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Reminder: this little blog is simply my tool to remind
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more extensive charts and/or analysis takes place in the GMR Newsletter. This
blog is periodic but usually updated once or twice a week.
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My Market Notes:
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Hard assets accumulate; mix of juniors, seniors, and physical
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UK Bank of England now looks to lower rates; Euroland likely to follow
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Reflation in US likely
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How for the US to handle $700 billion bailout + $600 billion Iraq War
+ $40 billion War on Drugs ??????
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US Housing - what floor ?
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In this market, single fundamentals have no importance; macro global considerations
are more important
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Commodities equities remain oversold; when does the penny drop that hard
assets will be the place to be ?
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Impossible to save with negative rates in most Western countries as inflation
is raging ... but off the radar screen
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Oil creeping higher now... Winter approaches
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BEAR Market: in force; DAX 5.700 , DOW 10.500 next stops; longer term
DOW 8.000 based on T/A
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Accumulate: Swiss Franc, physical silver, gold; longer term Brazilian
Real
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The Central Bank give-aways are still in force; BoJ put in 1 trillion
Yen today; now the CBs have started SWAP pools
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Current Outlook: weakness into 2009; commodity prices likely to be suppressed
from equity outlook but may be trumped by stampede of FEAR into oil, gold,
etc. Not knowable.
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Flight to Safety: short term I see no credible asset class for protection
; cash hold; accumulate hard assets on all pullbacks
Things Look Bad - Do Something
Unfortunately, the amount of work on my desk is piling up incessantly and
the amount of research ongoing for "best buys" in the resource sectors I follow
(precious, base metals, energy, agro and water) is also bursting ... I remind
readers that when opportunities present themselves, we must be ready to act.
Needless to say, I have not been getting a lot of sleep these last weeks...
Almost, as if I had written the below article myself, it points out the exact
issues I talked about in the last entry "Minding
the Shop". As credit markets contract and junior companies struggle
with financing issues, this will crimp / inhibit the ability for new resources
to be found and exploited - thus driving supply down as demand either is maintained,
or, as I suppose, increases. This due to the lag times associated with surveying,
exploration drilling, , environmental issues, in-country legislation, mine
setup, etc. A myriad of hindrances to increasing supply.
Commodity Supply May Be Curbed by Crisis, Goldman JBWere Says
By Jae Hur | Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Commodity prices will stay "stronger
for longer" as financing becomes a real constraint on supply growth because
of the global credit turmoil, Goldman Sachs JBWere Pty said.
"Credit restrictions and volatile equity markets have implications for the
supply side," the Melbourne-based firm said in a report. "Junior companies
wishing to finance greenfield projects that would have had little difficulty
in raising either debt or equity 18 months ago, would likely struggle today."
Raw material prices,
as measured by the Standard & Poor's GSCI index, have climbed 12 percent
since Sept. 16 as the dollar dropped on concern the U.S. government's $700
billion plan to buy bad mortgage debts would erode confidence in the currency.
Gold, a traditional haven in times of financial crisis, has gained 13 percent.
"Longer term, we believe the structural bull market endures,
based on supply and demand fundamentals," Goldman Sachs JBWere said. "The
theme of industrialization and urbanization in emerging markets has not disappeared.
Neither have the supply constraints for certain commodities been sustainably
alleviated."
In China, "growth rates have been slowing for some time, but fears of a
collapse in demand for raw materials post- Olympics are unfounded," it said.
"We expect sentiment to improve as a cleaner read on the Chinese economy
becomes available during the fourth quarter of 2008, and that the outcome
in China will be considerably stronger than the market currently seems to
fear,"
it said.
Credit Curbs
For the medium-term, credit restrictions will put pressure on demand for
raw materials.
"The housing market collapse in the U.S. has already taken a large and obvious
toll on demand for raw materials," as well as the weaker outlook for automotive
sales in many parts of the world, the firm said.
In the short-term, tighter credit availability and higher financing costs
have restricted the activities of commodities traders in the physical and
derivatives markets with de-risking and switching of counterparties, it said.
"The dollar has become the key short-term price driver, not just for gold,
but for all exchange-traded commodities," it said. Short-term speculative
money has moved neutral for oil or net-short for base metals, it said.
A few interesting remarks: Last week, as I sent out the entry "Minding
the Shop" I had to run and catch a flight to Zürich. Now,
this is the interesting part: On Tuesday, it was announced that AIG would
be saved by Paulson & Bernanke - a "classic" flip-flop if ever there
was one, having just said on the Sunday prior, that saving Lehman Brothers
was "not on" and that of moral hazard was mentioned.
On Wednesday morning, the streets of Zürich were very sombre and seemingly
many more smokers stood out on the pavement in huddled groups, especially in
front of the main UBS building. The AIG office just down the street was empty.
They had been told.
That evening we had dinner and were constantly checking the Blackberry - gold
was up $90 - its highest one-day advance in near history and the red wine flowed...
silver was up about $1.30. That night the steak simply tasted better.
The point is: as I have already hammered home to readers, VOLATILITY is here
to stay and the US authorities are obviously VERY cared. As a former executive
in industry, I once paid for classes myself to learn nuances in body language
and human behaviour to prepare myself for business negotiation - anything to
give me an advantage.
In yesterdays Capitol Hill testimony to Congress, Paulson and Bernanke were
exhibiting body language of dire frustration, urgency, and fear. Obviously
THEY know more than they are willing to say - obviously. Dick Cheney, absent,
was noted to have said "Things are bad - do something".
Another tidbit - I went to a local coin dealer to exchange some gold coins
- I was given MORE than the spot price - the spread has been totally whacked
out of alignment. Nobody currently knows where this massive bailout is going
and if the government puts a $700 billion price tag on it, we can likely assume
the REAL price is either unknown or shall exceed to the upside - I consider
that a safe assumption. The markets will likely take years to recover and the
financial institutions are, as I have previously said, the key to growth going
forward.
To get a perspective on what the low-end cost of $700 billion means: according
to the website http://www.nationalpriorities.org/costofwar_home the
ongoing cost of the Iraq War - now going for 5 years is $555 billion. The economist
Joseph Stiglitz' book said with all collateral costs, it is likely to be $3
trillion. The US' endless War on Drugs http://www.drugsense.org/wodclock.htm is
costing $37 billion. Total is $592 billion. In total, the bailout is so massive
by itself, that for all intents and purposes, such a bailout plus war, plus
drug wars, plus a 50yr. old infrastructure, plus Medicare ... is the de-facto
bankruptcy of the US when including ongoing expenditures and future obligations.
In further thought, and I have thought about this long and hard - very critical
indeed, the bailout dynamics. In either case, should the massive bailout be
approved, then the USD and confidence in the US economy will likely plummet
as massive debt and deficits will be piled on. If no bailout is approved (this
seems unlikely) then likely the US economy would tailspin into a massive recession
/ depression. That is what Paulson and Bernanke were alluding to in their body
language and often rather straightforward testimony - the US taxpayer is already "on
the hook", Paulson kept saying.
Now, we have seen that they - the authorities - in US, UK and Europe - have
started to bully and ban short selling. The US has short-term rescued the horrendous
US auto industry with a $50 billion injection - it must be obvious to all :
they will do ANYTHING to save the system. This is not necessarily wrong , but
it is being done in dictatorial fashion. The government can OUTLAW anything,
including non-fungible gold instruments. They could even ban going LONG on
gold stocks - but I doubt it.
My market thoughts are: accumulate more gold; my downside DOW target is currently
8000. A swiss banker (now retired) which I met, now has put in standing orders
to his bank to buy gold coins every week - price is of no interest - just buy & accumulate.
Reminder: we are currently in a real no-mans land as Paulson and Bernanke
stated. Nobody knows where the markets are headed nor what the REAL underlying
debt of these derivatives is and what instruments the government can or plan
to use in "cleansing" these, e.g. reverse auctions, etc.
We are in unprecedented times: I have talked about a massive hyperinflationary
bust in past newsletters and blog entries and also of a Kondratieff Winter.
We may be witnessing this soon in more gore and detail. If the last 300 years
of European history is any guide, we can assume that any US bailout will be
bloated, taxpayer and consumer negative, intransparent and bad for your personal
wealth and well being. I know of no historical guideline whereby holding some
gold has been detrimental to ones well-being in times of crisis.
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