Timing & trends
The new edition of the “In GOLD We TRUST” report is out. In his 7th report precious metals analyst Ronald Stoeferle takes an holistic view on the latest developments in the gold market. Mr. Stoeferle has set up his own gold fund recently at Incrementum Liechtenstein AG.
This edition of the report is characterized by a focus on the monetary aspect(s) of gold, a subject which remains highly underexposed in almost every report of major financial institutions. Because of the unprecedented global monetary policy experiments the need for monetary insurance has never been greater. The consensus could be convinced that the gold bull market has ended but In GOLD we Trust 2013 points to the fundamental arguments why the gold bull market remains intact.
Furthermore, this edition is the first which contains a quantitative model of the gold price. The model justifies a considerable risk premium to current price levels, even if small probabilities of occurrence of extreme scenarios are modeled. Based on conservative assumptions, the long-term price target is $2,230.
……read report and view charts HERE
As a general rule, the most successful man in life is the man who has the best information
Right now I’m a big fan of uranium, cobalt and silver. Here’s why…
Uranium
In 2012 world consumption of uranium was 165 million pounds versus 152 million pounds of mined uranium production. Globally there are 434 nuclear reactors operable, 67 reactors are under construction, 159 are on order or planned and 318 are proposed.
For investors the uranium supply/demand picture is interesting for several reasons:
- Nuclear power generation is being ramped up across the globe.
- Japan is restarting its reactors.
- The Megatons to Megawatts deal, the HEU agreement, is coming to an end.
- The U.S. has no uranium security of supply
Global uranium stockpiles have been filling the gap between consumption and production for more than two decades. By far the largest contributor has been the Russian Highly Enriched Uranium (HEU) agreement, providing 24 million pounds of uranium to the market every year. However, secondary supplies are drying up and the HEU agreement is coming to an end in 2013.
Cameco (one of the world’s largest publicly traded uranium companies) estimates world uranium demand will increase to about 240 million pounds by 2022.
The U.S. is in an especially dire situation in regards to the security of its uranium supply and the situation doesn’t look set to improve through exploration or new mine development anytime soon. Employment for uranium exploration in the U.S. was 161 person-years in 2012, a 23 percent decrease compared to 2011. The long lead time of uranium mine development – up to ten years – means that the industry is unable to respond quickly to sudden increases in demand or significant supply interruptions. With the recent lower uranium prices, delays and cancellations of new projects is becoming the norm and exacerbating the coming global and U.S. supply crisis.
Ten percent, or just 4.9 million pounds, of the 49 million pounds U3O8e uranium loaded into U.S. civilian nuclear power reactors during 2012 was from U.S. mined uranium, 90 percent was foreign supplied uranium.
According to the World Nuclear Association (WNA) there are plans for 13 new reactors in the U.S., three reactor units are under construction, and as many as six may come online in the next decade.
Expect uranium spot prices to start climbing to equalize with long term prices and then both to begin a rapid advance as the supply squeeze starts to be felt.
…….read Page 2 HERE
The Dow continues its rise. Up another 114 points yesterday.
Gold dropped another -$18 an ounce… Mr. Market is working his devious magic… scaring away the Johnny-come-latelies… putting the fear of God into the rest of us.
Hazarding a guess, the price of gold has about another $100 to fall. Then it will probably rebound a bit, as the “strong hands” take advantage of the opportunity.
But the fireworks in the gold market are still, probably, far ahead. You’ll hear the explosions when consumer prices begin to rise. And that won’t happen for a while.
And here is where the story gets interesting… and hard to follow. The bond market has turned. This could push the economy into a deeper funk unless growth starts to pick up. But it could be years before the new trend is firmly established.
We remember the last turn… in the early 1980s. Paul Volcker announced it in 1979. But it was almost four years before investors fully absorbed the news.
In the meantime, there is no pressure on consumer prices… because there is no real recovery. The news media was confused on the subject yesterday. Some sources reported big improvements in consumer confidence, durable goods orders and house prices. Others focused on the downward revision to first-quarter GDP growth.
You can believe anything you want. But on this we are certain: There will be no real recovery.
We are unsure of practically everything. Ask us our phone number…we will hesitate and check twice. Ask us who won World War I… we will have a whole barge-load of equivocations. Ask us which way the stock market is going… we will chuckle.
But ask us about a recovery and we have a ready answer: There will be none.
Why? How can we be so sure?
A recovery needs something solid to recover from. And the period 2003-07 was just the opposite. It was the feverish end to a long ailment that has plagued the US economy since the early 1980s. That was when America’s economy shifted from real growth to phony, debt-driven pseudo growth.
Before then the ratio of total debt to GDP had been about 150% for decades. Americans went about their business – saving… borrowing… spending… creating… producing in a reasonable way. Growth came from where it was supposed to come from – increases in productivity which were shared between workers, lenders, investors and businesses.
Then the confluence of a number of strange things sent debt levels soaring…
America was lucky enough to have the world’s reserve currency in an age of paper money
…the Chinese produced things cheaper than Americans. Wal-Mart pushed prices down further
…the Reagan administration decided that “deficits don’t matter”
…and the financial industry found innovative ways to package and sell on debt.
As a result, total debt-to-GDP levels rose to 300% by the end of the century… and then to 360% by 2007.
This extra debt changed the NATURE of the economy. It was no longer an economy that grew by producing things; henceforth, it was an economy that required larger and larger injections of debt to get high.
In 2007-08 subprime lenders got the shakes and it was over. At least, for them. In a matter of hours, the feds appeared on the scene with stronger drugs. They’ve been trying to relive that glorious “first toke” experience ever since.
And they’re still at it. A headline from today’s Financial Times: “Fed big-hitters seek to quash QE fears.”
What?
Investors are afraid the Fed might stop delivering the drugs. They needn’t worry. Those fears are “out of sync” with Fed thinking said “two senior Federal Reserve officials.”
The drug addiction analogy has been widely used to describe the situation. Like any analogy, it has its limitations and its dangers. But there is one element of it that has been widely ignored.
We spent some time with a psychologist recently. We we’re at a closed-door meeting of members of our family wealth investment advisory, Bonner & Partners Family Office.
There’s as much voodoo in psychology as there is in economics. Still, there are things one trade can learn from the other.
“Drug addicts rarely just decide to recover,” said our friend, a family therapist.
“They have to hit bottom first,” she replied. “And that can be a very long way down.”
The feds are not even trying to help the economy overcome its addiction to cheap credit. Instead, like a sleazy therapist, they want to keep it in expensive and ineffective therapy. Running a rehab clinic can be a good business, especially if the patients never recover. Patients are never allowed to hit bottom. And the quacks keep transferring more and more wealth and power to themselves and their friends.
But like drugs, you can’t increase the dosage forever. An economy that depends on ever-greater hits of credit is an economy destined to blow up.
Then, and only then, can a real “recovery” begin. But it will not be a recovery to the feverish credit bubble of the 2003-07 period. It will be something very different.
Stay tuned…
Regards,
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Bill
…..Volume & Credit Slumping. In 3 days the Fed has talked the S&P 500 up 4% (amid collapsing volumes)….
…..read more HERE
by Simon Black
‘If one of you stands up right now and heads for the exit, the rest of the audience probably won’t pay much attention. If ten of you do it, one or two people may notice and follow. But if 400 of you suddenly head for the exit, the rest of the audience would probably follow quickly.’
It’s a great metaphor for how our financial system works. The entire system is based on confidence. And as long as most people maintain this confidence, everything is fine.
…..read more HERE








