Central Bank News Link List – Jun 17, 2013: Withdrawal syndrome sparks anxiety for Fed

By www.CentralBankNews.info Here’s today’s Central Bank News’ link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

FOMC “The Big Driver for Precious metals this Week”, Wall Street Betting Against Silver Price

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Monday 17 June 2013, 07:30 EDT

THE U.S. DOLLAR gold price drifted back below $1390 an ounce Monday morning in London, but remained well within its trading range of the last few weeks, as European stock markets edged higher, with analysts citing Wednesday’s Federal Open Market Committee decision on US monetary policy as “the big driver” for this week.

 “On the whole, the market hopes for insightful comments in the course of the next Fed policy meeting…which will affect gold’s further development as well,” says a note from bullion refiner Heraeus.

 Any so-called ‘tapering’ of the Fed’s $85-billion-a-month quantitative easing program “would be bearish for gold and the other precious metals” says Jonathan Butler, precious metals strategist at Mitsubishi in London.

 On the New York Comex, the so-called speculative net long position in gold futures and options – calculated as the number of ‘bullish’ long minus ‘bearish’ short contracts held by traders classed as speculators – fell in the week ended last Tuesday, according to Friday’s weekly Commitment of Traders report from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

 Silver meantime edged back below $22 an ounce, as other industrial commodities were broadly flat on the day, while on the currency markets the Euro held steady against the Dollar above $1.33.

 For silver futures, the number of short contracts held by those in the Managed Money category – which includes hedge funds and other money managers – was slightly larger than the number of long contracts, CFTC data show. The last weekly reports to show money managers betting on aggregate against the silver price were published in April – prior to that no managed money net short silver position had been published since September 2007.

 “Silver has been trying in vain to regain the $22 per troy ounce mark…[but] the high level of pessimism among money managers is putting pressure on the price,” says today’s commodities report from Commerzbank.

 The world’s biggest gold exchange traded fund SPDR Gold Trust (ticker: GLD) saw the volume of bullion held to back its shares hold steady at 1003.5 tonnes Friday, though it ended last week down 3.6 tonnes. The GLD has seen outflows amounting to one quarter of the gold it held at the start of this year.

 Despite this, the GLD’s biggest holder, hedge fund Paulson & Co., says it has no intention of closing its Gold Fund, news agency Bloomberg reports, citing a letter to investors it has obtained.

 “While gold continues to pivot between negative investment appetite, which has slowed, and softer physical demand, this week the market focus will shift to the FOMC meeting and press conference,” a note from Barclays says.

 “The markets are a little bit fatigued at the moment,” agrees Victor Thianpiriya, commodities analyst at ANZ.

 “They are still looking for direction from the Fed meeting. That’s clearly the big driver this week.”

 Over in China meantime, Huaan Asset management, one of two physically-backed gold ETF providers to be approved by the China Securities Regulatory Commission, has said it aims to attract $400 million of initial funding – equivalent to around 9 tonnes at current prices – though no launch date has yet been announced.

 “Gold hasn’t lost its appeal as a store of value in China,” says fund manager Xu Yiyi, who will run the Huaan ETF.

 “Investors here usually like to buy on dips, so a decline in the bullion prices this year should work in our favor.”

 Over in India, the only country with stronger gold demand than China last year, gold and silver imports amounted to $8.4 billion last month, a 90% year-on-year rise, though this was down from April’s 138% annual rise, a trade ministry official said Monday. India’s trade deficit meantime widened from $17.8 billion in April to $20.1 billion last month.

 Gold and silver prices fell sharply in April, prompting a spike in physical gold demand, while Indian importers were also reported last month to be looking to get ahead of new regulations. Earlier this month, Indian authorities raised the import duty on gold to 8%, the second hike this year, and also curbed imports on a consignment basis.

 In Northern Ireland meantime the conflict in Syria and tax avoidance are expected to be two of the major topics discussed by world leaders meeting for the G8 summit.

 In Iran, outgoing president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has been summoned to appear before a criminal court, the Washington Post reports, following the election Sunday of his successor Hasan Rohwani, a reputed moderate who won 51% of the vote.

Ben Traynor

BullionVault

Gold value calculator   |   Buy gold online at live prices

 

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics. Ben can be found on Google+

 

(c) BullionVault 2013

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

George Soros Joins Michael Ballanger on the Goldbug Side of the Market

Source: Brian Sylvester of The Gold Report (6/14/13)http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/15373

In his 36-year career, Michael Ballanger, director of wealth management at Richardson GMP, has seen good markets and bad. As a true contrarian, he sees opportunity in the undervalued precious metals assets and lauds George Soros’ recently reported large gold-related positions. In this interview with The Gold Report, Ballanger discusses market sentiment and some companies that he expects to take off when the market turns.

The Gold Report: A news story in mid-May reported that billionaire hedge fund manager George Soros had almost $240 million ($240M) in gold-related positions. Moreover, on May 16 he had purchased $25M in call options on the Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF (GDXJ). What are your thoughts on that move?

Michael Ballanger: All one needs to look at is the historical relationship between gold and gold shares to see the logic behind such a move. With every market on every continent now surging to record high levels in response to central bank stimuli, it would be reasonable to manage risk by owning one of the most beaten-down sectors I can ever recall.

TGR: Why does someone like Soros buy gold-related instruments and not equities, even the large caps?

MB: In the case of the GDXJ, he is actually buying a “basket” of equities related to gold/silver mining and exploration. By doing this, he spreads his risk over a large population of companies in the same space. Picking individual companies in this space invites execution risk because as we have seen in numerous cases in the past decade, a one-off event such as politics or natural disasters can undermine a correct call on the sector as a whole.

TGR: Are you aware of other big-time players that are making similar moves?

MB: Not specifically and certainly no one as notable as Mr. Soros. It is interesting that the managers who were early in the gold trade such as Eric Sprott are more bullish today than ever and that is noteworthy given gold’s performance since 2000; despite this current correction and in my view, it is a correction rather than a secular bear.

TGR: When last we spoke you were convinced the market had found a psychological bottom. You noted that at the end of 2012, the TSX Venture Exchange (TSX.V)—acting as a proxy for the junior mining sector—was trading at 0.71 times the gold price. As of May 31, it was 0.69 times the gold price. Do you see the TSX.V-gold price ratio moving further sideways for the foreseeable future?

MB: I based my “bottom call” on sentiment. The sentiment in the junior space in January was abysmal and it is just as abysmal today. However, weak sentiment numbers, while historically reliable, do not tell you that the price has stopped declining. In that context, I was early because not only has the Venture Exchange dropped to new lows under 1,000, the TSX.V-gold ratio has recently hit .66 versus the bull market high over 5.0, which is actually quite remarkable.

TGR: What’s your thesis for investing in mining equities (large, mid and small cap)? Precious metals investors want to know what they should do over the course of the summer months. What’s your advice?

MB: There is always a degree of seasonality to the mining sector and the numbers dictate that one should wait until mid-August to begin initiating positions but I suspect that may be too “cute” because of the severity of the valuation compression we are witnessing in the juniors. Companies that were considered good value at $75/ounce (Measured) are now trading at under $20/ounce and so these prices may not wait for mid-August if gold decides to reverse or if sentiment shifts early back to the bull camp.

TGR: In our last interview you discussed “well incubated” junior mining companies, ones with a core of investors that understand how the game is played and have the long play in mind. Where are those companies?

MB: In a nutshell, some have done quite well but most have been disappointing. Despite either positive earnings reports or new discoveries, each time they try to lift off the bottom, they have been sold as a liquidity event. It is almost a Pavlovian reaction; they sell off because they have sold off in the past and until new volumes come in to relieve the supply that will not change until sentiment changes.

TGR: In January, you told our readers about Tinka Resources Ltd. (TK:TSX.V; TLD:FSE; TKRFF:OTCPK). What’s happening with Tinka now?

MB: Since the January interview, Tinka has continued to execute its corporate strategy of upgrading the Peruvian silver resource to Measured from Inferred while adding more ounces, but the big event was the recent A13-05 drill result, which was arguably one of the best massive sulphide intercepts in at least my time in this space. Sixty meters of 7.75% zinc with the total section of mineralized envelope running north of 200 meters is a very encouraging, if not spectacular, intercept. The company completed a financing in May (full disclosure: RichardsonGMP participated in that funding) and is now poised to recommence with further exploration on Ayawilca (the zinc) while finishing off the redefinition of Colquipucro (the silver). The share price has retrenched from the all-time high of $1.25 in March to the current $.75–.80 range.

TGR: Would you like to give any other updates on companies you’ve mentioned in previous interviews? At the moment, are there any other companies you’re closely following?

MB: Bitterroot Resources Ltd. (BTT:TSX.V) is another name in the unloved category. When I met its president, Michael Carr, he showed me the geophysics on his project in northern Michigan, just south of the White Pine mine. Within the exploration sector, this is a compelling story that speculators could sink their teeth into at $0.09 or $0.10/share. It is an exploration play so it may not be suitable for all investors but for those that can bear the risk, it is an interesting speculation.

MB: Another Peruvian junior I have been dabbling in is Darwin Resources Corp. (DAR:TSX.V). The company has a gold property in northern Peru, sandwiched by Rio Alto Mining Ltd. (RIO:TSX.V; RIO:BVL; RIOAF:OTCQX) and Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX:TSX; ABC:NYSE). Darwin trades around the $0.12 range on the TSX Venture Exchange. Darwin was a spinout of Mawson Resources Ltd. (MAW:TSX; MWSNF:OTCPK; MRY:FSE). Early geochemical results have been very interesting, to say the least.

TGR: Before we let you go, please give our readers something to ponder.

MB: Whenever I am interviewed for my comments on the precious metals sector, I am usually addressing an audience that is predisposed to understanding the value of holding gold or silver bullion or equities in their portfolios, but what is rarely addressed is the correct allocation. There are some who believe that it is the ONLY asset that one should own and there are others that believe that it should be used as a balancing tool within a larger mix of assets.

No greater example of the need for a correct mix of assets could have been more obvious than the behavior of gold versus the S&P 500 since mid-2011. While bullion has dramatically outperformed the S&P 500 since 2000, the S&P 500 has been a superstar versus gold for the past 18 months. For this reason, it is critical to be flexible in your allocations because while I am certainly one of the most fervent believers in the importance of gold in protecting the purchasing power of portfolios, as a wealth manager I have to maintain a balance and that is something everyone must remember.

TGR: Thank you for your time.

Originally trained during the inflationary 1970s, Michael Ballanger, director of wealth management at Richardson GMP, is a graduate of Saint Louis University where he earned a Bachelor of Science in finance and a Bachelor of Art in marketing before completing post-graduate work at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. With more than 30 years of experience as a junior mining and exploration specialist, as well as a solid background in corporate finance, Ballanger’s adherence to the concept of “Hard Assets” allows him to focus the practice on selecting opportunities in the global resource sector with emphasis on the precious metals exploration and development sector. Ballanger takes great pleasure in visiting mineral properties around the globe in the never-ending hunt for early-stage opportunities.

Want to read more Gold Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Streetwise Interviews page.

DISCLOSURE:

1) Brian Sylvester conducted this interview for The Gold Report and provides services to The Gold Reportas an independent contractor. He 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: Tinka Resources Ltd. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.

3) Michael Ballanger: I or my family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: Tinka Resources Ltd. and Bitterroot Resources Ltd. 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: Tinka Resources Ltd. 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.

4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent.

5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer.

6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned and may make purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise.

Streetwise – The Gold Report is Copyright © 2013 by Streetwise Reports LLC. All rights are reserved. Streetwise Reports LLC hereby grants an unrestricted license to use or disseminate this copyrighted material (i) only in whole (and always including this disclaimer), but (ii) never in part.

Streetwise Reports LLC does not guarantee the accuracy or thoroughness of the information reported.

Streetwise Reports LLC receives a fee from companies that are listed on the home page in the In This Issue section. Their sponsor pages may be considered advertising for the purposes of 18 U.S.C. 1734.

Participating companies provide the logos used in The Gold Report. These logos are trademarks and are the property of the individual companies.

101 Second St., Suite 110

Petaluma, CA 94952

Tel.: (707) 981-8999

Fax: (707) 981-8998

Email: [email protected]

 

Three (or Five) Rules of Thumb for Watching Insider Trading: Ted Dixon

Source: Brian Sylvester of The Gold Report (6/13/13)http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/15372

Data on trades made by company insiders—key executives and directors—demonstrates to Ted Dixon, co-founder and CEO of INK Research, that most of them are contrarian in their approach. Lately, Dixon finds that insider indicators in the gold and junior gold miner sectors are “off the charts.” In this interview with The Gold Report, Dixon shares the names of frequent traders in recent months, along with insights into why, when and how insiders are trading.
The Gold Report: Ted, INK Research monitors stock transactions made by key executives and directors inside their companies and uses that data to develop sentiment indicators for various indices and sectors. How does your system work?

Ted Dixon: When we look at a market and a sector, we use insider activity—buys and sells in the public market—to get a sense of how those insiders feel, not just about their company, but about the overall market or sector. This led us to develop what we call a sentiment indicator, which is basically a daily poll of insiders. You could compare it to the polls you see during election campaigns. Every night, we take a poll of what insiders are doing within the market and the sector. We aggregate all of the buys and sells in the different companies in that sector to get a sense of the overall mood of insiders in that area.

TGR: The sentiment indicators at the moment show almost twice as much insider buying among Toronto Stock Exchange-listed stocks as selling. Yet, the opposite is happening in the American market. How do you explain that?

TD: One of the rules of thumb when looking at insider activity is that insiders tend to be contrarian. They like to do the opposite of what other people are doing.

In 2013 to date, the U.S. market has had a nice run as the indices have been hitting new, all-time highs. As everyone else is piling into the market and chasing momentum, insiders, being contrarians, are selling into that and are taking profits.

We have not had quite the same ride here in Canada; different sectors have experienced different fortunes. Some sectors and stocks have been hit hard. Because they are contrarian, insiders will go shopping for bargains during periods of selloff. While everyone is hitting the sell button, insiders and select companies will pick up stocks that have been beaten down. The key element to keep in mind here is the time horizon. Insiders typically have a long time horizon. The fact that they may be buying does not mean they expect a 50% reversal over the next two or three months. It means that, over the long term, the risk-reward ratio has improved enough for them to jump in.

TGR: Among the TSX Venture Exchange-listed stocks, insiders are buying almost eight times more than they are selling. What trends have emerged from insider buying on the Venture Exchange?

TD: Before the Lehman Brothers collapse, insiders were a bit more opportunistic in their buying and selling. Since then, we have seen a long-term, secular commitment to buy among junior miner insiders. This has been going on for quite a while, but as we go through bouts of selloff in the sector, insider activity within the junior miners tends to pick up. That is happening now.

In fact, it would concern us if there were no increase in insider activity when junior miners sold off. That might indicate that insiders are giving up on the sector. We are not seeing that.

TGR: Where is your Venture Exchange sentiment indicator on a 12-month horizon?

TD: It is near all-time highs, just as the Venture Exchange index works down toward new multiyear lows. We have been at elevated buying levels, driven primarily in the gold group. The spring saw a massive spike.

TGR: Does a spike in insider buying in an underperforming sector generally predict medium- or long-term equity performance?

TD: It is important to remember that insider activity and the INK indicators are not a silver bullet to market timing. They are used in conjunction with the technical indicators that many of your readers follow and the fundamental research they do.

It is important to look at insider activity during a major selloff correction or a major rally: What are the insiders doing? Is insider activity spiking, suggesting a turning point is near?

Right now, we see a major move to the downside in commodity stocks and a major spike in insider buying. That is also what happened in December 2008. It is almost as if the mining industry is going through its own Lehman Brothers moment. Our indicators suggest now is the time to be bargain hunting for good companies. The time to exit the industry was a while ago.

TGR: Did you notice a significant change in insider buying or selling in the gold sector when gold had that significant selloff in April?

TD: Absolutely. When gold sold off in April, our indicator for the gold group jumped substantially. It got as high as 10:1, meaning 10 gold companies had key insider buying for every one that was selling. That is an astronomically high level of buying.

We had another test of that in early June when we saw renewed weakness in the gold stock indices and the gold price. Buying picked up. Insiders seem to be suggesting that they are very interested as the S&P/TSX Gold Composite Index toys with the 1,500 level.

TGR: Is there any seasonality at play, given the adage “sell in May and go away?” Or, has it changed to “buy in May?”

TD: I think price level is the key factor, not the month of the year. In the U.S., there was a nice rally into May, and we saw a lot of insider selling across the board. In Canada, among the miners, prices have tumbled to a level that is attracting significant insider interest.

TGR: It is also meaningful that, in the junior mining sector, when an executive adds to his or her position in a smaller company it can mean a significant percentage of ownership; for a larger company, it is often a drop in the bucket. What are some recent examples in the junior gold space where an executive has exercised options or bought shares that resulted in a significant increase in his or her stake in the company?

TD: You are absolutely right about the importance for smaller companies, Brian. When Nejat Seyhun did his comprehensive study of insider activity in 1998, “Investment Intelligence from Insider Trading,” he found that top executives such as CEOs and CFOs of smaller firms outperform the market by about 8% a year.

You get a better bang for your buck, on average, with smaller companies. I say on average, because in some cases insiders still suffer from wishful thinking and miscalculation.

Most of the insider buying is in the junior and the small companies. We have an indicator list that tracks what we call key insider buying—beneficial ownership buying where officers or directors directly own the interest in those stocks; they are not managing other people’s money. Our users can also generate net buying lists.

TGR: What are some of the smaller names on your 30-day activity list, meaning there has been insider trading in the last 30 days?

TD: The smaller names would include Belo Sun Mining Corp. (BSX:TSX.V) and Veris Gold Corp. (VG:TSX; YNGFF:OTCBB).

Remember, because these are small companies, some small gold miners may not be easy to invest in, as a matter of liquidity. Some may not trade much. Nor are these investment recommendations. They are companies on our list showing insider buying in the last month.

TGR: Veris Gold insiders bought 555,000 shares.

TD: As of June 10, it was 605,000 shares.

TGR: In general, do you know who is making such purchases?

TD: In the case of Belo Sun Mining, CEO Mark Eaton has been buying. He bought throughout the month of May: 2,000 shares on May 30 and 425,500 on May 15–16. Another company executive bought nearly 230,000 shares on May 31 at $0.59/share after buying 11,500 shares earlier in the month. All my dollar and cents figures are in Canadian currency. On May 16, a third officer bought 100,000 shares. That makes three insiders buying in the public market during May. During that same period, there were no insider public-market sales. That is a good example of the type of insider buying you want to see when there is market weakness in a stock.

TGR: Have you ever done a study of share price performance versus buying? Is there a greater correlation with more executives buying than with just one buyer?

TD: In general, the more, the better. You want to see situations where multiple insiders are buying and no one is selling.

When the CFO is buying is another good signal. Always keep an eye on what the CFO is doing. I say that because, in general, they tend to be more conservative.

TGR: What other small juniors are buying and selling?

TD: Orvana Minerals Corp. (ORV:TSX) is another multiple insider buyer situation. CEO Michael Winship bought 60,000 shares at $0.53/share in May and was joined by a director, Audra Walsh. Together they spent $52,000 of their own money in buying in the public market. That seems to be good timing because the stock is now trading around the $0.60/share level.

TGR: And they bought where?

TD: It looks as if they bought between $0.50 and $0.53/share.

TGR: Can you tell us about other companies where insiders are buying?

TD: Angkor Gold Corp. (ANK:TSX.V) is being bought by CEO Michael Weeks. Over the last 30 days, he has spent about $44,000 buying stock in that company. His purchases have been in a range of $0.38 and $0.42/share. Angkor Gold is a smaller company based in Cambodia. It is interesting to see its insider buying among the top 10 by dollar amount for over the past 30 days.

Interestingly, in the gold group we are seeing not only a lot of insider buying, but buying with a very broad geographic reach. It is not just the names in Nevada, Mexico and Ontario.

Centerra Gold Inc. (CG:TSX; CADGF:OTCPK), based in the Kyrgyz Republic, has gone through quite a news cycle over the past few weeks. Mine production, I believe, is expected to be restarted after some political events there. But we see some insider activity in that company as well.

Centerra is a high-risk stock. What the insiders seem to be signaling there is that perhaps the stock price has overshot the risks. Even when insiders are buying, you still have to look at the stock’s risk profile to see if it is something you want to get into. Just because insiders are buying does not mean the stock is not risky. It sends a signal related to the risk-reward outlook on average. The risk level may still be quite elevated.

TGR: Which companies are on the Top 5 list for officer and director buying on the 60-day list?

TD: In that time period in terms of development companies, the top net buyer was Colossus Minerals Inc. (CSI:TSX; COLUF:OTCQX), a development-focused miner in Brazil.

Orex Minerals Inc. (REX:TSX.V) would be No. 2, followed by Belo Sun and Veris Gold. Large-capTurquiose Hill Resources Ltd. (formerly Ivanhoe Mines Ltd.) (TRQ:TSX; TRQ:NYSE), which also owns producing assets, would be the fifth one.

Luna Gold Corp. (LGC:TSX.V), another Latin American company that you would classify as a producer, also has seen a lot of insider buying.

One name that is more of a pure gold play, junior nonproducer at this point is Giyani Gold Corp. (WDG:TSX.V). It is in South Africa. Duane Parnham, who founded Forsys Metals Corp. (FSX:TSX) and UNX Energy Corp., has now turned his attention to Giyani Gold. He has been buying a fair amount lately.

TGR: Are well-known CEOs or executives buying the junior companies, people like Ross Beaty?

TD: Ross Beaty’s latest purchase was in the alternate energy area. Maybe that is a story for another day. And of course, we have talked about other CEOs who have been buying.

TGR: Are there any mid-cap names that stand out?

TD: Centerra and Luna Gold would be in that category.

We saw insider buying in both Colossus Minerals and Detour Gold Corp. (DGC:TSX) during the selloff in April. Subsequently, both companies have gone to the capital markets to raise some money. That shows that the gold sector is perhaps not as bad as everyone thinks.

It is nice to see some emerging investor interest in the sector beyond the insiders. Lately, the news flow has been so negative that sometimes it sounds as if only insiders are interested in their companies’ stocks.

TGR: There also is activity in some of the gold sector’s biggest names. Who is buying there?

TD: Peter Munk, chairman of Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX:TSX; ABX:NYSE), has come back to the market. He bought 100,000 shares worth $2.1 million at $21.05/share on May 9.

TGR: Are other Barrick Gold executives buying its shares?

TD: In the last 60 days, Peter Munk is the only insider with public-market buying at the firm.

A few months ago Ian Telfer, chairman of Goldcorp Inc. (G:TSX; GG:NYSE), bought his company’s shares.

Compensation schemes at larger companies are structured a little differently than smaller companies. At Goldcorp, insider holdings have been on the rise through a combination of net public market activity and compensation-related acquisitions. It is nice to see insiders building their positions at these levels. Even though some of it is compensation-related, that is what we would like to see and are seeing in Goldcorp.

TGR: Are you seeing any other insider buying at the big gold names?

TD: There has been some net buying at Kinross Gold Corp. (K:TSX; KGC:NYSE) and there has been a fair amount of insider activity at IAMGOLD Corp. (IMG:TSX; IAG:NYSE). It is in fourth place on our list of direct insider buying over the last month. Over the last 90 days, IAMGOLD insiders have spent $504,778 buying shares in the public market. Notably, both the CEO and CFO have been buying shares. That is a positive contrarian signal for longer-term investors with the right risk tolerance.

TGR: How do your subscribers use your research?

TD: One of the most popular ways of using INK is to look at what insiders are doing with their options, both when they are being granted in some of the smaller companies and when they are exercised. Do they sell all their shares? Do they hang on to all or some of them?

That is particularly important in some of the mid- to larger-cap companies. We want to see if they are exercising options and not selling. That is why we are encouraged by what we see at Goldcorp. A lot of the Goldcorp activity is compensation-related acquisitions. It is encouraging to see insiders building their positions.

That said, sometimes insiders have to sell a portion of their compensation-related awards to pay taxes and the exercise costs, depending on the plan. There is no real standard in how compensation plans are structured. It is important to dig down into the details. We like to see insiders paying their taxes or exercise costs and then hold on.

TGR: What are the best ways to use the information INK provides?

TD: Three rules of thumb. First, good things come in small packages. Small companies are where you will get the most bang for the buck following insider activity.

Second, insiders usually go against the flow. They are contrarian. When a stock is falling, it is a good signal if insiders are buying.

Third, sometimes insiders go with the flow. When they are selling when everyone else is selling, that typically is not good news. When they are buying when other people are buying, it is usually pretty good news.

TGR: And four and five would be to follow the CFO and look for multiple executives buying.

TD: Right. Multiple executives buying along with the CFO indicates a good situation, especially if it is real discretionary buying as opposed to stock awards. If we see the CFO and other executives buying during a selloff, we have more confidence in that signal than if it is a single insider.

TGR: Investors in the gold space and the junior gold space have been beaten and battered. Can you leave them with something that might raise their spirits?

TD: For contrarians, the best time, up until now, to buy junior gold miners was November and December 2008. However, in the wake of the recent pullback, our insider indicators are off the charts. The time to start looking for bargains is when everyone has left the room, not when your next-door neighbor is talking about the latest gold stock he or she bought.

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

Ted Dixon is co-founder of INK Research; INK stands for Insider News and Knowledge and is Canada’s first online financial news and research service providing investor insight into what public company executives and significant shareholders are doing with their ownership interests. INK is also first in North America to provide a free source of insider trading alerts and reports across both the U.S. and Canadian stock markets. Free INK services are found on CanadianInsider.com andInsiderTracking.com. Dixon has also lectured in corporate finance at the British Columbia Institute of Technology. Before starting INK, he worked at the Connor, Clark & Lunn Financial Group where his responsibilities included portfolio strategy and product development. He has also been an analyst at the Fraser Institute and a treasury specialist at TD Bank. In the early days, he was a floor trader on the Vancouver Stock Exchange. Dixon is a Chartered Financial Analyst and member of CFA Vancouver (formerly The Vancouver Society of Financial Analysts). He holds a Master of Business Administration in financial management from the University of Chicago and a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of British Columbia.

Want to read more Gold Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Streetwise Interviews page.

DISCLOSURE:

1) Brian Sylvester conducted this interview for The Gold Report and provides services to The Gold Report as an independent contractor. He 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: Orvana Minerals Corp., Angkor Gold Corp., Colossus Minerals Inc., Detour Gold Corp. and Goldcorp Inc. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.

3) Ted Dixon: I or my family own 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. 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.

4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent.

5) The interview does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer.

6) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned and may make purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise.

Streetwise – The Gold Report is Copyright © 2013 by Streetwise Reports LLC. All rights are reserved. Streetwise Reports LLC hereby grants an unrestricted license to use or disseminate this copyrighted material (i) only in whole (and always including this disclaimer), but (ii) never in part.

Streetwise Reports LLC does not guarantee the accuracy or thoroughness of the information reported.

Streetwise Reports LLC receives a fee from companies that are listed on the home page in the In This Issue section. Their sponsor pages may be considered advertising for the purposes of 18 U.S.C. 1734.

Participating companies provide the logos used in The Gold Report. These logos are trademarks and are the property of the individual companies.

101 Second St., Suite 110

Petaluma, CA 94952

Tel.: (707) 981-8999

Fax: (707) 981-8998

Email: [email protected]

 

Asian stocks rise ahead of Fed meeting

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The Asian shares were traded higher on Monday ,along with the Japanese shares due to the strong profit in exporters stocks ,while investors waits for data about the bank’s bond-purchasing  from the Federal Reserve (Fed) policy meeting on Tuesday  .

The broader Topix edged at 2.7%to 1,084.72, while the benchmark Nikkei 225 rose 2.73%   to 13,033.12 by the end of the session. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 increased with 0.7, closing at 4,811.00   , while New Zealand’s NZX 50 index edged higher by 0.6 %.

South Korea’s Kospi closed at 0.32% to 1,883.10, while the Chinese Shanghai composite rose 0.17% to 2,165.70 and in Hong Kong, Hang Seng increased with 1.30% to 21,242.30, all as of 6.04 am GMT. The Singapore Straits Times index advanced 0.7% and the Taiex index added 0.7 %.

The market waits for this week’s Fed policy meeting which should clarify investors regarding the bond-purchasing program, which has caused a bit of an outbreak in the markets.

The Chairman of Fed Ben S. Bernanke is expected to address the subject after the two-day Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) has been held.

Approximately $3 trillion has been wiped from the global market since the Fed boss Ben.S Bernanke said, policy makers could cut back stimulus if the job market improves.

The Chinese economic growth is predicted to increase in the second half of the year, with a year gross domestic product estimated at 8.1%, according to reports released by Renmin University. While the Bank of Japan (BoJ) purchased a total of 111.4 billion yen in the Japanese government bond this Monday.

The post Asian stocks rise ahead of Fed meeting appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Gold prices increases reflecting on US data

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The yellow metal price rose slightly higher on Monday as investors outlook was affected by the weaker-than-expected US data from Friday. Gold edged to 0.10% to $1,389.10 per ounce at 4:45pm GMT.

Recommendation from the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission suggested that investors should cut their net long positions in gold futures by 4.1% to 54,779 contracts.

The US dollar index increased up to 0.14% to 80.786 as of 4:56pm GMT, while gold futures finished last week higher, closing at approximately 0.35% ($1,382.60).

The US consumer outlook dropped from its previous month’s record of 84.5 to 82.7 in June, according to data released from the UoM on Friday.

The US central bank has tied the bond purchasing program, which is helping to increase the gold prices to its highest in years and improving the labor market. Policymakers suggest that if the unemployment rate continues to reduce they would consider reducing the rate of the bond purchases, which is at a current $85 billion a month.

Fed policymakers are expected to even out the market swings at its upcoming two-day meeting from Tuesday. The Fed boss Ben Bernanke is expected to ease the effects of the global financial markets regarding an early cut of the QE program after the team on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) approve more weeks of full bond-buying.

The post Gold prices increases reflecting on US data appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

India maintains rate, CRR, fall in rupee may fuel inflation

By www.CentralBankNews.info     India’s central bank held its policy rate and cash reserve ratio (CRR) steady and warned the recent fall in the rupee could fuel inflation and it was ready to use “all available instruments and measures to respond rapidly and appropriately to any adverse developments.”
    The Reserve Bank of India (RBI), which was faced with a rapid drop in its currency last week – along with other emerging markets – acknowledged that inflation had eased but food inflation remained high and warned that “upside pressures on the way forward from the pass-through of rupee depreciation, recent increases in administered prices and persisting imbalances, especially relating to food, pose risks of second-round effects.”
    India’s annual wholesale price inflation, the country’s main inflation gauge, eased to 4.7 percent in May from 4.89 percent in April for the lowest rate since November 2009. All categories in the index fell except for food, which is sustaining the upside pressure on inflation, the RBI said.
    Retail price inflation fell to 9.3 percent in May from an average of 10.2 percent in fiscal 2012/13. The RBI does not have a formal inflation target but is aiming for inflation of 5 percent by March 2014.
    “Given that food inflation remains high, the inflation outlook will be influenced by concerted efforts to break food inflation persistence,” the RBI said, adding that the outlook would be affected by “suppressed inflation being released through revisions in administered prices, including the minimum support prices (MSP) as well as the recent depreciation of the rupee.”
    Following the recent decline in the rupee, economists had expected the RBI to keep its policy rate steady at 7.25 percent but many had expected the central bank to cut the CRR,  which determines the proportion of deposits that banks have to keep in cash at the RBI, to stimulate growth.
    The RBI has cut its policy rate three times this year by a total of 75 basis points and last cut the CRR by 25 basis points in January.
    The RBI said its policy stance would be determined by the path of economic growth, inflation and the balance of payments situation in the months ahead.
    “It is only a durable receding of inflation that will open up the space for monetary policy to continue to address risks to growth,” the RBI said.
    Although several measures have been taken to contain the current account deficit, the RBI said it had to be vigilant about the current “global uncertainty, the rapid shift in risk perceptions and its impact on capital flows.”
    Most emerging markets have faced pressure on their currencies and domestic markets since late May when investors started to prepare for an expected reduction in asset purchases by the U.S. by reducing their holdings of emerging market assets.
    India is especially vulnerable to the effect of an outflow of capital due to its high current account deficit (CAD) which widened to $32.6 billion in the fourth quarter of 2012, equivalent to 6.7 percent of Gross Domestic Product.
    The CAD is expected to narrow in the current 2013/14 financial year due to softer global commodity prices and recent measures to dampen gold imports, the RBI said, adding the main challenge is to reduce its to a sustainable level so it can be financed through stable capital flows.
    An improvement in the government deficit and its commitment to keep the fiscal deficit for 2013/14 at 4.8 percent from 4.9 percent for 2012/13 should have a favourable impact on investor confidence.
    India’s rupee has been depreciating since July 2011 but stabilized in the first few months of this year, trading around 55 rupees to the U.S. dollar. But since the beginning of May, the rupee has fallen rapidly and hit a record low of 58.98 to the dollar last Tuesday before recovering after dealers reported intervention in the market by the RBI.
    From May 22 – when Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said asset purchases could be reduced “in the next few meetings” of the Fed – to June 11, the rupee fell by 6.6 percent “due to sell-off by foreign institutional investors, reflecting risk-off sentiment triggered by apprehensions of possible tapering of quantitative easing by the U.S. Fed,” the RBI said.
    Last week the Finance ministry’s chief economic adviser, Raghruram Rajan was also quoted as saying that India’s government and the RBI would take action to ease the sharp fall in the rupee.
    “As recent experience has shown, shifts in global market sentiment can trigger sudden stop and reversal of capital from a broad swath of emerging economies, swiftly amplifying risks to the outlook. India is not an exception,” the RBI said.
    The RBI also said that global economic activity had slowed since its last statement in May and risks remain elevated.
    Economic conditions in India also remain weak, hamstrung by infrastructure bottlenecks, supply constraints, lacklustre domestic demand and subdued investment sentiment, the RBI said.
    India’s Gross Domestic Product expanded by 4.8 percent in the first quarter of 2013, up from 4.7 percent in the fourth quarter of 2012.

    www.CentralBankNews.info

D-Day for Australian Investors

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Today is D-Day. After six months of preparation I’m finally ready to officially launch Australia’s most exciting investment advisory service.

This afternoon you’ll receive a personal invite to join a technological revolution.

And I don’t say that lightly. You’ll find out about the simple invention that could overthrow China as the cheap manufacturer of the world…how TVs, smart phones and laptops will become so powerful and so flexible, you’ll be able to roll them up and store them in your wallet…and also how energy – rather than getting more expensive – will actually become cheaper, cleaner and more abundant than ever.

I’m certain what you read will impress you. Check your email for full details around 2pm this afternoon.

Until then, on with today’s Money Morning

When does a bull market not feel like a bull market?

When it has gone on for four years and yet barely a day has gone by without fear the market will crash.

Investing in a bull market is supposed to be easy. But you usually only hear those claims after a bull market has ended, with the help of rose-tinted hindsight glasses.

But really, that’s not how it is at all.

Below is a chart of the US S&P 500 index:


Source: Google Finance

The chart covers the last 10 years. It covers two huge bull market rallies. The first lasted from March 2003 until October 2007.

Then followed a bear market that lasted until March 2009…when the next bull market began. Four-and-a-bit years later and this current bull market is still going.

But look at the chart. You could hardly say that both bull markets have been a walk in the park for investors. The current bull market has been especially testing. Several months of gains followed by big falls that have doubtless shaken many investors out of the market…only to see it take off again.

That pattern has repeated at least five times on the US market since 2009.

Australia’s Missing Bull Market

But despite the volatility, the US market has recovered enough to go past the 2007 high.

The latest bull market hasn’t been quite so kind to Australian investors. In fact, when we look at the chart it’s hard to claim with any conviction that the Australian market has seen a bull market since 2009 at all:


Source: Google Finance

Since 2009 the Australian market has a completely different shape to the US market. Where the US market burst higher in 2010, the Aussie market sputtered. Then when the US market took off again in 2011, the Aussie market couldn’t even muster a false start…it just fell in a heap.

It stayed that way for the best part of a year.

Even though the Australian market enjoyed a similar run to the US market in 2012, it did so from a much lower base. So that while the US market hit a record high, the Aussie market is 2,000 points away from taking out the 2007 top.

But regardless of whether you invest in US stocks or Australian stocks, we need to get away from the idea that making money during a bull market is easy, because it isn’t.

Australian Market in No-Man’s Land

The buy-and-hold investors will point to the US index and say, ‘that’s what happens next, stock prices will go back up again.’ They’ll say you should put all your money in the stock market and never sell.

The naturally bearish investors will point to a chart we haven’t shown you today, the Japanese Nikkei225 stock index. They’ll say that’s what happens when a credit-fuelled market crashes and the central bank can no longer prop up the market.

That puts Aussie investors in a bind. Right now the Australian market is in no-man’s-land. It’s a long way from both the high and the low. It’s just stuck in the middle.

This is why we encourage you not to fall for the old buy-and-hold nonsense. In Money Morning we encourage you to take a more active involvement in your investments. And we’re not saying this with the benefit of hindsight either.

In late 2010 we started telling our Australian Small-Cap Investigator subscribers to take some money off the table because we believed the market had seen the end of the best gains.

Turns out we were right.

And then in late 2011 we suggested investors forget about blue-chip growth stocks and instead invest in cash, gold and most importantly, dividend stocks…a message we repeated often through 2012 and into 2013.

But the key question is what you should do next?

A View From the Other Side of the Market

By now you should know your editor’s view on this market. While it looks dangerous and volatile, we still say this is a great time for investors to build wealth.

We say you should use the current period of falling prices to top up your portfolio with a mix of income and growth stocks.

In fact, we’re confident the Aussie market will reach a new high in 2015. But not everyone here at our Albert Park office agrees with that view. In fact, your editor is in the minority on that score.

So, what do our other editors think? One person we suggest you listen to if you’re after another view is our old pal, Sound Money, Sound Investments editor, Greg Canavan.

A few weeks ago Greg sat down to discuss a crucial influence on the Aussie stock market and economy – China. Greg says a slowdown in China could have a major impact on Aussie stocks in the months and years ahead.

In fact, it could be the single biggest influence that determines whether the Aussie market takes off on a new bull market run like the US or sinks into a decade long slump like Japan.

As we say, your editor is optimistic about the future. We believe this is the best time in four years to buy stocks in particular sectors. And that investing in businesses is the single best way to build wealth.

But we also know you can only be a truly enlightened investor if you take into account more than one viewpoint. So we suggest you tune into
Greg’s video to check out his view on the markets, the economy and China.

Cheers,
Kris

Join me on Google+

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: Buy These Four Yen Dive Stocks Now

Daily Reckoning: How the Australian Dollar Stole Your Capital Gains

Money Morning: Money Weekend’s Technology FutureWatch 15 June 2013

Pursuit of Happiness: Government Spies: I Warned of This Trend More Than a Year Ago…

Australian Small-Cap Investigator:
How to Make Big Money from Small-Cap Stocks

The Single Biggest Mistake a Technology Investor Can Make

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Technology helps the world advance. As humans it’s in our nature to investigate, innovate and solve problems.

This curiosity means we make things, create things and develop new technologies.

You can look back thousands of years for basic examples of technology pushing civilisation forward.

Stone Age: it might sound simple, but the development of stone and bone blades and tools was vital to the development of mankind. The earliest example of innovation and technology is a shovel that was fashioned from the shoulder blade of an Ox.

Iron Age: in the Iron Age, iron smelting was all the rage. It helped make better, more efficient tools. This helped construction, agriculture and civilisation continue to advance.

Industrial Revolution: the industrial revolution sparked a wave of new technology. Manufacturing went from being hand produced to machinery made. New efficiencies and tools helped to bring an era of unprecedented wealth.

Of course I’ve skipped a few different ages. Importantly though you can find examples in the Bronze Age, the Atomic Age and the Information Age too.

Over the journey, well at least the last hundred or so years, there have been companies that have been built on these advances in technology. All of them using some form of technology that was ground-breaking at the time.

Some of these companies started on the smell of an oily rag. Today they have transformed into multibillion dollar companies. And there are numerous examples of rags to riches stories across the tech world.

Of course many of these companies went from being just an idea, to a private company, and then to a listed company. For some they just toiled away for many years, the world blind to their potential.

But fundamentally these companies had breakthrough technology ready to be unleashed. And when they took off they made returns in excess of 1,000%. Some of them have returned over 10,000% over the years.

Investment World of Technology

The investment world of technology is thankfully large. Technology is quite a broad term and it spans across many industries. That means opportunities are ample.

It’s easy to think of technology as just computers, phones, tablets and gadgets. But in all reality technology and technology stocks cover a range of industries. These include medicine, resources, telecommunications, automotive and aerospace.

Look at Ford Motor Co. They make cars…so what? But remember, the first cars were revolutionary technology. The car literally changed the world. And Ford started with just $28,000 and one car in 1903. 110 years later they’re a $60bn company that sells over 2.25million cars a year.

Then there’s the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company started in 1911 with 1,300 employees. They made weird (and large) machines that could calculate mathematics.

Later in 1924 they renamed to International Business Machines (IBM). They helped shape the world we live in today and were pioneers in computing. IBM’s now a $223bn business with over 434,000 employees.

These are two examples of companies started over 100 years ago that exist today because of continued innovation and cutting edge technology.

One final example is a company that started out as a simple radio repair shop in Tokyo in 1945. They went on to make Japan’s first transistor radio. They’re now a $20bn company that has dominated consumer technology for over 30 years. That’s the simplified story of Sony.

Over the years as these companies have grown into billion dollar businesses they’ve made a lot of investors very wealthy. But they started from humble beginnings with technology that not everyone really understood the full potential of.

The Biggest Mistake You Will Make As A Technology Investor

But how are you to know which technology is world changing and which one is all hype? What is it that separates those that make money from investing in tech stocks from those that don’t make any money investing in tech stocks?

Well there’s one big mistake technology investors make when investing in tech stocks. It’s important to know to make sure you don’t make it. I’ll get to it in a second…

One of the key things you need to know first is there’s a lot happening, a lot of new technology and a lot of companies promising the world.

The other is there are fundamentals that you need to know as an investor in tech stocks. In fact in any stocks these fundamentals apply. Good leadership, a good product or service, competitive advantage, a strong plan and the ability to remain solvent are all pretty important.

But what tech stocks eventually boil down to is will this technology change the world? And will enough people pay for whatever the company is selling?

If you get an answer to both of those questions, then you’re well on the way to finding a diamond in the rough.

But the one big mistake that too many technology investors make is ignoring technology breakthroughs by not understanding the technology.

Let me explain in a bit more detail.

When Google first listed in 2004 they were a search engine that sold advertising. Simply, they helped to find information on the internet. Now no one could have seriously predicted that less than 10 years later they’d be making wearable technology and have the dominant mobile operating system. But that’s irrelevant.

But those in the know realised Google’s technology wasn’t just a search engine. According to the company, they had the ability ‘to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful’.

And this was far more powerful than most people realised. The mechanics of it involved complex algorithms that sorted information on the internet. It made online life easy for billions of people.

By sorting that information Google could rank websites based on their content. Smart investors understood that e-commerce was taking off and having a ‘visible’ website was vital for business.

It made sense that businesses would pay Google to enhance their listing, and to advertise their websites.

More than just a search engine, Google was and still is an advertising behemoth. And that’s what their core business is and always will be. It’s resulted in 705% gains in just 9 years.

Then there’s a company like Illumina, involved in DNA sciences. To most people their understanding of DNA is the double helix image and that it somehow makes us the way we are.

But the work Illumina do is at the cutting edge of the Personalised Medicine trend. As the Human Genome project was underway, Illumina was gearing up their business to cash in on this.

Then in 2003 the entire human genome project was completed. And the potential for a DNA sciences companies was unleashed. Subsequently those that understood the technology Illumina had at their disposal were in for gains of 3,199%.

‘Crazy Talk’ Is Tomorrow’s Future

What this all means is that there are companies out there involved in cutting edge research and technology breakthroughs. And in the early stages many investors see tech breakthroughs as just a fad, or say, ‘It won’t take off.’

One thing is for certain, what might sound like ‘crazy talk’ now will be the future you live in tomorrow. No one thought man could achieve powered flight, walk on the moon, dive km’s under the sea, have a bionic eye or make calls on the go from a computer the size of your palm.

What’s clear is that technology advances civilisation, and those that ignore the inevitable do so to their own detriment. Those that seek to understand the potential are the ones that benefit financially.

The biggest mistake you can make is ignoring the technology breakthroughs happening every day.

Now I’m not saying you need a Doctorate in every new technology, but you need to be able to decipher and filter the real deal from the hype. And for that, you need expert information.

The best thing you can do is use this information to realise the potential revolutionary technology has.

Armed with the info you won’t be the person that looks back and says, ‘I had the chance to invest in Apple back in the 80′s.’

You’ll be the person that says, ‘I invested in Apple back in the 80′s, look at me now.’

Sam Volkering
Technology Analyst

Join me on Google+

From the Archives…

Don’t Make Investing a Chore… Invest in an Innovative Business
14-06-2013 – Kris Sayce

The Technology Revolution Begins in Four Days…
13-06-2013 – Kris Sayce

Zero G for the Australian Dollar is a Shot in the Arm for Miners
12-06-2013 – Dr Alex Cowie

There’s More to Technology Than Facebook and Spying
11-06-2013 – Sam Volkering

Four Great Australian Technological Achievements
10-06-2013 – Sam Volkering