The Equedia Weekly Letter
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America's Looming Debt Crisis  


For the first time in history, the S & P has threatened to downgrade United States credit. Investors are shorting treasuries as a result of the policies the US government is following.

 

What does that mean for the recovering economy? Watch the video as Mort Zuckerman talks about America's looming debt crisis. 

 

Dear Readers,

 

I am going to keep it short this week. It is a long weekend after all and time should be spent with family.

 

Last week, I said gold would climb past $1500 and silver above $45 - even as analysts and the big guns at Goldman called for a strong pullback. Gold shot above $1500 and silver above $45 this week. No matter what happens in the short term, we're going to continue to see these metals climb over a longer time span. The Dollar is in jeopardy and the gold and silver mania is really starting to begin.

 

If you think that it's almost over, think again.

 

Many are now calling gold overpriced and in a bubble that's about to burst.

 

Gold offers no income, no dividend, no interest and no earnings. It has very few industrial uses and gold production is rising (see Smaller Than You Think). It's also at an all-time high.

 

There are a lot of arguments regarding gold's true value. How can anyone justify that an ounce of gold is worth over $1500/oz? Do people even know exactly what an ounce of gold looks like?

 

Take a look at the picture below.

 

 

Not very big, is it? 

 

The fact is gold really does nothing but sit around and look pretty. And believe us, because of this, there are many anti-gold bugs out there who have been shooting darts at our faces for our continued belief in gold and gold-related plays.

So let's clear the air once again. I am not a gold bug. But I do take advantage of the obvious. And the obvious is simple: Gold is worth a lot of money

No. Wait.  

 

Gold is money

 

Gold, like the pieces of paper in our wallets, has perceived value. Let's not forget that our paper currency was derived as a receipt for the amount of gold or silver you actually owned.


But there's one big difference: You can print as much money as you want. You can't print gold. There's a limited amount and if we want more, we have to work really hard to get it and exhaust a lot of resources - especially when the cost of production have continually risen year over year.

That's why everyone wants a piece...especially the banks.  In 2009, the world's central banks became net gold buyers for the first time in two decades and this trend has continued in the last 2 years. 

 

During the past decade, precious metals were the best-performing asset class, beating property and shares with returns of nearly 250 per cent. People who invested money in precious metals, such as gold, silver and platinum, during the ten years to December 2009 made returns of 242 per cent, the equivalent of a gain of 13.1 per cent a year.  

 

While Contrarians argue that gold does nothing but sit there and look pretty (see Smaller Than You Think), gold is as good as cash.   

 

Last November we published the story, "The First Time in History," where we talked about how gold had become as good as cash: 

 

"As of November 22, 2010, clearing house ICE Europe will begin accepting gold bullion as initial margin for crude oil and natural gas futures trading. This marks the first day in modern financial history that gold will be eligible collateral for energy futures. And this is a big deal. A really big deal.

 

 The only form of collateral allowed by ICE before this was cash, and government securities. But with this announcement, ICE has effectively made gold equivalent to cash and government bonds. 

 

 This trend is expected to continue. Using gold to margin on oil marks a new era in making gold a usable and credit worthy currency and we can expect that other firms may soon follow suit."

 

On February 2011, JP Morgan followed.

 

JP Morgan Chase (NYSE: JPM), one of the largest banks in the US, said it will accept physical gold as collateral for certain transactions.  

 

For example, a hedge fund wanting to borrow money for a short period can put up gold as collateral and use the borrowings to invest elsewhere. That means gold is as good as cash.

 

Actually...It's better.

 

Gold has appreciated in value over the last decade more than any other asset, including both currency and real estate (see The Next Big Boom). That means it's not only a better investment, but also an inflation hedge, a safe haven against falling currencies, a hard asset, and now it's also as good as cash.

 

Using gold as collateral is a trend that is happening all over the world. According to WSJ:

 

"Exchanges in New York, Chicago and Europe recently agreed to accept gold as collateral for certain trades. And the World Gold Council also is gaining traction in its push to have the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision accept the precious metal as a Tier-1 asset for banks, along with government bonds and currencies.

 

In India, many financial-services companies are offering personal loans against physical gold, a market that is expanding."

 

So for all of the contrarians that still believe gold is worthless, tell that to the banks.

 

Is Gold Too Expensive?

 

Sure, gold at $1500 is expensive and maybe even a little risky. But it was also assumed expensive and risky when it was at $600. 

 

Regardless, risk is relative. Gold as an investment is risky at these prices. But you can say the same about stocks today. You can say the same about bonds. You can say the same about real estate. Heck, you can certainly say the same about the Dollar.

 

Don't bother telling me gold is risky and that it has no value. Especially when someone can print a trillion dollars for next to nothing...  

 

Are We in a Bubble?

 

Eventually, I think the world and the US will get back to normal and people around the world will once again believe in currency. The question everyone should be asking is not if gold is in a bubble, but rather, at what price will the gold bubble pop? At what gold prices will our economies stabilize? And when it does, where will it settle? 

 

Although I can sit here and make random predictions about where gold is going to pop, a lot of that depends on factors well beyond any of our control. Some say $2000. Some say $5000. Both of these numbers are attainable and aren't farfetched predictions.  

 

Let's say gold goes to $3000. The downside risk with gold at $1500 now doesn't seem so risky anymore. After gold reaches a high and the bubble pops, it will always find a higher base. I don't think we'll ever see $300 gold anymore.  

 

I am sure by now you have heard me, or someone else, tell you that the US is in a heap of trouble. They have a deficit that's growing astronomically and paying that down will be next to impossible in the near term. 

 

It's already estimated that over 16 percent of Americans will fail to file their 2010 federal tax returns, report their full income or pay their full 2010 tax liability. This will cost the US upwards of $490 billion in revenue for the 2010 tax year. And if they can't collect taxes, they'll find other means. 

 

They'll increase taxes, increase parking metre prices, increase licensing fees. They'll need to do whatever they can to squeeze every dollar out of every citizen.

 

That won't be a pretty sight, especially considering the state of the US economy. When people can't put food on the table due to inflated prices, do you think they're going to pay their taxes? If they don`t, how will the US pay their insurmountable debt?

 

If that happens, how high do you think gold will go then?  

 

The Week Ahead 

 

Bernanke will hold the Fed's first scheduled press conference ever after Wednesday's Open Market Committee meeting (see Beware the April Fool).

 

Normally, I would take the time off on a long weekend to spend more time with my son and skip a weekend issue of the Equedia Weekly Letter. But the week ahead is a jam packed calendar that I feel is my duty to make sure you know what to expect.

 

The week ahead includes earnings reports for key consumer, tech and energy companies, including Exxon Mobil Corp, the U.S.'s largest company by market capitalization. It also includes the release of reports later in the week at how the U.S. economy has performed in the first three months of the year.

 

Two-thirds of the 137 companies in the S&P 500 Index reporting first-quarter results in the previous week showed earnings above analyst expectations.

 

Next week, 180 S&P 500 companies are scheduled to report.

 

But the main focus will be on Bernanke and the concerns about inflation and the debate around what, if anything, is likely to replace the Fed's $600 billion bond-buying program, set to end in June, and how soon interest rates could rise.

 

While I doubt the Fed will be changing the rates, the market will be looking for clues in Bernanke's cryptic language about future forecasts. For example, if Quantitative easing (QE) simply ends, the markets will likely crumble.

 

That's why I think Bernanke will avoid doing that. That means I predict that they will let QE2 run its course, and maybe (just maybe) implement QE3 - they'll just call it something else. Anything short of QE3 is going to be called higher interest rates.

 

Regardless, next week will be volatile. 

 

To put it into perspective, heads of other major central banks have been holding press conferences for years, and they have become key market catalysts often sparking big market swings. Just as I mentioned in a past letter Beware the April Fool, when Bernanke speaks the markets listen. It doesn't matter what he says, the markets will react. And the world will listen. 

 

The S&P 500 is up more than 25 percent since Bernanke's speech at Jackson Hole last August, when QE2 was hinted.

 

This time around, it's going to be a tough call. We know QE2 will likely runs its course. We know QE3 is needed. But given the recent downgrade outlook of the US by the S & P, that would be difficult to implement. It's almost a lose-lose situation. 

 

As an investor, I would love to see QE3. Not for the fact that it is the right or wrong thing to do, but for the short term, I would like to see the markets roar long enough to cash out my chips for what may lie ahead.

 

I hope you have taken the time to relax this holiday weekend. Next week will be all business...  

 

   

 

Until next week,

 

Ivan Lo

Equedia Weekly  

 

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Casey Research  

Debunking Anti-Gold Propaganda     

 

By Doug Casey, Chairman Casey Research 

  

Doug Casey

A meme is now circulating that gold is in a bubble and that it's time for the wise investor to sell. To me, that's a ridiculous notion. Certainly a premature one.

 

It pays to remain as objective as you can be when analyzing any investment. People have a tendency to fall in love with an asset class, usually because it's treated them so well. We saw that happen, most recently, with Internet stocks in the late '90s and houses up to 2007. Investment bubbles are driven primarily by emotion, although there's always some rationale for the emotion to latch on to. Perversely, when it comes to investing, reason is recruited mainly to provide cover for passion and preconception.

 

In the same way, people tend to hate certain investments unreasonably, usually at the bottom of a bear market, after they've lost a lot of money and thinking about the asset means reliving the pain and loss. Love-and-hate cycles occur for all investment classes.

 

But there's only one investment I can think of that many people either love or hate reflexively, almost without regard to market performance: gold. And, to a lesser degree, silver. It's strange that these two metals provoke such powerful psychological reactions - especially among people who dislike them. Nobody has an instinctive hatred of iron, copper, aluminum or cobalt. The reason, of course, is that the main use of gold has always been as money. And people have strong feelings about money. Let's spend a moment looking at how gold's fundamentals fit in with the psychology of the current market.

 

What Gold Is - and Why It's Hated

 

Let me first disclose that I've always been favorably inclined toward gold, simply because I think money is a good thing. Not everyone feels that way, however. Some, with a Platonic view, think that money and commercial activity in general are degrading and beneath the "better" sort of people - although they're a little hazy about how mankind rose above the level of living hand-to-mouth, grubbing for roots and berries. Some think it's "the root of all evil," a view that reflects a certain attitude toward the material world in general.  

 

Some (who have actually read St. Paul) think it's just the love of money that's the root of all evil. Some others see the utility of money but think it should be controlled somehow - as if only the proper authorities knew how to manage the dangerous substance.

 

From an economic viewpoint, however, money is just a medium of exchange and a store of value. Efforts to turn it into a political football invariably are a sign of a hidden agenda or perhaps a psychological aberration. But, that said, money does have a moral as well as an economic significance. And it's important to get that out in the open and have it understood. My view is that money is a high moral good. It represents all the good things you hope to have, do and provide in the future. In a manner of speaking, it's distilled life. That's why it's important to have a sound money, one that isn't subject to political manipulation.

 

Over the centuries many things have been used as money, prominently including cows, salt and seashells. Aristotle thought about this in the 4th century BCE and arrived at the five characteristics of a good money:

  • It should be durable (which is why, say, wheat isn't a good money - it rots).
  • It should be divisible (which is why artwork isn't a good money - you can't cut up the Mona Lisa for change).
  • It should be convenient (which is why lead isn't a good money - it just takes too much to be of value).
  • It should be consistent (which is one reason why land can't be money - each piece is different).
  • And it should have value in itself (which is why paper money leads to trouble).

 

Of the 92 naturally occurring elements, gold (secondarily silver) has proved the best money. It's not magic or superstition, any more than it is for iron to be best for building bridges and aluminum for building airplanes.

 

Of course we do use paper as money today, but only because it recently served as a receipt for actual money. Paper money (currency) historically has a half-life that depends on a number of factors. But it rarely lasts longer than the government that issues it. Gold is the best money because it doesn't need to be "faith-based" or rely on a government.

 

There's much more that can be said on this topic, and it's important to grasp the essentials in order to understand the controversy about whether or not gold is in a bubble. But this isn't the place for an extended explanation.

 

Keep these things in mind, though, as you listen to the current blather from talking heads about where gold is going. Most of them are just journalists, reporters that are parroting what they heard someone else say. And the "someone else" is usually a political apologist who works for a government. Or a hack economist who works for a bank, the IMF or a similar institution with an interest in the status quo of the last few generations. You should treat almost everything you hear about finance or economics in the popular media as no more than entertainment.

 

So let's take some recent statements, assertions and opinions that have been promulgated in the media and analyze them. Many impress me as completely uninformed, even stupid. But since they're floating around in the infosphere, I suppose they need to be addressed...

 

Click Here to Continue Reading

 
More Casey Research Articles

 

> The Casey Report's David Galland: Major Policy Shift Ahead 

> Can You Pass The 2011 Gold Quiz?  

Featured News:

China Gold International Enters Into Memorandum of Understanding With Banro Corporation to Develop Gold Business - Click to Read

How Earnings Estimates Are Created

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We constantly talk about the importance of earnings estimates in driving stock prices.

But have you ever been confused by the jargon we use? Or wonder how earnings estimates are created?

Watch the video as Steve Reitmeister covers these topics to further your understanding of how to apply earnings estimates to beat the market.

 

More Zacks Videos:

 

> Momentum Stock Picks - April 21, 2011 

> Aggressive Growth Stock Picks - April 20, 2011 

> Value Stock Picks - April 19, 2011  

> What the Brokers are Buying and Selling 

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Canaco Announces Proposed Spin-Out of Tigray Resources Inc. - click to read
Technical Trading with Harry Boxer 
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Harry has more than 40 years of Wall Street investment and technical analysis experience, including eight years on Wall Street as chief technical analyst with three brokerage firms.

 

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technical analysis on a whole bunch of stocks he thinks you should be watching from last week. To see more videos, Click Here.


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Forward-Looking Statements

Except for the statements of historical fact, the information contained herein is of a forward-looking nature. Such forward-looking information involves known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors which may cause the actual results, performance or achievement of the Company to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by statements containing forward-looking information.

 

Although the Company has attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially, there may be other factors that cause results not to be as anticipated, estimated or intended. There can be no assurance that statements containing forward looking information will prove to be accurate as actual results and future events could differ materially from those anticipated in such statements. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on statements containing forward looking information. Readers should review the risk factors set out in the Company's prospectus and the documents incorporated by reference.

 

Cautionary Note to U.S. Investors Concerning Estimates of Inferred Resources

 

This presentation uses the term "Inferred Resources". U.S. investors are advised that while this term is recognized and required by Canadian regulations, the Securities and Exchange Commission does not recognize it. "Inferred Resources" have a great amount of uncertainty as to their existence, and great uncertainty as to their economic and legal feasibility. It cannot be assumed that all or any part of an Inferred Resource will ever be upgraded to a higher category. Under Canadian rules, estimates of "Inferred Resources" may not form the basis of feasibility or other economic studies. U.S. investors are also cautioned not to assume that all or any part of an "Inferred Mineral Resource" exists, or is economically or legally mineable.


In This Issue
Silvermex's First Quarter of Production at La Guitarra Ahead of Budget
Debunking Anti-Gold Propaganda
China Gold International Enters Into Memorandum of Understanding With Banro Corporation
Screen of the Week: What the Brokers are Buying
Canaco Announces Proposed Spin-Out of Tigray Resources Inc.
Technical Trading with Harry Boxer
Featured BNN Clip: Base Metals Outlook
Upload Your Own Videos
What the S&P Downgrade Means for Investors
Equedia Tips- Markets Tab
Additional Features
Forward-Looking Statements
This Week's Most Wanted
Equedia Watch: Companies Under Evalualtion
Rants and Raves - Unrated, Uncut, and Unedited

 

Featured Reports  

The Equedia Report: The Next Big Alaskan Gold Play 

 

The Equedia Report: The Hidden Producer 

 


Quick Links 

This Week's Most Wanted

 

The Stock Market's Most Interesting Videos That You Should Watch 

  


Equedia Watch   
Companies Under Evaluation This Past Week

 

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Rants and Raves 

 

Inside the mind of Equedia's editor - unrated, uncut, and unedited

 

Do we ever get a break? Even with what should be a relaxing long weekend full of chocolates and eggs, its hard to relax when you know the market is on edge.

 

I know Bernanke will more than likely hide the Fed's actions, but what he says will still have a tremendous impact on our stocks.

 

While he may not talk about QE3 or divert the question by saying that "we'll revisit that idea once QE2 has run its course," it will be hard to imagine a market without it. But if he does implement it, what will the S&P think of US's credit then? How bad will the world react if US gets downgraded? The fact is that we need QE3...  

 

The US has taken so many steps back, its scary. When you adjust for inflation, a home bought in 1979 has lost 8.5% of its value today.

 

Four out of 10 homes sold in the US are distressed properties. Don't expect housing to get us out of this mess.......   

 

 




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