SI
SI

 Gold/Mining/Energy | Blue Chip Gold Stocks HM, NEM, ASA, ABX, PDG


Previous 10 | Next 10 
From: gold$10k3/2/2012 11:26:10 AM
3 Recommendations   of 44664
 
Ok, buying now... good luck to all. <g>

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (2)

To: gold$10k who wrote (33897)3/2/2012 11:39:13 AM
From: Chu Berry1 Recommendation   of 44664
 
Why own gold stocks?

seekingalpha.com 

Earnings Growth

Low P/E ratio

Dividend Growth

Cheap

and because it's fun!

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: Wade3/2/2012 11:57:10 AM
2 Recommendations   of 44664
 
Probability of central bank intervention against gold rattles Gartman Letter


Submitted by cpowell on Fri, 2012-03-02 15:28. Section: Daily Dispatches
10:20a ET Friday, March 2, 2012

Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:

This week's counterintuitive smashdown in the gold price has not only brought a couple of gold fund managers to the point of wondering aloud about market manipulation by central banks:

http://www.gata.org/node/11045

http://www.gata.org/node/11052

Now even the dean of commodity market letter writers, Dennis Gartman of the Gartman Letter, is wondering aloud, even as he says he doesn't want to talk about it. His rattled comments from today's Gartman Letter are appended.

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

gata.org 


That is fine...but who bought those gold sales? This is a more important question.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (2)

To: loantech who wrote (33870)3/2/2012 12:00:34 PM
From: NOW   of 44664
 
thanks lt

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

To: benwood who wrote (33851)3/2/2012 12:01:54 PM
From: NOW   of 44664
 
nice idea really
but they would shut you down so fast like they did scroogle

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

To: Wade who wrote (33899)3/2/2012 12:03:17 PM
From: John McCarthy2 Recommendations   of 44664
 
Thanks for posting that ..... to wit

However, a note we received yesterday from a very longstanding friend and client of The Gartman Letter caught us off when it raised the very real possibility that something untoward took place Wednesday morning. Our friend, whom we've known for years and is not given to such speculation but who is at the center of such events, wrote

"Dear Dennis, hope you are well. Regarding yesterday's action in the precious metals, I have a different take on this than you do. As I have very intimate details of yesterday, I think it was indeed official selling. At the London fixing, an order came in to sell 3 million ounces of gold and it was explicitly ordered to be done in just a few minutes. No investor or speculator would 1) handle it this way and 2) do it at the fixing only.

"This [has] happened this way three times in the last year, yesterday being the fourth time. Ben Bernanke had done nothing yesterday to trigger this the way it happened. I [have done] this now for 30 years and this was no free market yesterday. We will find out one day."

We offer this explanation as it stands, but certainly it has our interest piqued. It may be idle speculation on our friend's part. It may even be wrong. But certainly it is interesting and worthy of some consideration. We shall leave it at that and we wish not to comment any further ... to the press, to clients, or to anyone else; nor shall we.


Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

To: gold$10k who wrote (33897)3/2/2012 12:08:47 PM
From: NOW   of 44664
 
what you buy?

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

From: John McCarthy3/2/2012 12:09:32 PM
   of 44664
 
Miners have less trouble getting equity capital and my (sneaky way of plugging Detour)


PDAC-Miners hopeful of emerging from a late 2011 funk

Optimism returning after rough patch for the sector * Positive indicators from U.S., China boost sentiment

* Pace of capital cost increases on projects causes concern

By Euan Rocha

TORONTO, March 2 (Reuters) - Detour Gold last month sold C$277 million of equity to investors willing to bet on its promising gold project - a hefty sum that bankers say the Canadian company would have struggled to raise barely two months earlier.

Detour's success in raising funds is one of many small signs that the malaise that gripped miners, explorers and investors in late 2011 is easing. A brighter economic outlook has brought a ray of optimism back to the global mining sector, which gathers next week in Toronto for its biggest convention of the year.

While stresses still weigh heavily on the world financial system, a batch of decent U.S. economic data and easing concerns about a slowdown in China have breathed fresh life into mining stocks that tumbled last year.

"If I compare right now to, let's say, the latter part of 2011, generally executives are more positive now," said Egizio Bianchini, co-head of metals and mining at BMO Capital Markets.

"The often overused phrase 'cautiously optimistic' is probably one that can be used now, and I think that's where people are at," Bianchini said in an interview before the annual Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada convention. The event, known simply as PDAC, opens Sunday in Toronto.

The Dow Jones Basic Resources Titans Index, which reflects the performance of a basket of the world's top mining and steelmaking stocks, dropped to a two-and-a-half year low in early October as the euro zone debt crisis spread.

It has risen nearly 30 percent since then, helped by rallies in both gold and copper prices.

Base metal and steel prices are usually strong indicators of the health of the global economy. Industry analysts, economists and government officials pay close attention to developments within the mining sector to guide their strategies and policies.

The more confident outlook is setting the tone for PDAC, as hundreds of exploration companies prepare to tout their projects to outside investors and to large, established mining companies.

With few exceptions, the juniors hope one day to either be swallowed up by a larger player or evolve into a powerhouse, following in the path of such industry giants as Barrick Gold or Teck Resources.

"PDAC is really about the explorers," said Charles Oliver, a portfolio manager with Sprott Asset Management. "PDAC is where dreams are made or crushed."





In early 2011, the mood at PDAC was bullish as well. Metal prices were on a tear, and many of the 26,000-plus delegates were decidedly upbeat. But the mood soured during the summer as equity markets turned choppy, volatility hit metal prices and the European debt crisis went from bad to worse.

"At the beginning of 2011, I think everybody was optimistic that we were going to see a full-blown recovery. That didn't happen in the way that people expected, though it looks like we may be seeing some nascent signs of that now," said Kevin Loughrey, chief executive of Thompson Creek , a diversified miner listed in both Canada and the United States.



COSTS WEIGH

To be sure, the new sense of optimism is not without its caveats. The industry's persistent tussle with rising fuel, material and labor costs has muddled even the most detailed of project plans.

Ten months ago, Thompson Creek raised the cost estimate for its Mt. Milligan copper-gold project in the western Canadian province of British Columbia by nearly 40 percent to C$1.27 billion ($1.29 billon). Last month the miner warned that the estimated costs had climbed to a range of C$1.4 billion to C$1.5 billion.

Loughrey is one of many top executives who spoke a BMO mining conference in Florida last month, where capital cost overruns on projects emerged as an central theme.

"We all sit around and bemoan the fact that a number we came up with a year ago, and did a lot of work on ... is 20 or 30 percent wrong today," Loughrey said. "I don't know what to say about it, except that that's the world we are living in today."

Still, cost increases are not all bad news. There is a silver lining in that project delays and deferrals are likely to tighten markets.

"The good news is certainly that the higher costs are really going to have to translate into higher sustained metal prices to be able to justify development of these projects," said Gordon Bell, head of RBC Capital Markets' global mining and metals group.



TURNING TIDE

The fear of a sharp slowdown in China was another reason behind the late 2011 slump, but recent policy moves by the Chinese government and positive signs from Asia's largest economy have eased those concerns.

Teck Resources believes strongly that worries about China are overblown. The Vancouver-based diversified miner is a large exporter of coal, copper and zinc, much of it to China, the world's top commodities importer.

"We are often asked about our view of the Chinese economy and whether we expect a hard landing or a soft landing. Judging by the recent economic data and the Chinese government's recent actions on bank reserve ratios, we think neither will occur," Teck's CEO Don Lindsay said at the BMO conference.

Last month, China announced its second cut in bank reserve requirements in three months as it moved to ease credit strains and shore up economic growth.

China has become the most powerful force driving world economic growth, even as the weak U.S. housing market and the sovereign debt crisis in Europe stymied growth in those regions.

Patricia Mohr, a commodities specialist at Scotia Capital, said an improving U.S. economic climate and ultra-low interest rates are also building the mining sector's confidence.

"You've got a very accommodative monetary policy in the United States and some Asian countries have also eased monetary policy," she said. "Their easing remains quite cautious, but at least it's moving in the right direction."

The U.S. Federal Reserve cut its overnight interest rates to near zero in 2008 and has bought $2.3 trillion in bonds in an effort to keep interest rates low and boost economic activity.

"I think all of these factors have lifted the sentiment and in fact a lot of the hedge funds and investment funds actually went long again in base metals in January," she said, referring to bets, known as long positions, that a commodity will rise.

reuters.com 

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

From: John McCarthy3/2/2012 12:20:06 PM
   of 44664
 
The NBA is buying ..... but there's a problem


Dikembe Mutombo And A Texas Energy Exec Tried To Buy $10 Million Worth Of Gold In The Congo From A Warlord
http://www.businessinsider.com/dikembe-mutombo-and-a-texas-energy-exec-tried-to-buy-10-million-worth-of-gold-in-the-congo-from-a-warlord-2012-3

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

To: Wade who wrote (33899)3/2/2012 12:34:11 PM
From: benwood5 Recommendations   of 44664
 
The West will undoubtedly smash gold when it serves their interests, mainly to facilitate bailouts in perpetuity (or as long as they haven't been overthrown yet) and of rapid inflation of the money supply. A smash here and there will do wonders to keep the masses from getting out before it is too late. The money supply inflation will be handed to the FED owners in order that they get the benefit; the masses, at the end of the line, will get retail inflation, high unemployment, a collapse of living standards, and food stamps (hungry people are far more likely to seek regime change).

Unfortunately for the long term prospects of our nation and the rest of the profligate countries in the West, it will only serve to accelerate the transfer of gold and wealth to the East.

That is of no consequence to the elite in the West. They will have grabbed a larger share of the world's total wealth even as they've sucked the blood out of the corpse to do so.

Thugocracy: You're what's for dinner!

I know the goal of most on this forum isn't actually to make a killing; it's to keep from being killed. Good luck to all of us. It ain't called a currency war for nothin'.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)
Previous 10 | Next 10 

Copyright © 1995-2013 Knight Sac Media. All rights reserved.