S2S
Mon 4-June-2007 8AM
Mortgage "pools" and Chinese stagflation
I am surprised (see *); Deutsche Bank is a well reputable institution. Are they getting so desperate as to buy those "cats in a bag". It may indicate a big problem, especially if it turns out that the mortgage buyer cannot sue the original mortgage issuer and if not - then the "pooled" mortgage assets would become less of an asset than the banks thought they were...
I am now more inclined to view a "pseudo-deflationary" scenario as the serious posibility and have to give a credit to Robert Prechter. "pseudo" means that in the situation of rapidly (>=10%) inflating currency and credit supply, a "pseudo-deflation" will be showing up as the prices still rising in nominal figures, but at the rate than is LOWER than the rate of inflation! That is the classical stagflation - the old fashion deflationary recession in modern dressing disguised by the rising monetary supply! This can and eventually will affect the raw materials but these will deflate the least, i.e. their prices will appear and only appear to be rising the fastest. However they (**) will still be rising slower than monetary inflation rate due to the real slowdown in the economic activity worldwide with the exception of India and China. At the moment the GDP in most economies is rising nominally much slower (~3%) than the rate of currency and credit inflation (10-13%) in almost all countries except India and China (8 and 10% respectively)
By those measures the real GDP growth worldwide is negative ~ -7% indicating the real recession and is stagnant in India and China, indicating that the stagnation in the rising living standards in China and their 14% unemployment is very real and has nothing to do with the influx of the countryside population into the cities. It is in fact the consequence of the stagnation!
Prediction: expect social upheavals and changes in China, Russia and in most other undemocratic countries! Stagnating living standards under very high overblown expectations caused by the distorted media image and propaganda of "success" are the social powder keg. Only very stable socially, and democratic societies can survive such stagnation or recession without suffering some major socio-political crisis.
Stan
-----------------
*) Read this:
http://biz.yahoo.com/fo/070601/549844fec1f41a3861ca5c3c697b9106.html?.v=1&.pf=loans
Forbes Magazine
Paper Chase
Friday June 1, 12:42 pm ET
By Bernard Condon
You're in luck. Your mortgage lender
has flipped, sliced and diced your loan--and now no one knows who holds
it.
In 2006 Michelle Tucker, a 35-year-old UPS package processor and mother of two, was hit by a one-two punch. Her husband had surgery on his shoulder and was forced to stop taking construction jobs around town that helped pay the bills. Worse, the adjustable mortgage with the low teaser rate she took out on her three-bedroom home in Jacksonville, Fla. adjusted, now to 10%, nearly double her old rate. She defaulted. Soon after, the lender filed suit to foreclose.
Then a stroke of luck: A Legal Aid lawyer, April Charney, got the foreclosure withdrawn after discovering that the company that filed to foreclose didn't own the Tuckers' loan. The owner was actually a securitized pool of loans overseen by Deutsche Bank (NYSE:DB - News). And Charney has documents showing the pool bought the loan after the Tuckers defaulted--an illegal purchase for most pools, including this one. That means a court might refuse to recognize it owns the loan. Charney is arguing it should do just that.
------
**) With a likely exception of gold
and other precious metals which should rise at or higher than inflation
rate, since their demand is not determined by the industrial cycles but
rather by the hedging against an instability of the monetary policy.
S2S
Thgu 24-May-2007 10AM
Banks
This is a good example of what we were talking about yesterday:
http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=610122
Credit card companies and banks get an average of 2.75% on every gallon of gas sold, and credit card processing fees now rank as the second-biggest expense for gas station operators, according to the National Association of Convenience Stores.
The way I see it is, I'm doing all the work of providing the labor, the wages, the electricity, the lighting, the maintenance of the pumps, the repairs and the insurance, which is quite substantial," Curro said. "I'm doing all the work, and somebody else is getting fat on me."
Comment:
Flooding the economy with cheap credit (= inflationary "square"[*] dollars policy) causes overinvestment in all unregulated commercial sectors such as manufacturing, investment funds, brokers and consumer retail heavily depressing their profitability. Regulated or monopolised sectors such as banking, health and mineral resources are not affected as much because it is easier to build yet another factory in China making 30$ DVD players or website generating eyballs than set up a new bank or build a new mine where everything that can go wrong usually does go wrong and things cannot be planned very well.
It leads to a situation where entire manufacturing sector becomes unprofitable and forced to lower the prices in order to sell at all, depressing wages as well. Meantime the raw materials, energy and food become bottlenecks eroding the disposable incomes of people employed in manufacturing and service sectors. This is a classical malinvestment disease cycles described in the classical analyses of the 19-th century Europe.
Inflationary effects of printing "square" dollars are offset by depressed pricing in the overinvested sectors, thus the "averaged" inflation, if one adds falling prices for LCD TV sets plus rising prices of butter, the average inflation comes out low or zero. This keeps square dollar interest rates low permitting to generate even more credit. It is similiar to Weimar Republic scenario when up until the final curency blowout the interest rates have been stable and low (6%). The lesson from those days is anyone who kept gold or some other stable currency or hard assets - won! Another lesson is that in such cases 80% of people tend to vote for dictators...
------------
*) We use terms "square"
dolar indicating a measure of commercial credit, as opposed to the "round"
dollars meaning cash and savings. "Square" dollars are the
currency used by large institutions while "round" dollars are the curency
used by the general population. Those two currencies are circulating
through distinct channels and generally do not mix, with the exception
of one possible leakage allowing converting of "squares" into "round" dollars
- mortgage credit.
S2S
Mon 12-Feb-2007 9AM
More corporate successes
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17104615/
US slowdown
looms as groups miss targets
By Francesco
Guerrera in New York
Updated: 1:40 a.m. CT Feb 12, 2007
The percentage of US companies failing to meet Wall Street's earnings expectations has reached the highest level in more than two years, fuelling fears that corporate America's record run of profit growth will come to an abrupt end. Concerns of a slowdown in corporate profitability – one of the key reasons for the stock market's record-breaking streak – have been heightened by companies' increasingly bearish outlook on business prospects.
Comment [morning rant warn level=MODERATE]:
In spite of the supposedly "healthy robust" economy according to other journalistic reports? In spite of virtually free and infinitely extendable corporate credit? In spite of evacutating almost all manufacturing to India and China? They are contradicting their own media propaganda of "success", just like late Gierek in the communist Poland of the 1970-ties.
I am guessing, but it seems that the virtually free credit machine may have hit a snag. There must be something in the financial mechanisms that is now putting a brake on the fake profit generation out of the fake, credit-stimulated phony corporate "growth" that has been working so smoothly after 1996. What would that snag be? Could it be the higher interest rates? Hardly, the rates haven't risen that much. The recent merger mania may have something to do with that - but I think it may be one of the symptomes of desperation rather than the cause. My gut feeling tells me that something serious is comming their way but they are of course not telling us, and I do not know yet what exactly it might be.
Stan
S2S
Sun 11-Feb-2007 3PM
Telecoms
Stan B. wrote:
Look how [... censored 6 letter word beginning with f and ending with d] they are:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/6345363.stm
Telecoms firm to cut 12,500 jobs
Patricia Russo
said the firm's results so far had been disappointing Newly-merged
telecoms equipment firm Alcatel-Lucent is to cut 12,500 jobs over the next
three years after suffering a collapse in profits. The firm said
the cuts were "difficult but necessary" as it sought savings of more than
1.7bn euros ($2.2bn; £1.1bn). The firm has struggled over the
past year, with profits more than halving to 522m euros in 2006 and the
business making a loss in the final quarter. It blamed the result
on uncertainty surrounding its eventual merger.
...
Full-year profits
fell to 522m from 1.67bn euros the year before as the business was hit
by substantial one-off costs relating to restructuring and the reduced
value of assets.
Comment:
It looks like they followed a classical receipe for trading two cats for a dog for a million dollar price [referring to an old Polish salesman's joke of trading two cats for 500,000$ each, in exchange for a dog worth 1M$] . Beefing up their nominal profits and assets by fiddling their accounts and let all hell break loose afterwards. We are witnessing a fraud on gigantic scale. There is no hope until they all go bust - Alcatel, Nortel etc, all of them!. If that does not happen, millions of people working for them and "investing" in them will keep getting poorer and poorer.
Stan
S2S
Sun 4-Feb-2007 2PM
Important comment
Stan B. wrote:
http://www.financialsense.com/Market/wrapup.htm
It's worth reading it all (note the wrapup will stay under this link only for 1 day so read it now or save it all (with graphs) on your local hard disk.
Stan
--------------
Today's Market WrapUp 02.02.2007
We're Swimming
in Liquidity, Aren't We?
BY BRIAN
PRETTI
Although I’m pretty darn guilty of this personally, I can’t turn around these days without hearing the words, “it’s a liquidity driven market.” Trust me, this is not about to go off into yet another discussion of the macro credit cycle. Collectively, we know global central bankers are “sponsoring” excess liquidity. We know Wall Street is capable of the same and is fully in gear at this point. We know the derivatives markets underpin excessive risk taking on the part of investors. We know private equity is the new fountain of youth for the institutional investment community. And we know leveraged hedge funds are not about to change their collective ways any time soon.
But what
we don’t know is how households/consumers will react ahead as, very much
unlike the financial markets, they are not swimming in liquidity.
Not by a long shot. At least not relative to the context of history. Given
my fixation on the residential real estate cycle being an asset
class capable of behavior modification when it comes to the US consumer,
it highlights the need to fully recognize that US household excess
liquidity availability has largely been driven by the monetization of asset
inflation in both equities late last decade and residential real estate
in the current, to say nothing of additional leverage assumption.
In literally point blank terms, the following chart documents just how
important stock and real estate asset inflation has been to growth
in household net worth by the decade over the last half century-plus. As
is clear, real estate and
equities
have never been more meaningful to aggregate household net worth expansion
than is the case in the current decade. Hence, incredibly meaningful
to consumer behavior.
...
Stan P. wrote:
This is a great article! I have not seen
it. Thank you. Rarely one has an opportunity to see a graphical representation
of what everybody is talking about in real numbers. I would like
to point out what is missing in this article as well. We both KNOW what
will happen next.
We have been there - or at least our Polish
families in late 80's and 90's.
First. When the government is printing credit it will always leak into real "goods and services" economy through the "door" of asset inflation. In Poland these were "cars, furs, gold, land..." anything tangible of real value.
Second. When the government is printing money it does NOT make sense to have savings. They will be inflated out. It does make sense to own assets, though. In this sense US consumers behave PERFECTLY REASONABLY
Third: Neither US consumers nor US government will EVER pay back these loans. They will be inflated out of existence.
Fourth: At some point dollar, just like Jaruzelski's zloty, will break down. Once actual debasement starts nobody wants the paper. However, at this point you can not have any debts either. Because, just like in Poland, the bank interest rates on borrowed money may go to 80% or higher. It HAS TO be higher then tax-adjusted rate of inflation or the economy, the banking system will collapse. I had many friends in Poland whose bank debt principal was inflated to near zero but who had mortgage payments of 80% of a home value every YEAR. They went bankrupt. There were millions who had "spoldzielcze mieszkanie" who could not pay the interest
Five: Deflation WILL not happen. It is easy to prevent by printing money a la Japanese.
Six: If all mortgages go into default then the banks can not simply foreclose. What they will do with millions of properties they cannot sell? What they will do if people simply refuse to leave? These banks will be bankrupt anyway because the cash flow will dry out.
Seven: Just like in Poland the government will have to pay everybody a minimum pension sufficient for survival. ("Emerytury starego portfela" takie jak mejej mamy. Wszyscy jednakowo, bez wzgledu na staz pracy i pozycje. Nie bedzie innego wyjscia.)
Eight: When you have millions of mortgages in default and no cash the government HAS TO step in. They have to take the ownership of your home and let you live in it until you die. They also have to sent seniors a monthly cheque sufficient for survival. This is not a jungle...
Nine: If everything else fails the USA has one guaranteed, though one-time way out. They can exchange the currency, like the communists. Overnight, the trillions of dollars owned by chinese or arabs will lose value. Dollar will cease to be the reserve currency and LIFE WILL GO ON!
Ten: I do not believe it will come to this. It is in nobody interest. Instead, the Dollar will have to be devalued and the interest rates will have to stay low. This can be achieved by removing the excess credit and letting the currency slide. The Japanese/German solution! 20 years of no-growth, no-bancrupcies until the balance sheets improve.
Eleven: When people die, their debts don't matter. This is a game of time. If they manage to "swim" long enough, like 30 years, without "drowning" then the entire problem will disappear with the deaths of baby boomers.
Twelve: USA is a very productive economy. The boomers are competent people. This is not a moribound Gierek's situation [1970-ties Poland]. They will find a way out though many will take a haircut.
My point is not to allow the government
to haircut us. I seriously warn you: when the dollar eventually starts
sliding not to owe any variable-rate debts. Fixed rate liability
is OK - it will nullify itself. [ unless the government changes the rules
of the game, which they CAN DO] If you have debts you have
to pay them in full before the collapse or they will destroy your net worth.
Stanley
S2S
Thu 25-Jan-2007 7PM
Banks deserve Nobel Prize in economics
It's wonderful, isn't it? Something created out of nothing, out of thin air! Large companies have been doing it all the time. Note that as long as more and more paper credit is generated, and as long as that "production" keeps accelerating, that is the second derrivative is >0, then it will also keep interest rates on savings and deposits depressed! If credit is cheap to get, nobody is going to pay you anything to keep YOUR savings in their bank! Why should they? The interbank interest rates will be then also generally depressed for the same reason. Interest rates = the "cost" of money.
Depressed interest rates makes it possible
to accelerate the generation of more new creadit or even money - bank notes!
Now that is a real perpetual motion machine! The only
problem is inflation but as long as manufacturing keeps expanding at the
same rate as money, i.e ~10% a year, then there will be no consumer inflation!
The only dark cloud on the horizon are those goods that cannot be physically
expanded at the above rate. Would you like to offer your guess as
to what that might be?
Stan B.
Stanley P. wrote:
I have just learned an interesting fact.
If one uses a debit card for purchases and there is not sufficient money
in the account then in the past the transaction was refused.
Not any more. Now the transaction will go through, but later you will be
hit with $27.20 overdraft fee.
This is done, of course, for customer's convenience.
I think this invention deserves a Nobel prize in economics.
Stan
S2S
Thu 25-Jan-2007 7PM
Successes are rewarded
Stanley P. wrote:
Successes are
rewarded:
Ford Motor Co.
lost a staggering $12.7 billion in 2006 -- an average of $1,925 for every
car and truck it sold...
...because of
interest on its debt, "total automotive results are expected to be worse
in 2007 than in 2006...
...the losses
were far from the largest corporate deficits on record -- Time Warner Inc.
reported a $97.2 billion loss in 2002
...Ford Motor
Co. may offer performance bonuses to white-collar workers in an effort
to keep them with the company to help lead its restructuring...
more successes
to come:
,,,For the year,
sales [of existing homes] fell by 8.4 percent, the biggest annual decline
since 1989...
but economists
said they believe the low point for housing has been reached and they are
forecasting a slow rebound in 2007. Because of that optimism, analysts
don't believe the slump in housing will drag the overall economy into a
recession....
B2S
Sat 13-Jan-2007 11am
Bears
Bob D. wrote:
Thanks Stan. I don't exactly from a lay point of view, how it would sound. From a common arms length view, would mention that right to me, the climate is right for the bear. Stan, every darn cement factory in Canada is expanding, little shit pit copper mines are open, a gold fever is enveloping, and consumers confidence is high while being debt ridden as never before. perhaps you could give ne a little tutoring before the post?
Bears not hibernating in 2007 GRRR!!!
I agree with this, it does look dodgy.
The current property boom in Canada (except perhaps Alberta) seems to be
basically following the inflationary rise in building material costs of
5-10%/y. I don't see it sustainable because of the high and
rising energy costs will push the material costs, especially cement much
higher eroding profits, and will simultaneously dampen the customer's enthusiasm
to keep heating the extra housing and comuting between those cottages.
Looks like the capital is screaming to find anything at a higer yield than
4% and they are scrapping off a bottom of a barrel. Now that
the conservative prime minister Harper has successfully managed to obliterate
the income trusts impoverishing large number of retirees in the process,
there is probably less choices for investors than ever before in history.
I don't know much about banking. I came across frequent statements from some analysts that banking sector does very well when interest rates are stable or falling. The last 20 years have been like that - very favorable for the banks. How many more years will this trend of falling or stable interest rates last? I don't know. My guess is as long until they figure out and publish the true rate of inflation.
Stan
S2S
Tue 9-Jan-2007 4PM
Economic "miracle"
How can you reconcile the following mutually inconsistent facts:
1. mild winter and
2. flat or slowly growing natgas prices
~6.6$ today
3. oil supply disruption in Nigeria, Russia
and more sabre-rattling in Iran, and
4. oil prices dropping happily by 10$
?
What if Germany and Poland will have to
start buying 2M barrels of oil next quarter in tankers, on the open market?
Has that been already priced in that 55$
price? I am not getting it....
S2S
Mon 8-Jan-2007 3PM
Severe correction?
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=afYGFBA.L8PQ&refer=home
Global Markets Face `Severe Correction,' Faber Says (Update4)
By Ian C. Sayson and Pimm Fox
Jan. 8 (Bloomberg) -- Marc Faber, who predicted the U.S. stock market crash in 1987, said global assets are poised for a ``severe correction'' and it's time to sell.
``In the next few months, we could get a severe correction in all asset markets,'' Faber said in an interview with Bloomberg Television in New York. ``In a selling panic you should buy, but in the buying mania that we have now the wisest course of action is to liquidate.'' ...
S2S
Mon 8-Jan-2007 1PM
More Ford
Stanley P. wrote:
You have smartly
avoided to voice any conclusions.
Yes, I
think Ford will go under and GM will survive.
But GM
has to change the front grill and cupholder on its models too.
Only then
people will ignore Toyota and start buying SUV's
S
I don't have a conclusion and I cannot predict which one would survive. They may even both go under. Perfecting the cupholders will get nowhere, however both companies have enough fat to survive just by eating their own people. Both companies have enough know how to produce good cars if they ever choose to do so. It would be twice as expensive as Honda but they have enough resources to subsidize every car they sell for a few years.
I now nothing about autobiz but if I wanted to gamble I would short the one that is expected to succeed by most people. Let me check the actual numbers:
Table: Cost of calls and puts for Jan-2008
at the striking price equal to todays (8-Jan-2007) stock value F=7.7$,
GM=30.4$ (based on
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/op?s=F&m=2008-01):
| FORD
| GENERAL MOTORS
-----|-------------------|------------------
CALL | 20% (1.55$@7.50$) | 16%
(4.91$@30$)
PUT | 13% (1.00$@7.50$) |
14% (4.30$@30$)
That means that probably a similiar number
of people expects GM to go up versus down as whitnessed by similiar prices
of calls and puts 16%:14%, while most opinions about F would be to go UP,
since the Ford's call options are very expensive at 20% of the stock price!
Actually, I did not expect that
because the media has managed to portray
Ford as a bunch of loosers while hyping GM up beyond belief, plus all that
Kerkorian thing. That shows that one must not form an opinion
based on media on anything. "Prasa klamie" [media lie].
In the light of that I would probably short F since the puts are cheaper than calls and to me it is bearish. If one believes that odds of each company are 50:50 then it may make more sense to short the cheaper play but be prepared that you may loose with a ~50% chance. Under these assumptions you may probably break even if Ford goes down with p=50% by about 2$ (-26%) within the next few months. Interestingly, to protect such a play against entire sector collapse [error, it should be SECTOR INCREASE] a Ford put would have to be coupled with a GM call.
If you played F long then it would have
had to go up by 40% (3$) for the same break even. It doesn't
make me rush to play it. I would rather continue
exploring uranium, energy etc.
I think the entire industrial manufacturing sector including automotive,
electronics, computers, software etc are all highly vulnerable to cheap
labor from India and China, rising energy costs and inflation killing the
purchasing power, and not much of an upside potential in real terms
after inflation adjustment. Even if we assume that they are
going to tap onto a virtually free credit and free borrowing [courtesy
of US Federal Reserve policy] - all that means simply more M&A but
not the real growth.
Stan
S2S
Sun 7-Jan-2007 6PM
Ford
That article put me to sleep. When
I woke up, everything around me looked like shades of metallic gray and
all was foggy and bland.
Interestingly, I noticed that a GM's (I think) 2 door Pontiac Pursuit was
quite a nice car to drive, I rented one for Hamilton trip in Nov.
I was pleasantly surprised. I wonder if Ford has got
something like that. May be that's why Kerkorian paid
20+ bucks for GM but not for Ford. I have a feeling that everybody
is now expecting F to go under and GM to survive. Being a contrarian
it may make perhaps more sense to play on the opposite outcome.
I think the way the pros play shorts is that they play it differentially,
one against the other so when they short one, they long another company
of the same sector.
Stan
Stanley P. wrote:
Hello Stan
I am sending
you a copy of a very interesting article from yahoo. Please read. I do
not comment. I believe your conclusions will be the same as
mine Staszek
Ford's
Future May Rest on 2 Redesigns
Sunday January 7, 10:55 am ET
By Tom Krisher, AP Business Writer
With Automaker's Future at Stake, Ford Engineers Update Aging Focus, Pedestrian
Five Hundred
DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) -- The challenge from Ford Motor Co.'s top brass was
daunting: Take an old car and a bland one and make them better. Don't
change their basic frames and footprints, but make them look and feel new.
And by the way, the future of the company is at stake, because if they
don't sell, the automaker could run out of money.
...
Ford has mortgaged its assets to borrow up to $23.4 billion to fund a massive
restructuring plan and cover billions in losses expected until 2009. The
company, which lost $7 billion in the first nine months of last year, expects
to burn up $17 billion in cash during the next two years.
...
They raised the sheet metal on the sides, shrinking the window size to
give it a sloping, sportier look, with horizontal creases in the sheet
metal. here's more chrome on the grille, mimicking Ford's successful
Fusion mid-sized car, and the hood became more rounded. ...
The interior is simple but modern with nicer seats, lighted cupholders
and more expensive materials including a brushed aluminum look for the
dashboard and
blue instrument lighting. The new Focus also
is among the models to get the optional Ford-Microsoft "Sync" system
that integrates cell phones and personal music players into the car's
electronics, something Ford hopes will appeal to younger buyers.
...
S2S
Fri 29-Dec-2006 9PM
U3O8 - new uranium
play in Guyana
What do you think of Guyana?
They are going public, here is the news:
http://www.u308corp.com/
Note who is on the board of directors: Dr. Keith Fourtybanger !
Stan B.
S2S
28-Dec-2006 9PM
One bad apple
Stan B. wrote:
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/801e1b82-9605-11db-9976-0000779e2340.html
Apple ‘falsified’ files on Jobs’ options
By Richard Waters in San Francisco
Published: December 28 2006 00:21 | Last updated: December 28 2006 15:08
Steve Jobs, chief executive of Apple Computer, was handed 7.5m stock options in 2001 without the required authorisation from the company’s board of directors, according to people familiar with the matter. Records that purported to show a full board meeting had taken place to approve Mr Jobs’ remuneration, as required by Apple’s procedures, were later falsified. These are now among the pieces of evidence being weighed by the Securities and Exchange Commission as it decides whether to pursue a case against the company or any individuals over the affair, according to these people. News of the irregularities, which is expected to be revealed in a regulatory filing by Apple before the end of this week, will add to pressure that has been growing on one of Silicon Valley’s most highly-regarded companies since the middle of 2005.
and
http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/cooke/2006/1227.html
ALGERIA INCREASES
THE PRICE OF OIL
by Ronald R.
Cooke
...National mandates to increase the fees and taxes charged against production and refining is happening throughout the world. Existing contract obligations are disregarded at the whim of each nation’s political establishment. This trend guarantees higher prices are a permanent fixture of the world’s oil and natural gas supply chain.
-----
Comment: it was predictable, we thought of that as a very strong possibility. First Russia, then Venezuela, Bolivia now Algieria. Who is next? The new political theory that all oil/gold and God knows what - belongs to the "people" - will guarantee that:
1) people will get
poorer
2) governments will
get more powerful
3) oil and gas exploration
will slow down
4) price of oil
and gas will go up.
If you bought oil and gas you will do fine, I think. Probably.
Stan [B.]
Re: Apple.
Thanks, I have read similar articles, but not this complete. I have found it interesting that the fact "the record of board meetings... as falsified" is called "irregularity". Besides, If the board did not know then the only people who COULD give themselves stock options were CEO and CFO.
Re: Oil and Gas contracts
I do not think I am surprised. Steven Harper lied to voters to get elected. Governments "word" was never worth a paper it was written on and this includes western democracies, even the best ones. You will be hard press to find a justification for French occupation of Algeria, 300 years of Brits pillaging India or the Boer war - after the discovery of gold in SA Contrary to you I do NOT think abuse and disregard of law will make government stronger. It will make them weaker. Governments are only as strong as their population support. In short, South Korea is stronger then North Korea and Chile is stronger then Cuba. Idi Amin-Dada has found this out first hand. Pity all weak governments have to resort to internal cruelty to stay in power - they have no other means. But this is not the sign of strength. USA, Canada and other democratic countries seem "weak", but are nothing but.
I have found a peculiar thing in respect to you and me. In many areas I have found myself starting as an odd-ball and ending right smack in the centre. This has happened NOT because we have changed, but because the society around us has changed. The examples abound both in my life and yours. For example, nobody [but you] was interested in trans fats 5 years ago. Margarine was considered "healthy". Now New York state has banned all trans-fats with very short implementation period. You have quit the corporate world 10 years ago. I am trying right now. I think we will soon find ourselves at the tip of an iceberg. "Common" people are very patient, but not stupid. Abuse of power and privilege in a democratic society usually ends badly for the abusers. They will not be punished. Life will find a way around them and they will become irrelevant. Call it the "italian" way. People need leaders and will follow them. They can also recognize fraud and crap. In totalitarian societies it almost always ends in bloodshed. In a democracy bullshitters will eventually become irrelevant. The governments are bankrupt and they will have to renege on more and more promises. But people have to keep feeding their children and take care of their parents. They will find a way to do it. Steve Jobs was universally considered an iconic "star" of high tech. Now he is exposed as a crook. Thief, to say it bluntly. Apple management stole from investors and falsified documents to hide it. What do you think it will do to "investors". They are hard pressed by their retirement needs and they do not see a viable alternative - yet. I needed you to show me the way. The corporate management has fired all the engineers, decent programmers etc. Right now they can still hire Hindus and Chinese. They can also get free money. But Beware - the iceberg is growing.
Stan [P.]
S2S
Fri 27-Oct-2006 6PM
Linux Linux ...
From today's Canaccord "Morning Coffee" bulletin:
I have a comment:
- after that Oracle anouncement they were all talking about shorting Red Hat corporation but I would think even farther ahead - why not shorting Microsoft instead?! We shall keep in mind that Oracle need not spend a single dollar on the R&D - all necessary basic Linux development has already been done!
When a very large stable multibillion dollar company like Oracle puts its weight behind it, anything may (or may not) happen! It's no longer a basement business or guerilla operation. You did not probably look at Linux, but I did:
- yesterday I just managed (after 2 months of sparse efforts) to make all my network work seemlessly with 3 Windows XP PCs, one WinMe, and two Linux, one Ubuntu/Debian distro (gnome GUI) and one 300GB file server in the kitchen running Kubuntu/Debian and KDE GUI. These things are fast like hell! There is a good choice of proven SQL servers (GNU license, free), if I ever wanted to run a database (I don't but you should!). You have all the applications plus compilers and debuggers at your disposal. Free and with all the docs!
I am still a novice in Linux but I have to say: I am HUGELY impressed with it! Whoever takes a (significant!) trouble to familiarize with it and learn it, would not ever want to go back to Microsoft Windows! I know that!
My assessment of the situation is that we wrote off Linux prematurely when we looked at it back 10 years ago because it's graphics shell felt slow and pretty unusable back then on those 60MHz 486 and 100MHz Pentiums, in comparison with Win3.1. Win 3.1 was buggy like hell and clunky but blindingly fast when we run it on 100MHz pentiums.
KDE GUI is still exactly as slow as back then if you put it on a 60MHz machine but we now run 3000MHz pentium cpu's, whereas Windows kept getting slower and slower in comparison. Second observation is that the MS Win NT idea of tight (+proprietary and secret) integration of graphics engine into the kernel, although in principle superior to having several explicit graphics GUI server/processes (as X11 + KDE servers in Linux), does not seem to work in practice as well. I don't know if the idea was right and MS may have done something wrong but this looks to me like a big potential show stopper for MS.
I also noticed that the networking has been a lot more reliable, powerfull and better documented under Linux. Not only there is a comprehensive documentation about it but it is the only known source where you can read about bugs and loopholes in the Windows servers!
I have worked also with Xforce GUI (at S.D. last month, in Ireland) which is absolutely amazingly fast and lean! It requires a tiny 4MB of memory overhead but still comes with virtually everything you would ever need. You can run it even on a handheld device, embedded etc. In comparison, MS have given up on the small appliances since their WinCE is an ancient dying relic. Big mistake I think, just look at those portable audiovideo players! Is this a beginning of the end of the Mezozoic era?
Stan
S2S
Mon 18-Sep-2006 11AM
Something may have changed in the long
term
I have a comment: [rant mode=ON] We have been talking about it on several occassions. The more I think the more I feel in the gut that the issue of the "boomers" generation and the sociology, is more important than we realize. The whole think about that unprecedented 1990'ties stock boom + consummer spending boom + property boom has just coincided with the boomers passing through their period of the highest personal income, as they were in their 30-ties and 40-ties. However now they are in their 50-ties and and (a) their personal income is stagnating due to layoffs and corporate "age-ism", poor health and the wide spread practice of corporate early retirements; (b) - many started already and will intensify drawing on their fixed assets such as their real estate holdings and their retirement plans - i.e. stock. This IMHO will have to produce a devastating effect on the market, creating exactly the opposite trend to the one of the 1990-ties.
If the largest group in the society have been steadily acquiring all paper assets and real estate, and indicriminantly so, their prices had to go up. There is no other way. If the same largest group are going to start disposing of those same assets, their prices or their _relative_ prices in relation to OTHER basket of goods that were not accumulated, will have to keep going down!
It doesn't mean that the economy has to crash or depression vs boom, it may be either, however it seems to me that the main assets being held by the boomers in the N.America and Europe - must go down regardless of how will the world economy be doing. There is probably no way of avoiding it. In other words - no end of the world, just the end of the boomers 8-:)
Please notice how selectively (or short sightedly) they have invested in only those 2 assets classes: the technology stock and property! No investments in land, in resources. No investing in agriculture or water resources. 25 years of non-investment in minerals, no new energy, running down the power stations and turning back the clock on nuclear energy. Nuking down any new technology related to space explorations and even destroying and regressing what they have already had built for them by von Braun. The only area of technology their nimble fingers did not destroy was computers, probably by accident rather than design.
The last trend I have to mention, which is probably the most troublesome is the fact that the market cap of the entire financial sector has reached about 30% of the total market. Based on historical precedences this is probably unsustainable in the long term. Something will have to snap.
Stan
S2S
Wed 13-Sep-2006 11AM
Gold
Congratulation for becomming a conspiratorialist and welcome in the club! Andrew is our undisputable chairman, I am just a reluctant member. I would also suggest to co-opt your friend Wojtek, I am sure he would have a lot to say to in the light of the recent development regarding Pluto. 8-:)
I agree with your comments, it does look
strange but I do not understand the mechanism of setting the gold leasing
rates. It
has been noticed by some commentators
that the movement in the leasing rates often preceeds the movement of gold
price. This
was the case last week.
Incidentally I just reviewed our gold predictions (posted on StanInvest) and you won! I am congratulating you! I must keep consulting you more often, to make more money.
Another "conspiratorial" factor I would like to point out is the manipulative way of reporting the oil and gasoline storage "data". It is not widely known that albeit the stored fuel reserves do play a role in stabilising the fluctuations they cannot possibly influence the moving average. The first problem is that the media is presenting this information with a slant as if it could. The second problem is that oil and gasoline reserves are worth only about ~1-3 months of supply, in the USA. In other countries they are typically even lower. The same with gasoline, in addition it cannot be stored for more than 3 months because of chemical deterioration. Because of this, large gasoline reserves may in fact serve to destabilize the market since it has to be dumped after expiry regardless of the price! This is probably happening right now - that's why gasoline retail prices collapsed by more than crude oil.! The third problem is that the reported reserves are, according to Matt Simmons, not based on any physical readings (level sensors) but rather are calculated and estimated based on some theoretical models.
Staszek
Stanley P. wrote:
> We have traded
places. Now I will play the devil's advocate.
> In the recent
month gold lease rates dropped like a stone.
> Over 4 times!
Show me the reason!
> At the same
time there are persistent rumors about central bank selling
> With hard data
only on Portugal (32 tons sold).
> Anyway, there
has never been a bigger spread between gold lease rates
> and interest
rates.
> A temptation
to do carry trade must be greater then ever.
> At the same
time overextended financial and mining institutions got an
> opportunity
to unwind some really bad paper
> and not-so-prohibitive
cost. Plus the Hindu "marriage season" is coming.
> Any which way
you look at it, it stinks.
> Krotko
mowiac, mysle ze to jest ordynarna, desperacka, grubymi nicmi
> szyta manipulacja.
> Bylbym bardzo
zdziwiony gdyby to dlugo trwalo.
> [ translation
: in short, I think
> it is a crudely
sawn manipulation . I would be surorized if it lasted.]
>Remember, October
is a
> month prone
to stock market crashes.
>
Inflacja wylazla z worka, prowokacje iranskie robia sie bezczelne a tu
> ropa spada
$10 zloto $50.
> Powiadaja [they
say] "if something looks too good to be true, it usually is". Co
> jak co ja nie
jestem paranoikiem i nie wierze w konspiracje.
> Ale jak cos
absolutnie nie trzyma sie kupy to trzeba spojrzec krytycznie
> na zalozenia.
> To nie jest
konspiracja ale to moze byc "polityka gospodarcza". Zobacz
> jak latwo centralnemu
bankowi manipulowac systemem
> "fiat currency".
nawet nie musza juz publikowac M1,M2,M3 money supply.
[Translation:
Inflation came out of a bag, Iranian provocations become more bold and
then oil suddenly drops by 10$, gold by 50$. They say "if something looks
too good to be true, it usually is". I am not paranoic
and don't believe in consiracies but if something absolutely does
not compute, one has to look critically at some assumptions.
It maybe not a conspiracy but rather an "economic policy". Look how easy
it is for a central bank to manipulate the "fiet" currency system.
They do not even have to publish M1,M2,M3 money supply.
> Popatrz na wykres [look at the graph]
> Lease Rates
>
> 0.13% to 0.03%,
straight down.
> One thing is
missing to call it a "theory": a reason. I still do not
> understand
why pushing
> gold lower
would help the state policies. It is such small market!
> Let me formulate
a thesis. Gold may or may not be "money". But gold can
> be exchanged
for money.
> Borrowing an
ounce of gold at 0.03% is the same as borrowing US$600.- at
> 0.03%.
> Why would anybody
do the lending if they can sell themselves to buy a
> basket of Canadian
Petroleum Income Funds instead?
> If you are
a bullion bank and the gold is going down from $750 to $580
> and the lease
rate is going down too why would you hold this gold?
> I would sell
it. Maybe that is what they did!
> Understanding
why and how gold has fallen 20% this summer is a key to
> uncover government
financial policy.
> It is not malice.
There must be a sound economic reason.
> SP.
>
> Stan Bleszynski
wrote:
> > Gold keeps fluctuating as in the
channel, since it crash in May. It has fallen today. However, in
the last 2 weeks the
pattern has changed. This may
be important. The last 4 weeks pattern has become bullish again,
for the first time since May.
> >
> > Stan
> >
S2S
Sat 5-Aug-2006 10AM
More successes of American corporate
socialism
R. Kyosake of the "Rich Dad/Poor Dad" books, wrote about it over 10 years ago, warning people not to trust the corporate pension plans. Please take a look at the wording - they imply that nuking the rich pilots' pensions in order to secure money for the poor (=other employees) is supposed to be socially justified...
Watch out if you make more than 35k$ in any one year - they may chop it off and give the "excess" to the poor... And they thought that señor De Castro was dead?!
Stan
http://www.cnn.com/2006/US/08/04/delta.pilots.ap/index.html
Friday, August 4, 2006; Posted: 8:53 p.m. EDT (00:53 GMT)
ATLANTA, Georgia (AP) -- Delta Air Lines Inc. filed a formal request with bankruptcy court late Friday to terminate its pilots' pension plan, as U.S. President George W. Bush prepared to sign a bill aimed in part at helping the struggling carrier save its other employees' pensions. ...
---
S2S
Thu 3-Aug-2006 1PM
Shorting Russia?
I need a consulting help. My "bigger
picture" instincts are telling me to short Russia. Are you
aware
of any large liquid Russian-invested or
Russia-entangled stock that can have widely tradeable options?
The best candidates would be Russian energy
sector, or any other sector.
I tried Rosneft but their stock is illiquid.
Bema Gold used to be heavily exposed to Russia but probably
not any longer. Smart guys.
[...] What else is there?
[...]
P.S.
Martin Weiss bulletin is stating that the
"Federasts" are going to increase the interest rates again next
week due to the "surprizingly" inflationary
[LAUGHING LIKE CRAZY] core Consumer Price Index figures...
S2S Sat, 17 Jun 2006
09:38:56 - 400
Great Rant
Stan P. writes:
Very interesting. Thank you. I have couple of comments, though.
1. Hedge fund blowup. [see M.Weiss warning]
I really did not think yet about this possibility. Thank you for a warning. I do not worry about the volatility just yet: Everybody KNOWS the housing is in trouble which means down the road the consumer is in trouble. But NOT TODAY. In addition, we have a greenhorn FED chairman, who, please note, is a "docent" [German "Dozent" or "Privatdozent" - an obsolete scientific title]. This is exactly the kind of people we both run away from: a scholar with real power. A guy who has neat theories, and if the people fail to measure up.... cut their heads off!!!
The really major difference from the previous cycles is that we have a FIFTH ASIAN TIGER growing. It will not stop to grow even if US economy tanks. It will suffer, slow down and the growth rate will fall from 10 percent to, let say 5%, but it will keep growing. Their problem is double this of East Germany: they have to rebuild every sewer, every rail, every road, every building in their country plus scrap and rebuild all industry It is a third world legacy plus a communist legacy. [East Germans were not third world] Plus, India is showing signs of life too. There is nothing better to jolt the great country run by incompetent beaurocracy like a SUCCESSFUL COMPETITOT - China.
This means the continuous demand for raw materials, transportation and even industrial goods They cannot produce some of the more sophisticated stuff just yet.
2. Nortel
I think you are mistaken. They COULD NOT sell 2 billion worth of stock at $4. You do not sell new stock to the public. You sell it to the brokers. They would not buy it at $4. They are not stupid. If they did, the stock would immediately tank to $1.50 and THEY would lose a billion. This $4 was based on a SLIM HOPE that things are getting better at Nortel. The trading volume has run down, the sellers disapppeared. Imagine what would happen to $4 stock if people has learned they need nother 2 billion to SURVIVE. Would YOU give more money to this alligator?
Let me be blunt. Just like in the Airline business there is too much capacity in the fiber or wire based telecom. One - Lucent, will live. Another, Nortel will die. If you had a choice which one would you choose? Lucent is Bell Labs plus accounting in order plus more product lines. The French buyers made the right choice.
Nortel was arrogant and stupid. Remember their "profit" with big bonuses for management If this was USA these executives would be in JAIL TODAY. They should have relocated their headquaters to Quebec, long time ago (like Air Canada and Bombardier). Then it would be the Federal Government problem. THE PROBLEM, in short :-) Today, they have no friends. Remember, banckruptcy is not a liquidation of business. It is changing an ownership and management.
Stelco was trading at $1 long after the bancrupcy judge said the stock is worthless. Nortel was trading at $4 for EXACTLY THE SAME REASON. Hope for a Miracle - or stupidy. Pick your choice. Miracles DO happen. Remember Algoma Steel. It was a basket case. Worse then Stelco. Today it is flush with cash thanks to Chinese demand and better worldwide prices.
As to taking more debt. It is ALWAYS like this. Refinancing. You never pay your debt, you roll it forward. For the bankers, it is one piece of paper for the other piece of paper. The alternative is immediate bancrupcy. I assure you THIS decision will be taken by OTTAWA
3. ACE Aviation/Air Canada
I would like you to notice another phenomenon: ACE Aviation. According to newspapers they are doing well. So well that if not for the recent market pullback we would have another Air Canada IPO today. This is a miracle. A divine intervention. The same company. Same management. Same planes. Same routes. Yet Air Canada went bust while ACE Aviation, their holding company would sell its only asset (!!!) again (!!!) to widows and orphans (pension funds?) AVE MARIA. HALLELUYAH!!! (BTW: Do you see similarities with $4 Nortel?)
4. Denison:
Watch out! I have recently listened to a good fund manager answering question on Dennison Mines. This stock is cheap for a good reason. They have massive operational problems at their mines for years.
======================
Now the important
part
======================
[RANT MODE ON, FULL
THROTLE]
I have never talked to you about it. Nobody else does. It will not happen in our lives.
URANIUM HAS GREAT FUTURE - medium to long term. Unless somebody builds a commercial fussion power plant.
Here is THE ARGUMENT
A the beginning of
the 20 century the average content of CO2 in atmosphere was 0.2% You can
check the old physical books. It is true!
Today, it is 0.39%.
It has doubled in 106 years. Now, the vein blood has 8% CO2 and it falls
to 0.8% in the oxygenated blood. There has to be a gradient or the CO2
will NOT be exhaled by the lungs.
I do not know where the limit is. It may be 0.8%, 1% or 2% of CO2 in the air (which corresponds to 21%, 20%, 19% of oxygen content in the air./ Actually less because a lot of CO2 will get dissolved in the oceans creating a weak H2CO3 acid). But at some point high CO2 contents will start creating havoc with our lungs. Having a choice what do you prefer: driving a car or being able to breathe? If you keep driving, you get a dead oceans in the bargain.
I am no Greens fan, but at some point the controls at using carbon fuels worldwide will be put in place. Very strick controls. It has to happen and it will happen. In addition, oil WILL run out. In 30 or 50 years, but it will become prohibitively expensive and liquefying coal is not good either. Besides, by that time atmospheric CO2 will be at 0.8%
There are only four possible alternatives
1. Nuclear fussion
2. Nuclear fission
3. Biofuels - they
recycle the atmospheric carbon.
4. Extreme conservation
I strongly doubt 3. and 4. will be sufficient. The only real solution is 1. but it does NOT EXISTS. The solution will be found - one day but probably not soon enough. Wind and geothermal is a white elephant. Elegant, but only a drop in a bucket. In the short term - 30-50 years it will be oil and gas. Medium term - Uranium. It is the only viable alternative! [Long term - Bin Laden 3 will start a global holocaust in the name of Allah.]
Here is the prediction. Cheap oil is gone. It will never go back to $20 no matter what the "analyst" say. It may drop to $50 for a short time, The reason: the demand is growing, the supply is not
Economics 101 dictates the price will remain high in real terms, inflation adjusted. I think Beijng will start building reactors much sooner then anybody expects. They do not have enough surplus to pay for oil. Mining thermal coal will soon - 10-20 years become uneconomic in China just like everywhere else in the world. They will have to pay the miners real wages one day!
At $70 the nuclear option is a bargain. Despite the radioactive waste!
So here is my final prediction which you may actually agree with. The "Analysts" and the "Investors" are all wrong. They are wrong because they have failed to comprehend the basic economic trend The center of world economic activity has ALREADY shifted to Asia. There will be setbacks and the US is still No1 and will remain so for a long time. I am a physicist. I can extrapolate and integrate. THE WRITING IS ON THE WALL for everyone to see. Just like Europe has quietly become No2 and will remain so content of their great way of life, North America will do well for the predictable future. The Mexicans are great workers in California (but not in Mexico :-) ) But the dynamics, the cauldron, the energy, the place to succeed has shifted from New York to Shanghai. If my suspicions are right, it will shift to Calcutta in 20-50 years. The economy does not function without freedom and the Chinese have real problem with grasping the concept. Not so the Hindus. They understand both democracy and freedom. The technology can be learned, the freedom has to be sucked from your mother's milk and breathed from the air around you.
Long term this favors
India over China. They will land on Mars - not the Chinese.
See you soon
Stan P.
S2S Fri,
16 Jun 2006 12:51:25 -0400
NT
Taking more debt to repay the short term line of credit??? They must be haemorrhaging cash from every pore, bleeding like crazy! Why did they not do it a couple of months back when their stock was worth ~4C$ and the corp bond rates lower? This is the exact repetition of the now famous mistake by the previous CEO John Roth who borrowed 1.5B$ agaist the stock at 1.5$/share, six months after the stock went down from 6$/share. Good time to start thinking of shorting it or not just yet? Note that this time around, if my gut feeling is right, the company may be in the end game...
Stan B.
Nortel works to reorganize debt
Friday, June 16, 2006
Nortel Networks is offering to investors $2-billion (U.S.) in senior unsecured notes to help it reorganize debt and settle some lawsuits.
Toronto-based Nortel said Friday it plans to use $1.3-billion of the net proceeds to repay a one-year credit line arranged in February.
The rest will go to general corporate purposes, including replenishment of $150-million used to repay 7.4 per cent notes due June 15 and $575-million plus accrued interest of $5-million deposited into escrow on June 1 for a proposed class-action settlement announced Feb. 8.
The Internet and telecom networks firm has struggled in recent years in the face of major losses, an accounting scandal, executive firings and shareholder lawsuits.
Nortel also announced
Friday it has formally filed new audited financial statements for the three-year
period ended Dec. 31, 2005, restated to reflect changes in reportable segments.
Copyright © 2006 Bell Globemedia Publishing
S2S Friday, June 16,
2006
More M.Weiss
From:
4 Hidden Surprises
Come to the Fore
Money and Markets
Friday, June 16, 2006
"Money
and Markets" <eletter@weissinc.com>
... Right now, all three of these indicators – emerging markets, the VIX and the junk bonds – are telling me that some major hedge funds or institutions are getting annihilated. We don’t know who yet. But we soon will.
--------
S2S Wed, 07 Jun 2006 11:11:28
M.Weiss, J.Puplava et al.
As you know, since last year I am trying a new strategy of following certain selected stock/invest analysts, particulary the guy you dislike (Puplava - see Peyto, Harvest En., KBR and ARU) and Martin Weiss. Results from [following] the first guy are quite interesting and do not need to be commented as you probably noticed. Weiss on the other hand seems to be a mixed bag, for example he was wrong about an imminent jump in the interest rates a month ago. However 2 weeks ago on the 23/05 he recommended in a bulletin titled "Three Tech Stocks I Hate!" shorting Intel Corp, MU and Juniper Notworks. Today I noticed the following snippet on the news:
Intel to lay off 16,000 employees
- sources
Wolfgang Gruener May 31, 2006 17:41
Westlake Village (CA) and Chicago (IL)
- Update - Intel chief executive officer Paul Otellini revealed last month
that Intel is about o enter the most extensive "self re-evaluation" phase
in 20 years. Now, first indications of the impact of this process begin
to surface: According to industry sources, the company may lay off or "re-deploy"
up to 16,000 employees. Intel is expected to announce details on 15 June.
http://www.tgdaily.com/2006/05/31/intel_to_lay_off_16000/
My comment and conclusion:
It is a bit to early for me to vouch 100%
on Weiss but so far so good! Keep an eye on him. You may find it
useful.
Stan B.
S2S Fri,
02 Jun 2006 13:07:47 (put on the web on 3-Aug-2006)
Aurelian
I love this, today I have the proof that Kitco website is a brillant indicator. What does matter is not what they publish but what they don't! I am going to use them regularly.
Stan B.
(6-June)
Re: The only really interresting story
is Aurelian ARU.V.
Kitco mentioned it only once when it was already 7C$ a share last week. They totally ignored it when it jumped [from 0.8$] to 3C$, and there is no mention whatsever even today when it has gone to 19$. . This is in a total contrast to hundreds of other similiar juniors when they were trumpeting every minute change of their stock movement from every tannoy, like for example that f..ed KRY. I was curious if you noticed this strange behavior of Kitco. Also there was no pumping whatsoever for ARU even though I was watching it like hell keeping my finger on the trigger ready to dump it (when was at 7$) if I detected a slightest trace of a stench. Instead - total silence!!! No news, no pumping, no bashing no praising no nothing. I have never seen anything like it before. Very strange!.
Stan B.
Stanley P. wrote:
If this
is true then you have nothing to worry about about your portfolio - both
gold and oil will stay high. Personally, I do not believe one word of it,
but this is just my personal opinion. As to our ranting it comes
and goes in waves. Right now there is a lull, but there is really not much
going on. We can only "politykowac" - polish style :-) because
there is realy no solid information. The only really interresting
story is Aurelian ARU.V. Did they stumbled on a world class discovery or
is it another Bre-X ? [...]
--------------
S2S Sun, 28 May 2006
17:07:11 (put on the web on 3-Aug-2006)
Forecasting the Gold price
My forecast for gold is as follows:
1. Technically the trend is very bullish. The bowl-like pattern interleaved with trangular spikes, almost no trace of domes except in the shortest of scale (intraday) 2 weaks ago just preceeding the plunge. The recent peak and a dip follows exactly the same pattern as previous ones, on the scales from days on a monthly chart to the scale of years on the yearly chart.. I have therefore no reason to suspect that the trend may change in any serious fashion any time soon, with the exception of some unforeseen global catastrophic events like a III WW, magmatic eruption under PNG, Second Comming etc.
2. The bowl-like pattern has a characteristic time scale of 2 months (1-3 typ), therefore I would expect the current bottom last for about 2 more months until mid July and then the price should test the 730$/oz limit again. The subsequent rise should add another 50-120 bucks on top and above 730$ within 1-2 month (i.e by 780-850 August-September).
3. After September there may be another correction followed by another very steep ~150$ spike, most likely to 950-1000$/oz by February 2007. I am less confident about that however.
Could you respond to this email in-writing
with your prediction, that you said on the phone, for the record?
I will put it on StanInvest then. Thanks,
Stan B.
Stanley P. wrote:
Gold will
trade in range 640-675 until september when it will slowly rise due to
increased physical demand. I do not foresee the dollar crash JUST
YET. In fact, I think dollar will trade 1.27-1.32 euro for the
rest of the year, barring unforeseen catastrophes (volcannoes, hurricanes,
terrorists, revolutions or oil embargo). My reasoning:
due to the high oil price the demand in USA will soften as people start
counting bucks.
This should
improve trade deficit. The terms of trade with Europe has become more favorable.
US interrest rate will rise another 0.5% withing 6 months which should
keep inflation in check. Housing market will soften, but not
crash
I think we are missing a big demographic point. The 11 million illegal mexican immigrants in the States. There is no way to kick out 11 million people - Mexico could not absorb them back. There is nobody to replace them in the USA. There is also no will too get tough with them and there is no need. They will stay. They are mostly young. This means 11 millions new americans, 20-30 million extra children, 6-7 million new homes 11 million more cars, food, furniture, clothing.
I think THIS TIME they will force them to learn English (else no citizenship) - everybody knows how essential it is to avoid creating more ghettos and more underclass.
One more
prediction. I believe the next big [commodity] thing will be LIGHTING.
These white LEDs are fantastic, the production is ramping up and the cost
is coming down. Energy is scarce and has become expensive - permanently.
It is time to stop heating air with 100 years old Edison invention
:-( especially with 100,000 plus hours MTBF typical for solid state
electronics.
S2S
Mon 13-April-2006 12PM
Gold Falls in London...
Quote: "Gold Falls in London Trading as Drop in Crude Oil Eases Inflation Concern - Bloomberg, Apr 13, 2006 08:06"
First of all, WHAT INFLATION? I thought prices rise only by 2% a year? ;-)
Secondly, I really enjoyed reading all those news headlines informing me of oil prices falling to 29$ then falling to 49$, 59$, and today "falling" down to 68.5$. When they mentioned the other day ETF in commodities they were saying in the headlines that this gives people a good opportunity for easy shorting. Go ahead then... let's short some 8-:) (sorry just kidding, please don't!)
I appreciated (literally) the fact that gold has been falling steadily, from 260$ to 280$, then to 320$, 380$, 420$, crashing in January'06 to around 550$ and finally falling back today down to 595$.
I hope my friends journalists will keep up with their good work and "oby tak dalej" [= So far soo good].
Stan
stanley p. wrote:
If your memory hasn't been so short you would remember communists did exactly the same.They lied, lied, lied and it worked, ...for a while.W 68 studenci przejrzeli, ale robotnicy nie. W 70 robotnicy przejrzeli, ale inteligencja i studenci chwilowo mieli dosc.Zreszta byly male Fiaty do "wygrania". W 80 wszyscy mieli dosc, ale armia jeszcze sie sluchala pana Generala.W 88 roku juz sie nikt nikogo nie sluchal i palcem nie kiwnal.What is surprising to us is that in communism it was understandable because journalists were EMPLOYED by the state. People here are confused because the press is supposed to be independent. There are no strings to pull, in theory. Yet they exist. You would have to talk to my friend Janek Ajzner who tried to make a career at the university of Toronto propagating the free market point of view. He was crushed by leftist professors. The universities and the press are hotbeds of left-wing thinking. To see how bad it it you would have to go to UofT to listen to these people to read some of their "naukowych wypocin" On the surface it is an unholy alliance of universities, media, big corporations and governments. It seems to make no sense. yet it does.Because the biggest danger to all these people and institutions is a private individual. Self reliant, financially independent and God Forbid,thinking for himself.Democracy is not about the elected government. This is what we were conditioned to believe. This is, at best, statism. It is better thendictatorship, of course. To understand the difference one has to go back 20 years when words still had meaning. This form of elected representative government was then called "socialdemocracy". It applied mostly to nordic countries and France, then become adopted in most of Europeand parts of former British Empire. Please note "socialdemocracy" not simply "democracy".Democracy is active, socialdemocracy passive. Democracy asserts the rights of the individual. Socialdemocracy denies these rights.A comparison: 100 years ago a male had all the rights in the household. A female had only one right: to choose a husband. Afterwards she was a virtual slave for the rest of HIS life. (Only a widow or a whore had some sort of independence). In socialdemocracy, you can choose a premier or president from 2 to 5 candidates. Afterwards you have no say whatsoever for the next 4 to 8 years.By that token there is only 1.5 democratic countries in the world today. One is Switzerland. The remaining 1/2 is United States, where the voters have some control over members of congress and administration.
Nie ma powodu do rozpaczy. Po pierwsze, Rzad sie sam wykonczy, trzeba mu tylko...pozwolic rzadzic. Po drugie, Internet sluzy do ... kopania dolkow Domyslam sie teraz co bylo w puszce Pandory: Bity, Stasiu, bity!. Wylazly z puszki rozlazly sie i katastrofa... Nikt juz nie slucha panow ideologow. Ja myslalem ze jestem dziwolagiem: od 10 lat nie bylem w kinie,od 5 lat nie czytam gazet, od dwoch lat nie ogladam telewizji... Myslisz ze jestem sam? A jak myslisz dlaczego akcje Abitibi (producent papieru) tak leca w dol? Mialem w Polsce znajomych ktorzy byli w Rosji przy smierci Stalina. Czarna rozpacz, wszyscy placza, ksiezyc spadnie, slonce zgasnie.Dawne, dobre czasy. Oh, wtedy to mozna bylo klamac i pierdolic od rzeczy i wszyscy z podziwem kiwali glowami...No trzymaj sie S.
You are right - it's an unholy alliance but it's hard to call them leftists. It has evolved into some kind of colorless statism or may be statinism 8-:)
Note: there will be a pullback [in gold] for sure, but so far it has been typically -10% (-15% happened only once in 2003). Similar for oil but it was about -25%. after Kathrina peak. As somebody noticed in one of the articles I quoted, the "leftists/statists" may print all the money they want supposedly without inflation (he he) and can propagate and publish all the "true facts" they believe in, but they cannot print more gold, copper nor oil! (*).
Stan
------
Footnote:
*) Quote "The
world has figured out that printing presses cannot make gold, silver or
gasoline."
by David Bond, "Its Over"
10-Apr-2006, http://www.kitco.com/ind/Bond/apr102006.html
------
Very unfortunate, because then socialism would work! It is a very nice system, after all Imagine Gierek swings his magic wand "i male fiaty powstaja z niczego :-) " [cars produce themselves out of nothing] I wrote this many times: I believe statism is psychological. There are people who cannot adjust to change.
Please consider the current statist/leftist/gomint buzzword: "sustainable development" What a nonsense! Think about it. Everything dies. It makes room for new and better. Dinosaurs were great design, yet they died and made room for us. Each product has a life cycle. So is each factory. Eternal cycle of renewal. Yet the statists want the investment to last forever. They hate mining because they are not "sustainable" They do it becaus e "susytainable" development does not change, is "static" therefore it can be effectively managed by the government beaurocrats ie. the statists themselves. (they would have time to think and develop procedures) What a croc!
Think about Enron and Worldcom. They use it as a "proof" capitalism does not work. What a bullshit. In capitalism Enron would be eaten on day 1 ; If they did, the banks would suffer, not the retirees.
However, it is also true capitalism leaves a lot of people behind and suffers from periodic crises. By pure logic one should eliminate these "useless retirees" plus the sick. Keep only the "superior race" I have heard this before and it is not funny.
So here is my firm belief. The biggest protection of democration is access to information! We need entrepreneurial meritocracy and we do need the government, which has a tendency to grow into social cancer. We may even need the unions. The only way to keep the balance is to keep people informed. I am still not sure if in the internet age "janitors can take over" because they are more numerous.
Kultura plebejska,
kultura budki z piwem i stadionu futbolowego nie ma prawa dojsc do wladzy.
Bo wtedy kolejnym, nieuniknionym krokiem jest nowy Stalin albo nowy Mao.
WSZYSTKIE rewolucje przerodzily sie w dyktatury i konczyly masowymi mordami.
Wszystkie co do jednej! Dlatego oczekuje ze w Iranie "walka
klasowa sie zaostrzy" i trzeba bedzie uciac wiecej Iranskich glow ktore
niedostatecznie popieraja A.la.ha. S
S2S
Mon 27-Mar-2006 3PM
Gold correction is over!
Gold correction seems over, all gold stock is going up rapidly! Some on rumors some in sympathy. Incidentally some of the best performers are medium to large cap companies, again, whereas the juniors are often heard of going +20% one week and -20% a few weeks later, and every headline is full of that small crap. At the same time nobody noticed that Goldcorp and Meridian were going steadily up almost every week! Mass psychology is weird thing and flag-waveing theory is actually true. It shows who is really speculating in juniors and that the totally different kind of people keep quietly accumulating on gold majors ignoring flags, mirrors and smoke ...
Same with oil. I was hoping to buy more Shiningbank on the cheap (adding to some bought about a year ago) following the smear campaign and all the negativity in the media. As it turned out it fell only by 2 dollars from about 24 to about 22 and now is back at 24. I was hoping to buy it up at 18-19. Another miss. This trusts gives now 13% yield in spite of the rock bottom natgas prices! It has already paid me 200$ since I owned it! Imagine what will it be like when gas goes back to 10$+ !
You know, in retrospect we should be grateful
to the media for creating a fear climate where as the consequence one can
buy the cheap energy trusts yielding 10-15%! Amazing,
isn't it? Buy Cisco or Microsoft? Why exactly anyone
would want to do that is beyond me! I am investing not gambling.
No thank you, not now. But when they start paying me 10% yield I
may reconsider!
Stan
S2S
Fri 24-Mar-2006 3PM
Yamana Gold (3)
I just read their release.
You are right it's full of red flags! Despite having
5Moz in the ground, dig out only 0.1Moz/yr at a cash cost 290$ (probably
fudged), and at the same time are still looking at acquisitions and exploration
in other areas! I wonder why! 8-:)
Their grades are falling but they promise
they will get better (?) They hedged 50% of their
copper at 1.2$/lb (!!!), and then they paid their managers 2M$ stock
options for such a brillian foresight, at the same time when they
lossed 4M$ (!). This is not even wrong, its a total mess or
a may even be a scam! I am amazed!
Stan
S2S
Tue 21-Mar-2006 3PM
Yamana Gold (2)
stanley p. wrote:
Yes, I remember you telling me this. I have started looking at the insider reports myself. Please note in Yamana case they HAD TO KNOW they are losing money and that their costs per ounce are quite high. (280$ vs average 175$) Please note there is a very simple way to avoid insider trading altogether, once and for all. It is the same method americans use to limit government corruption. When you become a US president you have to disclose all your assets and turn over management of these assets to a professional money manager. Look how simple and efficient method of controlling corruption it is if you force CEO's and CFO's to turn over management of their assets to professionals while they are officers of public corporations. Someone could resign? BS. It never happens. You could not benefit from insider knowledge. Period. Martha Stewart could attest what happens when other people KNOW.
Re: dual listed business.
There are probably
legitimate cases of dual listing, especially if the second listing is in
the USA. Please note a stock market listing is VERY expensive as you have
to comply with all regulations of both exchanges. It basically requires
dual accounting. So why would you do it? Well, you can sell 10 million
new shares to Canadians and another 10 million new shares to Norwegians.
I start to agree with you. Investment in small companies does not work
simply because percentage of crooks is too high. Those who survive
to become mid-size companies MUST HAVE HAD some business skills as well,
some products and real sales. I am starting to agree mid size is the best
investment category. However, in Canada there is just too few of them,
at least in metals and minerals. These who are worth anything are
bought very quickly by the majors.
S.
I actually prefer if they hold the assets and trade them in their own names rather than their wives' or some third party caretakers. At least I know who is who otherwise I would have to memorise the names of their past present and future wives and refresh them every time they divorce, etc.
Dual-listing is a serious impediment. I have seen too many dual-listed companies that disclose ZERO: 0.000 CAN$ of insider trading in 10 years in Canada and in US! Guess what...
I remember in Europe the stock regulations
are also tight but for some strange reasons less transparent for us customers
er I mean "investors". Trying to get any kind of insider
trading info of a European company is like pulling teeth. Nothing
is published anywhere and you will be forced to pay for special reports,
30 bucks, one company at a time. I tried in Ireland (1995) and
I couldn't even trade the stock on line back then, plus the cost per trade
thru a broker by phone was 60 punts per transaction (about 130 CAN$).
Yes, USA and Canada are 30 years ahead of the rest of the world in stock
markets. That's why I was pleasantly
surprised with the Warsaw Stock Exchange.
[...]
S2S
Thu 21-Mar-2006 3PM
Yamana Gold
stanley p. wrote:
I have never invested in Yamana Gold. It was very expensive stock most of the time and there was some strange smell there I did not like . Now I know what it was. Please read their financial statements just released. After reading these two pages of continuous success you wil barely notice they have actually LOST 4 millions.
Just to avoid misunderstanding between us which happens recently more often because we see each other less. I have no problem they have lost money. The official press releases have become the only way of communication between company management and company owners [shareholders]. So it has to be honest and stick to the facts. If there is a problem the management should explain how and when they are going to correct it. If I want poetry I will read Mickiewicz or Norwid.
I am sick
and tired of being manipulated. Anybody who tries it and gets caught
will join my private Black List off fu...ed companies. Welcome
our new arrival, Yamana Gold.
S
Yup, I will put them on blist!
I did look into Yamana a few weeks ago after talking to you but absolutely wasn't even tempted to buy them for a very simple reason: their management was selling their own stock like crazy!
They can write whatever success story they wish in their reports but if they won't buy their own stock so I shall not either! This method is, as any, not completely immune against manipulation by management, however nobody seem to have figured out yet how to fudge the insider trading reports except not to trade at all in one market and instead doing it in all in Europe in case of dual-listed companies (I have seen such companies, that Norwegian one that you mentioned once, is doing just that!). That is another reason I look suspiciously at dual-listed businesses.
On my list of personally proven methods listed in the order of reliability and usefullness are:
1) Insider trading reports. I get them on TD Waterhose web page under Research, must be logged-in.
2) Reports by some small analysts and small fund operators like Puplava, Weiss, some of the "gold bugs" from Kitco
3) Some selected bulletins like Canaccord's "Morning Coffe", internal BMO and TD publications (discontinued or severly restricted 2 years ago, even branch managers don't get them anymore)
4) Technical analysis of the charts, especially reliable being a "bowl" pattern, and "dome" patterns, less reliable are triangles and straight support/resistance lines.
....
[long way nothing]
...
998) Yearly and quarterly reports.
999) Press releases
S2S
Thu 12-Mar-2006 3PM
Rant
Stanley P.
wrote:
http://www.kitco.com/ind/Schiff/mar172006.html
Schiff's article is good. A simplification but illustrates neatly what the problem is. There has to be a balance between production (regarded as troublesome and dirty) and financial services (considered clean and superior). Communists also _loved_ desk jobs... . In reality however, one is not a substitute for another. This is exactly the way I saw American and European economies in the 1990-ties when I noticed a cultural shift in the upper management, when any kind of creative activity that resulted in new products begun by and large to be under-appreciated and any business based on acquiring things and exchanging paper assets became rewarded beyond reason (no I am not against trade but this is not what I saw).
I also was reading at that time a lot about British economy, having lived in Ireland and noticed with great surprise that what was happening at that time in the USA took place in Britain in the period beginning with the 1920-ties and ending in 1970-ties. 50-years of de-industralisation. This was probably inevitable but British unlike Americans were extremely attached to their Pound Sterling and were defending it at all cost. It was of course futile but the result of BoE interventions was that the pound was always overvalued in comparison to the economy. Americans are also using the fact that US$ is the world currency like British pound, in order to sell financial "assets" and services to the world, however ulike British, they seem to be ready to dump $ at any time. This I believe is one difference that may save their bacon in the long run preventing a total de-industralisation.
If history is of any value, the basic lesson of that is that no British stock of any kind was worth buying with the exception of only one: British Petroelium. In Britain, no matter what you would have invested in, in the 1920-ties, would have been of lower value whatsoever 30 years later! Even property and land were dubious becasue buying property in Britain in the 1920-ties you would have been paying real pounds while cashing 30 years later [actually 40] in Harold Wilson's pounds taxed at 80% capital gains.... Speaking of taxes, deindustralisation in Britain was accompanied by a HUGE political swing left. Which was not an accident. Similar trends may also happen in the USA. This unfortunate "Patriot Act" is a precedence towards more nationalism and such things may be followed by "defending" more American "values", then "culture", finally it may end up unfortunately protecting the rights of the "working class" .
Stan
S2S
7-8 -Mar-2006 3PM
LionOre
... a lot
of bad experiences with juniors I wanter to share with you a link:
read it: http://ca.news.finance.yahoo.com/07032006/2/finance-lionore-mining-s-q4-loss-jumps-128-6m-huge.html
You know I have
liked the company and the management. They do fit your profile of medium
fast growing companies. Suddenly such a bomb! If you follow they price
movements you will see sudden drop 6 months ago. It stayed down despite
NO NEWS and high commodity prices. My conclusion: ol' cynical reps from
Cannacord & Friends most likely KNEW the company will blow way in advance.
I followed the official news closely. There was nothing in company behaviour
that would signal "accounting errors". They have made multiple acquisitions/expansions
in recent years and must have been checked for credit-worthiness by major
banks. Nothing has signaled a 300-mil asset writedown. Since valuing minini
assets is voodoo economics at best (even Warren doesn't know how to do
it) I wonder if we are for a whole series of mining blowups.
...
I knew something must have gone badly wrong
with LIM back in December, 4 months ago when I noticed a spate of insdider
selling. Huge in fact! As I told you I value insider
selling or buying very prominently in my decision making. In this
case it was such a strong signal that I could not simply ignore it and
I dumped them all immediately. That surprised me and was the
very fact that prompted me to revaluate and recheck all my other holdings
at that time. None of the juniors passed that test with the
exception of Cambior, Kimber and NGX - these are the only out of
about 20 that I retained.
...
An interresting quote from Lion Ore announcement.
- Cash balance at December 31, 2005, including certain temporarily restricted amounts, was $229.5 million (2004: $262.5 million).
What a gem! Urban would be proud. Note this beauty: "certain temporarily restricted accounts" temporarily restricted? Most likely by creditor banks! Can they touch the cash? I doubt it. So how much is restricted, for how long. Why CASH accounts are restricted at all. Did they violated debt covenants? Then another gem:
"Thunderbox gold operations accounted for a loss in the quarter of $13.1 million"
A gold mine LOST money? There is only one explanation: the entire production was hedged. If so, how much of their nickel production is hedged? It looks like in order to grow so fast they gambled their future and lost. Read this carefully:
In light of the decision not to pursue gold exploration, which had the potential to unlock the value of the gold exploration tenements with an enhancement of the gold resource base, and given the short mine life of the Thunderbox gold mine, it was determined that the producing gold and exploration assets were impaired. The Thunderbox producing assets were written down from $69.7 million to $32.1 million, and the exploration assets, consisting of capitalized exploration costs and the assigned value of tenements (acquired with the takeover of Dalrymple Resources, previous 40% owner of Thunderbox) were written off by $74.1 million.
So they assigned a book value of 74 million to a lot in a desert providing they can "unlock" it through exploration and they simply decided not to do it? How about entering a promising field of Nanotechnology instead? This whole thing stinks. I wonder how much losses are hidden in Barrick and Placer hedge books. If gold goes to $1000, will Barrick go out of business? Will they manage to sell enough shares to "investors" (polish translation "frajer" [sucker]) to cover them?
There is probably a lot more that is not written nor told yet. To restrict an account they must have a pending court injunction. A bank cannot just freeze an account unless (unlikely) they defaulted on a loan to the same bank! In that case they shouldn't keep a current account in the same bank! I wonder why haven't we heard about it?
Such things are routinely happening in Russia (Bema - shiver shiver ...). I thought that in Africa they have a press and media.
It looks like a tip of an iceberg and if they managed to keep that secret for so long, you can imagine what it really might be when they turn the volume on full, xray them with audits and put them in the spotlights. I have an impression that it is another MacWatters: subpar operation using a short-lifespan mine running out, plus "mydlenie oczu" [colorful smoke] by means of some side resources supposedly in the ground to beef up expectations with probably no intentions of ever using them...
I have seen it a few times, if a prospecting company has this here and that over there and something else somewhere else, and "by the way there is an old mine" - it is always a red flag!
BTW, I also have a gut feeling we shall hear more in the future about Bema Gold as well, since that company exhibited the same pattern as LIM, in my humble opinion...
Stan
S2S
Tue 6-Mar-2006 5PM
Goldcorp
I have experienced a valuable lesson with respect to Goldcorp, which I would like to share.
Remember that we being recovering scientists, tend to fall in love with theories more often than we should. One of such theories was the idea that since mid to large cap mining companies are like slow moving large animals they were supposedly unlikely to bring a more decent return. Since I was aiming for something like 30%+ a year (I didn't achieve this goal BTW) I decided to play/speculate on large number of juniors: junior mining prospectors were suppose to produce higher return and using a large number of them was supposed to spread the risk of banckruptcy by anyone of them. Results as you may have guesses were TOTALLY opposite to what the theory predicted!
#1. The average appreciation of the juniors was not higher than the midcap companies but it fluctuated with a very high sigma - by a factor of 1/2 to 2 within a period of 3-6 months. To overcome a high fluctuation (beta) one would either have to time the stock which requires much higher remote viewing skills that I have, or would require averaging in time by holding the stock for >12months at a time. At the end, one would still get similar return as with the medium to large cap cyclical stock (assuming that you do it at the right point in the cycle, for the sector) - but with probably a higher risk!!!
#2. I have had a few good three and four baggers and they were all mid-cap to large cap stock! Meridian Gold and Golcorp are three baggers since I bought them for 11 dollars each during the previous gold corrections. Aber Diamond was a 4-bagger which I bought after reading a managament praise in a Bank of Montral bulletin. Peyto is a four bagger since I bought it at around 10-14$. Parallel Petes (oil) is a 5 bagger since I bought it at 3.5$, Standard Silver Resources quadrupled since I bought it. Bema Gold has doubled when I sold it.
#3. None of my juniors have ever became a 4 bagger! I only got a few 2-baggers but they all fizzled out when I missed their selling point by just a couple of weeks!. I held about 20 juniors total and when I added them up the net return on them was close to zero or negative, depending on which period you look at. The only exception was KBR that I bought last year for 1.6$ following Puplava which has shot up yesterday to 3$ on some drilling but I won't be surprized when it hits 2 dollars back again.... Which BTW shows me that since we do not really _know_ what is going on (we thing we do but we really don't!) then the best other option is probably to follow some people who do seem to know.
#4. A theory I stole from the "Turtles" investor's club, stating that the less risky and the bigger a company is, the more of it's stock you should buy and hold at any given time, has worked very well and that in fact has saved my bacon over the years. The fact that I used to buy 1000-1500$ worth of any given medium to large cap stock, while only 400$ in any given junior caused the overall account to grow rather than shrink.
I have to stress the following generalisation that I have learned:
Stan
S2S
Mon 27-Feb-2006 5PM
Charming the oil snakes
I just watched O'Leary Live on Robot TV for 5 minutes and realized suddenly where have you gotten those ideas from, such as for example that oil is risky etc! I must say, based on my experience with people and on my first impression: stay away from that guy since he can eat you alive! This is the red alert warning. In my humble opinion 3/4 of what he has said seems highly subjective opinions that are not based on facts but whishes and prejudices. You would probably achieve a higher rate of hits if you pinned the stocks on a wall and threw darts.
For example he says there is a16$ terror premium on oil (it may well be!!!) and if that was somehow miraculously removed the prices would "crash" (quoting his word) down to 45$. 45$ - my foot! Sure the price would have gone down IF the terrorists have suddenly disappeared as if by magic and the Saudis had discovered a new large field... IF IF IF IF IF IF .....
Furthermore, even if the price would have
indeed gone down to 45, BP, Exxon and Texaco would still be earning
about 8B$ every quarter for the next couple of years because of the future
contracts and Canadian oil income royalty trusts would still be paying
you 10-15% yield or more (rather more if their prices went down!).
Which would severly restrict their downside slide (the only risk, bigger
than the oil price drop is the interest rate hike but he has somehow been
surprprisingly quite on that...) I am not advocating
buying oil because this is only one of many plays, perhaps there are better
ones. Besides I do not want to bear your karma... 8-:)
I am just URGING you to watch out towards those too outspoken smooth-talking
television "experts" because chances are, you are being ruthlessly programmed...
S.
S2S
Tue, 21 Feb 2006
Prediction (natural gas)
In the short run (weeks) gas may fall to the long term (sloping) support line of about 7$. By the end of the year we will probably see it testing the 15$ level again.
S2S
Tue, 21 Feb 2006
Google
Quote from Puplava editorial:
This week, Barron’s published a bearish cover story about Google (GOOG), which was a fairly innocuous piece. It highlighted Google as a company similar to most others in that they had formidable seasoned competition such as Microsoft and Yahoo, and a difficult road ahead. Such a competitive environment can be considered “business as usual” for all companies, including Google. The next day, the Wall Street Journal published an article highlighting the fact that about 19% of Google’s quarterly earnings came from interest income on cash which was mostly raised in their most recent secondary stock offering. A sharp gumshoe could have found this out by reading their SEC filings; but the lack of clarity in the quarterly reporting press releases and TV coverage typifies the mood and low level of integrity that now exists on Wall Street and within many corporate managements. Their strategy is to just tell the public what they must be