Friday, October 7, 2011

Why Gold Isn’t $2000 yet…

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By: Julian D. W. Phillips, GoldForecaster.com - GoldForecaster.com



http://news.goldseek.com/GoldForecaster/images/specialreport.jpg
The gold price went over $1,900 and looked as though it was going to mount $2,000, but since then has fallen back to $1,600 and is in the process of consolidating around the lower $1,600 area. It was expected that it would have moved a lot higher faster, but that hasn’t happened, yet.
 
In the face of Italy’s downgrade to A2 by the ratings Agency, Moody’s summary that,
 
There has been a profound loss of confidence in certain European sovereign debt markets, and Moody’s considers that this extremely weak market sentiment will likely persist. It is no longer a temporary problem that might be addressed through liquidity support, and several euro-area governments are increasingly affected by the loss of confidence.”
 
The downgrading was expected as are further downgrades for the different Eurozone members. Why shouldn’t the gold price be on its way through $2,000 to higher levels?
 
The ‘Downturn’
 
The news over the last few weeks has sent global financial markets down heavily as a slow recovery morphed into a downturn and, at best, a flat economic future in the developed world. These falls have been accompanied by tremendous worries that there could be a major banking crisis that will cripple the Eurozone economy as a whole, not just the debt-distressed nations. In France, growth is now at zero; in Greece it’s somewhere south of a 5% dip in growth, well into recession. Greater austerity simply adds to the fall in government revenues, defeating their purpose of reducing their deficit. All of this implies an ongoing shrinkage of the Eurozone economy. This hurts investor capacities in all financial markets and wealth throughout the Eurozone. Cash becomes “king” as investors flees markets to a holding position, waiting for much cheaper prices before re-entering markets at lower levels.
 
The path to deflation is then made. Deflation in its early stages causes tremendous de-leveraging. That’s the selling of positions to pay off loans taken to increase positions. It may come about because of investor prudence, banks calling in loans, stop-loss triggers and margin calls (where the level of debt against positions becomes too high and forces sales). This often (and particularly in the case of precious metals) has nothing to do with the fundamentals of the market. It’s simply the position of investors. This happened in the precious metal markets as well. This is why gold and silver prices fell.
 
De-leveraging
 
As was the case in 2008 and often through history, the process of de-leveraging is a short-lived one, even when it’s savage. Downward pressure on prices disappears once an investor has sold the positions. Leveraged positions are the most vulnerable of investor-held positions and can make up the froth or ‘surf’ in the markets, which cause the volatility levels to increase when drama strikes. In 2008, these positions were huge because there had been two and a half decades of burgeoning markets that encouraged greater risk-taking. Since then, while leveraging has taken place, it has been less and rapidly removed when dramas hit.
 
In 2008 we saw a similar drop in prices from $1,200 to $1,000 [20%], which equates to the fall from $1,910 to $1,590 [16.9%]. In 2008, the precious metal prices then slowly rose as buyers started to come in from all over the world. It took over a year for prices to recover back to $1,200.
 
Change in Market Structure
 
Today the shape of the precious metal markets is quite different and particularly that of gold. In 2008, central banks were sellers; today they are buyers. In 2008, the Chinese gold markets were small. Since then they’ve grown to such an extent that they’re soon to overtake India. These are two dynamic features that give demand a totally different shape to 2008. More than that, the impact of the developed world, long-term, has diminished quite considerably. It now represents less than 21% of jewelry, bar, and coin demand. The emerging world, as a whole, represents over 70% of such demand now.
 
The bulk of the world’s physical gold that comes to the market is dealt at the London twice daily Fixings. The balance that’s traded outside the Fixings is the most short-term price influential amounts, producing the swings that resemble the waves on the seashore. It’s these traders and speculators that often persuade long-term buyers to stand back and wait for the prices to swing to the point that persuades them to enter the market. The drop from $1,900 had this effect on investors. Now that the fall has happened, we see a surge in demand from the emerging world to pick up the slack in the market. We’ve no doubt that central banks are buying the dips as well.
 
So once the selling from the developed world has stopped (emerging market demand waits for this before buying, allowing the fall to extend further) in come the buyers happy that they’re entering the market at a good time. Because of this change in market shape, expect the market to take far less time to find its balance and allow demand to dominate.
 
2012 Recession Battle
 
The I.M.F. has just warned that the developed world will enter a recession in 2012. Will that be negative for the gold market? We don’t think so. The world has seen the recovery peter out, the sovereign debt crisis arrive, and now sees the I.M.F. recommend that the Eurozone banks be recapitalized. What does this mean for precious metals?
 
Cast you minds back to the recapitalization of U.S. banks under the TARP measures whereby the Fed bought the toxic debt investments of the banks against fresh money. When we say fresh we mean just that, newly created money in the trillions. This did lower the perceived value of the dollar inside and outside the U.S. The effect on gold was palpable as it rose back through $1,200 and onto new highs.
 
Already we’re hearing rumors of an E.U. government minister’s plan to walk the same or similar road. With the recent past in mind, we’re certain that will lower the perceived value of the euro and see euro investors seek places to cling onto the value of the euro. This time round, expect markets to discount these actions in the same way. The downturn will therefore be fought with new money creation in the same way the U.S. did it from 2008 on.
 
Source: http://news.goldseek.com/GoldForecaster/1317844522.php

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Gold's volatility makes a long term focus more important


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While prices have fallen significantly in recent weeks and volatility continues to rise, David Levenstein looks at what has actually changed, if anything
Author: David Levenstein
Posted:  Tuesday , 04 Oct 2011
JOHANNESBURG - 
As events are constantly changing, sometimes on an hourly basis, it is difficult to keep abreast with the latest issues.  The price of gold can change in an instant, and some of the moves can be substantial. Many of these price changes are becoming a daily occurrence. One day the price is down $50 an ounce and then before you know it, it is back up.
During this phase of volatility, it is important to keep focused on the bigger long-term picture and remind yourself why you own gold bullion. One of the main reasons we invest in precious metals, in particular gold and silver is that they are an alternative to fiat money.  If you believe as I do that the global monetary system is looking precarious and if you have doubts about the solutions suggested by our financial leaders, then it is essential to have a portion of your investment portfolio in gold and silver. Nothing has improved regarding the deteriorating state of our global monetary system, and while the current demand for US dollars is pushing the greenback higher, this cannot be sustained.
In last three weeks the US dollar has gained approximately 7% as measured by the Dollar Index, and during the same time the price of gold has dropped 16%. The reason for this sudden rise of the dollar can be attributed to a move out of global equities, commodities and certain currencies in particular the euro and into the perceived safety of the US dollar. I use the term "perceived safety" because in the long-term there is nothing safe about the US dollar.
As investors panicked when the prices of many assets plunged they simply sold everything, even assets that have medium to long-term growth opportunities. The recent selling of gold was related to panic from hedge funds needing to raise money for redemptions as well as a tightening of margin requirements. This was not selling pressure based on any fundamental change in the global gold market. And, it is important to realise that at times, price discovery has little to do with supply and demand, and has much to do with speculative trades as those transacted on the futures markets, in particular Comex.
Practically the all the trades on Comex are merely leveraged "paper" trades in gold and only a very small percent of all deals ever end in physical delivery.  And, due to the nature of leverage, the volumes can be massive but totally unrelated to the real supply and demand equation. Nevertheless, as the physical spot market and the futures market are linked to each other, the futures market can have a huge impact on the prices in the spot market. Personally, I believe that the sell-off in these futures contracts had a lot to do with the recent price fall in gold. 
When the gold price plummeted on September 23, at one time the price of spot gold was down by $122 an ounce from the daily high of $1750 an ounce. When the US session on Comex closed, spot gold was down $79/oz on the day at $1657/oz. But, what was interesting was the volumes traded on Comex. They were enormous; around 340,000 contracts...roughly equivalent to 25% of the annual production output in one session! None of these contracts will result in delivery and yet these paper trades can have a significant impact on prices. Once the speculative interest has waned and investors realise that the current global monetary crisis is not any better than it was a few weeks ago, I bet that we will see a resurgence of demand for the yellow metal.
We are experiencing the results of half a century of debt-fuelled "growth" that is becoming increasingly difficult to sustain. Banks grew so big that their collapse would have brought down the entire global economy. To prevent this, they were bailed out with huge tranches of public money, which in turn is precipitating social crises on the streets of western nations. The European Union has grown so big, and so unaccountable, that it threatens to collapse in on itself. Corporations have grown so big that they are overwhelming democracies and building a global plutocracy to serve their own interests. But now with the Eurozone debt crisis, US debt, currency wars, poor economic growth, high unemployment, the global monetary system looks increasingly precarious. While the Eurozone sets up an amicable separation from Greece, the euro remains under pressure resulting in a stronger dollar. 
Greece will run out of money to pay salaries and pensions next month unless it receives the next €8bn installment of emergency loans. European officials are scrambling to avert a Greek debt default, which could wreck balance sheets of European banks, send the euro lower and possibly plunge the world into a new global financial crisis.
Then today, Monday October 03, 2011 the Greek government said it won't meet its deficit target this year and agreed to additional austerity measures demanded by international lenders ahead of a meeting of Eurozone finance ministers. Greece's 2011 deficit is now expected to be 8.5% of gross domestic product, falling short of a target of 7.6%. The deficit will be reduced to 6.8% of GDP in 2012, but still short of the 6.5% target.
The Greek finance ministry said the targets will be missed because the nation is suffering a much deeper-than-projected recession. The economy is now expected to contract 5.5% in 2011 compared to the 3.8% contraction projected in June. The news increases the possibility of a delay of the next tranche of bailout funds. It also spooked investors who rushed to sell shares Monday in Asia and Europe.
Frankly, we all know that the situation in Greece is dire and that they have no hope to pay back any of these loans. I believe that despite the political rhetoric of government leaders, the leaders of the Eurozone are setting up for an "orderly" default by Greece due to the impossibility of Greece being able to service an ever expanding debt mountain. While their package will protect the banks from collapsing, it will also necessitate the monetization of the debts of the PIIGS meaning very simply printing more money.  As the value of the euro declines, individuals will look to preserve their savings and turn to gold.
 
TECHNICAL ANALYSIS
 
Gold prices are beginning to consolidate above $1600 level after the recent drop. I believe that this period of consolidation will not take more than a few weeks.
Source: http://www.mineweb.com/mineweb/view/mineweb/en/page103855?oid=136820&sn=Detail&pid=102055

What does 15 Trillion looks like?

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Source: http://www.sgtraderclub.com/2011/08/what-does-15-trillion-looks-like.html

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Are you ready for the annual Christmas Rally in Gold and Silver?

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During 18 of the last 22 years, gold has rallied between US Labor Day and Christmas.  Will the pattern this year follow the historical pattern?  We will analyze the fundamentals, look at some charts and try to draw a conclusion.  The charts in this report are courtesy Stockcharts.com unless indicated.
·         First a quote by President Andrew Jackson:  “Gentlemen, I have had men watching you for a long time, and I am convinced that you have used the funds of the bank to speculate in breadstuffs of the country.  When you won, you divided the profits among yourselves, and when you lost, you charged it to the bank.  You tell me that if I take the deposits from the bank and annul its charter, I shall ruin ten thousand families.  That may be true, but that is your sin!  Should I let you go on, you will ruin fifty thousand families, and that would be my sin!  You are a den of vipers and thieves.  I intend to rout you out and by the Eternal God, I will rout you out.” (Spoken to a delegation of bankers requesting the extension of the 1832 Bank Renewal Act).
 
Several news items during the past ten days were very bullish for gold.  The first was an announcement by the Swiss National Bank that they were planning to buy Euros with Swiss Francs.  This action effectively removes the Swiss Franc as a convenient alternative to gold, and it moves the SNB into the camp of the money printers.
 
The second item concerns an announcement by five major central banks (FED, ECB, SNB, BOJ and BOE), to provide dollar liquidity for a number of European banks that suffer from exposure to Greek banks.
 
This dollar liquidity operation will last until the end of the year and will enable dollar funding for European banks, which were struggling.  It shows that the Federal Reserve, the ECB and also British, Swiss and Japanese banks have the will and the ability to cooperate at sensitive times, whenever they feel the system needs a ‘nudge’.
 
Another factor that is very bullish for gold is the current ‘negative real interest rate’ environment.  Regardless of whether we believe the ‘official’ CPI numbers, or the more realistic numbers provided by Shadowstats.com, anyone with money in the bank, or holding short-term Treasury notes, is losing money to price inflation.
10-year Treasuries are paying a miserly two percent. With inflation at 4.8%, these ‘so-called investments’  are losing 2.8% of their value over 12 months.
According to J. M. Keynes, and many other economists, whenever ‘real interest rates’ turn negative, gold will rise.  Keynes called this “Gibson’s Paradox”, and stated that there are no exceptions.
Finally, the most bullish facilitator of rising gold and silver prices is the supply of money (see chart below).
 
This chart courtesy Mises.org shows the True Money Supply continues to rise exponentially.  A rising money supply is bullish for gold and silver, as it increases the amount of money available for the purchase of precious metals.  As long as the Central Banks keep the banking system supplied with money, the banking system will survive.  This principle is far more important to the Central Banks than the integrity of the currency.
Historically, ‘monetary inflation’ always causes ‘price inflation’.   The U.S. consumer-price index (CPI) increased 0.4% in August. That’s an annual inflation rate of 4.8%!
The TMS chart also shows that, according to the people as Mises.org, the recession is ongoing (grey area).  During recessions, there is less money coming in to government, while expenses such as unemployment benefits, food stamps, welfare payments etc. increase.  This in turn causes deficits to rise, and deficits provide energy for gold prices to rise.
 
Featured is the daily gold chart.  Price is carving out a bullish pennant.  The supporting indicators are at levels where they have found support many times in the past.  The fact that the 50DMA is in positive alignment to the 200DMA (green oval), while both are rising, is bullish.  A breakout at the blue arrow will mark the beginning of the next rally.  
According to the weekly Kitco survey of gold analysts, a minority 32.1% of the analysts are bullish for this week, 53.6% are bearish and 14.3% neutral.  From a contrarian point of view that is bullish for gold!                                                                                                 
 
This chart courtesy Cotpricecharts.com shows commercial traders reduced their ‘net short’ position to 215,000 from 228,000 last week.  The ‘up-to-date number’ will likely be even lower since the gold price dropped for two days since data for the report was compiled.  At 215,000 the commercial traders are at the lowest level since July 8th.  On that date gold traded at $1544 and over the next few months price rose up to $1924.
 
  
Featured is the GDX gold producers ETF.  Price broke out from beneath the 64 resistance level last week (blue arrow), and since then a test of the breakout is the result as the bears press their case.  Price appears ready to try again and a close above the green arrow will confirm the breakout and thereby turn the trend bullish.  The SIs are positive.  The fact that GDX outperformed GLD on Friday is bullish.
 
Featured is the weekly silver chart.  Price is carving out a bullish pennant.  The supporting indicators (green lines) are positive with a lot of room on the upside.  A breakout at the blue arrow sets up a target at the green arrow.  The 50WMA is in positive alignment to the 200WMA (green oval) while both are rising.
 
Summary:  Gold and silver are less expensive today than they were in 1980 due to the fact that there is far more paper and digital money in existence today than was the case in 1980.  According to the inflation calculator provided at USinflationcalculator.com (using data supplied by the US government), the price of gold would need to rise to $2336, to match the inflation adjusted price of $850 (the 1980 peak).  In the case of silver the price would need to rise to $137 to match the inflation adjusted price of $50 (the 1980 peak).
The most bullish fundamental for gold and silver is the fact that there are now 2.5 billion people who were not around in 1980.  Most of these people live in China and India.  By coincidence these people live in a country where the economy is growing and furthermore they love silver and gold!
Conclusion:  Based on the observations presented in this report the expectation is that the annual Christmas rally in gold and silver is ‘right on course’.
Source: http://news.goldseek.com/GoldSeek/1316453532.php

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

The case for gold and silver investment gets stronger and stronger

Day by day, the case for holding gold and silver seems to get stronger as global economies remain mired in recession and the centre of precious metals demand moves ever eastwards.
Author: Lawrence Williams
LONDON - 
Every day the case for investing in gold and silver would appear to get stronger and stronger as worse economic news follows bad.  Gold and silver prices may get hit by stringent margin increases on some exchanges, yet still they bounce back.  It seems that whatever ammunition the gold bears (whoever they may be - and suspicion falls on ‘official' channels and major banks holding short positions here among others) throw at it the ‘monetary' precious metals regroup and bounce back after a perhaps initial sharp retreat.  It may well be that the bears are running out of ammunition!  Gold and silver may lose the odd battle but they are certainly winning the war.
As has been pointed out in these pages time and again over the past several months, or even years, the centre of gravity for gold demand is moving ever further eastwards, which means that whatever western institutions (and I use this term in its widest sense) may try to do to curb its enthusiastic breakout they are ultimately doomed to failure.  The Chinese, Indians and other eastern investors who are psychologically hard-wired into gold as the ultimate survival currency when times are bad - a factor which equally affects their government attitudes to the yellow metal - will call the tune and any splurge of western sales quickly provokes an even stronger purchase response from the East.
Silver will continue to be dragged up on gold's coattails, and given the far smaller market here we are likely to see more volatility - although it has been interesting to note silver's recent relative resilience to the occasional sharp gold price downward moves each time some obstacle is driven into  its advancing path.  It really cannot be too long before the magic $50 level for silver is surpassed and after a likely hiccup around this level, the floodgates could open.  I am not a believer in the Gold:Silver ratio falling down to 16 or even less - at least not in the foreseeable future, but 30 does not seem unreasonable and that would put silver at comfortably over $60 at the current gold price level.
Another boost to silver is also an indirect consequence of gold's strength.  Increasingly the small investor who wants some precious metal insurance against hard times ahead is being priced out of buying gold - and then silver becomes a real alternative.  Do not be surprised to see silver demand continuing to increase strongly, particularly in the emerging nations as at least some growth here sees more and more people becoming part of the middle classes - and middle class aspirations in many of these nations will include holding some precious metals against a rainy day.
It is also becoming increasingly apparent - in part through the demand patterns noted above - that any truly speculative element in gold (and silver) purchasing is probably relatively minor in its impact and the demand for the key precious metals is coming from holders who will only sell as a last resort - not to make a quick buck.  The radical difference in psyche between the Western speculator and the Eastern accumulator is paramount in the price advances we are seeing now.  But now there is also an increasing element of western accumulation as a wealth protector too.  With other safe havens like the Swiss Franc, and perhaps the Japanese Yen, even more prone to government intervention to balance domestic competitiveness in world markets, the role of gold as an insurance policy is getting stronger by the day. And this insurance is likely to remain in strong hands until the world is seen as coming out of recession - which looks to be years ahead still.
Add to the above the almost daily news items that various central banks are increasing their gold holdings - many by buying their own country's outputs (Bolivia is the latest of these) - and it would seem that the amount of gold becoming available to prospective purchasers may be diminishing by the day.  Indeed there is wide belief that other Central Banks from gold producing nations - China being by far the largest of these - are also purchasing all their domestic outputs, but placing this in accounts which are not reported as part of their official holdings until such time as it becomes politically expedient to do so. 
Meanwhile higher prices have not yet been able to stimulate any significant increase in mined output due to declining grades and end of mine lives counterbalancing any new output that may be coming on stream, which is further restricting supplies.  With growing demand, which looks unlikely to diminish in the near future, the squeeze on precious metals prices looks almost certain to drive the gold price onwards and upwards.
Gold miners, on the other hand, do not appear to have been reaping the benefits of the advancing gold price - at least as far as their stock prices are concerned.  But, with gold's price rise so far this year of over 30% in dollar terms, many miners will be showing massive Q3 profit increases when they come to report which may well really begin to stimulate precious metals mining investment interest at a time when the general stock market is appearing increasingly shaky.
All in all it seems to this observer that gold and silver are nowhere near their peaks yet.  $2000 gold and plus $50 silver have to remain as definite possibilities even this year and there is likely much higher to come ahead as the global economy seems nowhere yet near coming out of its severe downturn.  While continuing lack of global growth may not bode well for the short to medium term price patterns for industrial commodities it could well see gold and silver rise to ever increasing heights.
Source: http://www.mineweb.com/mineweb/view/mineweb/en/page32?oid=135114&sn=Detail&pid=102055

Avoid Losing Everything in the Coming Collapse

Doug Casey's four step plan to preparing for the Greater Depression...
EVEN IF you already consider yourself wealthy, it is worthwhile giving some thought to make and keep money, writes Doug Casey, founder of Casey Research.
What would you do if some act of God or of government, a catastrophic lawsuit or a really serious misjudgment took you back to Square One? 
One thing about a real depression is that everybody loses. As Richard Russell has quipped, the winners are those who lose the least. And as far as I'm concerned, the Greater Depression is looming, not just another cyclical downturn. You may find that, although you're far ahead of your neighbors (you own precious metals, you've diversified internationally and you don't believe much of what you hear from official sources), you're still not as prepared as you'd like.
I think a good plan would be to approach the problem in four steps: Liquidate, Consolidate, Create and Speculate.
Step 1: Liquidate
Chances are high that you have too much "stuff." Your garage, basement and attic are so full of possessions that you may be renting a storage unit for the overflow. That stuff is costing you money in storage cost, in depreciation and in the weight of psychological baggage. It's limiting your options; it's weighing you down. Get rid of it.
Right now it has a market value. Perhaps to a friend you can call. Or to a neighbor who might buy it if you have a yard sale. Or to some of the millions of people on eBay. A year from now, when we're out of the eye of the financial hurricane and back into the storm, it will likely have much less value. 
But right now there's a market. Even if most people are no longer wearing those "He who dies with the most toys, wins" T-shirts that were popular at the height of the boom, there are still buyers. But the general standard of living is dropping, and mass psychology is changing. In a year or two, you may find there aren't any bids and the psychology of the country has changed radically. People will be desperate for cash, and they'll all be cleaning out their storage units (partly because they can't afford the rent on them).
Liquidate whatever you don't actually need – clothes, furniture, tools, cars, bikes, collections, electronics, properties, you-name-it. You'll be able to re-buy something like it, or better, cheaper. Just as important, you'll feel light and mobile. Unburdened by a bunch of possessions that own you and weigh you down. It will definitely improve your psychology, which is critical to the next stage. And the cash it generates will be helpful for the rest of the plan.
Step 2: Consolidate
Take stock of your assets. After Step 1, that should be a lot easier, because you'll have less junk but a lot more cash. You'll already feel more in control and empowered. And definitely richer. But your main assets aren't money or things. It's the knowledge, skills and connections you possess. Take stock of them. What do you know? What can you do? Whom do you know? Make lists and think about these things, with an eye to maximizing their value.
If you're light on knowledge, skills and connections, then do something about it – although if you're reading this, you probably already live life in a way that builds all of those assets daily. But there's always room for improvement. Think the Count of Monte Cristo. Or, if you're not so classically oriented, think Sarah Connor after she met the Terminator.
Part of this process is to look at what you're now doing. The chances are excellent there's a better and more profitable allocation of your time. Even successful rock stars tend to reinvent themselves every few years. You don't want to get stale. That leads to Step 3.
Step 3: Create
Remember, the essence of becoming wealthy is to produce more than you consume and save the difference. But it's hard to maximize value working for somebody else. And when you're given a job, it can be taken away for any number of reasons. There is cause and there is effect. You don't want to be the effect of somebody else's cause. You want to be the cause for everything in your life. That implies working for yourself. At least turn your present employer into a partner or an associate.
Perhaps go through the Yellow Pages (while they still exist), page by page, line by line, and see what you can provide as a service for the businesses advertising there. I promise you, they're all looking for someone to come along, kiss their world and make it better. Think like an entrepreneur at all times. Remember that there is an infinite desire for goods and services on the part of the 6 billion other people on the planet. Find out how you can give them what they want, and the money will roll in.
I've said many times that I believe you could airdrop me naked and penniless into the heart of the Congo, and by the time I emerged, I'd not just have survived, I'd come out wealthy. And, believe me, I don't think wealth is by any means the most important thing in life; it's important but should be considered a convenience, not an imperative. Not that I'd want to be airdropped into the Congo at the moment; I've gotten a bit lazy, I have other interests, and you can't be everywhere and do everything.
But now that I think about it, if I wanted to make a real fortune today from a small base, I might prefer Africa to any other continent. As an educated Westerner, you can quickly meet anyone, on an equal level, much more easily than you could at home. If you have a reason that makes any sense at all, you can be in the office of the president within a week. These countries are all plagued with incompetence and corruption, they need everything, and they're full of untapped resources and talent. This all inures to the great advantage of a foreign entrepreneur.
Here's an idea. For your next vacation, book a trip to Cameroon, Togo, Gabon, Zimbabwe or Angola. Go through the Yellow Pages in the capital and meet everybody who is anybody. The chances are good you'll come up with several deals in the first week alone. If you can't find the time, send your kid who's just out of school and idiotically thinks he may want to misallocate time and money getting an MBA. This idea alone should be worth a million Dollars. Or, as I would prefer to think of it, 700 ounces of gold.
But to an economist, money, like all goods, has "declining marginal utility." In other words, the more of something you have, the less you need or want the next unit. Of course more is always better, but it's unseemly, even degrading, to pursue anything beyond a certain point.
When I was in Toronto a couple months ago, I spoke with a Chinese friend who, I believe, is worth at least $250 million. As he waxed philosophic, he allowed that he didn't feel he really needed more than 30 extra-large to live exactly as he liked. I agreed, in that meals in the best restaurants, the finest clothes, cars and houses only cost so much. And it's well within a conservative return on that capital, without ever even touching the principal. Is it worth it to get more? Perhaps not, unless your interests in the rest of life are entirely too narrow. The point of money is to allow you freedom, not make you crazy with getting more.
That doesn't rule out speculation as an avocation, however. More – everything else being equal – is still better.
Step 4: Speculate
You've got money. Now you have to keep it and make it grow, because staying in the same place amounts to going backwards. That's partially because the world at large will continue getting wealthier, even as the Dollars you own lose value.
In the past, I've discussed why a lot of old rules for success are actually going to prove counterproductive over the next few years. Saving with Dollars will be foolish as they dry up and blow away. Investing according to classic rules will be very tricky in a radically changing economy. Most people will try to outrun inflation by trading or gambling. The markets, which are the natural friend of productive people, will perversely prove very destructive to them in the years to come.
You'll know when the final bottom in the stock market has come: The average guy won't want to hear about the stock market, if he even remembers it exists. And if he does, he'll want it abolished.
Instead of becoming a victim of inflation and other politically caused distortions in the marketplace, you can profit from these things. Rational speculation is the optimum approach.
What to Do If You're Already Wealthy?
Perhaps, however, you've already covered all the financial bases to your satisfaction. Quo vadis? I have several thoughts on the meaning of wealth. You may find some of them of value as prices of everything fluctuate radically in the years ahead.
First, recognize that wealth is a high moral good. Don't feel guilty about having it or about wanting more.
If you've already accumulated and deployed enough capital to allow you to jump off the golden treadmill, congratulations: chances are high that you are an exceptional human being. I say that because the moral value of being wealthy is underrated. I don't mean that in a Calvinistic way, in that Calvin believed Yahweh rewarded the righteous by making them rich. But I do believe that productive people – people who work hard to provide goods and services for others – definitely tend to be wealthier than unproductive people. They deserve to be. And since we don't live in a malevolent universe, people generally get what they deserve. So, yes, wealth is definitely one indicator of moral excellence.
Sure, some wealthy people got that way by lying, cheating and stealing. But they're exceptions. It's much easier to become wealthy if (in addition to having virtues like diligence, competence and judgment) you are known to be truthful and honest. Those who automatically think ill of the rich are, at best, paranoid fools. Put it this way: Rich people may lack some virtues, but they definitely have at least a few that made them rich. Poor people, on the other hand, will certainly lack some virtues, and they'll definitely have some vices that kept them poor.
I'm a fan of some aspects of Gurdjieff, the late 19th to mid 20th century Russian mystic, who was also a merchant adventurer at some points in his colorful life. He said that anyone who successfully employed at least 20 other people must be considered at least partially enlightened and a type of guru. That viewpoint always resonated with me. Self-made wealthy people may not be saints or mystics or intellectuals or even especially thoughtful or moral. But they've proven they're better than the average bear in at least one important way: they can create and conserve wealth. And they've thereby eased everyone's path to further accomplishments. 
Second, figure out your purpose in having money.
Sure, money makes life easier. And it's nice how it enables you to assist people you like with material things. But I strongly suggest that you not take too short a view on this matter. Accelerating advances in medical science are not only lengthening human life expectancy, but new developments now in the works have the potential to vastly improve your capability and health as well.
Is it possible to live to age 200, with all the wealth, knowledge and wisdom that implies, while maintaining the body of a 30-year-old? Not yet. But the prospect is on the horizon. It will, however, be available only to those who can afford it. Ray Kurzweil makes a case that the Singularity is near, and I buy his reasoning. It would be tragic indeed if anyone frittered away his wealth, thinking he wouldn't live very long, and then succumbed to a self-fulfilling prophecy, not because of medical difficulties, but because of financial difficulties.
Third, don't give your money to charity.
Entirely apart from showing a lack of both imagination and foresight, it's a complete waste of good money, pure and simple. Contrary to popular opinion, it rarely does any good; it often does great harm. The whole concept of charitable giving is corrupt and desperately in need of a complete rethinking.
Fourth, if you do care about posterity (who knows, you might be reincarnated…), and on the chance you don't make it to the Singularity, carefully consider how to dispose of your estate.
For one thing, there's no reason to automatically leave anything to your children – unless they deserve it. The notion that someone should inherit just because he shares your genes is flawed and thoughtless. The example of Marcus Aurelius leaving the Roman Empire to his worthless son, Commodus, should be instructive. Wealth should be left to someone who is most capable of increasing it – at least if you want to benefit humanity in general. And, yes, I'm quite aware that humanity in general may deserve absolutely nothing.
At a minimum, consider that memes are far more important than genes. It's wiser, therefore, to leave your wealth only to individuals (related to you or not) who will carry forth values you hold dear and are worthy of the wealth. If nothing else, make sure you disinherit the government.
Also consider that dividing wealth dissipates it and generally makes it less useful. If you have a million Dollars, you could leave a thousand Dollars to each of a thousand people. But apart from the fact that it's unlikely anyone knows a thousand worthy people, that much money is only enough for a modest vacation or a few baubles. The larger the pool of capital, the more ways it can be used, the more creative power it has, and the more likely it will be conserved and used creatively. I favor the Roman system, in which one could adopt children of any age – but always after you could see what their character was. You might want to do that if your own kids don't make the grade.
The Bottom Line
If you want serious money, you have to get serious about money. You need to understand these fundamentals and never forget them. Don't let all the garbage reported in the financial media you read, see or hear confuse you about what money really is. Don't consume more than you make: save! Don't spend: invest!
Source: http://goldnews.bullionvault.com/survive_the_collapse_090620111

Friday, August 19, 2011

4 Reasons Why Silver Should be in Your Portfolio

It's the best electrical conductor of any metal, and may soon replace the lithium-ion in batteries used in future Apple (NYSE: AAPL) iPhones and laptops.

It's highly reflective, making it a perfect choice for the increasingly popular photovoltaic solar panels.

It's strong enough to withstand thousands of pounds of pressure and continuous abuse, making it the metal of choice for ball bearings on jet engines.

Its antibacterial properties prevent infection and speed healing. It's even used to purify one of the few limited resources that we would literally die without -- water.

This metal is already a strong investment.

Oh yeah -- and it's one of only two metals the U.S. considers legal tender.

As you've probably realized by now, the super metal we've been talking about is actually silver, and there's no reason it shouldn't be part of your investment portfolio.

The case for silver-lining your portfolio
1. Because silver is used in more products and services around the world than gold, its value will be prolonged and preserved for decades -- even during crises or financial collapse.

2. Silver is a great complementary asset to gold. For example, if gold prices rise to new record highs (as it has been), the expensive yellow metal will become less attractive to industrial users, jewelry buyers and central banks. In this event, many suppliers of these products will substitute gold with the much less expensive but still shiny and durable metal, silver.

This "substitution effect" would cause prices of gold to fall. In this instance, your total returns would suffer if your portfolio happened to be only invested in gold. However, if your portfolio happened to also be invested in silver (which would rise in price due to the substitution effect), the negative returns of the gold could be offset.

3. Affordability. The metal is much less expensive per ounce than gold, so an investor can purchase more "units" to increase their exposure to precious metals without breaking the bank.

4. There are lots of different ways to invest in this metal, making it super convenient.

Investing in silver ETFs and mutual funds
Want to invest in silver, but don't want to hassle of actually storing it? Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and mutual funds make owning silver as easy as buying shares of Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT).

The iShares Silver Trust Fund (NYSE: SLV) and the ETFS Physical Silver Shares (NYSE: SIVR) both track and reflect the price of actual silver (minus management fees).

If you want to further diversify your silver strategy, you can even invest in the silver mining companies themselves through the GlobalX Silver Miners ETF (NYSE: SIL).

Advantages: Lower premium (fund expenses only) on your investment and easy to add to an IRA or other brokered investment account. You don't have to store physical silver bricks or coins.

Disadvantages: ETFs and funds cannot be redeemed for actual silver, only cash, which generally holds little value in a market collapse or hyperinflationary environment.

Investing in silver bars, rounds and coins
Though ETFs and funds are easy to add to a portfolio, they are not the best option if you're looking to protect your wealth from the possible threats of a falling dollar, hyperinflation, failing government, or a market collapse.

When you purchase physical forms of silver bullion (in the form of bars, rounds and coins), you not only profit from silver's rising prices, but protect yourself from these threats.

The majority of .999 fine silver bars come in 100-oz size, with the most popular brand names being Engelhard and Johnson Matthey. Other fine silver bars that come in a heavy, 68 pound, 1,000-oz size are usually delivered commercially and are labeled by COMEX or LBMA (entities that hold large amounts of gold and silver). Their cost to produce is lower than most coins and rounds but they can be difficult to store.

Silver rounds look like coins at first glance, but they are produced by non-federal mints and can be customized with various designs or faces. Silver rounds carry a lower premium price for production than silver coins for the amount of silver content they possess, but they are not considered legal tender as most silver coins are.

Silver coins have been federally minted by many countries, but the American Silver Eagle is the only official silver coin minted in the United States. Other forms of silver coin are the 99.99% pure Canadian Silver Maple Leaf and "junk-silver" coins. "Junk-silver" coins are those widely-collected U.S. coins minted before 1964 that contain 90% silver content.

Official silver coins (especially collectable editions) generally charge a slightly higher premium than other physical forms of silver. However, American Silver Eagles and Silver Maple Leafs are the only silver coins with legal tender status, and carry an official guarantee of weight and purity by their federal mints (You can verify a dealer's ASE coins here for authenticity). An investor looking to buy one ounce of silver at a time may also find coins easier on the monthly budget than buying a single silver bar that may cost several hundred dollars.

Buying physical silver is just as easy as shopping online. Kitco and the First Federal Coin Corp. are two great places to start.

Advantages: Physical silver may be put in a tax-deferred "Precious Metals IRA" or Self-Directed IRA so long as it's at least .999 fine silver (like the official American Silver Eagle coin). Physical silver will also become more valuable as a potential medium of exchange as governments print more paper money and devalue their currencies.

Disadvantages: Physical silver in bar form can be difficult to store due to its heavy weight and volume. Silver rounds may not be used as legal tender and it can be difficult to verify their purity. If you're looking to invest in physical silver, your best bet are federally minted silver coins.

Action to Take --> Choose silver tracking ETFs and mutual funds with low expense ratios to easily add diversification to your investment portfolio. But if you're an investor looking to preserve wealth and gain from silver's future growth, choose bars, rounds or official coins.

Source: http://www.streetauthority.com/exchange-traded-funds-etfs/4-reasons-why-silver-should-be-your-portfolio-458439

Gold seen peaking at $1,900/oz in next 6 months - GFMS

(Reuters) - Gold could hit $1,900 an ounce in the next six months, driven by buyers seeking an investment safe from global economic problems, but a further rise to $2,000 looks unlikely, metals consultancy GFMS said on Thursday.

"Gold will be muddling through to peak at $1,900 (an ounce) as U.S. data points have been ambiguous, the action on the fiscal and monetary front is also ambiguous," said Paul Walker, global head of precious metals at GFMS, which has been acquired by Thomson Reuters.

Gold extended record highs above $1,825 an ounce on Thursday after poorly received U.S. jobs data hurt assets seen as higher risk, such as stocks, while boosting interest in nominal safe havens such as gold.

So far in August, the price has risen by more than 12 percent, putting it on track for its biggest monthly gain since November 2009.

"In the time frame, we really need exceptionally dramatic news to push gold above $2,000 and this is not our base case," said Walker. "This is highly unlikely."

Although gold remains off its inflation-adjusted peak above $2,000 struck in 1980, it is one of the top performing assets this year, up by over 28 percent versus a 15-percent loss in U.S. blue-chip stocks or a 7.7-percent decline in the price of copper .

He said there was a high probability of India's gold imports crossing 1,000 tonnes this year -- up four percent on 2010 -- as expectations were for prices to gain further.

The World Gold Council in a report on Thursday said Indian gold jewellery buying was up 17 percent in the second quarter and that signs of strength in the market remained.

Gold imports by MMTC, India's second biggest importer of the metal, have tumbled to 5 tonnes so far in August as buyers preferred a 'wait-and-watch' approach. Walker said consumers would wait for price stability before jumping in.

"People are getting accustomed to this kind of a benchmark (price) even though it is at incredibly elevated levels. Everybody who is involved in the value chain in the Indian gold market thinks prices will go up," said Walker, ahead of a conference in Kerala.

Silver prices could extend gains to $50 an ounce in the next months from around $40.60 an ounce now, he added.

"It will follow gold up ... It will move towards $50, but it is going to be a hell of a lot more volatile," said Walker.

Silver prices have more than trebled since 2008 to peak at $49.51 an ounce this year.

"Silver will benefit from the same factors as that of gold from rising investment drivers. Until the global macro situation gets clearer, prices will go higher," he said.

(Editing by Anthony Barker)

Source: http://in.reuters.com/article/2011/08/18/idINIndia-58854820110818

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

40 years on from gold standard, bugs crow - Reuter

(Reuters) - Gold, and only gold, will be our salvation when the value of companies, banks, countries and even money itself melts away. Gold, not shifting currencies, is the foundation of wealth and security. Gold is back, for good.

This is the song of the "gold bugs" - the fervent fans of the precious metal who have clung to its investment value for three generations and now glow in the reflected luster of a record price approaching $2,000 for just one ounce.

Monday will mark the 40th anniversary of the United States' abandonment of the gold standard. But gold bugs kept the faith -- even when prices stayed under $500 for nearly 25 years after their 1981 peak.

Their passion derided, dismissed as hopelessly out dated doomsayers, their love for the metal seemed irrational.

The gold bug label itself goes back to master of the supernatural Edgar Allen Poe and his story of that name, a tale of golden beetle whose bite sends the hero to a chest of gold and jewels.

It reappeared as one of the first campaign buttons -- a brass bug sported by supporters of William McKinley in the bitter U.S. presidential election of 1896.

McKinley, the first presidential candidate to barnstorm across the nation, backed the gold standard against his Democratic opponent's proposal that it should be joined by silver in a fixed ratio. Loser William Bryan slipped into history but bimetallism lived on for a little in the think tanks of the day.

Fast forward and the financial crisis of 2008 has made gold the darling of investors from hedge funds to taxi drivers, and sparked a near-doubling of prices.

"Gold has been rising against all national currencies, and that's significant," James Turk, founder of bullion dealer Goldmoney, said.

"When there are problems with a national currency... people begin to worry about the value of their money, whether they're going to lose purchasing power because of inflation or other problems. As a consequence, they look for safe havens."

He was speaking as a true gold bug -- not in the dark days after Lehman Brothers' demise in 2008, nor in the depths of last year's euro zone debt crisis, nor after Standard & Poor's recent downgrade of the United States' top-notch credit rating.

Turk's view came in a BusinessWeek interview he gave in 2005, well in advance of the current financial crisis.

"My long-standing forecast, made in a Barron's interview in October 2003, is that $8,000 per ounce will be reached sometime between 2013-2015," he told Reuters this week.

"I've stayed with that forecast over the years and see no reason to change it."

The world's current financial woes are only going to get worse if current policies continue, he believes, meaning the rally in gold prices is unlikely to stop here.

"Politicians and central bankers are making decisions that debase national currencies, and the resulting bad monetary policies they are following are causing the gold price to rise," he said.

Gold's latest push to record highs has gone hand-in-hand with a plunge in Wall Street stocks to their lowest in nearly a year, while the dollar is languishing near multi-year lows.

Long-term gold bull David Beahm, vice president of marketing and economic research at New Orleans bullion dealer Blanchard and Co., says worries over the stability of the stock markets will be a key driver of higher gold prices.

"The best investment right now is gold," he said. "By diversifying one's portfolio with a negatively-correlated gold, investors can protect themselves from deep plunges in the equity market."

"There is no news in the market today or over the coming few months that is likely to stop the current gold bull market, as the fundamentals are firmly in place for gold to continue its rise," he says.

Traditional investment commentators have dismissed gold -- which, with no "intrinsic" value of its own, is only really as valuable as a buyer thinks it is -- as a classic bubble.

But those who have predicted its crash since it rose above $700 an ounce in 2006, on a simple "what goes up, must come down" analysis, have consistently been proved short-sighted.

Gold prices traded in a relatively narrow range from $250-420 an ounce for the whole of the 1990s. They have since more than quadrupled from that high, peaking at a record just below $1,800 an ounce earlier this week.

Their rise accelerated sharply from 2005 onwards, breaking through $1,000 an ounce in 2008 as the weaker dollar fueled demand for alternative stores of value.

Now gold bulls are predicting that prices, now around $1,750 an ounce, but still short of an inflation-adjusted high of nearly $2,500 in 1980, could climb even higher.

"I believe the price of gold will rise irregularly over the next several years, possibly reaching $1,850 an ounce by the end of this year, breaking above $2,000 in 2012, and possibly $3,000, $4,000, and even $5,000 in years to come," says Jeffrey Nichols, managing director of American Precious Metals Advisors and senior economic advisor to Rosland Capital.

"At the heart of this forecast is my observation (or belief) that the United States and, to a lesser but still significant extent, Europe have been living beyond our means for decades."

Back in 1896, losing presidential candidate Bryan's Cross of Gold speech turned the watching crowd into "a wild, raging irresistible mob," the New York Times reported.

Gold bugs, often accused of sensationalism, are finding their passion is becoming mainstream. "Raging" is probably no longer a suitable description of them. "Irresistible" is increasingly nearer the mark.

(Reporting by Jan Harvey, editing by William Hardy and Richard Mably)

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/08/11/us-gold-bugs-idUSTRE77A3CT20110811