Notable Quotes
"FMS' Lac Knife has M&I resources of approximately 8 Mt and is still open." (2/7/12) Focus Metals Inc. - The Critical Metals Report Interview with Jack Lifton More >
"We do not know of any other graphite deposit in the world that has NGC's scalability." (2/7/12) Northern Graphite Corporation - The Critical Metals Report Interview with Jack Lifton More >
"LYD increased its Indicated resources by 111%" (2/7/12) Lydian International Ltd. - Morning Coffee More >
"G could be the best overall return in five years." (2/6/12) Goldcorp Inc. - The Gold Report Interview with Byron King More >
"NG could be quite rewarding to a patient resource investor." (2/6/12) NovaGold Resources Inc. - The Gold Report Interview with Byron King More >
"MFL is a one-trick pony, but it's one heck of a pony." (2/6/12) Minefinders Corp. - The Gold Report Interview with Byron King More >
"RV has multiple catalysts from a diversified asset base." (2/3/12) Revolution Resources Corp. - The Gold Report Interview with Joe Mazumdar More >
"Tests indicated NGC's jumbo flake is superior to Chinese graphite." (2/2/12) Northern Graphite Corporation - Morning Coffee More >
Fear, Gold and the Dollar
Source: Frank Holmes, U.S. Gold CEO and Chief Investment Officer (2/8/10)
The U.S. dollar is up this week against the euro out of fear of how debt problems in Greece and elsewhere in Europe will be resolved, and as a result gold has had a tough week. The dollar’s rally appears to be a short-term safe haven move, rather than a response to improving economic conditions in the U.S.
The U.S. dollar is up this week against the euro out of fear of how debt problems in Greece and elsewhere in Europe will be resolved, and as a result gold has had a tough week.
The dollar’s rally appears to be a short-term safe haven move, rather than a response to improving economic conditions in the U.S.
In fact, Friday’s report of a net loss of 20,000 jobs in December (the expectation was for a net gain in employment) and that many thousands more would-be workers have given up looking for jobs is evidence that the economy remains somewhat weak.
This weakness makes it less likely that the Federal Reserve will play it safe by not raising interest rates, and more likely that Congress and the Obama administration will pump more financial stimulus money into the system.
Both keeping rates near zero and expanding the monetary base are negative for the dollar, and thus positive for gold. We’ve seen that after a period of money-supply tightening in December and January, it appears that money is loosening again.
The federal deficit is pegged at more than $1 trillion this year and more than $8 trillion through 2019—this will slowly weigh on the dollar. On top of that, the TARP money being repaid by banks is not being removed from the monetary base—we shouldn’t be surprised if that money is used as a stimulus booster shot ahead of the 2010 midterm elections.
Our gold-dollar oscillator (above) shows that the dollar is approaching being overbought over the past 60 trading days, while the gold is showing signs of being oversold.
The magnitude of the current spread between gold and the dollar typically means that both could be close to a price reversal—dollar heading back and gold back up toward the mean.
In the 1990s, a strong dollar was associated with a strong U.S. economy, but the current one-month dollar rally has been accompanied by a drop in the S&P 500. With most of the world’s economic growth coming in emerging markets, many U.S. companies are relying on overseas sales to drive revenue and profit growth. A stronger dollar hurts U.S. companies trying to thrive in the global marketplace.
This is clearly evident in the illustration below. Here you can see that the world has changed and a strong stock market is aided by a weaker dollar.







