Daily Updates
Oil and stock indexes are highly correlated (move with each other) over the last decade.
Market Buzz – MOSAID Creates Special Committee to Evaluate WiLAN Bid
While they begun Friday’s session heading sharply lower on the downgraded U.S. GDP reading stocks quickly reversed to finish in positive territory after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke proposed no new measures to stimulate the weak U.S. economy, saying he’s confident strong growth will resume without a potentially inflationary lift from the Fed. Confident strong growth will resume…really? Did it every restart?
On the day, the Dow Jones industrial average closed ahead 134 points at 11,284, while the S&P 500 rose 17 points to 1,176. The TSX gained 43 points to finish at 12,327. Toronto ended the week up 2.67% on the weak.
“Although important problems certainly exist, the fundamentals do not appear to have been permanently altered by the shocks of the past four years,” Bernanke said at the annual conference of U.S. central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyo.
The Fed boss also went on to state, “It may take some time, but we can reasonably expect to see a return to growth rates and employment levels consistent with those underlying fundamentals.”
Again, we say underlying fundamentals…really? Do those strong underlying fundamentals include excessive public debt, persistently high unemployment, real GDP that grew at a less than 1.0% in the first half of this year, consumer spending, exports, and equipment and software spending that show a significant deceleration in the first six months of the year?
Switching gears to our Canadian Small-Cap Research Universe, we look ahead to next week to report on earnings from one of our top rated tech stock, which will release its third quarter fiscal 2011 results after market close on Thursday, Sept. 1, 2011.
We will also have an update on the MOSAID/WiLAN potential acquisition. This week, Mosaid Technologies announced it created a special committee of the board of directors on Aug. 18, 2011, to evaluate and consider Wi-LAN Inc.’s unsolicited offer for the company. The special committee has retained Barclays Capital Canada Inc. and GMP Securities LP as financial advisers, and Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg LLP as legal adviser to the special committee. The members of the special committee are Carl Schlachte, chairman of the board, Ian Giffen, director, and Barry Reiter, director. All of the special committee members are independent directors.
MOSAID reiterates its recommendation that shareholders take no action until they have received further communications from the board of directors.
Looniversity – Of Crashes and Bubbles
A bubble is an investing phenomenon that demonstrates the influence human emotion has on investing. A bubble begins when investors put so much demand on a stock that they drive the price beyond any accurate or rational reflection of its actual worth, which should be determined by the fundamental performance of the underlying company. Like the soap bubbles a child likes to blow, investing bubbles often appear as though they will rise forever, but since they are not formed from anything substantial, they eventually pop. When they do, the money that was invested into them dissipates into the wind.
A crash is a significant drop in the total value of a market, almost invariably attributable to the popping of a bubble, creating a situation where in the majority of investors are trying to flee the market at the same time and consequently incurring massive losses. Attempting to avoid more losses during a crash, investors resort to panic selling, hoping to unload their declining stocks onto other investors. This panic selling contributes to the declining market, which eventually crashes and affects everyone. Typically crashes in the stock market have been followed by a depression.
The relationship between bubbles and crashes is similar to the relationship between clouds and rain. You can have clouds without rain but you can’t have rain without clouds, bubbles are like clouds and market crashes are like rain.
Put it to Us?
Q. Is all “Insider Trading” illegal?
– Romy Renard; Calgary, Alberta
A good question. In the markets, there are two types of insider trading: legal and illegal. Because it’s no fun hearing about what you can do, let’s talk about what you can’t. Essentially, this is the buying or selling of a security by insiders who possess material, nonpublic information about the security. The act puts insiders in breach of a fiduciary duty or other relationship of trust and confidence.
A common misconception is that only directors and upper management can be convicted of insider trading. However, anybody who has material and nonpublic information can commit insider trading. This means that almost everybody can be considered an insider, including brokers, family, friends, employees, and yes, even you.
Having said this, there is an important thing to distinguish here; insiders don’t always have their hands tied. In fact, insiders can and do buy and sell stock in their own companies all the time, but they are restricted as to when they can execute their buy and sell orders.
In terms of legal trading, the OSC (Ontario Securities Commission) considers insiders to be company directors, officials, or any individual with a 10 percent or more stakes in the company.
KeyStone’s Latest Reports Section
- As Expected, Oil & Gas Service Company Posts Seasonally Weak Q2, Risk Remains on Balance Sheet – Poised for Strong Second Half of 2011 (Flash Update)
- Merger of Two Junior West African Gold Producers Creates Mid-Term Buying Opportunity – Rating Upgraded (Flash Update)
- Q2 2011 Revenues Grow, Margins Drop and Earnings Miss Expectations – Rating Downgraded (Flash Update)
- Consumer Products Company Announces Auditor Suspends Year-End Audit Procedures Requiring Further Clarification, Independent Audit Planned by Zungui, Shares Drop Significantly (Flash Update)
- Underfollowed Oil & Gas Service Stock Posts Strong Q2, Strong Outlook for Balance of 2011 – Reiterate BUY (Flash Update)
John McLintock: Gold Producers Riding the Risk Trade
With the price of gold soaring to over $1,900 an ounce and investors abandoning equities for commodities, John McClintock, equity research analyst at Mackie Research Capital, sees gold mining companies benefitting from this flight from risk. In this exclusive interview with The Gold Report,McClintock identifies several gold mining companies with great upside potential.
COMPANIES MENTIONED: ARGONAUT GOLD INC. – AVION GOLD CORP. – AVOCET MINING PLC – AXMIN INC. – CHESAPEAKE GOLD CORP. – ELDORADO GOLD CORP. – GRYPHON MINERALS LTD. – NEVSUN RESOURCES LTD. – RANDGOLD RESOURCES LTD. – YAMANA GOLD INC.
The Gold Report: With the recent performance of the gold market, what expectations do you have for the next 6–12 months?
John McClintock: I think nothing is really going to change on the equity side until we see the risk trade coming back on to invest in equities. That risk trade is going to be a function of the U.S. housing market rebounding, as investment is a function of wealth, and the resolution of the debt crisis in Europe. We are going to see companies that have shown consistent operating performance continue to outperform the market. Currently, the focus on quality is paramount, and we are likely going to see that continue for at least the next six months.
TGR: The situation is a little different from past markets when people were jumping into mining stocks because the metals were going up and they were buying almost anything in sight.
JM: Right.
TGR: So are people now being a lot more selective?
JM: Yes, in where they are going. People are focused on just the risk trade. If you look at the equities, all the major precious metals in Toronto are down on the year and definitely underperforming the commodity. It is not because the companies are themselves poor. Investment dollars for the equities other than institutions, predominantly retail, are largely going to exchange-traded funds (ETFs). ETFs are competing with the supply of funds for all of equities. People are saying, “I don’t want to own Treasuries as much anymore.”
I’ve already seen a bit of that. Just go to the commodity, be safe right now and then when we get out of this turbulent time, maybe in six months, you’re probably going to see stocks run. Maybe by September we’ll have more visibility. Going down the market cap, you’re going to probably see people start focusing on the intermediates and the junior producers that show consistent execution.
TGR: So what do you like in that range?
JM: Two stocks that I cover have had very good execution and share prices that are actually outperforming the commodity index and their peer groups. Argonaut Gold Inc. (TSX:AR) is in Mexico and Avion Gold Corp. (TSX:AVR; OTCQX:AVGCF) is in Africa. They share very strong commonality on execution.
TGR: Unlike a lot of juniors, Argonaut came out of the blocks fully loaded with cash. The company did a big IPO and has projects that were producing and ready to produce. Isn’t this unusual for a company that went public in the last couple of years?
JM: It is and it isn’t. It was a functioning mine, and produced, I believe, 40 or 50 thousand ounces (Koz.) prior under the name Castle Gold Corp., with cash costs in excess of $1,000/ounce (oz.). The new management team came in and executed. Even though it seems that it started with an extra handout because it did the large IPO, the funds were spent in a prudent, focused way. I look for three very simple things: 1) whether the company owns the asset, and this includes permitting risk or any subsequent geopolitical event, which would affect development; 2) merit of the assets—what are the technical/geological characteristics, and how do they affect profitability in different commodity and cost environments; and 3) management, management, management. With both Avion and Argonaut, unlike many stocks that come across my desk, I can check all three boxes. Somewhat proof that my system works is that both Argonaut’s and Avion’s stock prices are going up in an otherwise very bearish equity market.
TGR: Can you give us a little bit more background on the company?
JM: Absolutely. I call the company Meridian Gold 2.0 affectionately, although it is definitely not Meridian Gold currently. Meridian was acquired by Yamana Gold Inc. (TSX:YRI; NYSE:AUY; LSE:YAU) in 2007 for about $3.8 billion. Brian Kennedy, who was the president and CEO of Meridian at the time, is now chairman of Argonaut Gold. The CFO, Pete Dougherty, is the current CEO of Argonaut, and Edgar Smith, who is the COO of Argonaut, was also the COO of Meridian. They reassembled the team after their non-compete clauses with Yamana expired, and started Argonaut.
The team was very strategic in the asset they picked and asked, “What can we do at this point in the market with these gold prices?” A lot of assets in Mexico, Chile, Peru and Argentina became available in the crash. In the prior Meridian days, the team ran such assets as El Peñón mine, which is a very high grade gold and silver mine that will go down in mining history as one of the best assets ever. What Argonaut selected as its starting point was the El Castillo mine, which was low grade with small defined resources at that time, and people just saw it as a push along owned by Castle Gold. These guys came in and saw a diamond in the rough. I very much liked Castle Gold, but the company had some difficulties due to undercapitalization.
The Argonaut team saw an asset that had an incredibly good leach-recovery cycle and was able to cut a deal with the prior management of Castle Gold. Argonaut saw an ability to prove up or increase the reserve by 100% through a very strategic drilling program. Its mine development expertise was second to none from putting mines into production in the Meridian days. Given the complexity of a simple heap-leach operation in Mexico, it wasn’t really challenging.
Along with developing that mine, Argonaut also kept an eye out for other opportunities. One of the companies in Mexico that was available was Pediment Gold Corp. It had two simple heap-leach projects, which were very similar to El Castillo, called San Antonio and La Colorada. Moreover, Argonaut continues to add value post the acquisition. For example, at San Antonio, the previous resource mine plan was based on a mix of sulphide and oxide ore, and Argonaut took a calculated risk by stepping out certain zones and expanding the oxide resource. So it went from a potential four-to-six-year oxide production to about a 10-year oxide mine life resource.
Another example of Argonaut’s management caliber is its development strategy at La Colorada. La Colorada was a historical producer that Eldorado Gold Corp. (TSX:ELD; NYSE:EGO) had closed in 2001 because of low commodity prices. I recently came back from the site. I had always been a little skeptical of the asset, but Argonaut could very well have another 50–70 Koz. producer by 2013. Management was able to see a diamond in the rough and execute. Now the market is rewarding it for good execution.
TGR: Argonaut released earnings recently and, apparently, beat expectations.
JM: Yes, two reasons. On the cash cost side, it came in at $578/oz. We were expecting $580/oz., but General & Administrative and other corporate expenses came in lower than we expected. Q211 earnings were more a sign of management successfully executing on all concurrent things the company is doing. Argonaut has a 57,000 meter (m) drill program at La Colorada that is being financed out of cash flow and it is committing to another 10,000m of drilling at San Antonio, out of cash flow.
TGR: Are you expecting that trend to continue? The gold price jumping up the way it has is probably going to make a lot of companies look better than originally expected.
JM: We don’t think it’s reasonable to expect Argonaut to beat every quarter, but we view the operating risk associated with the company as low. With regards to the gold price affecting other gold equities, a high tide does raise all boats. However, in the context of current market conditions, execution is paramount, which translates into cash flow and good growth prospects with lower funding risk. Again, Argonaut is one such company.
We estimate by 2013 Argonaut should grow its production to 185 Koz. at cash costs of $541/oz. from 70 Koz. at cash cost of $581/oz. (or 164% production growth and 8% decline in cash costs) through: 1) expanding the mining rate at El Castillo in 2012 from 28 kilotons/day (kt/d) to 36 kt/d at minimal costs (we expect this to add 20 Koz. of average annual production); 2) construction of the San Antonio project in 2013 (Life of Mine (LOM) average production of 84 Koz. at total cash of $493/oz.); and 3) the addition of the La Colorada project (LOM average production of 47 Koz. at total cash costs of $499/oz.), also expected to be completed in 2013. We estimate the total capital cost for all three production expansions to cost $123 million (M). Moreover, this production growth is fully funded by internal cash flow—at $1,500/oz. Argonaut should generate $88.3M; a net cash balance of $22.7M; and the execution of 25.7 million warrants with a strike price of $4.50/share.
TGR: Do you think Argonaut has enough on its plate at this point or is it still out looking for other properties?
JM: I don’t think it would be acquiring tomorrow, but a mining company should always be looking for new assets and new opportunities, and should never stand still. If a great opportunity walks in the door, sure. But with two development projects on your plate, you should finish that up or at least get them closer to the finish line before you go out and buy more.
TGR: The other company you like is Avion Gold. You call it a turnaround story.
JM: Prior to Avion getting the Tabakoto asset in Mali, the mine was built by a company called Nevsun Resources Ltd. (TSX:NSU; NYSE.A:NSU), which had some problems understanding the block model on it. Nevsun spent approximately $150 million to build the mine, only to close it 18 months later. Most of the investment community looked at it and said, “It’s a broken asset. Sell it for scrap.” Two very astute people, Andrew Bradfield and Don Dudek from Avion, looked at it and said, “It is not the asset. The block model is not so bad, it is just misinterpreted.” They went in there and merely focused on the structural geology of the deposit, and reinterpreted it from, I believe, a solely north-south trending deposit to one with east-west cross-structures. Sure enough, the grade came in line with the drilling, and the asset was able to restart. But not everything in Avion went perfectly for the first year—it started in 2009. It missed on two quarters but since then, it has had, I believe, five quarters of stable execution.
Very much like Argonaut, Avion was able to not only focus on production, but also to grow its resources at Tabakoto from 0.9 Moz. in 2008 to 2.2 Moz. in 2011. It also, like Argonaut, was able to do two very astute, very cheap acquisitions—the Kofi Project from AXMIN Inc. (TSX.V:AXM) and then the Houndé Project in Burkina Faso from Avocet Mining plc (LSE:AVM). Avion picked up the Houndé asset, I believe, for $10M in an all-stock deal, and the Kofi project for $0.5M in cash and 4.5M Avion shares. Here’s another team that said, “What can we add value to?” and be very strategic. The similarities between the Avion management team’s view of things and execution and Argonaut’s are just striking.
TGR: What are the prospects on these other two properties—the Kofi and the Houndé?
JM: The Houndé Project right now has a current inferred resource of about 0.6 Moz. at about 2.87 grams/ton (g/t). That current resource is based off 800m of strike. Avion has drilled it on strike to about 3.7 km with very consistent intersections between 6, 10 and 15m, all within +1.8 g/t. One striking comparable that I like to use is Gryphon Minerals Ltd.’s (ASX:GRY) Banfora project. The company trades at about a $400M–$500M market cap. It has an approximately 2 Moz. resource at 2.1 g/t. We look at Houndé and it has the same mineralization footprint. Avion hasn’t closed yet but completed a $50M deal to raise funds to drill out that project. Right now it has a visibility on 2.2–2.5 Moz., and it’s just a function of drilling now to see where it gets it. The updated resource due at the end of the year will probably only come out with 1.5–1.7 Moz. That’s only a function of time and drilling, not a function of the deposit or the potential there. Again, Houndé is a deposit that I’m quite excited about.
The second project Avion bought was from AXMIN just recently. It’s in the Loulo trend. Loulo is a mine run by Randgold Resources Ltd. (NASDAQ:GOLD), and it is definitely the marquee asset in Randgold’s portfolio. Currently, the Kofi Project has another 0.6 Moz. resource at 2.47 g/t broken up in nine zones. It’s quite interesting because four of these nine mineralized zones are located within an approximately 5 km wide structural corridor. This structural trend, which intersects the Kofi property, is associated with a conductivity feature that extends for 19 km on the Kofi property, and hosts at least 17 Moz. of gold on the Randgold property. Although, Kofi is much earlier stage than Houndé in terms of where it could go, we don’t believe the market has really caught on to the potential there. The Avion market price is really just factoring in the production from Tabakoto and the ongoing expansion, and the next stage in Houndé’s resource growth. You can’t really see what is going to be there yet, but there is the potential that Kofi could someday be better than Houndé. Only the drill bit will tell, but I’m excited.
TGR: A question some investors might have is about political stability in countries like Mali and Burkina Faso.
JM: Absolutely. In 2003 and 2004, West Africa had a big wave of transformation to attract mining investment by changing tax codes and giving exoneration periods for taxes to keep companies there. Now, the prices of commodities, particularly fuel, have caused a dramatic increase in domestic prices, which has had a destabilizing effect on the broader economies. People who don’t make a lot of money don’t have a large propensity to spend. There has been civil unrest, much of it focused at government. People want subsidies for agriculture and fuel. In Burkina Faso, we have seen riots and things get out of hand a little bit. Do we think there’s going to be a full civil war or change in government in Burkina? No. But we do think there is an upward pressure on royalty rates and taxes on mining companies that will have to be factored into the valuations.
Right now, depending on which West African country you are in, there are exoneration periods for taxes for 4, 6, 8, even up to 15 years. Tax rates are generally lower, about 20–30%, and although the governments do get carried interests of 10–20%, the mining companies don’t pay out dividends to the government until all capital is paid back. So the governments really don’t get much of the immediate cash flow from the company. We do believe that the revenues and profits, particularly with the very successful companies, will have to be redistributed to some degree to keep political stability and also to ensure a long-term mining industry there. So investors should be aware that royalty rates will change. A lot of it has already been factored into the stocks, we believe.
TGR: Do you have any closing thoughts you’d like to leave with us as far as the gold market in general and expectations for juniors and mid-tier mining stocks?
JM: In the general macro scheme, I think gold will be the thing. The U.S. will have to deflate its dollar and rely heavily on exports. Inflation in the U.S. will not be put away for at least 5–10 years. In the early 1990s, it took the Canadian government about 10 years to get out of it and cut its deficit. Europe will have to print money to get itself out of its current situation. Who knows about the debt and real estate situations in China and other emerging markets worldwide? So in the longer term, I’m very bullish on gold and commodities, in particular, hard assets. It has been an investment trend that is likely to continue, particularly in the precious metals. Industrial commodities like copper can be expected to come off with an economic slowdown. People seeking safety and wealth preservation will cause gold to continue to be strong for the near and mid-term, without a doubt.
TGR: Hopefully that will filter down to the equities?
JM: For sure. It’s just a function of the risk trade coming back on. The U.S. will not hit 4% gross domestic product any time soon. We need the housing market to bottom, and people to get back into the equity market and begin to make investments. When people have taken 30–50% haircuts on their biggest asset, they can’t afford to lose a lot of money in the stock market anymore. So people are very risk averse right now and it is about wealth preservation more than wealth generation. With the long-term commodity price the way it is, people will come back to the market eventually, but it’s not going to be tomorrow or next month. We are going to see a volatile market here, but six months from now, I’m optimistic the gold stocks will catch up.
TGR: It looks like we are still in the fear stage. So we need fear to turn into greed.
JM: I’m sure you’ve heard that one before.
TGR: So your final thoughts?
JM: I’d say just stay focused on quality and on management teams that have executed like Argonaut and Avion. If investors want to focus on the development companies, we would suggest again to focus on quality strategic assets for senior and intermediate companies. Such a company would beChesapeake Gold Corp. (TSX.V:CKG). Although it is a development company, it is catalyst-rich, reasonably funded, has excellent management and its Metates flagship asset is very strategic for either senior or intermediate companies. Metates is a gold deposit in Mexico that has 28 Moz. gold. We estimate it can produce 1 Moz. of gold at sub-$475/oz. cash costs at a 20-year mine life. It is assets like those that have strategic importance for major companies that people should focus on.
TGR: That’s another one our readers can take a look at. We greatly appreciate your insights and a couple of good stories that look like they have some solid potential. Thank you very much for joining us today.
John McClintock is an equity research analyst at Mackie Research Capital, specializing in mining and metals. Prior to joining the firm in 2008, John was with Bank of Montreal Capital Markets where he worked in investment banking. John began his investment industry career in 2005. He holds a Bachelor of economics and commerce from the University of Toronto.
Want to read more exclusive Gold Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Exclusive Interviews page.
DISCLOSURE:
1) Zig Lambo conducted this interview. He personally and/or his family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Gold Report: Argonaut Gold Inc., Avion Gold Corp.
3) John McClintock: I personally own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally and/or my family am paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: Argonaut Gold Inc., Avion Gold Corp., Chesapeake Gold Corp.
08/29/11 Poitou, France – Last week in the financial markets was unsatisfactory. No clear trend announced itself. The Dow should have gone down. Gold should have gone down too. But they diddled around…and on Friday, both seemed to be back in counter-trends, moving against the direction we think they OUGHT to go.
As for stocks, everything we’ve found out about the economy since 2007 suggests that our Great Correction view is right. This market aims to correct something; we just don’t know what.
Whatever it is doing, it is NOT responding in a typical post-war recovery manner. The feds have pumped trillions into the economy. They’ve gotten nothing for it except more debt.
Which was just what they DIDN’T need. The real problem — or at least the most obvious problem — is too much debt. Adding more, the feds aren’t doing anyone any favors, except the banks themselves.
It’s just a matter of time before investors realize that stocks are not worth prices in the top of the range. In a correction, they’re worth prices in the bottom of the range. And eventually they should fall to the very bottom of the range…where you can buy the entire Dow group for only one ounce of gold.
But that is still a long way away. And in the meantime, what about gold?
Well, bull markets — like lovers — always test their admirers. Remember the stock market crash of ’87? Stocks had been rising for five years. Then came Black Monday. The Dow lost 508 points in a single day. By the end of October, the Dow had lost nearly a quarter of its value.
Naturally, a group of 30 prominent economists got together and made fools of themselves. They announced that “the next few years could be the most troubling since the ’30s.”
And naturally, faint-hearted investors failed the test. They left the stock market — fearful that another Great Depression…or maybe a repeat of a ’70s-style slump…was coming.
When the crash was over, the Dow stood at only 1,738. Investors who had bought stocks 5 years previously were still up 70%. And the bull market had scarcely even begun. Instead of going down, stocks rallied…and never looked back. The Dow rose to over 11,000 in January 2000 — the most spectacular stock market success story in history. The economy, too, roared ahead.
Stock market investors may anticipate a replay of that post-crash world. They’ll be disappointed. Our world today has nothing in common with 1987. To make a long story short, then we were coming out of a long bear market. Now, we are coming out of a long bull market. Then, we were at the beginning of a long bull market in bonds. Now, we must be near the end of it. And then, households and the government could still borrow in order to keep spending. Now, the private sector is played out; government continues to borrow at record levels….but that’s a different story.
The last bull market in gold tested its admirers too. The price had risen from $41 an ounce — when Richard Nixon cut the last link to the dollar in August ’71 — to nearly $200 in 1975. Thereupon began a sell-off, in which gold lost 40% of its value…coming to rest around $100.
Weak sisters, johnnies-come-lately, and camp followers got shaken out. They gave up on gold at $100 an ounce…before it began its real push to the top, which eventually put the price over $800.
Our guess is that this bull market in gold will test its admirers too. So far, it has closed every year higher than the last. Making money was easy. Our faith was never seriously challenged. Even now, the price of gold is close to $1,800. It’s still ahead for the year. It’s still in its upward channel, well above its 160-day moving average.
Gold is still a winner. Gold investors are still winners. There is no reason to doubt that they will be winners this year…just like they have been every year this century.
But that’s not how it works. Not usually. The gold market needs to make its admirers feel like losers. It needs to cause them to wonder…and question their own faith and judgment.
How so? By letting the price fall to…$1,200…or even $1,000. Then, we will be ready for the third and final stage of this great bull market.
Regards,
Bill Bonner,
for The Daily Reckoning
Since founding Agora Inc. in 1979, Bill Bonner has found success and garnered camaraderie in numerous communities and industries. A man of many talents, his entrepreneurial savvy, unique writings, philanthropic undertakings, and preservationist activities have all been recognized and awarded by some of America’s most respected authorities. Along with Addison Wiggin, his friend and colleague, Bill has written two New York Times best-selling books, Financial Reckoning Day and Empire of Debt. Both works have been critically acclaimed internationally. With political journalist Lila Rajiva, he wrote his third New York Times best-selling book, Mobs, Messiahs and Markets, which offers concrete advice on how to avoid the public spectacle of modern finance. Since 1999, Bill has been a daily contributor and the driving force behind The Daily Reckoning.
Dice Have No Memory: Big Bets & Bad Economics from Paris to the Pampas, the new book from Bill Bonner, is now available for purchase. It is the definitive compendium of Bill’s daily reckonings from more than a decade: 1999-2010. Whether you’re new to these Daily Reckonings, or one of Bill’s “long suffering” readers, this is one you surely won’t want to miss.
Special Report: Forget QE3 – America’s Going Bust, on the Road to Bankrupt Hell- If America had a credit card, it would get mercilessly cut up and thrown back in her face. The country’s basically broke and isn’t paying its debts. Harsh, but true. All of that – and how it could affect your family and your retirement – is revealed in this urgent video report. Don’t wait, watch now.
The Bottom Line
Technical, fundamental and seasonal influences point to another volatile period for equity markets around the world this week, but with less intensity than recorded last week. Support was established by major equity indices on August 8th including 1,105.54 for the S&P 500 Index, 10.604.07 by the Dow Jones Industrial Average and 11,617.81 by the TSX Composite Index. Preferred strategy is to hold/add to sectors that benefit from favourable seasonal influences at this time of year (e.g. gold equities on weakness, agriculture, “gassy” equities, biotech) and to watch for entry points on weakness in other economically sensitive sector in October.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 466.89 points (4.32%) last week. Intermediate trend is down. The Average trades below its 50 and 200 day moving averages and completed a “Death Cross” last week. Support has formed at 10,604.07. Short term momentum indicators are recovering from a deeply oversold level. A MACD buy signal was recorded on Friday. Strength relative to the S&P 500 Index remains positive.

The TSX Composite Index gained 320.04 points (2.67%) last week. Intermediate trend is down. The Index trades well below its 50 and 200 day moving averages. Support has formed at 11,617.81. Short term momentum indicators are recovering from deep oversold levels. Strength relative to the S&P 500 Index remains positive.

The U.S. Dollar slipped 0.20 last week. It remains in a six month trading range between 72.70 and 76.72. Intermediate trend is down. Short term momentum indicators are neutral.

Crude Oil added $2.66 per barrel (3.21%) last week. Gain since its new support on August 8th at $75.71 is 13.0%. Short term momentum indicators continue to recover from deeply oversold levels.

Gold fell $25.50 per ounce (1.32%) during a week that gold prices swung wildly up and down. Volume shows a typical “blow off”. Short term momentum indicators have rolled over from an extreme overbought level.

…read and view many more charts and links to articles HERE