Keynote Speaker Series: Randall Fields

By WallStreetDaily.com

We recently sat down for an exclusive interview with Randall Fields, the ambitious founder of two notably successful companies.

One of them – Mrs. Fields Cookies – is essentially a household name now.

But most people are totally unfamiliar with his other company…

Its products are protected by nine U.S. patents, eight registered trademarks and 37 copyrights, one of which is truly brilliant.

I’ve been researching this $153-million-market-cap stock for almost two years now. And I can comfortably say that it’s one of the market’s most underappreciated small-cap growth stocks.

I didn’t want to leave anything to chance, though. So we decided to get Mr. Fields on the phone to have an open discussion about the company’s future.

It won’t be long before other analysts (and investors) finally wake up to this opportunity, though.

Tune in to find out exactly why by clicking on the image below. Or you can read the transcript here.

During our discussion, we also cover:

  • One of the biggest problems plaguing some of the world’s largest retailers, including Wal-Mart (WMT).
  • And the $1-billion market that Mr. Fields thinks could be a “potentially explosive part of our business in the future.” (Hint: We first alerted you to this opportunity in May.)

RandyFields_Interview
Ahead of the tape,

Louis Basenese

The post Keynote Speaker Series: Randall Fields appeared first on Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: Keynote Speaker Series: Randall Fields

Gold Futures Stuck Around Flatline Ahead of US Labour Data

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Gold futures hovered around the flatline on Tuesday as traders waits for the US nonfarm payroll data which was delayed by 18 days due to the US government shutdown and it’s expected  to be released later in the day. The awaited US labor data is will determine the economic health of the world’s largest economy and the possible future plans to the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) monetary stimulus.

Yellow metal  futures maturing in December on New York’s Comex were trading at $1,315.50 an ounce at the time of writing, while silver futures retreated 0.17% to $22.140 an ounce at the same time.

Gold Futures – SPDR Holdings

The overall sentiment in the gold market was affected after the world’s largest gold-backed exchanged-traded fund SPDR Gold Trust, revealed that metals in its holdings had dropped to its lowest in 15 weeks. On Monday, holdings dropped 10.51 tonnes lower to 871.72 tonnes, hitting its lowest level since February 2009, the company confirmed.

SPDR Holdings was considered as a big contributor to the yellow metal’s 21% drop this year, as it dropped its position in the metal by ground 430 tonnes this year.

Gold Futures – Federal Reserve

After the 16-day government shutdown, the non-farm payrolls report was delayed and expected to be released by the Labour Department later during the day. Analysts are expecting new jobs to rise by 180,000 in September, up from 169,000 in the previous month, however the unemployment rate is expected to remain unchanged at 7.3%. The non-payroll data figures will determine the future of the Fed’s monthly $85 billion bond-buying program.

The Federal Reserve will probably delay the tapering of its stimulus program until March because of the 16-day partial shutdown slowed the economic growth in the fourth quarter, according to analysts.

On Monday, the Federal President of Chicago, Charles Evans said that Federal Reserve will likely postpone the tapering due to the fiscal drama, the interest rate which is below the Fed’s target and the high unemployment rate.

 

Visit www.hymarkets.com and start trading Metals online  today from only $50!

 

The post Gold Futures Stuck Around Flatline Ahead of US Labour Data appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Asian Indices Trades Mixed Ahead of US Labour Data

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Major Asian indices were seen trading mixed on Tuesday, clearing off previous gains and ahead of the delayed US non-farm payrolls data, which scheduled to be released later in the day.

Investors are focusing on the release of the US labor data  to determine what the Federal Reserve (Fed) would plan to do with its monthly bond-buying program, however analysts are predicting a possible delay in tapering the stimulus program due to the US partial government shutdown.

Asian indices were dragged lower from its previous gains that were driven by the resolution of the US government shutdown and the upbeat Chinese data.

The Labour Department is expected to release the key non-farm payrolls, after being delayed by the government shutdown. Analysts have forecasted an additional 180,000 new jobs have been added in the September, up from 169,000 in the previous month, while the unemployment rate is likely to remain the same at 7.3%.The non-farm payrolls data have been in the spotlight as the global markets would use the report to determine the condition of the US economy.

Economists are predicting the Federal Reserve will delay tapering the monthly stimulus program until March due to the US government shutdown which slowed down the economic growth in the fourth quarter.

On Monday, Asian shares closed with higher gains, while European equities traded mixed.

Asian Indices – Japan

The Japanese benchmark Nikkei 225 rose 0.13% higher to 14,713.25, while Tokyo’s broader Topix index advanced 0.12% to 1,214.17.

Pioneer Corporation was one of the main movers edging 5.6% higher, while Yaskawa Electric Corporation dropped 3.2% lower.

The greenback slightly rose against the Japanese yen, rising 0.15% higher to ¥98.31.

Asian Indices – China

Meanwhile, trades were heading to the negative territory in China, with Hong Kong’s Hang Seng lost 0.38% to 23,349.00 while the mainland Shanghai composite dropped 0.95% to 2,208.51.

The country’s index was dragged by the world’s second largest constituent, China Mobile, shredding 3.7%. Data from the National Bureau of statistics showed that the average prices of new homes in some cities in China rose to a fresh high in September. China Resources Land declined 0.7%, while China Overseas Land & Investment dropped 0.9%.

 

Interested in trading Asian Stocks Online?

Visit www.hymarkets.com and start trading today with only $50.

The post Asian Indices Trades Mixed Ahead of US Labour Data appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

How To Trade Binary Options In MetaTrader 4

Taking advantage of Binary Options MetaTrader 4 software gives investors some interesting choices. Binaries are different from other investments as they do not buy any quantities of futures or commodities. A binary refers to making a choice between two options and if the right choice is made, a specific payout is given. To be able to make these choices effectively, having the right software is essential. This is where this program is so valuable. It automates many of the functions associated with binary trading,

Anything that makes trading binary options easier is a good resource. There are not many other software products available that help investors find opportunities they can profit from. Having alternatives is always important and this is another resource to help investors profit in uncertain economic times. Binaries are an exotic form of investing that can be complicated. Maximizing the opportunity to understand the process and profit from unique chances depends on having the right resources. A software package designed to help with this type of investing will be helpful. In the process, a bid is made that a certain price of a stock, commodity, or almost any other investment, will be reached by a specific time. If the price is reached, the bid pays off. If it does not, the bid is lost.

Using binary options trading can be risky and only those who are familiar with what is at stake should get involved. Because of the risk, it is even possible to leverage the risk with the pay off. Choices that seem likely to be achieved may pay off less than the cost of the bid. Managing the complexities of these choices is much easier with software like MetaTrader 4. It is even possible to buy and sell the bids, which complicates the process even more. The software however will manage all the trades without any problems.

Access to a binary options broker is essential to success. Brokers will need Meta Trader 4 to offer the best service. This is a far more complicated type of trading and investing than most casual investors are familiar with. They will need the reassurance that they are working with experienced professionals who can give them the guidance they need. Brokers will need every advantage to balance the risk of binaries with the possible pay offs. This is another strategy to protect investors by staying as diverse as possible and having MetaTrader 4 will give brokers and investors the best chance for profit.

 

Disclaimer: Trading of foreign exchange contracts, contracts for difference, derivatives and other investment products which are leveraged, can carry a high level of risk. These products may not be suitable for all investors. It is possible to lose more than your initial investment. All funds committed should be risk capital. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. A Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) is available from the company website www.clmforex.com. Please read and consider the PDS before making any decision to trade Core Liquidity Markets’ products. The risks must be understood prior to trading. Core Liquidity Markets refers to Core Liquidity Markets Pty Ltd. Core Liquidity Markets is an Australian company which is registered with ASIC, ACN 164 994 049. Core Liquidity Markets is an authorized representative of Direct FX Trading Pty Ltd (AFSL) Number 305539, which is the authorizing Licensee and Principal.

 

 

GBPUSD failed to break above 1.6259 resistance

GBPUSD failed to break above 1.6259 resistance, suggesting that lengthier consolidation of the uptrend from 1.4813 (Jul 9 low) is underway. Range trading between 1.5894 and 1.6259 would likely be seen in a couple of days. However, as long as 1.5894 support holds, the uptrend could be expected to resume, and one more rise towards 1.6500 is still possible after consolidation. On the downside, a breakdown below 1.5894 support will signal completion of the uptrend from 1.4813, then the following downward movement could bring price to 1.4500 zone.

gbpusd

Provided by ForexCycle.com

How to Tell if This Rally Will Last – Watch Small-cap Stocks…

By MoneyMorning.com.au

As we wrote to you last week, when the market begins to lift off, typically small-cap stocks lead the way.

That’s because those attracted to small-cap stocks are usually those investors who are prepared to take more risks and are looking for the biggest bang for their buck.

By the time other investors feel the market is safe enough to enter, small-caps have already risen many multiples. The more conservative investors then tend to go for what they consider safer stocks – blue-chip stocks.

And that’s fine. But it’s not where you’ll find much excitement or innovation. For that you need to follow the small-cap sector. That’s why this morning we’re writing to you from the 4th Annual Microcap Investment Conference at the Sofitel in Melbourne’s CBD…

So, why are we here?

Well, we wanted to get an idea how others feel about the market and the outlook for stocks. Closeted away in our Albert Park office for 10-plus hours a day, we could lose touch with what’s really going on in the wide world.

It’ll be great to see the CEO’s and MD’s talk about their businesses and the opportunities they see in the market. And just as importantly, we’re keen to tune it to what other investors and analysts think about the current market.

If these folks are representative of the folks we hear about on TV and read about in the papers, we doubt that more than one in a hundred will be as bullish on the market as your editor. If that’s true, it’s fine by us.

Dividends Still Rule, but the Mood is Changing

As a small-cap investor it has been a great few days for the speculative stocks we follow most closely.

But even so, small-caps still haven’t put in the strong gains we’d normally expect at the beginning of a raging bull market. Since the market hit a low point in June, small-caps as measured by the Small Ordinaries index have climbed 12.9%.

That’s not bad.

But blue-chip stocks as measured by the S&P/ASX 200 index have gained 14.3%. Part of that of course is the demand by investors for blue-chip dividend stocks now that interest rates are so low. That’s certainly not something you saw from investors during previous bull markets.

Perhaps that’s because in the past investors expected that interest rates would rise and fall as part of the economic cycle.

Even the situation in Japan wasn’t enough. For nearly two decades investors saw Japan as a unique basket case. There was no way the same would ever happen to Australia.

And yet it did happen. When stocks fall, today the investors don’t think about buying cheap beaten-down growth stock. Instead they look for the stocks paying a good dividend yield.

That makes sense. Investors now rightly believe that interest rates will stay low. So when stocks tumble as they have in recent months, there are plenty of investors queuing up to buy stocks at a ‘discounted’ price.

These Stocks Will Tell You if This Rally is Real

But if you look back to the last major bull market from 2003, you’ll see how small-caps burst off of the starting blocks and didn’t look back for two years:

Source: Google Finance

You can see on this chart that a year after the 2003 rally began, small-caps had gained 37% compared to a 21% gain for the blue-chip index. In contrast, since June last year when the current rally began, blue-chip stocks have gained 32% while small-cap stocks have only gained 3.8%.

But maybe change is in the air. As we said before, the last few days have been great for small-cap stocks. We’ve started to see a wide range of individual small-caps doing better than blue-chip stocks.

Whether this will last is anyone’s guess. But even if small-cap investing isn’t your game, you should still keep watch on small-cap stocks. If you want to know if this is a genuine rally or a volatile market at the top of its range, small-cap stocks could be the giveaway sign.

We’re in no doubt that in order for the Australian stock market to reach 6,000 points by the end of this year investors will need to believe this is a genuine recovery. If they believe that, it’s a good bet that this will generate a more positive attitude towards small-cap stocks too.

In short, the small-cap sector should be your number one indicator to judge the strength of the coming rally. Based on what we’ve seen, we’re prepared to say the rally has already started.

Cheers,
Kris+

Join Money Morning on Google+

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: UNAVOIDABLE: Australia’s First Recession in 22 Years

Author information

Kris Sayce

Kris Sayce is Editor in Chief of Australia’s biggest circulation daily financial email — Money Morning. (You can subscribe to Money Morning for free here).

Kris is also editor of Australian Small-Cap Investigator, his small-cap stock research service, where he provides detailed analysis on some the brightest, smallest listed companies on the ASX.

If you’re already a subscriber to these publications, or want to follow his financial world view more closely, then we recommend you join Kris on Google+. It’s where he shares investment insight, commentary and ideas that he can’t always fit into his regular Money Morning essays.

Why Most Stocks Lose Money

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Since the deal in Washington the markets have celebrated. The stock market indexes have climbed higher than when the shutdown began. Optimism has paid off again in 2013.

It has to be said that for most of the past three decades or so, optimism has paid off,‘ bank analyst William Vincent opined in a recent column for SNL Financial titled ‘Where Are the Bears?

But has it really?

Vincent’s column looked at the lopsided consensus on a number of big stocks as a warning. (Apple, for instance, has 43 buys against just three sells.) In that column, he also rolled out the bullish refrain by citing the returns of various stock market indices. The Dow is up 358% since 1984. The Nasdaq, though it remains below its 2000 peak, is still up 2,765%. The indices deceive.

If you really track the mortality of companies,‘ says Carlo Cannell, ‘you’d conclude the market does not have the upward bias everyone thinks it does. The market is actually a well-tended garden.

Cannell is one of those rare birds, an investor who has consistently made money on the short side betting against companies. (The quote comes from The Art of Value Investing, a collection of quotes from some very good investors, edited by Whitney Tilson and John Heins. Like a bag of chips and a jar of salsa, it’s not a book you consume in one go. It’s good for dipping.)

Cannell’s analogy of a well-tended garden is perfect. The makers of the index weed out the losers. By doing so, they make the returns on stocks look greater than they appear.

Most stocks lose money,‘ is the way John Del Vecchio and Tom Jacobs start off their new book, What’s Behind the Numbers? The authors want to help prevent you from getting snookered in the market. They start by making sure you understand Cannell’s point.

They cite a study by Blackstar Funds that looked at the Russell 3000 from 1983-2007. This is a stock market index that represents 98% of the all the liquidity in the US market. Blackstar’s study, though, included all the stocks that qualified for inclusion in the index, even ones that de-listed. This universe of stocks had 8,054 names.

If you look at this population, most stocks lost money even though the index rose nearly 900% from 1983-2007. In fact, the top 25% – or roughly 2,000 names – provided all the gains. The worst-performing 75% – or about 6,000 names – collectively returned 0%.

Here is a chart from the study:

Source: Blackstar Funds

All is to say a small number of stocks provide most of the returns. That also means there are a lot of losers.

This reminds me of a quip famous short seller, Jim Chanos, likes to use. Chanos is a guy who pokes around looking for stocks that are going to fall apart for one reason or another. Sometimes these reasons involve thievery and fraud, which Chanos cheerfully exposes. He is most famous as the guy who sniffed out Enron.

This doesn’t make him popular among Wall Street’s bulls. Short sellers never are. (If there was ever a Wall Street version of the old board game Clue, you could swap out Professor Plum and the gang with prominent short sellers. Then Chanos could be the guy in the library with the knife in his back, or maybe Cannell gets the lead pipe in the ballroom.)

Anyway, people like to poo-poo short selling because your upside is capped – you can only make 100% if a stock goes to zero – and your downside is theoretically infinite.

But as Chanos says, ‘I’ve seen more stocks go to zero than to infinity.

There is another reason the indices are less dazzling than they appear. They do not account for inflation. A dollar today is not worth as much as a dollar in 1983. You must account for the deprecation of the currency.

Again, we turn to the useful Del Vecchio/Jacobs book. They cite the inflation-adjusted returns for the S&P 500 from 1950-2009. This has the effect of knocking down the total return on the index by about 40%.

The authors also note the arbitrary nature of cutoff dates. From 1968-83, for example, the stock market as a whole delivered an inflation-adjusted return of zero.

Besides this, investors are their own worst enemies. They tend to buy when stocks are high and sell when they are low. Del Vecchio and Jacobs cite another favourite study of mine by Morningstar, which I’ve cited before as well in my own Invest Like A Dealmaker. Morningstar looked at the best fund of the decade from 2000-2010. It was Ken Heebner’s CGM Focus Fund. It returned 18% annually.

But how did the average investor in the fund do? Poorly. This is because most investors piled in after the fund was up 80% in 2007 – right before it fell 48%. Morningstar looked at the flow of funds in and out of CGM and concluded that the typical investor lost 11% annually, while Heebner was racking up gains of 18% annually.

What is true at the mutual fund level is surely true at the stock market level. I bet the typical investor has never made any money in stocks.

To conclude: The posted returns of stock market indices show only a superficial triumph of optimism. Instead, most stocks are losers. I don’t regret being picky. And I don’t regret being fearful as the rest of the market ploughs higher on such superficial reasons as a temporary debt deal.

I turn again to The Art of Value Investing. I put little stars by some of my favourite comments in my copy. I noted that Seth Klarman, who leads the Baupost Group, had the most stars in my book. From the neck up, there is no one better as an investor. Here is one comment apropos of today’s discussion:

We are big fans of fear, and in investing, it is clearly better to be scared than sorry.

I agree and urge you to stay cautious.

Chris Mayer
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: Where Have All the Bears Gone? originally appeared in The Daily Reckoning USA

Author information

The Big Winners in Kenya’s Oil Debut

By OilPrice.com

Kenya will start pumping its first commercial oil next year and begin exporting in 2016, but this is just the opening salvo: new discoveries in recent months and fast-track new well development make Kenya the darling of East Africa from an investor’s perspective.

Kenya is set to soar past Uganda, which discovered oil much earlier, but is now having a hard time getting it out of the ground and into the market. And the next five months should bring not only news of the first commercial output for Kenya, but new commercial prospects coming online.

As the discoveries pile up for pioneers British Tullow (TLW-LSE) and Canadian Africa Oil (AOI-TSXv), the plan now is to escalate development and further the pace of exploration, while a third winner in this scenario—Taipan Resources (TPN-TSX)—is set to benefit enormously by owning acreage right next to the pioneers’ high-reward prospects.

Tullow, in partnership with Africa Oil–made the first discovery in western Kenya just last year, and in total have discovered more than 300 million barrels of oil equivalent resources in Kenya’s South Lokichar Basin, and they are still exploring.

In late September, the duo announced a fourth crude-rich discovery at Ekales, hitting a net oil pay of 60-100 meters. Significantly, this discovery is right between the Ngamia-1 and Twiga South-1 wells that first put Kenya on the oil map, and the reservoir properties are similar.  Drilling success here has been 100% and this is the fourth consecutive wildcat discovery in this basin since March 2012.

In the next 12 months we can expect another 12 wells to be drilled along Kenya’s “string of pearls”, and what investors are sure to be eyeing is the fast progress on two new wells–Bahasi and Sala–being drilled by Tullow and Africa Oil. These wells—targeting 700 million barrels between just the two of them—are in eastern Kenya, and this is where Taipan is.

The catalysts here for Taipan are increasing by the day.

The Bahasi is a 300-million-barrel well that was spudded earlier this month and should be completed around December this year. Upon completion of Bahasi, Tullow and Africa Oil will start drilling the Sala well, which is a massive 402-million-barrel prospect.

This spreads the discovery net wider, and Taipan is eagerly eyeing the results because both new wells are right next to their own Block 9 acreage, so a hit for one here means a hit for all.  They’re all targeting the same geology—the Tertiary part of the Lower Cretaceous.

Africa Oil and operator New African Global Energy also expect to spud the highly prospective El Kuran well this month. El Kuran is just to the north of and on trend with Taipan’s Block 1. It’s a low-risk prospect because there has already been a discovery and it’s really about testing commerciality and flow rate.

And with the 100% success rate for drilling in Northern Kenya so far, there is reason to be optimistic.

For Taipan, there are plenty of other catalysts as well, including a farm-out agreement earlier this month for 55% of its Block 2B with Premier Oil Investments Limited, which will cover the cost of drilling and testing its Pearl-1 prospect. The drilling campaign should be in place by the second quarter of next year.  A lot of information on geology will come to light—before Taipan drills–from the Bahasi and Sala wells.

It was only in 2012 that Tullow and Africa Oil struck the first oil in Kenya. This makes a commercial production timetable of 2014 and export goal of 2016 an amazing success story and puts Kenya leaps and bounds ahead of its neighbors.  With a string of successes and money pouring into the country from major oil companies—over $100 million in deals have recently been announced—Kenya’s risk/reward ratio is tipping heavily into investor’s pockets.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Geopolitics/Africa/The-Big-Winners-in-Kenyas-Oil-Debut.html

By. James Stafford of Oilprice.com

 

Three Essentials to Look for in Junior Mining Equities: Derek Macpherson

Source: Brian Sylvester of The Gold Report (10/21/13)

http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/three-essentials-to-look-for-in-junior-mining-equities-derek-macpherson

Underappreciated companies and companies with management teams that have disappointed in the past can be opportunities to buy, not sell, says Derek Macpherson of M Partners. Don’t be dazzled by flashy drill results, he advises. In this interview with The Gold Report, Macpherson says that investors are better to look for junior explorers with long-term vision, high grades and simple operations in good jurisdictions, and names eight companies that make the grade.

The Gold Report: Derek, when it comes to junior mining equities you’re something like a shark cruising for prey, seeking an opportunity to strike. What common buying opportunities do you look for that other investors might overlook?

Derek Macpherson: We seek out assets that have been underappreciated or unjustly tossed aside, companies whose stories are starting to change. That change might be an operations turnaround, a turnover in the management team or a revision to the capital structure.

TGR: One of your recent research flashes reported on the Mexican government’s consideration of imposing a royalty on Earnings before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization (EBITDA) on companies that mine commodities in Mexico. Tell us about that.

DM: Whenever that topic comes up, it puts pressure on Mexican producers and developers. We are seeing the potential of a royalty getting priced in to those companies, and priced in as a worst case scenario.

Initial discussions centered on a 5% EBITDA royalty, which could affect company valuations significantly. However, Mexican mining companies are working with the government to find a more reasonable solution. If the proposal gets ratcheted down to a 2.5% EBITDA royalty or perhaps a 2% net smelter return, then company valuations could recover.

In Mexico, you want to look for companies that have low all-in cash costs. They will be somewhat insulated from the royalty because their margins won’t be as compressed as higher cost operations.

For example, we like Timmins Gold Corp. (TMM:TSX; TGD:NYSE.MKT), which sold off on the royalty news. We think the selloff was unjustified, because the company has generally low all-in cash costs and higher margins than many of its peers.

TGR: Timmins is expected to announce that the mine life at San Francisco could be extended 10 years. Would that attract a buyer?

DM: It could, but I don’t think Timmins is in the sweet spot for acquisition. The company is too small for a big company to acquire and too big for some of the midtier companies.

Once Timmins’ resource report comes out, the stock should move up as investor confidence improves. There has always been concern about Timmins’ long-term grade profile and the mine life at San Francisco. The pending resource update will answer those questions.

TGR: Your share target on Timmins is $3.20, correct?

DM: Yes, and we have a buy rating on Timmins. Considering its cash cost profile, Timmins is trading below three times 2014 EBITDA. If you look at the company’s low cash cost peers in Mexico, similar open-pit, heap-leach operations trade at six to eight times EBITDA. I think the resource update will improve investor confidence and we could see an upward rerating.

TGR: What other common events lead you to undervalued equities?

DM: One of the most obvious is when management teams disappoint; the mining space is littered with those.

In those instances, we look at the underlying value and whether the management team can turn the operation around. We ask ourselves if the selloff was excessive, potentially creating a buying opportunity if the damage is recoverable.

TGR: Do you think management teams are being punished too harshly for performance shortcomings?

DM: I think it’s partly a function of the commodity price environment. In a rising gold price environment, there was more room for error and setback didn’t have as large an impact on project economics.

In a volatile price environment, investors have shown very little patience. If production results or a resource update aren’t in line with projections or better, the market pushes the stock down.

TGR: Do you watch for seasonal opportunities, or has seasonality become less predictable?

DM: Seasonality has been a bit less predictable. It has been dampened, first, by gold being driven by macro events and, second, by it being technically traded.

This year, in particular, investors should be looking at the season for tax-loss selling. I expect to see an accelerated selloff near the end of 2013, as investors try to capitalize on their tax losses. This should create a buying opportunity for a lot of good stocks. This is the time for investors to do their homework and find the stocks they want to pick up as they sell off later in the year.

TGR: What types of stocks do you think will sell off more than others?

DM: I think it will be a function of the company’s year-to-date performance. Companies that had a tough time from January to October will be the most affected. That doesn’t speak to the quality of their projects, which could create buying opportunities.

TGR: News flow used to dry up in the summer and start to flow again in September with the publication of summer drill results. Does news flow still matter?

DM: To a certain extent, yes. Drill results became a bit of a selling opportunity or a liquidity event this summer. However, we are seeing that abate, particularly in September.

TGR: Haywood Securities produces a quarterly report on the junior exploration companies that looks out three months to forecast how the companies listed will perform quarter to quarter. Do you look for quarter-to-quarter performance or do you look more long term?

DM: In the junior exploration space, you have to look a little bit longer term. It often takes time and money to determine the value of a deposit. We try to look through flashy drill results that might move the stock over the short term but don’t necessarily indicate anything about a company’s long-term economic viability.

We try to hitch our wagon to companies that take a long-term approach to how they do their work and a long-term approach to driving value.

TGR: Can you give us an example of drill results that have moved a stock?

DM: Two base metals names are good examples: Colorado Resources Ltd. (CXO:TSX.V) and Gold Reach Resources Ltd. (GRV:TSX.V). Both have been hitting good results in northwest British Columbia. Both are near two of Imperial Metals Corp’s. (III:TSX) assets, a company we cover. Their results, even through this summer’s tough market, moved the stocks up. However, the market is very selective when rewarding good drill results. At the very least, it has to be a good project in a good location.

TGR: It also helps if your neighbor has a world-class asset.

DM: Yes, Colorado Resources benefits from being next to Red Chris. That provides an obvious synergistic solution for the company.

Imperial is building a 30,000 ton per day (30,000 tpd) mill at Red Chris, and there is likely more to come on its own property. I wouldn’t be in a rush to say that Colorado Resources is on its way to becoming part of Imperial. Imperial has its hands full maximizing the value of Red Chris over the medium term.

TGR: Speaking to those of our readers who are new to the junior mining space, what are some effective approaches for novice investors?

DM: You certainly need to account for commodity volatility. Pick companies that have lower risk and can withstand volatility.

When it comes to projects, we look for one of two things: a project needs to have very high grade, for example, Klondex Mines Ltd. (KDX:TSX; KLNDF:OTCBB), or it needs to be technically simple, such as Timmins Gold’s open-pit, heap-leach project. Having one of those two features can reduce the risk of your investment.

The next thing to be aware of is jurisdiction. In the current market, there is an increased discount for political or permitting risk, and for the additional capital expense (capex) needed to put infrastructure in a remote location. Consequently, we tend to focus on North America, Mexico and some South American jurisdictions. In South America we look for jurisdictions with an existing mining culture, which can mean focusing on a specific region or even town in a given country. Peru is a good example; mining is welcome in some areas and is more challenging in others.

TGR: What about playing the volatility itself in metals prices?

DM: That’s very difficult to do because investors have to guess right on which way metal prices go that day. If investors want to play that volatility through equities, they have to get into more leveraged names, which tend to have a higher risk balance sheet. Playing the volatility can be very difficult and very expensive if you guess wrong.

TGR: Your thesis seems to prefer companies with cash and those that can raise cash with low-cash projects. Is that accurate?

DM: Yes. That is, in part, a function of the current market environment. Klondex and Timmins are two examples of low-cash costs and clean balance sheets: Klondex, thanks to its recent equity raise and ability to self-fund development going forward and Timmins, which should see its balance sheet strengthen over the next several quarters as it starts to generate free cash flow.

Temex Resources Corp. (TME:TSX.V; TQ1:FSE) fits into that category as well as an exploration-stage company with an attractive project that should be able to finance in the current market environment. Its project has the potential to be a high-grade, low all-in cash cost producer. It has low capex to start and $6 million ($6M) in cash on May 31 of this year. This is the type of company likely to get funded in the current market environment.

TGR: Temex is trading at $3/ounce ($3/oz), when some of its peers are as high as $20/oz. What accounts for that discount?

DM: As you know, exploration-stage companies are not as popular as they once were. Temex is still at an early stage, and investors might not fully understand the low-capex and shortened path to production that the Whitney project represents.

I think Temex is an excellent investment in the current environment for two reasons. First, it is in a joint venture with Goldcorp Inc. (G:TSX; GG:NYSE) on the Whitney project near Timmins, Ontario. That’s shaping up to be a higher grade, low-tonnage underground project.

The project is within sight of Lake Shore Gold Corp’s. (LSG:TSX) Bell Creek mill and about 12 kilometers (12km) from Goldcorp Inc.’s Dome mill. However, the Whitney ore is likely to be higher grade than either of those mills currently run, and consequently could displace ore at one of those mills. The market is still unsure of how real that opportunity is. The updated resource due out from Temex should increase market confidence in its potential.

Second, the Juby project makes Temex a good investment for the next gold price environment. Juby is the kind of lower grade, high-tonnage project that’s been popular target for majors. It resembles Prodigy Gold Inc., Rainy River Resources Ltd. and Trelawney Resources Ltd.—all of which have been taken out. Already at 3.2 million ounces (3.2 Moz) gold, there is a lot of upside at Juby, as it is still early days.

TGR: How long would its $6M cash in hand keep Temex running?

DM: Probably into mid-2014.

TGR: Does the board have access to funds?

DM: The board is strong. Ian Campbell is the CEO and the board includes René Marion and Gregory Gibson, both of whom have good track records.

TGR: In September you published a research flash on Trevali Mining Corp. (TV:TSX; TREVF:OTCQX; TV:BVL) that said, “Trevali is currently trading at 3.5 times consensus 2015 EBITDA whereas other base metal producers trade closer to 5.4 times EBITDA.” Is that discount strictly zinc related?

DM: No, the flash was issued when concentrate production had just started at Santander, something the market had been waiting for. Trevali has now been operating for less than two months. The discount is related to the risk of being at such an early stage.

When it comes to zinc, Trevali is one of the few pure-play zinc producers in the midtier base metal space. The macro environment for zinc is looking very positive. With so few vehicles to play in that positive macro environment, Trevali could trade at a premium to its peers.

TGR: You recently visited the Santander mine in Peru.

DM: It was a good trip, and the operation appears to be ramping up smoothly now that the mill has started. The silver lining to the delays in getting the mill commissioned was that Trevali was able to ramp up the underground operations and get approximately 140,000 tonnes ahead of the mill. That is about two months of mill feed and gives the company lots of flexibility as it brings underground operations to a steady state. In our view, the mill is very close to its operating capacity already, after just over a month of operation.

TGR: What is the mill’s capacity?

DM: Full throughput is 2,000 tpd, although Trevali has talked about the potential to expand to 4,000 tpd. Based on what we saw—the mill and crushing capacity, the underground mining width and the amount of development—we think 4,000 tpd is achievable, but not for a couple of years. Before an expansion at Santander, Trevali will be working to restart the Caribou mine in New Brunswick.

TGR: Is it realistic to think that Trevali will be generating cash flow by the end of October?

DM: Based on what we saw, yes. While we were on-site, we saw concentrate shipments leaving the mill. Because Trevali gets paid within a couple weeks of the shipments being delivered to the port, it should be generating cash very soon.

TGR: Trevali has discovered some high-grade mineralization at Magistral Norte, which is part of the Santander complex. What do you know about that?

DM: Trevali was aware of the Rosa Vein but had done little exploration on it from surface because the deposit’s orientation made it difficult. Once underground, it became easier to explore this new zone. Initial results point to the potential for higher than resource grades.

The high-grade potential led to Trevali completing some initial development in the zone and we actually stood in that zone when we were on-site. This zone further increases Santander’s tonnes per vertical meter and supports our view that an expansion to 4,000 tpd is likely.

TGR: Where else have you visited lately?

DM: We went to Klondex Mines, where we were also impressed with the ramp up. Klondex has exceptionally high grade; Measured and Indicated grade is 44 grams/tonne (44 g/t) gold.

TGR: But it’s a very small resource. Could it be expanded?

DM: The resource is 720,000 oz; however, the grade has gone up substantially. While the previous resource was larger, the earlier resource methodology wasn’t suited for this type of deposit. The new management team reworked the resource with a more applicable methodology and consequently now has a higher quality resource. We believe there is opportunity to grow the resource.

Resource growth is likely to come from two areas. The first is additional exploration; generally speaking the property is underexplored, providing the opportunity to expand the resource along the existing veins, and add new ones. The second opportunity for growth is the mineralized halo. Unlike most narrow-vein deposits, the host rock is also mineralized; however, it’s not included in the existing resource. The halo could be included in future updates, as Klondex’s understanding of it increases. The other benefit of a mineralized halo is an effective reduction in mining dilution, which should also benefit project economics.

TGR: What can you tell us about Klondex’s toll milling arrangements?

DM: Klondex doesn’t have its own mill. Klondex has toll milling agreements with both Newmont Mining Corp. (NEM:NYSE) and Veris Gold Corp. (VG:TSX; YNGFF:OTCBB).

In the current environment, saving capex is important. It allows Klondex to get cash flow very quickly. In fact, it has already started receiving payments from its toll milling agreements.

This ability to generate cash in the near term should allow Klondex to continue exploring while doing the necessary development for steady-state operations. We model it reaching 500 tpd and producing over 80,000 oz gold in 2015; Klondex is able to fund the underground exploration drilling needed to meet these targets.

TGR: What other stories would you like to share with our readers today?

DM: Atico Mining Corp. (ATY:TSX.V; ATCMF:OTCBB) is making the rapid transition from being a base metal developer to a producer. The company recently exercised the option on the El Roble property in Colombia. Because El Roble was a producing asset, Atico will go from being a developer to a producer once it completes that agreement later this quarter.

El Roble historically has generated positive cash flow even though there is significant opportunity for the operations to improve. Applying new engineering and a modern approach should allow Atico to surface additional value. As Atico improves El Roble, the stock should move higher.

TGR: It sounds a little like Klondex.

DM: It is, as it’s also a high-grade, low-tonnage operation. The recent resource update for this Cu-Au-Ag deposit had copper equivalent grades above 6%.

As a result of exercising the option a few weeks ago, Atico should be generating positive operating cash flow by year-end.

TGR: In March, the share price was more than $1/share. Now it’s about $0.50/share. What happened?

DM: Early on, Atico had some pretty flashy drill results at El Roble, which drove the share price higher. However, Atico had to raise money to exercise the option—the last option payment was $14M. That probably put an overhang on the stock. It is also worth noting that the move down in the stock price coincided with the drop in commodity prices.

TGR: Atico just completed a number of financings as well.

DM: Yes, that money went toward two things. First was $14M to exercise the option on El Roble, which gives Atico 90% ownership of the asset. Additional funds were raised to reinvest in El Roble’s operations, allowing Atico to optimize the asset.

TGR: And the final name that you want to talk about today?

DM: That is Mega Precious Metals Inc. (MGP:TSX.V), an exploration-stage company in northeast Manitoba—a good jurisdiction.

Mega Precious is sitting on 3.6 Moz of 1.25 g/t gold and has defined resources over a 4km trend with a total potential strike length of 8km. And, it has yet to test three parallel structures. Obviously, this could be a real district play.

The really interesting thing about this story is the presence of a tungsten kicker. Management is re-assaying old core to determine how much tungsten is present. Based on results released to date, there could be as much as a 25–30% improvement in gold-equivalent grade from the inclusion of tungsten. This could significantly improve project economics with limited additional investment.

TGR: Do you have any parting thought for our readers?

DM: Even though markets are challenging for mining equities, some high-quality names have sold off, creating an opportunity for investors to get involved at a reasonable price. Despite the overhang that equity markets have put on the space, it will get better; it’s just a matter of when.

TGR: Derek, thanks for your time and insights.

Derek Macpherson Derek Macpherson is a mining analyst at M Partners; before joining M Partners he worked in mining research for a bank-owned investment dealer. Prior to entering capital markets, MacPherson spent six years working as a metallurgist. Macpherson has a Bachelor of Engineering and Management in materials science and a finance-focused MBA.

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: Timmins Gold Corp, Colorado Resources Ltd., Klondex Mines Ltd., Trevali Mining Corp. and Atico Mining Corp. Goldcorp Inc. is not affiliated with The Gold Report. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services or as sponsorship payment.

3) Derek Macpherson: 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: Klondex Mines Ltd, Timmins Gold Corp. and Temex Resources Corp. 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]

 

 

What’s Happening With Google?

Article by Investazor.com

Recently, the media unveiled the fact that Google Inc. is among the most valuable companies in the world with its shares  rising 14 percent to a record $1,011.41 per share. The boost in the price of shares was also sustained by the third-quarter revenue which cumulated $11.92 billion.

Investors are excited about the evolution of the company, believing that the upward trend will be maintained for at least the foreseeable future. Despite the fact that the search provider giant is making considerable investments and important changes withing the services and products offered to its customers, it is believed that further investments in this company are a safe choice.

One of the worrying investments of Google is Motorola Inc. (purchased for $12 billion) which now is bringing only 8% of the company’s revenue. Motorola’s revenues are smaller compared with the time before being incorporated in Google and now is still swinging between being a smart or an unprofitable investment.

In search of decreasing its prices, since the beginning of the year, Google Inc. has been promoting an advertising service called enhanced campaigns, highlighting the advantages of investing in  wireless devices. Obviously, everybody now is watching Google Inc. and is closing tracking the company’s cost per click.

To project a better image, Google is seriously investing time and resources in fighting cyberattacks. As part of the company’s Google Ideas initiative, it is offering free protection for websites against the so-called “distributed denial-of-service”. Moreover, it is being launched a digital attack map to show real-time cyberattacks around the world. As an extension to all these innovations, Google is working on a new browser aimed to offer a safe way to navigate the internet, protecting the user from surveillance and filtering.

The post What’s Happening With Google? appeared first on investazor.com.