Financial Advisor

How China Could Push Gold to $1,000 An Ounce This Year

By Chris Weber
In the most recent issue of the Weber Global Opportunity Report, I sized up the current situation in the gold market.

To me the news is contained in the chart below:



Look at the top line, marked "Gold, adjusted for inflation." You can see that gold's "real" price, taking inflation into account, has only just begun to rise.

Even though in purely nominal terms, gold is around the same $850 "record" level we saw in 1980, in real terms gold is very far below that level. Gold would have to be more than $2,000 per ounce to approximate that 1980 level in today's prices. Further, very few people own any gold at all. Ask yourself about the people you know.

Chances are they don't own any. In fact, I know many of you reading this essay don't own any gold or silver.

Though gold is now trading at a record high, it is still roughly around January 1980 prices. How many other assets can you say this about? The average home is maybe five to six times what it was 28 years ago. The Dow is about 14 times what it was then.

Looked at in this way, gold is still a bargain.

Now look at the way the central banks are throwing newly created paper money and credit at every problem that comes up. Put this together, and gold's rise has far, far more to go. I am very impressed by the way gold has stayed above $800.

The month of December 2007 was the first month in history where gold closed the month over $800. I think we will see it touch $1,000 in 2008. This would be less than 20% from where it ended last year, at $833.80. After all, gold rose over 31% during 2007 (from $636 to $833.80). If it only had two-thirds of that juice this coming year, we'll see $1,000 gold.

Gold's percentage gains since its bull market began in 2001 are laid out below:

2007 31.1%
2006 20.6%
2005 40.0%
2004 8.36%
2003 54.5%
2002 20.2%
2001 33.1%


The average annual rise since 2001 has been 27.27%. If gold rises by just this average in 2008, it'll close the year at $1,061 per ounce. There's one other new development for gold that may help it get there...

This year, China is beginning the country's first-ever trading in gold futures contracts. These are of fairly small size: 1,000 grams, or 32.15 troy ounces per contract. Buyers can put down as little as 7% of the contract, or less than $1,900 per contract at today's prices.

Gold production in China has been soaring in recent years. And according to the China Gold Association, 2008 may be the year that China becomes the world's biggest producer, leapfrogging over Australia, South Africa, and current-No. 1 producer the U.S. And last year, China overtook the U.S. to become the second-largest consumer of gold, after India.

With gold futures contracts being traded on the Shanghai Futures Exchange in sizes that don't shut out the smaller investors, there could be huge demand on the part of the average Chinese for gold this year. If the stock market falters, or enough smart investors start to diversify out of stocks and into gold, this could have a huge impact on the price.

Good investing,

Chris Weber

Forex Trading Forecast: Singapore Dollar

Singapore dollar to rise in currency trading on inflation concerns in 2008The Singapore dollar is expected to rise in currency trading on the FX market this year as inflation concerns prompt monetary tightening. The Singapore economy is expected to continue growing, and this is likely to fuel gains by the currency.


Bloomberg reports on the forex trading forecast for the Singapore dollar:

Forex Forecast



Forex Forecast- try saying that three times fast! The Market Oracle, an online financial publication, has done even better, preparing a one-year forecast for all of the major currencies along with a detailed analysis of the major factors driving each currency in the month of February. The Dollar and Yen are projected to be the strongest performers in this time frame, benefiting from a trend towards risk aversion. It should be noted that this prediction is consistent with news reported by the Forex Blog earlier this week. On the other hand, currencies that have been propped up by the Yen carry trade, namely those of Australia, New Zealand, Canada and South Africa, will face selling pressure. The British Pound is projected to underperform slightly, due to an easing of British monetary policy, which will narrow the interest rate advantage claimed over the US.

Finally, the Euro is something of a wildcard. On the one hand, the EU economy is stagnating, and the ECB has hinted that rate cuts are a possibility. On the other hand, the Euro theoretically stands to inherit a significant amount of risk-averse capital, especially from foreign investors looking for a stable alternative to the Dollar. Accordingly, the Market Oracle forecasts a short-term decline in the value of the Euro but a long-term appreciation.


Read More: Currency Market Strategy and Forecasts for February 2008

GREAT NEWS FOR TRAVELERS


Just over a month ago, our chart of the week featured a "bearish call" on the pan-European currency, the euro.

You can read Steve's case for a weaker euro here. And you can see it playing out in stunning fashion with this week's chart. The euro is suffering one of the greatest short-term declines a major currency has ever seen.

What does the euro's fall mean? Expect financial headlines in Spain, Italy, France, and Germany to get much weaker. Expect European interest rates to fall.

And given the increase in purchasing power of the U.S. dollar versus the euro, consider planning your next European vacation...

– Brian Hunt

How to Profit from Europe's Folly

By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
August 5, 2008

The euro is now 50% overvalued versus the U.S. dollar...

In fact, the euro is as expensive as it's ever been. So it's time for it to come back to earth. Let me explain the story...

The euro went from expensive to outrageously expensive in the last year, as the chart shows.



Now, the euro has reached the point of ridiculousness. Here's a concrete example: A McDonald's Big Mac in Europe will cost you 50% more than a Big Mac in the States.

The Economist magazine's Big Mac Index is actually a pretty darn useful gauge of which currencies are cheap and which are expensive. This index simply compares the price of a McDonald's Big Mac in all the major currencies of the world. The theory goes that countries with similar levels of development should have similarly priced Big Macs. So in theory, a Big Mac should cost roughly the same in Europe and America.

According to the Economist, early 1995 was the last time a Big Mac was 50% more expensive in Europe than it was in the States. The last time Europe's currency got this expensive, it crashed by nearly half.

The Euro Hasn't Been This Expensive Since 1995



Could the euro continue to get even more expensive? Of course. But as the Big Mac chart suggests, the euro currency "rubber band" is stretched as far as it's ever been stretched.

The rubber band always returns to its "equilibrium" state of value. Just when is the question.
Could the euro continue to get even more expensive? Of course. But as the Big Mac chart suggests, the euro currency "rubber band" is stretched as far as it's ever been stretched.
In the latest issue of my newsletter Sjuggerud Confidential, I told my readers about the very best way to safely make money on the euro falling. I think we'll make 50% or more over the next two years.

We are at the brink of a major downtrend in the euro. I think it's time to make a safe wager. Bet against the euro while it's extremely overvalued and get out in two years or so. The euro will probably still be too expensive, but it'll be a lot cheaper than it is now.

Good investing,

Steve

The Three Best Gold Investments Right Now

By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
Aug 2008

In June 2002, I was pounding the table, telling people to buy gold at $250 an ounce... but nobody cared.

Today, in 2008, people are finally asking me about it.

The fact that people are showing interest for the first time in two decades... and that now you see gold covered much more in the mainstream financial media... tells me this bull market in gold is building steam, and getting ready to move a lot higher.

I also want to point out something else about investing in gold right now, if you are new to it: There will be short-term pullbacks in the price.

My friend Chris Weber, who became a self-made millionaire thanks to savvy investments in the last gold bull market, says:

These "down periods" are going to happen. No price goes in one direction forever without stop. When there is a correction or consolidation phase of the gold bull market, I would strongly advise anyone who does not have enough of the metals to use this time to start buying...

Before this bull market is over – and I see it lasting well into the next decade – it would not surprise me to see gold at $3,000 and silver at $187.50...

Richard Russell, who's been following the markets for about 50 years in his DowTheory Letters, agrees with what's been happening this year:

The great gold bull has broken free of its chains. The US public is unaware of the great phenomenon that is playing out before their eyes. Somewhere ahead, the US public will enter the bull market. My advice on gold, as it has been all along – ride the bull, and buy more on pull-backs.

The best financial professionals also agree...

As Michael Metz, chief investment strategist with Oppenheimer & Co., says of today's global economic situation: "You have a perfect storm that favors gold for as far as the eye can see. It's not too late to buy it..."

In this report, you'll learn about our three favorite precious metals opportunities right now – two in gold, and one in silver (and why you should own silver, too).

The first opportunity I want to tell you about is the simplest and safest way to own gold. It's perfect for part of your savings. I think it will grow steadily over the next decade and beyond. In short, every investor, no matter how young or old, should have some.

The second opportunity in this report comes from Porter Stansberry. He'll show you why you also should own some silver right now... and the easiest way to buy it.

The third opportunity we'll tell you about, from professional geologist and mining stock expert Matt Badiali, is our single favorite gold stock to buy right now. It's big, cheap, and safe... and right now, you can buy it at a double-digit discount.

So let's get started...

5 Reasons to Own Gold
& Precious Metals Now

1. Gold is still cheap, while stocks are expensive. In January of 1980, both the Dow Industrials and the price of gold were at the same level: 800. Now, nearly 30 years later, the Dow is above 10,000, and gold is around $950.

2. Governments can print money to pay off their debts and pay for bailouts... But they can't create gold or silver. For example, the U.S. government is printing tons of new money right now to get the banks to lend, and bailing out all the financial institutions that have failed recently (more will fail for sure). In other words, the supply of paper money can be infinite. But the supply of gold is extremely limited. They say the entire gold production in the history of the world could fit on the basketball court at Madison Square Garden. And it's not so easy to get it out of the ground.

3. Precious metals do well in major international conflicts. The price of gold was fixed during World War I and World War II. But silver rose by more than 100% in both world wars. Gold has risen for the duration of the War on Terrorism. It all comes back to No. 2, above... Governments ultimately print money to pay for wars.

4. Gold will rise during inflation... and during deflation. Gold rises as the value of the dollar falls. But what many people don't understand is that gold will do even better during deflation, as the government lowers interest rates and wildly prints money (creating inflation) to offset that deflation. This leads to substantially higher gold prices... which is exactly what's happening right now.

5. Gold lowers risk in your investment portfolio. In the past, gold has tended to do the opposite of stocks: It skyrocketed in the 1970s, when stocks did horribly. Then in the 1980s and 1990s, when stocks soared, gold lost more than half its value.
So right now, you want to be a buyer of gold. Here's the first way I recommend you do it:

Investment No. 1
The Easiest Way to Own Gold

There are several ways to own gold through the stock market.

You can either buy stocks of companies involved in the production of gold, shares in a gold fund, or exposure to the metal itself, in share form.

Of these three gold instruments, the third option offers the least risk: owning gold bullion in share-form.

The instrument I'm talking about is the SPDR gold shares ETF. The symbol is GLD. Each share of GLD is worth exactly one-tenth of an ounce of gold. Buy 10 shares of GLD and you own one ounce of gold. It's that simple.

When you buy the stock of mining companies, especially the juniors, you take on all sorts of additional risks... like investing in politically unstable countries, higher energy costs, labor shortages, and bad management decisions.

With this ETF, you own gold without all the baggage.

Recommendation: Buy the SPDR gold shares ETF (NYSE: GLD).

Investment No. 2
Why Buying Silver Is the Most Important Action You'll Take This Year
By Porter Stansberry

Today, after six years of dollar destruction – with more to come after the U.S. government's rescue of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac... the IndyMac takeover... and the Bear Stearns bailout – the prices of gold and silver are getting ready to head through the roof.

When people have tangible evidence that something has gone badly wrong with the economy, they begin to hedge against it. They hoard real assets. Rich people hoard gold and silver.

Hedging is like buying life insurance. You buy insurance so that, if something terrible happens, your family will have something to live on. Likewise, you should have some exposure to gold and silver in your portfolio. And no, it's not too late to buy some – far from it.

What you want in a hedge is a lot different than what you want in an investment. With an investment, you need something that's stable, which hopefully provides a yield, and isn't going to drive you crazy with volatility. Silver is none of these things.

But it is a perfect hedge, because, when things go wrong economically – when there's a crisis – the price of silver goes bananas.

Why? Because of the silver-to-gold ratio.

Historically, when demand for silver soars because of a monetary crisis, the price rises until it's roughly equal to 16 times the price of gold. As a result, the price of silver tends to move far more than the price of gold during a monetary crisis. Today, gold trades for around $950 an ounce. Dividing $950 by 16 shows the price of silver would be $59 an ounce. But today, silver still trades for less than $20.

Said another way, silver is the best hedge against a money crisis because its price will increase many more times than gold, as the silver-to-gold ratio reverts to its historic average. Silver will once again be worth 1/16th the price of gold. It is now worth only about 1/48th.

The easiest way to get into silver is the iShares Silver Trust (AMEX: SLV). If you don't want to buy real coins, this vehicle should work fairly well.

Make sure you own a substantial amount of gold and silver. I would recommend at least a 5% position in gold and a 5% position in silver. I wouldn't allocate more than 15% of your portfolio. That should be plenty to hedge yourself.

Investment No. 3
The Best Gold Stock to Buy Now
By Matt Badiali

My favorite gold stock investment bills itself as... "The Gold Company."

You'd think shares of the so-called Gold Company would skyrocket when the price of gold rallies like it has... but that hasn't happened.

In the last three years, the price of gold has risen 88% and the price of copper (the Gold Company's other major product) has jumped a whopping 140%. Meanwhile, the Gold Company's shares are up a pathetic 19% during that same period.

So, why buy this seeming laggard? Assets.

The company produced and sold 2.4 million ounces of gold from its Nevada mines in 2006 – 43% of its total gold sales. And the company has another 33.1 million ounces of proven reserves in Nevada. That means a little less than one-third of its 93 million ounces of reserves are located in a safe, stable, mining-friendly country.

With that in mind, we can still buy the company for less than $3,500 per produced ounce of gold. That's a 39% discount to the average for smaller, mid-tier producers working in much dicier locations. Who wants to pay a premium for riskier gold production?

Personally, I'll go for big and stable.

The Gold Company is Newmont Mining (NYSE: NEM) – the world's largest unhedged gold producer.

At its current price, Newmont is a fantastic buyout target. And that is what makes it a great place to be invested now.

The mining industry is in a frenzy of consolidation – and the price of gold is well past record-breaking territory. When a company combines assets as incredibly valuable as Newmont's and an unfairly cheap market value, it will be bought.

Just consider these giant mergers:
• Rio Tinto acquired aluminum producer Alcan for $38.1 billion.
• Freeport-McMoRan bought Phelps Dodge for $22.6 billion.
• Xstrata bought Falconbridge for $18.2 billion.
• CVRD acquired Inco for $18 billion.
• Goldcorp bought Glamis Gold for $8.7 billion.

Newmont has some serious assets to tempt a potential suitor. It built three brand new mines in 2006. It put 9 million ounces of reserves into production in 2007. And the company holds 29 million square miles of land in the world's premier gold-mining districts.

The company will produce between 5 million and 5.5 million ounces of gold this year. That gives us a worst-case sales number (at $650 per ounce gold) of $3.25 BILLION. Newmont says those ounces will cost between $375 and $425 per ounce to produce. That gives us a rough gross profit of $1 billion.

The company is currently worth around $22 billion, so it's trading at 22 times earnings. However, the rising gold and copper prices will buoy its earnings. That will attract interest in a takeover. Potential suitors will look at the volume of gold ounces coming out of the ground and the potential gains of lower-cost production.

In the meantime, the company pays a small (40¢ per share annually) dividend that we will collect while we wait. And we should enjoy some capital gains even without a takeover.

The company's copper hedges expired recently, so it can finally take full advantage of its copper production. Under existing contracts, Newmont has been selling its copper at prices that don't reflect the metal's current price.

Copper prices rose 80% since January 2006. As copper stays up around $3.70 per pound, Newmont will benefit.

Recommendation: Buy Newmont Mining (NYSE: NEM) and use a 25% trailing stop. When one of the world's largest gold producers is selling at a ridiculous discount to its peers, it's time to buy.

GOLD BULL MARKET: JUST THE BEGINNING


Todd Stein & Steven McIntyre
The Texas Hedge Report

In mid 2001, we were at a dinner party catching up with a friend who makes his living as a commodities broker. After the "How are the kids?" and "How is your family?" pleasantries were exchanged, we asked him how business was. His reply was that business was somewhat slow in general and then he added "interest in gold and silver has been dead". Several days later, gold reached its bottom.

Since that fateful day three and a half years ago, gold and silver have both shown healthy appreciation while the stock market has remained in the doldrums. Despite the run-up in bullion prices and precious metal shares, we think that the bull market in gold and silver has just begun. Our thesis is mainly derived from the bullish fundamentals of the yellow and grey metals as well as the bearish fundamentals of the U.S. Dollar. In addition to favorable fundamentals, we think that there are sociological signs that the bull market in gold has just started. We thought it would be helpful to depart from crunching the numbers and discuss what a gold bull market looks like in terms of popular culture.

Phase 1 of the Gold Bull - Planting the Seeds at the Bottom:

Pessimism is at its peak as industry experts (such as our commodities broker friend) declare that the gold market is "dead". Gold, labeled by the social elite as a "barbaric relic", is off everyone's radar screen as an investment. Only the most die-hard gold bugs keep the faith and buy up bullion or precious metals shares. Gold continues to lag in the doldrums.

Phase 2 of the Gold Bull - The Very Smart Money Nibbles:

Wealthy families and sharp hedge funds begin to look at the fundamentals of the precious metals and start to allocate capital to the sector. The price starts to rise, but 99.9% of the public has no idea what a Krugerrand is. The mainstream media (CNBC) cites terrorism fears or oil prices as reasons why gold's price has risen but still mocks those who consider gold as an investment. This is where we are today.

Phase 3 of the Gold Bull - The Upper Class Takes Notice:

The "wall of worry" is being climbed faster and faster as more hedge funds and high net worth families (doctors, lawyers, etc) discover gold as an investment. As official inflation reaches 7-10%, the media realizes that a growing section of the public has an interest in gold and loses its hostility towards precious metals. For the first time in decades, gold and silver bullion coin shop growth is large enough to warrant a multi-page section in the yellow pages.

Phase 4 of the Gold Bull - The Mainstream Gets in on the Action:

Victory! Gold has won its battle after 25 years of futility. Like Internet stocks in the mid 1990s, 5% daily increases in the price of gold are common. Wall Street analysts are seen on television talking about XYZ Mining Co.'s new Peruvian mines instead of Cisco's book-to-bill statistics. Mainstream mutual funds are now allocating a minimum of 5% to gold shares, just like in the early 1980s. We have no idea when this will occur, but this would be an appropriate time to start taking some profits.

Phase 5 of the Gold Bull - The Bubble:

Suze Orman is on television pitching gold stocks to a room full of empowered female investors. American Ivy League college students covet jobs where they can move to Vancouver and, after a few years of experience, raise enough capital to start their own mining company. Wall Street Week on PBS is replaced by Howe Street Week. Gold & silver newsletters and magazines begin to appear at book stores around the world. Once any of these symptoms appear, then you know it is time to liquidate. It's better to sell a little early than to get too greedy.

The preceding scenarios may sound a little ridiculous, but we think some reasonable variation of this is likely to occur. Bull markets grind their way higher and suffer steep short declines that scare out the week hands and set the stage for the next rally. This is exactly what gold has been experiencing and we expect good things to come in the future.


Todd Stein & Steven McIntyre
Texas Hedge Report

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