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To: Amark$p who wrote (17808)2/28/2009 8:03:19 PM
From: Nevada9999   of 29401
 
Tax strategy like that could backfire. At some level tax avoidance trumps tax increases. Excessive tax on gold could result in private hoarding instead of investments in GLD or COMEX or London gold. If COMEX and LBMA inventories were drawn down by deliveries to avoid taxes, gold might become a lot more volatile to the upside.

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To: Nevada9999 who wrote (17812)3/1/2009 11:00:13 AM
From: The Vet3 Recommendations   of 29401
 
Tax strategy like that could backfire.

That sort of tax strategy depends on people keeping their money at home (in the US). Offshore based funds etc. could still trade gold in other places without making it a central portion of their strategy but sufficient to maintain exposure while avoiding any punitive US taxes on direct gold ownership.

Net result would be gold, and gold trading would simply move to countries that treated it better.

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From: gold$10k3/1/2009 8:17:21 PM
   of 29401
 
My current favorite website...

THE BIG PICTURE - Macro Perspective on the Capital Markets and Economy

ritholtz.com 

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From: bull_dozer3/1/2009 9:18:03 PM
1 Recommendation   of 29401
 
per privateer gold

Consider some sage words from a great Austrian Economist - Hans Sennholz - penned a little over twenty years ago:

"Sound money and free banking are not impossible, they are merely illegal. That is why money must be deregulated.

...The Gold standard will return as soon as people realize that honesty is the best policy. As hope of ill gain is the beginning of the fiat standard, so is honesty the mother of the Gold standard. The Gold standard is as old as civilization. Throughout the ages, the Gold standard has emerged again and again because man needed a dependable medium of exchange."

It really is as simple and straightforward as that. As we have been saying ever since it started its rise from just above the $US 700 level last November, Gold is just "waiting in the wings".

That's in terms of US Dollars, of course, it has already emerged onto center stage in terms of other major world currencies.

There are some advantages to being paid in the world's reserve currency after all. Americans still have the chance to purchase Gold at prices lower than it was in March last year. That is something nobody else still has.


Message 25455397

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From: Condor3/2/2009 8:30:37 AM
1 Recommendation   of 29401
 
Feb 24 2009 11:01AM

The "Five M's" For Picking Gold Stocks

An abridged excerpt from “The Goldwatcher: Demystifying Gold Investing,” co-authored by Frank Holmes, CEO and chief investment officer at U.S. Global Investors. The book, published by John Wiley & Sons, is available from amazon.com and in bookstores.

Investors can improve their odds by learning how to assess the fundamentals of the gold exploration companies. A good tool for this job is what I call “The Five M’s.”

By using the Five M’s, an individual investor can build a simple but powerful model to initially sort through the many hundreds of upstart gold companies to find better opportunities.

1. MARKET CAP

If a junior gold company has 10 million shares outstanding at $1 per share, the company is valued at $10 million. The question any investor should ask is, “Is this company really worth $10 million?”

If the market pays $25 per ounce of gold in the ground, the company should be valued at $25 million. If the company’s market cap is only $10 million, it may look undervalued. If the company’s market cap is $50 million, it may appear to be overvalued.

For larger gold companies, an investor can measure a company’s market cap against its production level, reserve assets, geographic location and other metrics to establish relative valuation.

2. MANAGEMENT

Often the heads of junior companies are geologists or engineers who have no relationships in the brokerage business. This lack of relationships impedes their ability to generate market support.

Some of the most successful company builders in the gold-mining industry are what I call the “financial engineers” – people who have the relationships and understand the capital markets and who know how to hire the best geological and engineering teams. We tend to have more confidence investing in them.

3. MONEY

A gold exploration company has to deliver reserves per share to have a chance at another round of financing. It has to convince the capital markets that it is an attractive investment on a per-share basis.

The gold-equities market is efficient at judging reserves per share, so if the exploration company doesn’t come up with the results necessary to get an evaluation, investors quickly lose confidence.

There is an old rule when it comes to exploration companies: don’t pay more than two times cash per share if there are no proven assets in the ground.

4. MINERALS

Gold companies have the highest industry valuations based on price to earnings, price to cash flow, price to enterprise value and price to reserves per share.

Companies operating mines that produce gold and a significant amount of another metal (typically copper) tend to have lower valuations than pure gold companies. But at the top of a gold price cycle, copper/gold deposits end up rising to the same multiples as pure gold companies.

So when it comes to picking stocks in anticipation of an upward price move for gold, the investor’s margin for error is reduced by selecting companies with both gold and copper production.



5. MINE LIFECYCLE

In the exploration and development phase, a price of a gold stock often follows a course that ends up looking like a double-humped camel (see graphic above).

First there’s euphoria over exploration results that are better than expected. The stock price rises as investors race to buy shares. Then reality sets in – this gold discovery is still years away from being an actual producing mine. At this point, there’s a huge correction in the stock price.

Assuming the company continues down the path to development, its share price drifts sideways until around six months before the first ounce of gold is expected to be produced.

At this point, the stock begins a strong new leg up when a more sophisticated set of shareholders come into the market. Eventually the price drops off and then levels as the speculative money moves on to the next hot opportunity and the company transitions from explorer to producer.

by Frank Holmes
CEO and Chief Investment Officer
U.S. Global Investors

*****

Frank Holmes is CEO and chief investment officer at U.S. Global Investors, a Texas-based investment adviser that specializes in natural resources, emerging markets and global infrastructure. The company’s 13 mutual funds include the Global Resources Fund (PSPFX), Gold and Precious Metals Fund (USERX) and the World Precious Minerals Fund (UNWPX).

Please join us on March 5 for a free webcast “What’s Driving Gold,” hosted by Frank Holmes. Special guests are Greg Weldon, author of Gold Trading Boot Camp, and David Galland, managing editor of The Casey Report. Registration available at www.usfunds.com.

Please consider carefully the fund’s investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. For this and other important information, obtain a fund prospectus by visiting www.usfunds.com or by calling 1-800-US-FUNDS (1-800-873-8637). Read it carefully before investing. Distributed by U.S. Global Brokerage, Inc.

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From: Tommaso3/2/2009 9:18:11 AM
   of 29401
 
A thought for commentary:

If there should be a temporary sharp rally in the general stock averages, would that tend to carry gold mining stocks up with it?

Might that occur even if the price of gold itself stalls or even falls somewhat?

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To: Jim McMannis who wrote (17762)3/2/2009 4:00:43 PM
From: Jim McMannis1 Recommendation   of 29401
 
Trendline said it all.

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To: TH who wrote (17809)3/2/2009 5:36:13 PM
From: GST   of 29401
 
Emerging economies eye gold reserves as dlr fears rise

reuters.com 

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To: GST who wrote (17819)3/2/2009 5:51:03 PM
From: Dick Weigel   of 29401
 
"China has $2 trillion of reserves, and only one percent in gold and nearly all of the rest is in U.S. dollars," said Marcus Grub"

This strategy could come back to haunt them big time

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To: Jim McMannis who wrote (17818)3/2/2009 8:08:09 PM
From: Rick H. Malchow   of 29401
 
I suspect gold is being sold to cover bad bets. Similar to last Fall but, hopefully, on a much smaller scale. JMO.

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