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This gold bull market might just be getting started

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

Posted by: Alex Stanczyk

I find it interesting to note, that the common thought about gold is that it has peaked, is overbought, and will only go down from here.

This article gives a good argument as to why that may not be the case.

Your Road Map to the Bull Market in Gold

By Jeff Clark, editor, BIG GOLD

Does this sound like your world?

You trudge to the office, nervous about keeping your job. Some of your friends are out of work. The economy struggles, and recession seems just around the corner. Stores where you once shopped are now closed. Americans are still shooting and being shot at in the Middle East. The price of oil is far off its peak but remains high.

The government has promised action, but frankly you don’t like the president’s ideas nor trust the government’s judgment, since they don’t seem to notice that the budget and trade deficits are huge and show no sign of easing.

You invested in some gold and gold stocks, but they’re all down. Everything has lost value. Things are looking grim indeed.

If any of this sounds familiar, you’ve got a good memory. It’s what was happening in November 1975.

Yes, things didn’t look so rosy back then, either. And yet look how November 1975 fits into gold’s bigger picture:

Gold During the 1970s Bull Market

Powershares Wilderhill Clean Energy Portfolio

Now compare that chart to today’s…

Gold During the Current Bull Market

Powershares Wilderhill Clean Energy Portfolio

You’ll see that from 1970 to 1974, gold rose 400%. In our market (2000 to 2008), gold climbed 290% to its March 2008 peak.

From 1974 to 1976, gold fell 40%. In the current market, gold has fallen 31% in eight months, a much steeper decline.

Finally, during the three-year rise leading to gold’s peak of $850 in 1980, it gained 670% from its 1976 low.

This year’s gold price has been behaving much as it did in 1975.

So where will the price be a few years from now? I can tell you that Casey Research expects gold’s chart to look more and more like the 1970s before this is over. The U.S. government has only very recently fired the starting gun for racing inflation, but it has fired it very loudly.

In just the last two months, the Fed has increased the basic money supply (cash in circulation plus deposits held by commercial banks at the 12 Federal Reserve Banks) by nearly 50%. Nothing close to such a rapid increase has ever happened before in the U.S. It’s the kind of news that normally comes only from desperate banana republics. And it always means rapid price inflation is on the way.

What the Federal Reserve has done in the last two months guarantees high inflation. But the timing is unknown. In fact, it’s unknowable.

Looking at the past, a pop in the basic money supply gets felt strongly throughout the financial markets within six months or so. But that’s just the average experience, with some inflationary episodes running much faster and others running much slower. And our current situation is anything but average – very recent but extreme money growth colliding with a years-old but extreme credit crisis.

So we’ll have to sit and let the timing show itself. And if what you are sitting on is gold, you should sit comfortably. Patience served gold investors well in the mid-70s. It will serve them well again.

Regards,

Jeff Clark

A Peak Oil “Warning” from the IEA

Tuesday, November 18th, 2008

A Peak Oil “Warning” from the IEA

By Ian Cooper | Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

What does it mean when a usually conservative International Energy Agency (IEA) issues a gloomy report?

It means that recent cheap oil isn’t going to last – and that $100 oil will soon be a part of our daily lives… again.

The IEA is warning that crude oil will average about $100 between 2008 and 2015 because of an unavoidable energy crunch. And that the biggest cause of that crunch is “under-investment” in new and existing fields, which are needed to make sure oil production can keep pace with growing demand and slowing supply.

The agency also believes that the world needs to invest some $350 billion a year through 2030 to keep up with oil depletion rates. They’re claiming that current oil reserves are falling nine percent a year, as compared to three to five percent forecasts from analysts.

So, consider this.

If the world is using about 86 million barrels of oil everyday, a depletion rate of nine percent would mean that we’d need to find and produce another 7.7 million barrels a day just to remain at breakeven.

That’s like saying we need another Saudi Arabia, which is delivering a little more than nine million barrels a day after recent cutbacks.

Worse, the International Energy Agency outlook report, being released tomorrow—November 12—reveals that the world will eventually need to increase its production by “64 million barrels a day, or the equivalent of six times the current production of Saudi Arabia.”

ANGLO FAR-EAST ANNOUNCES NO SUPPLY DISRUPTION DESPITE RECORD DEMAND IN GLOBAL PRECIOUS METALS

Sunday, October 26th, 2008

Precious metals refinery capacity maxed out globally in recent weeks due to record levels of investor demand in the metals.

Recent currency volatility and financial institution fragility has been cited as the driving reasons for the record numbers of investors flocking to silver and gold in recent weeks looking for the stability and safe haven the metals have traditionally offered.  Global bullion refining capacity has been quickly overwhelmed by the sudden spike in demand for physical bullion supply.

“People are often surprised to learn there are less than seventy industry accredited refiners in the entire world” said AFE’s bullion treasury manager Simon Heapes this week, “refineries have been running three fully staffed shifts most of the year.  The industry is just not geared for such huge spikes in demand as we have seen in recent weeks”.

Many refineries are announcing long delivery delays and many are taking no further orders till Q1 quarter of 2009, particularly for refining of smaller investor type bars and coins, while North America coin dealers have been out of all stock for many weeks.

AFE announced this last week after weeks of record demand it continues uninterrupted supply to its clients with allocated good delivery bars through its network of long term supply relationships and unique global infrastructure.  “In peak times like these, long term multi-decade relationships are critical” commented AFE’s Founding Director, Philip Judge.  Meanwhile, AFE’s gold shekel distribution partner Joseph Wealth Systems is providing on time delivery to its growing numbers of customers and colleagues in 37 countries.

Jim Rogers says you should own Oil & Gas

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

RON PAUL on INFLATION

Friday, October 24th, 2008

The paper gold market vs. the bullion market by Jim Sinclair

Monday, October 20th, 2008

By Jim Sinclair

Sunday, October 19, 2008

It is axiomatic that the most leveraged gold market most often (95 percent of the time) sets the price of any cash market. First derivatives (listed futures) command price.  This remains true as long as the COMEX warehouse of gold is NOT meaningfully depleted by long gold contracts by taking delivery from the exchange warehouse.

As long as an exchange maintains a warehouse that historically overwhelms historical demand for delivery, then the first derivative, the COMEX listed gold future, will be the primary cause of price.

Taking delivery from the COMEX warehouse is not an easy process, as the system is designed not to violate your contract but to be a world-class pain in the ass. The COMEX requires re-assays, assuming that you wish to re-deliver. This then places another raving pain in the ass in your way.

The COMEX market is effectively an international 24-hour market as there is no location where you cannot buy or sell a COMEX clone.

Cash bullion gold, as opposed to the semi-cash markets that non-USA banks trade, is the only totally private means of buying and selling gold.

As currency problems increase, first the knowledgeable public such as you clean out the coin market.

This is the first time that the international coin markets have been cleaned out everywhere. This did not happen globally in the 1970s.

Large gold bars are still available in major markets but the backup inventory is getting low.

As long as the COMEX warehouse remains adequate and large bars still are available, the paper market, the leveraged COMEX market, will rule the price.

Only with a decline in COMEX warehouse inventories and a rundown in large bar supplies of the cash market will the cash bullion market command the price of the COMEX futures market.

It was not the buying by the Hunt Brothers that caused silver to move above $30 into the $50 area but rather the universal belief that the Hunts would take delivery, which would deplete or exceed the COMEX warehouse supply.

The war between paper gold and bullion gold is a war to determine which will take command of the price of gold, nothing more, nothing less. There will be no two markets trading at different prices. All this battle is about is if the bullion gold market is going to take the lead in making the singular price away from the traditional axiom that the most leveraged market makes the price.

I believe that bullion, in these most unique conditions, will command the one gold price, making it hard to impossible to manipulate the gold price via the paper gold market, as is the practice every day.

LINK TO ARTICLE HERE: http://www.gata.org/node/6794 

Heavy secret gold leasing may explain disparity in gold prices!!

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

MineWeb’s Lawrence Williams interviews Jeff Nichols of American Precious Metals advisers about gold’s decline on the commodities exchanges even as demand for the metal explodes, and they come up with a likely explanation — heavy surreptitious gold leasing by central banks.

Williams writes: “Nichols reckons it has been central bank gold loans — even more so than official gold sales — that have really pulled the rug out from under gold. Gold loans by central banks are an alternative — and invisible — means of injecting liquidity into the banking system. These gold loans to banks and bullion dealers by the leading central banks are probably a significant multiple of outright official sales.

“In simple terms, a central bank may lend or deposit gold with a banker or bullion dealer who simultaneously sells forward. Even with the recent substantial increase in gold-lending rates, at the end of the day the dealer receives cash in the transaction at a cost that may be advantageous to short-term money-market borrowing costs. Central banks have great freedom to lend gold outside their government-mandated rescue programs and these lending activities are typically hidden by their accounting practices.”

That is, more market manipulation by central banks, kept secret from the public and most investors, concealed on the central banks’ own books, but executed through a few favored financial houses that can trade on their knowledge of the secret government policy and make huge profits for providing the central banks with cover.

LINK TO FULL ARTICLE CAN BE FOUND HERE: http://www.gata.org/node/6789 

CFTC ‘looking into’ gold market as well as silver.

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

Submitted by cpowell on Tue, 2008-10-14 02:21. Section: Daily Dispatches 

10:20p ET Monday, October 13, 2008

 

Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:

Commissioner Bart Chilton of the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, who has been amazingly conscientious and cordial in correspondence with many GATA supporters, told two of them by e-mail today that the commission is not only investigating the silver market, which was announced on September 25 (http://www.gata.org/node/6672), but is “also looking at other markets, including the gold market, as part of our ongoing efforts.”

Since Chilton is associated with producing interests, farm interests (http://www.cftc.gov/aboutthecftc/commissioners/bchilton.html), he may be expected to be more skeptical of financial/manipulative interests than other CFTC commissioners. And since he is a member of the commission’s Democratic minority, he may have less influence than commissioners allied with financial interests. But our side plainly has gotten his attention and that of his agency, and everyone who has agitated with the CFTC should feel good about that.

CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer

Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.

 

LINK HERE: http://www.gata.org/node/6778

SILVER & The Masters Of Destruction

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

The Masters Of Destruction

By: Ted Butler

On Friday, October 10, the price of silver crashed, falling almost 25% from its price level 24 hours earlier. It is down roughly 50% from where it traded a few months ago. While a broad array of markets fell sharply in price that day and over the past few months, from oil to gold to grain to just about every commodity, none fell as sharply as silver. As regular market observers know, this is usually the case. I intend to explore why this is usually the case and what I think readers should do about it.

Does the sharp price decline mean that conditions have changed and that silver is no longer a great investment? I know it is human nature to assume that when the price of a commodity drops sharply in price, that there must be more of that commodity coming to market, or less demand. This is what we have all learned. But the facts in silver suggest something else entirely.

In my opinion, if conditions have changed, they have become more compelling and silver is an even better investment as a result of the price markdown. There is no great current or prospective increase in the supply of real metal coming to market. And if industrial demand does fall in the future due to deteriorating world economic conditions, it will be accompanied with falling production at current prices. Certainly, there is no evidence of anything but phenomenal investment demand.

Premiums on virtually every form of real silver have been sky-rocketing recently, especially on Friday’s price collapse. These premiums are the highest they have been in history, reaching 60% for certain items, like Silver Eagles. This is the clearest proof there is no developing glut of silver, as the price declines on the COMEX might otherwise suggest to some. At a minimum, the premiums dictate that none of this silver will be melted into bullion.

The purpose of this article is not primarily intended to encourage you to buy real silver, as it seems obvious to me that you understand that already. I’d rather explain the price decline, and what you can do about it (aside from continuing to buy silver).

FULL ARTICLE: http://www.investmentrarities.com/10-13-08.html 

Got Gold Report – Market Mayhem Continues, Silver Crushed, but not for long!

Monday, October 13th, 2008

By Gene Arensberg
12 Oct 2008 at 02:17 PM GMT-04:00

Panic flight to cash, margin calls and irrational fear knocks gold and especially silver lower on the paper-contract dominated spot cash markets while the real physical bullion markets get even tighter.

The divergence between pricing in the paper futures market and the physical bullion market reaches extreme levels for silver as the gold:silver ratio goes over 80:1.

Full must read article here: http://www.resourceinvestor.com/pebble.asp?relid=46957