Silvercrest Mines / Gold

47th Munich Security Conference 2011: George S...

47th Munich Security Conference 2011: George Soros, Chairman, Soros Fund Management, New York. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

GOLD $1604.30 -5.20
SILVERCREST MINES (V-SVL) $2.17 -0.15
KINROSS GOLD (T-K) $8.04 +0.01
What’s one to think about all these billionaires cashing in some of their gold holdings? Over the last few days, Bloomberg and other services have noticed how billionaire George Soros and Louis Moore Bacon have cut their stakes in gold ETF’s with Loan Pine Capital and Scout Capital also selling their entire stakes in the Spider Gold Trust.
Meanwhile billionaire John Paulson obviously still has some faith in the precious metals as he is purported to have maintained his holdings.
Many technical types are talking about the “death cross” – that technical move exciting the chartists which happens when the short-term moving average falls below the long-term. According the chartists, the suggestion is we could be seeing gold hit its next level of support which would be in the $1538—$1550 range, should gold break under $1600. Needless to say, if gold goes lower, that would not be good for gold or precious metal stocks.
One of our favorite juniors – SilverCrest Mines – which has been coming up with decent results, has a second mine on the way, is mentioned as a take-over target, will still suffer like everything else.
Meanwhile, we look at some of the more senior gold stocks and a few like Kinross Gold should simply have been ignored over the last five years as it just went down whether gold went up or not.Related articles


Russia Is Now The World’s Largest Gold Buyer

As Bloomberg reports, the Russian central bank has amassed 570 metric tons of it in the last 10 years, making it the biggest global gold buyer.

 
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Russian President Vladimir Putin has been loading up on gold.

As Bloomberg reports, the Russian central bank has amassed 570 metric tons of it in the last 10 years, making it the biggest global gold buyer.

Why is Russia’s central bank betting on gold rather than holding its foreign reserves in something with a bit of yield?

It’s a hedge against a collapse in the value of one of the global reserve currencies.

“The more gold a country has, the more sovereignty it will have if there’s a cataclysm with the dollar, the euro, the pound or any other reserve currency,” Evgeny Fedorov, a lawmaker for Putin’s United Russia party, told Bloomberg.

Screen Shot 2013-02-11 at 8.28.52 AM

Russia’s not the only one that’s been hoarding gold, though. China is the next runner up, having added one-quarter less than Russia, according to Bloomberg. Ambrose Evans-Pritchard argues that this is of a piece with what he calls a “new gold standard“:

The central bank buyers are of course the rising powers of Asia and the commodity bloc, now holders of two thirds of the world’s $11 trillion foreign reserves, and all its incremental reserves. It is no secret that China is buying the dips, seeking to raise the gold share of its reserves well above 2pc. Russia has openly targeted a 10pc share. Variants of this are occurring from the Pacific region to the Gulf and Latin America.

Putin kicked off the buying binge in 2005, when oil-per-ounce-of-gold ratio fell to around 6.5 barrels, down from 11.5 when Putin took power in 2000, according to Bloomberg. That parallels the ascent in gold prices, as it happens:

gold prices

And will this emerging-market gold rush threaten the status of the dollar and other currencies as a global reserve holding?

That seems unlikely. If the price is anything to go by—gold hovered within a range of $1,530 and around $1,770 dollars per ounce in the last two years—if anything, emerging market demand has cooled off a bit.

For one thing, there’s the slowdown in central bank buying. As economics blogger Scott Grannis points out, China’s central bank hasn’t been buying of late—it has overseen a dramatic tapering-off in China’s forex accumulationincluding gold.

But even Russia’s demand looks to have leveled off of late. And, as of the end of January, its reserves stood at around $532 billion, of which almost $52 billion was in gold, according to FactSet—close to its 10% goal.

Screen Shot 2013-02-11 at 9.28.29 AM

Aside from central banks, retail buyers in emerging markets are a key source of demand. With its central bank backed off of buying, China’s gold demand likely derives primarily from Chinese retail investors.

And as we’ve recently explored, Indians are piling up the yellow metal as well. That would  mean that the rise in gold prices since 2005 is as much the story of growing emerging market prosperity as is is one about fear of rampant devaluations of the dollar and other currencies.

And though Russia’s central bank and Chinese and Indian retail buyers may continue to binge, the biggest producers—China, Australia, the US, Russia and South Africa (pdf) mine the most gold right now—will continue to step up production, evening out the demand.


.U.S. Mint Silver-Coin Sales in January Climb to a Record

American Eagle, design by Adolph Weinman.

American Eagle, design by Adolph Weinman. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Sales of American Eagle silver coins this month by the U.S. Mint jumped to a record on demand for an alternative to currencies.

Sales of the coins surged to 7.42 million ounces so far in January, the biggest monthly total since 1986, when the Mint began the transactions, Michael White, a spokesman, said in a telephone interview today.

Silver prices in New York have more than doubled since 2008 as the Federal Reserve increased its balance sheet with debt purchases aimed at spurring an economic recovery. The central bank, which concludes a two-day meeting tomorrow, has pledged $85 billion in monthly bond buying in its latest round of stimulus measures.

“The quantitative easing has helped boost sales as people are worried about currency debasement and future inflation,” Anthem Blanchard, the chief executive officer of Blanchard Vault, a Las Vegas-based online retailer of gold and silver, said in a telephone interview. “We expect demand to remain buoyant.”

Global holdings of silver in exchange-traded products reached a record 19,699 metric tons on Jan. 18, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Prices are up 3.2 percent this month in New York, after advancing 8.3 percent in 2012, as central banks from the U.S. to Japan pledged more stimulus measures to boost economic growth.

Monthly Purchases

Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke will push on with purchases of $40 billion a month of mortgage bonds and $45 billion a month of Treasuries until the first quarter of 2014, according to a Bloomberg survey of 44 economists.

Silver futures for March delivery rose 1.3 percent to $31.184 an ounce today on the Comex in New York, the biggest gain for a most-active contract in two weeks.

The Mint resumed silver-coin sales yesterday after transactions were suspended for more than a week because of a lack of inventory.

Sales of American Eagle gold coins so far in January are up 84 percent from December to 140,000 ounces, which would be the highest monthly total since July 2010, Mint data show


Silver Vaults Stuffed

English: Silver bullion bar 1000oz top view

English: Silver bullion bar 1000oz top view (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Silver Vaults Stuffed Means Price Rising 30% in ’13

Silver Bullion Pte, one of Singapore’s largest suppliers of coins and bars to retail investors, says sales tripled since October, part of a global surge in demand that drove holdings to a record.

“Our clients are worried that a major currency crisis or mass bankruptcies would occur,” said Gregor Gregersen, the 36- year-old founder of Silver Bullion, whose sales now average about S$6 million ($4.9 million) a month. “It all has to do with falling confidence in the heavily indebted Western governments and financial institutions.”

Global investment through silver-backed exchange-traded products reached a record 18,854 metric tons in November, or more than nine months of mine output, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Holdings are now valued at about $19.2 billion. Prices will rise as much as 29 percent to $40.25 an ounce next year, based on the median of 49 analyst, trader and investor estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

Silver almost tripled since the end of 2008, lagging behind only platinum in gains for precious metals this year as policy makers from the U.S. to China to Europe pledged more action to boost economies. That’s attracting investors betting that stimulus will stoke inflation and debase currencies. It’s also luring those wagering growth will strengthen industrial demand for silver, 53 percent of which is used in everything from televisions to batteries.

Hedge Funds

The metal advanced 12 percent to $31.22 this year, compared with a 6.8 percent gain for gold and 14 percent rise for platinum. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Index of 24 commodities dropped 0.1 percent and the MSCI All-Country World Index of equities jumped 14 percent. Treasuries returned 1.8 percent, according to a Bank of America Corp. index.

Hedge funds and other large speculators increased bets on higher prices 12-fold since the end of June, to a net 34,862 futures and options, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. That’s about 50 percent higher than the average over the past five years, a period during which speculators have never been bearish.

Equity investors also bet on higher prices. Shares of Mexico City-based Fresnillo Plc (FRES), the largest primary silver producer, rose 24 percent this year. The company will report a 22 percent gain in net income to a record $927.1 million in 2013, according to the mean of seven estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Coeur d’Alene Mines Corp. in Idaho, which gets about 65 percent of its revenue from silver, fell 6.3 percent to $22.63 since the start of January and will reach $31.89 in 12 months, the average of analysts’ predictions shows.

Deposit Boxes

Silver Bullion, which started in 2009 in a rented bedroom with 18,000 ounces, now has 246,000 ounces (7.65 tons) stored in vaults for customers as well as its own inventories. The company operates from the Certis CISCO Center, home to one of Singapore’s largest providers of safety deposit boxes. It sells everything from 1- to 32-ounce coins and 10- to 100-ounce bars, as well as gold, platinum and palladium.

Investors bought 1,464 tons through ETPs this year, data compiled by Bloomberg show. They will probably add another 300 tons in 2013, Barclays Plc estimates. That’s less than the so- called implied physical surplus that the bank says will reach 6,441 tons in 2013. Its analysts expect silver to average $32.50 next year, from $31.20 in 2012.

IMF Outlook

The surplus may drag prices lower should economic growth slow because it would curb demand for consumer goods. A car contains as much as 30 grams and a mobile phone about 0.25 gram, according to the Washington-based Silver Institute. While the International Monetary Fund expects a 3.6 percent global expansion in 2013, from 3.3 percent this year, the forecast was cut twice since July.

The metal retreated 23 percent in 2008 as the global economy tumbled into a recession. Japan and the 17-nation euro zone are contracting again this year and the Congressional Budget Office says the U.S. economy faces the same risk should lawmakers fail to resolve more than $600 billion of automatic spending cuts and tax increases scheduled to start next month.

Investors may also be dissuaded by the metal’s price swings. Its 100-day historical volatility is almost twice as high as gold, meaning investors are subject to bigger losses as well as gains. Silver for immediate delivery reached a record $49.79 in April 2011 before tumbling 35 percent in less than three weeks.

Bullion Market

Comex silver futures are valued at about $22.6 billion, compared with $72.4 billion for the bourse’s gold contracts, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Members of the London Bullion Market Association handled an average of $34.7 billion of gold a day in October, and $3.26 billion of silver.

Investors own 18,760.34 tons through ETPs, less than 1 percent below the record set on Nov. 15. Morgan Stanley predicts they will add a further 500 tons in 2013. The bank said in a report Dec. 6 that silver is among its top commodity picks for next year, along with gold, corn and soybeans, because it will be boosted by investor demand and a weaker U.S. currency.

Central banks are seeking to boost growth through printing money, increasing investor concern the actions will debase currencies and spur inflation.

The Federal Reserve said Dec. 12 it would buy $45 billion of Treasury securities a month from January, adding to $40 billion a month of existing mortgage-debt purchases. Silver jumped about 53 percent during the first round of so-called quantitative easing from December 2008 through March 2010, twice the gain in gold. It advanced 24 percent in the second phase that ended in June 2011, about three times more than the other metal. The central bank bought $2.3 trillion of debt in total.

Subway Station

The scale of intervention is a sign to some investors that markets will be roiled once more by financial meltdowns. That’s reflected in Silver Bullion’s sales, which reached S$38 million in 2011, from S$700,000 in the first year of business. Orders were also boosted by the government lifting a goods and service tax on investment-grade gold, silver and platinum from Oct. 1.

While Gregersen’s first sale was made in a Singapore subway station, his company is now a member of the Singapore Bullion Market Association, with suppliers from the Perth Mint in Australia to the Mexican central bank.

“There’s going to be another big crash, we are really near it now,” said Chin Kuan Yew, a businessman and Silver Bullion customer who sold all his properties, including his condominium, to buy more metal. “You have on the one hand the U.S. printing money and the European Union is on the brink of collapse.”

What to Do Next?

If you have been predicting the ups and downs of the market well over the last few years, then stick with the strategies that are working for you. However, if you have a spotty track record, then likely you need some assistance in charting a course to better results.

The Gold Investor’s Handbook – click here for more detail on the in’s and outs of investing in gold

 


Gold Futures Decline on U.S. GDP Report

Description: Newspaper clipping USA, Woodrow W...

Description: Newspaper clipping USA, Woodrow Wilson signs creation of the Federal Reserve. Source: Date: 24 December 1913 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

DEC. 20

Gold futures fell to the lowest since August after a report showed the U.S. economy grew more than forecast last quarter, damping expectations that the Federal Reserve will expand monetary stimulus.

The U.S. grew at a 3.1 percent annual rate in the third quarter, more than previously reported and exceeding all projections in a Bloomberg survey, Commerce Department figures showed. The Fed said Dec. 12 it will boost its main stimulus tool by adding $45 billion of monthly Treasury purchases to an existing pledge of $40 billion in mortgage debt a month. The program is its third round of debt buying, known as quantitative easing, aimed at spurring growth.

Enlarge image Gold Futures Decline to Lowest Since August

Gold Futures Decline to Lowest Since August

Gold Futures Decline to Lowest Since August

Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

The price may drop to $1,535 an ounce if it closes below the 200-day moving average, said Dave Lutz, the head of exchange-traded fund trading and strategy at Stifel Nicolaus in Baltimore.

The price may drop to $1,535 an ounce if it closes below the 200-day moving average, said Dave Lutz, the head of exchange-traded fund trading and strategy at Stifel Nicolaus in Baltimore.

Dec. 20 (Bloomberg) — The number of Americans filing first-time claims for unemployment insurance payments rose by 17,000 to 361,000 in the week ended Dec. 15, Labor Department figures showed today. The U.S. economy grew at a 3.1 percent annual rate in the third quarter, according to Commerce Department figures released today in Washington. Betty Liu and Dominic Chu report on Bloomberg Television‘s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

“The GDP number was better than forecast, so the thinking is that improving conditions in the economy might mean a light at the end of the tunnel on when the Fed will end QE3,” Phil Streible, a senior commodity broker at R.J. O’Brien & Associates in Chicago, said in a telephone interview.

Gold futures for February delivery fell 1 percent to $1,650.80 an ounce at 9:48 a.m. on the Comex in New York, after touching $1,647.30, the lowest since Aug. 31. Through yesterday, the price was up 6.4 percent this year.

The metal

is poised to close below its 200-day moving average near $1,668, a bearish signal to some analysts who study historical price patterns. A close below the level means gold could drop to $1,535 by the end of the first quarter, Dave Lutz, the head of exchange-traded fund trading and strategy at Stifel Nicolaus & Co. in Baltimore, said yesterday.

Annual Gains

As of yesterday, prices surged 89 percent since the end of December 2008 as the Fed kept borrowing costs at a record low and bought debt. Bullion is heading for a 12th annual gain after central banks from the U.S. to China and Europe took action to prop up economies.

Holdings in gold-backed exchange-traded products increased to a record 2,631.79 metric tons yesterday, data tracked by Bloomberg show. They’ve expanded 12 percent this year.

Silver futures for March delivery tumbled 2.9 percent to $30.215 an ounce on the Comex. Earlier, the metal touched $30.05, the lowest since Aug. 23.

The ratio of silver’s price to gold climbed to 54.74, the highest since August.

AMP Gold and Precious Metals Portfolio: The Gold Investor’s Handbook by Jack A Bass (Sep 18, 2012)

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The Gold Investor’s Handbook – click here for  investment profits and much more detail on the in’s and outs of investing in gold


Gundlach Interview : Euro Defaults and Inflation Ahead

English: With his predecessor, Alan Greenspan,...

English: With his predecessor, Alan Greenspan, looking on, Chairman Ben Bernanke addresses President George W. Bush and others after being sworn in to the Federal Reserve post. Also on stage with the President are Mrs. Anna Bernanke and Roger W. Ferguson, Jr., Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Nov. 30

The cover story of the new Bloomberg Businessweek is an excellent and comprehensive profile of bond god Jeff Gundlach.

The reporters Seth Lubove and Alexis Leondis also laid out his longer term outlook for the world as the economy enters what he call “phase three.”

Deeply indebted countries and companies, which Gundlach doesn’t name, will default sometime after 2013. Central banks may forestall these defaults by pumping even more money into the economy — at the risk of higher inflation in coming years.

“I’m waiting for something to go kaboom,” Gundlach says in his office a week before the L.A. speech. “If phase three takes two years, it’s worth waiting for. The markets don’t have lots of opportunity now.”

According to the report, Gundlach recommends investors start positioning their portfolios now as there will be little warning when the “kaboom” happens.

For now, Gundlach recommends buying gemstones, art, commercial real estate, and other hard assets.

Gundlach’s DoubleLine Funds plans to off a long-short equity fund to provide inflation-adjusted returns.  He’s also sitting on cash because he expects there to eventually be extraordinary opportunities when asset prices tumble.

Adding color to his call, Gundlach discusses U.S. policy:

In the U.S., Gundlach sees a postelection, pre-fiscal cliff economy that’s growing anemically and only because of consumer loans, government stimulus and the Fed. He says inflation could jump by 2 percentage points if the Fed ramps up its purchases of government debt beyond what it has done so far.

Led by Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, the Fed has purchased $2.3 trillion in securities in two rounds of quantitative easing since 2008. And it may extend its third round through 2013 and climb past a total of $1 trillion in purchases, according to economists interviewed by Bloomberg.

“You’re just going to build up pressure in the pressure cooker, and when it blows, the lid will blow sky-high, and that’s when you get to phase three,” Gundlach says