Performance ( % Change)
| |
Current Level |
5 Days |
1 Year |
5 Year |
| Gold |
434.40 |
0.2% |
12.3% |
59.4% |
| Silver |
6.87 |
-5.4% |
18.4% |
39.4% |
| S&P |
1,156.85 |
0.4% |
1.6% |
-21.7% |
| Nasdaq |
1,921.65 |
-0.5% |
-1.9% |
-48.2% |
| ISEQ |
5,831.44 |
-2.4% |
6.2% |
8.4% |
| FTSE |
4,801.70 |
-1.0% |
4.9% |
-23.6% |
| USD/EUR |
0.78 |
1.2% |
-7.1% |
-28.6% |
| OIL |
49.72 |
-10.2% |
33.3% |
96.3% |
Weekly Markets
Stock markets were mixed if largely unchanged and interest-rate markets were
also unsettled and volatile.
Commodities and precious metals were mixed but largely down with oil dropping
more than 10%.
The slowest US gross domestic product growth in two years - at a 3.1% annual
rate in the first quarter of 2005 - subdued sentiment in many markets. Analysts
had expected GDP growth of some 3.5%.
Precious Metals
Gold was up marginally some $0.70 for the week. From $433.70
to $434.40
Silver was again volatile and was down 5.3% for the week from
$7.26 to $6.87. It thus gave up much of last weeks 3.71% gain.
Platinum (July) was down 0.3% for the week: from $873 per ounce
to $867.
Palladium (June) was down 2.5%: from $201 per ounce to $196.
The UK precious metals consultancy Gold Field Mineral Services Limited (GFMS)
released a bullish gold report - suggesting the gold price is likely to reach
$500. GFMS are normally quite conservative in their forecasts and not known
for bullish precious metal forecasts.
They cited the fundamental factors of supply and demand and the weak macroeconomic
fundamentals of the US economy as the primary drivers of the bull market in
gold. According to their Chairman, Phillip Klapwijk, the increasing upside
potential was due to the continuing twin US deficits, the precarious US dollar
and the possibility of a sharp slowdown in the US economy.
The GFMS survey also said mine production fell 5% in 2004, the largest decline
in annual mine output since 1943. Production dropped by 128 tons to 2,464 tons
on operational delays, poor weather and mine closures. Gold supply through
scrap metal and official sector sales also fell.
GFMS believe there is a clear upside for the gold price, chiefly stemming
from investment potential. Mr Klapwijk noted, "With the twin US deficits marching
forward unchecked, dollar weakness, and eventually, a sharp slowdown in the
US economy are distinct possibilities. Ally that with an event driven rally
in the oil price, then gold heading for the $500-mark no longer looks fanciful." Furthermore,
the consultancy believes that the down side is quite restrained, given the
robust nature of physical demand and its ability to respond to a dip in the
price.
Australia's The Privateer noted "the very tight trading range that has persisted
for almost a month has now been broken out of on the upside.... Gold has broken
back above both its longer-term (20 day) moving average (MA) and shorter-term
(10 day) MA. And once again, the shorter-term MA has moved back above the longer-term
MA - always a pre-requisite for a concerted upmove on the daily chart. The
last time this happened Gold rallied to an intraday high of $US 448.
"On the point and figure chart, the trading range as shown by the very compressed
sideways action has now been broken on the upside. What was a potential double
bottom at the $US 424 level last week has now become an actual double bottom,
always a STRONG sign that Gold has established support upon which to build
another upward thrust."
The Gartman Letter posts a gold chart since 2000 showing five triangles (the
last forming right now) and remarks:
"We really are not much for pattern recognition, but when a pattern repeats and
repeats only a fool would not pay attention. In gold (in US dollar terms) it
has been one "triangle" after another through the entire bull move, with another
developing presently. As in the past, this one is likely to resolve itself with
prices moving higher, and so we remain bullish."
Adam Hamilton of Zeal Intelligence writes is his essay 'Euro Gold Stealth
Bull' that:
"Today euro gold's secular support is near EUR325, not too far from EUR350. This
is much higher than the EUR300 support levels of early 2003, the last time euro
gold tried to break the EUR350 chains. From this much higher base, which is rising
constantly, euro gold has a growing probability of rising beyond EUR350 and staying
there for good.
I continue to believe that this probable coming EUR350 breakout will prove
to be the single most important technical event of this entire gold bull to
date. I think it is a far bigger deal even than gold climbing north of $500
in dollar terms. EUR350 could very well prove to be the very catalyst that
ignites Stage Two, when gold rises in all currencies instead of just primarily
the US dollar.
Why is this EUR350 breakout so crucial? Regardless of the technical arguments
for an already underway stealth bull in euro gold the EUR350 high-water mark
of recent years still colors the perceptions of most European contrarians.
They are well aware of the dollar bear and dollar gold bull, but until they
see gold rise to new bull-to-date highs in their local currency they will remain
skeptical that gold has any real strength beyond the dollar's weakness.
EUR350 has an excellent chance of unleashing great pools of European capital
that have largely remained on the sidelines until now. This added international
gold demand could very well catapult it up into Stage Two where it starts rising
at a more rapid pace in all currencies, not just the US dollar. More than any
other single factor, international investor participation could radically change
the face of this entire gold bull.
At Zeal we are continuing to closely monitor the euro gold situation and will
certainly report .... when it once again challenges EUR350. This will probably
be an excellent opportunity to add new trades since a further surge in gold
is probable once the Europeans believe EUR350 is decisively broken and start
chasing gold again.
In the meantime, if you are European, I hope you consider the possibility
that euro gold has already been in a moderate stealth bull. It is not the unsustainable
anomalies that make a bull or bear, but the prevailing primary trend. And while
most of the gold action has been due to the dollar bear, not all of it has."
We were featured in Business Plus magazine in an article about investing
and diversifying into gold.
The article on the whole was good and balanced. There was a slight caveat
that should IMF gold sales resume the price of gold could fall to some $300.
We do not know of any respected commodity or currency analyst who believes
that given the many fundamental factors that have led to gold's 70% increase
in the last 4 years it could somehow now fall back to $300. The reality regarding
the unlikelihood of IMF gold sales is often not grasped which is understandable
given the lack of sound analysis of the subject.
The reality is that the chance of IMF gold sales are slim to none. As not
only are the US, the majority IMF shareholders, against it so are the other
IMF shareholders. The President of the ECB, Jean Claude Trichet, the head of
the Bundesbank, the Canadian Finance Minister and many others have come out
against the proposal. It has also been pointed out how it would be as easy
to revalue the gold to today's gold market prices ( the gold is valued at 1945
prices) and forgive the debt to the deserving developing countries in dollar
terms.
Business Plus reported how the respected entrepreneur and expert in the field
of oil, precious metal and natural resource industries John Teeling was also
enthusiastic about gold's prospects due to powerful global players aligning
themselves for a future global confrontation. Such geopolitical uncertainty
would lead to a demand for hard tangible assets such as gold.
Oil
Oil was again massively volatile and ended down 10.2% after last week's 6.2%
surge. It was down $5.67 for the week closing at $49.72 from $55.39. The decline
was blamed on evidence of a slowing US economy. Economists had expected first
quarter growth to be some 3.5% when it turned out to be only 3.1%.
It was the first time that the price of oil has fallen below the $50 mark
in two months and the increasing average oil prices of recent months in now
leading to increased inflation and slowing growth concerns.
The elder statesman of the oil industry and former oil executive , T Boone
Pickens who is now the CEO of hedge fund BP Capital, told CNBC that oil production
is now peaking globally especially in Russia and Saudi Arabia. He predicts
that we will never again see prices in the $40 to $50 range and that oil will
be over $60 per barrel by the end of 2005 and gasoline at $3.00 per gallon
at the pump. Average prices in the US right now are at around $2.00 per gallon.
A further 50% increase in gasoline prices in the very oil dependent US economy
would seriously impinge on long term economic growth prospects.
Other Commodities
Reuters Commodities Research Bureau's Index was down 0.5% to
304.88 from 306.53 last Friday.
The CRB's year to date gains are 7.7%. Since hitting a low of 182.83
in October 2001 it is up some 70%.
The Reuters CRB Index ( the 17 basic components include hard tangible
assets such as Metals, Textiles and Fibers, Livestock and Products, Fats and
Oils, Raw Industrials, Foodstuffs). One of the CRB index's greatest strengths
is the fact that there is an equal weighting of all of its 17 components. This
weighting assures that no price increase in any single commodity, like oil,
can significantly skew the entire index. Significant moves in the CRB are only
possible when the majority of its component commodities are moving in unison
with a particular primary trend. Oil, silver and gold only account for 3/17th
of the entire index.
The Goldman Sachs Commodities Index was down 6.8%. The GSCI
is a world production-weighted commodity index which next year will be composed
of 24 liquid exchange traded futures contracts. The GSCI includes energy, industrial
metals, precious metals, agricultural and livestock products. It is up 15.3%
year to date.
Base metals
Base metal prices mostly declined amid the economic slowdown in the US.
"Slowing economic growth" would lead to "slowing growth in metal demand", Briggs
said.
By Friday, three-month copper prices slid to $3,213 per tonne on the London
Metal Exchange Friday from $3,267 a week earlier.
Three-month aluminium prices moved to $1,814 per tonne Friday from $1,868.
Three-month nickel prices gained to $16,000 per tonne on Friday from $15,875.
Three-month lead prices advanced to $958 per tonne Friday from $944.
Three-month zinc prices fell to $1,293 per tonne Friday from $1,303.
Three-month tin prices stood at $8,010 per tonne Friday from $8,150.
Rubber
Rubber prices were mixed amid heavy rainfall in producer countries in Asia.
"It's been a fairly quiet subdued market, on the whole, a downward" trend, one
anonymous London trader said.
The upcoming "Golden Week" of holidays in China and Japan next week pointed
to thin trading conditions, he added.
In Osaka, the RSS 3 June contract dropped to 140 US cents on Friday, from 141.90¢ a
week earlier.
Singapore's RSS 3 June contract rose to 131¢ on Friday, from 129.75¢.
Cocoa
Cocoa futures posted moderate gains as the world's top producer Ivory Coast
moved a step closer towards peace.
"A breakthrough on the political stalemate that has dominated prices. . . has
pressured prices down," said Refco analyst Ann Prendergast.
Ivory Coast announced it would hold a first round of presidential polls on
October 30, taking a major step forward towards implementing a peace deal signed
earlier this month in Pretoria.
On Liffe, London's futures exchange, the price of cocoa for July delivery gained
to £817 per tonne on Friday from £815 a week earlier.
On the CSCE, the New York futures market, the July contract added to $1,497
per tonne on Friday, from $1,496.
Coffee
Coffee prices rallied amid the ongoing threat of freezing weather hitting harvests
in leading producer Brazil.
"Local meteorologists are alerting farmers to the increased possibilities of
a crop-damaging freeze in 2005," Prendergast said.
On Liffe, Robusta quality for July delivery firmed to $1,086 per tonne on Friday
from $1,065 a week earlier.
On New York's CSCE market, Arabica for July delivery rose to 126.80¢ per
pound on Friday, from 122.20¢.
Sugar
Sugar prices pushed upwards while strong demand was expected from Asia and
Russia.
"Traders are looking to a resurgence of physical offtake from Russia, China and
India to shore up prices in an atmosphere of limited supply," Prendergast said.
Indonesian officials ordered 227,000 tons of raw sugar last week.
By Friday on Liffe, the price of a tonne of white sugar for August delivery
climbed to $246.50 on Friday from 244.80 a week earlier. On the CSCE in New
York, a pound of unrefined sugar for July delivery stood at 8.48¢ on Friday
from 8.38¢.
Soya and grains
Soya and grains prices were mixed while weather conditions in key producer
the US remained humid.
"The market will continue to go down as long as the weather remains favourable," said
Fimat analyst Dan Cekander.
On Liffe, wheat for May delivery stood at £65.75 per tonne on Friday
from £67.30 a week earlier.
In Chicago, the price of wheat for May delivery gained to 325¢ per bushel
Friday from 310.25¢.
Maize for May delivery declined to 205.25¢ per bushel on Friday from 210.25¢.
Soyabeans for May delivery fell to 624¢ per bushel on Friday from 637.50¢.
May-dated soyabean meal - used in animal feed - dropped to $195.60 per tonne
on Friday from 197.30.
Cotton
Cotton prices progressed as keen demand continued.
"The market remains supported by decent demand but future prices may have a hard
time sustaining the rally given the amount of supply available," Prendergast
said.
New York's July contract increased to 57.20¢ per pound on Friday from
54.40¢ the previous week.
The Cotton Outlook Index of physical cotton stood at 58.55¢ on Thursday
from 56.55¢ a week earlier. - AFP
Bloomberg's Koh Chin Ling and Jason Gale reported on China's continuing insatiable
appetite for raw materials and commodities. "China, the world's biggest cotton
user, may boost imports of the fiber by 83 percent in the year starting Aug.
1 because of rising demand from textile mills and a smaller harvest, a U.S.
agricultural attache said. China may import 3.3 million metric tons of cotton
(15.2 million bales) in the next marketing year."
Currencies
The US dollar index was up some 1% from 83.50 to 84.44.
Most currencies were down against the dollar for the week.
The euro gave up it's gains of last week and was down 1.95 points or 1.49%
for the week to close at 1.2858 from 1.3053.
Talk of Chinese revaluation supported the Asian currencies. For the week,
the Indonesian rupiah and Japanese yen gained more than 1%. The Taiwan dollar,
South Korean won, Singapore dollar, and Australian dollar all gained about
0.7%.
Bonds
The treasury and bond markets sold off with a consequent rise in yields.
The 10-Year Treasury note yield was down 5 basis points for the week to 4.20%.
Five-year Treasury yields dipped 2 basis points, ending the week at 3.90%.
Two-year Treasury yields ended the week up 5 basis points to 3.65%.
Long-bond (30 year) yields dropped 6 basis points to 4.51%.
The spread between 2 and 30-year government yields sank to a multi-year low
of 86. The 2 year note yield rising and the 10 year note yield falling indicates
there are increasing worries about a future recession. Greenspan's "conundrum" is
that in an economy which is meant to be recovering capital should flow out
of the bond markets with a consequent rise in yields.
Besides the fundamental health of the US economy there is also concerns regarding
the likelihood of General Motor's debt grading being down graded to junk status
and the implication this will have on the bond and wider markets.
'Bond Market Braces
for GM's Cut to Junk'
Ellen Simon, business writer the Associated Press wrote how 'High-Yield Bond
Market's Troubles May Be Harbinger of Rough Days to Come for Economy'
Hard times for high-yield bonds may presage more rough days for stock markets
and the economy.
Investors typically demand higher returns on high-yield debt, commonly referred
to as junk bonds, to compensate for the risk that the issuers could go broke
and not pay them back. That's why bond rating agencies term them "below investment
grade" securities.
But in recent years default rates have been low and institutions and individual
investors in search of higher payouts have snapped up billions of dollars worth
of these bonds or mutual funds that specialize in them. Among the companies
whose debt trades as junk are Qwest Communications International Inc., Nextel
Communications Inc. and El Paso Corp.
Now investors are backing away from junk bonds as the economy shows signs
of slowing and the Federal Reserve keeps bumping up interest rates. Almost
$1.5 billion in high-yield bond offerings were postponed last week, some leveraged
buyout deals could be in trouble, and mutual fund investors are starting to
cash out of high-yield bond funds.
"Historically, the debt market, especially the high-yield market, has frequently
served as an early warning signal for broader weakness in the capital markets," said
Duncan Yin, a research analyst at CRT Capital Group, a Stamford, Conn.-based
broker-dealer specializing in distressed securities.
Many of the factors causing the junk bond market to cool are unique to it.
For instance, analysts are forecasting that General Motors Corp., which is
rated one notch above junk by the three largest bond ratings agencies, will
be downgraded to junk status sometime this summer, said Brian Arsenault, the
high-yield strategist for Morgan Stanley.
They expect Ford Motor Co. to stay investment grade until 2006, but after
that, its debt may be junk, too, Arsenault said.
The fear is that those downgrades will mean the junk-bond category will be
awash with new debt. The total value of junk securities is about $900 billion,
Arsenault said. GM's rated debt, which doesn't include the car loans its financing
arm makes to customers, total $200 billion, according to Standard & Poor's.
The volume of GM debt has investors worried that some institutions, including
insurance companies and state pension funds, would be forced to unload their
GM bonds because of rules requiring them to only hold investment-grade securities.
Stocks
The Stock Markets performance was mixed.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.3% for the week to
10,192.
The S&P 500 Index, of more significance than the DOW, was also up 0.4%.
The Nasdaq Composite was down 0.4% for the week. This after last
week's 1.26% drop and the week before's 4.56% drop.
The Transports were down marginally. This was unusual considering the oil price
collapse.
The more defensive Utilities were up 1%.
The Morgan Stanley Consumer index was was up fractionally.
The Morgan Stanley Cyclical index was down 1%.
The small cap Russell 2000 and S&P400 Mid-cap indices were down 1.7% and
unchanged respectively.
The NASDAQ100 and the Morgan Stanley High Tech index were both largely unchanged.
The Semiconductors were down 1%.
The Street.com Internet Index and NASDAQ Telecommunications indices were down
1% and down marginally respectively.
Biotechs are down 1%.
The Broker/Dealers were up 1.25% and the Banks were up 2%.
Corporate 'insiders', that is directors and senior management are selling
in record numbers. During this past March alone insiders sold 60 times more
company shares than they purchased (60:1). This is close to the most extreme
ratio ever. How extreme is this? Historically speaking, a 20:1 selling to buying
ratio is considered a bearish indicator; today's figure is 3x as great.
But as for what the crowd of investors is doing, AAII's survey shows that "67%
of the individual investors' portfolios remain invested in stocks." Another
recent survey shows that a near record 57.4% of U.S. households own equities.
Thus the investing actions of what is cynically known on Wall Street as the
'smart money' and the 'dumb money' is clearly flashing warning signals.
It may be prudent to reduce exposure to property and equities and increase
exposure to more defensive conservative asset classes such as cash deposits
and gold.
Commentary
The week was dominated by the less than expected US GDP growth numbers. Now
even the most sanguine bulls on the US economy are having to acknowledge that
the US economy is at the very least entering what they refer to as a 'soft
patch'. The administration of President George W. Bush and more starry eyed
economists and financial commentators have remained relentlessly optimistic
about the outlook for the US economy but are now being confronted by some economic
realities which will be harder to ignore.
This 'soft patch' is not likely to be helped by very high oil and commodity
prices which are now beginning to create inflation. Higher prices or goods
are not being matched by higher wages and this along with increasing interest
rates may soon impinge on the voracious US consumer who have been crucial in
propelling global economic growth in recent years.
Talk of the economy entering a 'slow patch' is now being accompanied by talk
of a global housing bubble. Housing starts fell by a very large 17.6% in March
and this may be a harbinger of things to come and there is increasing concerns
regarding property prices globally and whether the bubble is soon to burst.
Consumer confidence in the US declined for the third month in a row in April,
with expectations for the months ahead slipping to the lowest level in nearly
two years. US durable goods orders unexpectedly fell 2.8%: this was also the
biggest fall in two years.
Donald Trump told CNBC that he did not believe that property prices were in
a bubble but said that he was very worried by the rising price of oil and inflation
which is affecting both the construction industry and the consumer.
Warren Buffet answered Berkshire Hathaway Inc. shareholders questions on a
range of questions. On real estate Buffet said "A lot of the psychological
well being of the American public comes from how well they've done with their
house over the years.... Certainly at the high end of the real estate market
in some areas, you've seen extraordinary movement.... People go crazy in economics
periodically, in all kinds of ways. Residential housing has different behavioural
characteristics, simply because people live there. But when you get prices
increasing faster than the underlying costs, sometimes there can be pretty
serious consequences."
Buffet also warned regarding the huge trade and current account deficits and
the threat of a major terrorist incident and the need to be prepared for the
worst that can happen.
Buffet is the most astute and prudent investor of our time and it is important
to take note of his opinions. The rest of his thoughts on the challenges facing
the US economy can be found at The
Oracle Speaks - Warns of Property Bubble - CNN/Money.
Despite the most extreme and unprecedented monetary and fiscal stimulus in
the history of the world Americans are now deeper in debt than ever before
in history. Credit expanded by $10 trillion between 2000 and 2004 compared
to nominal GDP growth of only $1.9 trillion.
Federal Reserve Governor Dr. Donald Kohn warned that a housing bubble may
exist, that the US economy was in unfamiliar territory and that complacency
would be ill advised.
He focused on the potential risks stemming from a number of imbalances he
said lay under the "placid surface" of the economy, most notably the record
shortfall in the U.S. current account, the broadest measure of the nation's
foreign trade and one that shows Americans spending far more than they produce.
In addition, Kohn said, were the related imbalances of the sizable federal
budget deficit and low U.S. household saving rate, and the big run-up in home
prices, which he said raised questions over whether a house-price bubble might
exist. "The magnitude of these imbalances is increasingly moving into unfamiliar
territory," Kohn said.
"In all likelihood, adjustment toward reduced imbalances in the United States
and globally will be handled well by markets without, by themselves, disrupting
the good, overall performance of the U.S. economy," he said. "Still, complacency
would be ill-advised," Kohn cautioned, saying it was possible asset prices
would shift abruptly.
Opinions
"But caution does seem to be in order.
There can't be any certainty that property prices will continue their steep,
relentless rise, particularly since interest rates are going up, perhaps higher
than previously feared if oil starts to inject inflation into the economy.
And rising interest rates ought to give some pause for thought to anyone thinking
of borrowing big sums to buy assets that may not rise in price.
Big debts when asset prices are falling is bad arithmetic."
Stephen Evans, US
House Market Boom Set for Bust?, US Business Correspondent, BBC
Buffett: "A lot of the psychological well being of the American public comes
from how well they've done with their house over the years. If indeed there's
been a bubble, and it's pricked at some point, the net effect on Berkshire
might well be positive [because the company's financial strength would allow
it to buy real-estate-related businesses at bargain prices.
"Certainly at the high end of the real estate market in some areas, you've
seen extraordinary movement.... People go crazy in economics periodically,
in all kinds of ways. Residential housing has different behavioural characteristics,
simply because people live there. But when you get prices increasing faster
than the underlying costs, sometimes there can be pretty serious consequences."
Munger: "You have a real asset-price bubble in places like parts of California
and the suburbs of Washington, D.C."
Buffett: "I recently sold a house in Laguna for $3.5 million. It was on about
2,000 square feet of land, maybe a twentieth of an acre, and the house might
cost about $500,000 if you wanted to replace it. So the land sold for something
like $60 million an acre."
Munger: "I know someone who lives next door to what you would actually call
a fairly modest house that just sold for $17 million. There are some very extreme
housing price bubbles going on."
Warren Buffet, The
Oracle Speaks - Warns of Property Bubble - CNN/Money
"Interest rates are starting to increase and many homeowners are finding themselves
falling behind with their mortgage payments." This is reflected in the number
of people who can't make their mortgage payments, which, according to Foreclosure.com,
is up, as the number of "Foreclosure listings nationwide went up 50% from February
to march 2005." Numbers-wise, they say, "over one million Americans were late
on their mortgage payment last month and half went into foreclosure."
National Legal Debt Centre
"The great American housing bubble, like its obese counterparts in the United
Kingdom, Ireland, the Netherlands, Spain and Australia, is a classical zero-sum
game. Without generating an atom of new wealth, land inflation ruthlessly redistributes
wealth from asset-seekers to asset-holders, reinforcing divisions within as
well as between social classes."
Mike Davis, 'Riotous
Real Estate', Los Angeles Times
"In all my years in this business, never before have I seen a central bank
attempt to spin the debate as America's Federal Reserve has over the past six
or seven years. From the New Paradigm mantra of the late 1990s to today's new
theories of the current-account adjustment, the US central bank has led the
charge in attempting to rewrite conventional macroeconomics and in making an
effort to convince market participants of the wisdom of its revisionist theories.
The problem is that this recasting of macro is very self-serving. It is a concentrated
effort on the part of the Fed to exonerate itself from the Original Sin of
failing to address asset bubbles. The result is an ever-deepening moral hazard
dilemma that poses grave threats to financial markets.
I am not a believer in conspiracy theories. But the Fed's behavior since the
late 1990s is starting to change my mind."
Stephen Roach, 'Global:
Original Sin', Morgan Stanley
"In all likelihood, adjustment toward reduced imbalances in the United States
and globally will be handled well by markets without, by themselves, disrupting
the good, overall performance of the U.S. economy.... Still, complacency would
be ill-advised.... asset prices could move by large amounts unexpectedly."
Donald Kohn, 'Imbalances
in the U.S. Economy', Federal Reserve Board
"I teach Financial Management on a part-time basis in Dublin City University
and a central tenet of what I teach concerns the virtues of portfolio diversification.
I am a firm believer and have argued in numerous presentations on the topic
of Property v Equities that it is not a case of either/or, but a case of both.
I would be a big fan of holding gold as part of a diversified portfolio and
would feel more confident about it than any other asset class at the moment."
Jim Power, Chief Economist, Friends First Ireland
Opinions and Quotes can be found in articles in the News and Commentary sections
of www.gold.ie.
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