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September 7, 2011

Debt, blood and fear present golden opportunities - Holmes

Debt, blood and fear present golden opportunities - Holmes

Equities, and gold equities in particular, are likely to benefit from the current macro economic picture that is characterised by expansive money supply, massive debts, says US Global's Frank Homes

Author: Frank Holmes
Posted: Wednesday , 07 Sep 2011

SAN ANTONIO (US Global Investors) -

My long-time friend and mentor Seymour Schulich forwarded an email to me that puts today's U.S. government debt mountain startlingly into context. By removing several zeros, one can place the debt situation in terms we all can understand-that of a family's income and expenses.

A family who takes in an annual income of $21,700 but spends $38,200 will soon be in dire straights. The large outstanding balance on the credit card only exacerbates the situation. Clearly, spending cuts need to be made, but eliminating only $385 from the family's budget would be a drop in the bucket. Either a substantially higher amount of income needs to be made, or the family will have to learn to live with less.

Of course, the fiscal situation is more complicated when it comes to a "family" of 311 million. It is only one part of a large conundrum for the global economy.

Gold is "Sole Beneficiary" in this Economy

Don Coxe, global portfolio strategist, points to the Shanghai Composite Index and Bombay Sensex which are currently at one-year lows, indicating that investors are not feeling confident even in these relatively strong markets where GDP is growing. In this environment, Coxe believes gold is the "sole beneficiary."

We've discussed several times that another driver of gold prices has been real interest rates. Take a look at the chart from Gold Stock Analyst (GSA) depicting the price of gold going back to 1968. In each case when real rates (calculated by subtracting the 12-month moving average of the year-over-year change of CPI from the 12-month moving average of the 3-month Treasury bill) went negative-in the 1970s, the first years of the new decade, and off and on from 2008 until now-gold has had a dramatic rise in price.

A negative real interest rate means that a hypothetical $100 investment in a T-bill is worth, for example, $98.90 a year later, i.e. you've lost purchasing power. Investors seeking yield have fled to gold in these instances.

Conversely, when interest rates turned positive in the 1980s, gold trended downward for the next 20 years.

Despite gold's dramatic bull run over the last 10 years, the yellow metal is only twice as high as its 1980 price. In comparison to other economic yardsticks since 1980, this is miniscule. Ian McAvity, editor of Deliberations on World Markets, says that federal debt, the S&P 500 Index and even GDP has grown much faster than gold over that same timeframe.

The gross U.S. federal debt of $14.3 trillion is 17 times its 1980 level. In 1980, the S&P 500 was at 105; today, it trades around 1,100. A gold price of $1,808 seems paltry as it is only 2.5 times the 1980 high of $738.

McAvity extrapolates the relative growth rate of the yellow metal, indicating that if gold doubled from its current high, it "would nearly ‘catch up' to GDP, while it might take a quadruple to match the S&P, or even a six-fold gain from here to catch the growth of debt." Multiplying the largest of these figures by the current price of gold means prices could theoretically go to $10,800. By these standards, gold is hardly a bubble.

Gold these days has become so "legitimized," helped by negative real interest rates, that the metal now directly competes with stocks for a share of investors' portfolios, says the GSA. We applaud this development, as we have always thought investors should allocate a small portion of their portfolio to gold. However, we argue that a gold ETF is not always a wise choice, particularly when it is treated as a short-term trade, like a stock.

As we've indicated many times in recent months, a better opportunity for gold investors appears to be in gold mining companies. Coxe agrees, as he believes today represents the "greatest devaluation of precious metal stocks." In his experience, he thinks there has never been such a disparity in precious metals stocks compared to the price of gold. There are two reasons for this: In the 1970s, the gold ETF did not exist, so speculators who wanted gold exposure had to purchase bullion and take physical possession of it or purchase gold mining shares. Also, gold miners have faced higher labor and energy costs as well as increased capital expenditures.

Coxe also brought to our attention the Investor's Business Daily's Industry Sub-Group Rankings, which lists six-month performance to help investors identify potential growing areas of the economy. Out of 197 groups, the third-ranking member on the list was gold mining companies.

Over the last several weeks, gold has received a lot of attention and we've discussed gold stocks and gold bullion quite often. If you were out trying to squeeze in one last summer vacation, here's what you missed:

Two Recent Developments for U.S. Stocks

What hasn't gotten a lot of attention in the media is growing money supply. Instead, much of the media has focused on day-to-day, even hour-to-hour, data. However, it is a key lubricant of the economy and financial markets.

The Federal Reserve influences money supply growth, and as can be seen in the chart below, money supply often spikes during crisis or uncertainty, such as Y2K, 9/11, the collapse of Lehman Brothers and the ensuing financial crisis. The current environment of sluggish growth, government austerity and worries over the European banking sector has likely influenced the dramatic rise in money supply over the past 18 months. The Fed likely errs on the side of caution to stimulate growth as inflation is not currently a concern.

Generally speaking, if money is growing faster than nominal GDP, that excess money tends to find its way to other uses such as investment in stocks, commodities and other financial assets. The relationship between money supply and financial assets is nonlinear and changes over time, but when tallying up pros and cons for the current environment, the recent increase of more than 8 percent in money supply growth provides a tailwind for commodities and stocks.

Equities look particularly attractive relative to bonds, especially today. During the last 40 years, the yield on the S&P 500 has rarely exceeded the yield on the 10-year Treasury bond.

For the long-term investor, the risk/reward profile for owning stocks appears positively skewed. Equity investors have suffered through one of the most difficult decades-rivaling even the Great Depression-while bond investors have enjoyed a 30-year bull market. Long-term mean reversion is a powerful tool that investors can use to help them attain their long-term goals.

It's worth repeating the famous quote from Baron Rothschild, an 18th century British nobleman and member of the Rothschild banking family, who is credited with saying that "the time to buy is when there's blood in the streets."

It has been "bloody" recently and that is precisely the time to have the courage to make long-term investments at favorable prices.

John Derrick, Director of Research, contributed to this article.

Frank Holmes is CEO and Chief Investment Officer of U.S. Global Investors - www.usfunds.com

Mineweb.com - The world's premier mining and mining investment website Debt, blood and fear present golden opportunities - Holmes - INDEPENDENT VIEWPOINT | Mineweb

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September 6, 2011

Incredible the price of Gold

Incredible the price of gold today! !!






The MasterMetals Blog

Who stole my gold?


Dossier
Venezuela
 
Humpty Dumpty - A quarter of the Venezuelan gold pays taxes, the rest vanishes. That is what the President of the Bolivarian Republic informed with a gold bar in his hands (Photo: AVN)
 The only joint venture in the mining sector has been already denounced. The labor union of Venrus points out that some gold bars -- that could amount to 81 suitcases filled with stolen dollars like Antonini s -- vanished


JOSEPH POLISZUK | EL UNIVERSAL
Saturday September 03, 2011 05:50 PM
From 23 million tons of gold that left the country last year, only six million reported taxes, said Venezuela's President Hugo Chávez in an obligatory simultaneous broadcast. "What is that?" he queried from Miraflores Palace. "Mafia, smuggling, we have to get rid of it." In El Callao, they add, however, that malfeasance goes under the government's nose.

Workers of the mine La Isidora warn about theft, loss or evaporation of more than 30,000 tons of auriferous material, the raw material of gold. "They were swallowed by the earth," Edward López affirms. "They steal the half from us and the State," he added.

Everything started because of a problem with fees: workers noted that the amount of raw material they extracted from that place in the State of Bolivar did not match with the earnings in their payment receipts. And a string of demands and counterclaims continued afterwards.

On the one hand, the company brought a criminal action against four trade union leaders. On the other hand, workers substantiated a case file with charges for fraud against the nation.

Gold bars missing"They cheated us saying that each truck transported 11 tons of auriferous material," says Edward López, one of the trade unionists facing trial. "We struggled to get a scale from the government for a year and a half and it turned out that when they installed it, we realized that each truck transported several tons beyond the estimated amount."

Only in this case, more than USD 65 million vanished completely. Gold transcended the barrier of USD 1,800 per ounce. The gold bar that disappeared from the mine La Isidora would amount to 81 suitcases filled with stolen dollars as Antonini Wilson's. In addition to the amount, the company is none than Venrus, the only one that the government had become partner with even before announcing the nationalization.

The gold mafias - whom President Hugo Chávez asked to get rid of in nationwide broadcast— are not that hidden. The labor union of the mine La Isidora points out that most of the smuggling goes by ordinary means and even under the guise of joint ventures, as the one that the government organized under the name of Venrus, in company with Russian capital.

Official anouncementsPresident Hugo Chávez recently announced -- at Council of Ministers meeting-- a new strategic plan for mining areas in the State of Bolívar. He had been warning about a new law for the group. Finally, holding a gold bar in his hand, he informed that the exploitation from now on would be carried out by joint ventures that have been operating in the petroleum area for some years.

Earlier, Minister of Petroleum and Energy Rafael Ramírez had already disclosed a bit of the plans: "Everyone who knows the southern area of the country and the mining arch of Guayana, can tell that gold has been in hands of transnational companies which operate in different ways: undercover, on the wrong side of the law and they are stealing our natural resources."

Ramírez spoke about stealing the nation, and in order to stop it as the value of the ounce of gold has peaked, he added that the State would nationalize gold mines through a new regulation by means of the Enabling Law.

It is now clear that what the government has called the nationalization of gold is intended to substitute the usual concessions for models of joint ventures, in which the State can ensure the majority stake in the firms that extract the mineral. But in El Callao, they insist that the status of joint ventures is not enough.

"We agree with nationalization, but if the State does not take a stance and take measures, they will keep stealing," López notes. He is positive that this has been the case with Venrus, whose stocks are shared by the Venezuelan government and Russian company Rusoro Mining Ltd in equal parts, and traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange in Canada.

Those in Venrus have chosen a low profile. Although an attempt was made to learn about their opinion, its representatives would not answer the phone. For now, they have not stated what they will do to face the changes announced by the government, or the claims of workers.

From London, however, the Chief Executive Officer of Rusoro, Andrei Agapov, said that when the Venezuelan president gave the news of the gold nationalization, he did not mean the whole sector; instead, the measure was aimed to fight against the mafias, which he attributes mainly to small mining.

Agapov --who according to The Wall Street Journal has bonds and friendship with Chávez-- thinks that the Head of State's words were directed to those who extract gold in illegal ways and without permission.

Without compassThere is no defined policy for gold, concluded the ex- mayor of Sifontes municipality in the State of Bolívar, Carlos Chancellor. He also speaks about "the terrible failure of this government in terms of mining."

For Chancellor, it is not accident that President Chávez included a gold plan in his agenda these days. He does not even think that it is all about electioneering to win the miners' vote, but simply an opportunity to seize the rise the market is offering. The swings of world economy have multiplied the value of this and other commodities and under those circumstances the government seemed to be worried about the mafias that have always been in the mines of the country.

"What a coincidence that in this very moment, when gold has an astonishing high price, the government wants to put its hands on the sector!" Chancellor wonders.

jpoliszuk@eluniversal.com

Translated by Adrián Valera Villani

Who stole my gold? - Daily News - EL UNIVERSAL


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