Technology, Consumer Shares Pull Down US stocks

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The U.S. stock market seemed to be on good footing headed into spring, but the slide that began last week continued as technology and consumer shares dropped before the start of corporate earnings season, according to Bloomberg. Stock options traders need to be on the lookout for clues as to which way major company earnings reports will trend, as this can enable them to predict market volatility.

For example, if traders believe technology and consumer shares will recover from the recent slide, a digital option can be used to profit from these market fluctuations by placing a call on a certain stock. Essentially, this means an investor believes a stock will end up above the entry price after the expiration of the contract.

Kate Warne, investment strategist at Edward Jones & Co., told Bloomberg this market slide could impact investors in a number of ways.

“Will investors see this as an opportunity to buy the dip, or do they stay on the sidelines and wait to see earnings strength in the first quarter?” Warne said. “The fundamentals remain pretty good, but sentiment can change quickly, as we saw on Friday.”

According to USA Today, stocks that took the biggest hit were those that had been on hot streaks, including Facebook, Tesla and Amazon. More positive economic reports could help reverse these declines. For example, if consumer spending and employment pickup in the coming months, technology and consumer shares may rise.

Stock options traders should be on the lookout for signs that the economy is improving. For instance, numerous publications, such as Bloomberg, report estimates of spending and employment, which could prove helpful when trying to trade profitably.

The post Technology, Consumer Shares Pull Down US stocks appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Two Buddies Pocket a Million Bucks, Then Get Busted…

By WallStreetDaily.com Two Buddies Pocket a Million Bucks, Then Get Busted…

I founded Wall Street Daily directly in the teeth of one of the scariest times in U.S. history – the Financial Crisis.

The first broadcast was sent to readers on December 3, 2008.

In the days leading up to that inaugural broadcast, the Dow Jones Industrial Average had fallen 2,552 points.

Everyone told me that I was crazy for launching a financial publication during such times.

They told me that the market was dead.

Some were even saying that the Dow could fall all the way to zero!

Well, not only did I send the first article to readers that day, but I even had the nerve to include a “Buy” recommendation on a stock.

We recommended buying shares of greentech company, Met-Pro Corporation.

It was up by double digits almost immediately, and the economic recovery hadn’t even begun yet!

How’d we do it? Solely on the merits of great research…

Met-Pro’s bookings had just hit record levels in the latest quarter, and its market-leading range of pollution-control products were certain to keep the registers ringing, despite the prospect of economic chaos.

Instantly, I had proof that great research trumps all.

And literally hundreds of winning stock recommendations later, Wall Street Daily is now one of the largest financial publications in the world.

Cheaters Never Win…

I told you about the origins of Wall Street Daily to nicely juxtapose a completely opposite story, one that occurred a few blocks away from our Baltimore, Maryland headquarters.

The story is about three buddies who decided to cheat, rather than work hard.

All three attended the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, which is known for having a rigid code of conduct, and graduating officers who exhibit “exemplary character.” (So much for that, right!?)

The antagonist in this Shakespearean-like tragedy is John Femenia, a former investment banker with Wells Fargo Securities.

Turns out, Femenia is a cheat, who tipped off his buddies about a big takeover in the energy industry.

Although the news wasn’t public yet, Femenia knew that Chicago Bridge & Iron had agreed to buy out its rival, Shaw Group, for $3 billion. (His firm was considering whether to finance the transaction.)

The Two Dumbest People of the Week…

Walter Wagner and Alexander Osborn win the honor for acting on the tip from Femenia.

According to the FBI’s investigation, dubbed “Operation Insider Out,” the two men invested ahead of the takeover news with purchases of both shares and call options.

Seriously, guys? Our analysts here at Wall Street Daily regularly track unusual trading patterns. And if we’re tracking such patterns, you can bet the FBI and SEC do it infinitely better than us.

Yet Wagner and Osborn failed to realize this simple fact…

“Wagner and Osborn had never bought stock or call options in The Shaw Group, yet they suddenly spent significant portions of their available cash resources to make sizeable purchases in the weeks preceding the public announcement of the acquisition,” said William P. Hicks, Associate Director for Enforcement in the SEC’s Atlanta Regional Office.

When the deal was officially announced, Shaw Group’s stock shot 55% higher in a single day.

The tandem collectively pocketed nearly $1 million in profits.

The Fallout…

Wagner has agreed to plead guilty to one count of insider-trading conspiracy, and now faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

He also agreed to surrender the $517,784 he pocketed by cheating, plus interest.

The SEC’s litigation against Osborn, who pocketed $439,830, continues.

And as for the ring leader, Femenia…

He’s already been barred from the securities industry, but the case against him runs much deeper.

The FBI’s investigation shows that Femenia built an entire network of friends and acquaintances to place profitable trades using his insider information.

The insider-trading scheme netted its participants $11 million.

Bottom line, you get an edge in the market by working your ass off and doing great research. There are never any shortcuts. Trying to anticipate announcements and takeovers is all part of the game. (The critical word being “anticipate.”)

We did it successfully with Met-Pro Corporation. Ironically, Met-Pro was ultimately bought out by CECO Environmental Corp. The deal was valued at approximately $210 million, or $13.75 per share – reflecting a 43% premium to Met-Pro’s share price.

Ahead of the tape,

Robert Williams
Founder, Wall Street Daily

The post Two Buddies Pocket a Million Bucks, Then Get Busted… appeared first on Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: Two Buddies Pocket a Million Bucks, Then Get Busted…

EURUSD stays in the downward price channel

EURUSD stays in the downward price channel on 4-hour chart, and remains in downtrend from 1.3966, the rise from 1.3672 is likely consolidation of the downtrend. Resistance is located at the upper line of the channel. As long as the channel resistance holds, the downtrend could be expected to resume, and next target would be at 1.3600 area. On the upside, a clear break above the channel resistance will indicate that the downtrend had completed at 1.3672 already, then the following upward movement could bring price to 1.4000 zone.

eurusd

Provided by ForexCycle.com

BOJ maintains policy, demand to take hit from tax rise

By CentralBankNews.info
    The Bank of Japan (BOJ) kept its monetary policy steady, as expected, and said Japan’s economy was expected to continue its moderate recovery but this would be “affected by the subsequent decline in demand following the front-loaded increase prior to the consumption tax hike.”
    The BOJ, which one year ago launched an aggressive easing program to rid Japan of some 15 years of deflation, again said inflation expectations appeared to be rising and the annual inflation rate, excluding the impact of the April 1 rise in the sales tax to 8 percent from 5 percent, was likely to be around 1.25 percent for some time.
    Financial markets are speculating that the BOJ may launch another round of quantitative easing in coming months if the impact of the higher sales tax has a large negative impact on the economy.
    Japan’s Gross Domestic Product expanded by 0.2 percent in the fourth quarter of last year for annual growth of 2.6 percent, the third quarter of accelerating growth.
    The BOJ has acknowledged that consumers have been purchasing goods in the months prior to the rise in the sales tax but expects the economic recovery to continue despite a temporary drop in demand in the months ahead.

    Japan’s inflation rate rose to 1.5 percent in February from 1.4 percent in January and the BOJ reiterated that it would continue with its quantitative and qualitative easing for as long as it is necessary to achieve its aim of boosting inflation to 2.0 percent.
    In April 2013 the BOJ changed its monetary policy framework and started to focus on boosting the country’s monetary base – cash in circulation and banks’  reserves – by an annual 60-70- trillion yen to 270 trillion by the end of this year from 138 trillion at the end of 2012.
    In a separate statement, the BOJ said the monetary base has risen to 220 trillion at the end of March from 205 trillion end-February.
    The BOJ is increasing the monetary base by purchasing Japanese government bonds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), Japanese real estate investment trusts, commercial paper and corporate bonds.

    http://ift.tt/1iP0FNb

   

Why I Prefer This Expensive Technology Stock to a Cheap Retail Stock

By MoneyMorning.com.au

California is the home of tech stocks.

Google [NASDAQ:GOOG], Facebook [NASDAQ:FB], and Oracle [NASDAQ:ORCL] all call California home.

They are among the biggest technology stocks on the market.

Your editor’s hotel here in San Diego is just a stone’s throw from the HQ of another tech giant, Qualcomm [NASDAQ:QCOM].

Tech stocks took a beating on Friday when the NASDAQ index fell 2.6%. Today the NASDAQ index fell 1.6%.

Is this the end of the technology stock rally? Is this dot-com bust mark two? Is it time to go back to good old-fashioned bricks and mortar?

Based on our experience here in Southern California, we wouldn’t be so quick to draw that conclusion. Given the choice, we’d happily buy technology stocks at these prices and sell a group of stocks that really are at death’s door.

It’s advice that translates well to the Australian share market too…

The mainstream has been falling over themselves to draw attention to last Friday’s tech stock slump.

For some time we’ve heard the wailing about crazy-high valuations.

Much of that attention has focused on another US west coast giant (Washington state-based) Amazon.com Inc [NASDAQ:AMZN].

Even though the stock has fallen 19% since the start of the year, it’s still trading at a price to earnings ratio (PE) of 552-times. That’s expensive by anyone’s standards.

But here’s the important thing. It’s not just about how a stock’s value shapes up today, it’s about where the valuation could be in the future. That’s why even with a PE of 552-times earnings, we’d rather buy Amazon.com stock than the stock of another group of companies.

Buy for a bargain or short sell to zero?

On this trip to San Diego we’re staying in the La Jolla (pronounced La Hoya) area, a northern suburb about 15 minutes from downtown.

Naturally, we’ve spent some time checking out the area, including the nearby Westfield [ASX:WDC] owned UTC open air shopping mall.

As far as malls go, it’s a great combination of mall and ‘high street’ shopping strip. It’s easy for parking, and there’s a good variety of stores, as you’d expect from a typical ‘high street’ shopping area.

Of course, as with any mall, there are always the ‘anchor tenants’. In this case it’s the big department store retailers Sears [NASDAQ:SHLD], Macy’s [NYSE:M], and Nordstrom [NYSE:JWN].

After spending 20 minutes wandering through each of Macy’s, Sears and Nordstrom, we came away with the feeling that the stock of these companies must be either a rock-bottom turnaround play (the type that Jason Stevenson looks for in resource stocks) ready for a contrarian investor to pounce, or that they are ripe for short sellers to beat them into the ground.

We would only know the answer for sure after checking out each company’s recent stock price movements, and their financials.

Even favourable demographics can’t help these stocks

In terms of stock price performance, it turns out it has been a mixed bag:


Source: Google Finance
Click to enlarge

Over the past five years Sears has fallen 20%, Nordstrom has gained 185%, and Macy’s has piled on an amazing 476%.

If we can put that in perspective for a moment, Amazon.com stock has climbed 358% over the same period.

In terms of financials, Amazon.com generates about three times as much revenue as Macy’s. Amazon.com’s revenue for the last financial year was US$74.5 billion. However, using the same financial year, Macy’s generated a profit of US$1.5 billion compared to just US$274 million for Amazon.com.

Now, although current revenue and profit is important, as a stock investor it’s more important to consider the future.

Let’s go back to our brief experience in these three department stores on Saturday. The UTC shopping mall was a hustling and bustling throng of people of all ages. As an open-air mall it was a perfect shopping day with the temperature in the high teens.

The queue for the craft beer festival in the mall’s centre square was a good 60–70 metres long. And most of the individual stores appeared to have good foot traffic and plenty of ringing tills.

We can’t say the same for the three department stores. While the demographic of shoppers in the rest of the mall spanned the age spectrum, in the department stores the average age was 60-plus…if not 70-plus.

But that wasn’t the biggest problem. With an ageing population, you could argue that the ‘old way’ of shopping is here to stay. But it’s not. The atmosphere in the department stores was more like a morgue than a thriving retail experience.

Most of the old folks appeared happier flitting in and out of the specialty stores along with the rest of the crowd rather than facing the risk of tripping over frayed-edge carpet and travelling on rickety escalators.

So what’s our point?

There’s more to a stock story than PE ratios

It was just a coincidence, but it was an appropriate one. While strolling through Westfield UTC we noticed the big video display showing the latest news.

It announced that Amazon.com was launching a delivery service to ship fresh produce to people’s homes.

Amazon.com — the company that almost singlehandedly helped to destroy book retailing, and which is in the process of killing off department stores, is now taking aim at another branch of retailing, grocery stores.

In short, yes we get it that Amazon is trading at a crazy valuation, but PE ratios don’t always tell the full story. Macy’s current PE is 15-times earnings. By any conventional comparison it should be easy to say that Macy’s is a buy and Amazon.com is a sell.

But looking at current PE ratios isn’t always the best way to value a stock. You have to do more than that. You have to consider the future. It’s clear the old department store style of retailing is reaching an end.

It’s happening here in the US, and it’s happening in Australia too. Retailing is at a key juncture. Consumers have spoken. They want two things. They want smaller, boutique style specialty stores where they can browse and find unique things.

And most of all they want an efficient online experience. That’s what Amazon.com gives its customers, and generally, it’s what the traditional department stores don’t.

We know which stock we’d rather own.

Cheers,
Kris+

PS: Small-cap analyst Tim Dohrmann recently touched on a similar point in Australian Small-Cap Investigator. In the monthly issue he highlighted a tiny company that could become the ‘Amazon’ of the Aussie market as it ramps up its local online business. It’s an intriguing story and a great opportunity that has only just become available to Aussie investors. Click here to find out how to get the inside scoop on this tiny Aussie success story…

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: Mining Boom Act II

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Apple Will Lose the Smartphone Wars

By MoneyMorning.com.au

The legal battles surrounding mobile devices, the so-called ‘smartphone patent wars’, are absolutely fascinating.

Last week saw Samsung and Apple limbering up for another US courtroom drama, with Apple claiming to be the great innovator. We’re all supposed to believe that smartphones didn’t exist before they came up with their iPhone. While it’s true Apple came up with a great product, can they really claim a monopoly on rounded corners on a rectangle? Or perhaps a patent on a sliding switch?

I mean, I’ve always enjoyed the beautifully crafted rounded corners on my oak-cased Roberts radio. And come to think of it, it also had a sliding switch! What gives?

Of course, those in the know tell me there’s much more to it than that…but is there really? It strikes me that Apple is exhibiting the classic symptoms of a monopoly power that’s losing its grip.

The courtroom battle may well be between Apple and Samsung. But be under no illusion. The real battle is between Google and Apple.

And in this battle, I’ve already nailed my colours to the mast. Apple is fighting to maintain its slot as the globe’s top company. But Google is nipping at its heels and no amount of courtroom drama will keep Apple from being toppled.

This Time Samsung Has Backup

You’ll often hear it said that when it comes to courtroom battles, it’s the guy with the biggest chequebook that wins. And Apple certainly has a fat chequebook.

But it’s not as if Samsung hasn’t got a decent legal team of its own. It has! And I strongly believe that justice prevails in the end. Already it seems Judge Lucy Koh’s Californian courtroom is starting to lose patience with Apple’s monopolistic ambitions.

After all, this isn’t the first time Apple has dragged Samsung into the courtroom. In the first foray, Apple was awarded just shy of a billion dollars in damages. But in reality, the skirmish was seen as a win for Samsung. The firm was still able to sell its units in the States, and Apple was told to pipe down on most of its claims.

This time round, Samsung is also likely to have Google on its side. The Wall Street Journal reports that Google engineers, including former Android Chief Andy Rubin, may testify.

Google will be a lot more front and centre than in previous cases,’ claims Michael Carrier, a patent expert and law professor at Rutgers University in New Jersey. ‘Google vs. Apple makes it more of a clash of the titans on the same turf.

And don’t forget, Google also has a considerable patent portfolio. A few years back, Google bought Motorola in a deal that netted little more than a library of patents. Google later sold the actual phones business at a massive loss.

It seems that this courtroom drama will be a series of claims by Apple, followed by a whole host of counter-claims from Samsung (aided and abetted by Google).

Apple is Turning into a Bully

I’ve never been a fan of Apple’s ‘closed-wall’ approach to technology. That is, how it ties users in to its software, hardware and ‘family’ of online products. The business model is based on a monopolistic game-plan. Now, don’t get me wrong, Apple has every right to pursue its business model as it likes.

But public perception is starting to go the wrong way for Apple. Journalists jibe Apple, suggesting that perhaps French cheese makers should await court papers from Apple for patent infringement on the rounded corners on a lump of Roquefort!

Nobody likes a bully. And that’s increasingly what Apple looks like.

The fact of the matter is that competition is a delicate balance between innovation and copycat production.

I mean, you only have to look at the fashion industry. The minute a new dress hits the catwalk, the copycats get to work. Next, Primark, you name it. They unapologetically release clone products as soon as they possibly can. That is not to say that these things are Versace, or Prada. It’s just that imitation is the best form of flattery — and imitation should be allowed.

Apple is pushing its case too strongly. Now, that may be just my opinion, but there’s evidence that the courts are increasingly taking this opinion too. The courts are getting bored of the patent wars. Increasingly patents are being used to stifle innovation, rather than enable it. And that’s the complete opposite to the intent of patents in the first place.

Of course, they’re not the only ones. All the big tech companies play the patent game and suffer patent syndrome. It’s just that Apple is increasingly looking like the giant trying to trample on the rest of the industry.

And as these trials drag through the courts, the battle on the ground continues. And Android devices are winning. What’s more, with hundreds of Android manufacturers competing against each other in this space, there’s no doubt where the genuine innovations are now coming from

Apple has had its day in the sun. Now all it can do is try to fight to maintain its innovations of yesteryear. And we’re all getting bored of it.

Bengt Saelensminde,
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Ed Note: The above article was originally published in MoneyWeek.

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Crude Oil triangle pattern set to break this week

While everyone has been focusing on Crude Oil futures crossing the round $100.00 handle back and forth, the struggle to find a clear direction has led to higher swing lows and lower highs, hence the market is stuck in a triangle pattern. With a distance of less then $2 between the triangle resistance and it’s support, as price is nearing the tip of the formation, we should see this struggle come to an end in the coming days.

Crude Oil 8th April

The 61.8% Fibonacci retracement bounces, first for the drop from $112.13 to $91.33, followed by the perfect 61.8% Fibonacci correction to $102.21 for March’s bearish swing, have led wave analysts to consider the possibility that a downward continuation is in play. This scenario will be invalidated if price will rally above $102.21. Activating the stop losses accumulated above this level will help the market make rise towards $104.19 – $105.20, where sellers would once again have their long term bearish view put to the test.

With most major moving averages already stationed inside the triangle formation, there is little point in picking any other first support other than 98.85, the most recent swing low on the support trendline. A bearish triangle breakout is unlikely to reverse at $98.10, the 100-Day Moving Average, since the logical downtrend scope is the formation of a lower low below $97.35.

*********
Prepared by Alexandru Z., Chief Currency Strategist at Capital Trust Markets

 

 

 

 

 

Ted Dixon: What Gold Stock Insider Trading Tells Us

Source: Kevin Michael Grace of The Gold Report (4/7/14)

http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/ted-dixon-what-gold-stock-insider-trading-tells-us

Despite the recent big gains in gold stocks, company insiders and institutional investors are still 2.5 times more likely to be buyers than sellers. According to Ted Dixon, co-founder and CEO of INK Research, this shows that those in the know are still quite bullish, despite the pullback in March. In this interview with The Gold Report, Dixon names the top insider buyers by dollar amount and by volume and explains how investors should interpret this data.

  The Gold Report: The price of gold fell more than 6% in March. To what do you attribute this?

Ted Dixon: Gold took a one-two punch in late March. The first was the widening of the renminbi trading ban in China by 2%, which added extra costs to buying and hedging gold. The second was the surprisingly hawkish tilt of the U.S. Federal Reserve, pointing to interest rates rising a little bit sooner. Tighter monetary conditions do not usually benefit gold.

TGR: Increased import duties in India haven’t reduced gold buying there. Why would China be different?

TD: I think the flows are different. In China, there is a lot of financial activity related to gold, whereas in India gold buying is cultural and driven by consumer consumption.

TGR: We’ve heard about greatly increased governmental buying in China, have we not?

TD: There have been rumors of that, and the Chinese media has called for the government to boost its gold reserves. That could provide a longer-term counterbalance to the shorter-term renminbi pressure.

TGR: DataQuick’s latest U.S. national homes sales snapshot shows that “prices are flatlining or drifting lower while sales are sinking like a stone.” Meanwhile, “The big private equity firms [are] exiting the [housing] market.” These data don’t suggest a U.S. economic recovery, do they?

TD: Basically, insiders are telling us that stock prices now have priced in a lot of good news, so it would be interesting to see how they react to whips to the downside. One has to be cognizant that much of the U.S. equities rally has been driven by the Fed and, arguably, has little to do with GDP growth one way or the other.

TGR: With regard to this hawkish tilt, it has been assumed for several years that we’d see higher interest rates and an end to quantitative easing (QE) only after an economic recovery. Given how weak the U.S. economy remains, can we assume that the Fed believes it is close to exhausting the utility of zero interest rates and quantitative easing?

TD: The Fed has a big ticking time bomb on its balance sheet. It is still piling up reserves, and I’d love to be a fly on the wall in staff meetings that don’t get reported. I have to assume there is much concern about what happens to those reserves, particularly if the economy does surprise on the upside. In this sense, the low-altitude economy has been a blessing for the Fed.

We may have a little game of bluff going on here. The Fed is taking a hawkish stance now, saying it has to move rates up earlier, but, of course, if the economy remains weak, and the Fed has to backtrack, that opens up risks on the other side. The Fed has been running a big monetary policy laboratory over the past few years, and sometimes in laboratories accidents happen. At this point, however, the stock market seems to have assigned a very little risk premium to something bad happening.

TGR: It has been argued that if you remove the Fed’s monthly stimulus from the monthly GDP report, GDP is actually shrinking, not growing.

TD: The Fed has certainly manipulated the economy. It has picked its favorite sectors, housing and autos. I believe that Operation Twist and QE have hurt the commodities base because they have favored interest-sensitive industries. Now, however, these industries will have to stand on their own two feet, and we’ll see how this experiment in industrial policy works out. Usually, planned economies have a day of reckoning when stimulative measures run out of steam.

TGR: Your company, INK Research, tracks the legally reported buying and selling by public company executives and institutional investors. What does this tell us about the status of individual companies in particular, and the gold sector in general?

TD: In general, U.S. market-insider indicators have been languishing at 25% for a long time. Insiders do not see very many bargains. This suggests that value strategies are going to be very important going forward if you’re looking to make money in the broad market.

A year ago, in the gold sector, insider buying went through the roof as the prices of gold and gold equities tumbled down. This was a bit early, but it basically confirmed a bottom in the equities last spring. The S&P composite gold index finally moved above 1,800 and then pulled back, with some insider selling into that run-up. We’re seeing a measured profit taking. It’s nice that there can be some profit taking in the gold sector, given how beat up it’s been, but money has come off the table, and that could foreshadow some short-term weakness.

TGR: As of March 24, 2014, your INK sentiment indicator of Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX)-listed stocks is 85.2%. What does that figure mean?

TD: It means there’s less insider buying than trading. At 100%, you have an equal amount of insider buys and sales. So the indicator rating is Overvalued.

TGR: For the TSX Venture-listed stocks in total, the figure is 341.1%.

TD: Right. That includes not just gold stocks but also the other miners and technology and energy juniors. But the TSX Venture Exchange is heavily weighted toward junior mining.

For the overall TSX gold sector, the indicator is 250%. So we’re seeing 2.5 companies with insider buying for every one that’s selling. This means that gold stock insiders are still quite bullish, despite the recent pullback.

TGR: And that indicator reading equals Undervalued?

TD: Right. The junior miners have been toughing it out for years. The TSX Venture Index moved 20% above its 2013 lows in March, and it’s been a long time coming. The insiders were early, but they’re not packing their bags now.

TGR: You publish a list of Top 50 Insider Buys by dollar amount over the past 60 days. What’s the significance of this?

TD: The dollar amount is a good initial screen to examine. Of course, you want to look at it with regard to the overall market cap of the company. So $1 million ($1M) bought in a large-cap company is not as significant as $1M bought in a medium- or micro-cap company. We also look at both the company’s valuation and its price direction because they put the insiders’ signals in context.

For example, if a stock is going up and there’s a lot of insider buying, that could mean insiders are buying into the news. On the other hand, if the stock has fallen and there’s a lot of insider buying, that could signal a value opportunity, that the market has overreacted. Then you want to dig a little deeper and see who specifically in the company is doing the buying.

TGR: Which gold and silver miners are in the Top 50 insider net buying by dollar volume as of March 24?

TD: B2Gold Corp. (BTG:NYSE; BTO:TSX; B2G:NSX) is No. 13 with $579,106, Wildcat Silver Corp. (WS:TSX.V) is No. 17 with $411,030, Premier Gold Mines Ltd. (PG:TSX) is No. 18 with $401,660, Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX:TSX; ABX:NYSE) is No. 25 with $335,720, IAMGOLD Corp. (IMG:TSX; IAG:NYSE) is No. 32 with $221,188, Treasury Metals Inc. (TML:TSX) is No. 35 with $192,760, Rusoro Mining Ltd. (RML:TSX.V) is No. 38 with $154,600 and Roxgold Inc. (ROG:TSX.V) is No. 48 with $120,000.

TGR: To what extent can insider buying be attributed to confirmation bias? In other words, this must be a good company, otherwise I wouldn’t be working for it.

TD: That is something to be aware of. There may be examples of that, but we find that insiders tend to buy when they think they can make money. They are usually pretty picky, and they usually like to spot opportunities for bargains. And one has to keep in mind again that insiders tend to be early, and I think that’s a more important consideration than confirmation bias.

The one big exception to this is when companies issue good news, and insiders buy. This could be a signal that the market hasn’t yet fully priced in that news.

TGR: Pretty much every company in the list above has seen a significant share price fall in the second half of March. To what extent, particularly among the juniors and the micro caps, could insider buying be seen as an attempt to bolster investor confidence?

TD: That’s why we must look at each stock individually. In addition, it’s best to look at insider signals on a portfolio basis. We’ve found that when investors have a portfolio of stocks that use insider signals as a key input, they are going to have a few big winners, a number of stocks that do better than the market and a number that do worse. Investors certainly want to avoid the tendency to zero in on one company on an insider-buy basis and then put all their eggs in one basket. That would not be prudent.

TGR: How often do you track insider buying and selling?

TD: All our indicators are updated overnight, like a rolling poll. They are aggregated across the sectors, so they tend to even out company-specific situations. We update individual companies daily because, as I mentioned, when a news release comes out, it could change company fundamentals. So we want to see how insiders react to that change.

TGR: How about Barrick, in particular? It took a hit March 24 after a Barron’s article cited a Credit Suisse Group analyst who continued to rate Barrick and Newmont Mining Corp. (NEM:NYSE) shares Neutral. Would the insider buying and selling in the days after this event be pretty significant?

TD: In our view, it would be. We don’t consider analysts ratings’ in our models, but investors can do both and compare, if they like.

TGR: What does it tell you when Barrick has had so much bad news lately, and yet it appears in the Top 50 list of insider buying by dollar amount?

TD: Well, insiders as a group are suggesting that the prospects for Barrick going forward are likely pretty good. It doesn’t mean the numbers wouldn’t get dragged down should the gold price take a tumble, but there’s enough insider buying there for us to have put Barrick in the top 30% of all stocks we rank. Our rankings are not an investment recommendation, of course.

TGR: How about other majors? In your interview with The Gold Report last year you said that it was “nice to see” that Goldcorp Inc.’s (G:TSX; GG:NYSE) chairman had bought shares. How does this company look in that regard lately?

TD: We’ve seen with Goldcorp some insider selling related primarily to insider compensation. It’s not unusual, but it has taken place at the same time as the post-December rally. Insider holdings at Goldcorp have remained fairly steady.

TGR: Which gold and silver miners are in your Top 50 insider net buying by share volume over the last 60 days as of March 24? There seem to be a lot of names, so how about only those in the first 25?

TD: Rusoro is No. 3 with 5,155,000; Quia Resources Inc. (QIA:TSX.V) is No. 6 with 3,920,000 shares; Manson Creek Resources Ltd. (MCK:TSX.V) is No. 17 with 1,679,500 shares; Currie Rose Resources Inc. (CUI:TSX.V) is No. 18 with 1,500,000 shares; Crown Gold Corp. (CWM:TSX.V) is No. 19 with 1,500,000 shares; Eskay Mining Corp. (ESK:TSX.V) is No. 20 with 1,460,000 shares; and Silver Predator Corp. (SPD:TSX) is No. 22 with 1,395,000 shares.

TGR: How significant is this data?

TD: Actual volume is another good first screening, but most of the companies that appear here tend to be small. When stocks are light traders with market caps under $20M, you’ve got to do more homework to ascertain what might be motivating insider activity. Is this company a value proposition, or is something else going on? You want to take a good look at the company’s management and its cash position.

TGR: Arian Resources Corp. (ARC:TSX.V; 0GT1:FSE) closed a $2.78M private placement March 24. Of the 18M units sold, 800,000–that’s $120,000 worth–were bought by members of that company’s advisory board. What does this data tell us?

TD: I can’t comment on a specific transaction, but, in general, when there are private placements you want to look at the terms. If they are reasonable, and management is participating, then it’s positive. But, of course, every deal is different, so that’s why we focus on public-market activity, which is more of a standard measure.

TGR: Your Top 3 INK Edge Quick Wins Q4/13 has Wesdome Gold Mines Ltd. (WDO:TSX) at No. 3, up 50%. What can you tell us about this?

TD: Our Morning Hour Report stocks use our INK Edge process, which looks at insider activity, valuation and price rank. We call it VIP criteria of valuation, insiders and price, and what we’re looking for is the stocks that have insider buying that are good value and have good price strength. That’s what we scour the market for every day.

TGR: So based on your various indices, which stocks stand out in insider buying, good value and good price strength?

TD: I’ll repeat the caution that investors should take a diversified approach. I’ve already mentioned Barrick, which ranks quite well on our screens. Looking at other stocks with high amounts of key insider buying as of March 24, the company with the second-highest amount over the last 30 days is Endeavour Mining Corp. (EDV:TSX; EVR:ASX); it also has a mostly sunny outlook according to our INK Edge, which puts it in the top 30% of all stocks ranked.

Teranga Gold Corp. (TGZ:TSX; TGZ:ASX) is also in our top 30% of all stocks ranked. It has a mostly sunny INK Edge outlook. Arian Resources is No. 4 in insider buying and Amarillo Gold Corp. (AGC:TSX.V) is No. 5. But we do not rank the last two stocks due to their small sizes. These might be stocks for investors with very high risk tolerances to take a look at.

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

Ted Dixon is co-founder of INK Research (Insider News and Knowledge), Canada’s first online financial news and research service dedicated to providing data on public company insider trading. (Free services are found on CanadianInsider.com and InsiderTracking.com.) He worked previously for Connor, Clark & Lunn Financial Group in portfolio strategy and product development, the Fraser Institute as an analyst, TD Bank as a treasury specialist and the Vancouver Stock Exchange as a floor trader. He has lectured in corporate finance at the BC Institute of Technology and is a Chartered Financial Analyst and member of CFA Vancouver. He holds a Master of Business Administration in financial management from the University of Chicago.

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 recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Streetwise Interviews page.

DISCLOSURE:

1) Kevin Michael Grace conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report and The Mining Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an independent contractor. He owns, or his family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None.

2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: Premier Gold Mines Ltd. and Roxgold Inc. Goldcorp Inc. is not associated with Streetwise Reports. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.

3) Ted Dixon: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. 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. Directors, officers, employees or members of their families are prohibited from making purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise during the up-to-four-week interval from the time of the interview until after it publishes.

Streetwise – The Gold Report is Copyright © 2014 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.

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

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<p>Source: Kevin Michael Grace of <i><a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/“>The Gold Report </a></i>(4/7/14)</p>

<p><a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/ted-dixon-what-gold-stock-insider-trading-tells-us“>http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/ted-dixon-what-gold-stock-insider-trading-tells-us</a></p>

<p><a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/htdocs/expert.html?id=9254“></a><a name=”_”></a>Despite the recent big gains in gold stocks, company insiders and institutional investors are still 2.5 times more likely to be buyers than sellers. According to Ted Dixon, co-founder and CEO of INK Research, this shows that those in the know are still quite bullish, despite the pullback in March. In this interview with <i><a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/” target=”_blank”>The Gold Report</a>,</i> Dixon names the top insider buyers by dollar amount and by volume and explains how investors should interpret this data. </p>

<p><b><i>The Gold Report:</i> </b>The price of gold fell more than 6% in March. To what do you attribute this?</p>

<p><b>Ted Dixon:</b> Gold took a one-two punch in late March. The first was the widening of the renminbi trading ban in China by 2%, which added extra costs to buying and hedging gold. The second was the surprisingly hawkish tilt of the U.S. Federal Reserve, pointing to interest rates rising a little bit sooner. Tighter monetary conditions do not usually benefit gold.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> Increased import duties in India haven’t reduced gold buying there. Why would China be different?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> I think the flows are different. In China, there is a lot of financial activity related to gold, whereas in India gold buying is cultural and driven by consumer consumption.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> We’ve heard about greatly increased governmental buying in China, have we not?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> There have been rumors of that, and the Chinese media has called for the government to boost its gold reserves. That could provide a longer-term counterbalance to the shorter-term renminbi pressure.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> DataQuick’s latest U.S. <a href=”http://www.unz.com/mwhitney/housing-one-chart-says-it-all/” target=”_blank”>national homes sales snapshot</a> shows that “prices are flatlining or drifting lower while sales are sinking like a stone.” Meanwhile, “The big private equity firms [are] exiting the [housing] market.” These data don’t suggest a U.S. economic recovery, do they? </p>

<p><b>TD:</b> Basically, insiders are telling us that stock prices now have priced in a lot of good news, so it would be interesting to see how they react to whips to the downside. One has to be cognizant that much of the U.S. equities rally has been driven by the Fed and, arguably, has little to do with GDP growth one way or the other. </p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> With regard to this hawkish tilt, it has been assumed for several years that we’d see higher interest rates and an end to quantitative easing (QE) only after an economic recovery. Given how weak the U.S. economy remains, can we assume that the Fed believes it is close to exhausting the utility of zero interest rates and quantitative easing?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> The Fed has a big ticking time bomb on its balance sheet. It is still piling up reserves, and I’d love to be a fly on the wall in staff meetings that don’t get reported. I have to assume there is much concern about what happens to those reserves, particularly if the economy does surprise on the upside. In this sense, the low-altitude economy has been a blessing for the Fed.</p>

<p>We may have a little game of bluff going on here. The Fed is taking a hawkish stance now, saying it has to move rates up earlier, but, of course, if the economy remains weak, and the Fed has to backtrack, that opens up risks on the other side. The Fed has been running a big monetary policy laboratory over the past few years, and sometimes in laboratories accidents happen. At this point, however, the stock market seems to have assigned a very little risk premium to something bad happening. </p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> It has been argued that if you remove the Fed’s monthly stimulus from the monthly GDP report, GDP is actually shrinking, not growing. </p>

<p><b>TD:</b> The Fed has certainly manipulated the economy. It has picked its favorite sectors, housing and autos. I believe that Operation Twist and QE have hurt the commodities base because they have favored interest-sensitive industries. Now, however, these industries will have to stand on their own two feet, and we’ll see how this experiment in industrial policy works out. Usually, planned economies have a day of reckoning when stimulative measures run out of steam.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> Your company, INK Research, tracks the legally reported buying and selling by public company executives and institutional investors. What does this tell us about the status of individual companies in particular, and the gold sector in general?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> In general, U.S. market-insider indicators have been languishing at 25% for a long time. Insiders do not see very many bargains. This suggests that value strategies are going to be very important going forward if you’re looking to make money in the broad market. </p>

<p>A year ago, in the gold sector, insider buying went through the roof as the prices of gold and gold equities tumbled down. This was a bit early, but it basically confirmed a bottom in the equities last spring. The S&amp;P composite gold index finally moved above 1,800 and then pulled back, with some insider selling into that run-up. We’re seeing a measured profit taking. It’s nice that there can be some profit taking in the gold sector, given how beat up it’s been, but money has come off the table, and that could foreshadow some short-term weakness.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> As of March 24, 2014, your INK sentiment indicator of Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX)-listed stocks is 85.2%. What does that figure mean?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> It means there’s less insider buying than trading. At 100%, you have an equal amount of insider buys and sales. So the indicator rating is Overvalued.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> For the TSX Venture-listed stocks in total, the figure is 341.1%.</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> Right. That includes not just gold stocks but also the other miners and technology and energy juniors. But the TSX Venture Exchange is heavily weighted toward junior mining. </p>

<p>For the overall TSX gold sector, the indicator is 250%. So we’re seeing 2.5 companies with insider buying for every one that’s selling. This means that gold stock insiders are still quite bullish, despite the recent pullback. </p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> And that indicator reading equals Undervalued?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> Right. The junior miners have been toughing it out for years. The TSX Venture Index moved 20% above its 2013 lows in March, and it’s been a long time coming. The insiders were early, but they’re not packing their bags now.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> You publish a list of Top 50 Insider Buys by dollar amount over the past 60 days. What’s the significance of this?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> The dollar amount is a good initial screen to examine. Of course, you want to look at it with regard to the overall market cap of the company. So $1 million ($1M) bought in a large-cap company is not as significant as $1M bought in a medium- or micro-cap company. We also look at both the company’s valuation and its price direction because they put the insiders’ signals in context. </p>

<p>For example, if a stock is going up and there’s a lot of insider buying, that could mean insiders are buying into the news. On the other hand, if the stock has fallen and there’s a lot of insider buying, that could signal a value opportunity, that the market has overreacted. Then you want to dig a little deeper and see who specifically in the company is doing the buying.</p>

<p><b>TGR: </b>Which gold and silver miners are in the Top 50 insider net buying by dollar volume as of March 24?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/819” target=”_blank”>B2Gold Corp. (BTG:NYSE; BTO:TSX; B2G:NSX)</a> is No. 13 with $579,106, <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/824” target=”_blank”>Wildcat Silver Corp. (WS:TSX.V)</a> is No. 17 with $411,030, <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/534” target=”_blank”>Premier Gold Mines Ltd. (PG:TSX)</a> is No. 18 with $401,660, <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/20” target=”_blank”>Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX:TSX; ABX:NYSE)</a> is No. 25 with $335,720, <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/682” target=”_blank”>IAMGOLD Corp. (IMG:TSX; IAG:NYSE)</a> is No. 32 with $221,188, <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/2138” target=”_blank”>Treasury Metals Inc. (TML:TSX)</a> is No. 35 with $192,760, <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/1070” target=”_blank”>Rusoro Mining Ltd. (RML:TSX.V)</a> is No. 38 with $154,600 and <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/3926” target=”_blank”>Roxgold Inc. (ROG:TSX.V)</a> is No. 48 with $120,000. </p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> To what extent can insider buying be attributed to confirmation bias? In other words, this must be a good company, otherwise I wouldn’t be working for it.</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> That is something to be aware of. There may be examples of that, but we find that insiders tend to buy when they think they can make money. They are usually pretty picky, and they usually like to spot opportunities for bargains. And one has to keep in mind again that insiders tend to be early, and I think that’s a more important consideration than confirmation bias.</p>

<p>The one big exception to this is when companies issue good news, and insiders buy. This could be a signal that the market hasn’t yet fully priced in that news.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> Pretty much every company in the list above has seen a significant share price fall in the second half of March. To what extent, particularly among the juniors and the micro caps, could insider buying be seen as an attempt to bolster investor confidence?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> That’s why we must look at each stock individually. In addition, it’s best to look at insider signals on a portfolio basis. We’ve found that when investors have a portfolio of stocks that use insider signals as a key input, they are going to have a few big winners, a number of stocks that do better than the market and a number that do worse. Investors certainly want to avoid the tendency to zero in on one company on an insider-buy basis and then put all their eggs in one basket. That would not be prudent.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> How often do you track insider buying and selling? </p>

<p><b>TD:</b> All our indicators are updated overnight, like a rolling poll. They are aggregated across the sectors, so they tend to even out company-specific situations. We update individual companies daily because, as I mentioned, when a news release comes out, it could change company fundamentals. So we want to see how insiders react to that change.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> How about Barrick, in particular? It took a hit March 24 after a <i>Barron’s</i> article cited a Credit Suisse Group analyst who continued to rate Barrick and Newmont Mining Corp. (NEM:NYSE) shares Neutral. Would the insider buying and selling in the days after this event be pretty significant? </p>

<p><b>TD:</b> In our view, it would be. We don’t consider analysts ratings’ in our models, but investors can do both and compare, if they like.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> What does it tell you when Barrick has had so much bad news lately, and yet it appears in the Top 50 list of insider buying by dollar amount?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> Well, insiders as a group are suggesting that the prospects for Barrick going forward are likely pretty good. It doesn’t mean the numbers wouldn’t get dragged down should the gold price take a tumble, but there’s enough insider buying there for us to have put Barrick in the top 30% of all stocks we rank. Our rankings are not an investment recommendation, of course.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> How about other majors? In your <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/na/15372” target=”_blank”>interview</a> with <i>The Gold Report</i> last year you said that it was “nice to see” that <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/23” target=”_blank”>Goldcorp Inc.’s (G:TSX; GG:NYSE)</a> chairman had bought shares. How does this company look in that regard lately?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> We’ve seen with Goldcorp some insider selling related primarily to insider compensation. It’s not unusual, but it has taken place at the same time as the post-December rally. Insider holdings at Goldcorp have remained fairly steady.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> Which gold and silver miners are in your Top 50 insider net buying by share volume over the last 60 days as of March 24? There seem to be a lot of names, so how about only those in the first 25?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> Rusoro is No. 3 with 5,155,000; <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/4953” target=”_blank”>Quia Resources Inc. (QIA:TSX.V)</a> is No. 6 with 3,920,000 shares; <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/1315” target=”_blank”>Manson Creek Resources Ltd. (MCK:TSX.V)</a> is No. 17 with 1,679,500 shares; <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/1462” target=”_blank”>Currie Rose Resources Inc. (CUI:TSX.V)</a> is No. 18 with 1,500,000 shares; <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/2864” target=”_blank”>Crown Gold Corp. (CWM:TSX.V)</a> is No. 19 with 1,500,000 shares; Eskay Mining Corp. (ESK:TSX.V) is No. 20 with 1,460,000 shares; and <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/3451” target=”_blank”>Silver Predator Corp. (SPD:TSX)</a> is No. 22 with 1,395,000 shares. </p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> How significant is this data?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> Actual volume is another good first screening, but most of the companies that appear here tend to be small. When stocks are light traders with market caps under $20M, you’ve got to do more homework to ascertain what might be motivating insider activity. Is this company a value proposition, or is something else going on? You want to take a good look at the company’s management and its cash position.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/6214” target=”_blank”>Arian Resources Corp. (ARC:TSX.V; 0GT1:FSE)</a> closed a $2.78M private placement March 24. Of the 18M units sold, 800,000–that’s $120,000 worth–were bought by members of that company’s advisory board. What does this data tell us?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> I can’t comment on a specific transaction, but, in general, when there are private placements you want to look at the terms. If they are reasonable, and management is participating, then it’s positive. But, of course, every deal is different, so that’s why we focus on public-market activity, which is more of a standard measure.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> Your Top 3 INK Edge Quick Wins Q4/13 has <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/579” target=”_blank”>Wesdome Gold Mines Ltd. (WDO:TSX)</a> at No. 3, up 50%. What can you tell us about this?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> Our Morning Hour Report stocks use our INK Edge process, which looks at insider activity, valuation and price rank. We call it VIP criteria of valuation, insiders and price, and what we’re looking for is the stocks that have insider buying that are good value and have good price strength. That’s what we scour the market for every day.</p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> So based on your various indices, which stocks stand out in insider buying, good value and good price strength?</p>

<p><b>TD:</b> I’ll repeat the caution that investors should take a diversified approach. I’ve already mentioned Barrick, which ranks quite well on our screens. Looking at other stocks with high amounts of key insider buying as of March 24, the company with the second-highest amount over the last 30 days is <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/3698” target=”_blank”>Endeavour Mining Corp. (EDV:TSX; EVR:ASX)</a>; it also has a mostly sunny outlook according to our INK Edge, which puts it in the top 30% of all stocks ranked. </p>

<p><a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/4020” target=”_blank”>Teranga Gold Corp. (TGZ:TSX; TGZ:ASX)</a> is also in our top 30% of all stocks ranked. It has a mostly sunny INK Edge outlook. Arian Resources is No. 4 in insider buying and <a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/co/2056” target=”_blank”>Amarillo Gold Corp. (AGC:TSX.V)</a> is No. 5. But we do not rank the last two stocks due to their small sizes. These might be stocks for investors with very high risk tolerances to take a look at. </p>

<p><b>TGR:</b> Ted, thank you for your time and your insights.</p>

<p><i><a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/pub/htdocs/expert.html?id=9254” target=”_blank”>Ted Dixon</a> is co-founder of INK Research (Insider News and Knowledge), Canada’s first online financial news and research service dedicated to providing data on public company insider trading. (Free services are found on CanadianInsider.com and InsiderTracking.com.) He worked previously for Connor, Clark &amp; Lunn Financial Group in portfolio strategy and product development, the Fraser Institute as an analyst, TD Bank as a treasury specialist and the Vancouver Stock Exchange as a floor trader. He has lectured in corporate finance at the BC Institute of Technology and is a Chartered Financial Analyst and member of CFA Vancouver. He holds a Master of Business Administration in financial management from the University of Chicago.</i></p>

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<p><b>DISCLOSURE:</b> <br />
1) Kevin Michael Grace conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of <i>The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report </i>and <i>The Mining Report,</i> and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an independent contractor. He owns, or his family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. <br />
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of Streetwise Reports: Premier Gold Mines Ltd. and Roxgold Inc. Goldcorp Inc. is not associated with Streetwise Reports. Streetwise Reports does not accept stock in exchange for its services.<br />
3) Ted Dixon: I own, or my family owns, shares of the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally am, or my family is, paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. My company has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. 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. <br />
4) Interviews are edited for clarity. Streetwise Reports does not make editorial comments or change experts’ statements without their consent. <br />
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 <a href=”http://streetwisereports.com/disclaimer/” target=”_blank”>disclaimer</a>

.<br />
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<p>Streetwise – <i><a href=”http://www.theaureport.com/“>The Gold Report</a></i> is Copyright © 2014 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.</p>

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Is Trouble Brewing In Japan?

Capital Trust Markets – Early this week, a number of key Japanese fundamental data will offer insight into the state of the Japanese economy. Trade and monetary policy is in the spotlight, as traders and investors continue to scrutinize the effect of the ongoing aggressive Japanese stimulus package. The package looks to be working, but looking a little deeper, is Japan heading for trouble?

First, a short history lesson. The lost decade, or two decades, depending on who you ask, have been covered in depth, but it’s worth a quick recap to introduce the situation. In short, throughout the 1970s and 1980s in Japan, low interest rates and excessive monetary easing fueled a huge speculative asset bubble. House prices, land prices and stocks boomed to unsustainable levels, and in response, the Bank of Japan raised interest rates sharply. The raise caused a wave of default, which led to the effective collapse of the Japanese financial system. The collapse fueled a sustained period of deflation, pretty much right the way through until 2012. At the end of 2012, Japan appointed Shinzo Abe as its Prime Minister, and things started to change. His “three arrows” policy, combining fiscal stimulus, monetary easing and structural reforms has started to tackle deflation, and many suggest he is responsible for helping Japan avoid prolonged and serious recession.

However, some have suggested all is not as it seems. Proponents of Abe’s policies point to the increase in CPI starting from June last year as a signal of Abenomics’ effectiveness. Yes, inflation has returned, but core inflation, is still a way behind its raw data counterpart. Why? As is so often the case, it’s all about supply. The nuclear power accident in Japan led to a closing of all the nation’s nuclear stations, which means it is no longer self-sufficient in terms of power production. This shortage of supply (coupled with the increased cost of imported energy as a result of the weakened Yen) increases energy costs, which distorts CPI.

Another problem comes from the increasing government debt. Japan’s current gross public debt is approximately $10T, equating to about 250% of its GDP. Couple this with Japan’s famously aging population (and the near term pension levels this infers), and you get the makings of a potential crisis. An April sales tax hike, from 5%-8%, it intended to counter this potential crisis, but it could just as easily damage consumer spending. Slowing consumer spending could undo the positives of Abenomics and, once again, send Japan into a drawn out deflationary period.

To add balance, Abenomics has sparked an increase in employment, a booming stock market, increased industrial production and rising GDP. In short, all is not doom and gloom. However, traders need be aware that aggressive expansionary policy has consequences, and it can only be a matter of term before they surface.

 

Written by Samuel Rae – Currency Strategist at Capital Trust Markets

Capital Trust Markets is a fully regulated and compliant online Forex Brokerage, offering a flawless trading environment to traders of all types. The world class trading infrastructure – backed up by advanced trading tools and cutting edge trading software and technology – is combined with award winning customer support to provide a highly successful blend of customized trading solutions.