Thai Guru's Gold und Silber ... (Informationen und Vermutungen)

  • Silber wird sich einem steigenden Goldpreis auf jeden Fall anschließen und meiner Meinung nach sogar outperformen....da ist der Markt noch viel enger wie bei Gold....wenn da mal die Post abgeht dann aber mal richtg und vor allem schnell.....gilt natürlich für beide Richtungen.
    Mir ist um Silber nicht bange.....die Zeit des Silbers kommt noch 8)

  • Sehe ich aehnlich - allerdings dominiert Gold nach wie vor als Krisenwaehrung, diesen Status hat Silber nicht und wird es auch vermutlich nicht so schnell einnehmen. Grosses Kapital fliesst also vornehmlich in Gold, wenn Inflation droht - das Umdenken duerfte nicht ueber Nacht kommen.


    Ich bin vor wenigen Tagen 50.000 Unzen long gegangen mit Stop bei 6.85 - gestern musste ich zittern, nicht ausgestoppt zu werden, low m.E. bei 6.91. Aber wenn's wirklich dieses Jahr noch auf 7.50 geht, freu ich mich natuerlich auch entsprechend. Chancen ueberwiegen m.E. die Risiken im aktuellen Umfeld.


    Druecken wir die Daumen!

  • Ein alter Beitrag von Gerbino , aber immer noch aktuell. :))


    BASE METAL STOCKS: A BULL MARKET BEYOND EXPECTATIONS


    By Kenneth J. Gerbino
    March 29, 2005


    I believe the base metal stocks are going to extend their bull market for a long time and well beyond the consensus "group think". There will be corrections along the way but I believe these stocks are going to surprise everyone over the next few years. My reasoning follows below.


    I believe precious metal mining stocks should be in everyone's portfolio but I also think it is a good idea to have some exposure to base and other metals (copper, zinc, nickel, lead, chromium, aluminum).


    In order to understand a major change that could take place in an investment sector one can gain insights from a major change that took place in another sector.


    I remember twenty years ago when Intel was producing computer chips, which at the time had become like a commodity item. From 1985-1995, Intel sold for only 7-12 times earnings because of the then "commodity" aspect of chips and the fact the computer industry was at that time a cyclical industry. By 2000, Intel was selling for 60 times earnings because of the Internet, laptop and cell phone usage explosion (mega-trends creating a new electronic marketplace with a more sustained demand for chips). Even today, after the tech stock wipeout, Intel is still selling for 20 times earnings.


    A similar usage explosion has now started in base metals. The corresponding new mega-trend is Asian and Indian base metal demand. Base metal stocks are now selling at only 5-8 times cash flow. Old time base metal investors are locked into the past thinking of the cyclical nature of the industry. Three billion Asian and Indian people say "no way". Any structural or sustained demand for these metals could increase cash flow multiples to 12-16 times or more. This has significant implications. It means that even if the prices of these base metals go down by 25-35%, because of the multiple expansions, the base metal stocks will still be buys.


    Even with just 2-3% growth in Asia and India (current growth rates are 8-9%) a steady demand for resources will create a more sustained and structural market for these metals. A steady demand would change the "cyclical" aspect of base metal demand and this would be reflected in higher cash flow multiples and higher stock prices. Tight supplies also will help stock values.


    The latest data from China shows that 82% of their capital spending is on housing and infrastructure (roads, power plants, railroads, sewers etc.). Even with only 2-3% growth, China's capital spending should be a long-term positive non-cyclical factor to metal demand, as these infrastructure projects will last for decades as huge rural populations enter their new economic world. In the more established economies, capital spending is more cyclical because people are buying cars and TV sets and washing machines based on the economy, which can go up and down. But newly industrializing countries do not stop building roads and power plants when their economies slow down. Infrastructure projects are usually not cyclical since they have State backing and many times are not curtailed despite poor economic conditions. In the current age of debt financing and printing money by world governments, it would be hard to imagine politicians considering canceling a power dam or major highway because of a slowdown in the economy. It will not happen in China or in India. The projects in the U.S during the great depression and many projects in Asia during the Asian meltdown are good examples of large state projects that continued despite all. Therefore one can expect a robust demand for base metals for a very long time even with substantial slowdowns in India and Asia.


    China will attempt to talk down their economic growth and try and get the hedge funds and speculators out of the metal markets so they can buy cheaper on world markets. But with 82% of their capital spending on housing and huge infrastructure projects any economic slowdown will still require a sustained demand for these metals.


    Because of this change from a cyclical nature of base metal demand to a more structural and smoothed out demand, the valuations and cash flow multiples for the base metal producers I believe could have a possible dramatic shift upwards. Also it is just a matter of time before they start paying out solid dividends.


    Asian analysts are missing the boat on the compounding of metal demand. Demand growth of plus 10% for a given year, followed by a major slowdown to only 3% in the next year is still bullish. When you do the math you start with, lets say, normal demand of 100,000 tonnes of some metal, that then goes to 110,000 tonnes (10% higher) and prices respond upwards. Now in the next year, if you go down to only a 3% growth rate that means you are now increasing demand from the 110,000 tonnes by another 3%. That means demand in year two is 113,300 tonnes. That's still more demand than what caused the price to go up in the first place. Get the picture? If 110,000 tonnes created a price rise, then a 113,300 tonne demand the following year will certainly do it again unless supply turns up from somewhere and in the mining business this means 5-10 year lead times. Even a slowdown in Asia and India is bullish for the metals.


    Cash flow multiples should also increase for these mining stocks due to two other long term inflation inducing economic mega-trends we have discussed many times (global money printing and increasing debt levels).


    At the recent The Bank of Montreal Nesbitt Burns annual institutional mining conference every CEO from the base metal companies that presented had the same story; demand was very strong and not letting up and that warehouse supplies globally of many basic metals are very low. They see significant supply squeezes for the next 2-3 years. BHP, the largest natural resource company in the world right now makes more profits from base metals than any other business sector including petroleum, coal, steel materials, or diamonds. BHP is currently bidding $7 billion for base metal producer WMC. Xstrata ($6.5 billion mining giant) was also bidding about $6 billion. These big conservative mining companies know their industry and I believe they see sufficient evidence that a new base metal decade is coming to this world.


    Some junior companies with quality base metal, or massive sulfide deposits and other important metals may also be good buy out candidates for other resource companies as these juniors develop their projects.


    A new "materials" centric world is unfolding for billions of people who desire a better lifestyle and are demanding it Technology, education, globalization, and communication, are driving this desire. This is a huge unstoppable mega-trend. The resource sector will be a solid investment theme because of this and the base metal sector will most likely be a leading beneficiary. ;)


    Ken Gerbino
    Kenneth J. Gerbino & Company
    Investment Management

    Einmal editiert, zuletzt von Aladin ()

    • Offizieller Beitrag
    Zitat

    Original von Aladin
    Zitat Ghost: .....Gestern musste ich zittern....


    Und das einem Profi! ;)
    Aber die Chancen stehen "schlecht",diesen Punkt wieder zu erreichen. :))
    Gemeint ist 6,85 $/Oz.
    Aber richtig: Kein Erfolg ohne Risiko.


    Good Luck !

    • Offizieller Beitrag
    Zitat

    Original von Aladin
    Ein alter Beitrag von Gerbino , aber immer noch aktuell. :))


    BASE METAL STOCKS: A BULL MARKET BEYOND EXPECTATIONS
    By Kenneth J. Gerbino
    March 29, 2005


    Das ist richtig.Er spricht aber besonders die Basismetalle an,weniger die PM`s.
    Aber da sitzen wir aber auch schon, fully invested,more or less. :] :D


    Grüsse

    • Offizieller Beitrag
    Zitat

    Original von ghost_god
    Edel Man,


    ich wuerde mich nicht als Profi im Trading bezeichnen. Ganz im Gegenteil, bin Broker...


    Nanana, welche Bescheidenheit! ;)
    Hab auch nur Profi ohne Zusatz gesagt. :]

  • Gegen Stops habe ich einfach eine ueber die Jahre gewachsene Aversion, trotzdem halte ich mich ueberlicherweise dran.. des guten alten money managements wegen :)


    Gerade in den letzten Wochen wurde ich mehrfach in groesseren Positionen ausgestopt, just in dem Moment, als der Markt drehte und mir dicke Gewinne beschert haette... daher traf ich in der gestrigen Marktbewegung im Silber quasi auf einen alten Angstgegner, da ich fundamental von deutlich festeren Silberpreisen ueberzeugt bin.


    mfG

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Zu alledem stimmt diese Richtung!
    So hat sich das auch Mahendra "Crystal" auch vorgestellt, aber anders herum. :D

  • Da habt ihr Recht. Die größte Chance des Silbers ist seine Marktenge. In Zusammenhang mit einem steigenden Goldpreis kann sich hier urplötzlich etwas entladen. Auch in kurzer Zeit. Ähnlich wie von Herbst 2004 bis Januar 2005. In diesen 3 Monaten ist Silber um ca. (ganz grob) 50% gestiegen.


    Das wären p.a. Kurse im zweistelligen Bereich zum Jahresende. Die Hoffnung stirbt zuletzt.
    Auf lange Sicht von vielleicht 3 bis 10 Jahren ist Silber sicher eine der besten Anlagen überhaupt. Die Börse traurert allerdings immer noch den exorbitanten Kurssteigerungen eines Neuen Marktes hinterher.
    Gut Ding will Weile haben.

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Doug Casey at his best !
    Ein Muß für jeden PM - und Rohstoff - Fan ;)


    Grüsse
    ******************************************************


    The Great Resource Bull Markets, Then and Now
    by Doug Casey


    There is an old saying: to look into the future, you must first look to the past. A more Darwinian interpretation of this maxim is that those who don’t learn from history are doomed to repeat it. In that context, studying the last great resource bull market may provide useful insights into the current unfolding commodities bull market.


    A quick refresher: the period, roughly from late 1971 to early 1980, saw, among other things, gold rise 2,390%, silver 3,487% and crude oil 1153%. Naturally, a number of geopolitical and economic factors contributed to these gains. In an attempt to add some structure to this exercise, I’ll use the 7 Ps, my trademark template for sound investments, to compare the resource sector of the 1970s to that of today.



    People


    In 1970, "mining" wasn’t the dirty word it has become in today’s politically correct world. Back then, getting a degree in geology or mining engineering was a perfectly acceptable career move, and such training could be had at any number of prestigious universities. Today, save-the-environment studies are many students’ first choice, while geology programs have been partly, or, more frequently, entirely shut down. As a consequence, far more geos are retiring than graduating. You can see this at any mining convention: it’s a sea of gray hair, or no hair at all. This may be bad for mining companies, but it can be positive for investors: the dearth of experienced exploration geologists and mining pros limits discoveries of new deposits and keeps supplies tight. It also makes it easier for us to identify promising companies; they’re the ones attracting the best talent. These professionals write their own tickets in the current market, and therefore gravitate to the most prospective ventures. (For news on the most successful of these exceptional individuals, see our new Explorers’ League.



    Politics


    In August 1971, after years of Johnson’s "guns and butter" policy and its consequent inflation, Nixon unleashed the price of gold. Nixon’s move had nothing to do with promoting free markets, about which he couldn’t have cared less—as demonstrated by his simultaneous implementation of idiotic wage and price controls. De-pegging the gold price was really about defrauding the Europeans, who kept trading increasingly worthless American currency for gold at $35. In a classic case of unintended consequences, the dollar lost ground against gold further and faster than Nixon ever dreamed possible.


    The ‘70s also saw escalating costs of the Vietnam War, the OPEC oil embargo in response to U.S. meddling in the Middle East, generally underpriced commodity markets, and large government deficits. All of these have even more serious counterparts today.


    For example, we have a "hedonically adjusted" (which is to say, arbitrarily adjusted or politically corrected) U.S. inflation rate that has officially remained relatively low, but which many observers, myself included, suspect is actually much higher. And of course, we have the Forever War on terror, a wholehearted entanglement in the Middle East and threats to the crude oil supply from Iraq (and, in time, probably from Saudi Arabia and Venezuela as well)—all unintended consequences of the most bellicose U.S. foreign policy since Teddy Roosevelt, and maybe in history.


    Given that the same kinds of moronic domestic and foreign policies at large in the 1970s are at work today, we have good reason to think prices will take off like they did three decades ago, starting from a similar low base.



    Property


    That low base in “property” is important. Many people think commodity prices are higher now, but in inflation-adjusted dollars many key commodities are actually cheaper than they were before the last great commodities bull market peaked. For example, the current “record high” crude oil price of $68 is only $31.63 in 1981 dollars, when oil peaked at C$38.34. Gold, at $440, is only $185.55 in 1980 dollars, when gold peaked at $850. In fact, at $440 in 2005 dollars, gold is actually lower than it has been in 30 years :]… save for the 2000-2003 period when it bottomed. At $1.73, copper today is at about half of the 1980 peak of $1.44. This doesn’t mean prices can’t temporarily go lower—for the short-term, given my overall pessimism about the U.S. economy, I’m particularly concerned about base metals—but it does paint a bullish picture for commodities for years to come.


    Supporting this view is the fact that there have been no giant oil discoveries for 20 years, and discoveries of large mineral deposits are becoming similarly scarce, particularly for precious metals. This begs the question: are we seeing a Peak Oil-type phenomenon developing in minerals?


    An 80-page report released by JP Morgan on January 24, 2005 projects falling gold production in South Africa and North America this year and states: "We believe that the larger driver for gold prices is the coming decline in gold production." This growing supply crunch, coupled with increased demand from both institutional and individual investors, could be the catalyst that takes gold over $500 this year. Of course, the companies we are following in the International Speculator . that actually have resources in the ground—or are good at finding them—will rise by multiples of any gains made by these commodities themselves.


    On the other hand, the collapse of the Soviet Empire and the opening of the Third World have made vast areas of the world available to new exploration. We also have new exploration and production technologies that simply didn’t exist back in 1970 (to name two: using satellites to spot mineralization and using heap leaching to extract it inexpensively). Then there’s China—communists in name, but capitalists in practice. I don’t doubt that China has great geological potential, and we are currently following one particularly undervalued Canadian junior with a large gold deposit in that country, but I won’t get overly excited about China as a home for my mineral investments until a fairly steady flow of Chinese projects begin making it through the minefield of local regulation.


    At the right commodity prices, there is literally an infinite amount of mineral wealth out there. But mines are not like a McDonald’s that you can knock together in a few weeks on any given street corner. A typical exploration cycle—the time it takes to find and evaluate a mineral deposit—is about two years. If a property appears economic, then the company has to engage in a lengthy and bureaucratic permitting process (ensuring there are no semi-rare salamanders in the area, for example). They also have to do the extensive and expensive drilling and mine plan analysis required to complete a bankable feasibility study, as well as raise the small mountain of cash necessary to keep the process moving along.


    The bottom line is that it takes a long time to bring a mine into production, which means that for many metals, supply is relatively, if not absolutely, inelastic.



    The Demand Picture


    Of course, for prices to rise in real terms, demand has to outstrip supply. On the supply side, the situation looks extremely bullish for silver, copper, nickel and gold—significant new mine production of these metals is unlikely to be realized in the near term. But will demand continue to rise? As long-time readers know, I believe commodities are ultimately trending toward zero (once nanotechnology and other major new technologies live up to their potential), but we’re a long way from there.


    At this stage of the super-cycle, more people have access to markets than ever before, increasing their standards of living and therefore increasing their demand for resources. Starvation was a common phenomenon in the '70s; now former basket cases such as China and India are emerging as world economic powerhouses. Such developments never go smoothly, of course, and I’m concerned by the possibility of a cooling in the global economy affecting many things—base metals in particular. Long-term, however, the question is not "if" demand for commodities will grow, but, "How fast?"



    Phinancing and Paper


    A way to focus on the "paper" dimension of market conditions then and now is to look at how U.S. paper—Federal Reserve Notes—has fared. While inflationary policies and wasteful government programs dissipate wealth, they also tend to increase returns on commodities. While the U.S. government is busily manipulating the money supply, my guess is that inflation is not as far below the levels seen in the ‘70s—the highest inflation figures of the last half-century and a trigger for the commodities spikes of 1980—as the Bureau of Labors statistics would have us believe.


    Remember: cycles do repeat, but never exactly. The relatively low levels of inflation up to this point in the current cycle could mean we are in for a longer, less volatile run. Or they could mean that inflation is being masked by the U.S., not just through hedonic adjustments and other statistical sleights of hand, but also through the recent devaluation of the dollar. This, in essence, exports U.S. inflation to other countries. That could change—with a vengeance—if the foreigners holding trillions in expat dollars ever come to doubt the value of that paper (or, more accurately, to recognize its true value, which is zero).


    Devaluation of the U.S. dollar followed inflationary policies in the U.S. in the ‘70s. But this time around the dollar’s collapse has brought very little inflation, as measured by the CPI. If U.S. inflation is actually higher than reported and/or kicks in at higher rates due to dollars held overseas flooding home, the leverage to investments in precious metals companies working in the U.S. is likely to be spectacular. That’s because, as the dollar weakens and gold prices go up, companies with U.S. production will see their costs go down (in real terms) while their revenue improves. This is why I’m currently speculating on a several very prospective gold exploration juniors operating in Nevada—one of the world’s most pro-mining jurisdictions.


    It’s also useful to look at U.S. equities during the last resource bull market. Many people believe the Dow, the S&P 500, and equities in general "traded sideways" during the period, but they forget to take inflation into account; the DJIA actually dropped during the ‘70s, in real terms, as steeply as it rose during the ‘80s and ‘90s. Given the amount of money tied up in U.S. equities, even a modest flight of capital out of those markets and into resource stocks today would be like trying to squeeze Niagara Falls through a garden hose. It’s coming.



    Promotion


    The equivalent here would be the market’s mass psychology or zeitgeist. This is not something I can quantify in numbers, but it is clear that we have not yet reached the mania stage we had at the end of the 1970s, when barbers and bartenders were telling their patrons about the gold coins they’d just bought. Or, when people lined up around the block to sell their grandmother’s silver. My sense is that we are beyond the early, contrarian phase when speculators can get in on the best opportunities for next to nothing. More and more people are waking up to the coming boom in commodities, and people like Jim Rogers are writing books about it for mainstream consumption. With good promotion like that, I think it won’t be long before this market heats up to the mania stage and the high caliber gold and silver exploration and development companies we are following in the International Speculator . turn into moonshots.



    Price


    How high could gold and other commodities go in this cycle? Some people think I’m trying to be controversial when I talk about $1,000 gold, but to my mind, that’s a conservative estimate. ;)Reversing the then and now price comparisons shown earlier, gold’s peak at $850 in January of 1980 would correspond to $2,015.66 today. $50 silver then would be $118.57 silver today. $42 uranium then would be $99.60 now. $1.44 copper would be $3.41. And $38 crude would be $90.11. Recent price increases are, at most, only the beginning. Silver, in particular, is still near a long-term historic low.



    Conclusion


    At the beginning of the '70s bull market, we had just come through a long period of underinvestment in resources, post-depression, post-WWII. This was particularly true for gold, due to price controls. Today, the situation is eerily similar. The analogy includes, among other factors, a "guns and butter" mentality within the U.S. government that has the printing presses—weapons of mass devaluation—going flat-out around the clock, and the fact that we are coming out of a long period of under-investment in resources. Again, this is particularly so in gold, which hit near 25-year inflation-adjusted lows in 2001—a trend perhaps exacerbated by the misallocation of investment in the tech bubble.


    When considering the recent correction in precious metals, it’s worth remembering that there was a massive slump in the middle of the '70s, not just for the resource sector, but for all commodities and for the U.S. economy as a whole, including equities. This led to the highly inflationary "economic stimulus" policies of the late 1970s. One could certainly argue that these developments are similar to the low metals prices and bear market suffered by U.S. equities in 2001-2002 and the extremely loose Fed policies that followed.


    Having said that, while it is interesting to compare the cycles then and now, it is important not to try too hard to find a perfect match. This time around, we aren’t coming out of a long period where the price of gold was officially fixed (though, according to GATA.org, the price may still be suppressed by government policy). And today, we have massive creation of wealth in countries such as China and India.


    While only a guess, I suspect we are currently in about the 4th inning of the new resource bull market, a cycle that will surprise most investors with its strength and duration. However, the savvy investor should always remember that the market never runs out of surprises; there is no “sure thing”. As prices rise, the masses will tend to cut back and consume less, potentially just as operators are cranking up production (at least in those markets where they can). The market will go up, but it will also go down. Overall, though, I expect we’ll be looking at higher lows and higher highs for years to come.


    The best way to play this cycle is to buy good companies on the dips, recover your initial investments on bounces that give you a double, and then sit tight and be right ;). In time, when commodities take off to the moon and Business Week starts running front-page stories about the great resource boom, we at Casey Research will be looking to make an orderly exit and move on to what’s next.
    *******************

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Friday, September 09, 2005, 12:31:00 PM EST


    WHY WE HAVE LIKED - AND CONTINUE TO LIKE - OIL AND GOLD :))


    Author: Monty Guild


    Several years ago, we became bullish on energy and precious metals for our clients. Our bullishness was a creature of long term economic and social events, which will continue to affect the world for at least one generation and probably longer.


    The most important event is the entry of about one billion new people into the developed world's economic system. On top of the generational trend, there are shorter-term trends as well. They may be connected to the election cycle in a country or to seasonal or other cycles, which are a function of local events within an individual country (i.e. changes of government, wars, political instability).


    We did not become bullish on energy because of terrorism and Middle-East tension, although it is a secondary reason to see oil and gold go higher.


    There are six billion people on earth and about one billion live in the parts of the world with somewhat developed economies. They live in Europe, Canada, U.S., Japan and small parts of Asia, South America and Africa.


    We became bullish on oil and gold because several years ago we saw that two major population blocks were joining the world economic system. We began to ask how they would make themselves felt. If they were to add 40% of their population to the world economic system - that is, if China and India were successful in lifting only 40% of their people out of subsistence economics into the world economic system - the size of the system would double in a generation.


    If in twenty years the number of individuals participating in the industrialized world doubled, it would take a 4%+ compounded growth rate for the entire world economy to accommodate that growth. The world economic system would grow at 10% in some sectors and at 1% in others. China and India have been growing at about 9% and 7% respectively.


    We saw two possible avenues for their expression in the world economy and concluded the growth would cause big changes in the way the world used resources and held its wealth:


    1. The Southeast countries would collect and use raw materials, especially energy and industrial minerals (i.e. iron ore, coal, copper etc.). In order to create an economic base, raw materials, labor, capital and technological know-how were necessary. These countries had labor in excess, they had technological know-how, and the developed world was happy to give them capital. What they needed was raw materials to build the economic system.


    2. Once assets were acquired as a result of creating and selling products and services, they would acquire gold and strong currencies to hold their accumulated assets. They would acquire gold and other precious metals as a store of value to protect their newly acquired wealth. We must remember that India has a history of thousands of years of holding their wealth in the form of gold jewelry and gold bullion.


    INDIA AND CHINA VIEW GOLD AS A DESIREABLE ASSET :]
    Accumulated wealth can be reinvested in the country. It can also be hoarded to protect a family's assets or it can be invested for interest. The demand for gold is both for hoarding and for investment. Gold pays no interest, but if it is rising versus, say, the U.S. dollar at 10%, it is better than collecting 4% interest in U.S. dollar bonds.


    The weakness in the dollar over the last few years, and the policies of the U.S. government, have caused China and India to hold a larger proportion of their hoarding and income earning assets in gold and other currencies, and less in U.S. dollars.


    These people are very intelligent and their long history has taught them to count on the family, rather than the government for good advice on how to hold on to your assets. They prefer something portable that cannot be debased, manipulated and easily confiscated. Gold represents this type of asset. As their assets grow, their demand for gold grows.


    WHY INVESTORS AND SPECULATORS SHIFT BETWEEN GOLD AND CURRENCIES


    In our opinion, in the short run, currency speculators look at real interest rate differentials between competing currencies. In the intermediate period, they look at balance of trade figures. In the long run, GDP growth rates and budget deficit figures are of concern.


    In the case of the U.S. dollar, none of these figures look good. If you monitor these statistics,you know the U.S. dollar and many foreign currencies are not the place to hold assets. Gold is the place. As wealth increases in China and India, we expect a bigger and bigger percentage of assets to be held in gold.


    HOW LONG WILL GOLD AND OIL DEMAND RISE?


    How industrialized are China and India?


    We estimate that about 5 -10% of people in these countries may be approaching middle class living standards. Their objective is 40%. They have a long way to go, and as long as they want to grow, they will consume energy and industrial minerals and they will hold gold and non-U.S. currencies for their savings.


    *********************************************
    Anmerkung:
    Monty Guild ist ein langjähriger Freund von Jim Sinclair.


    Grüsse

    • Offizieller Beitrag

    Diese Kurzmeldung bestätigt M.Guild:
    Erhöhung der Goldreserven : Dollarreserven= 10:1 !!


    Grüsse
    ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
    India`s forex reserves up by USD 1.7 billion


    Source: IRIS (10 September 2005)
    India`s foreign exchange reserves rose by US dollar 1.7 billion during the week ended September 2, 2005. The forex reserves stood at USD 1,45,555 million, according to Reserve Bank of India`s weekly statistical supplement released here today, reports PTI.


    Foreign currency assets also increased by USD 1,560 to USD 1,39,559 million as on September 2, RBI said.


    The rise in inflows is primarily due to revaluation of non-US foreign currencies such as Euro, Sterling and Yen, analysts said.


    While gold reserves increased by USD 140 million to USD 4,535, and Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) remained static at USD four million, it said.


    The country`s reserve tranche position increased by USD 14 million to 1,457 million dollars, it said.

  • Unsere Freunde aus Kulmbach melden sich zu Wort:


    Gold haussiert wieder mit Ziel $500
    Es sieht alles danach aus, daß die Goldkontrakte zum siebten Mal in Folge ihre Tagessitzungen mit einem Gewinn beenden werden. Im Schnitt liegen sie aktuell rund 1 % höher als vor Wochenfrist. John Person vom National Futures Advisory Service prognostiziert, daß der Goldpreis binnen Jahresfrist weitere 10 % zulegen wird, sofern die Wirtschaft weiterhin robustes Momentum zeigen wird. Zum Jahresende sieht Person damit den Preis des Edelmetalls bei rund 500 Dollar pro Unze. Zuletzt notierte der Dezember-Kontrakt bei 453,10 Dollar (+$2,40).
    powered by

  • Baltimore, Maryland


    September 10-11, 2005


    by Dan Denning


    ---------------------


    MARKET REVIEW: A HEDGE AGAINST HARD TIMES


    One would hardly expect to get a history lesson in Las Vegas. But, of course, little gems and nuggets of wisdom were liberally dispersed here at the gold and precious metals conference that took place at the Mirage this week.


    One of the high points of the conference for me was the panel discussion with some of my favorite resource gurus, "Asset-Based Investing; A Hedge Against Hard Times. The panel was moderated by Al Korelin from the Korelin Economics Report, and joining him were Doug Casey, Rick Rule, Bart Kitner from Kitco.com, and Pamela Aden.


    There were a lot of familiar arguments for gold, namely, as Pamela Aden put it, gold is the "ultimate currency."


    "For gold to be the ultimate currency," she went on, "it has to be the strongest currency." Pam looks for a gold to make a new high about $456 by this time next year.


    "But was Katrina bullish for gold?" Al Korelin asked.


    "Yes," Doug answered.


    "The war against Islam is going to go very badly. What makes you think these people can run a war on the other side of the world when they can't even get to New Orleans?"


    Understated as always, Doug pointed out that to the extent that the government response to Katrina (local, state, and Federal) was botched, it would not exactly inspire confidence in the United States.


    "And confidence," Doug continued, "is the only thing standing behind the dollar in a fiat currency world. Watching what happened in New Orleans can only decrease the value of the dollar."


    All of the panelists agreed that what's bad for the dollar is good for gold. But they did not entirely agree on the best way to own gold for those investors who've yet to begin hedging against what Doug calls the "unbacked liability of a bankrupt government."


    "All investors should own some bullion," Bart Kitner said. "But be aware that bullion doesn't give you an leverage. If gold goes up $5, you're up $5. If you own gold shares, then you've got some leverage."


    "Start with bullion," Rick suggested, "And if you're not a speculator, stop with bullion. You want to buy junior resource stocks in a bear market. You don't want to buy them in a bull market, after 80% of the crowd is already in. But if you're going to buy at all, buy the hoarders and prospectors."


    "What I mean by that," Rick elaborated, "is buy the companies run by guys who aren't going to go mine all their gold now and leave themselves with a big hole in the ground."


    "I like what Warren Buffet said," Doug added. "Put all your eggs in one basket...and watch that basket. Of course, that won't do you any good if the bottom falls out of your basket. But in a bull market like the one I think we're going to see, you want to put as much sail to the wind as you can. It's a once in a lifetime opportunity to take a kick at the cat."


    "And don't forget cash," Rick Rule added. "Cash is good for the nerves."


    Regards,


    Dan Denning
    for The Daily Reckoning

Schriftgröße:  A A A A A