Stocks & Equities

Stock Market Rally Watch

As we move into a historically strong period for stocks in the final two months of the year, the S&P 500 Index is already up 26 percent in 2013.

And there’s no sign that the Federal Reserve, which has pumped almost //www.gliq.com/cgi-bin/click?weiss_mam+283801-14+MAM2838+vgbb@shaw.ca+++2+4422655++“>$4 trillion into the economy to support companies, will end its stimulus program soon.

That begs the question: Will the rally continue?

To fully answer this key question, it’s important to look at three major factors that influence the stock market’s direction: valuation, trend and sentiment.

Today I’ll cover the first of these market indicators: valuation. And over the next two weeks, I’ll tackle trend and sentiment.

Stocks More Than Double

Market valuation is one of the most hotly debated topics among investors. Stock prices and earnings have come a long way since the darkest days of the financial crisis, which caused the S&P 500 to plunge to as low as 666 in March 2009.

Since then, the benchmark index has surged 158 percent (184 percent with dividends reinvested). Earnings for the 500 companies in the blue-chip index are up 100 percent.

The difference between price appreciation and actual profits has been accounted for by an expansion in the price-to-earnings ratio (P/E).

* In 2009, when nobody wanted to own stocks, the P/E ratio briefly dipped below 10.

* Today, based on expected earnings over the next 12 months, the P/E has risen to 14.3.

chart1

Historically, stocks aren’t overpriced based on this metric. In fact, the average forward P/E ratio for the S&P 500 has been 14.9 over the past 30 years, as you can see in the chart above.

Based on this picture, the market’s valuation still has some room to expand. The caveat is that any P/E expansion from here must rely more on rising prices than profits because earnings aren’t growing much anymore.

Profit Margins Maxed Out

After stocks bottomed in 2009, earnings exploded. In the first and second quarter of 2010, S&P 500 earnings surged an annual 92 percent and 51 percent, respectively, as business rebounded from the Great Recession.

But since then, earnings growth has slowed to a rate of only 5 percent, and revenue is growing even more slowly.

chart2

Third-quarter earnings have been upbeat, with more positive than negative surprises. But according to FactSet Research, S&P 500 profits are on pace to grow just 2.3 percent from the third quarter of 2012.

Over the past few years, businesses have cut costs to widen profit margins and lift earnings at a faster clip. But today, corporate profit margins are near an all-time high at 10 percent of gross domestic product (GDP).

That’s far above the average profit margin of 6.3 percent over the past 50 years.

As a result, investors shouldn’t expect cost-cutting and fatter margins to drive earnings higher. Instead, stronger revenue growth must do the heavy lifting for earnings to accelerate. And higher sales growth will only come from faster-than-expected GDP growth, or a sharp decline in the dollar.

So where does that leave us? Based on traditional valuation measures, like the P/E ratio, stocks don’t appear overly expensive today, but neither are they cheap. And I wonder how much higher the numerator (prices) can rise without much help from the denominator (earnings).

Next week I’ll explore two time-honored principles of stock-market behavior — the strong persistence of trends and the inescapable presence of mean reversion — and explain why they are at odds with each other.

Good investing,

Mike Burnick

The Outlook for Mining M&A

It’s no secret that mergers and acquisitions (M&A) activity in the mining sector is in the dumps.  According to PWC, deal volume in the first half of 2013 declined 31% as compared to the same period last year. Deal value declined 74%. Excluding Glencore’s $54 billion acquisition of Xstrata in 2012, deal value is still down 21%. A recent Bloomberg article noted that the volume of acquisitions valued at less than $1 billion is at an eight-year low while the volume of deals in Q3 was the lowest since Q4 of 2004. However, some deals are taking place and in order for speculators and investors to capitalize, they will need to keep a discerning eye, just like potential suitors.

The cause of the current malaise in M&A activity is fairly simple and two fold. First, the major companies who drive M&A activity made some bad decisions and costly acquisitions in previous years. Second, the deep and extended cyclical bear market has essentially forced the majors, in terms of acquisitions, to the sidelines. The majors are looking to get leaner and meaner and until that and a recovery in the market occur, they will remain on the sidelines.

Despite difficult conditions, some companies have remained active.

Days ago B2Gold (BTG, BTO.to) announced the friendly acquisition of Volta Resources (VTR.v) for $63 million. This will be B2’s second acquisition in the last 12 months. In the first quarter of this year the company closed its acquisition of CGA Mining, which cost the company $1.1B.

Alamos Gold (AGI, AGI.to), like B2Gold has been quite active. Alamos recently closed its acquisition of Esperanza Resources for $69.4 million which was announced in the summer. Alamos also closed a smaller acquisition of Orsa Ventures for $3.5 million.

Also, New Gold (NGD, NGD.to) on May 31 agreed to acquire Rainy River Resources for $355 million.

These recent deals highlight one observation I’ve heard from several exploration companies. At present, its the mid-tier type companies that will lead the M&A charge. These are companies that are generating healthy cash flow and earnings at these prices and have the working capital to push forward. Their share prices are not in the toilet like those of the majors and many juniors. Meanwhile, majors will be on the sideline at least until industry sentiment improves. That is what one exploration company told me.

So when will sentiment improve?

GDX and GDXJ continue to be trapped in a long bottoming process. This process began in the spring and is in its seventh month. While a bottom in terms of price is likely in, both GDX and GDXJ can stay trapped in this process for several more months and perhaps longer. My view is sentiment will not improve until after GDX and GDXJ breakout above the red lines.

oct30ed

M&A activity will remain quite low well into 2014 for several reasons. The majors for the most part are in no position to take on more risk. Even if we get a rip-roaring recovery in 2014, the majors will need more time to get themselves in a better position to make acquisitions. In addition, a handful of mid-tiers have already been fairly active. Thus, don’t expect a huge increase in acquisitions for at least several quarters.

Nevertheless, more than a handful of exploration and development companies appear to have bottomed and are showing relative strength against the sector. These are companies that have value and potential even amid a struggling market.

To find such companies, start your research by looking for junior companies which are strong enough to stand their own. Look for companies with cash, experienced management teams and projects in favorable jurisdictions. In addition, ownership of the stock by a major or larger company is the type of sponsorship we love to see. Then you have to do due diligence on the projects which is obviously more difficult. Acquirers are essentially looking for projects that are not too costly to start-up and will have good margins at current prices. Good Luck!

Jordan Roy-Byrne, CMT

Jordan@TheDailyGold.com

If you’d be interested in our analysis on the junior companies poised to lead this recovery, we invite you to learn more about our service.

 

 

 

 

One Of The Most Important Charts You Will Ever See

KWN Griffiths 10-30-2013

On the heels continued volatility in global markets, today one of the top strategists in the world sent King World News one of the most important charts investors will ever see.  Cazenove Capital is the appointed stockbroker to Her Majesty The Queen, and their acclaimed strategist, Robin Griffiths, also warned that the Chinese and others are now saying, “We don’t need anymore of your damn dollars.”  HERE is what Griffiths had to say in this timely and powerful interview. 

“The Most Interesting Story at This Time is Gold”

 “Turning to the market, fund managers are in the strangest predicament I have ever seen since I started writing 60 years ago.  The basic problem is the immorality of printing unbacked, intangible fiat money.  For years I’ve called fiat money basically immoral and an insult to the US constitution.  Unfortunately, our children and grandchildren will suffer the results of years of fiat currency printing.  Yes, even Wall Street is subject to the laws of morality.

The Fed has placed us in a dangerous situation.  At the slightest hint of cutting back, the markets go into a swoon.  This means that the FED must continue with QE.  On that basis we might as well play the FED’s game.  This would mean buying the DIAs and staying with them until the edifice begins to weaken.  Signs of weakening will be declining volume as the market climbs.  

Finally, as upside momentum runs out, the market will turn down.  Nobody can identify the peak of momentum, so we’ll have to depend on volume.  This is a dangerous game and not everyone has to play it.  Personally, I don’t have the stomach to play this latest Wall Street game of musical chairs.

As for gold, I continue to think that this is a game of patience.  The world is battling the forces of deflation and it’s going to take an increasing amount of QE just to stand still … The most interesting story at this time is gold.  It’s a question of buying stocks at all-time highs after the averages have doubled, or gold, the despised metal that appears to be pushing out of an impressive base.  

I realize that money managers have to show profits or income in a hurry.  But my subscribers and I have time on our hands.  We have the luxury of sitting on the sidelines or buying and waiting for results.  My feeling is that buying gold just off the current base will work out.  And the risk of substantially lower prices is minimal.  As I write, gold is in the process of enlarging its already impressive base.

I continue to like the action of gold, now well above its red trendline.  Remember that patience is key.

KWN Russell 10-30-2013

 

Despite flagrant technical discrepancies, the markets are following the lead of the Fed, and it appears that as long as the Fed pours on the QE, the stock markets will follow.  In the meantime, gold continues its climb out of its huge base formation.  As I see it, as far as holding stocks or gold, the greater risk lies in stocks. 

From the Kiplinger letter:

China is boosting its foreign investment.  It will ladle out $1 trillion over the next decade. And increasingly, it has its eye on the US. By 2023… $15 billion to $20 billion a year to snap up American assets.  And that’s in addition to whatever US treasuries China continues to buy.  Beijing already holds nearly $1.3 trillion of them. 

There are 2 million reasons for this surge: China’s $4 trillion foreign currency stash … euros, pounds, yen, dollars and more … racked up over decades of exporting far more than it imported.  Beijing wants more of it put to work in investments other than today’s low-yielding US treasuries. 

And an interest in acquiring US expertise and technology … needed more and more as China shifts its economy from one largely fueled by exports to one that is powered by domestic consumption.

Russell comment — Watch for China to buy US assets as fast as they politically can.  In the meantime, China is intent on amassing the world’s largest hoard of gold.  The Golden Rule; “He who holds the gold makes the rules.”

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No matter how elaborate an investor’s Halloween costume is, the gold space isn’t handing out much in the way of treats this year. While Encompass Fund Managers Malcolm Gissen and Marshall Berol don’t agree on the timeline for gold’s recovery, they have faith that it will come. In the meantime, their focus is on companies that are in production, generate cash flow and have top-notch management teams. They also dig into their treat bag for names in the energy sector and other metals in this interview.

COMPANIES MENTIONED: AMERICAN VANADIUM CORP. : BRAZIL RESOURCES INC. : COMSTOCK MINING INC. : MAGNUM HUNTER RESOURCES CORP. : NORTHERN DYNASTY MINERALS LTD. : PRIMERO MINING CORP. : U.S. ANTIMONY CORP. RELATED COMPANIESARGONAUT GOLD INC. :CLIFTON STAR RESOURCES INC.COLORADO RESOURCES LTD. COMSTOCK MINING INC.

The Gold Report: It’s almost Halloween and we remain in the clutches of a tricky market for junior resource equities. What are your perspectives on how long it’s going to take before investors see another treat-filled year like 2010?

Malcolm Gissen: The last couple of years have been frightening for investors, in both gold commodities and gold stocks. Gold prices have been rising the last few weeks, allowing some people hope, but I don’t expect an appreciable change in the gold price and the appeal of gold mining companies until 2015.

Marshall Berol: I’m more optimistic than Malcolm. I think the market will change, possibly in as little as five months. The underlying fundamentals that have driven gold up over the last dozen years are still in place: the money printing presses, supply and demand for bullion, bars and coins. Costs are going up, so is the need for higher prices.

I would like to see the market refocus on fundamentals and get away from tracking the hour-to-hour and day-to-day activities of the financial players. What they are doing in the futures markets is driving the price of gold and other commodities up and down incessantly. The dollar is up; the dollar is down. Oil is up, oil is down. Stock prices react to whatever news is coming out of Washington, Europe or Japan. At some point, investors will realize that gold’s underlying fundamentals have not changed and that there are reasons to buy it.

MG: We started investing heavily in gold in the accounts of clients of our RIA firm, Malcolm H. Gissen & Associates, in 2002, when gold was under $300 per ounce ($330/oz). We built allocations to precious metals of 15–18% by 2004. When Marshall and I launched the Encompass Fund in mid-2006, gold companies was the largest asset class. We believed that gold was deeply undervalued and with India and China, cultures that value gold and use it as a currency substitute, developing a middle and upper class, demand for gold would increase exponentially. We also knew that many investors would come to realize that the gold price would go up because of inflation and currency devaluation—the historical reasons people buy gold.

That attitude has changed over the last two-and-a-half years. Fundamentals no longer seem to play a role in attracting investors to buy gold or gold stocks. Marshall thinks it would be nice for people to go back to looking at fundamentals; I’m not sure that will happen. The information explosion—gossip, rumors and trying to guess what hedge funds and private equity investors are doing—plays an increasingly larger role in decision-making.

One factor that would cause gold to rise would be the realization that the U.S. government is printing money to deal with its tremendous debt. This is not sound policy. This should scare people, but it doesn’t seem to at this time.

The Federal Reserve is doing everything it can to keep interest rates low, which is good for corporations and good for the economy, but it is doing that by buying bonds and mortgages. Eventually, we will have to pay the piper. At that point, hard assets like gold and silver will look a lot more attractive. Until we get to that point, I’m concerned that gold will not break out of the range it has been trading in for the last couple of years.

TGR: Change will require the onset of fear.

MG: Fear is definitely one strong motivator. Unlike Halloween, where children (and many adults!) love going to haunted houses to be frightened, people do not seek fear in their investments. Rather, they avoid fear, often at all costs. If fear returns in the markets, Marshall and I think that gold is likely to be a place where investors will move their money.

Another new development affecting gold and silver prices in the long run could be supply constraints. The world’s largest mining companies have realized that they must be more sensitive to escalating costs of building and operating mines, especially with gold and silver at present prices. They can’t rely on $1,600–1,900/oz gold prices to pay for $3–7 billion ($3–7B) expansion and construction projects and remain profitable. With gold in the $1,000–1,300/oz range, some companies are not profitable.

I just attended an excellent presentation by Juan Carlos Artigas, head of investment research at the World Gold Council. While arguing that all investors should have a 3–10% allocation to gold because it is an asset with low correlation to almost all other assets, he pointed out that all-in costs for some gold producers were in the $1,200/oz range. As a result, CEOs are less willing to build large projects. We also have seen much less merger and acquisition activity among the majors. I believe that will, over the next few years, threaten the gold and silver supply.

If gold supplies are threatened, it could raise gold prices. I can’t say whether that will happen in six months or three years, but I believe that we’re headed in that direction.

TGR: Do you expect the trend of up-and-down gold prices with no real pattern and with little consensus to continue until there is a decided move upward?

MB: Although we disagree on timing, we agree that gold will continue trading in the $1,200–1,450/oz range until it breaks out to the upside.

MG: I think there’s a floor in the $1,100–1,200/oz range. When gold goes below a certain level, companies will stop producing, there will not be enough gold to meet demand and we’ll see higher prices.

Industry executives tell us that if gold should ever get to $1,000 or $900/oz, they expect many of their colleagues to go on care and maintenance, because they can’t make any money at that price. They’ll go to a skeletal crew and cut back on production.

MB: It’s happening. Goldcorp Inc. (G:TSX; GG:NYSE) reported it is delaying work in Argentina due to rising costs and other factors. Its all-in sustaining cost is likely to be $1,050–1,100/oz for 2013. At that level—and this is one of the largest gold miners in the world—management teams cannot continue to produce and lose money.

TGR: Let’s look at silver. New York’s CPM Group expects silver prices to consolidate for another three years, at an average of $18/oz. Do you support that forecast?

MG: I don’t, for a couple of reasons. First, it’s very difficult to make forecasts for a specific timeframe. I cannot predict what will happen in three years. It is difficult enough trying to forecast where prices will be in three or six months! Second, because silver has so many more industrial uses than gold, I don’t see silver prices declining by an additional 15% after the sharp decline of the past year. I also do not believe that silver prices will break out until factors—similar to what I mentioned for gold—change.

MB: Silver’s current price is $21–22/oz, so CPM’s forecast implies that the price will decline over the next three years. I don’t agree. About half of silver usage is industrial—electronics and medical, for example—all of which are increasing.

Silver tracks the price of gold investment-wise, but I think it could do better than gold percentage-wise over three years. Historically, silver has been more volatile than gold. It goes up or down to a greater percentage than gold.

TGR: Malcolm, we’re just a couple of weeks beyond the federal government shutdown in the U.S. What are your thoughts on the long-term health of the American economy and the American political system?

MG: I’m going to stay away from the politics, because my politics and Marshall’s politics are almost diametrically opposite.

I believe the U.S. economy is much healthier than a lot of Americans realize. Our entrepreneurial spirit is extraordinary; the number of young people starting companies has never been greater.

Sometimes government can get in the way. We need more reasonable, workable regulation than we have now. If we do that, the sky is the limit for the U.S. economy. I don’t think that will change for many years; I’m very bullish on our economy.

TGR: In 25 years, will the U.S. greenback still be the world’s reserve currency?

MG: I think it will. Twenty-five years would be too soon for the American dollar to lose its position as the world’s basic currency, just as English is the dominant language used around the world.

MB: You also have to ask yourself what the reserve currency would change to. The euro isn’t in any position to become a reserve currency. Nor will it be the yen, the ruble or the peso. It may one day be the Chinese currency, but not that soon.

That brings us back to gold. It would not replace the dollar, but central banks are adding gold to their reserves to lessen the impact of the dollar on the percentages held in their reserves.

TGR: Did you make changes to your Encompass Fund (ENCPX:NASDAQ) due to the government shutdown?

MG: We made no changes in either client accounts or in the Encompass Fund. However, we did debate whether to move more to cash in the eventuality of a default on the U.S. debt and the negative impact that would have on the market. We concluded Congress would likely go right to the wire, when the more moderate Republicans would prevail and strike a deal.

MB: The client accounts are managed to each client’s individual goals and objectives. The objective of the Encompass Fund is long-term capital appreciation. We are not a trading fund. The turnover rate for the Encompass Fund runs around 25%. We don’t focus on day-to-day, week-to-week or even month-to-month news developments. We look for industries and companies that will do well over time.

TGR: What are your clients telling you these days?

MG: I think clients like less risk and less volatility, and we have moved in that direction over the last 12–15 months. We have invested client accounts in more large-cap, domestic stocks. We like the energy, healthcare and technology sectors. We also have added Real Estate Investment Trusts.

We’ve done the same thing in the Encompass Fund. It was more heavily invested in resource companies, particularly metals. Over the last six months, we’ve kept the best of the resource companies, but energy is now the largest component represented in the Encompass Fund.

TGR: Your website describes the Encompass Fund as a “go anywhere fund.” Geographically, where has the fund gone in the last year that it had not gone previously?

MB: It’s more a factor of where we’ve pulled back than where we’ve gone for the first time. The fund has a number of resource sector investments in Canada, the U.S., Mexico, South America, Africa and a couple of companies in Europe. We are more wary of jurisdictions that have experienced geopolitical problems, such as Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador, areas where the governments appear less friendly toward resource operations.

TGR: Marshall, you’ve invested in resource companies based, in part, on your relationships with company management. How has the downturn in the junior resource space changed those relationships?

MB: It hasn’t changed the relationships as much as it has focused us even more on company management.

At the end of 2008, we assessed where all of the companies in the Encompass Fund were relative to their projects, finances and management. We reduced or eliminated a number of the companies that were not making the progress we had hoped for and added to those we thought were stronger. That worked out extremely well for the following couple of years, as the markets improved and some of the companies did likewise.

We did the same thing earlier this year, focusing even more on the management teams. In this very difficult environment, strong, knowledgeable managements with successful track records for bringing projects along and raising money are extremely important.

TGR: But you must have to say no to people when they come to you for more financing.

MB: Yes, almost every day. This year in particular, companies have needed to raise funds just to keep the lights on, much less advance their projects.

We are being far more selective in what we believe justifies funding. Primarily, that translates to companies that are in production and need funding to increase production, or are very, very near production.

TGR: Do the relationships just dry up when you have to turn down funding requests?

MB: I hope not. It’s a business decision. Companies are in a position where they need to ask. We’re in a position where we can and will say no if it doesn’t fit our portfolio objectives. I would hope that the management teams understand our position and our responsibility to our investors.

TGR: What is your current investment thesis for junior mining companies? What do companies you invest in today have to have?

MB: It’s very good if they’re in production or very near production. That means they’re generating revenue and cash flow of some kind and are advancing their projects.

Management and the state of the balance sheet are also factors. Companies with significant cash on their balance sheets are a lot more attractive.

With rare exceptions, it is difficult for us to justify investing in very early-stage companies in this environment.

TGR: This year investors have gotten more tricks than treats in the gold space. What are those rare treats that you’re following?

MB: We found a number of treats among the energy companies. We’ve been invested in Magnum Hunter Resources Corp. (MHR:NYSE.MKT) for some time. It’s expanding its operations in the U.S., primarily in oil, some in gas.

TGR: It was up almost 9% on Oct. 24.

MB: Yes. Many of the smaller companies are volatile. Magnum Hunter has doubled in price over the last couple of months. Thus, it’s more difficult to buy at these levels. A short while ago, we trimmed the position simply for portfolio management purposes; we still like the company.

We also find industrial metals, such as vanadium and antimony, attractive.

TGR: Which vanadium or antimony plays do you like?

MB: U.S. Antimony Corp. (UAMY:OTCBB) is expanding production in Mexico: mining, milling and processing. A number of strategic metals are currently sourced primarily out of China, and there are a lot of reasons why the users and governments around the world want to move away from China being basically a sole source supplier.

We have an interest in American Vanadium Corp. (AVC:TSX.V). While its project in Nevada is still a ways off, it also has a relationship with a German manufacturer of fuel cells used for energy storage for solar and wind power. That’s a very attractive business opportunity for American Vanadium to produce revenues in the short term while it moves ahead on starting production at its vanadium project.

TGR: Is that an offtake deal?

MB: It will be partially an offtake deal when it gets into production. Right now, American Vanadium is a sales agent for these vanadium-based batteries used to store energy produced by the solar and wind industries.

TGR: Returning to gold, which small-cap gold companies in the Encompass Fund portfolio would you like to talk about?

MB: Relative to a good management team able to move the company ahead and raise funds, I would mention Brazil Resources Inc. (BRI:TSX.V; BRIZF:OTCQX). It isn’t yet in production, but it recently announced acquisition of another Brazilian gold company. Marketwise, it has done better as a nonproducing junior company stock than many of its peers.

TGR: Earlier you talked about avoiding places like Argentina, Bolivia and Ecuador. Brazil is right in that neighborhood. Why are you comfortable investing in Brazil?

MB: The Brazilian government seems to be more reasonable, and it is a far larger and broader based economy than elsewhere in South America. Argentina, for example, nationalized a Spanish oil company and changed the tax laws, and the monetary situation is challenging.

TGR: Keeping with our trick-or-treat theme, which gold companies were tricky in 2013?

MB: There were a few whose stock prices suffered dramatically and that may be in positions to treat investors well in 2014.

One is Northern Dynasty Minerals Ltd. (NDM:TSX; NAK:NYSE.MKT). Its Pebble project in Alaska is very large and has a lot of gold and other metals. However, it is controversial from an environmental standpoint. Until mid-September, Northern Dynasty had Anglo American Plc (AAUK:NASDAQ) as its 50/50 partner. Then, Anglo American announced that it was withdrawing from the partnership and discontinuing its involvement, after having spent $541 million ($541M) of a projected $1.5B investment to develop the Pebble project. That took the Northern Dynasty price down dramatically, and it has basically stayed there.

Northern Dynasty says the advantage is that it now owns 100% of Pebble. Rio Tinto Plc (RIO:NYSE; RIO:ASX; RIO:LSE; RTPPF:OTCPK) owns 18% of Northern Dynasty. Nobody knows what will happen there.

TGR: Does CEO Ron Thiesssen need another partner to make a go of it?

MB: Yes, although Northern Dynasty claims to have the financial capacity to move forward with permitting and the project.

But investors were tricked, to use our Halloween analogy, because they thought Anglo would be putting another $1B into Pebble. Anglo’s announcement changed the project and the perception of Northern Dynasty. If these concerns can be straightened out, a year from now Northern Dynasty stock should be a real treat for those who invested at this level.

Another situation where the market got tricked is Pretium Resources Inc. (PVG:TSX; PVG:NYSE). Pretium has a major gold project in British Columbia. Its Valley of the Kings project is very high grade and very large. It was forecast to be in production in 2016. Earlier this month Strathcona Mineral Services Ltd., one of the two independent consulting firms working on a bulk sample project to delineate the gold resource, resigned. The stock took a hit.

Within the past week, Pretium released more details about why the firm withdrew. That raised even more questions about the nature of the project and how viable it is. The stock took another hit. The market felt tricked by an unexpected event driving the stock price down considerably.

If the consulting firm’s withdrawal and the reasons for it turn out to be a tempest in a teapot, Pretium stock will become a real treat for investors over the next few months and into 2014.

TGR: Do you consider Strathcona’s resignation an entry point to the stock?

MB: Not necessarily an entry point, but it creates what could be an excellent opportunity to get into the stock at half the price it was a month ago.

TGR: Snowden, another geological consulting firm, continues to oversee the bulk sample. Is having Snowden alone sign off on the bulk sample enough?

MB: It will be enough for some people, not for others. That is the conundrum in assessing Pretium and determining a good entry point price.

Some people will say there’s too much smoke and don’t want to get near it. Others will assess the situation as it develops and as the bulk sample results come out—Pretium has announced results from about one-quarter of the 10,000-ton bulk study—and will decide they want to invest.

TGR: Any other names you’d like to mention?

MB: We like Primero Mining Corp. (PPP:NYSE; P:TSX), which is making good progress at its San Dimas mine and Cerro del Gallo project in Mexico. It is producing cash flow, is growing and expanding and has a very accomplished, experienced management team. Despite recent questions about Mexico instituting a new tax and royalty structure, Mexico remains an attractive mining jurisdiction.

I recently visited Comstock Mining Inc. (LODE:NYSE.MKT). It has put together a major land package in the Comstock Lode area south of Virginia City, Nevada. It has been in production for about one year, and projects doubling its production to 40,000 oz gold equivalent in 2014, from 20,000 oz gold equivalent in 2013. The key for Comstock will be continued production expansion, which should lead to a lower cost of production per ounce and increased cash flow and operating margins. Increased exploration, which is ongoing, is likely to increase production and cash flow over time.

TGR: What tricks should investors avoid in today’s economic environment?

MB: Unfortunately, tricks are most noticeable with hindsight. I think the trick to success is to avoid assuming that when gold or silver prices rise that it will raise all the boats. While we remain optimistic on the price of gold and silver, just having an inexpensive stock doesn’t mean it will go up if the price of gold goes up. You have to dig deeper and look at the management, the projects, the location and the finances.

TGR: Indeed. That trick is a real treat. Thanks for your time and insights.

Malcolm Gissen founded Malcolm H. Gissen & Associates Inc., an investment advisory services firm, in 1985. His management experience has focused primarily on investments in publicly traded companies. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree from Case Western Reserve University and a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from the University of Wisconsin.

Since 2000, Marshall Berol has been the chief investment officer of Malcolm H. Gissen & Associates Inc. In addition, for more than 20 years, he has owned the investment firm BL/SH Financial. His investment management experience has focused primarily on investments in publicly traded companies. Berol did his undergraduate work at the University of California at Berkeley, and has a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from the University of San Francisco School of Law. Prior to entering the financial services industry, Berol was a partner in a San Francisco law firm.

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DISCLOSURE: 
1) Brian Sylvester conducted this interview for The Gold Report and provides services to The Gold Reportas an independent contractor. He 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: Brazil Resources Inc., Pretium Resources Inc., Primero Mining Corp. and Comstock Mining Inc. Goldcorp Inc. is not associated with The Gold Report. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.
3) Malcolm Gissen: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Magnum Hunter Resources Corp., U.S. Antimony Corp., American Vanadium Corp., Brazil Resources Inc., Primero Mining Corp., Comstock Mining Inc. and Encompass Fund. 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 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. 
4) Marshall Berol: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: U.S. Antimony Corp., American Vanadium Corp., Brazil Resources Inc., Comstock Mining Inc. and Encompass Fund. 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 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. 
5) Encompass Fund (co-managed by Mr. Gissen and Mr. Berol) is invested in Magnum Hunter Resources Corp., U.S. Antimony Corp., American Vanadium Corp., Brazil Resources Inc. and Comstock Mining Inc.
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