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A Bad Summer But
As you read
this no doubt you are wondering about gold, silver, energy & the
commodities world in general. Prices have fallen sharply in this area. What is
happening and why? First, the most important point
This was a
bad correction but the important point is that it was a correction. A
correction is a pause or temporary pull back in an ongoing bull market. Gold,
Silver, Energy and other commodities are in a historic bull market. In the
coming months and years we will witness the most powerful commodities &
precious metals bull market in history.
This being
an election year, the US government, the Federal reserve, foreign central banks
and some key brokerage firms have intervened in the financial markets to
prevent (actually DELAY) some blow ups in the marketplace. Among the moves have
been to temporarily undermine the ongoing bull market in gold, silver and
commodities prices in general. Gold`s price was pushed down as central banks
continued to sell off large holdings of gold. In silver, massive shorting of
silver (see article on blatant manipulation) caused an illogical drop in the
price of silver.
What should
people do? Either wait it out or add to your positions. As the world`s growing
population continues to use up more resources (demand growing) and we have
difficulty to meet this demand (shrinking supply) then well-positioned people
will become much wealthier. The coming months and years will bear this out.
Regards,
Paul Mladjenovic
September 15, 2006
Grandich Letter Special Alert: A Realist`s View
By Peter Grandich
September 12 , 2006
www.grandich.com
I admire
Peter Grandich`s work and I am happy to reprint his 9/12/06 essay with
permission from the author. I am very close to confirming his participation at
the Financial Vortex on Dec. 2.
Editor`s
Note Starting with this issue, the themes of the "Blue Chip & Income
Report" and the "North of The Border" newsletters will be incorporated into The
Grandich Letter.
While I
remain an avid follower of the Canadian markets, the original reason for
publishing NOTB was the belief that it would fill a niche for American
investors who want to know more about their neighbors to the North.
Unfortunately, most Americans seemingly care only about Canadian hockey and
cold fronts. The vast majority of NOTB readers have been Canadians who appear
to want to see what an American is saying about their markets. I will honor
that desire by continuing to comment on the Canadian economy and markets from
time to time in the Grandich Letter.
"Reality is
the leading cause of stress amongst those in touch with it." - Jane Wagner
While I`m
now in my 23rd year in the financial arena, I have never seen such a
discrepancy between what I perceive the future holds versus how the majority of
Americans are living their lives and are seemingly unprepared for it. I don`t
consider myself a pessimist but a realist. I believe America as we knew it just
a couple of decades ago, has ceased to existonly it`s politically incorrect to
even suggest that. Cultural relativism and secularism is becoming the norm
while the very fabric that held this country together for the first 200 years
is being ripped apart. At the same time, our country`s financial health is
rapidly deteriorating and little if anything is being done to prevent a
catastrophe that will make the Great Depression look like a walk in the park.
Don`t for
one minute assume this is merely a stance due to my work within the mining and
metals industry. I am in no means a "gold bug." I`ve been bearish and avoided
gold during my career. However, it has been a most appropriate investment
vehicle in recent times and nothing appears on the horizon to change that. My
"dark" outlook comes more from work with Americans as a financial counselor who
specializes in an alternative to traditional financial planning (which is a
process destined to fail and why so many Americans` financial futures are in
jeopardy). My work specializes in a family`s "cash flow" and the recent "flow"
has been to "rob Peter to pay Paul" but Peter is tapped out. Much of my work is
within the county in which I reside-Monmouth County. Money Magazine has ranked
it among the top 20 wealthiest in the nation. From what I`ve seen in the last
year or so, that so-called wealth has been built on a house of cards whose
foundation is debt, debt and more debt. Throw in living way beyond their means,
and you have a recipe for economic hardship unlike anything this generation has
seen or could imagine.
The fact is
that just about everyone I find who has used their house as an ATM, has many
possessions but owns outright very few of them. These people, who see the
cup as half full despite drowning in a sea of red, find my analogy of the
future to be either foolhardy or scar-mongering. This makes me even more
confident of my outlook.
Debts,
Deficits and You
The social,
economic and political upheaval facing America will be unprecedented in
American history. We`ve become the world`s biggest debt junkie and foreigners
are our Pushers. Terrorism and energy crises will pale in comparison to the
biggest crisis America has ever faced the aging of America. Moreover, come
this November, new all-time lows in political mud slinging will be everyday
occurrences as the Democrats and Republicans make the Hatfields and McCoys look
like a love fest.
"A man
in debt is so far a slave." - Ralph Waldo Emerson
Whether you
believe the Holy Bible is the word of God or just another book, it`s full of
advice on money and possessions (theologians say it`s the second most spoken
about topic in the entire Bible). Throughout the new and old testaments, debt
is spoken about often, yet nowhere can you find even a sentence that encourages
one to become a debtor. The inspiring voice for the Bible must have seen America
at the beginning of the 21st century. By believing Madison Avenue`s marketing
extraordinaire that more money and possessions equals more happiness, Americans
have been like hamsters on a wheel in a futile attempt to keep up with the
Joneses. The seductiveness of borrowing is at an all-time high:
Credit-card
debt alone spiked from about $250 billion in 1992 to $804 billion in 2005.
To
appreciate how much homes became "ATM machines" for Americans, one has to only
recognize that Americans borrowed just $11 billion in home equity in 1995, but
by 2005 borrowing had soared to $243 billion.
U.S. spending has reached 107 percent of
GDP, requiring an $800 billion annual infusion of foreign money and even higher
levels of debt to prevent a slowdown. We can`t stabilize both growth and debt
levels at the same time. One of them has to give- I believe it will be growth.
Not since
the Great Depression 70 years ago have Americans saved so little. In fact, we
now have a negative savings rate. In Debt We Trust will soon replace In
God We Trust.
Uncle
Sam: Hey Buddy, Can You Spare A Dime?
This past
July, an extraordinary paper was published that said a ballooning U.S. budget
deficit and a pensions and welfare time bomb could send the U.S. into insolvency. The
author of that paper said by some measures, the U.S. is already bankrupt. What
makes this paper so extraordinary is the fact it was published by one of the
key members of the country`s central bank- the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
The author was Professor Laurence Kotlikoff.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/publications/review/06/07/JulAug2006Review.pdf
In the
paper, Professor Kotlikoff said, "To Paraphrase the Oxford English Dictionary,
is the United States at the end of its resources, exhausted, stripped bare,
destitute, bereft, wanting in property, or wrecked in consequence of failure to
pay its creditors?" According to his central analysis, "the US government is,
indeed, bankrupt, insofar as it will be unable to pay its creditors, who,
in this context, are current and future generations to whom it has explicitly
or implicitly promised future net payments of various kinds."
The
professor noted, "The proper way to consider a country`s solvency is to examine
the lifetime fiscal burdens facing current and future generations. If these
burdens exceed the resources of those generations, get close to doing so, or
simply get so high as to preclude their full collection, the country`s policy
will be unsustainable and can constitute or lead to national bankruptcy."
So is the
United States broke? No, but it`s already well down the road to insolvency.
Thankfully,
the federal government keeps two sets of books. The one you hear about promotes
a better bottom line a $318 billion deficit in 2005. The set the government
doesn`t talk about is the audited financial statement produced by the
government`s accountants following standard accounting rules. It showed a $760
billion deficit for 2005. And, if Social Security and Medicare were
included, as the board that sets accounting rules is considering, the federal
deficit would have been $3.5 trillion (giving new meaning to cooking the
books).
Does the
U.S. Congress play by its own rules? When it comes to accounting, they have
written their own rules (which would be illegal for a corporation to use
because they ignore important costs such as growing expenses of retirement
benefits for civil servants and military personnel). According to a USA TODAY
analysis, the audited financial statement, prepared by the Treasury Department,
revealed a federal government in far worse financial shape than official budget
reports indicated. The "official deficit was just $729 billion but the analysis found the
government ran a deficit of $2.9 trillion since 1997. Congress and the
President get away with this because they don`t count the growing burden of
future pensions and medical care for federal retirees and military personnel.
To appreciate how massive these obligations alone are, if they were accounted
for back in the late 1990s, the then budget surpluses would have actually been
deficits.
If standard
accounting rules had been applied, the government would have reported nearly
$40 trillion in losses since 1997 due to the deterioration of Social Security
and Medicare. You see in the "real" world, generally accepted accounting
principles require reporting financial burdens when they are incurred, not when
they come due. Let me give you an example. XYZ Corporation decides to give a
new drug benefit to its retirees. The company would be required to count the
future cost of the program, in today`s dollars, as a business expense. If the
benefit costs $ 1 billion in today`s dollars and retirees were expected to pay
$200 million of the cost, XYZ would be required to report a reduction in net
income of $800 million.
Social
Security, Pensions, Retirement and You

I`ve written
often about the coming aging crisis so I won`t spend any real time on it in
this issue. However, in a related matter, I can never speak enough about the
impact the baby boomer generation reaching retirement age is going to have on
us to the downside. Again, I draw your attention back to my other business
where I work with families in an alternative to traditional financial planning.
It`s truly amazing to meet these folks in their 5,000 square foot homes (after
I passed two leased Lexus and/or Mercedes in the garage), discover they have
incomes anywhere from $100,000 to $500,000 and have little or no retirement
funds. But it should come as no shock as this Social Security study shows the
extent to how little Americans have saved.
The cottage
industry built around financial institutions is very evident on television
networks like CNBC-TV. You won`t have to wait long before you see a commercial
showing some older person/couple living the good life thanks to ABC Company
helping them.
To the
right is one of my favorite slides in a presentation I make called
"Investing For Excellence" in my financial counseling business. To start, who
wants to retire "poor"? In just one picture frame, the magazine clearly
suggests an older couple enjoying their "retirement." Much of the financial
services industry markets in the same fashion (if not more aggressively). Why
then, are study after study showing most Americans have not saved enough to
retire "comfortably?" The Employee Benefit Research Institute`s (based in
Washington D.C.) annual retirement confidence survey this year found that
about 68 percent of workers are confident about having adequate funds for a
comfortable retirement, yet half of all workers said they`ve saved less than
$25,000 toward retirement. Even among workers 55 and older. Almost half have
saved less than $25,000.
What I find
most disturbing about America`s poor savings performance is it comes at a time
when the nation`s employers are eliminating "defined benefit plans" better
known as pensions and are eliminating retiree health care coverage or asking
retirees to contribute more for it.
A study by
the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College found that many Americans
are doing far too little to prepare financially for retirement and are unaware
of how their lives might change as a result. Ms. Alicia Munnell, the
center`s director and one of the author`s of the research said, "Retirement is
going to get tougher for people over time, and people don`t know it. Look at
these numbers: they tell you that there`s trouble ahead."

FED
Chairman Greenspan spent much of his last few months in office speaking out
about the entitlement nightmare he envisioned if steps weren`t taken ASAP.
Knowing his need to double-talk was behind him, he made numerous dire comments
about the coming aging crisis, social security and the financial health of
Americans. I believe it was no coincidence that he was doing so while Social
Security and Medicare trustees were reporting further deterioration in the
financial condition of the government`s two biggest benefit programs. These
trustees now say the Social Security trust fund will be depleted by 2040 and
that the Medicare hospital insurance trust fund will be depleted by 2018. The
trustees, who include the head of the Social Security Administration and three
members of the cabinet, said long-term growth rates for both programs were not
"sustainable under current financial arrangements." Former Treasury Secretary
John Snow, chairman of the trustees group, said without action "the coming
demographic bulge will drive federal spending to unprecedented levels"
(thanks to 78 million baby boomers approaching retirement).
I
unfortunately half laugh, half cry, when I hear politicians talk about
"lowering" taxes. How anyone can speak of an era of "lower taxes" knowing what
America faces on the entitlement issue alone, is either stupid, ignorant or a
liar (okay, I know I just gave the job description for a congressman). The math
is simple: There`s an estimated $80 trillion in unfunded future entitlement
liabilities, which is six times larger than the U.S. economy and 16 times the
federal debt held by the public. It`s been estimated that future workers are
going to have to pay tax rates from 55% to 80% over their lifetimes to fund
these promises. Say hello to European socialism. Those who say the problem is
not severe are banking on a much stronger U.S. economy over the next couple of
decades and therefore future payments will come from a bigger pie.
Warning
Goldilocks Economy believers are urged to stop reading now!

Okay, I
assume if you`re still with me, you are like me and watch much of CNBC-TV with
the sound off. My friend, you don`t have to be an economist to know that the
"promised" benefits are scheduled to rise at the rate of real wages increases.
This means in the end, the only real answer to the entitlement nightmare is
raising taxes, extending the age before one can receive benefits, or lowering
and/or eliminating the benefits. Impossible you say? What do you think Congress
will choose: to renege (default) on a T-Bond and effectively file "bankruptcy"
or not pay an entitlement benefit, which is not a contractual government
obligation (look up Flemming v. Nestor, a 1960 Supreme Court ruling
that said there is no legal right to Social Security)?
I believe
(and advise in my counseling) that one of the key reasons the government has
been allowing so many new ways for people to save for retirement is the
knowledge that Social Security will one day cease to exist (or be so maligned
that future retirees will surely never see a dime). Look for more bad news on
our pension system as the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation PBGC, is the
Savings and Loans crisis of the 21st century.
Parents
tell little children fairytales like Goldilocks and the three bears. The "Don`t
Worry, Be Happy" crowd on Wall Street tells investors fairytales like
"Goldilocks` economies" and the ever elusive "soft landing" (I would sooner
believe the Vancouver Canucks winning the Stanley Cup-LOL). I wish the next
time one of the many "soft-landing" preachers appear on CNBC-TV, one of those
"softie" anchor personnel would actually ask when in the last 30 years did we
ever have a soft-landing? The answer is that since the mid-1970s, almost every
time the Fed had pushed rates higher, it has created a recession, a bear market
or both. The notable exception came in 1994 and 1995, when the Fed raised rates
without causing either, but bonds blew up and the Mexico Peso tanked. I have a
recommendation if you`re betting the soft landing theory actually works this time:
make sure your life insurance is fully paid and remove all sharp objects from
your reach.
"But all
bubbles have a way of bursting or being deflated in the end." - Barry Gibb
The Bee
Gees` Barry Gibb wasn`t talking about market bubbles, but his commentary was
indeed most appropriate for the 21st century real estate market. And the Bee
Gees song, "Jive Talkin`", certainly could describe those who claimed there was
no bubble.
It`s been
my contention that Americans have been living way beyond their means by robbing
Peter to pay Paul. They have managed to prolong the party (but the hangover
will now be even greater and longer) by tapping the last ATM available to them-
the equity in their homes. And just like the stories I heard in the late 1990s
from then "market players" on how great the market was, I, like others, was
hearing how real estate was the "can`t miss" investment for the new millennium
(and of course Wall Street was there to lead them to the "promised land").
And just like the scores of people who "banked" on the Internet-led stock market
bubble for their road to riches, sheep-like, overnight real estate mavens are
now well on their way to being sheared. Home sales are plunging, inventories
are bulging and the last missing ingredient to the total bust, falling prices,
is knocking at the door (that`s not Avon calling).
Remembering
that if they tossed a real estate agent off the top of the empire State
Building, the only thing you would hear them say on the way down is, "so far so
good", the next few years may prove its "not always a good time to buy real
estate." Housing starts are already down 20% from their January 2006 peak. The
National Association of Home Builders recently reported that traffic of
prospective buyers had tumbled to its lowest level since 1991 (a recession
year).
The cup is
always half-full at the home of the "Don`t Worry, Be Happy" crowd. And at the
height of the real estate bubble, they were out in full force (CNBC-TV is one
of the favorite "stumping" grounds). The "come on in, the water`s fine" boys
made many claims that are now being ripped apart in a dramatic housing slide:
- The
Hype Real estate was a safer and better bet than stocks. The huge price
gains were not only going to hold, but additional appreciation rates
better than money markets would continue.
-
Reality Prices actually have begun to
fall where housing is most vulnerable, in the West and Northeast. Not
earth-shattering yet, but realize that prices fell 2.1 percent in the
Northeast from July of 2005 while at the same time rose around 3 percent
nationwide.
- The
Hype CNBC-TV`s eternal optimistic economist has misfired on many fronts
but one I`ve heard him harp on many times is going to bite him where the
sun don`t shine. He states that so long as the jobs market is strong (and
that`s highly questionable at this time), housing prices can`t fall (the
theory is people doing well will want to buy and buy homes).
- Reality This General in the
always-positive army, fails to take into account how overextended the
average American is. Most I see are barely able to make it each month, let
alone now step up to bigger homes, cars, etc. And, the large increase in
inventories will bring a halt to the consistently rising prices,
effectively pulling the food chain down with it.
- The
Hype House values can only continue to rise in a low interest rate
environment, or at worse, keep prices constant.
- Reality The bubble grew because real
interest rates fell sharply starting in 2001. After reaching historic
lows, interest rates are all but certain to at least not go significantly
lower than they were in 2005. This won`t allow most to borrow more at what
they see as the same (or even lower) monthly payment, which allowed them
to step up the food chain.
- The
Hype Home builders are much smarter than they were in past housing
slumps. They won`t build lots of unsold "spec" homes.
-
Reality Just look at the actual
operating results of some of the best known builders lately. Robert Toll,
CEO of luxury home builder Toll Brothers, said recently that in his 40
years as a home builder, he has never seen a slump unfold like the current one.
Can you spell U-G-L-Y?
In the
August 28, 2006 edition of U.S. News & World Report,
an article ran entitled, "Housing Slump Threatens Jobs." It began by noting how
many Floridians had been "hoping to cash in on the real estate gold rush but
are now facing the cold reality of working in one of the cyclical businesses"
Home sales fell by one-third in Florida last quarter.

I, along
with other "bubble-busters," have repeatedly warned how the housing industry
had been the biggest single engine for job growth in the U.S., accounting for
one-third of all new jobs added to the economy since the boom began several
years ago. Add to that the fact that Americans withdrew over $600 billion in
equity from their homes in 2005 alone (according to a Fed study) and the
inability to see price growth and/or significant interest rate declines any
time soon, and you can be assured that this stimulus to the economy will be
missed. It will likely only add to more blood spilling in housing going
forward (and let`s not forget the Bush tax cuts, which added to the consumption
mania.)
Just as we
heard countless tens of thousands complain how they were caught up in the stock
market bubble of the late 1990s, so shall we hear the anger from many Americans
who took the bait of exotic mortgages (that gave new meaning to "creative
financing") in order to get into a new home and/or speculate in housing. One of
the most riskiest and complicated home loan product ever created is the option
adjustable rate mortgage (ARM). The "devilish" attraction of low minimum
payments became among the single biggest lures the mortgage industry used to
bring in the very people who could least afford the "downside" and allowed the
bubble to get even bigger. Countless media reports hit the wires almost daily
on how these "last to the food chain line" folks are now seeing their payment
schedules ratcheted up substantially. With home prices leveling off, borrowers
can`t count on rising equity to bail them out. They`re also "surprised" to find
out they can`t refinance again without steep penalties.
What`s
really going to piss these folks off is when they learn their broker was paid
more to sell option ARMs than other mortgages; that their lender is allowed to
claim the full monthly payment as revenue on its books even when borrowers
choose to pay much less; that the loan`s interest rates might not have been set
by a bank but rather a hedgefund; and that they will soon (if not already) face
either making higher payments or leaving their home.
Another
fact that will come out in time and be part of the "blame game" is according to
the National Associated of Mortgage Brokers, 80% of all mortgage originations
are now being dome by unregulated mortgage brokers (the pennystock brokers of
the 21st century?).
Other
"hindsight" stories sure to come will be:
Fixed-rated
Interest Only Loans Here, too, a relatively low monthly payment in the early
years is the attraction. While the borrower gets to enjoy their "castle" (and
you would be surprised to find how little furniture is in the castle), they
don`t build up any equity other than potential price appreciation. They can
also be hit with sharply higher monthly payments once the interest-only period
ends and the borrower is then obliged to repay the balance of the mortgage over
the rest of the loan`s term. They will also discover the savings wasn`t that
great since their loan typically had a higher interest rate than a 30-year
fixed rate mortgage.
Piggyback
loans - In recent years, many cash-strapped buyers opted for piggyback loans
a package of mortgages that includes a first lien at 80% of the property`s
selling price and a second lien for some portion of the remaining 20%,
depending on how much money they could put in the deal. In the old days, 20%
down was virtually mandatory and kept people who couldn`t afford the risk of
lower home prices and/or higher interest rates out of the housing market, and
that was a good thing. We all know where pigs eventually end up?
Inflated
Appraisals Critics inside and outside the appraisal business have been
warning that appraisals have been unrealistically high. You see, the loan
officer and mortgage broker often choose the appraiser. If a home is appraised
at less than the buyer offered, the deal is likely to fall through. Inflated
prices meant little during a rising housing market but now some sellers are
getting hit with a reality blast. This leads to having to lower the asking
price. Some, who were about to lock in new loan terms, are finding they have
less equity then they assumed, thanks in part to the original inflated
appraisal. You can even see lenders and mortgage investors taking a hit if the
collateral backing the loan is worth less than expected.
Things are
going to have to get a lot worse, for a long time, before any light can be seen
at the end of the real estate tunnel (any light now being touted is a freight
train heading right at you).
Real
estate special note Real estate as an asset class is now larger than the US
equity market and approaching the scale of outstanding corporate bonds. Recognizing
institutional clients such as builders and mortgage investors need to manage
their exposure to real estate, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) has begun
trading futures and options on an index tied to changes in residential real
estate prices. It`s called the S&P CME Housing Futures and Options. Should
you hedge your house against it? Probably not. But if you`re heavily invested
in real estate, you may want to explore this further.
IRAN / IRAQ: The Last Letters Are
Different, But Both Spell Major TROUBLE
One could
write hundreds of pages describing the conflicts in the Middle East and still
not come close to fully describing it. I won`t fool you or myself into thinking
I`m an expert on the matter (there are enough highly paid think tanks in Washington for
this). But I don`t think one needs to be a rocket scientist to figure out
how America stands with regard to these conflicts. A Harris/Financial Times
poll recently taken showed that Europeans see the US as a greater threat to
global stability than either Iran or China. Five thousand people in the UK, France, Germany,
Italy and Spain took part in the poll. European nations, once considered America`s strongest
allies, are no longer a big fan of Uncle Sam. In fact, when it once
only took two hands to count all the countries in the world who disliked
Americans, you can now basically count Uncle Sam`s real friends on those same
two hands.
American
Middle East policy, touted by the Bush Administration as on the threshold of
democracy less than two years ago, is unraveling as we speak:
Dubbed in
Washington the "Cedar Revolution," the protests following the assassination of
former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri, were hailed by the Bush
administration as a blow to radicalism and a vindication of America`s push for
freedom. Unfortunately, I have no doubt that America is more unpopular to the
people of Lebanon today, than it has been in a long time, thanks to the recent
conflict.
Iraq has gone from a major break-through
for democracy to teetering on secular civil war.
The death
of the PLO`s Yassir Arafat and the election of more moderate Mahmoud Abbas was
hailed as a big first step by the Bush crowd towards lasting peace. Instead,
Abbas is an emperor with no clothes while the radical Palestinian group Hamas
is now the real power.
The "Kefaya"
movement in Eqypt, which was yet another "sign" of democracy unfolding in the
Middle East during Bush`s "watch," has fizzled. The Egyptian regime has reverted to its
repressive ways.
The first
nationwide municipal elections in Saudi Arabia failed to lead to wider
elections so far.
No matter
how much "spin" the Bush Administration puts on it, America`s clout and
influence in the Middle East is likely at its lowest point in history. This
fact is going to have a profound affect not only on the world stage, but here
at home as well.
I believe
the Middle East is now set to be an "explosive" factor in our investment
planning. For starters:
Hezbollah
has redrawn the Middle East. For the first time ever, Israeli Defense Forces
were not the victors. In fact, Israel`s inability to eradicate Hezbollah has
empowered the radical Islamic front at the expense of the far more moderate
Arab community who appeared ready to accept coexistence with Israel. In addition,
radical Islamists now have a significant say in mainstream electoral
politics through Hezbollah and Hamas. Hezbollah`s leader is now seen as the "Nasser
of the 21st century" among many Arabs. The fact that Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia
went deafeningly silent after the Lebanese conflict is just another indicator
that Hezbollah was the clear winner.
Syria`s sliding influence within Lebanon has
been halted and may rise on the back of Hezbollah. They were quietly
appreciating Israel`s destruction of an already weak state and will benefit so
long as Israel doesn`t attack them. Behind the scenes, no one really wants to
see the current regime in Syria ousted, because sooner or later the Muslim
Brotherhood radical Islamist movement would be in charge.
I don`t
think many people realize why Iran has been a major supporter of Hezbollah.
Yes, it has created a mess in the Middle East again at a time when the world`s
eyes are upon them. But, the Iranians feel they have revenged their defeat at
Iraq`s hands back in 1988, when Arab Sunni nationalist and Islamic movements
supported Iraq against Iran. Now, Tehran is playing the "Arab Street"
and undermining the legitimacy of the ruling Arab regimes by leading this
new alliance of Islamic and Arab nationalism in the near east.
Israel, once viewed as an immoveable
force, is now viewed beatable (the legitimacy of that view is not very
important). There will be internal strife in Israel as the hardliners feel
betrayed by the current regime while, the peacemakers feel (now more than ever)
the need to appease the Arab world. In the end, the conflict with Hezbollah
will lead Israel to rethink its strategy. I believe part of it will be that
they spent too much time on the Palestinian militants in Gaza and the West Bank
instead of the two biggest state sponsors of terrorism in the region- Iran and
Syria. Israeli Military sources claim Israel is already preparing for a war
with Iran and Syria. It cannot, and will not, live with Iran having a nuclear bomb.
Meanwhile, look for Hezbollah to be behind supporting Palestinian militants in the
Gaza strip with weapons and tactical expertise.
Iran can be considered America`s "third front." The
other two are Afghanistan and Iraq. One`s a draw at best while the
other is just inches from falling into the abyss. There`s no doubt in my mind
that President Bush believes Iran poses an existential threat to close ally Israel.
The U.S. Congress recently passed a resolution that said an attack on Israel is an
attack on the US. While one assumes the world can`t be naïve enough to think Iran is
seeking nuclear capability merely to enhance its agriculture and ability to
treat and diagnose AIDS and cancer patients (that`s what their UN ambassador
said in a recent speech), it`s also not even close to having the "you no what"
to stand up to Iran in a manner that would satisfy the Bush administration. The
question will become, "Can the US afford another front?" What effect, if any,
will a return of a Democrat-controlled Congress mean to Bush`s ability to do
what he thinks needs to be done against Iran. There`s little doubt that Iran has
won the publicity battle up until now but some real serious challenges are now on
the horizon.
Iran and Iraq are going to remain major
factors in our investment decisions for the foreseeable future.
China Is It Really A Sure Thing?
Finding a
needle in a haystack would be easier than finding a bear on China`s economic
outlook. I`m always nervous when I find just about everyone in the same boat.
Knowing some are already penning an email to me on the belief that I`m about to
pan China (pun intended), rest assured this is by no means a bearish forecast.
It is, however, a strong suggestion that it may be wise to pull the reigns in
somewhat and to recognize the only three things in life that are certain are
death, taxes and no team named the Canucks can win the Stanley Cup.
Since 1978,
China`s annual GDP has averaged 9% (giving new meaning to urbanization,
marketization, privatization and globalization). In less than 30 years, China
has gone from being a peasant-rich Maoist autocracy to an economic behemoth. It has
been without a doubt, the single most important reason we`ve experienced the
greatest commodities bull markets in the modern era. And, with a population of
1.3 billion, it`s a multinational business dream scenario. It`s hard to find
anyone who is anything but bullish when China`s future prospects are
considered. To me, that`s enough reason to consider it is possible. Could
the "live happily there after" mentality of the Chinese bulls be premature at
best and a potential negative surprise at worse?
Here are
some factors to consider before you board the Chinese "gravy train:"
While China
isn`t about to face the aging crisis ready to engulf America, it does face some significant
hurdles thanks to its "one-child" policy of recent years. Chinese bureaucrats
have often stated their fears that their land will grow old before it grows
rich. The Rand Corporation is forecasting a graying of the Chinese workforce
within 10 years. By 2050, the ratio of Chinese active workers to retirees will
become among the world`s worst, with the aged (meaning people at least 60 years
old) rising to more than 400 million (from 120 million in 2003) and comprising
more than 30% of the population (now less than 10%). While neighbors Korea and
Japan face similar demographic problems, China is far poorer, doesn`t have social safety
nets, no pension protection mechanism and will still be in its economic infancy
when compared to Korea and Japan. Decent healthcare is either unavailable or
beyond the means of most Chinese.
Economic
growth has come at a great expense to China`s environment. About 300 million
Chinese drink contaminated water, with some 190 million being sickened by it
each year. According to the World Health Organization, 5 of the 10 most
polluted cities in the world are in China. With growth also comes acid rain,
deforestation, serious soil erosion, silted reservoirs and growing
carbon-dioxide and sulfur-dioxide emissions.
One of the
biggest potential problems is water. Its quality and availability is most
likely going to become a constraining factor on China`s economic growth. Severe
water shortages plague the North of China, which boasts two-thirds of the
country`s arable land, produces half of its grain and is home to much of its
manufacturing and population. Deserts are cropping up around Beijing, and the
city`s water table is dropping rapidly. A recent government inspection of 500
new water-treatment facilities showed that fewer than half had even been turned
on. Locals took the money to build the plants in order to create jobs and
kickbacks, but don`t want to spend local tax revenues on running them.
Corruption
can be found at all levels of government. While it`s not hard to find it
anywhere in the world, major world organizations believe it has become acute in
China. Local party officials are increasingly seen at high-roller gambling
tables of Macau and even in Las Vegas. Again, while corruption is nothing new
around the world, all those dollars one assumes are going directly back into
China`s economy are not anywhere near it.
Boom to
Bust? There`s no question it`s a boom right now, but in every great economic
birth in history, a period of serious digestion or bust followed. Why should
China be any different? If a period of slower growth is on the horizon, it`s the
incredible investment boom that`s the most likely cause. The bulk of the
financial risks reside in China`s banking system. It remains shaky, despite
efforts by Beijing to reform the system.

My comments
on China are not warnings of impending doom. China should remain the tiger it
has been only it`s not the one-way street so many would have you believe. In
the last few months, Chinese authorities have implemented several measures that
are likely to cause its growth rate to lose at least a few percentage points,
if not more. It`s foolhardy to assume China is going to continue growing at
10%+ and not have internal problems that could lead to an imploding of that
growth.
Who
Really Won the Cold War?
Historians
will tell you that when it comes to the Cold War, the final score was: Free
World 1, Soviet Union 0. But from that reported victory, a key part of the
"losing" team has emerged not only to play another day, but is fast becoming a
serious player on the world stage- RUSSIA!
With a 70
percent+ approval rating and an economy growing at more than 6 percent a year,
Vladimir Putin has led Russia back to the world stage. Russia`s brief cutoff of
natural-gas supplies to the Ukraine last January not only shocked European
customers further down the pipeline, but made many in Europe realize the
dramatic rise in energy prices turned Russia from a supplicant for foreign aid
to a cash-rich power courted for its energy resources. Europe has grown quite
dependent on natural gas to generate electricity. It already gets a quarter of
its gas from Russia, a level that is expected to rise by a third in less than
10 years. Why is this important? While the U.S. is concerned about the Middle
East for its oil, Europe is now viewing Russia as its "Middle East" for its
energy. Therefore, Russia can use this in its political positioning on
the world stage and knows Europe can ill afford to jump down its throat. This
is a net negative to relations between the U.S. and Russia, at a time when the
U.S. has far fewer pieces in the world chess game. I believe Russia is going to be more
than just a thorn in the side of America.
Final
Worldly Thought It seems there`s a crisis in whatever direction the White
House looks. Mr. Richard N. Haass, a former senior Bush administration official
who heads the council on Foreign Relations, said recently, "I am hard-pressed to think of any other moment in modern times
where there have been so many challenges facing this country simultaneously.
The danger is that Mr. Bush will hand over a White House to a successor that
will face a far messier world, with fewer resources left to cope with it."
I don`t think anyone could have summed it up better.
Blue
Chip & Income Report
I was in my
local bank recently when the teller was finishing a conversation with the
in-house "investment expert." When the "expert" returned to his desk, the
teller beckoned me up to her window while mumbling the following "I will never
be able to retire if my portfolio doesn`t get going." I asked her what she
meant. She proceeded to tell me that her account has been basically flat for
over five years and is still significantly lower than it was in the late 90s.
She said what little it made was eaten up in fees and she could have done
better if she simply put the money "in the bank".

Now, don`t
get me started on my opinion on the "quality" and qualifications of these
financial advisors at local banks, but what the teller expressed is what I find
from the public-at-large these days. Yes, the market has had some nice rallies
and if you`re the 1 in 100 who can beat it trading it, congratulations. But for
the vast majority, the stock market has not provided the rate of return I
suspect that teller was shown when she first sat down with the "expert." And
this is becoming an acute situation for the baby boomers who will begin to hit
the retirement age target next year.
U.S. Stock Market Outlook
While you
would think it should be at 15,000 based on what you hear daily on CNBC-TV, it
has only treaded water in 2006. The "Don`t Worry, Be Happy" crowd on Wall
Street will tell you that the Fed`s tightening mode is what prevented a big
rally and that should now occur given it looks like the Fed is done tightening.
Having been around sheep (the animal kind) numerous times on my family farms in
Ireland, I`ve seen first hand how they follow others almost blindly.
Therefore, it comes as no surprise that stock market players remain very
optimistic and believe it`s virtually certain that share prices will head
higher now that the bulk of interest rates hikes are done.
The problem
with that assumption, IMHO, is while it can allow a rally to new all-time highs
on the DJIA, there are numerous bearish factors that should not only curtail
any rally, but eventually lead to a new bear market:
The
upcoming general elections are going to deeply-polarize the nation. A
Democratic win in Congress should not be received well on Wall Street. It`s
hard to make a case that Democrats are favorable to big business.
I believe
earnings growth peaked in the 2nd quarter. There were strong hints of that in
the GDP numbers. Productivity has been the backbone of the economic expansion
and it has clearly seen its best days.
The housing
market is caving in. Much of the wealth effect from it has kept consumer
spending up. Literally overnight, the Americans who have been robbing Peter to
pay Paul by using their house as an ATM machine, will wake up to find
themselves in an uncomfortable position. A dramatic economic slowdown has
begun.
The
United States is no longer the star on the world stage. It`s no longer a certainty that
foreigners will continue to pay for our sinful deficit spending ways without
demanding either a cheaper currency and/or higher interest rates.
Our fiscal
house, both as a nation and as individuals, is in sorry shape and the longer we
avoid the inevitable painful measures (is any diet fun? If so, please tell me
one I can go on), the more painful the future will be. Debt, deficits and the
aging crisis should all combine to make the foreseeable future the most
challenging yet for the American public.
Until
further notice, it`s better to be a live chicken versus a dead duck when it
comes to the U.S. stock market.
North
of The Border
Up until a
few months ago, I greatly favored the Canadian stock market over the U.S. However,
I felt oil would peak this summer and the next $15 move from the highs would
be lower, not higher. Knowing the TSX was heavily weighted towards energy, I
felt it could see a correction of at least 20% and put it on the same level as
the U.S. market.
What
Canada does have going for it over the U.S. is a far, far, far better fiscal house. It took its
medicine in the 1990s and put its house back in order. While a peak in energy
and base metals prices is likely to lead to less economic strength than in
recent years, Canada should remain the preferred choice. The only dark cloud
not even on the horizon yet is the old adage, "when America sneezes, Canada
catches a cold." Because the U.S. is still Canada`s largest trading partner by
far, any serious U.S. economic contraction can spill over into Canada.
Precious
Metals and Uranium - The Party Is Far From Over
People keep
asking me why I remain so bullish on gold. Their questioning becomes acute
during corrections and periods of consolidation (like right now) as concerns
grow regarding is the bull run is over? I would like to tell you that I`ve
created a scientific formula or have a secret black box, but the fact is that
my ever-increasing gut remains my most accurate forecasting tool. That, and the
sentiment I see both in the market and communications sent to me from the
general public (some emails make you wonder what happened to people at an early
age). Because of this, I`ve decided to detail my observations on gold and also
finally say something more on uranium than "It`s the no-brainer metal" or "I
Love It" (although both clearly described my fondness and being on the right
side so far).
Gold
While I
clearly have been on the bullish side far more than the bearish, there have
been periods of time during my 22+ years in the financial arena that I avoided
gold or bet against it. However, in the Spring of 2003, after being out of the
resource market for over three years, I returned to the bullish camp with gold
on the verge of breaking above $325, (which was considered key resistance back then).
Other than stepping aside for some serious corrections, I`ve been blessed to be
on the right side of gold. Now the "law of averages" players may want to play
the "Grandich puts his pants on one leg at a time like the rest of them" fact
and bet against me. I can appreciate that (the wife has been suggesting I
lighten up Okay, urging!). However, my "tea leaves" gut and charts suggest the
"perfect storm" remains for gold.
Here are
some of the key bullish factors:
Supply
versus Demand At the end of the day, supply versus demand will decide the
fate of any commodity. I continue to find most "goldbugs" downplaying or even
ignoring the single most important factor for gold: jewelry demand.
(Don`t scream, manipulation and conspiracy followers. I`ll get to that
shortly). Jewelry demand is still about 70% of the market. Investment demand is
about 20% and the remainder is industrial and dental demand. 2005 was a
barn-burner for demand so the drop off in the first half of 2006 comes as no
surprise. Jewelry demand is always price sensitive so it takes time for the
market to adjust to higher prices. We`re entering the most seasonallyfavored
period, so I don`t envision a lack of demand to impact prices for the balance
of the year.
Demand
should also remain strong on the investment side. I`m totally convinced that
America is well on its way down a slippery slope to economic, social and political
upheaval, thanks in part to the country as a whole living way beyond its means.
This reckless spending and borrowing has set the stage for the most dramatic
economic downturn that can make the "Great Depression" look like a walk in the
park. The U.S. Dollar is terminally ill so gold is the best alternative and
safe-haven investment vehicle, bar none. While old-line goldbugs dislike Gold
Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs), they have grown from near zero demand in 2003
when they were introduced, to nearly 500 tons at the end of the first quarter
of 2006. I`m convinced much of that buying came from investors who otherwise
wouldn`t have bought physical gold (but it did take away some of the buying
that used to go into mining shares as a way to play gold). I believe they will
continue to be a big positive for gold.
On the
supply side, there are three key sources: mine supply (61%), gold scrap (22%)
and Central Bank Sales (17%). I will discuss mine supply and Central Bank sales
below.
Mine Supply
Back in early 2005, I stated we were going to see a dramatic increase in
mergers and acquisitions within the metals and mining industry. Sure enough,
the "good ole` boy`s network" within the mining industry has been welcomed to
the 21st century! Like when oil first went to $30 and the oil industry found it
cheaper and faster to look for oil on Wall Street versus in the ground, mining
companies have discovered that Wall and Bay Streets have excellent targets. The
lack of enough mega discoveries, combined with higher costs and operation
difficulties, should cap any real increase in mine supply for the next few
years.
Manipulation
and Cartels I want
to devote space to an extended view on this factor, as it`s as critical to the
gold picture as jewelry demand.
Let me
begin by noting that I was not a real believer but for years knew there were
very unusual trading patterns. When I returned to the speaking circuit, I began
to hear Bill Murphy and Chris Powell of www.gata.org speak. At first, I thought Bill had
a screw loose (but don`t we all have one?). However, as I began to digest
GATA`s research and analogy, it began to make a lot of sense. As the
circumstantial evidence piled up, I concluded GATA`s view was realistic and
deserving of recognition.
Now, allow
me to make a critical observation to the claim of manipulation. The
non-believers, many of whom have badly missed the great bull run in gold,
simply dismiss manipulation as impossible and/or nothing more than the ravings
of a madman. Before you, too, make this fatal error, I want to take you back to
October 20, 1987.
Young Peter
Grandich was Head of Investment Strategy for a then New York Stock Exchange
Member Firm called "Philips, Appel & Walden". On August 11, 1987, in my
capacity as "Investment Strategist", I sent out a commentary that forecasted a
market crash of 500 to 1,000 points. We all know what happened by October 19,
1987. Most people forget (or simply weren`t in the business or investing back
then) that October 20th was looking even bleaker than the 19th. By early
afternoon, many of the DJIA stocks were still not opened. The DJIA was off
almost 200 points and blood was truly running through the streets. The
regulators shut the S&P 500 futures pit in Chicago in part because it was
the selling of futures related to program trading that was causing even more
selling. However, the Kansas City Board of Trade and its S&P 500 Futures
contract remained open. Its volume was normally peanuts compared to Chicago`s
but an event would unfold in 20 minutes that I believe literally helped change
our future.
For reasons
no one has ever truly known or cared to find out, several of the largest
financial institutions in the world decided virtually at the same time to buy
massive amounts of S&P 500 futures contracts in Kansas City. In 20 minutes,
that buying caused the S&P Futures contract to rise the equivalent of 1700 DJIA
points. This caused the sell programs to become buy programs, which caused
massive buying of the major stocks that made up the DJIA and S & P 500. All
the major stocks began trading and the market finished up 170 points.
Since that
time, there have been a growing number of people who believe the U.S. government
created what has been dubbed, "The Plunge Protection Team" (PPT). Many of
the same critics of gold manipulation were also pooh-poohing stock market
manipulation. Thankfully, one of the best financial journalists ever, Mr. John
Crudele of the New York Post, has faithfully stayed on the PPT story. This past
June 13th, he wrote an article entitled, "A Plan For A Plunge". In it, Crudele
discussed how a 1997 Washington Post article basically "explained the
government`s secret role in the stock market." He went on to note how the
President "confers with members of his Working group on Financial Markets the
secretary of the Treasury and the chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, the
Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission." He noted that the article pointed out that "an outline of the
government`s plan emerges in interviews with more than a dozen current and
former officials who have participated in meetings of the Working Group", which
it says was established after the market crash in 1987.
I find it
most intriguing that Mr. Crudele goes on in his column to report that Treasury
Secretary Hank Paulson was a member of the PPT.
Two weeks
later, Mr. Crudele published another article entitled, "George Let Plunge
Slip." In it, he notes that former President Clinton senior advisor George
Stephanopoulos made a bombshell statement on September 17, 2001, the day the
stock market reopened after the 9/11 attacks. He quotes it verbatim:
"And
perhaps the most important, there`s been the Fed in 1989 created what is
called the Plunge protection team, which is the Federal Reserve, big major
banks, representatives of the New York Stock Exchange and the other exchanges,
and there- they have been meeting informally so far, and they have kind of an
informal agreement among major banks to come in and start to buy stock if there
appears to be a problem. They have, in the past, acted more formally. I don`t
know if you remember, but in 1998, there was a crisis called the Long term
Capital crisis. It was a major currency trader and there was a global currency
crisis. And they, at the guidance of the Fed, all of the banks got together
when that started to collapse and propped up the currency markets. And they have plans in place to consider that if the stock
markets start to fall."
Mr. Crudele
goes on to note how Robert Heller, a Federal Reserve governor, proposed in 1989
that the central bank prop up the stock market in times of crisis by purchasing
stock index futures contracts. He then states that the PPT, "seems to have been born on March 18, 1988, when President
Reagan signed Executive Order 12631 establishing a Working Group on Financial
Markets that included the chairman of the various stock exchanges, the
chairman and governors of the Federal Reserve, and the secretary of the U.S.
Treasury, who was also the chairman."
STOP - If you`re like the non-believers
who ceremonially dismiss manipulation claims and even still do after reading
what I just said, sit down, take a deep breath and be prepared to be honest
with yourself if you truly seek truth.
Federal
Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke admits there`s a PPT in Congressional
testimony!!!!!!!!
John
Crudele, who I`m certain had a big grin from ear to ear when he wrote the
column, published a column in the July 27, 2006, in the NY Post entitled, "COME
CLEAN, BEN!"
Here`s
the entire article:
FEDERAL
Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke revealed that the secretive Plunge Protection
Team meets several times a year, but he dodged a congressman`s inquiries about
what the group does and whether minutes are kept of those meetings.
So The Post
has filed a Freedom of Information Act request for those minutes - specifically
for the meetings that likely occurred immediately after the terrorist attacks
in 2001.
I wrote
about the Plunge Protection Team in a series of articles earlier this month.
Formally called the Working Group on Financial Markets, it was formed in 1988
by President Reagan to advise Wall Street.
Headed by
the Secretary of the Treasury, it also has top regulators and the chairman of
the Fed as members.
But in
addition to giving Wall Street advice, I suspect - and former White House
adviser George Stephanopoulos seems to have confirmed - that the Plunge
Protection team has morphed into something more active.
And Wall
Street firms may have been invited to join.
What`s
clear from answers to questions posed by Rep. Ron Paul, (R.-Texas) is that new
Fed chief Bernanke either doesn`t know much about the role of the working group
or preferred not to discuss the matter.
And, I
think, it`s time we found out a little more about an organization that could
afford some Wall Street firms an opportunity to reap massive profits at the
expense of ordinary investors.
Here`s some
of the exchange that occurred between Bernanke and Rep. Paul last Thursday at
the House Financial Committee hearings.
Rep. Paul:
Good afternoon, Chairman Bernanke. I have a question dealing with the Working
Group on Financial Markets. I want to learn more about that group and exactly
what authority they have and what they do.
Could you
tell me, as a member of the group, how often they meet and how often they have
actions? And have they done something recently? And are there reports sent out
by this particular group?
Bernanke:
Yes, congressman. The president`s working group was convened by the president,
I believe, after the 1987 stock market crash. It meets irregularly. I would
guess about four or five times a year. But I`m not exactly sure.
And its primary
function is advisory, to prepare reports. I mentioned earlier that we`ve been
asked to prepare a report on the terrorism risk insurance. So that`s what we
generally do.
Rep. Paul:
In the media you`ll find articles that will claim, at least, that it`s a lot
more than advisory.
You know,
if there is a stock market crash, that you literally have a lot of authority,
you know, to impose restrictions. And we`re talking about many trillions of
dollars slushing around in all the financial markets. And this involves the
Treasury and, of course, the Fed as well as the SEC (Securities & Exchange
Commission) and the CFTC (Commodities Futures Trading Commission.)
And the
reason this came to my attention was just recently there was an article that
actually made a charge that out of this group came a position that interfered
with the price of General Motors stock.
Have you
read that? Or do you know anything about that?
Bernanke:
No sir. I don`t.
Rep. Paul:
But back to the issue of meeting. You tell me it meets irregularly. But are
there minutes kept, or are there reports made on this group?
Bernanke: I
believe there are records kept by the staff. There are staff, mostly from
Treasury, but also from other agencies.
Rep. Paul:
And they would be available to us in the committee?
Bernanke: I
don`t know. I`m sorry. I don`t know.
Rep. Paul
obviously doesn`t have a reporter`s knack for the follow-up question, so here`s
what I would have asked next.
Crudele:
Well, Mr. Bernanke, how about you find out! Someone in your position should
know if, as former White House adviser Stephanopoulos has claimed, the Working
Group on Financial Markets - the Plunge Protection Team - has the authority to
interfere with the free market for stocks.
And we`d
also like to know who makes decision for the group, politicians or guys on Wall
Street. Don`t misunderstand, Mr. Bernanke. I`m not saying what the group is
doing is wrong. But why should firms like Goldman Sachs - from which two of the
last four Treasury secretaries have come - be in a better position than anyone
else who gambles in the stock market?
See, that`s
why I`ll never be in Congress.
STOP!
If after
hearing Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke openly admit the PPT does exist
and you still will dismiss or shrug off as nonsense government intervention in
the financial markets, I have a bridge that connects Brooklyn to Manhattan for sale cheap!
The Gold
Anti-Trust Action committee (GATA) has not only demonstrated enough
circumstantial evidence to demonstrate "at times"
the gold market has been manipulated and influenced by un-natural forces, but
the admission by Bernanke IS the closest we`re
likely to get to a smoking gun.
Central
Bank Sales Part of the manipulation argument is that Central Banks have conspired to
manipulate the gold price by lending large quantities of gold to be sold into
the market in order to suppress or depress prices. Whether or not they were
willing participants, I do believe Central Banks have sold far more than some
assumed just a few years ago. Why? Because I believe prices of $500, $600 and
$700 would have been too tempting to pass up on if they had anywhere the level
many believed they did. Let`s not forget that very, very, very few people ever
thought gold could get above and stay at $400 because Central Banks would dump
their gold.
Now, it`s
also important to note that the 15 Central Banks that formed the European Gold
Agreement (EGA) also gave clarity to the gold market. The March 8, 2004,
agreement by 15 Central Banks made effective September 27, 2004 the following:
Gold will
remain an important element of global monetary reserves.
The gold
sales already decided and to be decided by the undersigned institutions will be
achieved through a concerted program of sales over a period of five years.
Annual sales will not exceed 500 tons and total sales over period will not
exceed 2,500 tons.
Over the
period, the signatories to this agreement have agreed that the total amount of
their gold leasings and the total amount of their use of gold futures and
options will not exceed the amounts prevailing at the date of the signature of
the previous agreement.
The
agreement will be reviewed after five years.
As
September approached, some in the gold market were caught up with talk that the
EGA had not come close to reaching its yearly limit with just a month or so to
go. Some felt it would be quite bullish if, in fact, the EGA didn`t sell up to
their limit. The problem always is most Central Banks don`t comment on future
sales and therefore we won`t know until after the fact. I do believe the big
drop that began after Labor Day could have been do in part to the EGA indeed
selling what it had left for this quota. Regardless if they did or didn`t, I
believe Central Bank sales are not the "show stopper" they once were. Yes, they
are part of the equation, but their influence is no longer over powering.
Hedging Back in the 1990s, I used to tell
significant gold producers that they were "cutting their nose to spite their
face" by selling forward (hedging) their production. Barrick Gold (American
Barrick in the old days) was as much as a commodity speculator as they were a
gold producer in the 1990s. By sophisticated hedging strategies (that some
full-time conspiracy believers think was part of the manipulation crowd),
Barrick was able to derive a much higher price for their gold than their
competitors. They were literally the darlings of the investment community who
could make money at $300 gold while others battled to just keep the lights on.
But when hedging became so disliked by investors and the financial community,
companies rushed to show they were not part of the "axles of evil" like
Barrick. This began at the new millennium and really became fashionable as the
gold bull market accelerated towards and through $400.
While gold
mining hedge books continue to decline through the 2nd quarter of 2006, I don`t
believe we`re going to see the levels of dehedging we`ve grown use to in recent
times. This doesn`t mean I expect hedging to accelerate, just not be the big
bullish benefactor it has been the last few years.
Bottom
Line
The sell
off in recent days has afforded those not yet on board, a chance to do so
before the move to new, all-time highs in gold in 2007.
Platinum
and Palladium
The overall
picture for PGMs remains bullish. However, the expected economic slowdown is
likely to cause both to remain flat but not cause for reducing or eliminating
exposure.
Uranium,
The "No-Brainer, Gotta Love It Metal"
While I did
step into the correction camp on gold and have turned decisively bearish on
copper, I`ve had only one opinion on uranium since $17 a pound BULLISH!
Throughout its rise from under $20, I kept calling it the no-brainer metal.
When asked my latest opinion on it, I simply respond I LOVE IT!
With prices
north of $50 now, it`s no longer a no-brainer. And like a marriage that has
gone past the "honeymoon" days, the crazy love has turned to "contained"
enjoyment. However, uranium remains the most likely significant metal to
continue rising in price. To appreciate why, let us look back at where it`s
been and where it may be heading.
In the
1970s, the world began to envision nuclear power as the wave of the future for
power needs. Major resource companies greatly ramped up mining and exploration
for uranium in hopes of filling that need. Then came Three Mile Island and Chernobyl
and before you could say "lights out," power companies cancelled orders for
nuclear reactors. Rather than pay the penalties for reneging on uranium
purchase contracts, companies figured out it was cheaper to continue buying
uranium and stockpile it. Uranium exploration literally grounded to a halt. In
the mid 1990s, the low spot price saw production at existing mines fall 50%
below demand. Stockpiles were then drawn down and with the decommissioning of
Russian nuclear warheads, the need to explore for uranium became non-existent.
The new
millennium ushered in dramatically increased demand for nuclear power in Europe
and especially Asia. This allowed for stockpiles to be swiftly drawn down at a
time when an energy crunch began on the back of rising energy prices. Because
there was little or no new exploration for uranium for many years, new
additional supply was nowhere to be found. Hence, we`ve witnessed a strong rise
in uranium prices.
While the
"easy" money has been made, I believe there remain numerous bullish reasons for
uranium to reach or surpass my target of $75:
Demand
should remain strong for the foreseeable future. The number of reactors under
construction worldwide continues to grow. China, Asia and Korea have committed
themselves to nuclear power and Europe also is increasing its interest.
Relatively new markets like India are opening up and where once a new nuclear
plant seemed impossible, the United States, it is now being reconsidered as a viable
energy source.
While
uranium exploration has been hit with some of the same obstacles other metals
have--rising costs and labor shortages, it also has two additional factors
hindering supply--very strict environmental permitting and a shortage of real
(non-moose pasture type) exploration projects. Many experts believe it won`t be
until at least 2009 before a significant increase in planned mine production
results in a perceived temporarily oversupply market. Russia is also indicating it
will not continuing converting its warheads into uranium suitable for
US reactors when their non-proliferation agreement expires in 2013.
Investment
demand, virtually non-existent until a couple of years ago, is only now
becoming recognized. This is mainly due to Uranium Participation Corporation
(U-TSE-V) a publicly-held investment company, which invests primarily in the
physical ownership of uranium. The very fact that they recently announced a
second offering suggested demand for physical uranium remains strong (it also
aided in driving the uranium price above $50).
Within five
years, there should only be enough secondary supplies to meet a quarter of the
expected demand for uranium. Lack of aggressive exploration and falling
inventory should keep the uranium market tight for several years. The
aggressive M&A activities in the metals market are likely to spill over
into the uranium market (but because there are so few real producers, it should
be more in the way of acquiring attractive projects from exploration companies).
Teck Cominco Ltd. stated recently it may consider uranium acquisitions to
benefit from a possible doubling of prices for the nuclear fuel. "If there was
some way into it where it makes sense financially, we`ll do it, because we like
the prospects of the industry," said Donald Lindsey, CEO of Teck Cominco.
Base
Metals
The Top in
the Cycle Has Been Put In This is not a popular statement in the arena I work
in, but after 22years+ I`ve learned my job is not to win popularity contests.
Like oil, I believe the investment community became far too one-sided in its
belief the bull would be like the energizer bunny and just keep running. The China
argument was a good one, but there, too, I expect a more moderate growth pace. Yes, I
did turn outright bearish on copper prematurely at $2.98, but by 2007 and
beyond, I fully anticipate the price to be substantially lower. I`m less
concerned about zinc and even less concerned about nickle, but as a group, I
expect base metals to greatly under-perform precious metals and uranium going
forward.
Mining
and Exploration Shares
The
bearishness that has engulfed the market of late appears to be the missing
ingredient needed, especially in the junior exploration market. There remain
numerous bullish reasons to stay on the long side, including:
As
suggested earlier, new mine supply is expected to remain flat for several
years.
While
demand is likely to lessen for base metals as the world economy slows, precious
metals and uranium continue to have strong fundamental outlooks.
It`s
becoming quite difficult to operate as a mining concern in many areas of the
world, which should help to contain new supply and also make certain areas and
projects even more attractive. Political risk is now a key factor for
consideration.
Labor and
parts shortages remain, although both should lessen as we get into 2007.
The "good
ole boys network" within the mining industry has been "put to rest" with the
dramatic and sometimes hostile mergers and acquisitions of late. Further
consolidation is not only likely, but we should start to see juniors being
acquired or strategically aligning with majors in order for high levels of
production to be met.
In the old
days, Christmas decorations weren`t put up until the day after Thanksgiving (in
the U.S.). However, each year they seem to go up earlier and earlier. The same
timing can be said for tax-loss selling. I suspect that tax-loss selling in the
junior market can begin as early as Canada`s Thanksgiving Day (October 9th) but
keep some powder dry even for those last couple weeks in December where "stink
bids" can turn into new share ownership.
GRANDICH PUBLICATIONS, LLC.
P.O. Box 243 o Perrineville, NJ 08535
www.Grandich.com
phone o 732-642-3992
email • Peter@Grandich.com
A
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TED BUTLER COMMENTARY - BLATANT MANIPULATION
www.InvestmentRarities.com
September 11, 2006
This essay is by Ted Butler and is reprinted with permission from the great folks at
(This essay
was written by silver analyst Theodore butler, an independent consultant.
Investment Rarities does not necessarily endorse these views, which may or may
not prove to be correct.)
In a
holiday-shortened Labor Day week, the concentrated short sellers attacked gold
and silver with a vengeance. Gold broke out earlier in the week, only to
collapse in price on Thursday, Friday and today, Monday. Silver lost almost two
dollars in three days. Since it is crystal clear to me what transpired,
I`d like to explain what I think occurred.
Before last
week, gold looked technically strong. The downside looked limited. I was
encouraged by this structure in gold, as I saw little risk of the dealer shorts
rigging a big sell-off in gold in order to engineer a similar sell-off in
silver.
That changed
on Tuesday, as gold exploded to the upside by some $15 on heavy technical fund
buying of fifteen to twenty thousand contracts. (a fraction of what they
formerly bought). The key 20 and 50-day moving averages were decisively
penetrated to the upside. With the funds now on the long side of gold, the
dealer shorts were then in position to force gold and silver sharply lower. The
key for the dealers is that they know how the technical funds and other
technical traders will behave at certain price points. The dealers know that
technical traders buy as prices are rising and that they sell as prices are
falling. Armed with this knowledge and the fact that only 8 or less dealers
control the entire net dealer short position in gold and silver, it is easy for
the dealers to dictate the technical funds` behavior.
Since there
are so few dealers holding a very concentrated short position, It is no problem
for the dealers to collude and tacitly agree to withhold offers to sell more
short positions as the tech funds are buying with abandon. This assures that
the tech funds buy at a high price. Once the tech funds are positioned on the
long side, the concentrated dealer short sellers pull the rug out from under
the tech funds. The dealers then collude and withhold bids until the tech funds
begin to sell in a panic. The dealers are real pros (if that term applies to
criminals) in that they know just when to effect their collusive activity,
i.e., when the markets are thin, such as overnight. This assures the most
dramatic price movements, up or down.
That this
activity is illegal is beyond question. Because it is done repeatedly doesn`t
make it any less illegal. Commodity law holds that futures trading and pricing
should be subservient to developments in the real world of supply and demand.
This principle is called price discovery. That`s not what happened to gold and
silver prices. Supply and demand changes had nothing to do with recent price
changes. What we just witnessed was as far away from price discovery as it gets.
What we just witnessed in gold and silver futures trading was price fixing. The
concentrated dealer short sellers fixed and set the prices to their advantage.
That`s against the law. Once again, it is absolutely amazing that the silver
producers and resource companies sit mute while the concentrated shorts toy
with the price of the product of their hard labors. If they made this case, it
would undoubtedly bring a quicker end to the manipulation.
What makes
this manipulative activity by the dealers so distressing is that it is so
obvious and blatant. It has gotten impossible to believe that senior management
of the NYMEX/COMEX can be unaware of it. I have personally written to the
Chairman, the CEO, the chief legal counsel and the chief regulatory official of
the NYMEX about the dealers` concentrated short position and other manipulative
activities, as have many of you. To date, no response from them has been
received.
It hard for
me to imagine writing to the head of a legitimate financial institution, for
instance, John Thain of the New York Stock Exchange, about a such a serious
issue as manipulation and getting no response. Especially if that financial
institution were about to go public. Yet that is exactly what has occurred with
the leadership of the NYMEX/COMEX. Sadly and unfortunately, I can reach no
other conclusion that they must be aware of and maybe involved, up to their
eyeballs, in the silver manipulation. I can`t help but think that they may be
trying to dump the problem on an unsuspecting investing public, via their
proposed initial public offering. I hope I am wrong, but I don`t think so.
While I
have been very careful to only publicly recommend that people buy real silver
on a fully paid for basis, I know that many also buy silver on a margin or leveraged
basis. This is, in fact, my background, and I can understand why people do it,
even though it can and does lead to forced liquidation on these manipulative
sell-offs. I would like to introduce a thought I`ve held for decades, yet have
never publicly disclosed.
If and when
events in silver turn out the way I have predicted, and the silver manipulation
becomes common knowledge and an accepted fact, I think that any losses can and
will be recovered through legal recourse, in addition to possible punitive
damage awards. If you have suffered such losses and are not complaining about
the manipulation, you may be doing yourself a disservice.
The CFTC
Responds (Sort Of)
It appears
that the CFTC has finally responded to the allegations, by myself and others,
of manipulation in the silver market, due to the documented concentrated short
position. I say appears, because as of this article, I have not received a response,
nor has Carl Loeb. I find this more than curious, as the CFTC mentioned
my name in their response to others, which some readers were kind enough to
forward to me.
While I
intend to fully discuss the response from the CFTC in detail in the very near
future, I would like to make a few initial comments. Against my hopes, but
fully within my expectations, the CFTC denied there was a manipulation. As
anticipated, they did not refute one fact presented by Loeb, or myself but
tried to diffuse the allegations with extraneous data, which was clearly
designed to confuse.
In reading
their response, I was left with the feeling that, while I was trying to
simplify and clarify the issue, their intent was to confuse. Unfortunately,
this has gotten to be a Washington, DC art form. You ask them a straightforward
question and they answer a completely different question. I find it maddening.
One thing I
can tell you about the CFTC response is that there were two different responses.
Somebody sent me one dated Aug. 26, that was materially different from the ones
dated Sept. 6. The earlier response had a couple of paragraphs saying how it
was perfectly normal for there to be a short position bigger than deliverable
supplies. Then the LME nickel default took place and the CFTC revised the
response by deleting any reference to delivery. The default made their response
look foolish and by changing the letter it makes them look even more foolish.
I`ll try to get both responses up on the Internet, so you can judge for
yourself. I`ll lay out the whole case and let you be the judge. That`s hard to
do when the CFTC takes months to answer and the COMEX doesn`t answer at all.
I spend so
much time and effort on the manipulation and the mechanics of the illegal
trading because these are serious matters. But not for a moment should anyone
interpret them as a reason not to buy silver. Rather, I try to demonstrate why
this manipulation is the very reason you should buy silver. The unintended
consequence of the silver manipulation is that it is allowing you to buy silver
at way below what the price should be.
We all have
the choice to view the glass as half-empty or half-full. The manipulators do
win some short-term battles against the technical funds and other leveraged
traders. But they are clearly losing the war and you, the long-term real silver
investor is clearly winning. Here we are, after yet another vicious and
engineered sell-off, still over $11 and the gold/silver ratio at close to 53 to
1. In days not so long ago, sell-offs ended at 4 or 5 something, with the ratio
at 70 or 80 to 1.
AN INTERESTING E-MAIL
By Theodore Butler
Recently I
received an e-mail from someone that I`d like to share with you. (By the way, I
read and appreciate all comments, even if I can`t reply to them all.) I thought
you would appreciate hearing Jerry from Tennessee:
"Mr.
Butler,
I have read
each of your writings (every available one I can find) with great interest for
many years now. I view you as the Michael Jordan and Tiger Woods of silver.
Personally,
I have been accumulating silver since 1993. Incredibly, I got my first 300
ounces back then at a low of $3.72. Once I got them, all I wanted to see was
$50 silver the next day so I could cash-in on the big profits.
Then a year
passed by and not much happened, so I had a chance to accumulate more, and did.
Now I
thought I was ready for $50 silver! But again, another year passed by and not
much happened. So I accumulated more.
Each year I
have done this, accumulating more and more silver. Since 1993, there has not
been a year I have not accumulated more silver. And when I began reading your
writings, it only confirmed my beliefs and then I accumulated even more.
The point
is, that had $50 silver came for me back in 1993 like I had desperately wanted,
I would have missed out on all the important accumulation years I have now
experienced, and they have been SIGNIFICANT ones.
Painfully,
I have seen more dives in the price of silver than made by the great cliff
divers of Acapulco. But, I am now SO THANKFUL that silver prices remained SO
LOW for SO MANY YEARS, because it allowed me to accumulate so much more silver
than I would have ever thought possible back in 1993.
For years
my wife thought I was nuts, until this past year when she and I entered into
early retirement in our mid 50s. I have to admit, these past couple of years
have been sweet around our household, and I don`t have to explain why, they
just have been. Even if silver never goes up another penny, we will be
comfortable the remainder of our lives.
However,
you and I both know that silver still has a long ways to go from here, so it
will only get better around. And just like every year I`m now ready for $50!
So let her rip!
Signed,
Jerry
(Retired in Great Smoky Mountains of East Tennessee)
In follow
up e-mails, Jerry explained how the manipulation had lasted so long that he was
able to increase his initial 300 ounces in 1993, to almost 60,000 ounces today.
He also wrote that he felt that the big short was trapped and that this
explained the violent sell-offs, as the big short tried to wiggle out from
under his position.
There was a
lot of wisdom in Jerry`s e-mails. He had gone about it right buy on the
sell-offs and only for cash. Then sit tight. If the price drops, buy more. Make
the best of the situation.
Anyone can
replicate what Jerry has accomplished. All you need is patience and discipline.
You won`t get as good an average price as he got, but you shouldn`t have to
wait near as long either. When you adjust the current price for inflation, or
compare it to other investment possibilities, you`d be surprised just how cheap
silver still is.
Jerry
started buying his silver long before he started reading my articles. However,
I know there are many people who started buying silver after reading my
articles and are in a similar position to Jerry. I know these people have done
well. More importantly, they are sure to do well in the future.
While I
admit that my primary motivation is to end the silver manipulation sooner than
it might end on its own, seeing people improve their families` financial
security is also important to me. That`s why I believe you should buy silver.
These sudden and manipulative sell-offs only allow you to enter at more
advantageous prices.
This recent
two-dollar sell-off looks large now, because it came so suddenly. As with all
previous sharp sell-offs, it was designed to force as many margin players from
the market as possible. Undoubtedly it had that effect. But as time rolls on,
this sell-off will recede in importance. If you are able to take advantage and
buy here, it wouldn`t surprise me if I got a note from you in the future
telling me how much better your life is because of your family`s improved
financial circumstances.
Mark
your calendar for FINANCIAL VORTEX!
The 2nd
annual Financial Vortex is coming December 2nd! People are still
talking about last year`s Vortex. For those that didn`t attend the 1st
annual Financial Vortex (March 2005. available on CD), it was indeed a star-studded
line-up of top financial pros. Here are some highlights from that ground-breaking event:
People were
warned about the housing bubble months before it popped
Profitable
forecasts of the Commodities & energy bull market
Gold &
silver predictions made folks a lot of money
Warnings to
avoid cyclical stocks such as GM
Continued
weakness in the US Dollar
Yes and
the proverbial "much more".
Those
attendees that heeded the great insights of our speakers made great money. When
you have speakers like Murray Sabrin, Noel Jameson, Paul Mampilly, Charlie
Nedoss and David Corsi, you have a wealth-building conference that is second to none.
But here is the GREAT NEWS!!!.
The Second
annual Financial Vortex will be better than ever. Many of last year`s outstanding
speakers will be returning with fresh wealth-building insights to guide you in
2007 and beyond. There will be exciting surprises unveiled (more details in due
course). The best change coming is that this year`s conference will be a full
weekend! The Financial Vortex will be on Saturday December 2nd while
the following day Sunday December 3rd will be BUSINESS VORTEX!
That
weekend will be a great one-two punch. On Saturday you will learn how to invest
your money; On Sunday you will learn how to make money. One is about passive
wealth-building while the other is about active wealth-building. Isn`t that the
best way to build wealth? When you and your money both earn more money? I
definitely think so.
More
details will be coming in the coming weeks and months. It will be a sensational
weekend! For now. all you need to do is to reserve one (hopefully both!) of
those days. The hotel room will only be able to accommodate about 100 people so
we`re not kidding when we say "seating is limited". You`ll be able to reserve
your place at this powerful event as early as September 2005. Stay tuned
Regards,
Paul Mladjenovic
201-585-0239
paul@mladjenovic.com
PS: I am
not finished with all the details of the event so feel free to give me some
suggestions so that I can make it as valuable as possible for you. Thank you!
LAST MINUTE
BLOCKBUSTER:
Although
it`s not confirmed in writing yet, I can say with confidence that JAY TAYLOR
& PETER GRANDICH will speak at the Financial Vortex! More details coming
“Stock Investing for Dummies” the 2nd edition is now available!
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Thank you
for reading this issue of the Prosperity Alert. Feel free to pass this along to
others (unchanged, of course) or encourage them to get their own free
subscription at www.SuperMoneyLinks.com. The
next issue will be in your email inbox sooner than you think.
Regards,
Paul Mladjenovic
Email: paul@mladjenovic.com
Tel: 201-585-0239
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