Timing & trends

European Flight Capital To Accelerate. What To Do….

LarryEdelsonHow would you like it if you had, say 500,000 euros in a European bank and …

A. You are earning less than 0.01 percent on your money.

B. Worse, every one of your euros over 100,000 is subject to confiscation should your bank fail.

And if that’s not bad enough …

C. You see your country’s leaders getting ready to enact tax hikes.

D. You see your country’s stock markets starting to tumble.

E. You see the European Central Bank (ECB) getting ready to actively and aggressively devalue your currency. And …

F. You see a very real chance of military conflict in Eastern Europe, threatening your security, your business, and just about everything else you do or own.

How would you feel? What would you do? What would you be planning to do?

The very first thing you’d do is get as much of your money out of Europe as fast as possible.

And indeed, that’s what scores of Europeans are doing. They’re packing up their wealth and shipping out of Europe, in droves.

Most of that money, mind you, is coming to our shores. As I showed you last week, nearly $1 trillion worth of capital flowed into our economy in 2013 alone.

And though specific data on the amount of money coming out of Europe is not yet available, I am certain the majority of it is precisely that, European money stampeding out of Europe and into the United States.

Moreover, it’s a tsunami of European flight capital that is likely to continue and even accelerate. Reasons …

 All three of the euro area’s biggest economies — Germany, France and Italy — are failing.

Germany, the only country preventing Europe from plummeting into an abyss, saw its output decline in the second quarter. Italy, one of the euro areas most indebted countries, saw its GDP decline for the second consecutive quarter.

Overall …

 Europe’s GDP remains 2.4 percent below its 2009 peak, compared to the U.S. where growth has already exceeded that same benchmark. Meanwhile …

 In the 18 countries that use the euro currency, unemployment is stuck at a dismal 11.5 percent. For those younger than 25, the euro-zone’s unemployment rate is a whopping 23.2 percent.

ECBMaking matters worse …

 Inflation in the euro area is running at 0.4 percent — way below the ECB’s target of roughly 2 percent. That’s the official inflation rate. Other stats show most of Europe already caught in a deflationary vortex.

All this is why Mario Draghi, head of the ECB, last week slashed its main benchmark refinancing rate by 10 basis points from 0.15 percent to 0.05 percent — and did the same for its main depository rate, taking it further into negative territory, from -0.1 percent to -0.2 percent.

It’s also why he unveiled an asset purchase program worth as much as one trillion euros, where the ECB will purchase private sector bonds, rather than government bonds.

That in turn is why the euro plunged 1.8 percent last week alone, a huge devaluation, sending the dollar to its highest levels in more than a year.

My view: The euro’s long-term bear market is now accelerating and in the weeks and months ahead, the currency is doomed to plunge all the way back to parity with the U.S. dollar, which would be a whopping plunge of nearly 23 percent in value.

The long-term consequences for the financial markets will be earth-shattering.

As in the 1932 to 1937 period, when Europe also went bankrupt and its currencies plunged in value …

 U.S. stock markets will explode higher yet again, eventually reaching the Dow 31,000 level.

 The U.S. dollar, despite all its problems, will continue to appreciate, ultimately ushering in severe stagflation, or worse, deflation in this country. While at the same time …

 Most commodities will bottom, just as they did in the early 1930s, and head higher as flight capital from Europe also seeks safety in hard and tangible assets.

Make no mistake about it: The greatest threats to your wealth come not from the United States, but from what’s happening to Europe’s economy.

Combined with the rise in the war cycles, which I have repeatedly warned you about that will impact nearly every country and market on the planet …

Everything you thought you knew about protecting and growing your wealth will be turned upside down in the months and years ahead.

Get them wrong, and you will lose, big time. Get them right, and you will win. It’s all up to you.

For now, I recommend …

A. Get any money that you have invested in anything to do with Europe to safety. Go to cash, U.S. dollar cash.

B. Buy into U.S. stock markets, after a correction comes.

C. Continue to accumulate precious metal investments, not going all in at one time.

D. Keep an eye on other commodity markets, especially …

 Crude oil and natural gas, which are forming long-term bottoms now from which they will vault to much higher prices in the months ahead offering you exceptional profit opportunities.

 Agricultural markets, which will also soon bottom.

And above all, stay safe and stay flexible. Follow the money flows. For in the end, it is how money flows that matters the most. Not price-earnings ratios, not corporate earnings, and not even interest rates.

Capital has a mind of its own, and when there is rising geo-political chaos across the globe coupled with 25 percent of the world’s GDP (Europe) going down the tubes …

Capital moves around the globe and from one investment to another in ways that most analysts and economists simply don’t understand.

And don’t forget, you can let me know what you think about this and other topics right here.

Best wishes, as always …

Larry

P.S. Don’t miss out on Martin’s new Q&A video that addresses your questions! It was posted just yesterday, click here to view now! You will also be able to catch up on the urgent video briefings that he posted last week.

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Stock Trading Alert: Indexes Extend Their Recent Fluctuations – No Clear Direction Yet

Briefly: In our opinion, speculative short positions are favored (with stop-loss at 2,030 and a profit target at 1,900, S&P 500 index)

Our intraday outlook is bearish, and our short-term outlook is bearish:

Intraday (next 24 hours) outlook: bearish
Short-term (next 1-2 weeks) outlook: bearish
Medium-term (next 1-3 months) outlook: neutral
Long-term outlook (next year): bullish

The U.S. stock market indexes gained 0.3-0.8% on Wednesday, extending their recent fluctuations, as investors continued to hesitate following last week’s economic data announcements, among others. The S&P 500 index remains relatively close to its all-time high of 2,011.17. The nearest important level of resistance is at around 2,000-2,010, and the support level is at 1,980-1,985, marked by recent local lows. There have been no confirmed negative signals so far. However, we still can see negative technical divergences, accompanied by overbought conditions:

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Expectations before the opening of today’s session are negative, with index futures currently down 0.2-0.3%. The main European stock market indexes have lost 0.2-0.4% so far. Investors will now wait for the Initial Claims data release at 8:30 a.m. The S&P 500 futures contract (CFD) continues to fluctuate along the level of 2,000. The resistance level is at around 2,000-2,010, and the nearest important level of support is at 1,980-1,985, marked by local lows, as we can see on the 15-minute chart:

 

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The technology Nasdaq 100 futures contract (CFD) remains in a short-term consolidation, as it moves along the level of 4,000. The nearest important level of resistance is at around 4,100-4,115, and the support level is at 4,050-4,060, marked by local lows, as the 15-minute chart shows:

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Concluding, the broad stock market retraced some of its month-long advance as the S&P 500 index broke below the level of 2,000. We remain bearish, expecting a downward correction or uptrend reversal. Therefore, we continue to maintain our already profitable speculative short position with entry point at 2,000.5 (S&P 500 index). The stop-loss is at the level of 2,030 and potential profit target is at 1,900 (S&P 500 index). It is always important to set some exit price level in case some events cause the price to move in the unlikely direction. Having safety measures in place helps limit potential losses while letting the gains grow.

Thank you.

 

Long Cycles and Trend Changes

Several markets seem over-extended and about to reverse their current trends. 

S&P 500 Index:  It bottomed in March 2009 about 670 and is currently about 2,000.  The S&P, thanks to QE, ZIRP, Central Bank purchases, and who knows what other contrivances, has levitated to the magical 2,000 level.  Will it go higher? 

Dollar Index:  The dollar index, currently about 83, is well below its high in 2002 at about 120.  However it is also well above its 2008 low around 72.  Will capital flows into the US and the fear trade continue to levitate the dollar? 

Gold:  Gold prices peaked in August 2011 about $1,920 and today gold sells for about $1,260.  However, prices have retreated to 2010 levels but are still far above the lows in 2001 at about $255.  Is gold ready to rally? 

What about cycles?

  1. I have little faith in short term cycles which can be easily overwhelmed by other forces.
  2. I prefer longer cycles as I believe they are more reliable.
  3. I think any cyclic analysis should be confirmed with additional technical and fundamental analysis.

S&P 500 Index:  Consider the following graph of monthly prices for 30 years. The blue vertical lines are drawn every 81 months – about 7 years.  Note the highs in 1987, 1994, 2000, 2007, and 2014, and note the current “over-bought” condition of the S&P as indicated by the MACD and TDI indicators.  This graph does not conclusively inform us that the S&P is ready to correct, but it does indicate that the S&P could be forming a 7 year cyclic top with a low due perhaps in 2016 – 2019.

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Dollar Index:  Consider the following graph of monthly prices over nearly 30 years and the vertical blue lines every 75 months.  Note the alternating high – low pattern with a high in 1989, low in 1995, high in 2002, low in 2008, and possible high in 2014.  The dollar index might move higher and take longer but it could be topping now.  The monthly TDI is modestly over-bought and the weekly (not shown) is strongly over-bought.  The dollar index could be peaking.

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Gold:  The gold chart shows 20 years of prices with blue vertical lines every 56 months.  Note the lows in 1999, 2004, 2008, and 2013.  Gold appears to have made a long term low in 2013 – 2014 and has built a base from which another rally should appear.  The MACD and TDI indicators are oversold and indicate strong rally potential.  Further, my long-term empirical gold model indicates that current gold prices are too low by about 20%, which will provide a “tail-wind” for gold prices over the next several years, independent of massive QE, more wars, dollar weakness, and economic slumps that create even more unpayable debt.

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Given the troublesome economic conditions in the world and potential expansion of war in the Ukraine, Iraq, Syria, North Africa, and elsewhere, there is considerable risk that the S&P could fall substantially and a strong probability that gold will rally.  Furthermore, there is a growing global movement away from the use of the dollar in global trade, led by China and Russia, and that bodes poorly for long-term dollar strength, particularly as cycles indicate a potential top due in 2014.  A fall in the dollar would likely be accompanied by a rise in gold prices.

Markets can move farther and take longer than most people expect, but it is certainly time to consider that the S&P is quite high and ready to reverse its five plus year uptrend, and that gold is too low and set to reverse its three year downtrend.

Gary Christenson

The Deviant Investor

www.GEChristenson.com

Sprott’s Charles Oliver: Gold at $1,500 by Christmas?

Charles Oliver rev 10-23-12Gold and silver prices are being repressed by central banks, but Sprott Asset Management’s Charles Oliver argues that demand pressure will cause this dam to burst sooner rather than later. As a result, he expects big increases in the prices of gold and especially silver, with a corresponding recovery of small- and mid-cap precious metal equities. In this interview with The Gold Report, Oliver discusses companies likely to prosper thereby, most of which will be profitable now, even at current bullion prices.

COMPANIES MENTIONEDASANKO GOLD : DALRADIAN RESOURCES : GUYANA GOLDFIELDS : OSISKO GOLD ROYALTIES : PRETIUM RESOURCES :SILVER WHEATON : TAHOE RESOURCES : UNIGOLD

The Gold Report: Gold continues to languish under $1,300 per ounce ($1,300/oz), even as full economic recoveries in the U.S. and the European Union (EU) have yet to occur, despite trillions in new debt and stimulus. Meanwhile, we have two wars in the Middle East that could escalate, as well as reports that Russian troops are in Ukraine. With all that in mind, do you think that gold’s fundamentals are less important than they once were, or is the price of gold being held back by other factors?

Charles Oliver: Gold is just as valuable today as it was 100 years ago. There was an orchestrated takedown of gold in April 2013. It has since traded between $1,200/oz and $1,400/oz, and this flies in the face of the conditions you mentioned.

We’re going to have to be patient. We have gone through a bottoming process. We’ve had similar conditions before. In 1974, after the oil embargo, U.S. inflation was increasing dramatically, yet gold fell from about $200/oz to about $100/oz in 1976. Then over the next four years gold subsequently rallied to over $800/oz. In this decade, gold has fallen from $1,921/oz to $1,180/oz, but the fundamentals remain intact, and gold will regain its reputation as a unique store of value.

TGR: You used the phrase “orchestrated takedown.” Do you agree with the thesis advanced by the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (GATA) that gold and silver prices are manipulated downward by central banks?

CO: A decade ago I was on the sidelines. Then, after 2008, when the Federal Reserve gave us quantitative easing (QE) 1, 2 and 3 and increased its balance sheet by $4 trillion, effectively fixing the bond market and price, I became convinced that GATA was correct. All the price-fixing scandals we’ve seen are not isolated incidents. The gold market is a relatively small one. When 400 tons of gold rapidly came onto the market in April 2013, I was persuaded that this was definitely an orchestrated takedown.

TGR: Can this gold repression be maintained, or is it a dam about to burst?

CO: I like that metaphor. Eric Sprott did an analysis that suggested that a fair amount of the gold putatively held by the Federal Reserve may not actually be in its vaults. Footnotes in the Fed’s records indicate possession of about 8,000 tons but also suggest that some of that might have been loaned out. We don’t know how much, but supply-and-demand numbers suggest it could be a very significant amount. I believe that the gold exchange-trade funds (ETFs) were raided because gold could not be found where it was supposedly held, so it was taken from the ETFs instead.

Much of the gold sold out of Western vaults has found its way into Asia, China in particular. To run a trading platform requires a certain amount of physical bullion to meet delivery demands. If deliveries cannot be met, confidence in the system will fail, and paper trading will dry up. I must say I was quite surprised that after Germany asked for its gold back from the U.S. and it was informed that delivery would take seven years, the market did not suddenly unravel. Nevertheless, I believe the central banks are running out of bullets, and when they do, we could see a very significant rise in the gold price.

TGR: Is control of the gold bullion market shifting from London to Shanghai?

CO: The amount of trading in Shanghai is increasing, and I would imagine that the gold bullion repositories in London are diminishing. Over time, control of many components of the world economic system will shift to Asia as it becomes a more powerful entity on the global stage.

TGR: As mentioned earlier, central banks continue their attempts to force demand, yet economic recoveries remain elusive. How will this play out?

CO: QE was a dirty word five years ago, but today governments tout it as a triumph, even though the economies are still not that healthy, while record-low interest rates and record-high stimulus will continue. The U.S. is currently winding down QE, but the EU looks as if it may start up. I do believe that the U.S. may once again ramp up QE because its interest rate policy hasn’t worked.

Countries are debasing their currencies, which leads to investors moving into hard assets, as confirmed by U.S. stock indexes reaching record levels. We saw this in the Weimar Republic in Germany, when stocks soared because they were inflation hedges. A collapse in confidence in paper money is not something I want to see. If that happens, all bets are off. In the meantime, currency debasement should lead to a recovery in the values of gold, silver and other precious metals.

TGR: Do you anticipate higher gold and silver prices following the historic return of market interest in September?

CO: I think there is a very real chance that gold might hit $1,500/oz by the end of the year.

TGR: It is has been reported that higher tariffs on gold buying in India have resulted in the substitution of silver for gold there. Do you think this will spur a higher silver price and that the current gold/silver ratio of 1:66 will fall as a result?

CO: We have seen in India an increase in silver purchases. That said, the gold purchase figures from India do not include smuggling, which soared in the 1990s and is rising again.

At Sprott, we believe very strongly that the next decade will see the gold/silver ratio move toward its historic rate of 1:16. The last time this happened was in 1980, when the gold price was $800/oz and the silver price was $50/oz. Under this scenario when the gold prices rise to $1,600/oz, I could expect silver to hit $100/oz. That would be a 500% increase in the silver price, versus a 30% increase in the gold price. I have taken a fairly significant weighting in the silver sector.

TGR: Gold equities outperformed bullion by a significant margin earlier this year. Can we expect more of this, or is the value of gold equities now constrained by the current gold price?

CO: The gold price bottomed out in December 2013, and as a result, gold equity valuations were destroyed. To some extent, the outperformance we’ve seen in 2014 is a return to more normal valuations, but a continuation of this trend will require higher bullion prices.

TGR: When the Sprott Gold & Precious Minerals Fund considers the companies it holds, which qualities are paramount?


CO: We look first to management. We want management teams with track records of performance, teams with share ownership of their companies. A deposit’s geology is just as important. Without the geology there is no mine, there is no cash flow, there are no profits. We evaluate ore bodies by all the various parameters: quality, strip ratios, underground versus open pit, access to water and power, ease of permitting and local taxation regimes. Finally, we examine a company’s valuation and how it compares to its peer groups. That includes dividends, cash flow, cash-flow growth and many other aspects.

TGR: Which gold and silver companies are your favorites?

CO: Within my top 10, I have Osisko Gold Royalties Ltd. (OR:TSX) and Tahoe Resources Inc. (THO:TSX; TAHO:NYSE). They both have great management. Tahoe is run by Kevin McArthur, the ex-CEO ofGoldcorp Inc. (G:TSX; GG:NYSE) and Glamis. Osisko is run by Sean Roosen, who discovered and built the Canadian Malartic mine in Québec.

Among explorers, other companies in my top 10 include Guyana Goldfields Inc. (GUY:TSX), run by Scott Caldwell, whose CV includes Kinross Gold Corp. (K:TSX; KGC:NYSE) and Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. (FCX:NYSE), and Dalradian Resources Inc. (DNA:TSX), run by Patrick Anderson, who built up Aurelian Resources, which was sold to Kinross.

TGR: Why do you like Tahoe and its Escobal silver mine in Guatemala?

CO: I visited the mine in March and was very impressed. The company has ramped it up over the last year, and the process has been almost flawless. Tahoe has delivered what it promised and is exceeding guidance. It looks to produce 20 million ounces (20 Moz) silver equivalent at below $5/oz for over a decade. This is one of the largest producing silver mines on the planet, and to accomplish that in the first year of operations is outstanding.

TGR: How does Tahoe’s balance sheet look?

CO: Tahoe is going to be paying down the debt it took on to build Escobal. It should announce a dividend sometime this year.

TGR: Does operating in Guatemala negatively affect Tahoe’s valuation?

CO: There is a discount, no question about it. There was local opposition to Escobal, and there are still holdouts, but I think the company has done a good job with community relations and brought most of the population to its side.

TGR: Guyana is another burgeoning mining jurisdiction. What impresses you about Guyana Goldfields and its Aurora gold project?

CO: I’ve been a shareholder for many years. The management and board of directors are large shareholders and have participated in the most recent round of financing to a large degree. Guyana Goldfields has a nice asset in Aurora: 6.54 Moz Measured and Indicated, and 1.8 Moz Inferred. The after-tax internal rate of return (IRR) is great at 31%, as is the net present value (NPV) at $735 million ($735M). Aurora is fully funded, and the engineering, procurement and construction management contracts are complete. Guyana Goldfields is building the mine.

TGR: When will mining begin, and how much gold will be produced annually?

CO: Commercial production is scheduled for mid-2015. The number of ounces per year will depend to a certain extent on whether they go underground or not, but first-year production is estimated at 126,000 oz (126 Koz), ramping up to about 300 Koz by year six or seven. Aurora has a 17-year mine life, and all-in sustaining costs will be lower than $700/oz.

TGR: If Guatemala and Guyana are burgeoning jurisdictions, then Northern Ireland is virgin territory. What impresses you about Dalradian’s Curraghinalt gold project there?

CO: The management has been buying into the company, and Curraghinalt is an exceptionally high-grade underground deposit. The after-tax IRR and NPV are exceptional as well. Based on $1,378/oz gold, they are 41.9% and $467M, respectively. There is some concern about opening a mine in Northern Ireland, but they are gaining the goodwill of the people, and permitting is moving forward.

TGR: The company closed a $27M financing at the end of July. How does it stand for cash?

CO: That placement gives Dalradian the cash and permits it needs to fund its current underground exploration bulk sample program. I think this stock is extremely undervalued.

TGR: Let’s talk about some of your fund’s other holdings.

CO: Asanko Gold Inc. (AKG:TSX; AKG:NYSE.MKT) is in my top 15 companies. It features top-notch management, including much of the ex-team of LionOre Mining International Ltd., which was bought out by Norilsk Nickel (GMKN:RTS; NILSY:NASDAQ; MNOD:LSE) after a bidding war with Xstrata Plc (XTA:LSE). Asanko’s team paid about $30M to take over Keegan Resources, which merged with PMI Ventures and now owns two Ghana deposits within 10 kilometers of each other. They can be processed by the same plant. The company has begun construction of its first phase of the Asanko gold mine at Obotan.

This is a very cheap stock. In fact, before the merger with PMI, Keegan was trading very close to cash. It has great assets, and I have a big position in it.

TGR: Asanko announced Aug. 27 it has eliminated a 2% net smelter royalty (NSR) on the Asanko gold mine. Is this good news?

CO: I am always happy when companies can buy back royalties at a reasonable price, because NSRs skim the cream off the top.

TGR: Your fund holds Pretium Resources Inc. (PVG:TSX; PVG:NYSE). In June, the Supreme Court of Canada awarded substantial, yet undefined, rights to native Indians on British Columbia’s Crown Lands. This was followed in August by the tailings spill at Imperial Metals Corp.’s (III:TSX) Mount Polley mine. What implications do these two events have for mining in British Columbia?

CO: They are very negative. It will be more costly, time consuming and challenging to build mines in British Columbia. That said, Pretium’s Brucejack has a great many positive attributes. It is a very small, very high-grade gold-silver mine with a very small environmental footprint. So tailings will be a relatively smaller issue for Pretium. Indeed, it is so high grade that dry-stack tailings may be possible.

On permitting, Brucejack was a historic mine as recently as the 1980s, which will make approvals easier to get. The project is going underground, so Brucejack will not have one of those big open pits that some people do not like.

TGR: Pretium’s gold and silver assays have been spectacular for several years, but many people point to this resource as being nuggety. Could you speak to this issue?

CO: They’re absolutely correct, but many nuggety gold deposits have been produced successfully in the past, and they will continue to be produced successfully in the future. Brucejack has the advantage that it has seen a surprisingly large number of high-grade nugget hits. The resources are there. Mining this project may result in some lumpy quarters, but I do believe that the mine will be permitted and will be very profitable.

TGR: Let’s discuss gold explorers in your portfolio.

CO: Unigold Inc. (UGD:TSX.V) is one of them. The company is drilling a very prospective land package, the Neita concession, in the Dominican Republic. Unfortunately, there is not much financing available to the small-cap sector. For companies like this to recover, we’ll need higher gold and silver prices.

TGR: The company announced in November 2013 an initial Inferred resource of 2 Moz. Yet shares are trading at $0.04. Can this be attributed to the specifics of Neita?

CO: No, it’s the market, which currently is paying nothing for ounces in the ground.

TGR: This bear market in junior precious metals companies is now 3.5 years old. How long will it continue?

CO: As I said at the beginning, we could have $1,500/oz gold by Christmas. Should gold reach that price, interest in juniors will revive, and valuations will come up quite dramatically.

TGR: Do you see any potential takeover targets among the companies we’ve discussed so far?

CO: Dalradian, Guyana and Asanko could all be targets.

TGR: The gold and silver royalty/streaming sector has done quite well compared to the general market. Will this continue?

CO: This sector will continue to grow and prosper but is somewhat countercyclical. The best time for such companies is when the general market dries up, when companies cannot access capital and are forced to sell royalties or streams. And so the last two to three years have been very good for royalty streaming companies. Higher gold prices will result in higher profits for this sector, but I expect the mid- and small-cap mining companies will do better in relative terms.

TGR: Pierre Lassonde of the World Gold Council told The Gold Report in May he believes that the relatively small size of its market will compel silver streamers to move into gold contracts. Do you agree?

CO: I do. I have long thought that limiting a company to gold or silver is not completely logical, although I don’t believe it’s in the interest of gold and silver companies to move into base metals. I would expect that over time we will see companies such as Silver Wheaton Corp. (SLW:TSX; SLW:NYSE) take on more gold transactions.

TGR: What’s your opinion of Silver Wheaton?

CO: It has been one of the best performers over the last few years. Silver streamers do not run much risk of operating overruns and higher costs. It’s a nice business when you know you’re going to get a profit, and the only question is how big it will be.

TGR: Are you bullish on Silver Wheaton going into the future?

CO: I am, but given the higher bullion prices I’m expecting, my preference is for increasing my weights in some of the midtiers.

TGR: Osisko Gold Royalties is a newcomer to the streaming sector. It has a 5% NSR on the Canadian Malartic mine and 2% NSRs on the Upper Beaver and Kirkland Lake properties and on the Hammond Reef project. Will it aggressively seek further streams?

CO: The management team has significantly invested in the company, and I think they will take their time and do what they think is appropriate. I do expect, however, that significant assets will be acquired in the next year.

TGR: Even before the takedown of the gold price, precious metals valuations collapsed, and the last few years have been dire for many investors in gold and silver companies. What are the reasons for investors to feel positive?

CO: We’ve seen an awful lot of capitulation. Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX:TSX; ABX:NYSE) just announced it will eliminate its entire corporate development team. I’ve lost a lot of good friends and analysts who have left the industry. These are all signs of a bottom.

I look around the world and see European Central Bank President Mario Draghi talking about rolling out QE. I see the continual debasement of currencies. And I see China buying gold left, right and center. I am convinced that gold and silver and precious metals equities will recover in the not-too-distant future.

TGR: Charles, thank you for your time and your insights.

Charles Oliver joined Sprott Asset Management in 2008. He is lead portfolio manager of the Sprott Gold and Precious Minerals Fund. Previously, he was at AGF Management Limited, where his team was awarded the Canadian Investment Awards Best Precious Metals Fund in 2004, 2006 and 2007. His accolades also include Lipper Awards’ best five-year return in the Precious Metals category (AGF Precious Metals Fund, 2007) and the Lipper Award for best one-year return in the Precious Metals category 2010.

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DISCLOSURE: 
1) Kevin Michael Grace conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report and The Mining Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an independent contractor. He owns, or his family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. 
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: Tahoe Resources Inc., Guyana Goldfields Inc., Asanko Gold Inc., Pretium Resources Inc., Unigold Inc. and Silver Wheaton Corp. Goldcorp Inc. is not associated with Streetwise Reports. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.
3) Charles Oliver: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. Sprott funds hold all of the companies mentioned. I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview. 
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Short Stocks

Stock Trading Alert: Indexes Search For New Direction Following August Rally

Briefly: In our opinion, speculative short positions are favored (with stop-loss at 2,030 and a profit target at 1,900, S&P 500 index)

Our intraday outlook is bearish, and our short-term outlook is bearish:

Intraday (next 24 hours) outlook: bearish
Short-term (next 1-2 weeks) outlook: bearish
Medium-term (next 1-3 months) outlook: neutral
Long-term outlook (next year): bullish

The main U.S. stock market indexes gained between 0.4% and 0.6% extending their recent consolidation, as investors reacted positively to worse-than-expected monthly jobs data release. The S&P 500 index remains relatively close to its all-time high of 2,011.17. The resistance level is at around 2,000-2,010. On the other hand, the nearest level of support is at 1,985-1,990, marked by recent local lows. There have been no confirmed negative signals. However, we can see negative technical divergences, accompanied by overbought conditions:

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Expectations before the opening of today’s session are slightly negative, with index futures currently down 0.1-0.2%. The European stock market indexes have been mixed between -0.8% and 0.0% so far. The S&P 500 futures contract (CFD) Continues to fluctuate along the level of 2,000. The nearest important level of resistance remains at around 2,005-2,010, and the support level is at 1,990, among others:

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The technology Nasdaq 100 futures contract (CFD) follows a similar path, as it trades slightly below the level of 4,100. The resistance level is at 4,100-4,115, and the nearest important level of support remains at 4,050-4,060, marked by recent local lows, as we can see on the 15-minute chart:

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Concluding, the broad stock market remains relatively close to all-time high as the S&P 500 index continues to fluctuate along the level of 2,000. We remain bearish, expecting a downward correction or uptrend reversal. Therefore, we continue to maintain our speculative short position. The stop-loss is at the level of 2,030 and potential profit target is at 1,900 (S&P 500 index). It is always important to set some exit price level in case some events cause the price to move in the unlikely direction. Having safety measures in place helps limit potential losses while letting the gains grow.

Thank you.