Asset protection

R. Russell – Financial Meltdown & Once In 600-Year Event

The 90-year old Godfather of newsletter writers warns of a coming financial meltdown that will totally destroy the current financial system. The 60-year market veteran also discusses the fact that the world may now be witnessing a devastating once in 600-year event.

Russell:  “What do they say about the trend of the market?  Let’s review a few technical items.  New lows on Friday were triple the rate of new highs.  The advance-decline line was rolling over.  There are six distribution days on the NASDAQ and three distribution days on the S&P Composite.  The percentage of stocks trading above their 200-day moving averages was at 43, well below the 50% level.  Investor’s Business Daily’s index of 25 growth mutual funds shows a declining trend in this index.

So all in all, the technical background for the stock market does not look good.  Nevertheless, the D-J Averages appear constructive.

Below, we see the Dow testing its 50-day moving average and well above its (red) 200-day MA.  But note that MACD is rolling over.

Screen Shot 2014-09-30 at 5.18.04 AM

The Transports are also testing their 50-day MA and MACD has rolled over…..continue reading HERE

 

8 Stocks “Poised To Explode”

Jay Taylor Urges Investors to Stay Liquid for the Coming Gold Boom

Jay Taylor doesn’t beat around the bush—he believes the price of gold is being suppressed to support the U.S. dollar and underwrite American foreign policy. But the publisher and editor of J. Taylor’s Gold, Energy & Tech Stocks and host of the radio show “Turning Hard Times into Good Times” thinks that this suppression will fail, just as it did in the 1970s, when gold rose over 2,300%. In this interview with The Gold Report, Taylor urges investors to stay as liquid as possible so they can invest in undervalued companies poised to explode when the value of gold is reasserted.

Stocks Reviewed plus read what other experts are saying about:

The Gold Report: The price of gold has fallen more than $130 an ounce ($130/oz) since July. Why?

Jay Taylor: I believe we have two different markets. One is an honest market for physical metal. The other is a market that has increasingly become less than honest. The latter is a paper market, primarily in London and New York, and it is used to muddy the waters of price discovery with gold and silver. This paper market price is assumed to be the real price of gold. I don’t think that’s true.

Screen Shot 2014-09-29 at 6.32.03 PMThere is a need on the part of Wall Street, and the ruling elite within the Anglo-American empire, to keep people uninterested in honest money and real gold because dishonest enterprises must keep people from knowing the truth. What we have essentially is a fiat currency system that is devised to allow those in charge of the monetary system to profit at the expense of the real producers of wealth: the miners, the manufacturers, the farmers, the inventors. The people that produce useful things are having their wealth confiscated clandestinely by this monetary scheme.

TGR: You have written that “the rigging in the gold price in New York and London is accomplished by a handful of major bullion banks that just happen to be the biggest shareholders of the Federal Reserve.” How is this rigging accomplished?

 

JT: It’s accomplished through massive futures markets selling on the Comex and the London markets. It is like a casino. There is a 100 to 1 ratio of gold futures bought to actual gold settlement. We see huge amounts of selling coming into the market at exactly the times we would expect gold to do well. The futures markets are so highly leveraged that a very small amount of actual dollars are needed to drive the gold price down.

Screen Shot 2014-09-29 at 6.32.10 PMThe players here, the big banks, have the largest shareholdings of the Federal Reserve. They have access to massive amounts of money created out of nothing. It is interesting to note that, especially for platinum, palladium and silver, a large premium, up to 24% in the case of palladium, is being paid by people in the physical markets of Shanghai. The premium for silver has been around 14%, and the premium for platinum has been between that of palladium and silver.

TGR: In retrospect, was the creation of gold exchange-traded funds (ETFs) a mistake?

JT: I don’t think so. We must distinguish between those gold ETFs that are honest and those that might not be so honest. Among the good ones are the Merk Gold Trust ETF (OUNZ), which allows investors to actually take delivery of physical gold. Another good one is the Central Fund of Canada Ltd. (CEF:NYSE.MKT; CEF.A:TSX), which publishes a quarterly audit of the amount of gold, silver and cash that backs each share. The Sprott ETFs are honest as well, and at least one Sprott fund allows investors to take delivery of gold, albeit a larger number of ounces than the Merk Gold Trust, which is designed more for retail clients who wish to turn their shares into gold.

TGR: The rigging downward of gold, silver and other metals would obviously harm the mining industry profoundly. So why isn’t the industry complaining?

JT: I don’t think the major mining companies understand the product they’re selling. I don’t think they understand that gold, and to a lesser degree, silver, are, in fact, money designed by nature and not decreed by human beings. They have been taught to believe, by men and women with Ph.D.s from Princeton, Harvard and Yale, that gold is a “barbarous relic.” There may be an exception here and there, with CEOs of major gold mining companies. Rob McEwen of McEwen Mining Inc. (MUX:TSX; MUX:NYSE), for example, understood this truth and said it many times when he headed Goldcorp Inc. (G:TSX; GG:NYSE).

Screen Shot 2014-09-29 at 6.32.24 PMThe World Gold Council, which is funded by those same CEOs who do not understand the product they sell, promotes gold as jewelry. That is simply, with all due respect, asinine because the greater the amount of gold taken off the market for jewelry, the lower gold is priced. What would really boost the gold industry would be an understanding that gold is honest money and that fiat money is dishonest. A lot of the junior miners sort of understand this. They’re more supportive of the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (GATA).

TGR: How long can this rigging continue?

JT: It’s really a question of how long confidence in the U.S. dollar can be maintained. The BRIC countries are forming their own financial infrastructure to compete with the dollar. Sanctions directed by the United States against Russia are pushing Russia into the arms of China, which makes the BRIC countries stronger. China is the largest gold producer in the world and has supposedly imported huge amounts of gold in recent years. Also, as tensions with Russia have been rising, that country has also has been importing large amounts of gold, as the chart below illustrates.

jtaychart

If we had an honest monetary system with gold at the center, we could not issue endless amounts of money to finance the war machinery. The U.S. went off the gold standard in 1971 because it wanted socialism and the ability to wage war without telling the people they had to pay for it. I don’t know how long our pathological monetary system can last, but the handwriting is on the wall. As I look at the continuing decline of western economies, including that of the U.S., I feel the day of reckoning is drawing near. I can’t imagine we won’t see a major breakdown in the global financial system within a year from now.

TGR: Capital continues to seek the U.S. dollar. The Dow and the S&P 500 continue to hit record highs, while the headline unemployment number falls. Are we looking at an economic recovery, or could we face another repeat of the 2007–2008 crisis?

JT: I don’t believe that we’ve had a recovery. If we have, it’s the most tepid in history. The number of people in the labor force continues to decline, and inflation is certainly not the 1% or 2% our government pretends it is. The top 1% in the western world have done extremely well, while the middle class is being hollowed out. Talk of recovery is a fraud that keeps people pacified. The large corporate interests in America don’t want change because the banks, through the Federal Reserve, can print all the dollars they want, and they now have purchased Congress and the executive branch of the American government.

TGR: How does the present situation for gold resemble what happened in the late 1970s, when it rose more than 2,300%?

JT: There is a case to be made that a much bigger rise could occur. The ratio of money being created relative to GDP—even if you take the government’s GDP numbers at face value, which I do not—is much greater now than it was in the 1970s.

Screen Shot 2014-09-29 at 6.32.42 PMI’m still agnostic as to whether the economy goes into hyperinflation or massive deflation. After a deflationary implosion, the nominal price of gold would not necessarily rise, but its purchasing power would rise dramatically. If the masses become outraged over the fall in their living standards, we could see money printed and thrown to them from helicopters. I pray to God that doesn’t happen, because hyperinflation is the worst of all outcomes. The debasement of the dollar will continue. If this leads to a flight from the dollar, we could see a sudden and dramatic shift of capital from paper money into real goods, such as gold.

TGR: Will gold stocks lead or lag the gold price breakout?

JT: I think they have been leading already. My gold share values are up low double digits from the bottom. I’m seeing wonderful opportunities in precious metals equities. These markets are true markets, unlike the fraudulent paper markets for gold and silver.

TGR: One of your major holdings was just bought out by Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd. (AEM:TSX; AEM:NYSE), correct?

JT: That’s right. Cayden Resources Inc. (CYD:TSX.V; CDKNF:OTCQX) is my second largest holding. The company has agreed to be purchased by Agnico Eagle for $205 million ($205M). I was a bit disappointed at first, because we could have seen a much higher number in the longer run. That said, there’s no question that a bird in the hand is better than two in the bush. As Ivan Bebek, Cayden’s CEO, recently noted on my radio show, the company is now derisked, having exchanged shares of Cayden for Agnico Eagle, which is a very strong gold mining company. Agnico Eagle is one of my favorite senior gold mining companies because it has been very careful about protecting its margins. It’s a stock I could easily see doubling or tripling when the real price of gold resumes its upward trek.

TGR: What’s Ivan Bebek going to do in the future?

JT: Ivan and Shawn Wallace, Cayden’s chairman, are definitely on to their next deal. This was their second success. Their first was Keegan Resources, which is now Asanko Gold Inc. (AKG:TSX; AKG:NYSE.MKT). I think that investors need to follow the successful jockeys. I’m certainly looking forward to what they will do next.

TGR: Which other companies do you like in Mexico?

JT: Almaden Minerals Ltd. (AMM:TSX; AAU:NYSE) is one that I like a lot. The company is a project generator, but it has focused on the Ixtaca gold-silver project. This has developed quite nicely into a low-cost, multimillion-ounce project.

The company released an updated preliminary economic assessment of Ixtaca on Sept. 3. Its initial capital expense has been reduced 19% to $399M. Its pre-tax net present value is now $842M, and its pre-tax internal rate of return is 37%. The after-tax payback period is 2.5 years.

TGR: What prices did Almaden use for its base case scenario?

JT: The base case is $1,320/oz gold and $21/oz silver. I expect a gold price rise would be very positive for the company.

I also like SilverCrest Mines Inc. (SVL:TSX; SVLC:NYSE.MKT) a lot, because the company always does what it says it is going to do. It started producing on a small scale, and uses its cash flows to grow the company. SilverCrest is going to 3,000 tons a day, and this will increase production dramatically. The company earned $0.03/share during the first six months of this year, but its cash costs fell by 2% to $7.66 per equivalent ounce of silver produced. I expect this company will continue to grow organically without shareholder dilution.

Screen Shot 2014-09-29 at 6.32.53 PMAnother Mexican company I like isParamount Gold and Silver Corp. (PZG:NYSE.MKT; PZG:TSX). It’s trading at only $0.92/share now, but it has 2.4 million ounces (2.4 Moz) of gold equivalent at San Miguel, and at the Sleeper mine in Nevada, where the latest NI 43-101 resource totaled 3.5 Moz in the Measured and Indicated categories, and just under 2 Moz in the Inferred category. This company has deep pockets supporting it.

TGR: Which companies do you prefer in the Caribbean and South America?

JT: I have Precipitate Gold Corp. (PRG:TSX.V) on my list. The company has good exploration potential in the Dominican Republic. In fact, the company just announced a discovery hole on its Ginger Ridge project. Specifically, it intersected approximately 0.4 oz/ton gold over 5 meters (5m) and 0.145 oz/ton over 18m. Ginger Ridge is close to the GoldQuest Mining Corp. (GQC:TSX.V) discovery, where a 2+ Moz gold resource was outlined. GoldQuest is also on my list. Precipitate is a low-cost stock that could evolve into something very considerable. Obviously, this discovery hole improves the odds.

Mandalay Resources Corp. (MND:TSX) is making money and paying a bit of a dividend. The company has operations in Chile, Australia and now in Sweden, after its takeover of Elgin Mining. I also like companies in French Guiana and Guyana.

TGR: Such as?

JT: In French Guiana, I love Columbus Gold Corp. (CGT:TSX.V; CBGDF:OTCQX) and its Paul Isnard project. The company was smart enough not to go it alone. Instead, Columbus brought in a large, successful Russian mining company, Nordgold N.V. (NORD:LSE). Nordgold will take it to production, or at least feasibility, with Columbus keeping just under 50%. I like French Guiana because it has French law. Columbus CEO Robert Giustra has done a remarkable job, and I think the probability of success is quite high. With the stock selling at around $0.45, I think the upside is phenomenal, especially when the next leg of the gold bull market gets underway.

Screen Shot 2014-09-29 at 6.33.03 PMNext door, in Guyana, Goldsource Mines Inc. (GXS:TSX.V) has the same management team as SilverCrest, and will begin producing gold this year. This stock sells for only $0.20 now. It could easily become a five- or tenbagger within the next year, because it will likely produce gold at $480/oz. Goldsource is going to mine the saprolites only, just taking the low-hanging fruit, before it explores for hard rock potential. If a sizeable hard rock resource is found, it will likely look for a partner.

TGR: Ecuador is not a country we’ve associated with foreign mining companies for some time, but you’re interested in a company there, are you not?

JT: Cornerstone Capital Resources Inc. (CGP:TSX.V; GWN:FSE; CTNXF:OTCBB) is a project generator. It has had some phenomenal intercepts at the Cascabel copper­–gold prospect. For example, a hole announced on Aug. 26 scored 0.4% copper and 0.17 grams per ton (0.17 g/t) gold over 958m. An earlier hole scored 0.46% copper and 0.18 g/t gold over 597.26m. The one thing I’m hesitant about is that its Australian junior partner, SolGold Plc (SOLG:LSE), is not terribly well financed. That said, this could be a tenbagger very quickly.

TGR: Which Canadian gold companies do you like?

JT: There are a lot of them. Klondex Mines Ltd. (KDX:TSX; KLNDF:OTCBB), which is operating in Nevada, looks really good for its high grade resource. It recently reported its first profit. It has really turned the corner since it acquired the Midas mill and mine from Newmont Mining Corp. (NEM:NYSE). It is trucking high-grade ore (more than 1 oz/ton much of the time) 100 miles from its Fire Creek property to the Midas mill. But both the Fire Creek project and the Midas mine have substantial exploration potential. I believe this company will continue to grow its production organically as it takes advantage of excess mill capacity.

Premier Gold Mines Ltd. (PG:TSX) is one of my favorites. The company has three great projects in Ontario and Nevada. It owns 100% of the Trans-Canada property in Ontario, and holds a 49% interest in the Rahill-Bonanza project, with Goldcorp holding 51%. Premier recently acquired a 100% interest in the Cove gold project in Nevada, having purchased Newmont’s interest. I believe this is one of the best development companies out there, with not one but three potential company-making gold mining projects advancing toward production.

TerraX Minerals Inc. (TXR:TSX.V), a new entry on my list, has the Yellowknife City gold project in the Northwest Territories. The company is 9.7% owned by Virginia Mines Inc. (VGQ:TSX), which has increased my confidence level. Management is in the process of pulling together data from some 463 previous drill holes, but what is most exciting is the fact that the southern end of the company’s Northbelt property hosts the northern extension of the Yellowknife Gold Belt, which hosted the famous 8.1 Moz Giant Deposit and the 6.1 Moz Con deposit. The company’s management team is technically strong and has skin in the game.

The final one I’ll mention in Canada is Balmoral Resources Ltd. (BAR:TSX; BAMLF:OTCQX). The company has projects straddling the Ontario-Quebec border. It has a high-grade gold discovery on its Detour trend project at the Martiniere claim group, located 45 kilometers from the Detour Gold deposit. Also in this group of claims, which measures 700 square kilometers, the company has made a nickel and platinum group metal discovery This is a very successful company from an equity point of view and from an exploration point of view.

TGR: Do you like any companies in Asia?

JT: I am very excited about Novo Resources Corp. (NVO:CNSX; NSRPF:OTCQX) and its Pilbara gold project in Australia. CEO Quinton Hennigh has begun work on a bankable feasibility study for lower grade surface material. It’s free milling gold, which should be very low cost, almost like a saprolite in the amount of effort required to win the gold from the hosting material.

Screen Shot 2014-09-29 at 6.33.14 PMNewmont Mining Corp. owns 32% of Novo, and management owns a big chunk of stock. Newmont just finished using its propriety bulk leach extractable gold (BLEG) surveying technology to outline huge masses of prospective land for finding what the company hopes will be the next Witwatersrand deposit. I expect that, before the end of this year, its resource will grow very dramatically. Novo is also going to put down a couple of deep holes this year.

TGR: You mentioned Witwatersrand. What’s the connection?

JT: The Witwatersrand Basin in South Africa has produced 1.5 billion ounces of gold, about one-third to one-half of all the gold ever produced. Quinton Hennigh, who is a geologist, believes that he has found the same kind of environment at Pilbara. If Novo were to hit what is known as the carbon leader that’s typical of the Witwatersrand, then I think this stock would be a rocket shot to the moon in no time. I was talking to Rick Rule about this recently, and Rick says if Novo really intersects that carbon leader, which is deeper down in the ancient seabed, then it will have to stop worrying about putting together a bankable feasibility study and just drill the heck out of this thing.

Screen Shot 2014-09-29 at 6.33.21 PMQuinton has studied Witwatersrand rock and has been developing this hypothesis for many years. Novo is an Australian company, so political risk is relatively limited. Pilbara has the prospects of near-term production combined with the possibility of a major discovery. Novo is very well financed, with about $14M in cash.

TGR: Some investors are put off Novo because it isn’t listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX).

JT: That doesn’t bother me, but I expect it will be listed on the TSX or another senior exchange shortly. Novo is actually very illiquid now. To give you an example, I probably have more shares of this company than I should. I wanted to sell some to buy something else I thought looked attractive. The stock was at just over $1.10/share when I went to sell. I sold 1,100 shares, and that transaction took it to just below $1/share.

TGR: You have stated your firm belief that the price of gold cannot remain suppressed for much longer. But as John Maynard Keynes reminded us, “Markets can remain irrational a lot longer than you and I can remain solvent.” Many investors in gold companies have felt the sting of Keynes’ word for more than three years now. What should they do?

JT: Well-managed companies with good projects and the ability to raise money will survive. Many juniors are not in that position, and will be gobbled up or be subjected to the huge rollbacks that kill early investors. Obviously, not putting all your eggs in the precious metals basket would have been wise, and still is. I do not, however, advocate big investments in the wider equities markets now, because they are long in the tooth and could be rolled back substantially themselves.

Investors should keep some cash and build some cash. I’ve sold stocks at a loss to make sure I have cash for when this market finally turns around. There’s some enormously attractive junior gold and silver mining companies out there, so investors need to keep liquid. Investors should find liquid companies that have valuable assets and can stay the course; companies with managements that are careful about how they structure their shares and their financings.

TGR: Jay, thank you for your time and your insights.

As he followed the demolition of the U.S. gold standard and the rapid rise in the national debt, Jay Taylor’s interest in U.S. monetary and fiscal policy grew, particularly as it related to gold. He began publishing North American Gold Mining Stocks in 1981. In 1997, he decided to pursue his avocation as a new full-time career—including publication of his weekly J. Taylor’s Gold, Energy & Tech Stocks newsletter. He also has a radio program, “Turning Hard Times Into Good Times.”

Want to read more 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 Streetwise Interviews page.

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DISCLOSURE: 
1) Kevin Michael Grace conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report and The Mining Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an independent contractor. He owns, or his family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. 
2) Jay Taylor: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Cayden Resources Inc., Central Fund of Canada Ltd., Columbus Gold Corp., Cornerstone Capital Resources Inc., GoldQuest Mining Corp., Goldsource Mines, Novo Resources Corp., Paramount Gold and Silver Corp., Premier Gold Mines Ltd., SilverCrest Mines Inc. and TerraX Minerals Inc. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I determined and had final say over what companies would be included in the interview based on my research, understanding of the sector and interview theme. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview. 
3) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: Cayden Resources Inc., Asanko Gold Inc., Almaden Resources Ltd., SilverCrest Mines Inc., Precipitate Gold Corp., Mandalay Resources Corp., Columbus Gold Corp., Klondex Mines Ltd., Premier Gold Mines Ltd., TerraX Minerals Inc. and Balmoral Resources Ltd. Goldcorp Inc. is not affiliated with Streetwise Reports. The companies mentioned in this interview were not involved in any aspect of the interview preparation or post-interview editing so the expert can speak independently about the sector. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.
4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent. 
5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer.
6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned. Directors, officers, employees or members of their families are prohibited from making purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise during the up-to-four-week interval from the time of the interview until after it publishes.

 

US Health Care – A Canadian wake up call

sibylEd note: Houston-based Sibyl Bogardus is the Chief Compliance officer with HUB International, Canada’s largest cross border insurance brokerage. In advance of her Canadian seminar series this week we asked her to highlight the major pitfalls and uncertainties faced by Canadians and Canadian companies doing business in the US.

Q:        What would you say are the top 3 mis-conceptions Canadian companies have regarding compliance with the new US Health Care reforms?

1)   The law only applies to employers based in the U.S.  Actually, it applies to U.S. employers, even if the company headquarters or parent company is based in Canada or elsewhere.

2)   U.S. subsidiaries under 50 full-time employees are exempt.  Actually, all full-time employees in U.S. entities will be counted together to see if the employer groups taken together as a whole are over 50 full-time employees. This may even be true if the Canadian company owns less than 100% of the U.S. operations.

3)   Canadians working in the U.S. don’t need to have coverage that meets U.S. health reform standards and their U.S.-based employers don’t need to offer them health plan coverage.  Actually, Canadian citizens with coverage in their home country, even if it is very comprehensive, are not exempt from the U.S. requirement to have coverage.  Their personal obligations will depend in large part on how long they are in the U.S.

Q:        What role does the IRS play in these regulations?

The IRS (Internal Revenue Service) enforces the requirements for employers to offer coverage, and for individuals to elect coverage.  The penalties are imposed by the IRS as “excise,” or penalty taxes.  The process often will be a demand letter sent to employers, which may follow an audit /review by IRS government agents, or the IRS may send the demand letter simply because the employer’s or the individual’s tax filing reveals a health plan coverage failure. The IRS approach usually puts employers and individuals back into a defensive mode, where they have to prove to the IRS that they really don’t owe the penalty…not a good position to be in.

 Q:       Who is defined as an “employer” under this system?

The employer is the organization controlling the worker…how he does his work, where he does it, and when.  The employer includes all employers in the same “controlled group” for IRS tax purposes.  A controlled group is based on common ownership, either 80% of more of two or more employers is owned by a single parent company.  Or, if 5 or fewer individuals own 80% or more of two or more companies, the companies might be considered related after the IRS applies some other standards.  This last rule really tends to catch entrepreneurs by surprise.  

Q:        If a Canadian company has multiple divisions, or subsidiaries – are they treated as separate companies?

No, they typically will be treated as a single company in the U.S.  The Canadian parent is not required to comply for its Canadian-based employees, of course, but the U.S. divisions or subsidiaries are all treated as one for purposes of determining size.  If over the required number of full-time employees, under the new rules then all the divisions or subsidiaries must comply by offering a plan that satisfies minimum standards of that law and that is affordable to employees.

Q:        What should Canadian companies NOT DO prior to these regulations coming into effect?

A major red flag in the eyes of the IRS and the U.S. Department of Labor will be terminating employees who would be eligible for coverage when the law takes effect in early 2015.

Also, don’t wait to address the so-called Cadillac tax that penalizes employers for having plans that are too generous.  Those rules start affecting plans in 2018; don’t be caught by surprise.  Instead, have a progressive plan strategy in place well before the date your plan is affected. Also, an employer should not offer to pay for any individual policies…the federal government wants an employer of any size to offer a group health plan of its own.  Similarly, trying to move employees onto Medicare (a government program for the elderly, disabled, and people with kidney failure) is very risky under older rules that slip the attention of many employers.  Finally, beware of any schemes that urge savings through reduction of payroll taxes; many of these are viewed as tax avoidance by the IRS.  

Q;        What is the most interesting loophole you’ve seen so far?

The law only requires an employer to offer something cryptically called a “minimum essential coverage” plan.  There is a major glitch in the law because Congress defines this type of program as just about any employer-sponsored plan.  Very circular definition!  So, by offering a health plan with preventive visits, such as annual physical examinations, but no coverage for anything else means an employer can avoid the worst penalty under the law.  (Generally, $2,000 times the number of full-time employees, minus 30 employees.).

So, even with a plan that offers no coverage for x-rays, surgery, cancer treatment, hospitalization, doctor visits, or drugs, the employer can avoid the worst of the new law.  IRS insiders in Washington say the law as passed by Congress creates this loophole, and the IRS can’t close it because they don’t have the power to override Congress.

CEOs, CFOs and business owners take note. Will this issue affect you or your company? If you would like to attend one of Sibyl’s complimentary seminars in Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton or Vancouver CLICK HERE to register.

Seminar Dates

  1. Calgary – Monday, September 29th, 3-6 pm – Hotel Arts, 119 12th Avenue SW
  2. Edmonton – Tuesday, September 30th, 3-6 pm – Fairmont Hotel Macdonald, 10065 100th Street
  3. Winnipeg – Wednesday, October 1st, 3-6 pm – Manitoba Club, 194 Broadway
  4. Vancouver – Thursday, October 2nd, 3-6 pm – Ter minal City Club, 837 West Hastings Street

 

4 Stocks That Meet The Strategy of the Week

perspectives header weekly

Avoid Confirmation Bias

Screen Shot 2014-09-29 at 9.35.09 AMIn this week’s issue:

  • Weekly Commentary
  • Strategy of the Week
  • Stocks That Meet The Featured Strategy

perspectives commentary

In This Week’s Issue:

– Stockscores’ Market Minutes Video – When Support Works (and when it doesn’t)
– Stockscores Trader Training – Avoid Confirmation Bias
– Stock Features of the Week – Bargain Hunting Energy Stocks

The Toronto Money Show
Join Tyler Bollhorn and a star-studded cast of financial experts at The World MoneyShow Toronto (Metro Toronto Convention Center) this October 16-18. Tyler will be speaking on Saturday Oct 18th at 12:45 – 1:30 on How to Find and Trade Hot Stocks.

Attendance is free but you must register. For more information, and to register, click here:
https://secure.moneyshow.com/msc/TOMS/registration.asp?sid=TOMS14&scode=036901

Stockscores Market Minutes Video – When Support Works (and when it doesn’t)
In this week’s Market Minutes video, I look at what the two types of chart support are and how these price floors serve to stop selling pressure and under what conditions they fail to hold. If you are wondering whether the market is setting up for a big correction, this is a must watch video.

Avoid Confirmation Bias
Investors usually do some research on the stocks that they are considering purchasing. This might involve checking the company’s financial position, reading their recent news releases or consulting research done by experts. The aim is to make a well informed decision.

If the research satisfies their criteria, a trade will be made. For most investors, that trade brings with it a dangerous commitment. Since no one likes the pain of suffering a financial loss in the market, the investor now has a vested interest in finding any information that they can to confirm that they have done the right thing.

Behavioral finance researchers call this confirmation bias. This is the tendency to seek out information to confirm their trading position and ignore or underweight anything that runs contrary to their financial interest. It is dangerous practice and one of the reasons why I think the small investor should not seek out any information at all when buying stocks. Instead, just learn how to interpret the market’s message.

Let’s say you buy a mining stock that has some gold projects that have good potential. Before you buy the stock, you read the company’s news and some analysis done by a mining expert who publishes a newsletter. All indications from your analysis is that this stock is likely to go higher.

After you buy it, the stock does go higher, adding further credibility to the research work you have done. Then, one day, the stock makes a very abnormal move lower without any corresponding bad news. You go on to a stock market message board and find a few comments about initial results from the project rumored to be poor but most comments confirm what you know; the company has some great projects.

You ignore the naysayers and seek out other information that confirms that your stock is a good one to hold. You find enough good information to convince yourself that the market’s recent downward move is an overreaction and wrong.

In doing so, you have behaved like a normal human being eager to avoid pain and pursue pleasure. Unfortunately, we humans are myopic and, in this case, you are likely avoiding short term pain but increasing the chance for long term pain. The market moved down for a reason and, if you wait to find out why, it is usually too late.

I believe that fundamental analysis is essential for the market to function and has to be done. However, it does not have to be done by you because you do not have the resources to do it well. Those who do it right will tell you what they know by their actions in the market. Just listen to them.

If you know too much about a company you are likely to fall in love and commit the sin of confirmation bias. If you must seek out information, make sure you are balanced in how you do it.

perspectives strategy

Last week, I provided no trade ideas, preferring instead to cash up in anticipation of a pull back. That pull back came right now schedule this week. Friday’s action indicates the market may hold its long term upward trend line, making it a good time to go shopping for beat up stocks that still have good long term outlooks.

The sector that I like the most for bargain hunting is Energy. Oil has dropped sharply over the past two months but has now come to an important trend line of support. Oil stocks have followed Oil down and many have sold off so sharply that their trends have gone parabolic to the downside. That means opportunity.

On Friday, Oil showed signs that it would hold that upward trend line, making now a good time to look for Oil stocks in long term upward trends but which have suffered in the short term, taking them back to important areas of support.

This week, I went through the three year weekly charts of a number of Canadian Energy stocks. I was looking for those that were in upward trends long term but had pulled back over the past two months to come back to their upward trend lines. This is what the Canadian Energy Index Fund (T.XEG) has done. I found a lot of examples of what I was looking for, here are 4 that are worth considering for some bargain hunting:

perspectives stocksthatmeet

1. T.BNK
Red hot for the year ending in April, it has been sliding lower since and has now come back to the linear upward trend line where it is likely to reverse.

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2. T.PD
The service companies have been drifting lower but now appear likely to stabilize and strengthen. I could have picked T.TDG or T.CFW as they have similar charts. T.PD has made a big pull back over the past few months but has come back to support at the long term upward trend line. 

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3. T.SU
Oversold with support at $40, should end the downward slide here.

 Screen Shot 2014-09-29 at 9.43.26 AM

4. T.CPG
Has trend line support at $40 with upside to $46 and downside to $38.

 Screen Shot 2014-09-29 at 9.43.43 AM

References

Disclaimer
This is not an investment advisory, and should not be used to make investment decisions. Information in Stockscores Perspectives is often opinionated and should be considered for information purposes only. No stock exchange anywhere has approved or disapproved of the information contained herein. There is no express or implied solicitation to buy or sell securities. The writers and editors of Perspectives may have positions in the stocks discussed above and may trade in the stocks mentioned. Don’t consider buying or selling any stock without conducting your own due diligenc

 

Final Stages of Silver’s Historic Capitulation

Silver Update

Many investors have been freaked out by silver’s recent breakdown from a Descending Triangle and the sharp drop that followed, but as we will see this morning there is now a strong case to make for silver either being at its low for this cycle, or very, very close to it.

We’ll start by looking at silver’s 6-month chart, on which we can see its recent action in detail. Here we see the breakdown from the Triangle (shown on the 4-year chart below) and the resulting sharp drop. This drop is now regarded as a final capitulation following the long and grueling downtrend that preceded it. Note the pronounced high volume bull hammer that occurred early last week. There is a good chance that this marks the final bottom, and if not, we are considered to be very close to it. This hammer was followed the next day by a “spinning top” candlestick, a sign of indecision and another sign that the downtrend has exhausted itself. You may recall that it was stated in the Silver updateposted on the site a couple of days ago that “Traders wanting to buy here have a low risk setup, as silver may be bought here, or ideally on a short-term dip towards the hammer intraday low, with a stop a little below the low of the hammer.” Well, the price has since drifted back to the vicinity of the hammer low, and on Thursday dropped to a whisker below it intraday, and this may turn out to be a near perfect entry point. Before leaving the 6-month chart, note how horribly oversold silver is on its short-term oscillators after its prolonged downtrend, especially its RSI which shows it to be super-critically oversold.

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Now let’s see

what has got so many traders freaked out on the 4-year chart. On this chart we can see the breakdown from the Descending Triangle which has been forming from late June last year. We can readily understand why this has got so many people worried as it looks like silver is starting another heavy downleg just going on this chart, but before we join this crowd, let’s quickly move on to consider why this breakdown is believed to be a bear trap, and why the bullish case for silver is now strong.

 

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The 15-year chart presents the other side of the story, as it reveals that silver has still not broken down from its long-term uptrend in force from 2003 and is still in a zone of major support arising from the extensive trading in this price zone in 2008 and again in late 2009 and 2010. This chart makes plain that while silver has certainly been in a bearmarket from April – May 2011, in the larger scheme of things this may only be a severe correction within an ongoing major bullmarket.

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Now let’s move on to see what the latest COT and sentiment indicators have to see about silver at this juncture. In a word, sentiment towards silver stinks – it is absolutely awful, and the number of people that you know who are bullish on silver you can probably count on the fingers of one hand – this is the classic extreme of negative sentiment that is the hallmark of a bottom.

The standard silver COT is now most encouraging. It shows that at last positions have eased to a low level that must be construed as bullish. The formerly enthusiastic Large Specs, who are always wrong, have given up and are out.

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The silver hedgers chart (which is a form of COT chart that goes back further), shows that readings are now rapidly swinging into bullish territory.

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Chart courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com

Next we move on to the silver optix or optimism index where we see that sentiment is already at an extreme that in the past has already correlated with an important bottom, or been close to it. This chart alone makes a strong case for a silver bottom here.

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Chart courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com

While we normally look at the US dollar in gold updates only, it is so important to both metals and at such an extreme that we will include a look at it in this silver update.

The whole world is optimistic on the dollar now, probably up to and including IS, which is understandable considering how many greenbacks they have robbed from banks, and sentiment towards it is at wild “off the scale” bullish extremes. For this reason, a correction in the dollar looks imminent, even if it later continues higher for a while, and if it is gold and silver should turn higher. Let’s now review the evidence.

First, the long-term 11-year chart for the dollar index shows the runup of recent weeks in the context of prior pattern development, and while the runup so far doesn’t look all that big historically speaking, it has arrived at a twin target and is critically overbought on its RSI indicator.

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The 4-year chart shows to advantage the dramatic spike in the dollar index, which has resulted in it arriving at the target shown in a wildly overbought state. Thus it is now vulnerable to a sudden reversal.

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The 6-month shows recent action in detail, and how the dollar’s advance has ramped up in stages. The RSI indicator at the top of the chart shows that it has been critically overbought for over a month, a situation which cannot persist indefinitely.

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Next, the dollar hedgers chart (COT) shows that positions are already at record extremes – this chart calls for a reversal, and very soon.

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Larger Image Above
Chart courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com

Meanwhile, the dollar optix or optimism index chart shows that optimism also is already at record extremes and is “off the scale” – optimism is so widespread that Barack Obama no longer feels the need to put his cup down when saluting the military – and here we should note that we are much more worried about the example set to youngsters not by his saluting with a plastic cup in his hand, but that it appears to be a nasty carcinogenic polystyrene cup. The record shows that such wild optix index extremes have almost always coincided with a top or closely preceded it.

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Chart courtesy of www.sentimentrader.com

Finally, the dollar seasonal chart, which is admittedly only a background influence, shows that the next few months are not historically the best time of year for the dollar

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Conclusion: although we have vacillated in the recent past – with good reason given that silver just made a new low, we can now emphatically conclude that silver is believed to be either at or very close to an important low here, especially as the dollar looks set to turn lower soon. Only in the event of an immediate all-out across the board deflationary plunge would silver prices be likely to drop further.

 

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