Why We’re Happy With Gold’s Current Price
March 30th, 2010 | Posted by goldBy Brad Zigler
Real-time Monetary Inflation (last 12 months): 0.5%
Gold prices turned up Monday on short covering following Friday’s aggressive buying. COMEX front-month metal gained more than six bucks in the day session on volume even heavier than Friday’s. Still, spot gold needs a close above $1,115 to indicate last week’s dip to the $1,067 level was a near-term bottom.
The trading range that presently binds gold hasn’t been very satisfying to many traders and investors—bull and bear alike. Traders have had to content themselves with scalping small-scale moves while they await a real cyclical breakout.
Portfolio managers and financial advisers, however, are pretty happy with gold right now. Not because of its price per se but because of its correlation to stocks. More accurately, its falling correlation.
Gold and blue chip stocks, represented by the S&P 500 Composite, were marching fairly well in lock step in February. The correlation coefficient between COMEX spot and the SPX, in fact, reached a weeklong plateau of 80 percent before metals prices broke to the downside late last month.
CMX Gold/SPX Correlation
Yesterday, the correlation fell to 29 percent; not quite to the two-year mean of 15 percent, but a heckuva lot closer than before.
So why would this make portfolio managers and advisers happy? Because a low correlation bespeaks gold’s value as a risk diversifier—the “zig” an account needs when all else “zags.”
Remember, it was the confluence of risk that presaged the big break of 2008, as Ivy League endowment managers now know. With gold zigging and stocks zagging, portfolio risks now can be spread out better.
Keep in mind, though, that we’re talking about gold here. Not gold mining shares. The correlation between SPX and the index tracked by the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (NYSEArca: GDX), at 54 percent, is still fairly close to last month’s levels.
GDX/SPX Correlation
No doubt, this development will encourage some quant-minded investors—retail and institutional—to look more favorably upon a gold purchase. How this buoys the metal’s price remains to be seen, but at least gold is resuming its role as a proper risk diversifier for equity-based portfolios. That is, as long as that pesky coefficient stays low.
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Two Silver Producers That Shine – Mike Niehuser
March 30th, 2010 | Posted by gold
“The case has never been better for having a position in precious metals as a store of value,” says Mike Niehuser, founder of Beacon Rock Research, LLC, especially in light of increasing amounts of government debt. In this exclusive interview with The Gold Report, Mike talks about his goal of finding mining stocks with good management and assets with defined pathways to value creation and two in particular that he’s keeping an eye on that “have excellent exploration upside.”
The Gold Report: Mike, has your outlook for precious metals changed given the recent strengthening of the U.S. dollar?
Mike Niehuser: From a U.S. perspective, we still see gold between $900 and $1,200 an ounce, and continue to believe that we could see gold at $1,500 by year end. Likewise for silver, $15 to $20 an ounce appears to be a reasonable trading range, and with silver we would expect to have greater volatility. The case has never been better for having a position in precious metals as a store of value. With the bailout of Greece or Portugal, the euro may be in trouble, and yet the U.S. is also becoming an increasingly uncertain place to do business. So long as the U.S. is perceived to be relatively more stable than most other parts of the world, and the federal government can manage its problems, the U.S. dollar will periodically strengthen and you may expect volatility with metal prices. The uncertainty being generated should have the offsetting effect of increasing the attraction for precious metals as a store of value, but over 2010 to the longer term, increasing amounts of government debt relative to a constant total supply of precious metals will allow metals to remain a store of value.
TGR: Is this a good time to invest in mining equities?
MN: We have a bias that over the long run, for mining stocks with good management and assets with defined pathways to value creation, so long as metal prices are above cost of production, we are in business, which seems to be the case today. Look at it this way, would you want to hold assets in the form of I.O.U.s from the government that has no will to stop the printing press, or would you rather have an interest in an outfit that actually produces hard currency? The difficulties faced by mining companies to profitably produce gold and silver—read hard currency —is what makes them rare. In the current environment, holding shares of mining companies is an option to holding physical metals or in an ETF. The key to stock selection is locating companies that are either on a path or have achieved profitable production. Certainly, the deleveraging over the last couple of years has even taken down companies that have met investor expectations, and we may not be out of the woods yet. So yes, we don’t see a bubble in precious metals or mining stocks, and so stock selection is still important.
TGR: What silver mining companies are you recommending to investors?
MN: There are two that come to mind. Minefinders Corporation (MFN) has achieved their first profitable quarter mining gold and silver, or silver and gold, depending on metal prices from their open-pit Dolores mine near Chihuahua, Mexico. We also like Alexco Resource Corp. (AXU), which has an early jump on constructing their modest but high-grade silver and base metal underground mine in the Yukon Territory. Both companies have excellent exploration upside with solid balance sheets, good management, and relatively fewer shares outstanding compared to other companies in their space. Interestingly, both companies are not trading far from where they were without significant improvements and at much lower metal prices.
TGR: Mexico has been getting a lot of bad press—do you have concerns?
MN: Look, sure, but I have concerns about the U.S. as well. We just got back from visiting Dolores and actually it seemed calmer than our last visit. Interestingly, it appeared that given room availability at the hotel and number of small airplanes in the hangar at the airport, they may be experiencing their own economic downturn. This may be both good and bad; we would expect that the government would appreciate a stable long-term operator like Minefinders. They have successfully relocated the village and the blockaders from years ago were nowhere in sight. You may attribute this to management working with the federal government and the locals.
TGR: So why would Minefinders, for example, be trading at lower than expected levels?
MN: Once again, Minefinders’ stock is now trading at a price that is close to that when they had just finished the road to the project prior to construction. So that is a good question. They are now in production and it would appear to have worked out the bugs from startup and have recently completed their first earnings-positive quarter. This is a somewhat amazing statement to say that a mining company is now profitable.
TGR: If Minefinders keeps mining ore should the value drop from here?
MN: Only if there was no upside for exploration or increasing recoveries or if metal prices declined as they are unhedged. This should be a pretty good year from Minefinders for a number of reasons. Management reports that they have solved their screen issue of last year and that they should be processing at the 18,000 tons per day rate. In addition, having moved the village, they are now in position to pursue higher grades of both gold and silver. Silver grades should double through the end of the year and gold grades should step up in the second half as they move into higher grade areas of the pit. It will be important for investors to watch recoveries. Gold is fairly easy to recover in the leach process but silver can take longer. On the whole, they have reported that leaching has met their expectations, but they learn as they go, and this is a good reason for their contemplating a mill to boost recoveries of higher-grade silver.
TGR: Could the cost of a mill be a concern to investors?
MN: It may be a concern for some. Minefinders is in the process of reviewing different scenarios of different types and sizes for a mill operation. They question is not an easy one as the terrain is a factor and power is always an issue. The nutshell for a mill is to boost recoveries of higher-grade silver that otherwise may be left on the leach pad. Even more important and not in the current resource model is the potential to process even higher grades from underground and outside the current resource model. This expansion of the resource underground or expanding the pit to the south plus the potential for increasing recoveries does not appear to be in the stock price. The company is also profitable and has available credit and fewer shares outstanding, so they have options to make the best of the opportunity.
TGR: What is the life of the Dolores Mine?
MN: As contemplated in the Feasibility Study, the life of mine is 15 years. This will change with the mill; it could actually shorten by increasing processing or be extended with additional resources added to the project. Investors should also know that Minefinders should be making decisions on its La Bolsa heap leach project on the Arizona-Mexico border near Nogales. This was Minefinders’ initial project that was put on the back burner after Dolores was discovered. We have seen La Bolsa as well and it is a relatively simple project. La Bolsa could produce 40,000 to 50,000 ounces of gold over four to five years with relatively little cost. Potentially more important than La Bolsa, Minefinders reported on its new La Virginia target, which is a Dolores look-alike but with potentially higher grades of gold and silver. This should address some of your questions about Minefinders potential for value creation beyond the start up of Dolores.
TGR: Have you seen Alexco’s project recently?
MN: We were up there last summer for the analyst tour of the Bellekeno underground work. It is still a little cold in the Yukon, but they are reported to be experiencing an unusually early spring. This should have allowed them to get a jump on construction having buttoned everything up for the winter and put them in good position to move into production in 2010. Unlike Dolores, Bellekeno is part of the Keno Hill Silver District, which has completed infrastructure from past production. In addition, Alexco is mining some of the highest grades of silver in the world, which allows them to build a relatively modest-size and low-cost processing operation.
TGR: So Minefinders and Alexco are apples and oranges?
MN: As far as being different types of silver projects and locales, you are correct. In addition to high grades of silver with base metals, the Yukon Territory is becoming more interesting to investors based on recent discoveries in the area plus the area’s long mining history and friendly political jurisdiction. Alexco is also a bit different from a management perspective as Minefinders are exploration geologists while Alexco has the unique background as an environmental services firm, which is how it came into ownership of the Keno Hill Silver District.
TGR: Why was it important that Alexco had environmental expertise?
MN: Alexco acquired the Keno Hill Silver District from the government with the agreement to clean up environmental damage left over by previous operators. So Alexco will be paid by the government in the Yukon to clean up the district while having the opportunity to mine resources to current standards. The Keno Hill Silver District has past production of over 200 million ounces of silver averaging about 40 ounces of silver per ton, yet the district has never been comprehensively explored with modern mining methods. We would expect that the market is only giving value for Bellekeno, while there is potentially much more beyond the initially identified resource for about a five-year mine life.
TGR: How can you be sure that there are additional resources left to discover?
MN: Well, point well taken. In Alexco’s case, investors may consider the manner in which it financed the development and construction at Bellekeno. Alexco commenced construction prior to completion of a bankable feasibility study by selling 25% of the silver production at about $3.90 an ounce to Silver Wheaton Corp. (SLW). The deal allows Alexco to retain full ownership of the remaining 75% of the silver production, plus lead, zinc, and any gold found on the property.
The funding by Silver Wheaton allowed Alexco to forgo completing the expensive and time-consuming feasibility study, which allowed them to accelerate the time to construction with metal prices at record levels. Funding by Silver Wheaton also allowed Alexco to advance to construction without issuing shares and diluting existing shareholders or securing debt financing, which may have required restrictive bank covenants and hedging. The very interesting part of the Silver Wheaton deal is that it would not have been justified on the existing resource at Bellekeno, so it begs the question exactly what is the upside at Keno Hill.
TGR: Well, what is Silver Wheaton expecting?
MN: It is hard to say; this may be the first silver stream purchase by Silver Wheaton on a more or less pre-feasibility level project. As I said, though the diverse ownership interests had been consolidated over the years by the United Keno Hill Mines, the prior owner never completed a comprehensive analysis of the district and never established a resource ahead of a couple years of mine life. The ore was never mined below a couple hundred meters was well. Although the operation was large and had scale over the oldtimers’, United Keno Hill only pursued high grade veins until they were offset by faults and then mining ceased. Not until recently did Alexco consolidate and complete a study of the volumes of historic data.
TGR: So why is the historic data important?
MN: Alexco digitized and assimilated rooms of data that allowed them to identify targets to potentially locate extensions of high grade veins that were lost or dead ended due to faulting. Alexco successfully used this data to potentially locate extensions of the high- grade Lucky Queen and Silver King past-operating mines. These vein continuations may now be visible to Alexco while the previous operator was in the dark.
TGR: What do you mean by high grades?
MN: The Lucky queen produced 11 million ounces at 88 ounces per ton and the Silver King produced 11 million ounces at 53 ounces per ton. But even more interesting than just locating extensions of lost veins on high grade veins, Alexco was successful at stepping out well beyond historic mines and producing significant drill results elsewhere. The Birmingham, for example, is several kilometers away any known mines. Alexco hopes to locate another Hector Calumet at Keno Hill, which produced over 96 million ounces. As Keno Hill has produced over 200 million ounces of silver and has never been explored beyond following surface expressions of mineralization, as the district is about 10 by 20 miles, there is significant upside, which is what Silver Wheaton is banking on.
TGR: So do you expect Alexco to be profitable in 2010?
MN: It could be close. We would expect Bellekeno to be highly profitable for a mine of its size and expect additional ore to be located to either extend the operating life of the mine or to the acceleration of an expansion or an additional mill on the project. It is still too early to tell, but in addition, Alexco has an environmental business in that is active in North and South America.
TGR: What is this all about?
MN: It was Alexco’s environmental expertise in mine remediation and closure that allowed it to be successful in acquiring the Keno Hill Silver District from among a number of bidders. Alexco is the government’s sole contractor for the cleanup of historic mining activity, all the while being held harmless for prior mining activities while free to extract precious and base metal resources. The combination of the contract for cleanup plus the operation at Bellekeno should place Alexco in both an envious operating position and cash-flow generation. We have visited two other environmental sites cleaned up by Alexco, one in South Carolina and one in Colorado, and we are expecting that this year may be the year their environmental business takes off.
TGR: Mike, we appreciate your time.
Mike Niehuser is the founder of Beacon Rock Research, LLC , which produces research for an institutional audience and focuses on precious, base and industrial metals, and substitutes, oil and gas, alternative energy, as well as communications and human resources. Mike is also on the faculty of the Pacific Coast Banking School and was nominated to BrainstormNW magazine’s list of the region’s top financial professionals in 2007.
DISCLOSURE:
1) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Energy Report or The Gold Report: Minefinders, Inc.
2) Mike Niehuser: I personally and/or my family own the following companies mentioned in this interview: Minefinders, Inc. and Alexco Resources. I personally and/or my family am paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
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Buy-and-Hold Is Out, ETFs and Trend Following Are In
March 30th, 2010 | Posted by etfLong-term buy-and-hold investors don’t seem too happy, especially after the recent market crash. With major averages flat or negative over the last decade, who can blame them? If you are a discouraged buy-and-holder, it may be time to consider using another strategy in conjunction with ETFs.
Many investors have given up the buy-and-hold strategy, but that has only prompted some contrarians to declare that now is the right time to be a buy-and-hold investor, reports Aaron Task for Yahoo! Finance. What gives?
Lakshman Achuthan, managing director of the Economic Cycle Research Institute (ECRI), doesn’t believe “buy and hold” is necessarily a bad thing, “unless you’re having more frequent recessions.” The problem? The Economic Cycle Research Institute (ECRI) predicts just that in the coming decade.
Achuthan commented that successive recoveries after the WWII recessions were weaker and weaker “on every count,” including growth, sales, employment and production. Furthermore, volatility in the economy is increasing. Just look at the last couple of years, which saw large swings in late 2008 and early 2009, followed by the surge in recent months.
Achuthan argues that we are in a period of “more ‘boom and bust’-type cycles,” and that the period of a more normal business cycle is coming to an end.
In today’s climate, hanging on for dear life can result not only in lost money, but lost time. There are lots of uptrends out there and it’s just a matter of learning to spot them and, most importantly, acting on them.
We use the 200-day moving average to determine when we’re in and when we’re out. When a position is above its 200-day, it’s a buy signal. When it drops below or 8% off the recent high, it’s a sell signal. Having such a strategy has you in a position in time for any potential long-term uptrend, while having a point at which you sell puts a cap on your losses.
While trend following can be used with nearly any financial instrument, it’s best suited to ETFs. Stocks can be more volatile, which leads to frequent trades and increased costs. Mutual funds don’t possess intraday liquidity and many of them feature early redemption fees or investment minimums.
Max Chen contributed to this article.
Disclosure: None
About the author: Tom Lydon
Brazil ETF Surges on Infrastructure Plan
March 30th, 2010 | Posted by etfBrazil has been one of the big winners of the rally in global equity markets over the last year, as the BRIC economic bloc established its position as the leader in the economic recovery. Strong demand for raw materials in other developing economies fueled an impressive rebound, and the selection of Rio de Janeiro as the host of the 2016 Olympics gave an autumn boost to South America’s largest economy.
Brazil has grand ambitions of hosting those Olympic Games as a top-five world economy, and has made considerable progress towards that goal. The resource rich nation is now one of China’s largest trading partners, and has benefited tremendously from a global rebound in commodity prices. A strong commitment to social programs has closed the significant wealth gap. The Brazilian currency has surged over the last year as foreign investors have flocked to get a piece of the action. But some formidable obstacles remain as constant reminders that Brazil is still very much an emerging economy facing a difficult road to developed market status.
Over the past decade, Brazil’s commitment to maintaining and improving infrastructure has failed to keep pace with its rapidly-expanding economy and growing cities, a fact readily acknowledged within the country. Speaking on the potential for Brazil’s economy, former central bank president Arminio Fraga recently expressed general optimism but noted some major areas of concern. “We still have serious barriers to growth,” said Fraga in a February interview with BusinessWeek. “I have a particular concern with infrastructure, which is in terrible shape. We’ve not been keeping up with new needs, not even with maintenance.”
This neglect came to a head in November 2009 when a massive blackout affected some 60 million people and 18 of Brazil’s 26 states. The loss of power resulted in stranded metro trains and hundreds of traffic accidents, sparking public outrage over the country’s outdated and overloaded electrical grid. “It’s sad to see such a beautiful city with such a precarious infrastructure,” said one witness to be blackout. “This shouldn’t happen in a city that is going to host the Olympic games.”
With the Olympic games (and more immediately the 2014 World Cup) looming as opportunities for Brazil to showcase itself as a modern country on the global stage, the government is making a furious effort to enhance its roadways, utilities, and transport systems. Brazilian president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva recently launched a massive $878 billion program to upgrade Brazil’s infrastructure, a welcome development to citizens and foreign investors alike.
Some see the infrastructure plan as a pivotal issue in upcoming presidential elections. The ultra-popular Lula will step aside to comply with term limits, but the massive infrastructure spending could give a boost to the campaign of his hand-picked successor, chief of staff Dilma Rousseff. “Rousseff is expected to tout the massive investments to voters as evidence that Lula’s center-left government is rapidly improving the potholed roads, clogged ports and underfunded health system that dog Latin America’s biggest economy despite strong growth in recent years,” writes Fernando Exman.
According to government documents, more than $250 billion will go to Brazil’s energy sector, with another $50 billion going towards transportation systems and $150 billion to fund the “My House, My Life” program aimed at providing housing to low income families.
Brazil’s failure to make sufficient investments in its infrastructure and the government’s accelerated catch up plan may create some interesting investment opportunities. The spending plan could be good news for the Brazil Infrastructure Index Fund (BRXX), which surged more than 3% in Monday trading following news of Lula’s infrastructure program. BRXX tracks the INDXX Brazil Infrastructure Index, a benchmark comprised of 30 leading companies deemed to be representative of Brazil’s infrastructure sector.
BRXX focuses exclusively on infrastructure stocks, but spreads exposure across a number of sub-sectors, including telecom, electric utilities, transportation infrastructure, and independent power producers. The underlying index is tilted towards large cap stocks (the median market cap is more than $5 billion) and recently had a projected price-to-earnings ratio of about 18 times.
Disclosure: No positions at time of writing.
About the author: Michael Johnston
Why Is the SEC Suddenly Scrutinizing Leveraged ETFs?
March 30th, 2010 | Posted by etfHere is what the SEC has said:
Pending the review’s completion, the staff has determined to defer consideration of exemptive requests under the Investment Company Act to permit ETFs that would make significant investments in derivatives. The staff’s decision will affect new and pending exemptive requests from certain actively-managed and leveraged ETFs that particularly rely on swaps and other derivative instruments to achieve their investment objectives. The deferral does not affect any existing ETFs or other types of fund applications.
I used to write regularly about ProShares leveraged ETFs. Under the hood, leveraged ETFs, both the 2X or 3X and inverse 2X or 3X, make extensive use of derivatives. Swaps of one kind or another are commonly utilized to achieve results that are multiples of an underlying index.
Let’s look at the ProShares Ultra QQQ (QLD) ETF that is intended to deliver twice the daily performance of the NASDAQ 100 index. According to the ProShares site, QLD daily holdings include over $200M in futures and nearly a $1B (notional value) in swaps. This is in contrast to other holdings of approximately $500M in the actual stocks that make up the NASDAQ 100 plus $340M in cash and other assets. Needless to say, it’s primarily the swaps that gives this ETF its juice.
In effect then, a company like ProShares would not be able to bring to market any more leveraged ETFs. Fortunately for ProShares, the SEC announcement indicates that existing ETFs will not be affected.
Who does this SEC decision actually hurt?
Institutions always have more opportunities to use complicated or exotic investment techniques so the SEC decision will be merely an inconvenience.
Once again, it is the small investor who will see less choice in investment products. Sector and style-based ETFs have made it much easier for individual investors to make diversified bets on different areas of the U.S. and global economies. The leveraged long and short ETFs have been good vehicles for reasonably educated traders with a more short-term orientation.
So why all of a sudden the interest in leveraged ETFs? Is the SEC responding to political pressure to make it look like they are doing something about the barely regulated derivatives market? Is it easier to just dump on providers of ETFs and mutual funds than to actually go up against the investment banks and hedge funds that are primary players in the derivatives markets?
Read the SEC press release here.
About the author: Trade Radar Operator
Actively Managed Mutual Funds Continue to Outperform
March 30th, 2010 | Posted by etfETFs track indexes for better or worse, but as of late, mutual funds have mostly been beating the indexes. Most mutual funds notoriously underperform their benchmarks, but with this shift, we might be sharpening our knives for a plate of crow. Or are we?
According to Lipper Inc., 95% of intermediate bond funds beat the Barclays Capital U.S. Aggregate Bond Index and 68% of diversified U.S. stock funds beat the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index in 2009, reports Jason Zweig forThe Wall Street Journal. Year-to-date, 58% of stock and bond funds are beating their underlying benchmarks.
However, Zweig explains how indexes don’t always reflect what fund managers are doing. For instance, the Barclays Aggregate’s market average gained 6% in 2009, whereas most taxable investment-grade bond funds were up 14%. The reason for the discrepancy was because the index consists of bonds issued by the U.S. Treasury and government-related equities while corporate bonds make up only 18% of the total benchmark.
The average intermediate-term bond fund holds half its assets in government bonds, almost 40% in corporates and 10% in foreign debt. The reason why funds deviate from their indexes with riskier holdings is because funds charge expenses, and a fund with a 1% annual cost has to beat the index by at least 1% to justify fees.
Furthermore, the United States has issued around $2 trillion in new debt to bail out the financial system, which has pushed up the percentage of Treasuries to more than 29% of the index, compared to 22% at year-end 2007.
In the stocks arena, managers mostly favored small companies over larger ones. Small stocks tanked during the market crash but recuperated much more quickly than their larger counterparts. The apparent cunning of many managers may be mostly due to the flip side of their earlier inadequacies.
Habitual underperformance in mutual funds is a reason we’re big fans of ETFs. Millions of investors, however, are going to be keeping close watch on actively managed funds to see if they can generate alpha. While active ETFs are a marked improvement over the mutual fund model – after all, you get lower fees, transparency and intraday liquidity – they’ll have to add value by beating their benchmarks, as well.
Max Chen contributed to this article.
About the author: Tom Lydon
March 30th, 2010 | Posted by etfBy Lara Crigger
Thought we closed the book on position limits in the commodities markets? Guess again.
In the latest episode of the government’s apparently never-ending quest to regulate every commodity under the sun, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission held a public hearing last Thursday to explore the possibility of enacting position limits in the gold, silver and copper markets.
Confused? So was I. Apart from a few gold manipulation theorists, there hasn’t really been much public outcry for tighter regulation in the metals markets. And despite Commissioner Bart Chilton publicly calling for “professional-grade regulatory tools” in the metals markets, the CFTC as a whole hasn’t really demonstrated any regulatory interest in gold, silver or copper before now.
Still, according to CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler in his opening remarks, the CFTC is now weighing whether position limits in the metals markets could “enhance market integrity and efficiency”—and, of course, reduce excessive speculation.
The issue is entirely irrelevant, because we already have position limits in the gold, silver and copper markets.
COMEX currently sets and enforces its own position limits for these metals, which they call “accountability limits.” According to the existing rules, any individual trader may hold up to 6,000 contracts of gold or silver, and up to 5,000 contracts of copper (whether in any one month or for all months totaled together). As contracts near expiration, limits tighten: In the spot month, investors may only hold 3,000 gold contracts, 1,500 silver contracts and 1,200 copper contracts.
Granted, the existing limits don’t always work perfectly. In the past 2 1/4 years, 56 traders have overstepped the caps for gold contracts at least once, according to COMEX data presented at the hearing. But in my mind, that’s not an invitation for Bart Chilton and company to step over and lay down new limits. It’s a sign that the COMEX needs to more aggressively enforce the ones it already has.
Besides, I question the impact that position limits in the U.S. could achieve, given that in all three metals markets, the bulk of trading occurs overseas. London handles over half of all gold futures trades and 90 percent of all copper. New York handles a little more than a third of all gold trades.
Still, many of those testifying at Thursday’s hearing—copper producer Jeff Burghardt in particular—pointed the finger at passive, long-only index funds for driving up the metals’ prices, pushing the markets out of whack with fundamentals.
I can’t agree. There are several solid, well-documented fundamental factors driving the prices of gold, silver and copper higher: Chinese commodity stockpiling, infrastructure build-outs in other emerging markets, supply disruptions and production slowdowns, and, of course, “safe haven” demand for precious metals worldwide. Sorry, producers: Higher prices aren’t a smoking gun for “excessive” speculation.
Myself, I tend to agree with CPM Group’s Jeff Christian, who said, “I know of no empirical or theoretical basis for assuming that programs that have failed in the agricultural markets would succeed in the metals and energy markets.”
About the author: IndexUniverse.com
Gold Rising With Chinese Investment Demand
March 29th, 2010 | Posted by goldGold
Gold closed at $1104.45/oz Friday night with a gain of 1.09% on the day in dollar terms, but a loss of 0.27% on the week. Prices were volatile this morning in Asian trading as gold surged in price to $1,114.60/oz prior to falling to $1,103/oz. Gold then gradually recovered in Asian trade and European trade as the dollar weakened. Gold is currently trading at $1,112.00/oz and €824.18/oz & £741.28/oz in EUR and GBP terms, respectively. (Click to enlarge)
Geopolitical tensions in Russia and North Korea are supporting gold. Terrorism remains a risk and the risk of a military confrontation between North Korea and South Korea remains real.
Gold is also being supported by the World Gold Council’s projections regarding future demand for gold in China. Chinese demand may double in the next decade according to the World Gold Council and importantly this significant increase in demand comes at a time when production internationally has been falling in recent years.
Investment demand for gold is expected to see “exponential growth.” While this may seem like hyperbole, it is not, as the gold market in China was only liberalised in 2001. Chinese people could not own gold bullion since 1950. Thus, per capita ownership of gold is well below western levels and massively below the per capita ownership seen in India.
Chinese demand from investors and the jewellery industry, which now accounts for 80% of purchases in China, reached 423 metric tonnes in 2009, while domestic mine supply was 314 tonnes. The output shortfall will create a “snowball effect” as the country’s production fails to keep pace with the annual leap in consumption.
The World Gold Council is right when they say that higher mine development costs, potential supply disruptions, tougher safety regulations and depleting ore bodies could put a much higher floor under the gold price. Indeed the favourable supply demand fundamentals mean that gold should be very well supported with a floor above $1,000/oz.
Silver
Silver closed at $16.86/oz on Friday a gain of 1.08% on the day, but a loss of 0.82% on the week. Silver is currently trading at $17.09/oz, €12.69/oz and £11.41/oz.
Platinum Group Metals
Platinum is trading at $1,604/oz, palladium at $741.28/oz and rhodium at $2,400/oz.
Disclosure: No positions
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Time’s Running Out for the Gold Monster
March 29th, 2010 | Posted by goldBy Brad Zigler
My disappointment with Colin McCabe is now turning to worry. In fact, I’m questioning his skill as a stock picker. Don’t know McCabe? He’s the supposed editor and analyst for the Elite Stock Report, a so-called paid mailer that has been recently touting a penny gold stock, Guinness Exploration, Inc. ((OTCBB: GNXP)).
McCabe promised “monster gains inside 60 days” in a report I received Feb. 16 (“A Golden Future In Your Mailbox?“) when GNXP shares were changing hands at $1.28. At last look, the stock was dawdling around $1.04, depressed by the capital outflows that seemed to plague the issue since I got McCabe’s tip.
Guinness Exploration (OTCBB: GNXP)
There are only 14 more trading days left for those “monster profits” to appear. Judging from the performance of other junior gold stocks, GNXP is an outlier. And not of the good kind, either. It’ll be a tall order turning this stock around.
Take a look at the Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF (NYSE Arca: GDXJ), a broad-based portfolio of 55 metals producers. While GNXP sank 19 percent, the value of the rest of the gold mining world actually rose a half-percentage point. More important, money flowed into the sector as a whole. GDXJ’s MFI reading is pretty close to where it was Feb. 16, after spiking above 70 (MFI is measured on a 1-100 scale). GNXP’s index, meantime, has fallen from 87 to 35.
Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF (NYSE Arca: GDXJ)
Needless to say, this has got me worried, as I had banked on McCabe’s acumen to help me generate enough profits by April 15 to settle my tax bill and ultimately fund a bevy of Christmas gift purchases (he said in his newsletter that GNXP could go “10-for-1 in the next 12 months”).
Perhaps I shouldn’t worry, though. In all of last year, McCabe’s recommendations — how many there were he doesn’t say — were all winners, save one. Well, what he actually said was that closed out only one stock at a loss. For all I know, he could still be holding on to some dogs.
Darn. Now I’m worried again.
Mr. McCabe, please get in touch with me and let me know when in the next two weeks I should expect to be visited by that monster.
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Capturing Gold’s Allure With ETFs
March 29th, 2010 | Posted by goldGold has been a reliable store of value for centuries and today it’s no different. Investors looking to help keep their wealth intact during troubled times should consider a 21st century option in investing in gold: exchange traded funds.
When the economy looks shaky, jittery investors typically fall back on to gold to preserve their wealth, remarks Matt Krantz for USA Today.
Gold is seen to be perfect for any number of occasions. For instance, gold bugs say the precious metal is a good way to invest when the government’s deficit results in runaway inflation and pessimism shakes the foundation of the dollar’s strength. It is suggested that an investor may allocate 5% of his or her portfolio in gold if one is worried about possible depreciation in the dollar. [7 Things to Know About Gold.]
However, gold has been lagging behind almost every other asset class over the extended periods of time. Gold is also very risky, but its reputation as a volatile asset may be overstated. It’s less volatile than stocks.
For those who are more interested in gold as a hedge against a weakening dollar, ETFs are an easy and cost-efficient way to invest in gold. Gold ETFs are a great tool to get access to the metal. Not only do they carry the inherent benefits of ETFs, but you can take your pick when it comes to how you get your exposure: gold mining stocks, gold futures or physical gold bullion. [The Benefits of Equity Commodity ETFs.]
Max Chen contributed to this article.
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