
Image courtesy of St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Neither a borrower nor a lender be. And yet, if you have to choose, it is
better to be a creditor. Why? America is about to discover the dangers of becoming
a debtor. The U.S. debt load has climbed to $44.5 trillion or roughly three
times the country's yearly GDP, exceeding levels last seen in the Great Depression
and that does not include the trillions of dollars of unfunded liabilities
from Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. The global economy in total is
only $51 trillion. Easy central bank policies led by the United States have
triggered a deluge of money that has washed over financial markets in recent
years. This massive injection of liquidity lowered interest rates and remade
America's corporate world as debt-inflated super buyouts, caused a boom that
has surpassed even the dot-com era. With record debt burdens and record debt
ratios, the United States has become overly dependent on outsiders to finance
its standard of living. America's hunger for dollars is quite simply self-destructive.
Despite America's dependency on overseas financing, the White House has slapped
tariffs on China for the first time since 1991, filing two cases against that
country over pirated movies, music and books. Ironically, America's fate may
be similar to the 1997 Asian Contagion Crash, when exchange rates fell, equities
collapsed and land prices plummeted, causing huge losses. Today, there are
parallels and warning signs like big trade deficits, big budget deficits and
rising debt burdens. The trigger for the crisis? Exchange rates fell due largely
to the sharp reversal of capital flows, as investors stampeded for the exits.
Today, the shoe is on the other foot. It is the US dollar that has become highly
vulnerable to capital outflows, hitting a 26-year low against the pound and
another record low against the euro. The dollar's days as a reserve currency
is over.
US Needs to Import Even More Savings
America's savings shortfall is the yang of chronic trade deficits, making
the country increasingly reliant on others. The United States must attract
more than $2 billion a day of capital inflows to finance its current account
deficit. In December, U.S. capital inflows collapsed to $14.3 billion, which
is far short of what's needed to fund the deficit. America's imports are more
than seven percent larger than exports, as it continues to consume far more
than it produces. Meantime, the world's largest debtor nation has a bigger
problem: The savings rate has dropped to the lowest level since the Great Depression.
So in order for America to continue to grow, it is left with no choice but
to import surplus savings from abroad. Without this, the dollar will fall further.
Debt on debt is not good.
The
United States' two biggest trade deficits are with China and Japan. In the
past few years, the reliance on Asian central banks' purchases of US debt has
been enormous, resulting in mammoth holdings of foreign exchange in Asia and
elsewhere. So this new round of protectionist pork-barrel politicking has Americans
believing that the problem is with China and the need to revalue the renminbi.
Wrong. This is not about an undervalued renminbi. This is about the fact that
Americans continue to spend more than they produce and have an insatiable appetite
for debt to finance their consumption. So it may well be that this old-fashioned
protectionism will cut the lifeline connecting the market and the United States.
And Then There Is China
China has displaced the US as Japan's largest trading partner. China is the
US' second largest trading partner after Canada and holds over $400 billion
of US debt. China's reliance on America has lessened as it rebalances its economy
to better accommodate the growth of its middle class, which has been fuelled
by the massive resettlement of the rural population to the cities. China's
per-capita income has doubled in less than 10 years. Today, China's middle
class is bigger than the population of the United States. Against this backdrop,
the U.S. administration is facing pressure from the Democrats, who have lodged
complaints against China three times in the past three months serving to weaken
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's new China policy. The last thing a country
with a record debt can afford is to hurt its bankers, particularly when it
has no savings.
Meantime, the recent selloff in global markets should not be ignored. We believe
the days of low volatility, cheap money and the massive glut of liquidity are
over. An increase in global interest rates has also caused a slowdown of the "carry
trade", whereby investors borrowed Japanese yen and invested the proceeds in
higher-yielding US assets. The recent uptick in interest rates has made this
carry trade less profitable, leading to an increased risk premium. At the same
time, inflation is back, driven by supply shortages, an emerging Asian superpower,
global liquidity and the slumping dollar. Further, the U.S. consumer price
index with food and energy calculated back-in, is running at an annualized
7.2 percent. Tellingly that's not good for the dollar, but good for gold.
Sub-Prime Crisis Gets Worse
The final body blow was the implosion of the sub-prime market in the United
States. Junk mortgages were repackaged through collateralized debt obligations
(CDOs) and then sold to investors. Sub-prime mortgages accounted for eight
percent of all outstanding mortgages and fully 23 percent of last year's volume.
According to the Mortgage Bankers Association, more than 2.1 million U.S. families
with home loans missed at least one payment last year. This year it will be
worse. About 14 percent of the $1.2 trillion in outstanding sub-prime mortgages
is now in default. Sub-prime loans were aimed at those with poor credit records,
and today many borrowers are finding they can no longer afford their payments,
thus making it even harder for those with tarnished credit to refinance. The
tightening of credit follows the uptick in rates and the accompanying glut
of houses on the market has triggered a fall in home prices. Home equity is
a key foundation of consumer spending, which makes up 70 percent of U.S. GDP.
With 70 percent of Americans owning their own homes, the absence of the home
equity "wealth effect" will lead to a further slowing of the U.S. economy.
Junk loans, The Bedrock of Fault-ridden Derivatives
The big problem is that Wall Street securitized these sub-prime mortgages
by "slicing and dicing" and repackaged the loans, which were then sold back
to investors such as hedge funds and private equity groups looking for better
returns. Of course, to boost the volume in fees, lending restrictions were
relaxed further and an abundance of capital chased this sector. As a result,
these junk loans became the fault-ridden bedrock of a synchronized global binge
of cheap loans, derivatives, and leveraged credit. Lenders to highly indebted
companies are making the same mistakes, of too high debt, too loose standards
and falling risk premiums that undermined the sub-prime debt market.
In a form of deja vu there was another time when there was another period
of declining property values, cycle of foreclosures, reduced consumption demand,
rising unemployment and more delinquencies.. That was in the Dirty Thirties
when balloon mortgages came due and householders could not refinance. Then
the banks were taught a lesson and mortgages became instead vanilla self-liquidating
forms of debt. Today, sub-prime bonds are the underlying layer of trillions
of obligations that were created by Wall Street. Mortgages are set to be renegotiated
again. Hence the debt market is set for a rude awakening. So the ripple effect
from the sub-prime crisis has now cast doubt on whether holding U.S. dollar
obligations is such a good thing, particularly as the US economy absorbs declines
in house and auto sales.
Furthermore, the sub-prime crisis threatens to spread to higher quality debt,
triggering a wave of defaults that could sink the U.S. economy and the greenback.
Central banks appear to be willing to accumulate euros to dollars and gold
to anything but dollars. It appears dollars are not such a good holding anymore.
Is a new reserve currency in the making?
A China-Centric World
And
what if there were a trade war? China has more than $1 trillion of foreign
reserves, Japan $909 billion. The United States has no savings and foreign
exchange reserves of only $41 billion, fewer than Indonesia's $46 billion.
With numbers like that, more and more of America's funding partners are getting
the message. According to the International Monetary Fund, U.S. dollar holdings
fell to 64.7 percent in the 2006 fourth quarter from 72.6 percent in mid-2001.
Amazingly the euro, launched in 1999, is increasingly a replacement for greenback
holdings, with its share at 25.8 percent. Is the euro the new reserve currency?
The world's biggest debtor nation simply cannot afford to launch a trade war
with the world's most important creditor. The gyrations in the currency markets
threaten to become a full-blown dollar crisis.
New Worries
So while the Shanghai stock market gyrations may have caused palpitations,
it also focused investors on the real problem and that is America's indebtedness
and its dependence upon precarious financial markets. Don't worry about the
Chinese because they have a savings rate of more than 30 percent, with savings
in excess of $2 trillion. Worry about America's consumption binge with too
little savings and too much debt. Worry about the dollar's diminished role
as a reserve money. Worry that there are more euros in circulation than dollars.
Worry that the international debt market has even more eurobonds than dollar
bonds. Worry that Wall Street's stock market capitalization has now been eclipsed
by Europe and China. Worry if you're not holding gold because gold is the very
hedge against the printing presses.
The Fight For The Next Reserve Currency
In recent years, hundred of billions of dollars have flooded into China's
financial system through trade and foreign investment. After all, China is
the world's fastest growing economy, causing a global financial shift of unprecedented
proportions. Beijing has plans to diversify its foreign exchange reserves because
they have too many dollars already, including now risky mortgage-backed securities.
However, there simply is not enough oil, euros or yen to satisfy Beijing's
appetite. So China is looking elsewhere because within four years its official
reserves are expected to top $2 trillion.
We expect the Chinese to acquire more producing assets instead of paper. China
will also create the world's largest investment company from some of those
reserves. With about $200 billion at hand, China will not only diversify its
holdings but use those holdings to strengthen its economy. Today, three Chinese
banks rank in the top 10 global banks by market value. Japan, too, is establishing
a special investment fund, following China and Singapore's lead. By investing
in assets to diversify and get better returns, China will leave US investments
and the dollar behind and help create the next new reserve currency.
China is an emerging super-power and beneficiary of globalization. In a less
US-centric world, Beijing is about to show its hand. China has become the biggest
consumer of copper, steel and iron ore, and is the second largest user of oil
and energy. China is also the world's largest creditor. By establishing the
largest investment fund in the world to make investments in everything from
euros to gold, China is about to use its financial might to finance its bold
economic blueprint.
We expect China to diversify further into other asset classes such as gold,
which is a prime beneficiary because the country holds only less than two percent
of its foreign reserves in the metal. We believe that China has just begun
to acquire hard assets due partly because its growth dictates the need for
oil, copper, wheat and zinc. And the world is also short of hard assets. In
our last report, Rich Country, Poor Country, we noted that the liquidity glut
caused by accommodative global monetary policies would flow over into hard
assets and other asset classes such as metals, where there has been underinvestment
and few discoveries - like gold. Gold is the ultimate reserve currency. Historically
gold has served as the world's only true currency, retaining its store of wealth
against paper and fiat currencies.
$1,000 Gold Is A Certainty
Gold is the ultimate safe haven against inflation and falling stock markets,
and it is a hedge against a weaker U.S. dollar. Indeed, gold is a good index
of currency fears. Given our expectation of continued favourable supply-demand
fundamentals, we expect gold to retest the January 1980 high at $850 an ounce
this year, with a new target at $1,000 an ounce. While $1000 may appear overly
optimistic, it is important to remember that gold rose nearly 3,000 percent
from 1971 to 1980 and is only up 166 percent from its low in 1999.
Gold-mining shares have not kept up with bullion due in part to the fundamental
reason that gold-producing companies by and large have not been able to replace
their production or even reserves. The senior gold players are stuck on a treadmill.
The market fears that gold companies are simply harvesting their mines and
thus have not accorded the group a growth multiple. In addition, costs have
risen from $200 an ounce to more than $300 an ounce. But that is still leaves
most companies able to make money. So what is the problem? The boom in exchange
traded funds (ETFs) is part of the problem because they represent competition.
There are now 600 tonnes - or $13.3 billion - of gold socked away in ETFs.
There is no doubt that their buying tightened the physical market, yet we do
not believe that ETFs are much competition.
Gold stocks' lagging performance will change because of the increase in the
price of gold. Gold companies, at long last, have been churning out cash and
many of them are trading at 20 times price/earnings versus the 30 or 40 multiples
of the past. As such, many companies have acquired others in the quest for
growth since it is still cheaper to buy ounces on Bay Street than explore for
gold in the ground. While ounces have grown, per-share growth has been lacking.
We believe higher gold prices will change that and the higher price level plus
leverage will attract investors.
While the seniors remain attractive from a pricing point of view, the lack
of growth makes the mid-tier group of companies such as Agnico-Eagle, Kinross and Meridian appealing
given their rising gold production profiles. At this time, we also like the
more junior precious metal producers since those companies possess the most
attractive risk/reward profiles. As a package, we like Continental, Etruscan, Excellon, St.
Andrew Goldfields, Philex, Unigold and McEwen's USgold.
Three Days, Three Mines in Mexico....
Mexico is one of the world's leading silver producers producing more than
100 million ounces annually. In three days, I visited three Mexican silver
companies located in three of the most productive metal districts.
Previously recommended, Excellon Resources (EXN) was first visited. The company
has a solid management team, strong balance sheet and an experienced Board
of Directors. Excellon owns 100 percent of the Platosa silver deposit located
in northeastern Durango state. Excellon has a huge unexplored land package
of 129 square km (36,000 acres) that lies in the middle of the beltway of Mexico's
carbon replacement deposit (crd) system which hosts Mexico's largest silver
mine, Santa Eulalia. Excellon has the highest grade in Mexico and is profitable.
Excellon has more than $13 million in cash and the company will beginning piling
up the cash in the next quarter and will be most importantly, debt free. This
year, Excellon will produce 2.5 million ounces up from 1.7 million ounces but
next year with normalized shipments, Excellon should producer 3.3 million ounces.
Excellon has begun permitting and preparation for building a 300 tonne per
day mill which will allow it to double its production in the fourth quarter
of 2008. Of more excitement is that Excellon has boosted its exploration budget
following an airborne survey which has highlighted at least two "mag highs".
The company intends to drill these "mag highs" this summer.
Mag Silver Corp (MAG) was visited and its crown jewel is the Juanicipio deposit
where Mag is 54 percent owner with joint venture partner Penoles, Mexico's
largest mining company. MAG is surrounded by Penoles and appears to be the "meat
in the sandwich". Penoles operates a 7500 tonne per day facility nearby, and
we saw three Penole rigs on the border of Juanicipio along strike. Mag has
over eight projects in Mexico but this Jaunacipo project is being fast tracked
with $3.3 million spent so far by the joint venture. The Mag/Penoles joint
venture has four rigs turning and is conducting a 28,000 metre program this
year. Mag recently completed an airborne survey and appears ready to fast track
development. While there is no doubt of the need to infill results, our visit
suggests that based on the land holding, Mag's share could easily exceed 250
million ounces of silver. Mag is well on the way to drill the 30 odd holes
to support this and we are most impressed with the consistency of the the grades
and results to date. While still early we believe that the potential success
and the fact that is sandwiched between Penoles' land, a takeover by that Penoles
is possible. With only 42 million shares outstanding, the shares are an attractive
buy here.
Genco (GGC)is a small silver producer, having acquired La Guitarra in 2003
from Luismin. Genco's mine is in the Temascaltepec Mining District and enjoys
a huge land spread about 15 km long and 4 km wide. The mine was being harvested
and Genco management has upgraded the facility, improved buying methods and
begun overdue development in order to feed a hungry mill. Genco produces a
silver concentrate that is sent to the Luismin mill. The Company has added
Greg Liller who came from Gammon Lake. Genco has spent more than $5.6 million
on development work to replace a depleted reserve base. The company is contemplating
a heap leach operation next year and an extensive underground development program.
However, needed is additional capital in order to support its ambitious plans.
Genco produced a modest 370,000 ounces last year and should produce about a
million ounces this year. Nonetheless, we believe that the shares are an attractive
buy below $4 a share.
Companies
Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd.
Agnico-Eagle successfully acquired Cumberland Resources which owns the Meadowbank
project located in Nunavut. The project is already under construction and
has proven and probable reserves of 21.3 million tonnes, grading 4.2 grams
per tonne of gold or 2.9 million ounces. Production is intended in early
2010 at an average rate of 400,000 ounces in the first four years. The acquisition
continues Agnico-Eagle's growth trend and if the stars remain aligned, Agnico-Eagle
has enough projects underway to produce 1.2 million ounces by 2010 with five
new gold mines in production. And because of its healthy balance sheet and
a cash hoard of almost $480 million, the company does not have to issue equity
for any of the projects or in fact for the acquisition of Cumberland shares.
The Cumberland acquisition is just another accretive acquisition and complements
Agnico-Eagle operations. We continue to recommend Agnico-Eagle shares for
its excellent growth prospects.
Eldorado Gold Corp
Eldorado had disappointing results because of delays in the ramp-up of production
at Kisladag in Turkey and its newly opened Tanjianshan mine in China. Eldorado
therefore cutback its production estimate to 310,000 ounces this year down
20,000 ounces from 330,000 ounces. But that is history and we expect the
addition of reserves from Efemcukuru project, also in Turkey, in the current
quarter will add to Eldorado's reserve base. We continue to recommend Eldorado
for its healthy production growth profile and the likelihood that one of
these days Eldorado will be a tasty tidbit for one of the majors. Buy.
Goldcorp Inc.
Goldcorp reported $0.11 per share for the first quarter but below the consensus
due to a 100,000 ounce shortfall of production. Goldcorp has morphed into
one of the largest mining companies. Goldcorp should produce 2.5 million
ounces this year. However, we believe that Goldcorp's earlier acquisitions
are maturing and the chickens may be coming home to roost. Kevin MacArthur
has set about pruning some of Goldcorp's underperforming assets and attempted
to lower the risk profile at huge low-grade bulk tonnage Penasquito mine
by selling future production to Silver Wheaton.
But there is still much more work to do. For example, there is still a need
for the consolidation of their varied interests that they share with Kinross
Gold (Musselwhite, Porcupine, and La Coipa). In addition Red Lake, the big
cash cow may be slipping in contribution over the next couple of years despite
spending over $26 million on exploration (the Red Lake shaft won't be completed
until late this year). Goldcorp shares have been underperforming because the
company has likely reached a size that management and growth in ounces are
in conflict. Execution risk is going to be particularly important and thus
Goldcorp has more downside than upside at this time. Consequently, we recommend
that profits be taken here.
High River Gold Mines Ltd.
High River reported its result for the year, of $0.13 per share versus a loss
a year earlier. Gold production was almost 130,000 ounces at a cash cost
of $133 an ounce. The results were slightly disappointing but reflected the
slower ramp-up of High River's two new gold mines in Russia and West Africa.
However, High River is expected to complete the two new mines in Russia and
Africa in the next quarter or so and so we believe that the problems are
behind High River. More important, recent results at Bissa (exciting gold
project in Burkina Faso) and expected good news from Prognoz, a high grade
silver project in Russia will further boost shares. Looking ahead, we can
expect High River to split up its Russian assets which consists mainly of
two producing underground gold mines operated by its Russian subsidiary (Zun-Holba
and Irokinda) and the huge and high-grade Prognoz deposit. The 100 percent
owned Berezitovy project in Russia will be completed in the next quarter
and produce 100,000 ounces. High River's West African assets could be spun
out to shareholders.
Consequently, we recommend High River shares for its long awaited increase
in production this year to almost 240,000 ounces of gold and a projected cash
cost of $324 per ounces. The 100 percent Bissa project with 1,000 square kilometers
of exploration permits and 12 major target areas in Burkina Faso could contain
more than 2 million ounces of gold. Meanwhile, the Prognoz silver project may
prove to be one of the largest and highest grade developed silver projects
in the world. We believe High River is undervalued and unrecognized. Buy.
IAMGOLD Corp.
IAMGOLD results were also disappointing due in part to poor performances at
Sadiola and Rosebel. With production of 1 million ounces from eight different
mines, IAMGOLD needs to consolidate and prune its assets from the acquisition
of Cambior. We did not like the deal, because we believe that the action
was taken to suit the major shareholders of IAMGOLD and Cambior and not its
shareholders. Cambior does not add much to IAMGOLD's growth profile and Doyon
is a depleted asset. While IAMGOLD will produce 1 million ounces with the
acquisition of Cambior, the company has also increased its share dilution.
As such, we prefer Kinross to IAMGOLD.
Kinross Gold Corp.
Kinross has been on a tear due to the benefits of the Bema acquisition. Kinross
should produce 1.8 million ounces this year up from 1.5 million ounces last
year due to the contribution of Bema's operating mines. Meanwhile the Paracutu
expansion in Brazil is on track and will be an important contributor. The
new Buckhorn acquisition also will make a contribution this year. Bema's
high grade Kupol project in Magadan will be a significant contributor. Execution
will remain a problem but 40 percent of the work has been completed at Kupol.
Overall, we like the upgrading in assets at Kinross and with 1.8 million
ounces of unhedged production, the company is a tasty tidbit and a remedy
for the those heavily hedged producers. Buy.
Newmont Mining Corp
Newmont shares have been in funk, because of the problem plaguing all the big
cap mining companies- the lack of growth. Newmont is on a treadmill to replace
its 5.87 million ounces of annual production. Newmont's people have been
quoted as saying they hope, "to add 10 million ounces of gold a year just
to replenish its depleting reserves". However, that task is overly ambitious
given the fact the company only spent $175 million last year on exploration.
In addition, mining costs are rising and production declines at the Yanacocha
mine in Peru hurt results in the quarter as did a slow Phoenix start-up and
power shortages in Ghana Newmont must generate growth on a per share basis.
Consequently, we expect that company to be a predator in coming quarters.
How to make money? Look for Newmont's prey.

Click to open larger image in new window.
Analyst Disclosure
| Company Name |
Trading Symbol |
*Exchange |
Disclosure code |
| Barrick Gold |
ABX |
T |
1 |
| Kinross |
K |
T |
1 |
| Continental Minerals |
KMK |
V |
1,5 |
| Crystallex |
KRY |
T |
1 |
| Excellon |
EXN |
V |
1 |
| High River Gold |
HRG |
T |
1,5 |
| Philex |
PGI |
V |
1 |
| St. Andrew Goldfields |
SAS |
T |
1,5 |
| Unigold |
UGD |
V |
1 |
Disclosure Key: 1=The Analyst, Associate or member of
their household owns the securities of the subject issuer. 2=Maison Placements
Canada Inc. and/or affiliated companies beneficially own more than 1% of any
class of common equity of the issuers. 3=<Employee name> who is an officer
or director of Maison Placements Canada Inc. or it's affiliated companies serves
as a director or advisory Board Member of the issuer. 4=In the previous 12
months a Maison Analyst received compensation from the subject company. 5=Maison
Placements Canada Inc. has managed co-managed or participated in an offering
of securities by the issuer in the past 12 months. 6=Maison Placements Canada
Inc. has received compensation for investment banking and related services
from the issuer in the past 12 months. 7=Maison is making a market in an equity
or equity related security of the subject issuer. 8=The analyst has recently
paid a visit to review the material operations of the issuer. 9=The analyst
has received payment or reimbursement from the issuer regarding a recent visit.
T-Toronto; V-TSX Venture; NQ-NASDAQ; NY-New York Stock Exchange