above 30,000 contracts, or 150 million ounces. That’s more than 22% of the entire annual world mine production of silver. It is impossible for such a large concentrated short position not to be manipulative.

    I’m fed up with the CFTC and their so-called investigation. They claim to be investigating , while the manipulation grows more obvious. I think we’ve passed the point where we can eliminate incompetence as the explanation for their inaction. I have a good idea of what is behind their refusal to right a very obvious wrong, although I won’t get into those details here. Let me just remind them that while they may fear the possible ramifications of a truly free silver market, after decades of manipulation, the greatest damage is their abandonment of the rule of law.

    (Editor’s note – here’s a detailed report of Ted Butler’s past and present dealings with the CFTC regarding the silver manipulation –

    http://www.investegate.co.uk/invarticle.aspx?id=66705)

     

     

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

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

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

    Silver, Past, Present, Future – Phoenix Silver Summit Speech – Silver Seek

    Source: SilverSeek.com

    By: Theodore Butler

     

    I’d like to acknowledge a few people who are not here that had an awful lot to do with me being here today. First, I’d like to thank Jim Cook, from Investment Rarities in Minneapolis, for his sponsorship of my work for more than eight years. It was this support that enabled me to devote all my time to studying and contemplating everything I could about silver. Thanks, Jim.

    Second, I’d like to thank my friend of 25+ years, Israel Friedman. It was Izzy, who back in 1984, issued to me the challenge to prove him wrong in his analysis of silver. Although I had traded and invested in silver for years before his challenge, I admit to never having studied it in depth. Izzy’s claim that the world was and had been consuming more silver than was being produced seemed so at odds with the price at that time, that I took up his challenge. I also admit that I thought it would be easy to prove him wrong, although I was well aware of his buying of silver in the $4 range and then selling it in the $40 range a few years later. When I discovered that he was correct, it set off a thought process that I couldn’t satisfy. I couldn’t reconcile how there could be greater demand for an item than there was current production with prices not moving higher. I’m sure that many had also been deeply perplexed with that puzzle.

    For some reason, rather than to simply dismiss and put out of mind something I couldn’t figure out, I thought long and hard about the silver supply/demand/pricing enigma. It was that thought process, plus my background as a commodity broker, that led me to the conclusion that the silver market was manipulated by excessive short selling on the COMEX. The actual Eureka Moment came one day as I reading the Wall Street Journal Commodity Tables. It wasn’t an accidental discovery. I was looking for something wrong. I was looking for anything that was different about silver that could account for it’s very different behavior compared to other commodities. After all, we were all taught that when consumption is greater than production, price must rise. Yet silver didn’t. The light bulb went off in my head when I realized that COMEX open interest, when converted into real world supplies was completely out of line with every other commodity. This meant that the derivatives market in silver was larger than the underlying host market from which it was derived. A complete absurdity. The paper market tail was wagging the physical market dog. This is something that has remained constant in the subsequent 25 years of manipulation.

    Much later, I would come to understand the role of leasing in the silver manipulation, which answered a lot of open questions in my mind. It was Izzy who caused me to be bitten by the silver bug, just as I may have, in turn, infected others, who in turn infected still more. The good news about this silver virus is that instead of giving you the flu or killing you, it could make you rich. For introducing me to silver, thanks Izzy

    Finally, I’d like to thank my wife, Mila, who has been subjected to my preoccupation of silver for the entire duration. While I have both suffered along the way and enjoyed the journey, it was always my choice to continue or not. I know it was much harder for Mila as a partner, and a I marvel at her ability to persevere where I know I could not, were our roles reversed. Thanks Mila.

    The Past.

    The silver story goes back, quite literally, for thousands of years. You won’t find many stories of longer duration, except if you’re an archeologist. For those thousands of years, it was prized as money and jewelry and for ornamental objects and as a measurement of wealth. Silver’s history is similar to its precious metals brother, gold. Both precious metals were the cause of exploration and the discovery of new worlds, and instrumental in the development and formation of nations, including war. Both gold and silver were dug out of the ground and held and accumulated throughout the ages. For use as money, governments for hundreds of years assigned a fixed ratio of roughly 15 to 16 ounces of silver being worth one ounce of gold. This made sense, because that ratio was close to the rate at which silver came out of the ground compared to gold. There was a lot more silver accumulated above ground than gold, so it further made sense that 16 ounces of silver was equal to one ounce of gold. In the late 1800’s tremendous new silver production came to market, due to the massive supplies from the Comstock Load in the western US. Coupled with a demonetarization of silver, but not gold, by many world governments the price of silver plummeted and with that the amount of silver needed to buy one ounce of gold rose to 100 ounces in the 1920’s. The world was truly awash in silver.

    Coincident with these developments, starting about 100 to 150 years ago, around the same time that the world found itself awash in silver, something else dramatic was occurring. We began to enter the industrial age. Inventions and devices of all kinds began to be introduced, impacting the world as never before. Electricity came into wide use. The automobile was born. Photography was introduced. As dramatic as this overall change was to how people lived, the transformation in silver was even more dramatic. It turned out that the substance that the world was awash in, the substance that had been accumulated for thousands of years, had properties that no one could have contemplated through the vast sweep of history. This largely too abundant material was a perfect fit for the rapidly transforming modern and industrial world. Silver was, and is, the best conductor of electricity, the best heat transfer agent, the best reflector of light, a marvelous lubricant, a versatile catalyst and alloy for a wide range of industrial applications, including medical. Silver was the key ingredient that made photography possible. All these uses, plus abundant supply and cheap prices. It was the perfect consumption set up. And consuming silver is something the world took to in a very big way, until this very day.

    It was the push into the modern age that caused a parting of the ways between silver and gold in how they were used. Gold has many potential industrial applications, although not near as many as silver. But because gold was, and is, so high-priced compared to silver, it wasn’t practical to use it in widespread industrial applications. Because silver was so cheap and abundant, it was used extensively. So extensively, that not only did the world begin to consume every ounce of silver that was taken from the ground, it also began to consume the accumulated inventory from the past.

    In 1940, there were approximately 10 billion ounces of silver above ground in the world, with half owned by the US Government. At that time, there was about a billion ounces of gold. Ten times more silver existed in the world than gold. After more than 60 years of over-consumption of silver, of drawing down and depleting the inventories built up over hundreds and even thousands of years, the relationship of how much silver exists above ground compared to gold has flipped. Now there is much more gold left in the world than silver. Currently there are up to 5 times more gold in the world than silver, depending on how you define inventory. Silver inventories have declined from 10 billion ounces in 1940 to 1 billion today. The U.S. government, the largest owner of silver in 1940, with over 5 billion ounces, now owns zero ounces. Gold world inventories, including jewelry, have increased from 1 billion ounces in 1940 to 5 billion today, according to all reputable sources like the World Gold Council.

    I ask you to think about that for a moment, there being more gold than silver aboveground, as this is one of the most important factors in silver today. It is also one of the least known facts, even though it is easily verifiable and has evolved over such a long time. When people first hear or read it, they instinctively disbelieve it. 99.9% of the people on the planet, to this day, would tell you that it can’t possibly be true that there is more gold than silver in the world. Or even that there is an equal amount of gold and silver. None of this 99.9% has ever taken even a minute to think about it or read or try to verify how much of each remains above ground. They don’t have to. Their verification comes everyday, as it has everyday for decades, from one simple source – the daily price of each. The price of silver and gold is broadcast constantly, to every nook and cranny around the world, that there are 60 to 70 to 80 times more silver in the world than there is gold. That’s what 99.9% of the people in the world think. And I’m not just talking about uneducated people in third world countries. I would include the most sophisticated, wealthy and educated people, who have come to believe that the price doesn’t lie. I do hope 99% of the people here don’t think that.

    It is this simple fact, that the relative price of silver compared to gold is so distorted, relative the their respective quantities in existence, that is all anyone needs to know to buy silver. This is not a knock on gold. I will stipulate to and accept as true every bullish argument that anyone could make on gold. You could spend hours or days lecturing me on all the good things that gold has going for it, and I will accept them without dissent. When you are done giving all the bullish gold arguments, I would just add two things. One, all those arguments apply to silver as well, and two, there is less silver than gold.

    I’m compressing hundreds and even thousands of years of silver history into a few minutes of time. For many centuries, the world dug up and used silver for money and beauty and wealth. In the last century or so, we discovered incredible new uses for this age-old material and continued to dig it out of the ground, in ever increasing quantities, basically consuming all the newly mined silver plus almost all of the old stuff as well. And even though this is a fairly easy set of facts to verify, only an infinitesimal amount of people are aware of how little silver remains. And in spite of the growing rarity of this age-old cherished and desired material, its price, on any objective measure, is dirt cheap. There is less silver in the world on a per capita basis, than in history, yet the price still reflects super abundance. At the risk of over using a statement I’ve made in the past, I couldn’t make this up if I tried.

    The Present

    I’m going to include the 5 years or so, maybe even a little longer, as part of the present. Today, thanks to the Internet and other means of communication, including conferences like this, the true silver story is coming out. I think I’ve played some role in that. Investors, in ever growing numbers are grasping the disconnect between the price and the true value existing in silver. It is this disconnect that presents an exciting investment opportunity.

    Perhaps the most unique and attractive characteristic about silver is its dual role as a vital industrial material and its history and desirability as an investment asset. No other commodity comes close to silver in this regard. Of course, we need copper and zinc and lead for industrial purposes, but they have never been considered popular investments in their pure metal state. Same with other natural resources, like oil. None of these commodities can be practically held in one‘s personal possession. Gold is the primary investment metal, but its high price prevents widespread industrial use. Platinum and palladium are both precious metals and are used extensively in industrial applications, but have not evolved into broad and popular investment assets.

    As the true dual role material, silver stands alone. In its industrial consumption role, silver demand has been so strong for the past 60 years, that it has depleted inventories that took hundreds of years to accumulate. Now that industrial demand has been interrupted by current bleak economic circumstances, investment demand is stepping in to take up the slack. And make no mistake, the evidence clearly indicates that an investment rush is developing in silver.

    The introduction of the silver and gold ETF’s (Exchange Traded Funds) has been the single most important factor on the investment side of silver’s dual role. Since the introduction of the first silver ETF, less than three years ago, over 300 million ounces have been absorbed by the various silver ETF’s. That is remarkable and much more than I ever thought they could accumulate. More importantly, these ETF’s will turn out to be, in my opinion, what my friend Carl Loeb has nicknamed, the Death Star, in that they may absorb all the world’s available silver.

    Lately, I’ve noticed quite a bit of suspicion and criticism concerning the legitimacy of the ETF’s, particularly the gold ETF’s, with the criticism centered on whether the real metal exists that is said to be on deposit. I’d like to add my two cents. Quite frankly, I don’t understand this criticism. If someone would prefer to own metal in his own possession or control, they should do so. It’s an easy choice. Certainly, this has always been my advice. And it’s not like the ETF’s are beyond criticism, and I have publicly done so in the past when I detected massive unreported short selling in the big silver ETF, SLV. I think that’s fraud, and I think there is currently a big unreported short position in SLV.

    But that’s not what the current criticism of the gold ETF’s is all about. The current criticism revolves around allegations that the metal said to be deposited is not really there, even though serial numbers and weights of all bars are listed. It seems some are claiming that the big quantities of gold flowing to the ETF’s are beyond anything reasonable. Where can all this metal be coming from? While I can’t personally guarantee the metal is in the ETF’s, nor do I wish to, I don’t understand this line of thinking. The gold ETF’s have been accumulating gold for more than 4 years. In that time, roughly 50 million ounces have been absorbed by the all the gold ETF’s. That’s one percent of all the gold in the world. Even if you reduce the 5 billion ounce gold inventory by 60%, and say there is 2 billion ounces of gold in good-delivery bullion bar form, the 50 million ounces in gold ETF’s is only 2.5% of that 2 billion ounces. Is it so hard to imagine 2.5% of anything being accumulated over 4 years and with more than a doubling in price? After all, the silver ETF’s have accumulated almost 30% of total world bullion inventories and little is said of that by gold people.

    The fact is, for the most part, the investors who buy the silver and gold ETF’s are institutional investors who probably wouldn’t buy the metal if the ETF’s didn’t exist. You would think the gold analysts criticizing the ETF’s would recognize that. The buying in the silver and gold ETF’s are a very big reason behind the doubling in price in a few years. You would think metal people would be cheering the ETF’s on, instead of complaining. Go figure. Look, I understand that investment demand in mining shares has probably suffered as a result of buying in ETF’s, but that’s a different issue and is no reason to claim that the gold ETF’s don’t have the metal. Metals prices wouldn’t have climbed if there was no metal demand from the ETF’s.

    Back to silver investment demand. Aside from ETF demand, the past year has seen other compelling evidence of an investment rush into silver. For the first time in any of our lifetimes, we have witnessed a persistent retail investment shortage, characterized by soaring premiums and delays in product delivery. I have to laugh when some people say there is no retail shortage, as the very definition of a shortage is rising premiums and delays in deliveries.

    Also, we have witnessed, for twelve straight months, something never seen before. The US Mint, even after doubling its production capacity, hasn’t been able to fully supply Silver Eagles in the quantities demanded, for the first time in the 23 year history of the program. There is no doubt in my mind that my friend Izzy is responsible for kicking off the rush into Silver Eagles with his article in December 2007. I know of no one else who recommended Silver Eagles, then or now.

    The current economic collapse has resulted in a sharp drop in industrial consumption of all commodities, including silver. Production, while falling, has not yet fallen as much. It will, given silver’s byproduct production profile. So, temporarily, we have a “surplus” of silver. Unlike other industrial materials, the surplus in silver is being gobbled up as an investment. Instead of being dumped into exchange warehouse inventories, like copper, zinc, or other industrial metals. Once production of all these metals falls sufficiently enough to balance with industrial consumption, as it must, there should be a shortage in silver that will seem unreal.

    The economic condition of the world is dreadful. That it came like a thief in the night makes it more ominous. When and how we turn this around, I haven’t a clue. Many of us have worried about this for 30 years or more, hoping it would never come. Despite that hope, the wolf has come to the door. We must deal with it. Fortunately for silver, these scary economic times rev up investment demand. The worse economic conditions become, the more silver investment demand should grow. Silver is positioned well for whatever economic conditions prevail.

    The Future

    I want you to do me a favor. I want you to play a little game of imagination with me. It may sound silly at first, but try to play along, as I want to make the central point of the day. I want you to imagine that in this room, right there, in the space between you and me, is a giant elephant. Not a regular elephant, mind you, but the biggest elephant ever documented. A 26,000 lbs African Bush Elephant, 14 feet tall in the shoulders, with absolutely massive tusks. I looked this up, so I‘m not misstating the dimensions. Not only is this the biggest elephant ever recorded, it’s loud, agitated and it stinks to high heaven, flapping its ears and swinging its giant trunk. And it’s right there and has been right there the whole time. I want you to imagine that you’ve been sitting there, listening to me talk about silver with this 13 ton elephant right there, interrupting my speech all along and scaring the dickens out of you. And the kicker is that we’re all trying our best to ignore the elephant. Pretending it’s not there, speaking around it. We’re all trying to act like it’s perfectly normal to be in a room speaking about silver with this giant elephant and trying to act like it’s not there, when it clearly is there.

    The African Bush Elephant in the room is the silver manipulation. But whereas the elephant is imaginary, the silver manipulation is as real as rain. But like the imaginary elephant, most are doing their best to pretend that the silver manipulation doesn’t exist. Not me, of course, as the manipulation is the most important pricing factor in silver, and I write on it continuously. I sense I have convinced many thousands of readers that silver is manipulated and maybe many in this room. But it is absolutely amazing to me how so few analysts and industry people publicly speak out on the manipulation.

    I’m talking of people working for the financial firms and banks whose job it is to follow and write about silver. I’m speaking of those in the mining industry and in particular the Silver Institute. I’m not complaining about this lack of manipulation talk. Maybe at one time it upset me to be so alone, but not anymore. Now it’s just amusing. I read everything there is to read on silver and 95% of what I read never refers to the manipulation in any way. I find that bizarre. I find that to be the real life equivalent to my previous imaginary exercise of the elephant and pretending it’s not in the room.

    I’m not demanding that anyone agree with me about silver being manipulated. I’m human and I reserve the right to be wrong. Besides, it’s better for me to be the only making this the main issue. In the past, many did challenge and attempt to refute my allegations of manipulation, especially those in the mining industry, which never made much sense. But as the issue has become so specific as to the documented facts about the concentration, I’m not even hearing lately anyone explaining why I am wrong or answering simple questions, even on the Internet. If there is one thing I have learned about the Internet, because of its shield of anonymity, many love to tell you why you are wrong and they are right, and in generally a rude manner to boot. But I’ve asked the question for 6 months for how can one or two U.S. banks being short 25% of the world silver production not be manipulative, with no response. I was seriously considering running a contest with a reward for every legitimate answer.

    Stranger still in the collective avoidance of even talking about a potential market manipulation is that the prime regulator, the CFTC, has initiated a formal investigation into my allegations of manipulation in silver. This is the third silver investigation in less than five years, and the first by their Enforcement Division. This has never occurred in any other commodity. Regardless of the outcome of the investigation, the fact that there is another investigation is extraordinary, in and of itself. Nothing could be a more important issue than whether any market is manipulated or free. You would think that there would be wide discussion on the potential outcome or the merits, pro and con, on the investigation itself. Instead, mum’s the word. That so many establishment analysts and mining and industry people can pretend that everything has been completely aboveboard in silver is more bizarre than my elephant in the room example. Especially now that the CFTC has stated that they are investigating.

    Like all manipulations, the silver manipulation has resulted in an artificial price level. Unlike most manipulations, the one in silver is a downward price manipulation. Admittedly, that does make it harder for folks to grasp the issue. But the saving grace to this manipulation is that those not involved in the manipulation can take advantage of the artificially depressed price. The special essence of this manipulation is that outsiders can profit from it in a simple and easy manner. All you have to do is buy and wait.

    Like all manipulations, the silver manipulation will end suddenly and the price must move sharply in the opposite direction of the manipulation. In this case, the price of silver will explode upwards, once the manipulation is terminated. Those holding silver when that occurs will be rewarded. This is not complicated.

    But what happens if the CFTC’s investigation ends with them, once again, finding that no manipulation exists in silver? It doesn’t matter. The silver manipulation must end, suddenly and violently, to the upside, no matter what the CFTC says or does. I wouldn’t be no naïve as to depend on the CFTC for doing the right thing. The price, having been depressed so low and for so long, must result in a shortage. The shortage has been clearly evident in the retail market for more than a year. Not as clearly, but present nevertheless, are strong signs of a wholesale shortage in the unreported shorting of SLV shares and other wholesale indications. When this shortage hits in earnest, no one will be able to stop the sudden demise of the silver manipulation.

    You might further ask, “If the manipulation in silver will end regardless of what the CFTC may or may not do, why do you (meaning me) persist in focusing on this issue? Why not just sit back and let it happen? Well, I have no choice in waiting to let it happen, so I guess the question is whether to keep quiet about it. The answer to that is while the manipulation presents the strongest reason for buying silver, it is a market crime of the highest order. There is no more serious market crime than manipulation. It is the equivalent to Murder One, Treason or kidnapping.

    In addition to providing the most compelling reason for buying silver, the manipulation is a crime in progress. As such it offends my sense of what is right and wrong. Being the best reason for buying silver and being a crime in progress are not mutually exclusive. Just like recommending that people buy silver and write to the regulators and lawmakers complaining about the manipulation is mutually exclusive. And I am gratified that so many have taken the time to contact the regulators, as it has really made all the difference in the world.

    In conclusion, the supply/demand set up in silver, which has evolved over an incredibly long period of time, has been one continuous process promising to culminate in an explosion in price at some point. Quite simply, we are rapidly approaching that defining moment when there just won’t be enough physical material to go around at anything but rapidly escalating prices. Those escalating prices will encourage and drive others, including industrial consumers, to enter what should become a buying frenzy. Superimpose upon that the sudden destruction of a decades-old downward price manipulation and you have all the necessary ingredients for price event that will be referred to forever.

    Thank you and I’d be happy to take any questions you might have.

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

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

    My Final Note for today: How long are we going to continue to let 1 or a few Banks disctate the prices of Gold and Silver. If you read their short position is 22% MORE than world’s production in Silver! Everyone needs to be contacting Comex, CFTC, FTC, SEC,and the Federal Justice Dept and screaming their outrage at this! Plus it being allowed to continue! The other action step is to take physical delivery! Sooner or later by bringing all these pressures to bear, (no pun intended), we will see the “Short Squeeze of the Century” as these traders/manipulators will be forced to cover their Short Positions. Just how long are we going to let them do this to us? Good Investing – Jschulmansr now you can also follow me on twitter just click here and be notified every time I make a post and the best part it is absolutely free! 

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

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

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

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    Need A Second Chance?

    19 Thursday Feb 2009

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

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

    Gold today is trading on Feb Contract between $975 – $985 oz, a little more consolidation and base building before the launch to $1000+.  Currently Gold is up $3.80 at $982.00. The push to $1000 could come as early as today. Do you need a second chance? Well here it is- get into Gold now or you’ll be kicking yourself later.  If Gold breaks the $1003 all time high then we’ll see at least $1050 gold, if it breaks that we have a straight shot to $1100 – $1250. This is without any major news, such as Israel attacking Iran nuclear facilities, or China moving in and taking back the disputed territories in India, or a major terrorist attack event like 911. If any of those happen then $1500 or greater. True Inflation Rate while still roughly 7-8% could easily jump to 12 – 18% or higher, as the printing presses around the world are spinning out of control around the world. This eventually will lead to even more devaluation of all the currencies as Governments are madly trying to stop Deflation. The Gold market is saying the stimulus packages around the world are failing. Buy a wheelbarrow to haul your cash around and Gold to preserve the buying power of your Dollars. Even if you only allocate 10% of your portfolio- BUY GOLD NOW! As Always Good Investing – jschulmansr

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

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

    Gold Continues to Climb as Economic Catastrophe Looms – Seeking Alpha

    By: John Browne of Euro Pacific Capital

     

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

     

     

     

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

     

     

     

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

     

     

     

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

    Projects

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

    Capital

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

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

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

    Good Investing,

    Luke Burgess and the Gold World Staff

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

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

    EGO: A Particularly Healthy Gold Stock – Hard Assets Investor

    By: Brad Zigler of Hard Assets Investor

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

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

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

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

     

     

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

     GDX Graph

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Source: Financial Post Trading Desk

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

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

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

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

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

    Aram Shishmanian, CEO of World Gold Council, said:

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

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

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

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

    Genuity said:

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

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

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

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

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

    My Disclosure: Long AUY, NXG, SLW – jschulmansr

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

    Good Trading! -jschulmansr

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

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


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

     

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

     

     

     

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

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

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

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

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

    How To Pick the Right Junior Gold Stocks

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

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

     

    Corporate

     

    click to enlarge

     

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

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

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

    The Road Ahead

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

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

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

    How To Pick Junior Gold Stocks – GoldWorld

    Source: GoldWorld.com

     

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    As I have been saying Buy Gold Now! – jschulmansr

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

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

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

    By: Ashraf Laidi of AshrafLaidi.com

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    Catch Me If You Can!

    18 Wednesday Feb 2009

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

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

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    Jschulmansr Recommended:

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

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

    By: The Sun of The Sun’s Financial Diary

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

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

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

    Gold rally

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

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

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

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

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

    Stock chart from INO Stock Analysis

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    My Disclosure: Long DGP and GLD – jschulmansr

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

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

    By: Adam Lass of Wave Strength Options Weekly

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

    Make 203% as Washington becomes a global laughing stock

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

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

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

    Our Own Worst Enemy

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

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

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

    Our Newest Secret Weapon: The Dollar Bomb

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

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

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

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

    The Price of Weakness

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Turning Ineptitude Into Gold

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Disclosure: no positions- Adam Lass

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

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

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    The following is a Very Interesting Article! – jschulmansr

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

    By: J.S. Kim of SmartKnowledgeU

     

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    So the lessons to be learned are these:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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    Gold Around the Globe: Setting Records – Seeking Alpha

    Source: Monday Morning

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Euro Gold

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

    UK Gold

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

    Canadian Gold

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

    Brazilian Gold

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

    Indian Gold

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

    Chinese and Japanese Gold

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Original post

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

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

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

    By: James West of Midas Letter

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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    Gold Set To Rise Even Higher – Seeking Alpha

    By: Mark O’Byrne of Gold and Silver Investments

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

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

    click to enlarge

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Disclosure: no positions

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

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


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

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


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

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    It’s Starting Again!

    17 Tuesday Feb 2009

    Posted by jschulmansr in 10 year Treasuries, 20 yr Treasuries, banking crisis, banks, Barack Obama, bear market, bull market, capitalism, central banks, China, commodities, Contrarian, Copper, Credit Default, Currencies, currency, Currency and Currencies, DGP, dollar denominated, dollar denominated investments, economic, Economic Recovery, economic trends, Fed Fund Rate, Federal Deficit, federal reserve, Finance, financial, Forex, Fundamental Analysis, futures, futures markets, gata, GDX, GLD, gold, Gold Bullion, Gold Investments, gold miners, hard assets, How To Invest, How To Make Money, hyper-inflation, IAU, IMF, India, inflation, Investing, investments, Junior Gold Miners, Latest News, Long Bonds, Make Money Investing, market crash, Markets, mid-tier, mining companies, mining stocks, monetization, Moving Averages, palladium, platinum, platinum miners, precious metals, price, price manipulation, prices, producers, production, rare earth metals, run on banks, silver, silver miners, sovereign, spot price, stagflation, Stimulus, Stocks, TARP, Technical Analysis, TIPS, Today, U.S., U.S. Dollar, XAU

    ≈ Comments Off on It’s Starting Again!

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

    It’s starting again, time to get aboard now, next stop $1000 to $1500! Gold cleared the $950 price mark today with a vengeance. During trading today Gold was up over $970 oz and closing at $967.50 up $25.30. Today’s main headline on MarketWatch was “Bears test November lows- Technical support levels in peril; Investors pile into Gold, Treasuries”. As I have mentioned in a recent post about Gold if we successfully clear and close above the $950 – $960 level the Gold will zoom up and have a retest of the all time highs! To answer my question I posted here… Gold has passed it’s first test with an A++. If you haven’t already invested in gold and precious metals you definitely need to do so now! Some of the following articles explain why… – Good Investing – jschulmansr

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

    Here is where I buy my bullion:

    Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online –Get 1 Gram Free! Just for Opening and Account, No minimums, Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! Bullion Vault.com

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

    Don’t Kick Yourself Later for Not Buying Gold and Silver Now – Seeking Alpha

    By: Peter Cooper of Arabian Money.net

    Gold is powering up towards $1,000 an ounce, and while the odd hesitation along the way is possible it will shortly cross this boundary, hit a new all-time high and then head upwards again.

    A trend is your friend, especially if you take advantage of it. For gold the question is how best to leverage the up trend.

    Gold and silver stocks are the answer. Conveniently precious metal stocks got really thrashed last autumn – along with gold and silver and every other asset class except bonds. So they are dirt cheap.

    Rising prices

    But will gold and silver equities not fall again if global stock markets tank, as they surely must with profit forecasts for the non-financials still ludicrously optimistic (face facts, for many major companies there will be losses and not profits in 2009)?

    No they will not if precious metal prices are rising – and not falling as they did last autumn. And why will gold and silver prices keep on rising this time?

    Well, investors are now very worried about bonds and currency rates, and that leaves gold and silver as the last safe haven in the investment universe. If there is only one investment class left to buy that ought to simplify things for investors.

    Rising profits

    Gold and silver producers are also big beneficiaries of falling energy prices this year, as up to a quarter of production costs go on energy. In addition, most mines are in non-dollar economies, so manufacturers have costs in depreciated currencies and income in the strong dollar.

    That means that even if precious metal prices stagnate – and that looks highly unlikely – gold and silver producers are among the only commodity producers that will see profits jump in 2009.

    My blog contains many articles on gold and silver which can point you towards some of the better, and riskier equity investments in this sector, and taking a risk in a rising market usually pays off handsomely.

    The people who will be kicking themselves later in the year will be those who do not buy gold and silver stocks now.

    This reminds me of my warning to those who did not buy Dubai property when they first had the chance, and even after a 50 per cent fall in house prices they are still 300 per cent up on their original investment!

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

    My Note: If you have been following my Blog “Dare Something Worthy Today Too!”, for any length of time this is exactly what I have been saying – many gold and silver stocks with production are still selling at or near book values! -jschulmansr

    Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online –Get 1 Gram Free! Just for Opening and Account, No minimums, Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! Bullion Vault.com

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

    Gold Strikes Record Levels in Most Currencies – Seeking Alpha

    By: Toni Straka of The Prudent Investor

    With all equities markets deep in the red, MSM and bloggers have missed out on this easy scoop for several weeks: Gold currently strikes new all-time highs in most currencies. This sensational news, omitted in all those media that are normally quick to recommend this or that paper ‘asset’, which in the end is always only somebody else’s obligation, can be revealed at this blog exclusively, a Google news search shows. 😉

    Gold traded for more than €771 and GBP 682 for the first time in history. The strong rise in the price of gold to new historic records in most countries except the USA is a logical reaction to the credit and solvency crisis that engulfs the globe as investors, nervous about a total market fallout, flee all paper promises and seek a truly safe haven.

    Gold has never lost its value in more than 3,500 years, whereas no fiat currency survived longer than a human’s lifespan so far. Check out its resistance against inflation here.

    click to enlarge

    GRAPH: Gold priced in Euro has been on a tear since late November. It also outpaced all other asset classes. Chart courtesy of Stockcharts.com

    I have been recommending investments in gold and mining shares since 2005. Licking my wounds from last year’s biggest and longest decline in this equity sector in 80 years, I will at least have a story to tell to my grandchildren.

    But the fundamental outlook has only worsened in the past 4 years. Having correctly called for a sharp economic downturn in the USA since 2005, I nevertheless failed to recognize the dramatic situation in the Eurozone and the recent hard landing of China. This worsening global situation only underscores the value of holding the only asset that is not someone else’s obligation. The Euro is as doomed as are Federal Reserve Notes and nobody outside the UK cares about Sterling anymore.

    We are about to witness the era of busted major fiat currencies that will go out the same way as did all unbacked fiat curencies in the past 1,000 years.

    The Chinese tried it in the 11th century and it ended in a revolt. The same happened in France in the 18th century where it gave birth to the Republic. The decline of the Austro-Hungarian empire in WWI came on the heels of hyper-inflation and Germany’s fate could have taken another turn in the 1920s, if it were not for the hyper-inflation that paved the way for Adolf Hitler.

    Unfortunately, we could very well end up as happened in past crises, with everyone a millionaire beggar.

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

    Bullish Long Term Outlook for Gold – Seeking Alpha

    By: Peter Degraaf of pdegraaf.com

    The long-term outlook for gold is very bullish, for to paraphrase Sir Winston Churchill’s famous remark, “never before in history have so many dollars chased so few ounces of gold (and silver)”.* The mountains of currency are rising, while the number of ounces of gold produced by gold mines is dropping.

    The passing of the Stimulus Bill, referred to by some as the Porkulus Bill, will add billions of dollars to an already ballooning deficit. Instead of allowing the excesses in the credit markets to work themselves out by letting healthy institutions prosper, while allowing unhealthy institutions to fail, the new administration, aided by Congress, is throwing gasoline at the fire by rewarding shoddy business practices. People like Barney Frank and Christopher Dodd, who strong-armed the banking industry to make questionable mortgage loans, are now helping to shape the decisions that will prolong the problems. The foxes are still in the henhouse.

    In the 1960’s it was James U. Blanchard III who pointed to the growing US deficits as the trigger that would cause gold prices to rise. In those days the deficits were still counted in millions of dollars. One wonders what Jim would say about deficits that are now counted in trillions of dollars. His advice would surely be: “Buy Gold”.

    It was my pleasure to meet Jim Blanchard at one of his hard money conferences in New Orleans. Jim founded the National Committee to legalize the ownership of gold in the USA. In 1973, during the inauguration of President Nixon, Jim hired a small plane that flew near the inauguration site towing a banner that read: “Legalize Gold”.

    Jim did everything with style and ingenuity. During one of his conferences he needed to move about one thousand of us from the convention hotel to a nearby convention center. He hired a marching band, and while police controlled several intersections the marching band led us to the center.

    Let’s now look at some charts.

    Featured is the chart (courtesy www.stockcharts.com that compares the price of gold to the XAU index (top), and compares this picture to the HUI index (bottom). The blue vertical lines draw your attention to a ‘link’ when the Gold/XAU rises above 5 and the HUI index begins a multi-month rise from a bottom. The red vertical line points to the only exception to this trend, since 2002. In that last seven years this early warning signal has worked 7 out of 8 times.

    The last link is the ‘mother of all signals’, as the index rose to a record high of 11.5, while the Huey put in a four year bottom.

    According to research done by John Hussman, in the past, when the gold/XAU ratio reached a point above 5, while the ISM purchasing managers index registers a reading below 50 (indicating the US manufacturing sector is decreasing), gold shares advanced at an annual rate of 125%. The current reading for the PMI is 35.6%, while the gold/XAU is at 7.2.

    Featured is the ‘real interest rate’ chart, as reported by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. The bank shows the real rate at zero percent, having risen up from -3%. If we use the figures supplied by John Williams (see next chart), we arrive at a negative ‘real interest rate’ of -3.5%. Unless and until real rates turn positive by at least 2%, and for at least 6 months, we can depend on gold continuing its bull market rise.

    This chart courtesy www.shadowstats.com compares the official CPI rate in orange to the John Williams interpretation in blue. With the Williams CPI-U at 3.5% and short-term bills at 0% interest, the ‘real interest rates’ are negative by 3.5%.

    Featured is a chart (courtesy www.stockcharts.com) that compares the HUI index to the US dollar for the year 2005. For those who feel that gold stocks cannot rise unless the US dollar falls, this chart tells us that both gold stocks and the US dollar ended the year higher than at the start of the year.

    As long as other currencies, such as the Euro, Yen, Pound and Canadian dollar are having problems of their own (caused by monetary inflation), the US dollar does not need fall, and gold and gold stocks can still rise.

    Featured is the weekly gold chart (courtesy www.stockcharts.com). The blue arrows point to bottoms in the 7 – 8 week gold cycle. The last 3 cycles were short, thus the expectation is that we are due for a longer one, perhaps 9 or 10 weeks. The black arrow points to the upside breakout that occurred last week. This breakout came from beneath resistance that went back all the way to March 2008 AD. The green arrow points to the target for this breakout. The supporting indicators (RSI & MACD) are positive, with room on the upside.

    The Gold Direction Indicator moved up from a reading of + 20% on Feb. 9th, when gold bullion was 895.00, to the current reading of +60% with gold bullion at 941.00.

    Featured is the weekly silver chart (courtesy www.stockcharts.com) . Price has risen four weeks in a row and is expected to meet resistance at the purple arrow. Once this resistance is overcome, the target is at the green arrow. The supporting indicators, (RSI & MACD), are positive with room to rise.

    Featured is the price progression for silver during the past five years (annual average – data supplied by the Silver Institute).

    Summary: Last week’s breakout by the gold price confirms that the Christmas rally that started in November is ongoing. In the short-term we can expect a lot of volatility, as commercial traders and bullion banks that are ‘short’ gold will do their utmost to suppress the price. They will do this by testing the current breakout. They will use the threat of ‘asset deflation’ (which has nothing to do with the effects of monetary inflation, which always leads to price inflation), and they will use the threat of IMF gold sales to try to cap the gold price rallies.

    In the longer term the huge increases in currency (both paper and digital), on a worldwide basis, tell us that the gold bull still has a lot of running room left.

    *(“Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few” – Sir Winston Churchill referring to the Battle of Britain).

    DISCLAIMER: Please do your own due diligence. I am NOT responsible for your trading decisions.- P. Degraaf

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

    Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online –Get 1 Gram Free! Just for Opening and Account, No minimums, Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! Bullion Vault.com

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

    Upwrds momentum builds as gold breaches $950 – MineWeb

    Source: MineWeb.com

    EXPLOSIVE INCREASE AHEAD?

    Upwards momentum builds as

    gold breaches $950

    The gold price this morning moved quickly through the psychological $950 an ounce level and predictions of $1000 gold being seen sooner rather than later seem far from far-fetched.

    Author: Lawrence Williams
    Posted:  Tuesday , 17 Feb 2009

    LONDON –

    In what has been a relatively steady climb over the past few weeks, gold moved back well above the psychological $950 an ounce mark in this morning’s trading (over $960 at the time of writing) – the first time in seven months it has achieved this level – while silver was approaching $14 an ounce, being pulled upwards by the gold price.  Platinum and palladium were also better as platinum maintained its differential price advantage over gold.

    Indeed gold looked poised to move higher still with ETF inflows continuing and a glimmer of renewed demand interest in India as sentiment may be moving towards a growing feeling that the price is poised to increase further.  Previously India, the world’s largest area of consumption,  has seen gold sales and imports at their lowest level for some time with traders anticipating lower prices.  Today, though, the gold price in rupees hit a new record at over 15,000 rupees per 10 grams and there has been wide expectation of the price moving to 16,000 rupees in the short term with open interest in metal for April increasing a little.

    In the Far East in general there appears to be a movement into gold developing strongly as the stock market continues to drift downwards.  The market has seen the dollar price gold consolidating above $930 of late and there has been a strong feeling that the metal is poised to move higher which is now turning into real purchases and becoming reality.

    Bloomberg reports that there is also talk of Central Banks buying gold rather than selling .  The newswire quotes Steven Zhu of Shanghai Tonglian Futures Co. as saying “There’s been a lot of talk about central banks buying but they are quiet about it because they don’t want to disrupt the market, so the market tends to react when there’s some fresh news.”   There is also a report today that Russia’s Central Bank has raised gold’s share of its reserves and plans to continue doing so.

    To an extent $950 an ounce is seen by some as an important trigger point towards the movement to $1,000 gold and it certainly seems that the momentum is with the yellow metal at the moment.  Stock markets remain weak, and in reality there seems to be little but gloomy news ahead.  Economies are very definitely in recession and confidence in the dollar is not strong.  Gold is increasingly being seen by many as the best way of protecting wealth in the current environment.

    The only weakness has been the fall-off in demand from the traditionally strong Eastern markets, and if the realization that gold is more likely to move higher than fall back takes serious hold there then, coupled with the continuing movement by western investors into gold, the price increase could accelerate.  $1,000 gold may be with us again sooner than expected and this time there is a growing feeling that it could stay there for an extended period.  Virtually no-one seems to be betting against this occurring in the very short term – indeed as momentum builds, which it appears to be doing, there could be an explosive price increase ahead in the months ahead.

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

    Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online –Get 1 Gram Free! Just for Opening and Account, No minimums, Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! Bullion Vault.com

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

    Remember: Don’t Forget about Silver too!

    Listed Gold and Silver Stocks Soar – Mineweb

    Source: Mineweb.com

    SILVER BEST PERFORMING

    Listed gold (and silver) stocks soar

    Gold bullion, and listed gold stocks, decouple from a strange and troubled world.

    Author: Barry Sergeant
    Posted:  Tuesday , 17 Feb 2009

    JOHANNESBURG –

    Precious metal prices moved strongly higher on Tuesday, led by gold bullion, which hopped more than USD 30 an ounce to above USD 970 at one stage, prompting yet another sparkling performance by listed gold equities. Gold bullion is currently trading around seven month highs, and just 6% below the record level it set in March 2008.

    At just over USD 14 an ounce, silver is around 34% off its record highs, while platinum at USD 1,085 an ounce is 52% off, and palladium at USD 219 an ounce, a significant 63% off.  Demand for platinum group metals has been deeply damaged by reduced demand from the auto sector, which uses the metals in auto catalysts.

    Silver stocks, which command a combined global market value (capitalisation) of USD 13bn, currently rank as the best performing equity sub-sector in the world, led by stellar performances from  Silver Standard, Fresnillo, and First Majestic. The global grouping of primary silver producers is relatively small, given that the majority of silver is produced as a byproduct at bigger mines; BHP Billiton, the world’s biggest diversified resources stock, ranks as the world’s biggest silver miner.

    There are, however, hundreds of listed stocks that rank as primary gold producers. This global grouping currently carries a combined market value of just over USD 230bn, dominated by Tier I stocks; Barrick, the world’s biggest gold name by production and value, currently holds a market value of just below USD 34bn. This ranks Barrick as the world’s No 5 overall mining stock, after BHP Billiton, Vale, Shenhua, and Rio Tinto. Two other Tier I gold producers, Goldcorp and Newmont, now also rank as members of the world’s top 10 mining groups.

    While silver stocks, as the small cousin of precious metals, may rank as top equity performers, on a relative basis, the Tier II gold grouping, seen alone, ranks as the world’s leading equity subsector. Some of the top performances in this grouping have been produced by recovery stocks such as Centerra, while JSC Polymetal represents the recovery Russian stock, from a jurisdiction where stock prices were savaged to an extent rarely seen elsewhere.

    It is also of interest that some stocks in the global Tier II gold grouping are currently trading close to 12-month highs – a factor virtually unthinkable in any other sector – as seen in the cases of Iamgold, Eldorado, Red Back, and also Franco-Nevada, a royalty, rather than operating, company. It is of further interest that investors have at long last started to move back into Chinese gold stocks in the past few weeks, benefiting the likes of Zijin (Tier I), Zhongjin, and Shandong (Tier II), and Hunan Chenzhou and Lingbao (Tier III).

    The SPDR Gold Shares exchange traded fund (ETF), which holds gold bullion on behalf of investors, rather than mining the stuff, is close to trading at all time record levels. The fund currently holds physical gold bullion worth just under USD 31bn; if it were an operating entity, it would rank second only to Barrick. However, if other gold ETFs around the world are also taken into account, the amount of bullion currently held on behalf of investors is worth well above USD 40bn. Silver ETFs, which are trading in price terms in line with silver bullion’s 34% discount from its record high, currently hold close to USD 4bn worth of physical metal.

    In terms of individual performances by gold stocks, the top overall Tier I performance award is probably deserved by Kinross; the Tier II award is most difficult, but would likely go to Iamgold, while Novagold appears to be a clear winner among the Tier III grouping. Among developers and explorers, spectacular performances have been put in by La Mancha Resources, Azteca Gold, and San Anton Resource; Central Sun Mining has also shown radical price moves, possibly assisted by corporate action.

    Global tier I gold stocks      
      Stock From From Value  
      price high* low* USD bn  
    Goldcorp USD 32.66 -38.0% 136.0% 23.829  
    Polyus USD 32.00 -60.0% 128.6% 6.100  
    Harmony USD 11.96 -17.9% 118.6% 5.005  
    Lihir AUD 3.47 -21.0% 128.3% 4.840  
    AngloGold Ashanti USD 31.10 -20.5% 132.6% 10.995  
    Zijin CNY 8.28 -62.4% 120.2% 12.475  
    Barrick USD 38.71 -29.3% 124.1% 33.773  
    Newcrest AUD 34.28 -15.4% 107.1% 10.502  
    Gold Fields USD 11.47 -31.9% 147.2% 7.495  
    Kinross USD 19.36 -29.3% 182.6% 12.875  
    Newmont USD 42.60 -22.8% 101.2% 20.152  
    Buenaventura USD 21.75 -49.3% 141.7% 5.979  
    Freeport-McMoRan USD 27.89 -78.1% 77.6% 11.469  
    [[SPDR Gold Shares ETF]] USD 95.28 -5.1% 44.4% 30.709  
    Tier I averages/total -36.6% 126.6% 165.489  
    Weighted averages -43.4% 122.9%    
             
    TIER II Stock From From Value  
      price high* low* USD bn  
    Zhongjin CNY 50.48 -58.8% 121.4% 2.594  
    Iamgold USD 8.24 -4.8% 271.3% 2.437  
    Simmer & Jack ZAR 3.24 -48.7% 120.4% 0.335  
    Yamana USD 9.42 -52.7% 184.6% 6.903  
    High River CAD 0.13 -96.4% 212.5% 0.058  
    Eldorado USD 8.68 -7.1% 264.7% 3.197  
    Agnico-Eagle USD 55.42 -33.6% 165.5% 8.577  
    Centerra CAD 5.23 -66.2% 481.1% 0.895  
    Randgold Resources USD 48.49 -13.8% 117.6% 3.709  
    Shandong CNY 66.94 -43.5% 153.6% 3.406  
    Peter Hambro GBP 5.66 -63.3% 262.8% 0.785  
    Hecla Mining USD 1.77 -86.5% 78.9% 0.385  
    Golden Star USD 1.69 -60.9% 322.5% 0.315  
    Franco-Nevada CAD 27.20 -0.1% 134.1% 2.158  
    Fresnillo GBP 4.00 -30.4% 330.1% 4.094  
    JSC Polymetal USD 5.30 -46.2% 430.0% 1.670  
    Red Back CAD 8.50 -8.1% 197.2% 1.533  
    New Gold CAD 2.93 -69.9% 211.7% 0.493  
    Northgate CAD 1.74 -50.1% 159.7% 0.352  
    Tier II averages/total -44.3% 222.1% 43.897  
    Weighted averages -42.3% 188.1%    
               
    TIER III Stock From From Value  
      price high* low* USD bn  
    Western Goldfields CAD 2.35 -40.8% 370.0% 0.254  
    Great Basin CAD 2.10 -45.2% 130.8% 0.357  
    Sino Gold AUD 5.59 -26.6% 135.9% 1.040  
    Alamos CAD 8.25 -9.7% 135.7% 0.687  
    Highland GBP 0.60 -72.0% 185.7% 0.278  
    PanAust AUD 0.17 -86.8% 101.2% 0.167  
    Kingsgate AUD 4.20 -33.3% 90.9% 0.249  
    Int’l Minerals CAD 3.28 -50.7% 180.3% 0.243  
    Allied Gold AUD 0.41 -50.3% 121.6% 0.107  
    First Uranium CAD 5.15 -45.4% 404.9% 0.617  
    Novagold CAD 4.75 -59.4% 900.0% 0.680  
    Gold Wheaton CAD 0.29 -84.6% 1325.0% 0.213  
    Oxus Gold GBP 0.08 -74.3% 113.9% 0.042  
    Pan African GBP 0.04 -47.5% 113.3% 0.063  
    Citigold AUD 0.23 -49.4% 50.0% 0.106  
    Jaguar CAD 7.15 -47.7% 199.2% 0.362  
    Pamodzi Gold ZAR 1.40 -88.3% 185.7% 0.013  
    Oceanagold AUD 0.58 -81.9% 286.7% 0.060  
    DRDGold ZAR 9.25 -9.8% 223.4% 0.340  
    Dominion Mining AUD 4.82 -1.2% 152.4% 0.316  
    Avoca Resources AUD 1.92 -34.2% 118.9% 0.338  
    Integra Mining AUD 0.23 -67.6% 142.1% 0.057  
    Royal Gold USD 43.33 -13.0% 90.5% 1.474  
    Hunan Chenzhou CNY 12.84 -62.0% 115.8% 1.005  
    Aurizon CAD 4.59 -15.5% 279.3% 0.538  
    Kazakh Gold USD 6.80 -74.8% 209.1% 0.285  
    Gammon Gold CAD 8.74 -22.0% 226.1% 0.829  
    Crew Gold CAD 0.11 -94.6% 110.0% 0.071  
    Lingbao HKD 2.42 -56.0% 202.5% 0.093  
    Zhao Jin HKD 8.57 -54.7% 360.8% 0.483  
    Rusoro Mining CAD 0.70 -63.7% 197.9% 0.216  
    Minefinders CAD 6.59 -51.2% 97.9% 0.308  
    Andina Minerals CAD 1.98 -57.3% 280.8% 0.125  
    Crystallex CAD 0.36 -87.6% 260.0% 0.084  
    Ramelius Resources AUD 0.57 -54.0% 52.0% 0.067  
    Tanzanian Royalty CAD 4.96 -21.5% 149.2% 0.349  
    Minera Andes CAD 0.64 -66.7% 100.0% 0.096  
    Semafo CAD 2.07 -1.4% 176.0% 0.381  
    Tier III averages/total -50.1% 225.7% 12.991  
    Weighted averages -51.9% 170.0%    
                     

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

    In my opinion you need to move now and move quickly and get on this great Bull Market in Gold and ALL Precious Metals -jschulmansr

    My Disclosure: Long Many of the Tier’s 1, 2, 3 mining stocks, Precious Metals Bullion, Long DGP,GDX, CES, ROY. You might say I am a Gold Bug and Proud of it! Good Investing! – jschulmansr

    Catch the New Bull! – Buy Gold Online –Get 1 Gram Free! Just for Opening and Account, No minimums, Buy Safely, quickly, and at low prices, guaranteed! Bullion Vault.com

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

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

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    Shock and Awe! – Doug Casey

    12 Thursday Feb 2009

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

    ≈ Comments Off on Shock and Awe! – Doug Casey

    Tags

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

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

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

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

    2009: Another Year of Shock and Awe – Seeking Alpha

    By: Jeff Clark of Casey Research

     

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

     

     

    The $1.1 Trillion Budget Deficit


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

     

     

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

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

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

    The U.S. Economy in 2009

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

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

    Deflation vs. Inflation

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

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

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

    The U.S. Dollar and the Day of Reckoning

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

    The Recession

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

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

    Gold’s Performance in 2008

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

    Gold Volatility

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

    Gold Stocks

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

    The good news is that relative to the price of gold, gold stocks are at their cheapest level in history. I still have my gold stocks and the fact is, I’m buying more. I’m not selling, because I think we’re starting another bull market. And this one is going to be much steeper and much quicker than the last one. I’m not a perma-bull on any asset class, but in this case I’m forced to go into the gold stocks. They’re the cheapest asset class out there, and the one with the highest potential.
    =========================================

     

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

     

     

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

    Enjoy and Good Investing – jschulmansr

     

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

     

     

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