Beiträge von ThaiGuru

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    http://www.reuters.de/newsPack…oryID=520441&section=news


    Notenbank:


    Italienisches Defizit 2004 über Drei-Prozent-Grenze


    Montag 31 Mai, 2004 11:39 CET

    Rom (Reuters) - Italien wird nach Ansicht des Chefs seiner Notenbank in diesem und im kommenden Jahr die Defizitgrenze der Europäischen Union (EU) überschreiten.


    Im laufenden Jahr erwarte er eine Neuverschuldung von 3,5 Prozent des Bruttoinlandsprodukts, sagte Notenbankchef Antonio Fazio am Montag. Auch 2005 werde das Land mit 4,0 Prozent deutlich über der von der EU verlangten Drei-Prozent-Grenze liegen. Die drittgrößte Volkswirtschaft der Euro-Zone könne in diesem Jahr nur mit einem Wachstum von einem Prozent, im kommenden Jahr von zwei Prozent rechnen,
    "wenn das internationale Umfeld günstig ist".


    Die Regierung geht bislang von einem Wirtschaftswachstum 2004 von 1,2 Prozent und einer Neuverschuldung von 2,9 Prozent aus. Im Gegensatz zu Deutschland und Frankreich rechne er im April und Mai für Italien mit einem weiteren Rückgang der Industrieproduktion, sagte Fazio

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    http://www.swissinfo.org/sde/s…?siteSect=143&sid=4969896


    31. Mai 2004 13:18

    Grosse Öl-Vorkommen in Chinas Nordwesten gefunden

    PEKING - In Chinas Nordwesten ist ein grosses Öl-Feld entdeckt worden. Dessen Vorkommen sollen alle anderen Funde seit einem Jahrzehnt übersteigen.


    Gemäss ersten Schätzungen der staatlichen Ölfördergesellschaft China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) lagern in dem Öl-Feld Xinfeng in der Provinz Gansu etwa 108 Millionen Tonnen Rohöl.


    Vermutlich seien die Vorräte noch grösser. Geologische Probleme erschweren und verteuern gemäss der Darstellung von CNPC aber die Erschliessung dieser Öl-Vorkommen. Auf Grund sinkender Fördermengen in den grossen Feldern im Osten verlagern die Ölgesellschaften ihre Suche stärker in den Westen des Landes.


    Der wachsende Bedarf Chinas ist einer der Hauptgründe für den massiven Anstieg des Öl-Preises auf dem Weltmarkt. China ist hinter den USA der zweitgrösste Ölimporteur der Welt. Im ersten Quartal 2004 steigen sind die Rohölimporte um mehr als 30 Prozent gegenüber der Vorjahresperiode. 311313 may 04



    SDA-ATS

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    Beware bursting of the money bubble

    Published: May 30 2004 19:30


    The financial markets have been hit by shocks from the Middle East over the past few weeks. But the real risk to world markets is that the speculative bubbles and "carry trades" that have developed as a consequence of American monetary policy over the past year will unravel as the US Federal Reserve moves to increase interest rates.


    During the Nasdaq bubble of 1998-2000, US interest rates ranged between 4 per cent and 6 per cent. Since June 2003, they have stood at 1 per cent. The advent of such low money market yields has unleashed speculative capital flows to asset classes that played no role in the technology bubble of four years ago.


    The first bubble that US monetary policy has spawned is in east Asia. America cannot finance an external deficit equal to 5 per cent of gross domestic product with 1 per cent yields, so east Asian central banks have intervened heavily to support the dollar exchange rate. This has encouraged faster monetary growth and a capital spending boom in China, which has turned the country into the world's largest consumer of many industrial raw materials. The ensuing commodity boom is now threatening to increase inflation everywhere.


    American monetary policy has also had a dramatic impact on many other asset markets. There were significant price gains during 2003 and early 2004 in emerging market debt, high-yield debt, government bonds and property, as well as equities.


    Wall Street has earned large profits over the past year from bond trading. The financial services sector now accounts for 31 per cent of the market capitalisation of the Standard & Poor's 500 benchmark index, up from less than 10 per cent during the late 1980s. The borrowing of primary government bond dealers has tripled to nearly $800bn during the past four years. Issuance of high-yield bonds in the US debt market rose to $175bn last year, a level just below the bubble peak of $200bn. American households refinanced $3,500bn of mortgage debt during 2003, compared with $2,500bn during 2002 and a previous peak of $750bn in 1998. American residential real estate prices also rose at a 16.7 per cent rate in the year to April, compared with gains of 6-8 per cent during 2003 and 2002.


    US monetary policy has produced great distortions on the periphery of the world economy as well. The most notable example is South Africa's currency market. According to data from the Bank for International Settlements, South Africa now has the largest currency market in the developing world. Its trading volume is now equal to 24 per cent of the country's gross domestic product compared with 4 per cent for Thailand and 2 per cent for Brazil. The rand's trading volume has increased ninefold during the past decade. South Africa also has a swap market nearly three times as large as the country's GDP. The size of South Africa's currency market and swap market is a by-product of surplus global liquidity, which has been attracted by South Africa's money market yields of 8 to 9 per cent. The large interest rate differential has produced a rand carry trade - investors borrowing in dollars to invest in the rand or rand-denominated assets - that has driven the rand/dollar exchange rate from nearly R14 to the dollar in late 2001 to R6.25 in March this year. Large flows of speculative "hot" money are behind this, which means the currency will remain volatile in the future.


    Low interest rates in the US and Europe have also encouraged a large carry trade in other currencies. The volume of currency trading in Australia and New Zealand is now 35 per cent of GDP compared with 27 per cent for the US and 18 per cent for Europe. As with South Africa, investors have flocked to the south Pacific in search of higher yield, turning the currencies into global casino chips, rather than a simple means of payment.


    The Fed's mandate is to make monetary policy for the US economy. It has adhered to a highly stimulative policy because, until recently, US employment growth was subdued and the core inflation rate had collapsed. The central bank has not seen much risk of a liquidity bubble in the US because margin debt - money borrowed from brokers to buy shares - has remained below 2 per cent of GDP, compared with 18 per cent on the eve of the 1929 stock market crash. US banks also behaved far more prudently in the bubble economy of the late 1990s than during previous booms. They securitised their potentially bad loans and sold them to pension funds, mutual funds and insurance companies rather than keep them on their own books. As a result, America has had only 21 US bank failures since 2000, compared with nearly 500 during the early 1990s, when banks experienced large losses on property lending.


    Now, the buoyancy of the US economy has encouraged the Fed's rate- setting open market committee to open the door to a possible increase in interest rates, signalling an end to America's experiment with ultra-low money market yields.


    It will be up to other central banks to prepare for the consequences.


    David Hale is a Chicago-based economist

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    http://www.mineweb.net/fast_news/326066.htm


    Silver contracts down


    Posted: '31-MAY-04 08:59' GMT © Mineweb 1997-2004


    The net speculative long position in COMEX silver fell to 23,340 contracts on May 25 from 26,183 on May 18, reports Reuters.


    The non-reportable net long position slipped to 25,781 contracts from 27,141 previously. Open interest eased to 88,330 contracts on May 25 from 89,376 lots on May 18.


    The Commodity Futures Trading Commission issues the latest weekly Commitments of Traders data.

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    http://www.mineweb.net/fast_news/326064.htm


    Gold long positions fall


    By: Gareth Tredway
    Posted: '31-MAY-04 08:00' GMT © Mineweb 1997-2004


    The net-speculative long position in COMEX gold fell to 22,209 contracts as of May 25, compared to 30,066 on May 18, reports Reuters.


    Non-reportable net long positions slipped to 27,030 contracts, from the 30,066 contracts a week earlier. Open interest inched down to 252,665 lots from 253,647 previously.


    The latest weekly Commitments of Traders data is issued by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

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    http://biz.thestar.com.my/news…ness/8088578&sec=business


    Monday May 31, 2004


    Tin mining makes major comeback


    By HANIM ADNAN

    THE tin mining industry, written off as an obsolete industry for almost two decades, is set to make a major comeback, thanks to China's huge demand, new uses for the metal and the new highs the price of the commodity has reached on the Kuala Lumpur Tin Market (KLTM) and the London Metal Exchange (LME).


    The Malaysian Chamber of Mines, which has continued to champion the cause of the local tin mining industry despite the metal market's collapse and the cessation of operation of the London-based International Tin Council's buffer stocks in 1985, is optimistic that these encouraging developments would give renewed hope to the industry.


    The chamber's executive director, Muhamad Nor Muhamad, said the chamber had charted a five-year road map under the grand mineral resources master plan, which forms part of its Vision 2008, to aggressively promote tin as well as other major metals and minerals like iron ore, gold, bauxite, sand-silica, aggregates, limestone, clays, kaolin and coal in Malaysia.


    Zitat

    “Once in place we believe that the mining industry in Malaysia, given the full recognition and support by the Government, will be able to attract foreign investments over the next five years,” he told StarBiz in an interview in Kuala Lumpur.


    Muhamad said that despite its lesser role in terms of production, the tin mining sector could still be considered one of the major contributors to the country's economy alongside the oil and gas, and palm oil, stressing that the industry needed the Government's continuing support to return it to its former glory.


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    Last year, Malaysia's tin production stood at only about 3,358 tonnes, a far cry from its heydays. “This year, we expect the same level of production, unless more new tin mining areas can be opened up,” he added.


    Muhamad said given that tin price was trading above US$9,000 per tonne, the chamber was pushing hard to ensure that both the federal and state Governments would open up more tin mining areas and give leases to interested groups.


    Zitat

    “We believe that states like Perak, Kelantan, Pahang, Johor, Terengganu and Sabah still have large deposits of tin and other minerals just waiting to be explored and mined,” he added.


    Muhamad said even after the tin market collapsed miners, including the chamber’s members, had continued to seek approvals to carry out more prospecting, exploration and mining activities in Malaysia but the state Governments had been reluctant to issue more licences and leases due to profit concerns.


    The Malaysian Chamber of Mines was incorporated on Dec 10, 1914, under the Federated Malay States Chamber of Mines Incorporated Enactment No. 25 of 1914, which is now known as the Malaysian Chamber of Mines Incorporation Act 1914.


    It is the only chamber in the country to have been established via an Act of Parliament.


    Today, it has 127 members from major mining management groups, mining companies, mining and mineral associations, consultants, engineers and individuals.


    According to Muhamad, it is timely for the state governments to be more flexible in their policies and allow potential miners to rework the mines, especially in view of the insatiable demand from China, at least over the next two to three years, and the resurgence of tin uses in various industries.


    Zitat

    “We (miners) have been entrepreneurs for decades. Just leave the decision to us whether a venture is going to be profitable or unprofitable. Just allow us to prospect, explore and mine,” he added.


    In the case of tin, the chamber believes that Malaysia has the capability to produce about 10,000 tonnes a year in the near future. As at end-December last year, there were 54 mines in operation in the country.


    Zitat

    “Of course, Malaysia cannot produce as much as before because most good virgin grounds for mining are gone.


    “However, there is still potential if land can be made available to miners, like those in mountain ranges and in even offshore areas in Malacca, Terengganu, Johor and Perak,” he said.


    Last Friday, tin closed at its all-time high of US$9,840 (RM37,392) per tonne on the KLTM. At such a price level, Malaysian tin miners could possibly reap good profits based on their current estimated average production cost of RM2.50 per kg or RM2,500 per tonne, Muhamad said.

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    http://quote.bloomberg.com/app…sid=aW9N0ECEB2bY&refer=uk


    Crude Oil, Gold Prices Rise After Terror Attack in Saudi Arabia

    May 31 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil and gold prices rose after the third terrorist attack this month against foreign workers in Saudi Arabia left 22 dead over the weekend, raising concern higher fuel costs may slow global economic growth.


    Oil for October delivery rose 520 yen a kiloliter (76 cents a barrel), to 22,890 yen a kiloliter ($33.29 a barrel) on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange, Asia's biggest energy-futures market. Gold, seen as a haven from declines in equity markets, rose as much as 0.5 percent to $395.82 an ounce for immediate delivery, as Asian stocks fell.


    Saudi Arabian security forces yesterday stormed a housing compound in the city of Khobar used by international workers and rescued 25 people held hostage by gunmen. Crude prices have risen 40 percent in the past year on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the world's biggest energy market, partly because of attacks in Iraq and Saudi Arabia in the past two months.


    Zitat

    "It's all about Saudi Arabia and what they will do. If they have problems inside their own borders, it shows a bleak picture,'' said Michael Preiss, chief investment strategist at CFC Securities Ltd. in Hong Kong, a unit of Switzerland-based CFC Group. ``It's a wake-up call for Saudi Arabia to really be decisive and communicate the message that the situation is under control.''


    New York and London, the world's two biggest oil futures markets, are closed Monday for public holidays.


    Gold, Stocks


    Gold for immediate delivery rose as much as $2.17 an ounce to $395.82 an ounce. The precious metal traded at $395.25 at 7 p.m. Tokyo time. The Morgan Stanley Capital International Asia Pacific Index, which tracks more than 900 stocks, is headed for its second monthly slide amid concern rising crude prices will slow economic growth.


    Currencies in Japan, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, Indonesia, South Korea and the Philippines gained against the dollar, underscoring concern about terrorist attacks against U.S. interests.


    Saudi Arabia, which has capacity to produce about 10 million barrels a day, has an OPEC limit of 7.64 million barrels a day and last month pumped 8.35 million barrels a day, according to Bloomberg's estimates.


    ``Fundamentally, what we have is an 80 million barrel a day oil market with 2 million barrels spare capacity in one country,'' said Kurt Barrow, a Singapore-based energy consultant at Purvin & Gertz Inc.


    New York


    Crude oil futures in New York rose on Friday for the first day in four amid concern about possible terror attacks in the Middle East and consuming countries over the weekend.


    A statement purportedly issued by the al-Qaeda terrorist network said it carried out the attack in Saudi Arabia at the weekend, Agence France-Presse said.


    Crude oil futures in New York rose 2.2 percent on Monday, May 3, the first trading session after gunmen killed five employees of Swiss engineering company ABB Ltd. at an oil refinery in the town of Yanbu.


    Zitat

    "It's obvious now that al-Qaeda is now targeting oil installations,'' said Phil Flynn, senior energy trader for Alaron Trading Corp. in Chicago. ``We have to be worried about attacks upstream, downstream, overseas and at home.''


    Terrorism attacks have added to concern about supply as U.S. gasoline supplies lag year-earlier levels before the peak summer demand months.


    OPEC


    The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, source of a third of the world's oil, this week will probably approve a plan to boost output and lower near-record prices, OPEC officials and energy analysts said.


    Saudi Arabia on May 21 announced an increase in output and proposed that OPEC boost the group's production target by at least 2 million barrels a day, or 8.5 percent. OPEC, which meets Thursday in Beirut, may decide to suspend quotas altogether, two officials of the group, who asked not to be identified, said Friday.


    Zitat

    "Contracts are also rising on speculation it may be difficult for OPEC to increase output quotas at its June 3 meeting as Venezuela and other countries are against raising production,'' said Tatsuo Kageyama, an analyst at Kanetsu Asset Management in Tokyo.


    The International Petroleum Exchange in London is closed for the Spring Bank Holiday. The New York Mercantile Exchange is closed for the Memorial Day holiday.

    To contact the reporters on this story:
    Hector Forster in Tokyo at hforster@bloomberg.net and Sri Jegarajah in Singapore at (65) sjegarajah@bloomberg.net.


    To contact the translator on this story:
    Hiromi Horie in Tokyo at hhorie@bloomberg.net.
    Last Updated: May 31, 2004 06:34 EDT

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    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/gata/message/2211


    2:21p ET Sunday, May 30, 2004


    Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:


    How does the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee know that central banks are working with bullion banks and
    other financial houses to suppress the price of gold?


    We know because of the painstaking research of our consultants -- Reg Howe, James Turk, Andrew Hepburn,
    Mike Bolser, and Bob Landis. They have gone through
    the official reports and the footnotes of the Bank for
    International Settlements, the International Monetary
    Fund, the Federal Reserve, the U.S. Treasury
    Department, central banks and government agencies,
    mining companies, and financial houses, and have
    amassed enormous evidence.


    But that's the complicated stuff, and we also know for
    a very simple reason.


    We know that the central banks and their intermediaries
    are working together to suppress the price of gold
    because time and again they have TOLD us so.


    After all, what was the Washington Agreement of
    September 1999 if not a proclamation that the 15
    participating central banks were colluding to regulate
    the gold price?


    Of course in the Washington Agreement the central
    banks affected to be SUPPORTING the gold price; they
    pledged to limit their gold sales to 400 tonnes per year
    for five years -- lest, they said, the gold market be
    flooded with metal and the gold price collapse, taking
    with it the economies of gold-producing countries.


    Of course GATA has put a different construction on the
    Washington Agreement. We consider it the device by
    which central bank gold LOANS are written off as
    SALES at discounted prices, rather than be called back
    and cause a short squeeze in gold.


    That is, far from supporting the gold price, the
    Washington Agreement was how the central banks
    kept gold from rising and prevented the bankruptcy of
    the financial houses that, at the invitation of the central
    banks, eagerly joined the gold carry trade of the 1990s.
    In that carry trade gold was, in effect, loaned by the
    central banks for next to nothing and sold by the financial
    houses to depress its price, strengthen the U.S. dollar,
    reduce interest rates, and inflate the price of paper
    assets, which were purchased with the proceeds of the gold
    sales.


    But no matter how you want to construe it, the
    Washington Agreement was admittedly a co-ordinated
    action by the central banks to regulate the gold price.
    That central banks get together to discuss and unify
    their policy toward gold is a matter of ordinary public
    record. Anyone who really believes that this collusion
    is always benign, in the public interest, and without
    ulterior motives shouldn't go even grocery shopping
    alone.


    The Washington Agreement wasn't the first coordinated
    intervention of the central banks in regard to gold. It was
    at least the second and probably much more belated
    than that. How do we know?


    Because Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told
    us. In fact, he told Congress too. As usual, no one in the
    financial press seems to have been paying attention.


    But on July 24, 1998, Greenspan told the House Banking
    Committee:


    Zitat

    "Central banks stand ready to lease gold in increasing quantities should the price rise."


    He repeated that statement a few days later to the Senate Agriculture Committee:


    http://www.federalreserve.gov/…stimony/1998/19980724.htm


    Of course, like the central banks that participated in the
    Washington Agreement, Greenspan was disguising the
    true purposes of the policy he described. He was
    explaining why he didn't think that the derivatives market
    needed federal regulation, and suggested that central bank
    gold leasing was a safeguard against a private corner on
    the gold market, a safeguard that made derivatives
    regulation unnecessary.


    GATA maintains that, as with the Washington Agreement, the purposes of the central banks were the opposite of
    what Greenspan was suggesting. Far from working
    together to prevent a private corner on the gold market,
    the central banks were using gold leasing to maintain
    a corner on the gold market themselves.


    Construe Greenspan's testimony as you will, but there it
    is again -- central banks admitting that they work together
    to regulate the price of gold. And, more than that,
    Greenspan told Congress, if inadvertently, that the purpose
    of gold leasing was not really the purpose long maintained
    by the central banks involved in it -- to extract a little
    income from a supposedly dead asset -- but rather to keep
    the gold price down.


    Central bankers aren't the only ones in the gold business
    who acknowledge collusion to control the gold price. The
    biggest hedger among the gold-mining companies, Barrick
    Gold, has gone so far as to confess, in federal court in
    New Orleans, to participation in this scheme. Sued along
    with its bullion bank, J.P. Morgan Chase, by Blanchard &
    Co., the New Orleans coin and bullion dealer, Barrick filed
    a surprisingly candid motion in court on February 28, 2003.


    Barrick moved for dismissal of Blanchard's lawsuit on
    grounds of sovereign immunity. That is, Barrick claimed
    that, in borrowing gold from central banks through Morgan
    Chase, Barrick became the agent for central bank gold
    policy; that, as the agent of central banks, the company
    could not properly be sued without also suing the real
    parties in interest, the central banks, as well; and that,
    since the central banks, as the agencies of sovereign
    governments, have immunity and could not be made party
    to the Blanchard suit, the suit should be dismissed:


    http://www.lemetropolecafe.com…03/memoformotiontodis.pdf


    Fortunately Judge Helen Berrigan dismissed Barrick's
    motion, and so Blanchard's lawsuit has gone to the
    evidence-collecting phase. The suit is similar to Reg
    Howe's federal lawsuit, which was brought in U.S. District
    Court in Boston, underwritten financially by GATA, included
    government defendants, and failed on the very issue of
    sovereign immunity -- the issue that is now out of the way
    so that, in the Blanchard case, the world yet might get a
    close look at how the gold market really works.


    Just as the true purpose of gold leasing is to suppress
    the gold price rather than earn a little interest on a "dead
    asset," some central banks even acknowledge that the
    only purpose of holding gold reserves at all now, in the
    absence of any currency's formal convertibility, is to rig
    markets.


    GATA is grateful to its researcher in Amsterdam, Milhaly
    Schroth, for locating the following admission from the
    Reserve Bank of Australia, which, on Page 31 of its
    annual report for 2003, says this about its reserves:


    Zitat

    "Foreign currency reserve assets and gold are held primarily to support intervention in the foreign exchange market. In investing these assets, priority is therefore
    given to liquidity and security, in order to ensure that
    the assets are always available for their intended policy
    purposes."


    The Reserve Bank of Australia's admission can be
    found here:


    http://www.rba.gov.au/Publicat…03/2003_annual_report.pdf


    All this shows that while the formal convertibility of
    currencies into gold has been ended by the articles of
    the International Monetary Fund, gold continues in its
    nature and function as money and as the independent
    international currency, the competitor of the dollar and
    the euro -- and that central banks recognize as much,
    however grudgingly.


    Central banks often acknowledge intervention in currency
    markets -- direct intervention, as with the Bank of Japan's
    printing yen to buy dollars and the People's Bank of China's
    enforcing a fixed exchange rate with the dollar; and
    indirect intervention, as by the heavy purchases by many
    central banks of U.S. government bonds. Meanwhile the
    Federal Reserve intervenes in and supports the U.S. bond
    and equity markets every week through the strategic
    purchase and sale of U.S. government bonds.


    Maybe you've heard the joke about the lawyer who,
    asked by a potential client, "How much is 2 and 2?,"
    replied, "How much do you WANT it to be?" These
    days that is even more the premise of central banking
    than of the practice of law. What do the markets
    say? What do you WANT them to say?


    Far from being the mechanisms of steady development
    and democracy we tout to the developing world, markets
    now are, in the eyes of central banking, considered to be
    usually INEFFICIENT and WRONG. And so bailouts and
    interventions and the issuance of price-capping derivatives
    have followed constantly on each other's heels so that no
    big financial interest might ever suffer the consequences
    of its mistakes or venality. National and even world
    economic objectives are now set by unelected overlords,
    gods of the market whose power is almost completely
    undemocratic.


    Amid all this intervention, why should it be so hard to
    accept that central banks might be more involved in the
    gold market than they make plain? Indeed, to believe that
    central banks are NOT deeply involved in the gold market,
    one almost has to believe that it is the ONLY market they
    are not deeply involved in.


    GATA is in the free-market advocacy business, not the
    investment advice business. But we can draw a few
    conclusions.


    First, because of gold leasing and the deceptive accounting
    for it, central bank gold reserves are far less than what is
    claimed.


    Second, amid worldwide currency debasement, the gold
    price will be largely a matter of how much more gold the
    central banks are ready to lease and then sell, a matter of
    how far down the central banks are willing to run their gold
    reserves and whether they think they may need gold again
    to restore confidence someday when currency debasement
    gets out of hand. The evidence of the gold price of the last
    few years -- rising steadily despite constant selling or talk
    of selling by the central banks -- suggests that the central
    banks are attempting a controlled retreat with gold. The
    increase in official anti-gold propaganda supports
    suspicion that the central banks are running out of
    golden ammunition.


    And third, and most important, far from being Keynes'
    "barbarous relic" or a quaint antique, gold remains not just
    basic to the world economic system but, in fact, the secret
    knowledge of the universe -- the substance and mechanism
    by which everything else financial can be revealed and
    measured. If gold ever escapes the distortions that so
    laboriously have been imposed on it, we may see how
    everything we have considered normal has actually been
    distorted grotesquely -- may see, to our shock, that, as
    Kipling wrote in "The Gods of the Copybook Headings":


    "... all is not gold that glitters, and two and two make
    four."


    When that day comes and the real world reasserts itself
    with a vengeance, people will need the real thing -- or the
    real things, ANYTHING that is real. Kipling foresaw it this
    way:


    ... Then the Gods of the Market tumbled,
    ...... and their smooth-tongued wizards withdrew,
    ... And the hearts of the meanest were humbled
    ...... and began to believe it was true
    ... That All is not Gold that Glitters,
    ...... and Two and Two make Four --
    ... And the Gods of the Copybook Headings
    ...... limped up to explain it once more.


    ... As it will be in the future,
    ...... it was at the birth of Man --
    ... There are only four things certain
    ...... since Social Progress began: --
    ... That the Dog returns to his Vomit
    ...... and the Sow returns to her Mire,
    ... And the burnt Fool's bandaged finger
    ...... goes wabbling back to the Fire;
    ... And that after this is accomplished,
    ...... and the brave new world begins
    ... When all men are paid for existing
    ...... and no man must pay for his sins,
    ... As surely as Water will wet us,
    ...... as surely as Fire will burn,
    ... The Gods of the Copybook Headings
    ...... with terror and slaughter return!


    CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer
    Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.


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


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    The Fed Can't Stop Inflation


    Kenneth J. Gerbino

    Posted May 28, 2004


    (The following is an excerpt from a recent client letter)


    Here are some hard-core facts that you need to consider.


    Starting in 2000, the U.S. has created $1.5 trillion new dollars ( M2 ) , and has a cumulative trade deficit of $1.6 trillion. This totals $3.1 trillion on the negative side of the dollar equation. To say the least, this is bad monetary karma and will lead towards a very strong gold price.


    From 1973 to 1981 the inflation rate in the U.S. averaged 9.2% per year! The Fed raising interest rates during this time, on balance did nothing! Why? Because the money increases from prior years were already in the systemthe horses were out of the barn. For most of this time gold went up, interest rates went up and inflation went up. Prior to this time the money supply ( M2 ) from 1965 to 1974 increased 101%. This caused the inflation from 1973 to 1981. The Fed could not stop it. Gold went from $100 to $850.


    Here is a reality check on the above mentioned $1.5 trillion created from the year 2000. First, I will refer to the U.S. money supply ( M2 ) in 1980. It was $1.5 trillion. All the tangible wealth in the United States, every bridge, office building, home, car, television, plane, everything was created over 200 years with a money supply that ended up at $1.5 trillion. 200 years of blood, sweat and tears to create all the tangible wealth in the U.S. Our country in a bit more than four years has created the same amount of money! $1.5 trillion! This new money has not created anything near the tangible wealth of the first 200 year's $1.5 trillion. This is currency depreciation on a grand scale.


    This is economic madness and this is the madness that has made people like Warren Buffett recently increase his foreign currency investments ( out of dollars ) to over $12 billion.


    Bill Gross, who manages the largest bond portfolio in the world and is considered on the same world class investment level as Buffett, was on CNBC just last week and in response to Ron Insana's question of "what to do now" stated,


    Zitat

    "Move money elsewhere to a central bank in Euroland that is more rational."


    Warren Buffett, Bill Gross, and hopefully you understand this situation. The smart thing to do is to protect oneself with assets of real monetary value.gold. One of the best ways to own plenty of this time-tested asset is with gold and silver mining companies that are sitting on mountains of resources and reserves in the ground.


    Here is something else important to understand. The dollar is not always that good a barometer of the gold price. From 1976 to 1980 the dollar index went from 106 to 92, down only 13%, yet gold during this time went from $103 to $850, up over 700%.


    From 1985 to 1995 the dollar index collapsed from 140 to 80, down 43%. Gold during this time went from $325 to $390, up only 20%. Gold should go opposite to the dollar but the magnitude of the move has a life all its own and regardless of all complexities and theories the bottom line is that it is the world's heavyweight champ of money and liquid wealth, regardless of whatever everything else is doing. Besides, the price of gold is based on supply and demand of gold not dollars. If the top 10 gold mines in the world closed down for any reason, that would take 20% of the mine supply off the market. Regardless of the dollar, you could bet gold would go up. The gold/dollar relationship has merit, but it is not the key determinate to the ultimate value of gold.


    Gold is headed higher regardless of the dollar, the Fed, or interest rates. The gold stocks are also. The current sell-off in the mining shares is a buying opportunity.


    The U.S. stock market is worth about $13 trillion and the bond market about $22 trillion. That would be about $35 trillion. Since the U.S. has about 30% of all the liquid wealth in the world, we could assume that the global stock and bond markets would be about $100 trillion.


    The market value of every gold mining company in the world on every stock market in the world is $200 billion. For comparison General Electric's market value is $300 billion.


    The point is that there is an awful lot of money that could potentially flow into these gold mining shares and most likely will. The wake up call will certainly be there when the economic repercussions of all the past and current monetary and economic mismanagement manifest themselves. Not only are the chickens coming home to roost but in the next few years the debt levels and the printing of money will most likely have to increase even more to keep the show on the road.


    Despite all this bad news, the world will still turn, people will get up in the morning and eat breakfast, the cereal makers will still be in business, their employees will still shop at stores, the store owners will still buy cars, the PGA Tour will go on, etc., etc. A depression of productivity will not be the end result. Life will go on. But the big change will be the value of everyone's assets. Here is where a massive shift of value and wealth will take place.


    M2 just since 2000 is up 32%. Since 1995, up 73%. This means plenty of inflation in the next 5-10 years, and although hard to imagine, the bond market could lose 30-40% of its value. Raising interest rates couldn't stop inflation from 1973 to 1981 and it won't stop it now. All the money printed in the late 60's and early 70's was already in the system. Today it is no different. This time it could be much worse because of all the debt, which dwarfs the debt levels of the 70's. Also the new economic power, China, has increased its money supply ( M1 ) by 84% just since 2000.


    All this is bullish for gold and the mining stocks.


    The monetary insurance of gold mining stocks, coupled with the growth and value attributes of this investment group make a compelling and logical rationale in this day and age for investment capital. It is your life jacket on a sinking ship.


    In 2004, we just could be seeing the last real great buying opportunity in the mining shares for a generation. I would encourage clients to contact our office and add funds to your gold mining stock account this quarter and take advantage of this opportunity.


    Kenneth J. Gerbino
    May 2004

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    http://www.mineweb.net/sections/gold_silver/325817.htm


    Banks and Amex score on gold merger frenzy


    By: Tim Wood


    Posted: '29-MAY-04 00:54' GMT © Mineweb 1997-2004


    NEW YORK (Mineweb.com) -- The American Stock Exchange and six banks - RBC, BMO, CIBC, National Bank, GMP and Endeavour - struck a rich vein in this week's opportunistic attempt to break up the putative takeover of Wheaton River [WHT] and IAMGold [IAG].


    28.2 million shares worth over $115 million were trades as arbitrageurs got stuck into bridging the hostile bids from Coeur d'Alene [CDE] for Wheaton River, and from Golden Star [GSS] for IAMGold. IAMGold and Wheaton are days away from a shareholder vote on their merger, which was announced earlier this year. Coeur and Golden Star have agreed to share the burden of the IAMGold break fee if they prevail.


    Golden Star has made a very conditional all stock offer worth $854 million, or $5.66 per IAMGold share. The announced premium was quickly whittled away with Golden Star losing more than 6% to reduce the offer premium to 7.5 cents, or 1.3%, above IAMGold's price. IAMGold gained nearly 4%, making its bid for Wheaton slightly richer and helped by investors selling down Coeur.


    The bid spread for Wheaton narrowed from 22%, or $381 million at Thursday's close, to 10%, or $171 million at Friday's close. Coeur's cash and scrip offer is worth an effective $3.39 per Wheaton share, or just over $2 billion, versus IAMGold's $3.10, or $1.84 billion, which compare with the Wheaton price of $2.91 and market capitalization of $1.7 billion. The final price from Coeur would be affected by takeup of the cash inducement which is capped at $205 million.


    Rationale


    The bids generated little genuine enthusiasm among professional investors. People we canvassed were jaded on the transactions, seeing companies stretching for accretion as urgency builds to deploy premium rated scrip before the cycle turns. The only genuine winners are Wheaton River shareholders and the various advisors. The advisors are cashing in some novel ideas, and Wheaton shareholders have one offer banked and another to fall back on should things go awry.


    The anecdotal consensus is that IAMGold has done enough to take Wheaton home and become Axiom Gold, the proposed new name. IAMGold apparently has received support from around 20% of its shareholders and will be in an even stronger position when actual voting takes place.


    Golden Star has made much of IAMGold shareholder disaffection over the Wheaton offer, however there was only one partisan investor egging the Ghana miner on during the company conference call. Golden Star is seen acting because it is inevitably in the cross-hairs of the Axiom combination.


    Nevertheless, Golden Star does win kudos as an operator of considerable experience and ability with great competence in West Africa. The Axiom combination weakness remains a lack of operating depth, but investors generally approve of the asset, cash flow and management foundation to address that. As HSBC analyst Victor Flores noted during the investor conference call, cynics will see Golden Star converting its habitual stock offerings to a single large transactions. Savings from rationalizing redundant infrastructure is real, as are substantial tax losses, however the overall return is probably quite slim and leaves little room for error.


    It is not inconceivable that another bidder may now strike at Golden Star given the fall in its share price. Randgold [GOLD] has just expanded in Ghana and could use the knowledge banked in its war with AngloGold [AU] for Ashanti to make an offer for Golden Star. However, parity in net asset valuations remains crucial and Randgold suffers a relative discount which would make a transaction risky.


    Wheaton River might turn the tables for a truly interesting transaction chain. It could immediately launch a counter bid for Golden Star, thereby neutralizing antagonistic IAMGold shareholders, and setting in motion a deal many see as inevitable.


    Meanwhile, Coeur had a very tough time convincing skeptical analysts of the merits of its offer. There is some concern that Coeur is disrupting its silver image by playing up the gold potential so heavily. Still, it presented a compelling case to Wheaton shareholders based on participating in one of the biggest precious metals companies in the world as opposed to the struggling wannabe it painted IAMGold as.


    As cogent as the case is, it comes down to whether or not Wheaton shareholders will accept Coeur scrip over IAMGold's, even with a premium and improved liquidity. There's no assurance that they would.


    Superior offer


    Time and the superior offer clauses in the IAMGold takeover agreement are critical. According to the merger terms, Wheaton River's board can only consider a competing offer of at least $4.12. Similarly, IAMGold's board is guided by a price of roughly $7.49. Clearly, neither bid meets the requirement. however, both companies have wedged into a gray area surrounding the date the hurdles were set.


    Golden Star closed at $6.78 on March 30 for a retrospective bid price of $7.81 per IAMGold. Likewise, Coeur closed on that day at $6.91 for a supposedly trumping offer price of $4.83.


    It is unlikely that either board will accept that argument, but it could make for an interesting legal tussle.


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    silvereagle
    schuldenblase
    hpopth


    Man kann leider noch sehr selten sowas wie das was ihr heute wieder zu den Edelmetallen, und speziell zum Silber geschrieben habt lesen. Absolut zutreffend.


    Habe heute einen Telefonanruf von einem Freund aus der Schweiz erhalten, der in der vergangene Woche zu einem Vortrag über Anlage Möglichkeiten in der heutigen Zeit, von der UBS Bank eingeladen wurde.


    Fast Unglaublich, es wurde dort Gold, und Silber als Anlage empfohlen.
    Beim Gold sprach der Hauptredner von einem Preisziel von 800.- Dollar !!


    Und das bei einer Schweizer Bank Veranstaltung!


    Die Zeichen der Zeit, scheinen ganz langsam auch in den Banketagen erkannt zu werden, und was noch viel wichtiger ist, von einigen "Mutigen" mit, oder ohne Wissen der obersten Etagen, an ihre Kunden weitergegeben. Sowas war bis vor kurzem überhaupt nicht der Fall gewesen.


    Gruss


    ThaiGuru