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


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To: orkrious who wrote (35554)5/19/2012 11:12:53 PM
From: gold$10k   of 43982
 
Exactly! If the retest of gold $1523 is successful (as in November 2008), then this is like October 2008... otherwise it is like August 2008. If SPX heads lower while PMs rally (for more than 2 days), that would reinforce the October idea.

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From: TheSlowLane5/20/2012 6:13:55 AM
   of 43982
 

Whales in the Gold Market

May 18, 2012 - 03:50 PM
By: William_Bancroft

Okayama Metal & Machinery has become the first Japanese pension fund to make public purchases of gold, in a sign of dwindling faith in paper currencies. Initially, the fund aims to keep about 1.5 per cent of its total assets of Y40bn ($500m) in bullion-backed exchange traded funds, according to chief investment officer (CIO) Yoshisuke Kiguchi, who said he was diversifying into gold to “escape sovereign risk”.


news.goldseek.com 

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From: smh5/20/2012 8:06:30 AM
   of 43982
 

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From: John McCarthy5/21/2012 9:42:53 AM
7 Recommendations   of 43982
 
Believe in Gold

Mish

snip

Belief in Gold

Note that the US dollar index is right where it was over seven years ago.



The US$ index is at a spot first touched in late 2004. Gold was well under $500 an ounce at that time, so please do not tell me gold is a function of the US dollar.



One of the reasons gold is at $1600 with the US dollar index above 81 is precisely because central banks in general (notably the Fed, the ECB, the Bank of England, and China) have printed nonstop and the Fed and the ECB have initiated all sorts of liquidity and QE measures. In addition, the ECB's balance sheet is more bloated than the balance sheet of the Fed thanks to the LTRO program.

Integrity of Gold

The proper conclusion is that gold is a function of mistrust in fiat currencies in general, not just the US dollar. However, nothing moves in a straight line including faith (or lack thereof) in central banks' ability to handle this crisis.

By now it should be perfectly obvious the LTRO is a complete failure. Banks in Spain took the money and bought more of their own bonds and are now underwater on them.

Only monetarist fools want the ECB to do more of the same. Sadly, monetarist fools are nearly everywhere, and the chart of the price of gold says just that.

In conclusion, if the ECB was to take the action suggested by Davies (and they might), it certainly will do nothing for the "integrity of the euro", but it is highly likely to further the integrity of gold


globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com 

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From: John McCarthy5/21/2012 9:56:28 AM
   of 43982
 
China Is Drowning In Excess Commodities And Canceling Orders Left And Right
snip

The latest comes from a report from the Financial Times that Chinese commodities buyers are asking for deferral of delivery of raw materials, or occasionally decide simply to default on the contracts. Of course, this is not all too surprising if you have seen the level of build-up of iron ore inventory:

Chinese consumers of thermal coal and iron ore are asking traders to defer cargos and – in some cases – defaulting on their contracts, in the clearest sign yet of the impact of the country’s economic slowdown on the global raw materials markets.

The deferrals and defaults have only emerged in the last few days, traders said, and have contributed to a drop in iron ore and coal prices.



businessinsider.com 

Note:
No link but articles out there indicating China may step up having banks lend more to boost their
economy.

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From: gold$10k5/21/2012 10:35:36 AM
3 Recommendations   of 43982
 
GDX approaching its downtrend line of the past 2 1/2 months.

stockcharts.com 

Watch it update in realtime... such drama! <g>

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To: gold$10k who wrote (35560)5/21/2012 12:37:17 PM
From: NOW2 Recommendations   of 43982
 
backtest of that neckline makes sense

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From: John McCarthy5/21/2012 1:43:20 PM
2 Recommendations   of 43982
 
Doug Casey

snip
What Volume Tells Us about Gold Stocks By Jeff Clark, Senior Precious Metals Analyst

I've read articles from more than one analyst claiming that gold stocks are down on low volume, implying there's a lack of interest in precious metals. While on the surface that seems like an obvious statement, their point is that most of the recent volume has been coming from sellers and thus exaggerating the recent decline.

I decided to test this hypothesis, because if correct, it has investment implications, starting with the fact that at some point you run out of sellers; and if and when buyers return, the ensuing rise could be spectacular.

I also wanted to compare volume now to the waterfall decline in 2008. If volume is starting to spike now like it did then, it might give us some additional clues about our current environment and what to expect going forward.

So let's take a look. The following chart shows the average weekly volume of the 10 largest gold producers that trade in North America, along with the daily price movements of GDX, the Gold Miners Index.



(Click on image to enlarge)

While the number of shares trading hands every day fluctuates a great deal, the first thing that jumps out is that the current correction in gold is indeed occurring on relatively low volume. You can see how GDX has sold off since its peak last May, but also that, in the larger scheme of things, volume hasn't really changed.

This fact indirectly confirms the premise that it's been mostly sellers providing the recent volume. If there were equal interest from buyers, prices would be flat; or if they were pushing harder, prices would be rising.

The second thing that sticks out is how low the volume is now compared to the selloff in 2008. It's roughly half what it was then, signaling that equities aren't being dumped en masse like they were four years ago. This meshes with a recent observation by Doug Casey, that as steep as the current correction is, we're not seeing the raw panic we saw in 2008.

So what might this mean going forward?

First, at some point the sellers will tire or we'll run out of them – especially if gold prices hold up at or near current levels. At that point, even without any major changes in our market fundamentals, interest from buyers could swamp out the sellers; this is what is meant by a "consolidation phase" or a "regrouping" before the next surge upward. And if buyers become the dominant player in the market, which could easily occur once gold heads north again, stock prices could push dramatically higher.

Second, regardless of the sellers' reasons, they've managed to make gold equities incredibly cheap. The stocks of the better gold miners have become nearly as undervalued as they were during the worst of the financial crisis – without the same level of crisis and uncertainty. Stock prices are not at the same level they were in 2008, but relative to the price of gold they are. These facts point to an extraordinary opportunity. Unless you think gold has peaked for this cycle and it's downhill from here, this disconnect cannot and will not last.

Here's another way of looking at it. Caesar Bryan, portfolio manager of the Gabelli Gold Fund and speaker at our Recovery Reality Check Summit last month, recently relayed an interesting point he'd heard from Don Coxe. For a $1,000 investment right now, you can get about 0.6 ounces of gold. However, for the same $1,000, you'd get four ounces of gold by buying shares of Goldcorp… or more than five ounces buying Eldorado Gold.

This represents incredible value if you're a gold equity investor. These kinds of opportunities only come along rarely in a bull market. The last time was four years ago – with a lot more risk amidst the crash. That didn't last forever, and neither will this window of opportunity.

When this imbalance between gold and gold stocks corrects itself, the returns will be positively smile-inducing, perhaps life-changing.


caseyresearch.com 

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From: gold$10k5/21/2012 3:43:09 PM
1 Recommendation   of 43982
 
Just sold the SLW I added last Wednesday... just playing the game.

Currently 46.8% PMs. The rest cash and short term bond funds.

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To: gold$10k who wrote (35563)5/21/2012 4:08:42 PM
From: F.W.Inglis   of 43982
 
No-Change / No-Budging ... (100%-Broad-Spectrum-Miners).

-
Sentiment: Upward-Momentum has ... (barely?)-Begun ???

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