Gold & Precious Metals

How to identify a major gold top

Most important gold peaks of the past 40 years occurred well after the monetary backdrop had turned gold-bearish

In the October 1st weekly update, we described three signs that will likely be seen at around the time of, or just prior to, gold’s ultimate price top. First, we said that by the time the ultimate top of gold’s bull market is close at hand the general public will have given up on the idea that returning to economic health requires more money-printing, more government spending and more debt. The purveyors of such economic quackery will still have their fans, but they will most definitely be in the minority. Second, we reiterated the historical fact that the most important gold peaks of the past 40 years occurred well after the monetary backdrop had turned gold-bearish. We then said that as a consequence of gold’s tendency to follow major changes in the monetary situation, gold probably won’t reach its ultimate top until well after the Fed stops trying to ‘stimulate’ the economy using cheap credit and money-pumping. Third, we cited the strong tendency observed under the current monetary system for long-term bull markets to go to absurd extremes and culminate in spectacular upside blow-offs during their final 12 months.

Not one of these three signs has been evident during the past few years. Furthermore, based on the time it would take for the above-mentioned signs to appear it is reasonable to conclude that gold’s ultimate price top lies a minimum of two years into the future.

We are revisiting this topic today because our October 1st commentary omitted an important indicator of a gold top. It’s an indicator we’ve included in many TSI commentaries over the past 10 years that for some unknown reason escaped our most recent discussion of what to look for when trying to determine if gold’s bull market is nearing its end. We are referring to the relationship between gold and the U.S. stock market. The relationship is illustrated below and can be expressed as follows: Secular trends in the Dow Industrials Index relative to gold go hand-in-hand with secular trends in stock market valuation (represented on the following chart by the S&P 500’s price-to-peak-earnings ratio, also known as the Hussman P/E). Due to this relationship, gold probably won’t be close to a major peak relative to the Dow until after the SPX’s Hussman P/E makes a prolonged move to single digits. To put it more succinctly, near a major gold top the U.S. stock market will be very under-valued.

Note that the relationship between gold and the stock market isn’t just a coincidence. It stems from gold being the world’s most durable, transportable and widely accepted store of value. As other investments fall out of favour (as indicated, for example, by a long-term downward trend in the U.S. stock market’s P/E ratio) there is an increase in demand for the store-of-value function that gold has provided with great success for thousands of years.

SS1

The U.S. stock market is not remotely close to being undervalued at this time. Therefore, the link between gold and the U.S. stock market’s valuation is sending the same signal as the other indicators of a major gold top, which is that a major gold top is probably still years away.

Regular financial market forecasts and analyses are provided at our website: 
http://www.speculative-investor.com/new/index.html
We aren’t offering a free trial subscription at this time, but free samples of our work (excerpts from our regular commentaries) can be viewed at: http://www.speculative-investor.com/new/freesamples.html 

 
 
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No Way Has the Silver Market Peaked

Silver hit $806.00 500 Yrs ago, in the Year 1477 as seen on this 650 year Silver Chart (Ed Note: Click HERE or on the image for a larger view)
 
 
600yearsilver
 
 
There is plenty of data that the silver spike toward $50 last year was it for the silver market. Don’t be fooled, we heard the same thing in 2008 after silver had hit the $21+ level and during the depths of the financial crash silver sold near the $9 level. While many were throwing in the towel and admitting utter defeat we said…
 
BUY, BUY, and BUY some more – sometimes just the power of conviction is all that is needed. The conviction to stay the course and buy when FEAR was in the silver market!
 
When gold had dipped, silver was at the buy of a lifetime…it was silver investing that could make you rich!
 

Think about it, buying silver near $9 and selling near $48 would yield great returns. Those who jumped in near the bottom received almost five times their money without any leverage at all. . 

Silver-Price(Ed Note: Click HERE or on the image for a larger view)

What was so interesting is how much more money will be made in this sector but many that read this far will NOT invest. They will think the market is too far along in the bull progression and therefore they have missed the majority of the move.

It used to be one of my mantras – “If there is only one thing to teach you about the upcoming silver bull market it is this90% of the move comes in the last 10% of the time!”

Think about that statement—Would you be happy to capture 90% of any market move? What this means is you could just now be waking up the precious metals and build your wealth even starting at what appears as— this late date.

What if the entire precious metals bull market hits the average 17 year cycle. Since gold bottomed for this cycle in 2000 it would suggest that 2017 for the top. A full five years from today. If the last year or so of this market is the most explosive and gold explodes and you are along for the big gains in the blow-off phase how would you feel?

Now is the market really going to make the majority of the move in the last year, let alone 90%? Probably not, however think about the facts you already know, look at the housing bubble the most excitement and largest gains happened going into the top, the last few months of the move. Think about the technology stocks bubble, the Japan bubble, or any other market. This simply is market behavior!

However, this time is different—Why?

Because this time it will not be about being a smart real estate investor, or understanding that technology is leading the growth cycle, or the Japanese have a more efficient system. It will be about the one word I seldom use—FEAR…

Yes, you and many throughout the world will be concerned that you don’t have enough money for retirement…

Or concerned  that your pension will not be there? Or concerned your employer cannot meet his obligations? Concerned that the Dollar, Euro, Yen, or any government script will be worth tomorrow what it is today?

Worried that the system truly is cracking up and plans that you made based on solid evidence a decade ago are invalid and you need to take action into your own hands instead of relying on your financial planner, stock broker, defined benefit package or even the safety net provided by the governments at large.

When that shift takes place, that tipping point, when just enough people on a global basis collectively say, we are mad and we are not going to take it any more therefore we are moving into the precious metals. Once this happens look out the buying frenzy will be upon us, many have heard there is no fever like gold fever, this may be true, but bear in mind there is nothing close to a silver bull market! – Not a thing—nothing because silver shines the light of truth about the corrupt financial system better than gold because more people own it!

How high can silver go?

And as we brace ourselves for the final chapter of a U.S. dollar currency crisis…silver has a long way to go.

Let’s take a look at history. In 1980, as the nation was still reeling from the Carter-era inflation and investors were buying up precious metals…silver peaked at $52 an ounce. Adjusted for inflation, that’s about $143 today!

Those who get in now will be richly rewarded…and can get a lot more for their money.
 

by David Morgan

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2 Simply Amazing Gold Charts

  1. Worldwide money printing continues unabatedKWN EVG 5
  2. Just In 10 years $120 trillion have been printed making global debt $200 trillion
  3. World GDP has gone from $32 trillion to $70 trillion 2001-2011
  4. Thus $120 trillion debt is required to produce a $38 trillion annual increase in GDP
  5. The marginal return on printed money is negative in real terms
  6. Thus the world is living on an illusion of paper that people believe is money
  7. This illusionary paper wealth will implode in the next few years
  8. The initial trigger will be the collapse of the world’s reserve currency – the US dollar
  9. The dollar is backed by $120 trillion of US government debt and probably NO gold
  10. All currencies will continue their race to the bottom and lose 100% in real terms against gold
  11. This will create a worldwide hyperinflationary depression
  12. All assets financed by the credit bubble will go down in real terms
  13. This includes stocks, bonds, property and paper money of course
  14. The financial system is unlikely to survive in its present form
  15. The banking system including derivatives has total liabilities of around $1.2 quadrillion
  16. With world GDP of $70 trillion, the world is too small to save a financial system which is 17x greater
  17. This is why there will be unlimited money printing and hyperinflation
  18. Gold has been money for 5,000 years and will continue to be the only currency with integrity
  19. Western countries’ 23,000 tons of gold is probably gone. See recent article by Eric Sprott.
  20. The consequence is that most of the gold in the banking system is likely to be encumbered
  21. This means that Central Banks one day will claim it back against worthless paper gold IOUs
  22. Thus gold and all other assets within the banking system involve an unacceptable counterparty risk
  23. Gold should be held in physical form and stored outside the banking system
  24. The only asset that will maintain its purchasing power is gold see chart below:

GLOBAL-LIQUIDITY-TO-GOLD

All the above via Egon von Greyerz’ GOLD SWITZERLAND website

GoldSwitzerland is the precious metals investment division of Matterhorn Asset Management AG (MAM), a Swiss asset management company specialising in wealth preservation for high net worth individuals and institutions.

GoldSwitzerland advises investors on precious metals investments and buys, sells, transfers and stores precious metals for investors. The metals are stored in the name of the clients in ultra-secure vaults in Switzerland. MAM also assists clients in transferring existing gold and silver holdings out of the banking system to the private vaults. Clients have full control of their gold and silver bars which are allocated and segregated. Clients have personal access to the vaults to inspect or collect their metals.

MAM is associated with the Aquila Group, Switzerland’s largest independent asset management group.

About Egon von Greyerz – 

Egon von Greyerz (EvG) – Founder and Managing Partner of Matterhorn Asset Management AG (MAM) and GoldSwitzerland based in Zurich, Switzerland.

EvG forecasted the current present problems in the world economy well over 10 years ago. In 2002 when gold was $300 per ounce, MAM recommended to its investors to put 50% of their investment assets into physical gold stored outside the banking system.

Egon von Greyerz started his working life in Geneva as a banker and thereafter spent 17 years as Finance Director and Executive Vice-Chairman of a FTSE 100 company in the UK, Dixons Group Plc.
Since the 1990s EvG has been actively involved with financial investment activities including Mergers and Acquisitions and Asset allocation consultancy for private family funds. This led to the creation of Matterhorn Asset Management in 1998, an asset management company based on wealth preservation principles. The GoldSwitzerland Division was created to facilitate the buying and storage of physical gold and silver for private investors, companies, trusts and pension funds.

EvG makes regular media appearances such as on, CNBC, BBC and King World News and speaks at investment conferences around the world. He also publishes articles on precious metals, the world economy and wealth preservation.

 

Must Read: Central Banks Accused of Gold Market Fraud

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It is the nature of the central banks’ involvement that is at issue. James Sinclair and Peter Grandich (and others) now openly accuse the gold market of fraud, with the former calling Comex “Crimex” and the latter calling it “Crimenex.”  Sinclair declares, “Yesterday’s popular myth gone viral in the community is that gold banks have infinite liquidity to depress the price of gold. That assumes that gold is the trading center of the entire market universe, which I am sorry to tell you, it is not. It might be my and your universe, but the gold banks compared to other markets is small.” 

According to Chris Powell of GATA, in an October 24 speech, “All major markets are now manipulated, mostly surreptitiously, by governments. There are a few reasons for this explosion of manipulation, but the big ones are that the world economy has grown terribly unstable in recent years (in large part because of smaller manipulations by governments) and because an international currency war has broken out.

“The gold and silver markets are the most manipulated of all because they involve currencies that compete with government currencies and because gold is a primary determinant not just of the value of currencies but also of interest rates and the value of government bonds.”

“The gold and silver markets are the most manipulated of all because they involve currencies that compete with government currencies and because gold is a primary determinant not just of the value of currencies but also of interest rates and the value of government bonds.”

How much gold does the United States Government own? Supposedly more than any other government, but no one really knows because there hasn’t been an open audit of its bullion since pretty much forever. Curiously, only “tinfoil hatters” such as GATA and Ron Paul seem to care.

Germany does care, however. Ambrose Evans-Pritchard reports in the TelegraphOctober 24 that “Germany’s budget watchdog [has] demanded an onsite probe of the country’s remaining gold reserves in London, Paris and New York to verify whether the metal really exists. The country has 3,396 tons of gold worth €143 billion, the world’s second-largest holding.” The German Court of Auditors “ordered the Bundesbank to secure access to the storage sites.” 

…..much more HERE

 

Saskatchewan’s unique political history has created a modern-day last frontier for exploration. Within its borders is a treasure trove of early-stage resources, so many that Tom MacNeill, president and CEO of 49 North Resources, says his Saskatchewan-focused natural resources company can’t tackle every project it wants to. As an incubator enterprise to raise capital for early-stage projects throughout Saskatchewan, MacNeill’s company is capitalizing on the build-out of capital markets in the province. Read why MacNeill says Saskatchewan is wide open in this exclusive interview withThe Gold Report.

COMPANIES MENTIONED : 49 NORTH RESOURCES INC. : BHP BILLITON LTD. : DNI METALS INC. :NOVAGOLD : OMINECA MINING AND METALS LTD. : POTASHCORP. : RIO TINTO PLC : TEMBO GOLD CORP.: VALE S.A. : WESTCORE ENERGY LTD. : AROWAY ENERGY INC. :EQUAL ENERGY LTD.FORAN MINING CORP.:NEW MILLENNIUM IRON CORP.
 

The Gold Report: Tom, few if any Canadian provinces are booming the way Saskatchewan is. Québec used to be Canada’s top province for mineral exploration and now some believe the recent election of the Parti Quebecois could curtail resource investment in the province. Is Saskatchewan just an election away from boom to gloom?

Tom MacNeill: I seriously doubt that. Saskatchewan is fundamentally different than Québec in that Saskatchewan doesn’t politicize as many things.

More important, a lot of the changes happening under the current Saskatchewan administration were initiated by a left-wing government starting with the Roy Romanow and Lorne Calvert Saskatchewan New Democratic Party (NDP) administrations. We’ve come out of the dark ages here. We had very left-leaning governments that led us on a path to overt nationalization of certain parts of industries in the 1970s. In the 1980s, the pendulum started swinging in the other direction. A big part of the changes with leveling the royalty playing field in oil and gas and becoming friendly to mining development and business started in the 1990s and 2000s under NDP administrations.

We don’t have any fear that we could go back with a swing in government. That was obvious in the election last fall. Dwain Lingenfelter, the leader of the New Democratic Party at the time, started making noise about creating a Saskatchewan oil and gas company again, using old party rhetoric from the 1970s and 1980s. He was rebuffed even by his own party because things are good here because business is getting done. We’re not going to go back.

Also, Québec didn’t have the mandate to change as much as one thinks. Anything the Parti Quebecois wants to do will take budgeting. Since they have a minority government, there will be a confidence vote the first time they try to do anything rash. Their rhetoric is mostly hot air because the party is going to be compromising on a whole range of issues or else it will not be able to govern. We don’t have that problem in Saskatchewan.

TGR: Do politics play too much of a role in resource development?

TMacN: It can play a good role in resource development by staying out of it unless necessary. In the 1970s, we created three of the most detrimental things to our capital market in Saskatchewan history: SaskOil; Saskatchewan Mining Development Corp., the forerunner of Cameco Corp. (CCO:TSX; CCJ:NYSE); and Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan [PotashCorp] (POT:TSX; POT:NYSE), which was formed in 1975 through legislation.

At that time, the government gave itself the right to back into any project it wanted by recouping 50% of the capital costs to the explorers and developers that expended it. The effect was similar to what we see in other jurisdictions that lean that way—it scares away external capital. People don’t want to deal with government because they feel that it can change the rules at any time.

More important, the average taxpayer was burdened with the risk of resource development. Taxpayers were saddled with the risks of the downtimes. The Saskatchewan government jumped headlong into the resource business because resource prices had gone up 400% between 1969 and 1974. It’s a very volatile business, as we all know. The commodity cycle goes up and down. By the time it went down, taxpayer dollars were being expended on capital projects and investments that were underwater.

TGR: Let’s get into a tangible example of politics playing a role in investment in Saskatchewan. In fall 2010, Anglo-Australian mining powerhouse BHP Billiton Ltd. (BHP:NYSE; BHPLF:OTCPK) made a bid for Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan, but the bid was killed by Prime Minister Stephen Harper, his conservative government and Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall. Did that send the wrong message to the investment community?

TMacN: It probably wasn’t helpful from Saskatchewan’s perspective. The whole world is getting sensitive about trade barriers and international capital flows and that didn’t do us a lot of favors. It didn’t particularly hurt us either because we’re wide open for business, which is clear. We had the unique situation where a very high-profile transaction happened leading into an election year and that really got the fervor going.

TGR: Saskatchewan remains fairly top heavy when it comes to publicly traded resource companies. There is Potash Corp., Cameco and not a lot else. Why is that?

TMacN: It’s a function of our history. Both of those were Crown corporations. Since they’ve been unshackled, they have become the best companies in their leagues in the world. As Crown corporations, they were sterilizing the rest of the capital market beneath them because capital fled.

Saskatchewan has early-stage prospectors and senior mining companies that are absolutely behemoth, but we have no capital market supporting that because our capital market left in the years when socialism was the flavor of the day.

Capital markets are just starting to come back. We’ve got one investment banking group in Saskatchewan. Jeret Bode and Kevin Thompson at MGI Securities in Saskatoon have done in excess of $500 million (M) in core finance activity, maybe more, in the last few years. There’s also 49 North Resources Inc. (FNR:TSX.V), two labor-sponsored venture capital funds and Lex Capital Management, which operates a couple of funds out of Regina. That’s our entire institutional capital market. . .still very, very small.

We’re still living the hangover. However, that hangover is an opportunity that’s similar to our neighboring province Alberta a half-century ago. There’s a big void between the top-heavy senior mining companies and the bottom end of the scale where we work, but we’re happy to watch that fill up over the coming decades.

TGR: You’ve been able to take advantage of that paucity of capital.

TMacN: We get to deal directly with the majors once we prove something up. We can deal directly with the senior mining companies. All the major ones are in Saskatchewan now. Rio Tinto Plc (RIO:NYSE; RIO:ASX; RIO:LSE; RTPPF:OTCPK)Vale S.A. (VALE:NYSE) and BHP are all here and looking for the large-scale projects that this province is filled with.

Our advantage is that there is no one else here doing it. We see everything that’s happening on our landscape. Once we get to the point where we’ve developed an asset that would be of interest to a large integrated miner or oil and gas enterprise, we can deal with it directly.

TGR: Have you had any trouble raising funds?

TMacN: We haven’t tried in the last two years. We’ve been working internally with our own generated cash flow because the capital market has been abysmal. From July 2010 to July 2011, there were about $4.3 billion (B) in financings on the TSX Venture Exchange. The following 12-month period had just $1.2B. We’ve been keeping our powder dry waiting for things to turn. We saw a false market bottom in 2010–2011 because the companies had enough money to limp along. That’s finally been drained out of the system.

TGR: You don’t believe we’ve seen the bottom?

TMacN: We’re heading to it now. The most recent bottom was this summer, but things haven’t improved enough for me to confidently say it was the bottom. There’s too much at play right now.

TGR: Are there some tangible financing advantages for a company operating in Saskatchewan?

TMacN: There would be some real advantages if there were others besides us. They would have a wide-open playing field. We have a backlog of resource projects in our own offices here in Saskatoon. There are reams and reams of projects. We simply cannot develop every high quality project that we see. The Saskatchewan Geological Survey has been around for about 75 years and it does some of the best work in the world to get explorationists a head start. Government is very supportive. We have infrastructure everywhere. It’s still wide open here.

TGR: Are there any other publicly traded companies that are operating exclusively in Saskatchewan?

TMacN: There are very few of those. Typically, a Saskatchewan project is brought into a company that exists with assets elsewhere.

We have a large holding in Westcore Energy Ltd. (WTR:TSX.V), a Saskatchewan-headquartered company developing coal. It’s a long-term project with the intention of defining a substantial resource in thermal coal for conversion to crude oil and other high value carbon products. It has a partnership with Quantex Energy Inc. in Calgary, has defined a number of deposits and is in the process of putting together the initial NI 43-101 calculation of the size of the coal deposits it has identified so far.

TGR: You’re a contrarian investor. What are some recent investments you’ve made?

TMacN: We haven’t made a lot of new investments this year. We’ve been trading the companies in our portfolio. We’ll continue to buy shares of Tembo Gold Corp. (TEM:TSX.V; TBGPF:OTCQX) because it’s been so beat up. We buy Westcore Energy when it’s been beat up. We have been cultivating the investments that we do have and making sure that those companies have enough cash to keep moving through this dry spell in the capital market to keep projects advancing.

That’s why we created 49 North. Until we came on the scene, when things got really lousy, companies had nowhere to turn. 49 North supplies capital when the times are very lean so the companies within our portfolio can avoid hyper dilution. The companies that are near and dear to us, we care about their health and welfare and can help them with their cash flow by taking a financing down at reasonable prices and they can view that as an untouchable part of their float until markets turn. We’re a bit of a lender of last resort or an investor of last resort in the bad times, not just there to exploit things in the good times.

TGR: What is Tembo doing?

TMacN: It’s caught in the crossfire of a downward gold market. However, everything that it’s been working on is going as planned—it defined a series of new targets, did a broad-based exploration program and is now homing in on the Nyakagwe and Ngula targets, which look prospective and are continuations of the structure that comes off of Bulyanhulu, the largest mine in Tanzania, which is owned by African Barrick Gold Plc (ABG:LSE).

Tembo has been crucified on the back of bad news from other companies in the region. For example, Canaco Resources Inc. (CAN:TSX.V) announced results in May on a resource calculation that was much less than what the market expected. Hana Mining Ltd. (HMG:TSX.V) had the same experience in that the market was very disappointed with the resource calculation on its copper project in Botswana. Investors typically buy in a jurisdiction. If they own Canaco, they were likely to own Tembo. Some institutions said, “Whoa! We’re getting scared by some of the things that are happening here.” Ironically, Hana just received a takeover offer at twice its recent trading price. Things can happen fast.

It’s the early days for Tembo. It has been doing great work with lots of exploration and drilled many holes, nearly all of which are hitting exactly what one would expect to hit. There are more than 2,000 artisanal miners in more than 100 shafts and lateral workings on the property, mining gold anywhere from 8–50 grams per ton (g/t). In this sense there’s already an active gold mine on the property. Tembo is drilling underneath where the artisanal workings are and hitting the same type of structural material as Bulyanhulu, and Bulyanhulu typically gets better at depth.

TGR: Does it have the cash to drill more holes?

TMacN: Tembo is in the midst of a $4M fundraising right now. There isn’t a lot of money going around, but there always is money for good projects. In a down market the investment community likes the dust to settle first and then look around to see who’s still alive.

Tembo is definitely one of those enterprises that is worth paying attention to because once things turn, it should turn quickly. I’ve said to Tembo’s management that my expectation is that once they put 100 more holes into the project they will probably have proved up the region’s next mine. We will continue to buy at these extremely cheap levels and support the company any way that we can as it moves forward.

TGR: You recently bought back about 10% of your share float. What’s the thinking behind that?

TMacN: We renewed our normal-course issuer bid because our stock is grossly undervalued. Our stock trades at less than $2/share with a $30M market cap. That’s significantly less than the gross value of our oil and gas alone, which we carry at book value. We’ve got significant cash flow from our oil and gas operations. We have the ability to farm out to those with deeper pockets because we have so much development land. We end up with a big hunk of free oil for doing that because we’ve spent the money upfront derisking it. We’re a very deep value play at these prices. Buying our own stock back is one of the best deals out there.

TGR: You recently sold CVG Mining Ltd. Tell us about that deal.

TMacN: Omineca Mining and Metals Ltd. (OMM:TSX.V), a group that we’ve worked with for a very long time, is taking over CVG Mining. Omineca is the product of a spinout from the sale of Copper Canyon Resources to NOVAGOLD (NG:TSX; NG:NYSE.MKT). We were significant institutional investors in Copper Canyon with the resulting sale to NOVAGOLD working out very well for all involved.

It’s a way to give CVG the profile needed to raise the capital that’s necessary for start up. The cash flow should be extraordinary in a short period of time and it likely will take much less than $10M to put into production. Omineca’s associations, high quality management team and excellent track record, combined with our connections provide it a number of avenues to raise capital.

The group at Omineca is very good. The company is based in British Columbia, has very close connections in industry and government and is familiar with the permitting environment. The project is nearly fully permitted and ready to go.

TGR: You have a position in DNI Metals Inc. (DNI:TSX.V; DG7:FSE), which plans to use bioleaching to recover various metals from black shale in Alberta. What’s happening with that company now?

TMacN: DNI Metals has been doing everything it said it was going to do and has been having great success with it. The initial resource on the Buckton Zone, which is a shale that runs 10–20 meters (m) thick with polymetallic material in it, was defined at 250 million tons (Mt). It also is abundant in rare earth elements, which makes the per-ton value very attractive. The LaBiche formation, another black shale that was assumed to be barren cover rock, turned out to have better rare earth element content than the Buckton pay zone.

The LaBiche formation is so thick, up to 100m, that it has a multiple of the tonnage of the 250 Mt initial Buckton resource. The company should be able to expand the gross Inferred resource in short order to 3.5 billion tons (Bt) and once all of the work from drilling is processed, likely in 2013, it should be able to report on a resource of about 5 Bt. Let’s look at the metrics: 5 Bt of $30 rock, maybe even $50 rock with scandium credits, and costs of $5–15/ton based on other projects like Talvivaara in Finland, creates a profit somewhere around $20/ton. It costs about $1B to build the plant. Even if it only profits $10/ton and metals prices stay where they are, there’s $50B in potential profit sitting in the ground.

TGR: Why isn’t the project getting more attention?

TMacN: People don’t understand it. In 1967, when Suncor Energy Inc.’s (SU:TSX; SU:NYSE) first operating mine started processing bitumen into synthetic crude oil, they cracked the champagne bottle. But the oil sands were misunderstood by the investment community. It took a long time. Quite frankly, it was not until the late 1990s that the international investment community perked up to what was going on there. It’s a process. . .given the success of the oil sands, the timeline for DNI Metals should be much shorter.

DNI Metals has been doing a great job of going through all of the scientific work, making sure that it is professional, confirming and reconfirming that drilling is where it needs to be. The preliminary economic assessment (PEA) is underway. The company should be able to finish up the processing work on the drilling that’s been done so far very shortly. It is striving to hit a 5 Bt resource at grades that should provide rock values in the $30–50/ton range. This suggests an enormous quantity of profit in the ground that is an analog to the neighboring oil sands mining that started 40 years ago. The beautiful thing for DNI Metals is all of the roads, power, manpower, infrastructure and experience with strip mining in the area—it’s all there.

DNI Metals is a small junior exploration company that doesn’t spend its budget on beating its drum. It spends it on good science and that’s good for us because we love massive resources that are being developed at low costs. It will catch on.

TGR: Investors want something that’s more near term, maybe?

TMacN: This is very near term. DNI Metals is going to have a PEA and a resource calculation that’s huge. The next steps will be to either finance its way into or partner up for a test facility. If you do good science, you end up with good projects, and then the capital market comes knocking.

TGR: When we spoke in February you said that it would take a few more years to see where the macroeconomic policy of the world’s financial leaders takes us, but that it would ultimately prove positive for gold. Is that picture any clearer now?

TMacN: It’s not a lot clearer because there hasn’t been much traction in world economies. Central bankers are going to keep their foot on the gas pedal until the car fires.

If you’ve ever owned a car that’s carbureted, during a cold winter you go out and try to start it by pumping the pedal a couple of times. That’s the first round of quantitative easing (QE). But it doesn’t start, so you try it again. You pump it a few more times and it fires, but it stalls out. That is QE2. So, you put your foot right to the floor. You hold the choke all the way open until it fires and when it fires it runs a like a son of a gun because there’s so much fuel coming through it and you can’t even contain the revving for a while, even when you take your foot off the gas. That’s QE3.

Central bankers have said that they’re going to hold the gas pedal all the way down until the car starts. Great, because you will, at some point, have a period of inflation that cannot be contained no matter how much they try. All of this macroeconomic QE is likely to result in inflation at some point, which is going to be very good for gold.

Let’s say that all of this macroeconomic QE doesn’t cause rampant inflation, but instead sticks the way the central bankers want and that it creates real economic growth. That’s going to be good for oil because it’s at supply/demand capacity right now and an expanding economy on the back of QE will drive up the price of oil. That is going to be inflationary. There will be a follow-on that will bring the price of gold up.

Oil trading volume is up 25% in the last quarter, which means that institutions and investment bankers are trading it as if it were just another financial asset. That adds volatility to it. We’ve seen oil go up to $110/barrel (bbl) and down to $79/bbl in the last 12 months, and then back and forth and anywhere in between. That means the world doesn’t know which way it’s going yet.

TGR: Are you more bullish on Saskatchewan or gold?

TMacN: I can predict Saskatchewan a little bit better than I can predict the price of gold. We’re going to do fine because we’re in the very early stages of economic development in Saskatchewan. Saskatchewan is going to do great over a very long period.

However, there are likely going to be much higher gold prices very quickly. There’s too much implied risk in the system and too much desire for competitive currency devaluation worldwide in order to get rid of debt on government balance sheets. It’s coming. I will not predict when because things are too volatile at this stage but we can see those clouds on the horizon.

TGR: Thanks, Tom.

Tom MacNeill established 49 North Resources Inc., an incubator enterprise to raise capital for early-stage projects to develop resources throughout Saskatchewan, in 2006; he serves as president, CEO and director of the company. His 25+ year career includes positions as an investment adviser with a major Canadian brokerage firm, management accountant within the mining industry, CFO of a Canadian trust corporation and extensive resource portfolio management.

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DISCLOSURE:
1) Brian Sylvester of The Gold Report conducted this interview. He personally and/or his family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Gold Report: 49 North Resources Inc., Tembo Gold Corp., NOVAGOLD and DNI Metals Inc. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for services. Interviews are edited for clarity.
3) Tom MacNeill: I personally and/or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: 49 North Resources Inc., Tembo Gold Corp., DNI Metals Inc., Omineca Mining and Metals Ltd., Westcore Energy Ltd. I personally and/or my family am paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: 49 North Resources Inc. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview.