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To: PaperPerson who wrote (4136)7/24/2011 9:46:54 PM
From: DrBill   of 4686
 
JIM ROGERS: SILVER GOING MUCH HIGHER


Sunday, July 24, 2011


CHINABUSINESS NEWS


In an interview with CNBC, legendary commodity investor and Quantum Fund co-founder Jim Rogers calls for a long term bull market in silver.

“The world is having shortages develop of nearly every metal,” Roger says. Silver prices are likely to go up substantially over the next decade, Rogers predicts and he says he will buying any dips that are yet to arrive.

As for whether he prefers miners to the metal directly, Rogers said that he generally invests directly in commodities rather than buying producers since he is not prepared to pick the winners and losers amongst the group. “If you pick the right miner you’ll make a lot more money than you will in the metal,”Rogers explains. Though, by exposing yourself to management risks and the regional risk of the mines, among other factors, you can potentially not participate in the strong fundamentals of the commodity market and could lose all your capital. For example, ‘natural gas tripled and yet Enron, a producer of natural gas went to 0. Natural gas can down but it cannot go to zero.’

Silver buying is partly driven by currency debasement, Rogers says but the industrial aspects of the metal are also bullish, according to Rogers. In another recent interview with CNBC, Rogers said he expects QE3 to arrive from the Fed and that this will only fuel the fire driven by the commodity bull market currently underway. – Source: http://goldnews.com

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From: PaperPerson7/24/2011 10:13:14 PM
   of 4686
 


Gold hits fresh record as U.S. debt talks grind on

By Virginia Harrison, MarketWatch
SYDNEY(MarketWatch) — Gold futures hit a fresh record in electronic trading Monday, as U.S. debt-ceiling talks to avert a default continued, with no apparent progress toward a deal.

Gold for August delivery GC1Q +0.64% gained $16.30, or 1.0% to $1,617.70 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange during Asian trading hours.

(July 24, 2011, 8:44 p.m. EDT)

Last week gold reached a nominal record of $1,602.50 an ounce.

Adjusted for inflation, gold would have to settle at around $2,400 an ounce to supplant a record around $850 an ounce reached in January 1980.

The metal has benefitted from the uncertainty stemming from global debt problems in recent weeks, with the deadlock in U.S.negotiations taking center stage on Monday.

Click to Play
White House: Debt talks crucial
White House Chief of Staff Daley said debt talks are moving into "difficult days" and said it is crucial to market confidence to get a deal soon. Video courtesy Reuters.

U.S. lawmakers failed to reach agreement on an approach to raise the debt-ceiling in Washington on Sunday, despite a weekend of talks. President Barack Obama later met with the congressional leaders of his own party.

The $14.3 trillion debt ceiling needs to be raised by Aug. 2 or the government is at risk of defaulting on its obligations. Read more on U.S. debt negotiations.

Analysts at MF Global said the lack of resolution in U.S. debt-ceiling talks will weigh on the U.S. dollar, and present upward potential for gold.

“Raising the debt ceiling in such last-minute fashion relays [an] unwelcome message to investors,” the analysts said, “The main casualty of such a decision will be the US dollar.”

Commodities should do better, at least initially, they said, as the asset class will be viewed as an alternative to paper currencies.

“Gold should benefit the most,” they said.

The dollar index DXY -0.21% , which tracks the U.S. unit’s performance against a basket of six other currencies, slipped to 74.197, from 74.221 late Friday. Read more on dollar, currencies.

The greenback tends to trade inversely to dollar-priced commodities such as gold, as a lower dollar makes them cheaper for holders of other currencies.

The broader metals complex diverged Monday.

Silver tracked gold higher, with the September contract SI1U +0.61% adding 33 cents, or 0.8%, to $40.45 an ounce.

Copper for September delivery HG1U -0.49% lost 1 penny, or 0.3%, to $4.40 a pound.

October platinum PL1V -0.08% gained $1.30, or 0.1%, to $1,799.70 an ounce, while palladium for September delivery PA1U -0.12% lost $2.15, or 0.3%, to $804.25 an ounce.

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From: PaperPerson7/25/2011 7:08:27 AM
   of 4686
 

Barkerville Receives $8,529,375 From Warrant Exercise-All Warrants From Previous Financing Exercised




Barkerville Gold Mines Ltd. On Tuesday July 19

reports that the Company has now secured a total of $8,529,375 from the exercise of all warrants attached to a $13,647,000 brokered financing announced November 20, 2009 which closed in three tranches, December 30, 2009, January 22, 2010, and February 02, 2010 (please see news releases for these dates for details). For this financing, the Company issued in total 17,587,750 common shares and 8,529,375 share purchase warrants for gross proceeds of $13,647,000. All warrants including broker's warrants and all warrants subject to the acceleration clause as announced July 16, 2011 were exercised.

Proceeds of this additional capital in conjunction with revenue produced from the ongoing gold production will be used for general working capital and to continue the Company's current drilling and development programs aimed at expanding gold resources and production.

About Barkerville Gold Mines Ltd.

Since the mid 1990s the Company has focused on exploration and development of gold projects in the Cariboo Mining District in central B.C. The Company's mineral tenures now cover over 1,225 square kilometers, encompassing seven past producing hard rock mines and three NI 43-101 gold deposits, including the QR Mine & Mill. The QR Property was acquired in February 2010 and includes a 900 tonne/day gold milling facility and a permitted gold mine located approximately 110 kilometers by highway and all-weather road from the Barkerville Gold Camp. Mining operations commenced at QR in the first quarter of fiscal 2011 and the Company began pouring dore gold in September 2010. In November 2010, the Company acquired a second permitted mill currently on care and maintenance in Revelstoke, B.C. for relocation to the Barkerville Gold Camp near Wells, B.C. and upgrade to a 3,000-tonne/day facility subject to government approvals. In November 2010 the Company and the Lhtako Dene First Nation also signed a Project Agreement in relation to its Bonanza Ledge and Cariboo Gold Projects. The Company has not hedged any of its future gold production.

On behalf of the Board of Directors,

J. Frank Callaghan, President and CEO

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From: PaperPerson7/25/2011 7:12:08 AM
   of 4686
 
Lawmakers split as debt deadline looms, markets uneasy

WASHINGTON | Mon Jul 25, 2011 6:42am EDT


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A sharply divided Congress pursued rival budget plans on Monday that appeared unlikely to win broad support, pushing the United States closer to a ratings downgrade and debt default that would send shockwaves through global markets.

With an August 2 deadline little more than a week away, lawmakers have steadfastly refused to compromise and talks once again collapsed in acrimony at the weekend. Democrats and Republicans split into two camps to work on their own proposals.

Financial markets were uneasy in Asia and Europe on Monday about the prospect of a first-ever U.S. debt default, which Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has said would be a "calamitous outcome" for the U.S. and the global economy.

European and Asian stocks fell 0.4 percent to 1 percent. U.S. stock futures prices were also down 1 percent, suggesting a weaker start on Wall Street later. Gold, the favored safe haven, rose 1 percent to a record high.

But there was no panic selling that some politicians in Washington had feared after the weekend talks broke down.

"There's an old saying that things don't matter until the day they matter; we're getting close to the day when it will matter," said Quincy Krosby, market strategist at Prudential Financial in Newark, New Jersey.

After weeks of rancorous talks, finger-pointing and political point-scoring, both sides appeared still far apart on a deal to reduce the budget deficit, which would clear the way for Congress to raise its $14.3 trillion borrowing limit.

President Barack Obama and congressional leaders have tried to reassure global markets that the country will be able to service its debt and meet other obligations after August 2, when the Treasury Department says the United States will run out of money to pay its bills.

Faced with the prospect of defaulting on debt and the country losing its AAA credit rating, the highest possible, lawmakers set a Monday deadline to show markets a plan.

Republicans, driven by the fiscally conservative Tea Party movement that helped them win the House last November, strongly oppose tax increases, while Democrats who lead the Senate dislike proposed cuts to popular social programs.

Despite the breakdown in talks, officials in Asia remained confident U.S. lawmakers would strike a last minute deal to avert default, although worry levels are rising.

"Those in direct charge of reserves operations must be more nervous than before," said a senior official at South Korea's central bank, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the news media.

"But nobody thinks Americans will choose suicide when they have known solutions."

Still, there are signs of increasing frustration at the inability of U.S. lawmakers to come to a solution. British Business Secretary Vince Cable told BBC television on Sunday that "right-wing nutters" in Congress were holding up the talks.

China, the biggest U.S. foreign creditor with some $1.16 trillion invested in U.S. Treasuries as of May, has regularly pressed Washington to get its fiscal house in order.

RATINGS

Talks between Democrats and Republicans in Congress fell apart once again after House Speaker John Boehner acrimoniously broke off talks with Obama.

Now the Republican-controlled House and the Democratic-controlled Senate appear to be heading for a showdown as their leaders develop competing legislation to resolve the crisis.

Ratings agencies have warned that even if Congress raises the debt ceiling and averts a default, they may still strip the United States of its AAA credit rating if lawmakers fail to agree on deeper long-term budget cuts.

A lower credit rating could raise borrowing costs not only for the U.S. government but also for other countries, companies and consumers because U.S. Treasuries are the benchmark by which many loans are measured.

Earlier this month, Bernanke warned against overzealous government spending cuts in the short term because it could derail an already fragile recovery from the global financial crisis and a default would be calamitous.

Democratic Senator Harry Reid aims to raise the debt ceiling by $2.7 trillion, enough to cover the country's borrowing needs through the November 2012 elections. That would be paired with an equal amount in spending cuts over 10 years -- short of the $4 trillion in deficit savings that experts say will be necessary to keep debt at a sustainable level.

Boehner's plan would raise the debt limit in stages, forcing Congress to confront the politically painful issue again before the election. His plan could potentially deliver bigger budget savings through an overhaul of the tax code and a reform of expensive health benefits that are expected to balloon over the coming decade.

NO NEW TAXES

Neither plan would raise taxes, despite Obama's insistence that tax hikes needed to be part of the solution. Democrats want to ease the pain of spending cuts by phasing them in gradually over 10 years and increasing taxes on the wealthy.

Boehner's plan could also include some form of a balanced-budget amendment to the Constitution, a bid to retain the support of conservatives in his party aligned to the Tea Party. However, the Senate voted down a similar bill last week.

"I do think there is a path, but it's going to require us to stand together as a team," Boehner told fellow House Republicans, several sources said. "It's going to require some of you to make some sacrifices."

Democrat Reid said Boehner's plan will get nowhere in the Senate.

"Speaker Boehner's plan, no matter how he tries to dress it up, is simply a short-term plan, and is therefore a non-starter in the Senate and with the president," he said in a prepared statement.

How quickly the negotiations can advance is less clear now that both chambers will be advancing rival bills. The Senate generally needs a week to pass any legislation unless opponents can be persuaded to drop procedural barriers -- an uncertain prospect on such a high-profile issue.

Ethan Harris, co-head of global economic research at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch, said he expected a temporary increase in the debt ceiling with the promise of up to $4 trillion in deficit reductions to be finalized six months later.

"The base case scenario can be summarized as 'appease and delay' -- appease the rating agencies and the market with the beginnings of a large plan, but in actuality delay the crisis further into the future," Harris said.

Robert Tipp, chief investment strategist at Prudential Fixed Income in Newark, New Jersey, said the U.S. Treasury may have a bit of wiggle room on the August 2 deadline because tax revenues had exceeded expectations. But that would buy a few days, not weeks.

He thought the most likely scenario is a small deal that averts default but bumps the United States down to AA status.

"I think that's what the agencies have signaled, and therefore that's what the markets are expecting," he said.

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To: PaperPerson who wrote (4137)7/25/2011 7:19:06 AM
From: PaperPerson   of 4686
 
Quote of the day, Reuters, early Monday with no compromise on u.s. Debt:


"There's an old saying that things don't matter until the day they matter; we're getting close to the day when it will matter," said Quincy Krosby, market strategist at Prudential Financial in Newark, New Jersey.

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To: PaperPerson who wrote (4141)7/25/2011 11:53:29 PM
From: roymario   of 4686
 
Paper, here in Canada, I watch with great interest the debt default crisis. It is a huge crisis, but the optimist in me knows in every crisis there is opportunity. I hope the opportunity is correctly found and taken. Compromise is required, but afterwards, Government must become much more fiscally responsible (is an understatement?) Citizens quite correctly have concerns as too whether the US government can achieve this. It will affect us all. R.

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To: DrBill who wrote (4138)7/26/2011 1:18:45 AM
From: DrBill   of 4686
 

GOLD & SILVER LONG-TERM WINNERS

By George Maniere Jul 25, 2011

Whether the US defaults or not, physical gold and silver, ETFs, and mining companies will prove long-term winners.

If Congress reaches an agreement and the debt ceiling is raised, gold and silver will go up. If there is no agreement and there is a default, gold and silver will go up but in a parabolic move. Either way gold and silver will continue to rise as the US and European economies continue to debase their currencies by the printing of fiat paper money to try to pay off their debt with paper of a lesser value. Indeed, the West has gone so far as to not even bother to print fiat money into paper, instead creating new vehicles like gold and silver derivative products that are nothing more than digital bytes traded across international borders.

As Gerald Loeb taught us, it is human nature to open your 401K and see more dollars than there were last month and feel that all is well. What Gerald Loeb also taught us, however, is that we should not be fooled by how many dollars we have but instead determine the true value of the dollars we have.

As I have often written, “the market will do what it has always done: misdirect, confuse, and confound.” Last week I was feeling confused and confounded. Then on Sunday morning it occurred to me that the partisan bickering being played out in Congress over the debt ceiling is nothing more than a well orchestrated charade by both parties to prepare the masses for what will be a an eventual default on our credit rating. I must admit that I never connected the dots but I now firmly believe this thesis is right. The die has been cast. The ship has already sailed. We can only work to protect ourselves and our families from the eventual tsunami that will wipe out those who have not positioned themselves properly in precious metals.

I remember well back in the '60s being in kindergarten and doing drills by hiding under our desks to protect us from a nuclear bomb as the two superpowers, the US and the USSR, played a Cold War game of chicken with nuclear arms. It is laughable now when I think of a six-year-old hiding under a desk to save himself from a nuclear Armageddon.

Those days are long gone, and now the nuclear arms race has been replaced with a new war. This war is now being played on a different battlefield as the East and the West race to accumulate physical gold and physical silver reserves. Those of you who read me on a regular basis already know that I have been a gold and silver bug for 50 years. I think that while it is prudent to hold physical gold and silver, it is also dangerous as it is not unprecedented for governments to confiscate gold and silver holdings while they write you a bogus check for what they perceive is the true value of the metals. We only need to look back to Executive Order 6102 on April 5, 1933, to see it can happen in our country.

There are those who would say they have buried their treasure in secret hiding places and have a little treasure map for their family to use if they need to find it. While this seems like a sensible idea and I do advocate the holding of physical gold and silver, if the government has satellites that can see into the Earth’s crust to locate deposits of ores and precious metals, what makes you think it will not be able to use this technology to find your buried treasure? And you’d be amazed what you will say when you are staring down the barrel of a gun.

So this raises the question, how do we hold gold and silver? While there are reports that the gold ( GLD) and silver ( SLV) ETFs do not actually hold the physical assets their paper represents, I feel these rumors are a bit overdone and we are not close to that nightmare yet. If it makes you feel safer I would recommend that you hold the Sprott gold ( PHYS) and silver ( PSLV) funds, whose metals are held by the Canadian Mint and which conduct a physical audit on a yearly basis. The downside to these holdings is that there is a premium of 18% for silver and about a 5% premium for gold, but you can choose at any time to take possession of the physical assets, so for the premium you are paying you can feel comforted knowing that it is not a shell game and you really do own a piece of the underlying asset.

Another way to invest in gold and silver is to hold the underlying mining companies that have lagged the physical asset. I have holdings in Barrick( ABX) and Goldcorp( GG) and would recommend a position in these companies on any pullback. They are the cream of the crop in gold and silver mining companies. If your timeframe is a little longer (2015), I would also recommend US Gold ( UXG), which will soon be McEwen Mining. I urge all readers to Google US Gold and CEO Rob McEwen. McEwen is one of the brightest CEOs in precious metals, and the truth is that if Rob McEwen were CEO of a company that sold ice pops to Eskimos I would probably invest in it.

The stock has run up to an intraday high of $7.15 in the last week and closed on Friday at $6.90. I would be a buyer under $7.00 as this will be a long-term winner, but if you invest in this you must do so knowing that the payday will be in 2015. Another stock that has a high probability of doing well is Novagold( NG). The flagship project of this company is the Donlin Creek project, which it sold a 50% stake of to Barrick for $127 million. Novagold has agreed to repay Barrick $63.5 million dollars once the mine comes into production, which could be as soon as the end of 2011. While this stock closed Friday at $10.24, the fundamentals of the company support a buy at $9 or below. If it does not pull back to this level, the risk to reward ratio is too high.

So while my long-term thesis is the timely accumulation of Gold and Silver, I recommend that you choose any of the vehicles above.

Before wrapping up, I want to address some reports from the media that gold at $1,600 an ounce and silver having reached a high of $50 an ounce are in a bubble. I will go on record right now and say that this is nonsense. A bubble is not determined by price. A bubble is created by a run-up that is not supported by fundamentals. I remember back in 2000 during the dot-com tulip mania hearing a radio ad for a company called Seashells.com. It said just go to its website and purchase seashells. This was madness. I immediately called my broker and told her to dump my tech portfolio. What ensued was a very heated discussion that ended with my threat of pulling all my accounts from her company and filing charges with the SEC. She sold my tech portfolio while the Nasdaq was at 4,700, and several months later I watched as it cratered to 3,600 and in 2003 around 1,500.

That was a bubble. There was no fundamental reason for these companies to be trading at the levels they were. It was sheer irrational exuberance. The prices of gold and silver based on the debasement of currencies are in my opinion very cheap. I will go on record right now and say that by 2015 gold will be $5,000 an ounce and silver will be $125 an ounce, and I have had some very smart people tell me that my projections are too low. What is and will continue to drive the prices of gold and silver up is the continued debasement of currencies as debtor governments look for ways to pay off debts with paper of lesser value. My recommendation is to keep buying physical gold and silver and to keep trading ETFs and mining companies.

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To: DrBill who wrote (4144)7/26/2011 8:01:25 AM
From: PaperPerson   of 4686
 
Quote from Bloomberg story on the declining dollar:

“We might have to get used to the fact that safe-haven assets aren’t that safe anymore,” said Philip Marey, a senior market economist at Rabobank Groep in Utrecht, the Netherlands. “U.S. Treasuries have always been the main investment grade safe-haven assets, but investors are starting to look at alternatives.”

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From: diddlysquatz7/26/2011 9:37:41 AM
   of 4686
 
BGM.V news

Barkerville Gold Mines Ltd.: New Zone on Cow Mountain Now Reaches 152 m in Strike and 311.75 m in Depth and Assays Include 11 m of 12.5 g/T Gold-Drilling Continues

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, Jul 26, 2011 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) --
Barkerville Gold Mines Ltd. (TSX VENTURE: BGM)(FRANKFURT: IWUB) (the "Company") reports further assays from the new discovery zone on Cow Mountain in central British Columbia. The drilling continues with four drill rigs currently running. Drill assays will be announced as they are received. Some highlights include (also see table attached):

-- 11.0 m of 12.5 g/T gold between 217.7 m and 228.8 m
(36.2 feet of 0.364 oz/t between 714.3" and 750.5")
-- 12.4 m of 6.32 g/T gold between 82.8 m and 95.2 m
(40.7 feet of 0.184 oz/t between 271.7" and 312.4")
-- 8.2 m of 4.17 g/T gold between x 288.0 and 296.2 m
(26.8 feet of 0.122 oz/t between 944.9" and 971.7")

The new zone is adjacent to (striking NE), outside of the perimeter of, and now intersecting gold grades approximately 682 feet deeper below the floor elevation of the Gold Quartz proposed open pit mine. The Gold Quartz mine currently has a NI 43-101 compliant resource of 6,013,728 tonnes of 2.23 g/t indicated (430,885 oz) and 1,527,699 tonnes of 1.85 g/t (90,936 oz) inferred.
President & CEO J. Frank Callaghan states, "Expanding the size and grade of the proposed open pit on Cow Mountain has been one of the focuses of the Company this year. We are extremely pleased with the multiples of grade and depth we continue to find beyond the original 43-101 resource parameters on Cow Mountain. We will continue the resource expansion campaign aggressively with 4 drill rigs running on Cow Mountain and Barkerville Mountain."
True width of the new zone varies from approximately 2.1 m (6.9") and 7.9 m (25.9").
The controlled strike length of the newly discovered visible gold-cosalite-pyrite-quartz mineralized zone reaches about 152 meters (500 feet). The discovery is in an untested area outside the perimeter of the proposed Gold Quartz open pit on the northwest flank of Cow Mountain in central British Columbia. Previous results from 2 drill pads were released in a news release on June 27, 2011. Since those results, 7 additional holes have been drilled from 2 other drill pads. Total distance controlled by the four drill pads is approximately 152 meters (500 feet). More drill holes are being conducted along the strike and dip of the zone.
Full table including previous assays from new zone is below. New assays from holes CM11-33 to CM11-40 are outlined in bold, lower half of table.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
----
Table 1. SIGNIFICANT INTERCEPTS OF THE NEWLY DISCOVERED
ZONE ON COW MT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
PAD DIP DDH# FROM TO WIDTH Au Ag
# ---------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------
FEET METER g/T oz/t g/T
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
N -46.1 CM11-25B 337.0 402.4 65.4 19.9 83(i) 2.429(i) 11(i)
---------------------------------------------------------
including
---------------------------------------------------------
352.1 385.0 32.9 10.0 165(i) 4.824(i) 23(i)
---------------------------------------------------------
including
---------------------------------------------------------
352.1 353.6 1.5 0.5 118 3.441 3.0
---------------------------------------------------------
375.0 381.3 6.3 1.9 821 23.943 118
---------------------------------------------------------
526.6 527.8 1.2 0.4 8.9 0.260 N/S
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-55.4 CM11-26 NO SIGNIFICANT ASSAY (hole got stuck & abandoned)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-65.2 CM11-27 256.0 268.8 12.8 3.9 66.6(i) 1.941(i) N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
including
---------------------------------------------------------
259.0 266.0 7.0 2.1 121(i) 3.543(i) N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
including
---------------------------------------------------------
262.1 266.0 3.9 1.2 204 5.949 N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
306.0 316.0 10.0 3.0 1.22 0.036 N/S
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
P -45.8 CM11-30 148.9 155.8 6.9 2.1 124(i) 3.63(i) 87.7(i)
---------------------------------------------------------
including
---------------------------------------------------------
148.9 150.7 1.8 0.5 313 9.128 326
---------------------------------------------------------
163.0 171.9 8.9 2.7 3.35 0.098 N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
452.8 454.8 2.0 0.6 1.00 0.029 N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
487.0 488.3 1.3 0.4 2.04 0.059 N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
894.0 895.3 1.3 0.4 20.5 0.598 1.0
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-55.7 CM11-31 140.1 153.2 13.1 4.0 8.27(i) 0.241(i) N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
including
---------------------------------------------------------
144.4 149.4 5.0 1.5 20.9 0.610 3.2
---------------------------------------------------------
186.9 205.9 19.0 5.8 5.64(i) 0.165(i) N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
including
---------------------------------------------------------
195.4 197.7 2.3 0.7 25.1 0.732 1.8
---------------------------------------------------------
199.2 201.3 2.1 0.6 16.4 0.478 1.4
---------------------------------------------------------
223.1 231.5 8.4 2.6 5.40(i) 0.158(i) N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
including
---------------------------------------------------------
230.2 231.5 1.3 0.4 30 0.875 1.6
---------------------------------------------------------
248.5 255.6 7.1 2.2 1.11 0.032 N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
434.5 443.6 9.1 2.8 1.21(i) 0.035(i) N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
459.8 473.0 13.2 4.0 3.92(i) 0.114(i) N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
510.2 522.3 12.1 3.7 9.54(i) 0.278(i) N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
including
---------------------------------------------------------
515.1 516.1 1.0 0.3 114 3.325 10.0
---------------------------------------------------------
730.0 732.9 2.9 0.9 8.60 0.251 N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
742.2 743.4 1.2 0.4 27.6 0.805 N/S
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-63.1 CM11-32 164.0 172.6 8.6 2.6 20.2 0.589 1.4
---------------------------------------------------------
423.2 425.2 2.0 0.6 2.89 0.084 N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
432.5 434.6 2.1 0.6 1.10 0.032 N/S
---------------------------------------------------------
465.5 467.5 2.0 0.6 23.3 0.679 1.6
---------------------------------------------------------
552.4 553.5 1.1 0.3 4.12 0.120 1.6
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Results July 26, 2011
-73.5 CM11-33 444.3 454.3 10.0 3.0 13.4(i) 0.392(i) 2.6(i)
including
444.3 446.2 1.9 0.6 70.0 2.041 12.8
647.2 667.3 20.1 6.1 1.68(i) 0.049(i) N/S
O -45.6 CM11-34 317.1 344.5 27.4 8.4 1.00(i) 0.029(i) N/S
787.4 792.9 5.5 1.7 2.16 0.063 N/S
812.5 821.9 9.4 2.9 3.97(i) 0.116(i) N/S
838.2 843.4 5.2 1.6 1.13 0.033 N/S
-59.5 CM11-35 264.0 277.7 13.7 4.2 1.23(i) 0.036(i) N/S
366.1 384.6 18.5 5.6 1.44(i) 0.042(i) N/S
574.7 587.5 12.8 3.9 9.94(i) 0.290(i) N/S
-74.6 CM11-36 322.0 328.7 6.7 2.0 14.0 0.408 N/S
374.0 419.0 45.0 13.7 3.54(i) 0.103(i) N/S
714.3 750.5 36.2 11.0 12.5(i) 0.365(i) N/S
-84.9 CM11-37 164.0 178.5 14.5 4.4 6.80(i) 0.198(i) 1.6(i)
including
173.9 178.5 4.6 1.4 20.9 0.610 4.6
237.0 250.0 13.0 4.0 1.77(i) 0.051(i) 2.0(i)
Q -44.4 CM11-38 187.0 192.0 5.0 1.5 12.6 0.367 N/S
225.0 229.5 4.5 1.4 1.0 0.029 N/S
271.7 312.4 40.7 12.4 6.32(i) 0.184(i) N/S
including
308.8 310.0 1.2 0.4 157 4.579 5.8
344.0 353.0 9.0 2.7 3.77(i) 0.110(i) 3.7(i)
661.8 675.4 13.6 4.1 3.64(i) 0.106(i) N/S
718.5 738.2 19.7 6.0 1.37(i) 0.040(i) N/S
934.7 939.0 4.3 1.3 1.02 0.030 N/S
944.9 971.7 26.8 8.2 4.17(i) 0.122(i) 3.6(i)
1020.0 1022.8 2.8 0.9 3.66 0.107 N/S
-54.3 CM11-39 842.6 850.8 8.2 2.5 2.20(i) 0.064(i) N/S
-69.3 CM11-40 78.4 79.8 1.4 0.4 9.55 0.279 N/S
216.4 239.5 23.1 7.0 6.42(i) 0.187 N/S
including
224.4 227.5 3.1 0.9 38.0 1.108 3.0
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Weighted

Drill core processing included descriptive logging and sampling for geochemical analyses. The HQ and NQ-size drill core was split in two halves using a splitter at the Company"s Lowhee Creek Compound in Wells-Barkerville, central B.C. One-half of the core is put in a sample bag. After all the samples are placed in the rice bags at the mine site, they are transported by BGM"s personnel to a shipping company in Quesnel for trans-shipment to Eco Tech Lab in Kamloops, B.C. Sample preparation and geochemical assaying is done at Eco Tech Lab, following their own internal standards for quality control and verification. The gold assaying method uses a standard fire assay with AA finish. ETL is certified under the Assayers Certification Program of B.C.
About Barkerville Gold Mines Ltd.
Since the mid 1990s the Company has focused on exploration and development of gold projects in the Cariboo Mining District in central B.C. The Company"s mineral tenures now cover over 1,225 square kilometers, encompassing seven past producing hard rock mines and three NI 43-101 gold deposits, including the QR Mine & Mill. The QR Property was acquired in February 2010 and includes a 900 tonne/day gold milling facility and a permitted gold mine located approximately 110 kilometers by highway and all-weather road from the Barkerville Gold Camp. Mining operations commenced at QR in February 2010 and the Company began pouring dore gold in September 2010. In November 2010, the Company acquired a second permitted mill currently on care and maintenance in Revelstoke, B.C. for relocation to the Barkerville Gold Camp near Wells, B.C. and upgrade it to a 3,000-tonne/day facility subject to government approvals. In November 2010 the Company and the Lhtako Dene First Nation also signed a Project Agreement in relation to its Bonanza Ledge and Cariboo Gold Projects. The Company has not hedged any of its future gold production.
The technical information in this News Release has been reviewed and approved by Chief Geologist Jim Yin, PhD, P.Geo, a qualified person as defined in National Instrument 43-101.

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From: PaperPerson7/26/2011 12:58:07 PM
   of 4686
 
nice move on palladium, up 3 percent, but the market does not seem willing to give PAL/PDL credit for either the 1600 gold or the 800 plus palladium???

kitco.com 

stockcharts.com 

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