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post #81 of 308
Thread Starter 

Everything You Need to Know About Junior Mining Stocks

Money Morning

Let's make something clear up front: junior mining stocks are not for the faint of heart.

Legendary investor Doug Casey calls them "the most volatile stocks on earth."

They can and do regularly undergo massive swings, both positive and negative.

It's a really tough business. Many flame out.

But all it takes is just one 10-bagger to make up for all the dogs in the pound.

Thanks to a new discovery, a takeover bid or full-blown investment mania, it's not uncommon for some of these stocks to return as much as 1,000%, 5,000%, and even 10,000%.

Those are not typos. In fact, there are countless examples.

Aber Resources was a $3 stock in 1993 before it made a big diamond discovery. Four years later, the stock hit $28/share, handing early investors over 900% returns.

Then there's Diamond Fields Resources. Its shares were $4 before geologists made a massive nickel discovery in 1994. Not long after, the stock hit a pre-split equivalent of $160 for a 4,000% return.

That phenomenal 4,000% return was repeated in 2006, when Aurelian Resources Inc. made a high-grade gold discovery in Ecuador. Shares of the junior miner went from $0.89 to almost $40.

So what makes a stock a "junior miner"?

In a pure sense, junior mining companies have market caps somewhere between $5 million and $100 million.

But here's the thing the makes them not for the faint of heart.

Usually, junior miners don't make any money. They just raise money from investors to explore properties for gold, silver, base metals, oil, gas, potash, or uranium, just to name a few.

And even if they make a significant find, junior miners rarely develop it themselves. Instead they sell the project to a major miner, who can more easily raise the required funding and has the experience to build and operate a mine.

OK, so now you're pumped with the idea that one of these little mining companies could help you retire in two years.

And you're right, they can. But not so fast.

The truth is you need to approach this mining subsector with a game plan -- an investment "toolkit" if you will - to help you to cast aside the dogs and focus on the "diamonds in the rough."

Essentially, there are four main areas you need to vet in order to decide if a given junior miner is one to add to your portfolio.

 

Junior Mining Stocks and Geopolitics

When considering a junior miner, geopolitics is always a concern. In this case, stability is what you are looking for.

For instance, it is important to know:


  • Where the company's main project is located.
  • And what the political regime is like in that jurisdiction.
  •  
I make no bones about avoiding projects located in places unfriendly to mining, and neither should you.

That includes most of Africa, Russia, and some areas in Asia and Latin America. Places favorable for miners include much of Canada, Australia, parts of Europe and Scandinavia, Latin America, and Asia.

It's simple. The last thing you want is for some kleptocrat to wait until tens of millions have been spent to discover a massive gold deposit, only to turn around and revoke a key permit or expropriate the land.

What also tends to happen in these "hostile-to-mining" locations is that, after a project is built, the government decides to change the rules, ask for a significant share, and/or up the royalties.

For the most part, the places I like for mining have an established legal framework that allows the miner to know the rules and doesn't make drastic changes too often.

The second aspect of geopolitics is the surroundings and placement of the property. Many times there can be people living nearby, or the land may have significance to an indigenous population.

Some projects also need to get entire small towns to move, while others need to negotiate with a native group for some sort of compensation.

To avoid these hurdles, a Stakeholder Engagement Program is a great way for the company to gain favor with the locals.

By involving the local community through sponsorships and hiring, and by working with educational institutions for consulting or research, the company can demonstrate how they are able and willing to contribute to the economic benefit of the area.

Obviously, a deposit in the middle of nowhere is less likely to affect people. But that could also mean there is little or no infrastructure like electricity, water, or roads nearby.

Generally, the closer the access to these, the better, as it allows access to the property, facilitates exploration and development, and simplifies eventual mine operation.


The Importance of Management for Junior Mining Stocks

When it comes to junior mining stocks, management is the key.

It is so important that many times a less-than-stellar property can be made viable simply by a great management team that has the ability to prove its deposits are economically attractive, or even potentially very profitable.

Investors need to be sure the guys running the junior miner have a ton of experience, ideally directly related to the same commodity involved in the project at hand.

Even better is when management and/or the company's geologists have made significant discoveries in the past, and some of those deposits have made it all the way to becoming mines.

Experienced management will also know how to navigate the legal, political, and financial issues sure to arise.

Look for companies where the key people have plenty of "skin in the game," ensuring their shares and stock options align their interests with those of shareholders.


Don't Overlook the Balance Sheet

Balance sheets can be intimidating for some investors, but they don't need to be. Here are a few things you want to look for.

First, determine the market cap of the company and the number of outstanding shares.

If the share float looks excessively big, it could be that management raised money at really low equity prices when they were desperate. It could be a question of bad luck or timing, or it could be bad planning. You need to figure out which.

Second, you don't want a junior miner that has debt, or at least significant debt on its balance sheet, if it has no cash flow. As well, their cash balance should be able to take them through to their next significant milestone.

If that's the case, and the news pointing towards that milestone is positive, it may allow management to raise money at a significantly higher share price, avoiding overly diluting existing shareholders.

Also, take a look at their monthly costs to keep the lights on, employees paid, and exploration moving forward.

In certain cases, a junior may actually earn income from an ongoing related business. I've come across one company with significant earnings from mine remediation, which actually helped them gain invaluable information on interesting properties they eventually picked up. Another, a small silver miner, manufactures, sells, and repairs mining equipment for competitors, helping to pay the bills.


The Drilling Results are Paramount

An important ingredient that helps separate the wheat from the chaff is the drilling results.

It's one thing to drill a hole and hit gold. It's quite another to know where to keep drilling, and to keep finding more.

The best junior miners are the ones that use a process, involving plenty of science, geology, geophysics, and yes, some art.

All the scientific aspects help geologists know where to look. But it's decades of experience that allow some geologists to interpret the drill results and assays. Only then can they use that info to formulate a concept of what the deposit may actually look like.

Prospective investors will want to look for high grade (concentration) of the resource for every ton of ore. Typically, the higher the concentration, the higher the value, as eventual mining and processing costs will be lower per gram or per pound of final product.

In that vein, investors want to see higher grade, and drill results that consistently hit quality material.

That tells you two things: the geologist is looking in the right place, and the deposit is likely growing in size. This in turn helps boost the value of the asset, while allowing for a more economic extraction of the contained resource in the future.

So there you have it. Now you know what things to look for to significantly increase your odds of investing in a junior resource company that's going to hit the jackpot.

Remember, even doing all this provides no guarantees.

You need to do plenty of due diligence to narrow down the vast pool of potential candidates to the select few deserving of your hard-earned capital.

You also need to arm yourself with patience and be willing to allow a given investment months and even years to play itself out. Good management needs time to execute, and resource exploration is a tough business.

But there are few other industries where $1 spent drilling in the right place can return $100 dollars to early investors.

Junior miners offer that explosive potential.

Now you just need to decide... do you want a piece of it?
post #82 of 308
Thread Starter 

Blaming the Machines for Gold

By: Adrian Ash | Wednesday, June 13, 2012
 

Who-oh-who is to blame for the gold pricemoving against you, up or down...?

 

So Europe might be facing deflation, and Greece might begin a firesale straight after this weekend's vote. Yet still €1.1 trillion doesn't buy what it used to.

Last winter, the European Central Bank soaked the currency union's commercial lenders with cheap loans, lending them cash to lend in turn to their domestic governments by buying government bonds. But now Spain's 10-year bond yields are at a fresh Euro-era high of 6.73%. Italy's borrowing costs are back where they were before the second chunk of El Tro was unleashed in February.

The cheapest 3-year money in history - lent for just 1% per year - has proven itself worthless in short. Any wonder people keep opting to buy gold for protection?

 

The recent swoons and jumps in the gold price, however, have the market scratching its head. Both of this week's pops came just as New York got to its desk, but with barely a ripple in the gold futures market - where US traders typically throw their weight around. So it seems most likely to be simply a heavy gold buyer, bidding up prices for a chunk of physical metal in the wholesale market.

 

Whoever it is, they're spoilt for reasons to buy gold - Greek elections on Sunday, record-high Spanish bond yields, or a weakening US recovery. Take your pick. Massive money inflation, either before, during or after a major credit default, isn't a risk you can discount to zero or nearby today.

Yet still the finance business demands cause and effect. The obsession with tick-by-tick reasoning - the relentless search for "This because that" - goes far beyond financial journalists. The classic example, cited in Daniel Kahneman's recent Thinking: Fast & Slow by way of Nassim Taleb citing it in The Black Swan, was when a Bloomberg headline writer first blamed the capture of Saddam Hussein for a rise in US Treasury bond prices, and then, minutes later, rewrote the headline to blame the very same event for T-bonds falling when the price dropped.

 

"The two headlines look superficially like explanations of what happened in the market," says Kahneman. "But a statement that can explain two contradictory outcomes explains nothing at all."

And so in gold, some market participants saw this Tuesday's $30 jump, says one bullion-bank salesman, coming from Fitch's downgrade of Spanish banks. Others players we spoke to saw Wednesday's rise - which then reversed - coming off the weak US retail sales data. Yet more traders saw both moves as just noise spat out by automated traders, those algorithms run wild on electronic platforms which mean even market-makers can't see quite what is happening with physical flows.

 

"The Electronic Platforms, or 'machines' or 'toys'," says one, "already installed at clients' desks and currently marketed by commercial banks for precious metals trading [mean] that market-makers are lacking a bit of view of what is happening on the spot [market in gold] from time to time."

Moving a little flow away from the biggest banks might sound a "good thing" to some. But blaming the electronic machines and toys for nonsense moves in the gold price is becoming a popular pastime in the professional market, especially for traders caught the wrong side of what feels like volatility.

Truth is, however, the violence of gold price swings has been easing since last summer's 3-year highs. And if London's market-making bullion banks feel they can't hang a story on what's driving the price tick-by-tick, few journalists or private investors will spot the "true" cause either. So save your energy.

 

Because what matters, as with any home for your savings, isn't whatever breaking headline might or might not be driving other people (or machines) to buy, only to sell - and buy again - before the next newswire update. It's the core reasons you do or don't identify for your own decision to buy or sell.

With gold investing, we'd suggest, those reasons to consider start and end with the threat to your own savings from the ugly twins of default and devaluation. Still lurking round the corner, what odds would you put on them mugging your money in the next month, year or half-decade? Five years and $900 per ounce after the start of the financial crisis, it still looks a long way from finished yet. And hoping that you won't need uninflatable, indestructible gold isn't the same as not needing it.

 

post #83 of 308
Thread Starter 

Gold Stop Hunt Goes Full Retard

 
Tyler Durden's picture


Did a BIS gold trader just spill coffee on his keyboard not once but twice, or did we just have another ye olde algo trick of stopping the hunts (get it?) out of all marginal players? We will never know. What we will know is that paper prices of physical objects are becoming increasingly more meaningless.

 

 

20120615_gold_0.png

 

It is shaping up to be one of those before one of those weekends as we see FX, equity, and now precious metals markets gapping up and down as if they forgot that you never go full-retard as the rip-and-drip stop hunt round-trips for $14 up and cliff-dive back down. As the world becomes more and more bifurcated by the fail of reality and hope of intervention, liquidity is sucked out of the system from a bid-offer perspective. We can only imagine what FX will be like at the close.

 

post #84 of 308
Ted Butler:  A Few Questions; One Answer
 

A Few Questions; One Answer

Please read this article carefully because I’m disclosing for the first time that the U.S. government has given JPMorgan the green light to manipulate the silver market. This fact explains the shenanigans in the silver market. It answers all the questions and exposes this tawdry affair for all to see.

The scandal recently became more outrageous. The June Bank Participation Report, as of Tuesday, June 5, along with the COT confirmed that JPMorgan’s silver short position has increased by at least 5,000 contracts in the past two reporting weeks. That is the equivalent of 25 million ounces of silver, truly an enormous amount in a two week period and about equal to all the silver produced and consumed in the world in the same period. I calculate JPMorgan’s net short position in COMEX silver futures to be between 16,000 and 17,000 contracts. JPMorgan has been the sole net commercial silver short seller over the past two weeks. That is the clearest proof yet of manipulation. A market dominated by one buyer or seller is the ultimate definition of manipulation.

Had JPMorgan not sold short 5,000 or more net additional contracts in COMEX silver over the past two weeks, the price of silver would have climbed even higher. Why? Because without JPMorgan selling, someone else would have had to sell in their place. Those sellers would have demanded a higher price. Furthermore, JPM’s short position alone equals the entire 16,500 contract total net commercial short position in COMEX silver. In other words, if JPMorgan did not hold a 16,000 to 17,000 contact net short position, there would be no commercial net short position at all. The additional proof of silver manipulation includes the two massive price takedowns of last year, when the silver price fell more than 30% in a matter of days, benefitting JPMorgan more than any other trader.

How can I continue to get away with accusing JPMorgan, arguably the most powerful bank in the US, of the most serious market crime possible and get no reaction from them? An objective reading of the past four years, since the time I first publicly identified JPMorgan as the big silver short, has resulted in the bank being universally recognized on the Internet as the big silver crook. The reputation of a systemically important financial institution is always of prime concern from the board of director and senior management level on down. Why have I never been threatened by them?

The same question comes to mind when applied to the CME Group, owner and operator of the COMEX, where the silver manipulation is centered. The allegations that the CME is aiding and abetting in the silver manipulation are serious because the CME has been officially designated as a self-regulatory organization (SRO), meaning they have a legal obligation to prevent any attempt at manipulation in their markets. Like JPM, the CME is tough as nails and, presumably, could step on me should they choose to. (Yes, I send everything I write to JPM, the CME and the CFTC).

Unlike JPMorgan and the CME, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has not remained completely silent. The agency has initiated a number of reviews and investigations into allegations of manipulation in silver over the years (at my prodding), including a current Enforcement Division investigation, now approaching the four-year mark. The allegations of a silver manipulation were always credible, since they were based upon data from the agency itself and compared to how the Commission reacted strongly to past instances of concentration. The CFTC had to at least go through the motions of pretending to care. After all, many thousands of silver investors have consistently petitioned the agency on this matter over the years.

It’s been all talk and no action from the Commission when it comes to the silver manipulation. I can’t tell you how many times I have asked myself after I have just explained another undeniable proof of silver manipulation, “why can’t these regulators see this?” Why is the Commission conducting an expensive and formal silver investigation in the first place, when all it has to do is explain why a US bank holding a silver short position equal to 25% to 30% of both the paper and physical total world market wouldn’t be manipulative to the price (in and of itself)?

To this day, I have been baffled by how CFTC chairman Gary Gensler can preach the Holy Gospel of true regulatory reform of transparency, position limits and no concentration, while ignoring the clear evidence of manipulation in silver. I think what has caused his and the agency’s failure to terminate a highly-visible silver manipulation has nothing to do with a lack of understanding of the silver manipulation. It took me a while to figure it out, but better late than never.

The answer to all the above questions lies with the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets. Largely in response to the great stock market crash in October, 1987, President Ronald Reagan signed an Executive Order in 1988 creating the Working Group to prevent a recurrence of a market crash.http://www.archives.gov/federal-register/codification/executive-order/12631.html

There are four members in the Working Group; the Federal Reserve Chairman, the Treasury Secretary, the Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Chairman of the CFTC. The Treasury Secretary is the Chairman of the Working Group. The purpose of the group is to promote market stability and prevent disorderliness by working with the exchanges and major market participants in times of stress.

Such a time for the financial markets existed in March 2008, when the investment bank Bear Stearns failed and, undoubtedly, the Working Group was heavily involved. The Group, along with exchanges and major market participants, oversaw the transfer of Bear Stearns’ giant short positions to JPMorgan, in the process indemnifying JPM from any concerns of dominance and overt control of silver and gold prices. As a result, JPMorgan orchestrated (and was the biggest beneficiary) the more than 50 % decline in silver prices into late 2008 with the Working Group’s permission.

Things then quieted down in silver until the fall of 2010, when prices started to make an historic move into the late-April 2011 price high near $50. At that point, JPMorgan’s giant short position began to hurt and it moved to cover some of the silver shorts into the very top. At that point, it looked like JPMorgan would get crushed by the physical silver shortage and the growing losses on their short positions. Instead, JPM appealed to the Working Group for relief and, working with them and the CME, JPM caused the silver market to crash, starting on Sunday night, May 1. Later, the Working Group teamed with JPMorgan and the CME to smash prices by 35% in 3 days in late September 2011.

The President’s Working Group on Financial Markets answers all my questions. It explains why JPMorgan and the CME remain silent about allegations of manipulation. They have been given legal cover by the Working Group. This also explains why the CFTC says they are conscientiously investigating silver when it is clear they are not. The agency can’t come out and disclose silver was smashed with the full knowledge of the Working Group, so it pretends to go through the motions of investigating. What is going through Gary Gensler’s mind? Is he not tormented by the blatant silver manipulation which runs contrary to all his public utterances? Commodity law is being broken.

If my analysis is correct, what does this mean for silver from here? It will prove to be wildly bullish for the price; maybe not immediately, but on a long term basis. It sets the stage for the really big move in silver. This overt government interference in the silver market will boomerang at some point, just as every attempt at artificial price setting has failed. Just let the word start to spread about Working Group involvement in causing the price of silver to fall and the natural reaction by the world’s investors will be to take advantage of the bargain created.

This is an attempt by the government to influence the price of silver lower by favoring the paper short sellers and not by dumping physical silver on the market. That’s because neither the US Government, nor any other world government has any physical silver to dump. All the Working Group can do is aid the paper silver short sellers by permitting vicious price sell-offs designed to scare existing holders. There is an easy way around that scam and that is buying real silver, not the junk represented by COMEX paper contracts. If, as and when the role of the Working Group in the silver manipulation becomes known, the best reason yet for buying silver will come into focus.

I know that many have long suspected that some type of government involvement was present in gold and silver. But rarely have those suspicions been as clearly documented as they are now in silver. Questions about a silver investigation that never ends, or price moves beyond reason or historical precedent, or why the nation’s most important bank and exchange are up to their eyeballs in the silver manipulation have been explained by the Working Group. Too bad the Working Group took the side of a few short manipulators and not the many silver investors and producers of the world. No doubt someone has sold a bill of goods to the regulators, falsely convincing them that terrible things will happen financially should silver explode to its true market value. Well guess what? The rotten state of world finances has nothing to do with the price of silver currently, nor will it in the future.

Ted Butler

June 15, 2012

For subscription information please go to www.butlerresearch.com

post #85 of 308
post #86 of 308
Thread Starter 
Quote:
Originally Posted by GoldenBear5 View Post

Ted Butler:  A Few Questions; One Answer
 

"A Few Questions; One Answer"

 
GB...Butler has been writing about manipulation for at least the last 10 yrs. obviously nothing is going to be done, but gold is up fir 11 years in a row, so I guess we just have to live with it.
post #87 of 308

Stone, you are right.  We do just have to live with it, at this point in time.  

 

Since Butler began writing about manipulative concentration in the silver market, (and as a direct result of his writings) I suspect that many more retail investors have bought physical silver than would have had Butler not written publicly.  This makes it harder for the manipulation to occur.  More investors are willing to buy dips.  The attention Butler has drawn to this crime in progress has impacted the market and the manipulators have less of a free hand because of the opposition they face.  Good men should not do nothing and Butler has persistently acted.  I find his logic to be meticulous and unassailable.

 

In recent years I have often heard that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.  But time is a factor and there is a cumulative effect from repetition.  A tiny hammer striking a brick once (or ten times) will have little effect.  Repeating it a million times will have more effect.  Each strike is not identical and the brick will have changed between blows #1 and #800,000.  In the meantime, bystanders will mock the person who has hit that brick with a tiny hammer once every Monday for five years.  But if that's his only tool and Monday is his only chance to use it, I give him credit for doing so.

 

Eventually the manipulation will end.  Before then, some PM investors will have passed away from old age.

post #88 of 308
Thread Starter 

CFTC%20Appreciation-470x353.jpg

post #89 of 308

Goldbug Saturday

“Bereft of the modern printing press, the Romans resorted to clipping their metal coins, a practice most prevalent during the reign of their infamously pyromaniacal emperor, Nero. The idea was simple enough: Boss Man calls in ten coins…then reissues eleven, fashioned out of the same amount of metal. And, voilà! Wealth has increased by 10%! The scam here is obvious…except to the credulous acolytes of modern finance.” Daily Reckoning

Perpetual QE Has Arrived: “Unless the Fed is Actively Engaging in monetization at every given moment, the impact from easing diminishes progressively, ultimately approaching zero and subsequently becoming negative!” And this was written prior to ‘preparing to interveen’ talk of Thursday and Friday at Zero Hedge.

But this fellow says Current Account, Inflation & Jobless Claims Not Enough For QE3 & Twist Pressure at 24/7 Wall Street.

“There hasn’t been a case in history where they haven’t eventually printed money and devalued their currency.” – Ray Dalio (AA) [Cliff Comment: The inflation from money printing might not occur rapidly enough to prevent a deflationary financial system disastrous collapse.]“ Cliff Kule

Cheap gold stock commentary Adam Hamilton at Zeal.

Gold chart at Seasonal Charts with a hat tip to 3.58 at Investor Village.

S&P 500 inverse head & shoulders breakout: This is How Bottoms are Formed from All Star Charts and another from Market Anthropology.

Posted in Gold, Precious Metals | Leave a reply

post #90 of 308
Thread Starter 

Gold, Gold Mining Shares, and QE

post #91 of 308
Thread Starter 

Prepare Right Now for Tomorrow's Tempest

 

Christopher Barker
June 15, 2012

 

The world has ventured so far into uncharted territory in its collective response to the global financial crisis that we have no clear precedent at our disposal from which to discern the ultimate result.

But that doesn't mean we are incapable of identifying the likely consequences of all this government largesse created in response to the specter of systemic deleveraging throughout our precarious financial system. The intentions of all key government and central banks engaged in this battle against deflation remain both explicit and crystal-clear: They will continue to undertake whatever extraordinary measures they consider necessary to thwart the deflationary beast lurking in the shadows.

 

Buying time at an ever-increasing cost
Given the extraordinary scale of interventions already executed, perhaps the most foreboding sign of all is just how little they appear to have accomplished, aside from buying a little time. At the realized rate, moreover, this has been some seriously costly time!

The U.S. Federal Reserve has already completed two debt-monetization campaigns, one "Twist," and a dizzying array of bank rescue facilities and liquidity injections. Yet even after all those historic interventions, a hyperaccommodative zero-bound interest rate, and a massive economic stimulus package, the U.S. economy has unfortunately failed to reach the kind of "escape velocity" that might encourage authorities to ease up on the accelerator. Further intervention will inevitably follow. Indeed, because governments and the moneyed interests fear a deflationary spiral above any other scenario, I believe we find ourselves mired in an unseemly vicious circle that gold expert Jim Sinclair has deftly labeled "QE to infinity." The debt issuance, central bank balance sheet expansion, and corresponding currency debasement that still looms on the horizon even after all that has been done to date speaks to the unspeakable scale of the underlying crisis.

 

After much initial reluctance, Europe has opened the monetary spigots with some gigantic emergency measures of its own. But there, too, each successive response seems only to apply a little salve to a wound that never heals. Noting the tremendously disappointing market response to Europe's $125 billion bailout of Spanish banks announced on June 9, The Economist concedes: "it's a plaster, not a cure." And as Europe's prolonged malaise weighs upon the world economy, the International Monetary Fund has urged both Japan and England to consider additional stimulus in their respective nations. I have long bemoaned the dynamic of competitive currency devaluation that has taken shape as this crisis matures, and now the world stage appears to be set for some sort of coordinated or roughly simultaneous easing initiative by four of the world's major money centers. These are truly remarkable times, and I understand it can be very daunting for investors to make sense of it all and devise their strategy accordingly. Fortunately, a voice from the past can now be heard once again to help Fools navigate their way through the current and forthcoming stages of fiat currency devaluation as a predictable consequence of worldwide efforts to avoid a great depression of staggering proportion.

 

Understanding the familiar dynamics in play
Recognizing the remarkable relevance of the material to our present predicament, New York fund manager Roger Lipton has resurrected a true classic by publishing a brand-new edition of Harry Browne's 1970 book: How You Can Profit From the Coming Devaluation. In this book, Browne correctly predicted the U.S. dollar devaluation and subsequent inflationary cycle of the 1970s, and he succeeded in presenting the predictable boom-and-bust cycles of inflationary monetary policy in an easily absorbed manner. It's a quick read, and well worth the time. James Grant, noted financial historian and editor of Grant's Interest Rate Observer, wrote the foreword for the new edition. Grant writes: "I commend this volume to every investor and to one particular central banker: For your sake and ours, Ben Bernanke, please read every word."

 

The work contains too many gems to share here, but permit me to include just a few. I enjoyed Browne's definition of a recession as "the liquidation period following an inflationary cycle." Browne continues: "The government invokes inflation as a way of appearing to create prosperity; as a way of financing, on a subtle basis, its own programs. Once under way, the inflationary program must be sustained to ward off the recession that will inevitably follow." I find this an elegant means of understanding the circumstances that set the scene for our current predicament. You see, when Browne published his book, the dollar was pegged at a gold price of $35 per ounce, whereas today an ounce of gold fetches more than $1,600! That epic degree of dollar devaluation vis-a-vis gold offers a window onto the mother of all inflationary cycles -- an extended period of apparent prosperity that was really nothing of the sort because it left us precisely where we find ourselves today: between a rock and an unimaginably hard place. Browne cautioned back in 1970: "And so the binge continues, guaranteeing an even worse readjustment period ahead. The longer the cycle lasts, the bigger the inflation, the greater number of miscalculations to be liquidated, the worse the recession to come."

 

How to profit from the ongoing devaluation
Browne conducts a useful exercise in his book by exploring the likely performance of various asset classes through each of the potential scenarios resulting from the bust of an inflationary cycle. For each type of investment, Browne scores its desirability within the context of continued inflation, recession, depression, runaway inflation, and devaluation. Not surprisingly, gold and silver emerged from this exercise with a golden outlook for gains through most of the scenarios considered. For those interested in adapting their investment strategies to the specter of continued fiat currency devaluation, the one unavoidable conclusion is that gold and silver have an immutable role to play.

 

The way I see it, we're still in the early stages of this global financial crisis and the related devaluation of paper currencies. I consider my long-standing target of $2,000 gold such a simple threshold to reach that I expect it will appear laughably conservative in hindsight. In fact, for those paying close attention to the supply side of the equation, $2,250 gold is coming into clearer view. In silver, I believe the upside could be greater still, and I have positioned my own portfolio accordingly. I consider some bullion exposure critical, and for that I recommend Central Fund of Canada as a one-stop shop for reliably unencumbered gold and silver. Accordingly, my bullish CAPScall on Central Fund of Canada has remained in place since November 2006!

 

Mining stocks have proven a tough nut to crack thus far in this precious-metal bull market, as a combination of rising costs and way too much poor execution have contributed to a shocking degree of underperformance by the miners relative to the underlying metal prices. But I remain steadfast in my expectation for meaningful outperformance by the miners going forward, with the top-quality producers likely to yield some legendary returns from their currently impaired state. While major producer Goldcorp (NYSE: GG ) offers a low-risk starting point, I gravitate toward smaller-cap operators that appear to be in the midst of a major turnaround. I just visited Brigus Gold's (NYSE: BRD ) Black Fox mine in Ontario, and that company's long-awaited turnaround is finally taking shape. On the silver side, though the well-known Silver Wheaton (NYSE: SLW ) will certainly remain a core holding, I'm excited by the remarkable growth prospects of quality miners Aurcana, Endeavour Silver (NYSE: EXK ) , and First Majestic Silver (NYSE: AG ) .

 

We need not be hapless victims to the currency devaluation that's heaped upon our shoulders by governments and central banks engaged in an all-out global war against deflation. By making a bit of room for gold and silver exposure within their investment portfolios, You would do well to heed the seasoned advice of Harry Browne and profit from the coming devaluation.

post #92 of 308
Thread Starter 

Jesse's Café Américain

 

20 June 2012

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - More Wiggle Waggle

 

The Fed did what was expected, and the metals were hit going into this FOMC day, as expected.

Boring. Don't let these jokers muscle you out of your positions with their intraday shenanigans.

Let's see how the real trend develops.

I am long bullion and short stocks.


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post #93 of 308
Thread Starter 

via Ed Steer...June 21, 2012

 

As usual, The Central Bank of the Russian Federation updated their website yesterday. It showed that they had added another 500,000 ounces of gold to their reported reserves in May...which now sit at 29.3 million troy ounces of fine gold. The excellent chart below is courtesy of Nick Laird, for which I thank him on our behalf.

(Click on image to enlarge)

post #94 of 308
Thread Starter 

Summer Lows At Hand?

By: Mary Anne & Pamela Aden
 Thursday, June 21, 2012
 

In a key turnaround, gold bounced up from its December lows this month on fresh safe haven buying as QE3 possibilities came back to the table.

The psychological $1600 level was quickly surpassed. This is essentially the level that will determine if 2012 ends up being the 12th consecutive up year for gold.

For now, we are seeing some backing and filling, which isn't a bad thing... as long as the December lows hold. This is currently a very important juncture for gold, and for silver.

Help on the Way?

When Europe or the U.S. looks vulnerable, especially in the jobs area, it quickly fuels emotions. And we all know how Bernanke feels about this... he will save the system at all costs. In fact, all of the monetary policy makers worldwide are being pressured to help the ailing global economy.

This is why the markets bounced up after their sell-off. A liquidity infusion would be bullish for gold.


Big Picture is Bullish

The big picture continues to point the way up. And the global debt crisis and record low interest rates are a bullish factor for gold too.

Chart 1 shows this clearly. It shows the gold price above, with the "real" T-Bill interest rate below since 1967.

25908_a.png

When the real T-Bill rate is negative (below zero on the chart) it means that rates are providing a negative return, adjusted for inflation.

This is bullish for gold because there's no competition. Normally, an investment that pays a higher interest has the advantage. But if interest rates aren't paying interest, and neither does gold, then there is no advantage between the two.

Note that the two major bull markets in gold happened while real interest rates were mostly negative.

Even though gold peaked in September and it's been declining for nine months, the gold trend is still up, regardless of the currency it's traded in.

Plus, gold has been stronger than the other precious metals and gold shares, especially since last year when Europe started flaring up.

Another good sign for gold has been its underlying strength as the U.S. dollar has moved higher. Gold held above its December low, for instance, when the dollar index soared to an almost two year high. This type of situation tends to lead a renewed gold rise.

Demand also remains bullish. Central banks continue to be active buyers. They bought bullion at the fastest pace in five decades in 2011, and they'll likely purchase a similar amount this year, according to the World Gold Council. In fact, central banks continued buying during weakness this past month.


 

 

Gold Timing: At key juncture

Gold's downward correction since September is now taking longer than it did in 2008.

The 2008 decline from March to November was steeper and gold lost almost 30%. The current decline has been mild in comparison, losing nearly 20%.

Chart 2 shows this comparison. Since the 2008 decline was the worst one in the 11 year old bull market, it again reinforces the importance of last December's low. This low is key. If it holds, all is well.

25908_b.png

 

 

 

If it doesn't and gold breaks clearly below $1536 for a few days, we could see gold fall much further first, before a renewed rise again starts. A 30% decline, similar to 2008 for example, could take gold to the $1350 - $1400 level.

For now, so far so good. Plus, as you can see on Chart 2B, gold is near a D low area, indicating that gold is close to a low. But we must also be prepared for a possible final washout, in case it comes.

To refresh your memories, gold has moved in an impressive recurring pattern on an intermediate basis. In a bull market its best rise is what we call a 'C' rise when gold reaches new bull market highs.

The worst decline is called a 'D" decline, which is where gold is today... forming a double 'D' bottom. And it's why we're watching the December lows so closely.

Bear markets tend to start with D declines and if this low is clearly broken, it would be a bad sign.

Once the 'D' decline is over, however, the upcoming A & B moves tend to be a consolidation time, before another C rise takes off. So stay tuned.


On The Upside: Keep an eye on...

Most important is that gold stays above $1536, the December low.

Then once it rises and stays above its 65-week moving average at $1635, it will be in bullish territory. Gold could then rise to its next resistance at the $1700 level.

From there, the next hurdle will be the $1800 level. This will be a harder one to surpass because it's kept a lid on the weakness since November.

But once it does, gold could then jump up to its record high near $1900. And it'll be smooth sailing, in another leg up in this amazing bull market when new record highs are reached.

And when $2000 is eventually surpassed, it'll likely be THE level that causes an exploding bull market to take hold.

post #95 of 308

Call me stupid, but I bought my FIRST consignment of silver.banana.gif

 

SO the bubble is probably about to burst....eek.gif

 

25 Canadien maples...........

 

NATURALLY THE NEXT DAY SILVER TANKS............

post #96 of 308
Thread Starter 

Jesse's Café Américain

22 June 2012

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Ending a Week of Shenanigans

 

Well, we can say goodby to this week, and good riddance to what proved to be a rough week for the metals bulls and miner mavens, except for the good news that Harvey Organ's illness was not life threatening and he will be fine it appears.

As you may recall, I warned about a 'hit' on the metals for FOMC meeting Tues-Wed. But I expected there to be a rebound and then another hit next week for the end of quarter and silver's July option expiration. That turned out not to be the case, as the metals were hammered lower. Interestingly enough, Silver OI increased.

Intraday commentary on this here.

So what next? Chart formations are really not so much help here except to track levels of support and resistance. I think the reason for this is the free-wheeling nature of these paper markets, only lightly traded, dominated by pros, disconnected from the real economy, and swinging around technicals and exogenous events.

Let's see how next week goes. There should be more data by then to be able to say something more substantial.

Chris Powell's interview on CNBC Asia is below the charts.

Have a pleasant weekend.

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post #97 of 308
Thread Starter 

Breaking News: Regulators to Classify Gold as Zero-Risk Asset

post #98 of 308
Thread Starter 

Jesse's Café Américain

 

25 June 2012

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Big Bounce on 'Flight to Safety'

 


Gold and silver 'popped' today despite the higher dollar and risk off trade. It happened shortly after I posted the NAV premiums chart, having seen some odd action on the tape, and watching the action closely into the option expiration tomorrow in silver. It is also expiration for copper.

The metals often act oddly around their Comex Option Expirations, depending on a number of factors. If you remember nothing else, remember that. You can get some nice entry and exit points around those days, in the lead up and aftermath.

The fellows who write and trade those options play games against them and with them, make no mistake about it. People who buy options on the retail side are typcially gamblers unless they are hedging.

Sometimes guys who are deeply knowledgeable of one or two indicators get lost in these little events that occur. But you can often spot them in the anomalies in the tape.

One has to watch many things and be open to various possibilities. That is why I do not like to 'predict' so much as calculate probabilities, since one tends to fall in love with their models and forecasts.

That is why I so often like Jim Sinclair's comments. He understands the short term moves for what they are, and treats them accordingly, ie with little regard but keeps his eye on the prize, the primary trend.

Chasing a model that predicts wiggles is a mugs' game, wherein you are always chasing 'a better model.' If the model were any good, you certainly would not hear about it on a free web site. And for the most part, the wiseguys make money with practical models but gain their edge by 'cheating' using asymmetric information and stacking the odds in their favor.

And I hope to be in this for money, not a fan club. So sorry, but there are no mechanistically precise models that crank out the future in advance which I can share with you. There are plenty of other fellows who can do that for you, and often for a price.

Do yourself a favor if you are not doing it full time for some reason AND making consistent money and just stop trading for the short term, or reduce your activity significantly. You cannot beat the shenanigans, mispricing of risks, and transaction frictions like commissions.

One can forecast the longer term trends on fundamentals, but that is something else entirely. You have to be prepared to ignore the 'wiggles,' especially in the kinds of markets we have today.

At 58 the gold/silver ratio was a bit stretched against the peoples' metal.

Markets remain edgy about Europe.

End of quarter this week. Let's see how it goes. I remained concerned that some of the bigger wiseguys (JPM) might smack the metals to make their carried losses look smaller for quarter end. It is hard to see that since one does not know their overall net positions in all markets.


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post #99 of 308
Thread Starter 

Fibonacci: Gold Stocks Thermometer

Morris Hubbartt
Weekly Market Update Excerpt
posted Jun 22, 2012


Gold & Bond Synergy Chart

  • The US Bond market is a debt market. Evaluating the US bond from a fundamental view point shows there are several things that make the US bond a long term investment to avoid.
  • The dollar is being diluted by the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing programs. Upon maturity, bond investors are set to be paid with a currency worth much less than when the bond was issued.
  • Most governments seem to be hopelessly addicted to spending money. The debt in the United States is now nearing $16 trillion, which is an amount too large to be honestly repaid.
  • The deficit is now growing by roughly $1 trillion every year. It overwhelms GDP growth. For every dollar collected in tax revenue, an additional dollar is being borrowed. Higher taxes can’t fix the economy. They will slow it down and create even bigger deficits.
  • From a technical stand point, the bond is overbought, yet it could become even more overbought.
  • The gold & bond synergy chart that I am highlighting this week shows how the bond’s price action can signal the end of a gold market correction.
  • Note the bullish rectangle technical pattern on gold in 2008, and how similar that is to today’s market. When bond prices are substantially extended, as they seem to be now, gold can begin a big move higher.
  • Why become a creditor and buy debt you probably can’t collect on, when you can buy gold instead?
  •  

Gold Triangle Trigger Chart

  • Gold appears to be completing its correction. A triangle formation is very bullish, and the MACD indicator at the bottom of this chart will likely be the trigger that shoots the gold bullet up and out of this triangle.
  • Because this price pattern is most prominent on the weekly chart, it carries more “technical weight” than if it only appeared on a daily one.
  •  

Gold Target Chart

  • The 61.8% Fibonacci retracement line of the move from about $1309 to $1923 has been the main support for gold at the lows of this correction. Substantial commercial buying has occurred each time the price has declined towards $1544.
  • The posture of the “Slow Stokes” and the CCI indicator are also bullish.
  •  

GDX Major Bottom Chart

  • Senior gold stocks are arguably now leading the precious metals sector. GDX is doing battle at the important Fibonacci 38% bull market retracement level. The number I have been watching closely is $47.25.
  • As of today, we have now had three closes above that level. The “three day close” is an event which confirms technical strength. My work targets $53.50-$55.
  • A move above $48.50, if it comes on strong volume, would be further confirmation of a new bull phase.
  •  

GDX Breakout Chart

  • My work suggests that GDX will acquire the $53.50-$55 target area in late July. Senior gold stocks have performed quite impressively over the past month. Note that gap in the $44 area that has not been filled.
  • The gap could be filled without negating the head and shoulders formation. The 50% Fibonacci retracement line sits at $43.91, which is right where that gap is. The Fibonacci indicator can be viewed as the gold stock thermometer, and it says a pullback to $44 is normal, healthy, and needed!
  • Higher prices for GDX are very likely in July, with growing volatility.
  •  

GDX vs Gold Chart #1

  • The valuation of gold equities is astounding at current levels, compared to gold. The above ratio chart shows GDX is still nearly as undervalued as when it traded at $15-$20!
  • It appears that a breakout has occurred, much like happened at the lows of 2008, when gold stocks gained about 300%.
  •  

GDX vs Gold Chart #2

  • The breakout from the wedge has been followed by the development of a solid head and shoulders pattern.
  • Another outstanding feature of this breakout is the powerful volume, indicating the move has probably only just started.
  •  

GDXJ V-Bottom Chart

  • One of the key technical highlights in GDXJ has been the capitulation volume that occurred at the recent lows. I hoped the V-bottom would have helped to push GDXJ as high as $24, before a serious correction set in.
  • So far that has been the case, yet price does need to accomplish that $24 level, or this market may abort the V-bottom and begin a double bottoming process.
  • Double bottoms can be frightening to experience, but they are very bullish events.
  •  

Silver Stop & Go Chart

  • Silver is one of my favorite assets. I am highlighting a monthly chart of the white metal this week.
  • Some technical indicators are now more oversold than at the lows of the 2008 crisis. Note the position of the Williams oscillator. Tremendous value is presenting itself to silver investors.
  • Continued strong buying by commercial traders suggests substantially higher prices are likely.
  • I’m not concerned that silver is lagging gold here. That’s normal at the beginning of a bull move in precious metals. June is seasonally a tough month for silver, but July can be excellent. Position yourself in June, so you profit in July!
post #100 of 308
Thread Starter 

Market Bottom Only In Hindsight

By: John Lee | Monday, June 25, 2012

The last 18 months have been gut-wrenching for mining equity investors.

 

$CDNX (S&P/TSX Venture (CDNX) Composite Index) TSXV

 

As the above chart demonstrates, the TSX Venture Composite Index, a fair representation of the junior mining sector, has come back down to levels seen in 2002, when gold first broke out of $300/oz.

While the TSX Venture Composite Index is still well above its 2008 low, the pain is just as pronounced now as it was then, as the TSX Composite Index, relative to the Dow, is now trading below 2009 levels. The following chart indicates a flight out of Canadian markets into the U.S. markets.

$TSX:$INDU (TSX Composite Index/Dow Jones Industrial Average) TSE/INDX

 

With emerging markets, such as China, struggling and the Eurozone in outright crisis mode, global investors not only have been pouring money into U.S. stocks but have also driven U.S. bonds into an all-time high, ignoring the fact that the bonds are sporting negative real interest.

$USB (30-Year US Treasury Bond Price (EOD)) INDX

 

While this represents an extreme flight to perceived "safety", the U.S. dollar index has failed to break out of its 2009 high, indicating the fundamental weakness of the U.S. dollar.

$USD (US Dollar Index - Cash Settle (EOD)) ICE

 

Focusing back on the gold sector, the severe correction is not just felt by the juniors, but senior producers as well. Kinross, for example, is now back to its 2008 low, when gold was below $1,000/oz.

KGC (Kinross Gold Corp.) NYSE

 

Overall, gold producers, relative to the price of gold have indeed reverted back to the 2009 level as the following chart indicates.

$XAU:$GOLD (Gold & Silver Index - Philadelphia/Gold - Spot Price (EOD)) INDX/CME

 

Despite the financial crisis worldwide, gold has held up very well in the last 23 months, currently ($1,600/oz) trading comfortably above the 2008 crisis level ($900). This clearly shows that gold is gaining momentum as the safe haven and reserve currency in the time of crisis.

$GOLD (Gold - Spot Price (EOD)) CME

 

Also notice, post 2008 crisis, gold doubled from $800/oz level to peak at more than $1,900/oz in less than 3 years. In 2008, the U.S. Federal Reserve embarked on unprecedented quantitative easing, creating trillions of dollars to revive the banks, and the equity and housing markets. Such inflationary measures had a direct positive impact on gold.

$GOLD (Gold - Spot Price (EOD)) CME

 

As we seemingly come out of the Euro crisis and with world governments eager to again embark on unlimited monetary easing, there are reasons to be again bullish on gold as it completes the current 18 months consolidation.

My conclusion is that the degree of flight to safety today and risk aversion is no less than the case in 2008. The dollar and U.S. bonds were the main beneficiary during the 2008 crisis and as they are in the current crisis.

Post 2008 crisis, gold and gold equities were the big winner, registering triple digit gains. There are preliminary signs of gold and gold equity market bottoms if one considers the bottoming ratios of TSX to Dow and gold equity to gold, and the blow off of U.S. bonds.

I am reminded of two old famous adages: never catch the falling knife, and a market bottom is only known in hindsight. For me, successful investing means buying 20% from the bottom and selling 20% from the top. If we are not currently 20% from the bottom, I'd say we are darn near.

 

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