BullMarketRun   BullMarketRun.com

A Daily, Vibrant Voice Focused on Speculative Opportunities,
Commodities, and Economic & Political Trends Impacting
The Resource Sector & Equity Markets
 

"Market-Trouncing Returns Through Unbeatable
Technical & Fundamental Analysis of Niche Sectors"

September 22, 2011

BMR Morning Market Musings From Rouyn-Noranda

Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec

A loss of confidence is the theme this morning…markets are rapidly losing confidence in the general economic outlook, not to mention the ability of political leaders (and institutions) to effectively manage the current difficulties…assets are taking a hit across the board today…as of 10:45 am Eastern, Gold is off $54 an ounce at $1,727 while Silver has dropped $2.74 to $36.88…Copper has fallen below key support we outlined yesterday, confirming in our view that a significant global economic slowdown is now upon is…Copper has lost 27 cents to $3.53, its lowest level since September of last year…Crude Oil has fallen $4.08 a barrel to $81.84 while the U.S. Dollar Index has climbed two-thirds of a point to 78.44…folks, this is not a pretty picture…what’s makes the difficult economic situation in the United States and Europe even more problematic is the lack of political leadership…the United States is beset with one of its worst Presidents in history who’s also a lame duck with the 2012 elections likely to seal his fate (at the moment, though, there is no obvious successor)…the political climate in the U.S. is miserable and it’s likely only going to get worse…given the Fed’s warnings yesterday regarding the economic outlook, and fresh numbers this morning showing the private sector in retreat in China and Europe, economic conditions around the globe are likely to deteriorate though whether we actually enter another global recession is open to debate…

As John has repeatedly stated in recent weeks, Gold is in a consolidation stage and is vulnerable to drop even more…keep in mind we’re anticipating a powerful reversal to the upside during the fourth quarter that could carry the yellow metal past $2,000 an ounce (and producers in particular should explode)…below is a 6-month daily chart for Gold from John based on yesterday’s close showing the various support levels…

Below is a Gold chart we posted about a month ago when John brought up the possibility of Gold declining to just above $1,600 per ounce – that appears to be the worst-case scenario and wouldn’t even put a dent into Gold’s long-term bull run…

Support has not held on the CDNX at 1700 or 1675 and the Index has plunged to 1617 as of 10:45 am Eastern, a decline of 87 points…this is now looking more like a bear market than a bull market looking for a bottom…more than ever, it’s important to focus only on juniors with strong cash positions, superior management and high quality (preferably advanced-stage) projects…even the companies with great properties are taking a beating at the moment…Kaminak Gold (KAM, TSX-V), which is developing its Coffee Project in the White Gold District of the Yukon, has slipped to $3.12…it’s clearly in oversold territory but in this market many investors are afraid of trying to catch a “falling knife”, no matter how solid a company may appear to be…below is John’s chart update for KAM

We are clearly in a period of intense market volatility and during times like this, pricing mistakes occurRichmont Mines (RIC, TSX), for example, plunged almost $2 per share this morning from yesterday’s close of $13.10…15% was wiped off the company’s market cap in just 30 minutes of trading…it has since bounced back to $12.53…indiscriminate selling by investors always occurs during times like this as common sense is thrown out the window and emotions rule…yes, the market very much operates on greed and fear…

Richmont Mines’ CEO Interview Part 3: “Our Bosses Are The Shareholders”

Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec

As exciting as Richmont Mines‘ (RIC, TSX) Wasamac Property is, this is a company with many other positive factors in its favor.  This morning, Jon completes his three-part interview with Richmont’s President and CEO Martin Rivard by reviewing everything from RIC’s under-appreciated Monique Property to the CEO’s outlook for Gold

BMR Interview (Part 3, Sept. 21) With Richmont CEO

Richmont Mines' President and CEO Martin Rivard with a Wasamac map in the Richmont board room.

Independent Research and Analysis of Emerging Junior Resource Companies: Speculative, Undervalued, Home Run Opportunities in Today’s Markets

Welcome to our site, or at least the initial version of it!  BMR has been online for two years and strictly through word-of-mouth we have built a loyal following. 

We’re continuing with our plans to ultimately build a very unique investment and money-management resource site that goes considerably beyond what we have now.  While we focus very much on the Gold market and trends in the global economy, and of course the technical health of the TSX Venture Exchange (CDNX), an important component of this site will always be original research on undiscovered junior exploration companies or small producers, mostly in the Gold exploration space, that offer very real and significant upside potential. We are extremely selective in the companies we feature and put forward to investors – we prefer quality over quantity.  However, investors must understand that these are still highly speculative situations and entail considerable risk, volatility and unpredictability.  Our stock coverage is for informational and entertainment purposes only and must not be viewed or interpreted as “buy”, “sell” or “hold” recommendations. Always perform your own due diligence and please read our disclaimer at the bottom.

We use a combination of fundamental and technical factors in determining the value and potential of a stock.  In terms of fundamentals we look for a company with a superb project supported by strong management.  Management must possess integrity, solid ethics and a determination to succeed and build shareholder value.

At BullMarketRun (BMR) we approach the handling of money from a biblical perspective and this is an important topic we will be sharing with our readers (and listeners) as the site continues to develop. The Bible teaches so much about money and how to handle it and invest it –  there are literally thousands of verses on how we should handle the money and possessions that God entrusts us with.  By examining the life of Jesus and reading the Word of God, we can all become fully equipped to be successful investors and handle money wisely.  If it’s the other way around –  if you’re a slave to money by being in debt for instance, or if you don’t respect the value of money and spend it foolishly –  you’re in trouble and you’ll never be blessed financially.  We have a God who thinks big – He created the universe – and He wants us to think big  in every area of our lives.  When we handle money from a Biblical perpective (His money that we have been given stewardship of) He will bless our financial decisions and an increase of tenfold or a hundredfold is always possible.  This all begins, of course, with a personal relationship with Jesus Christ by accepting Him as your Lord and Savior and putting Him at the throne of your life.  It is the most important decision you’ll ever make.

God Bless,

Terry Dyer

Owner/Publisher, www.BullMarketRun.com

Disclaimer:

BullMarketRun.com (BMR) is completely independent from any companies it covers.  BMR accepts no compensation of any kind from any groups, individuals or corporations for coverage of any company mentioned on this site.  We accept no advertising either.  Our stock coverage is for informational and entertainment purposes only and must not be viewed or interpreted as “buy”, “sell” or “hold” recommendations. No investment opinion or other advice is being rendered on any stock or company. We strongly recommend that you consult with a qualified investment adviser, one licensed by appropriate regulatory agencies in your legal jurisdiction, and do your own due diligence and research before making any investment decisions. The stocks we cover, by definition, are highly speculative and potentially very volatile. Investors are cautioned that they may lose all or a portion of their investment if they make a purchase or short sale in these speculative stocks.  We are not Registered Securities Advisers. Our opinions can only be construed as a solicitation to buy and sell securities when they are subject to the prior approval and endorsement of a Registered Securities Adviser operating in accordance with the appropriate regulations in your area of jurisdiction. It should be assumed that BMR personnel, writers and their associates may hold or dispose of or trade in positions in any securities mentioned herein at any time.  Owner/Publisher of BullMarketRun.com is Terry Dyer of Langley, British Columbia.

Forward Looking Statements:

All statements in BMR’s reports, other than statements of historical fact, may be forward-looking statements. These statements relate to future events or future performance. Forward-looking statements are often but not always identified by the use of words such as “seek”, “anticipate”, “plan”, “continue”, “estimate”, “expect”, “may”, “will”, “project”, “predict”, “potential”, “targeting”, “intend”, “could”, “might”, “should”, “believe” and similar expressions. These statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties and other factors that may cause actual results or events to differ materially from those anticipated in such forward-looking statements.

September 21, 2011

VGD Updated Chart

It was an ugly day on the markets overall and Visible Gold Mines (VGD, TSX-V) was not immune from the selling pressure.  Just last week, VGD was as high as 43.5 cents – more than double where it was at the end of June which has made it one of the best-performing stocks on the CDNX since that time.  The reason for investor enthusiasm regarding VGD has made perfect sense – Visible Gold Mines has enjoyed early exploration success at its Wasa Creek and Wasa East Properties immediately adjacent to Richmont Mines’ (RIC, TSX) growing Wasamac deposit 15 kilometres west of Rouyn-Noranda.  This is one of the most important and exciting exploration areas along the entire Cadillac Trend at the moment as we’ve been pointing out to our readers.  Today, Richmont hit another new all-time high of $13.39 – nearly double where it was just over a month ago.

There’s a very good chance the Wasamac area could host additional deposits, and no company is better positioned to make another discovery than Visible Gold Mines which controls a total land position of 6,000 hectares immediately east, west and south of the Wasamac Property.  They have advanced their Wasa Creek Property in rather remarkable fashion in just three months, thanks to a top-notch geological crew led by Robert Sansfacon.

What’s unfortunate for Visible Gold Mines‘ sake is that Pinetree Capital’s (PNP, TSX) Sheldon Inwentash has sold over 300,000 shares since the middle of last week (he’s classified as an “insider” simply because his company, Pinetree, holds a 10% position in VGD).  That seems to have rattled the nerves of some investors though making buy and sell decisions based on what an “insider” does can be dangerous.  Who knows why Inwentash sold some VGD, or even if he’s aware of it (yes, individuals of his stature with positions in so many companies don’t necessarily make their own trades – they often have others doing that for them).  Insider trading reports show that no VGD directors or management have been selling stock.

We encourage investors to stay focused on the “big picture” with Visible Gold Mines. VGD is blessed with one of the finest geologists in all of Quebec (Sansfacon), the company is in a strong cash position ($4.2 million with an exploration credit of approximately $2 million coming from the Quebec government), it has two first-rate exploration projects (Lucky Break including Wasa Creek and Wasa East, and Joutel), and it’s aggressive which we like.  At today’s closing price of 32.5 cents, VGD has a modest market cap of just $15.4 million.

Given today’s events, we asked John for an updated chart on VGD to get a technical perspective on what’s happening.  Interestingly, the stock has retraced exactly to the Fibonacci 50% level. Some of the selling today was technically-driven but there appears to be strong support at and immediately below today’s closing price.

Note:  Both John and Jon hold positions in Visible Gold Mines.

BMR Morning Market Musings From Rouyn-Noranda…

Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec

Markets are quiet and Gold is down slightly in advance of an important Fed statement expected at 2:15 pm Eastern…as of 11:15 am Eastern, the yellow metal is off $8 an ounce at $1,797…Silver is up 60 cents at $40.34, Copper is up a penny at $3.77, Crude Oil is flat at  $86.89 while the U.S. Dollar Index has jumped one-fifth of a point to 77.16…all eyes are on Ben Bernanke again today as he’s expected to launch the 2011 version of an early 1960’s join Fed-Treasury action to push down long-term interest rates, “Operation Twist”…in a rare move, the Republican Congressional leadership yesterday sent a letter to Bernanke telling him that further Fed action could harm the economy and erode the dollar…the letter was signed by House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio), House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.), Senate Minority leader Mitch McConnel (R-Ky.) and Senator Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.)…they also wrote that Bernanke should resist further intervention and there’s no evidence additional monetary stimulus will create jobs or help the economy…the fact that members of Congress are taking aim at the Fed, rightly or wrongly, is another example of how politically and ideologically divided the U.S. is at the moment…

Greece is being blackmailed by the markets and Europe is not managing the crisis as quickly and as decisively as it should, Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos stated today…the Greek government, a victim of its own financial mismanagement and incompetence, will make announcements later today on austerity measures it’s discussing with its international lenders to save the country from bankruptcy, a government spokesman said…the writing in our view, however, appears to be on the wall…sooner or later, Greece will fall into bankruptcy…

One of the biggest challenges investors face in the junior resource market is knowing whether or not they can actually trust a company to do what it says it’s going to do…an excellent case in point is GoldQuest Mining (GQC, TSX-V) which we have followed closely at BMR for the past year or so…GoldQuest unquestionably has a high quality land package in the Dominican Republic where it has been exploring for a decade…it also holds a promising lead-zinc-Silver deposit in Spain with a significant 43-101 compliant resource…in February, we interviewed GQC Chairman Bill Fisher – highly respected in the industry – and he clearly laid out for us and our readers the GoldQuest game plan for the balance of 2011 which involved drilling of three different properties and steady news flow…as it turned out, drilling only took place at La Escandalosa…another phase of drilling was proposed for that property during the second half of the year, according to an April 19 news release from new President and CEO Julio Espaillat…needless to say, investors were really caught off guard Monday when GoldQuest announced a proposed merger with Takara Resources (TKK, TSX-V)…ultimately, the merger could work out well but valued GoldQuest at just under 14 cents (in our view, a very low-ball valuation for GQC) based on last Friday’s closing prices for GQC and TKK (16.5 cents and 8.5 cents, respectively)…GoldQuest closed at 15 cents yesterday while Takara finished at half that price, 7.5 cents…a GQC shareholder will receive 1.63 shares in TKK for each share of GQC…furthermore, Fisher brought up the possibility in Monday’s news release of a 1-for-4 rollback once the merger is approved, and a private placement financing of $6 million prior to the commencement of any drilling…while it may work out in the long run, this is indeed a bizarre turn of events for GoldQuest and certainly the last thing we had anticipated given what Fisher told us (and our readers) in the February interview…we’re disappointed with the ratio and we envision a situation where institutions will be lining up at the trough for a cheap $6 million financing, paper that they will later want to unload on retail investors…yes, sorry to say, but the retail investor is getting screwed here…GoldQuest shareholders are speaking quite loudly through the market this morning as GQC has dipped as low as 13 cents on CDNX volume of 350,000 shares…this is certainly not the only example of a company not carrying out what it stated it would do – this problem is widespread – which means investors must be especially careful and discerning…a good practice is to review several years of company news releases and look for consistency and follow-through…

The CDNX is sitting near important support…it’s off 7 points at 1721 as of 11:15 am Eastern…John’s updated CDNX chart shows critical support at 1700 and 1675…

We do have more interviews and stories to post over the next couple of days from Rouyn-Noranda…Richmont Mines (RIC, TSX) hit a new all-time high yesterday of $13.29…it’s currently up 3 cents at $12.98 after dipping as low as $12.73 this morning…Visible Gold Mines (VGD, TSX-V), exploring a very attractive land package in the immediate vicinity of the growing Wasamac deposit, is off half a penny at 37.5 cents…

Seafield Resources (SFF, TSX-V) has released positive results for the initial scoping level metallurgical testwork on its Miraflores property in the Quinchia District of Colombia…testwork was performed on 14 samples taken from five drill cores from the Miraflores deposit…the samples consisted of the Gold-bearing white breccia and rock flour breccia rock types associated with the Miraflores breccia pipe…the samples were combined into a single composite sample, with a weight of approximately 10 kilograms, to form a bulk sample for metallurgical testing….the testwork returned gravity recoveries as high as 94.3% for Gold and 62.3% for Silver…testing continues…a preliminary economic assessment for Miraflores is expected to be completed during the first quarter of next year…Seafield also reported this morning it expects to release more drill results from Dos Quebradas within the next four weeks…new President and CEO Carlos Lopez is doing an excellent job with this company…Seafield is up half a penny at 22 cents…

A regular reader brought to our attention a company yesterday by the name of Argex Mining (RGX, TSX-V)…the stock looks interesting simply from a technical point of view…we caution we have not had time to perform any significant due diligence on the company’s fundamentals…Argex claims it has adopted a simple and low-risk strategy for the scale-up of its proprietary process that allows it to produce high purity TiO2 directly from its 100% owned deposit, the La Blache Fe-Ti-V property located in the Manicouagan region here in Quebec – approximately 120 km northwest of the Baie-Comeau on the north shore of the St. Lawrence River…on May 18, RGX released a 43-101 resource estimate for La Blanche…the company stated, “It (the resource estimate) demonstrates that the La Blache Property is a significant titanium and vanadium resource and a high-grade iron resource. Importantly, the titanium dioxide ore grade is high compared with most major titanium ores currently being mined around the world, and the vanadium grades are higher than what was expected and that the homogeneity of the mineralization at East Hervieux and West Hervieux shows that orebody has great consistency that should work well with the process flow sheet for the hydrometallurgical plant developed by Process Research Ortech”…RGX has 89 million shares outstanding and reported working capital of $4 million as of June 30…below are two charts from John on RGX that are definitely interesting but we encourage our readers, as always, to perform their own due diligence…

September 20, 2011

What Obama Doesn’t Understand About Job Or Wealth Creation

Below is the full testimony of Peter Schiff, a respected American economist, author and commentator, when he recently appeared before the U.S. House Subcommittee on Government Reform and Stimulus.  Schiff is also the President of Euro Pacific Capital.  As President Ronald Reagan famously stated in his 1981 First Inaugural address, “In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem.”

How The Government Can Create Jobs

Peter Schiff, September 13, 2011

Mr. Chairman, Mr. Ranking member, and all distinguished members of this panel. Thank you for inviting me here today to offer my opinions as to how the government can help the American economy recover from the worst crisis in living memory.

Despite the understandable human tendency to help others, government spending cannot be a net creator of jobs. Indeed many efforts currently under consideration by the Administration and Congress will actively destroy jobs. These initiatives must stop. While it is easy to see how a deficit-financed government program can lead to the creation of a specific job, it is much harder to see how other jobs are destroyed by the diversion of capital and resources. It is also difficult to see how the bigger budget deficits sap the economy of vitality, destroying jobs in the process.

In a free market jobs are created by profit seeking businesses with access to capital. Unfortunately Government taxes and regulation diminish profits, and deficit spending and artificially low interest rates inhibit capital formation. As a result unemployment remains high, and will likely continue to rise until policies are reversed.

It is my belief that a dollar of deficit spending does more damage to job creation than a dollar of taxes. That is because taxes (particularly those targeting the middle or lower income groups) have their greatest impact on spending, while deficits more directly impact savings and investment. Contrary to the beliefs held by many professional economists spending does not make an economy grow. Savings and investment are far more determinative. Any program that diverts capital into consumption and away from savings and investment will diminish future economic growth and job creation.

Creating jobs is easy for government, but all jobs are not equal. Paying people to dig ditches and fill them up does society no good. On balance these “jobs” diminish the economy by wasting scarce land, labor and capital. We do not want jobs for the sake of work, but for the goods and services they produce.

As it has a printing press, the government could mandate employment for all, as did the Soviet Union. But if these jobs are not productive, and government jobs rarely are, society is no better for it.

This is also true of the much vaunted “infrastructure spending.” Any funds directed toward infrastructure deprive the economy of resources that might otherwise have funded projects that the market determines have greater economic value. Infrastructure can improve an economy in the log-run, but only if the investments succeeds in raising productivity more than the cost of the project itself. In the interim, infrastructure costs are burdens that an economy must bear, not a means in themselves.

Unfortunately our economy is so weak and indebted that we simply cannot currently afford many of these projects. The labor and other resources that would be diverted to finance them are badly needed elsewhere.

Although it was labeled and hyped as a “jobs plan,” the new $447 billion initiative announced last night by President Obama is merely another government stimulus program in disguise. Like all previous stimuli that have been injected into the economy over the past three years, this round of borrowing and spending will act as an economic sedative rather than a stimulant. I am convinced that a year from now there will be even more unemployed Americans than there are today, likely resulting in additional deficit financed stimulus that will again make the situation worse.

The President asserted that the spending in the plan will be “paid for” and will not add to the deficit. Conveniently, he offered no details about how this will be achieved. Most likely he will make non-binding suggestions that future congresses “pay” for this spending by cutting budgets five to ten years in the future. In the meantime money to fund the stimulus has to come from someplace. Either the government will borrow it legitimately from private sources, or the Federal Reserve will print. Either way, the adverse consequences will damage economic growth and job creation, and lower the living standards of Americans.

There can be no doubt that some jobs will in fact be created by this plan. However, it is much more difficult to identify the jobs that it destroys or prevents from coming into existence. Here’s a case in point: the $4,000 tax credit for hiring new workers who have been unemployed for six months or more. The subsidy may make little difference in effecting the high end of the job market, but it really could make an impact on minimum wage jobs where rather than expanding employment it will merely increase turnover.

Since an employer need only hire a worker for 6 months to get the credit, for a full time employee, the credit effectively reduces the $7.25 minimum wage (from the employer’s perspective) to only $3.40 per hour for a six-month hire. While minimum wage jobs would certainly offer no enticement to those collecting unemployment benefits, the lower effective rate may create some opportunities for teenagers and some low skilled individuals whose unemployment benefits have expired. However, most of these jobs will end after six months so employers can replace those workers with others to get an additional tax credit.

Of course the numbers get even more compelling for employers to provide returning veterans with temporary minimum wage jobs, as the higher $5,600 tax credit effectively reduces the minimum wage to only $1.87 per hour. If an employer hires a “wounded warrior”, the tax credit is $9,600 which effectively reduces the six-month minimum wage by $9.23 to negative $1.98 per hour. This will encourage employers to hire a “wounded warrior” even if there is nothing for the employee to do. Such an incentive may encourage such individuals to acquire multiple no-show jobs form numerous employers. As absurd as this sounds, history has shown that when government created incentives, the public will twist themselves into pretzels to qualify for the benefit.

The plan creates incentives for employers to replace current minimum wage workers with new workers just to get the tax credit. Low skill workers are the easiest to replace as training costs are minimal. The laid off workers can collect unemployment for six months and then be hired back in a manner that allows the employer to claim the credit. The only problem is that the former worker may prefer collecting extended unemployment benefits to working for the minimum wage!

The $4,000 credit for hiring the unemployed as well as the explicit penalties for discriminating against the long-term unemployed will result in a situation where employers will be far more likely to interview and hire applicants who have been unemployed for just under six months. Under the law, employers would be wise to refuse to interview anyone who has been unemployed for more than six months, as any subsequent decision not to hire could be met with a lawsuit. However, to get the tax credit they would be incentivized to interview applicants who have been unemployed for just under six months. If they are never hired there can be no risk of a lawsuit, but if they are hired, the start date can be planned to qualify for the credit.

The result will simply create classes of winners (those unemployed for four or five months) and losers (the newly unemployed and the long term unemployed). Ironically, the law banning discrimination against long-term unemployed will make it much harder for such individuals to find jobs.

At present, I am beginning to feel that over regulation of business and employment, and an overly complex and punitive tax code is currently a bigger impediment to job growth than is our horrific fiscal and monetary policies. As a business owner I know that reckless government policy can cause no end of unintended consequences.

As I see it, here are the biggest obstacles preventing job growth:

1. Monetary policy
Interest rates are much too low. Cheap money produced both the stock market and real estate bubbles, and is currently facilitating a bubble in government debt. When this bubble bursts the repercussions will dwarf the shock produced by the financial crisis of 2008. Interest rates must be raised to bring on a badly needed restructuring of our economy. No doubt an environment of higher rates will cause short-term pain. But we need to move from a “borrow and spend” economy to a “save and produce” economy. This cannot be done with ultra-low interest rates. In the short-term GNP will need to contract. There will be a pickup in transitory unemployment. Real estate and stock prices will fall. Many banks will fail. There will be more foreclosures. Government spending will have to be slashed. Entitlements will have to be cut. Many voters will be angry. But such an environment will lay the foundation upon which a real recovery can be built.

The government must allow our bubble economy to fully deflate. Asset prices, wages, and spending must fall, interest rates, production, and savings must rise. Resources, including labor, must be reallocated away from certain sectors, such as government, services, finance, health care, and educations, and be allowed to into manufacturing, mining, oil and gas, agriculture, and other goods producing fields. We will never borrow and spend our way out of a crisis caused by too much borrowing and spending. The only way out is to reverse course.

2. Fiscal policy
To create conditions that foster growth, the government should balance the budget with major cuts in government spending, severely reform and simplify the tax code. It would be preferable if all corporate and personal taxes could be replaces by a national sales tax.

Our current tax system discourages the activities that we need most: hard work, production, savings, investment, and risk taking. Instead it incentivizes consumption and debt. We should tax people when they spend their wealth, not when they create it.

High marginal income tax rates inflict major damage to job creation, as the tax is generally paid out of money that otherwise would have been used to finance capital investment and job creation.

3. Regulation
Regulations have substantially increased the costs and risks associated with job creation. Employers are subjected to all sorts of onerous regulations, taxes, and legal liability. The act of becoming an employer should be made as easy as possible. Instead we have made it more difficult. In fact, among small business owners, limiting the number of employees is generally a goal.

This is not a consequence of the market, but of a rational desire on the part of business owners to limit their cost and legal liabilities. They would prefer to hire workers, but these added burdens make it preferable to seek out alternatives.

In my own business, securities regulations have prohibited me from hiring brokers for more than three years. I was even fined fifteen thousand dollar expressly for hiring too many brokers in 2008. In the process I incurred more than $500,000 in legal bills to mitigate a more severe regulatory outcome as a result of hiring too many workers. I have also been prohibited from opening up additional offices. I had a major expansion plan that would have resulted in my creating hundreds of additional jobs. Regulations have forced me to put those jobs on hold.

In addition, the added cost of security regulations have forced me to create an offshore brokerage firm to handle foreign accounts that are now too expensive to handle from the United States. Revenue and jobs that would have been created in the U.S. are now being created abroad instead. In addition, I am moving several asset management jobs from Newport Beach, California to Singapore.

As Congress turns up the heat, more of my capital will continue to be diverted to my foreign companies, creating jobs and tax revenues abroad rather than in the United States.

To encourage real and lasting job growth the best thing the government can do is to make it as easy as possible for business to hire and employ people. This means cutting down on workplace regulations. It also means eliminating the punitive aspects of employment law that cause employers to think twice about hiring. To be blunt, the easier employees are to fire, the higher the likelihood they will be hired. Some steps Congress could take now include:

a. Abolish the federal minimum wage
Minimum wages have never raised the wages of anyone and simply draw an arbitrary line that separates the employable from the unemployable. Just like prices, wages are determined by supply and demand. The demand for workers is a function of how much productivity a worker can produce. Setting the wage at $7.25 simply means that only those workers who can produce goods and services that create more than $7.25 (plus all additional payroll associated costs) per hour are eligible for jobs. Those who can’t, become permanently unemployable. The artificial limits encourage employers to look to minimize hires and to automate wherever possible.

By putting many low skill workers (such as teenagers) below the line, the minimum wage prevents crucial on the job training, which could provide workers with the experience and skills needed to earn higher wages.

b. Repeal all federal workplace anti-discrimination laws
One of the reasons unemployment is so high among minorities is that business owners (particularly small business) are wary of legal liability associated with various categories of protected minorities. The fear of litigation, and the costly judgments that can ensue, are real.

Given that it is nearly impossible for an employer to control all the aspects of the workplace environment, litigation risk is a tangible consideration. Given all the legal avenues afforded by legislation, minority employees are much more likely to sue employers.

To avoid this, some employers simply look to avoid this outcome by sticking with less risky employee categories. It is not racism that causes this discrimination, but a rational desire to mitigate liability. The reality is that a true free market would punish employers that discriminate based on race or other criteria irrelevant to job performance. That is because businesses that hire based strictly on merit would have a competitive advantage. Anti-discrimination laws titled the advantage to those who discriminate.

c. Repeal all laws mandating employment terms such as work place conditions, over-time, benefits, leave, medical benefits, etc.
Employment is a voluntary relationship between two parties. The more room the parties have to negotiate and agree on their own terms, the more likely a job will be created. Rules imposed from the top create inefficiencies that limit employment opportunities. Employee benefits are a cost of employment, and high value employees have all the bargaining power they need to extract benefits from employers. They are free to search for the best benefits they can get just as they search for the best wages.

Companies that do not offer benefits will lose employees to companies that do. Just as employees are free to leave companies at will, so too should employers be free to terminate an employee without fear of costly repercussions. Individuals should not gain rights because they are employees, and individuals should not lose rights because they become employers.

d. Abolish extended unemployment benefits
In addition to being a source of emergency funds, unemployment benefits over time become more of a disincentive to employment than anything else (although the disincentive diminishes with the worker’s skill level — i.e. high wage workers are unlikely to forego a high wage job opportunity to preserve unemployment benefits). For marginally skilled workers unemployment insurance is a major factor in determining if a job should be taken or not.

Even if unemployment pays a significant fraction of the wage a worker would get with a full time job, the money may be enough to convince the worker to stay home. After all, there are costs associated with having a job. Not only does a worker pay payroll and income taxes on any wages he earns, the loss of unemployment benefits itself acts as a tax. Plus workers must pay for such job related expenses as transportation, clothing, restaurant meals, dry cleaning and childcare, and they must forgo other work that they could do in their free time (providing care for loved ones, home improvement, etc.).

Understandably, most people also find leisure time preferable to work. As a result, any job that does not offer a major monetary advantage to unemployment benefits will likely be turned down. This entrenches unemployment insurance recipients into a class of permanently unemployed workers.

It is no accident that employment increases immediately after unemployment insurance expires for many categories of workers. In fact, many individual will seek to max out their benefits, and remain unemployed until those benefits expire. If they work at all, it will be for cash under-the-table, so as not to leave any money on the table.

Regards,

Peter Schiff

www.europac.net

BMR Morning Market Musings From Rouyn-Noranda

Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec

Markets are buoyant today as the FMOC begins two days of meetings…Gold has traded between $1,769 and $1,811 so far today…as of 11:50 am Eastern, the yellow metal is up $29 an ounce at $1,808…Silver is 51 cents higher at $40.16, Copper is flat $3.79, Crude Oil is $1.44 higher at $87.14 while the U.S. Dollar Index has declined one-third of a point to 77.04…this really isn’t surprising but Standard & Poor’s has cut Italy’s credit rating, underlining how the euro zone’s third-largest economy is being sucked deeper into the sovereign debt crisis…Italy’s Prime Minister, of course, came to the defence of his country with a strong rebuke of Standard & Poor’s…
“The assessments by Standard & Poor’s appear dictated more by newspaper articles than reality and appear to be tainted by political considerations,” Berlusconi said…truth is, Italy – like some of its euro zone partners – has become a financial basket case because of over-spending and economically illiterate politicians elected by a society that has demanded far too much of government…the head of a Brussels-based economic think-tank, Sony Kapoor, was quoted in this morning’s Financial Times as saying, “This is a downgrade of EU and Italian politicians”…the miserable failure of EU leaders to tackle the problems posed by Greece does little to inspire any confidence that the much larger and more urgent problems faced by Italy would be managed any better”…one of the many reasons Gold is so attractive right now is that political leaders across the board (Canada’s Harper is probably the exception and the most economically literate of a bad bunch), led by the President of the most powerful country in the world, simply do not understand the concept of wealth creation…later today, we’ll post a great speech by Peter Schiff, a respected American economist, author and commentator…he’s also President of Euro Pacific Capital…Schiff recently gave testimony to the U.S. House Subcommittee on Government Reform and Stimulus, and in that testimony he exposed examples of bad policies with disastrous, unintended consequences…he also laid out a sensible game plan for how the U.S. can pull out of its jobs and growth deficit…speaking of creating wealth, a company here in Rouyn-Noranda that really understands how to do that is Richmont Mines‘ (RIC, TSX) which has become an earnings machine…RIC is a growth stock with the company’s Gold production on track to triple by 2015 when Wasamac should kick into gear…2012 production will increase by about 40% with Francoeur coming on stream during the first quarter of next year…below, John updates the RIC chart with a new Fibonacci target level…RIC hit a new all-time high this morning of $13.29…technically, this is an extension of Wave 3 as John outlines below…how far this extension will carry RIC is impossible to say…however, at some point a Wave 4 move to the downside can be expected followed by a powerful Wave 5 move back up again…right now this is a stock on steroids…

To a large degree, the success of Richmont recently (the share price has almost doubled in a month) can be attributed to the company’s Wasamac Property which is finally starting to get the recognition and credit it deserves…what the street hasn’t yet picked up on is the fact that the Wasamac area has huge potential for additional deposits and the #1 area play – the junior leader – is clearly Visible Gold Mines (VGD, TSX-V) which has already demonstrated that Wasa Creek has strong discovery potential…VGD controls significant portions of land bordering Wasamac to the west, the east and the south – 6,000 hectares in total in a region already blessed with infrastructure and more of it coming through development of the Wasamac Mine…VGD is currently unchanged at 38 cents and appears to have found RSI support, so another leg up could be just around the corner…

The CDNX is 4 points higher at 1742 as of 11:50 am EasternGrayd Resource Corp. (GYD, TSX-V) is once again the volume leader after yesterday’s friendly takeover offer from Agnico-Eagle (AEM, TSX)…look for this kind of activity by big, medium and small producers to accelerate in the coming weeks and months as a period of consolidation grips the industry…cash-rich producers – even a current small producer like Richmont – are desperately trying to find ways to add ounces to their production profiles…another junior with an advanced property we like is Spanish Mountain Gold (SPA, TSX-V) which really appears to have its act together at the moment…SPA is up 4 pennies this morning to 86 cents…the company has a low-grade but high-tonnage deposit in the advanced stages in central British Columbia…investment guru Jim Slater, who BMR interviewed last year, is a major player in SPA and recently accumulated an additional 1.2 million shares in the company…this morning, SPA announced it has appointed Donald Coxe to the company’s board of directors…Coxe has four decades of institutional investment experience in North America and has maintained a highly visible presence in major business communities as an adviser to corporate boards and speaker for business conferences and industry events worldwide…he has been a strategic consultant to several major Gold mining companies over the last decade…

It’s important to keep a close eye on the action in Copper as we’ve stated many times at BMR…Copper is currently in a critical support area, as John shows in the chart below, and how it behaves in the days ahead could determine the future direction of the CDNX and the broader markets…


September 19, 2011

BMR Morning Market Musings From Rouyn-Noranda

Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec

Gold has traded in a range between $1,775 and $1,828 so far today…as of 12:15 pm Eastern, the yellow metal is down $27 an ounce at $1,785…Silver is off $1.12 at $39.54…Copper has fallen 15 cents to $3.78…Crude Oil is off $2.35 to $85.61 while the U.S. Dollar Index is up one-fifth of a point to 77.25…media reports based on European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund data show that European central banks have bought a net 0.8 tons of Gold since the beginning of this year…according to Commerzbank, this would be the first time in over 20 years that European central banks are buying more Gold than they are selling…the emerging markets of China and India now collectively account for more than half of global Gold demand, and their consumption is likely to keep rising as their populaces become more prosperous, said an official with the World Gold Council…“There is a continuing surge of demand coming from the emerging markets, led by India and China,” said Jason Toussaint, managing director, U.S. and investment, for the WGC…“Those two economies are growing extremely rapidly”…all eyes are on the Fed this week with markets participants overwhelmingly banking on the Federal Reserve to deliver a new program to bolster the U.S. economy after meetings tomorrow and Wednesday…Bernanke is expected to launch Operation Twist in which it buys longer-dated Treasury bonds in an effort to drive down interest rates…this will require some co-ordination with the Treasury Department in order to be effective…President Obama is proposing a more than $3 trillion plan to shrink U.S. debt with roughly half of the money coming from tax increases on the wealthy and corporations…it’s very refreshing to start to see some Canadian journalists, most of whom are generally considered very liberal, waking up to how incompetent this American president is…check out Rex Murphy’s column in Saturday’s National Post (quote:  “…the flaws and failures of what is turning out to be one of the most miserable performances in the the modern history of the American presidency”)…nice job, Rex…

The CDNX as of 12:15 pm Eastern is off 22 points at 1741…the TSX Gold Index, meanwhile, continues to perform well as producers are definitely in favor at the moment…the Gold Index is currently up 3 points at 432…John sees the possibility of a minor pullback in the Gold Index from current levels before the start of a potentially explosive “Wave 5” phase as the chart below explains…

Agnico-Eagle Mines (AEM, TSX) has made a friendly takeover offer of $275 million for Grayd Resource Corp. (GYD, TSX-V)…this is the kind of activity that we’re expecting more of in the coming months as majors scramble to add ounces…Grayd owns a 100% interest in the La India project located in the Mulatos Gold Belt of Sonora, Mexico (approximately 70 kilometres northwest of Agnico-Eagle’s Pinos Altos Gold mine)…the project hosts a NI-43-101 compliant measured and indicated Gold resource of 26.8 million tonnes at a grade of 0.88 g/t Au and an inferred resource of 19.7 million tonnes grading 0.80 g/t Au…mineralization is open in all directions at La India and AEM must believe there is considerably more Gold on the property…GYD has shot up 78 cents to $2.73 this morning and is the most active stock on the CDNXNiogold (NOX, TSX-V) and Aurizon Mines (ARZ, TSX) have discovered two new high grade zones at the Marban Block Property in the heart of the Malartic Gold camp, just down the Golden Highway from here in Rouyn-Noranda…Aurizon has an earn-in option on the property…906.2 g/t Au over 2.9 metres (MB-11-198) and 5.9 g/t Au over 15.7 metres (MB-11-195) were intersected at the new High Grade Western Zone at vertical depths of 175 and 125 metres, respectively…meanwhile, the second discovery, the Eastern Down Dip Zone (400 metres east of the former Marban mine shaft) includes intersections at depth of 7 g/t Au over 10.9 metres, 179.5 g/t Au over 1.2 metres and 6.1 g/t Au over 12.6 metres…a resource estimate for Marban Block will be completed by the end of the year based on drilling since last yearr…Niogold is currently up 2.5 pennies at 35.5 cents…GoldQuest Mining (GQC, TSX-V) is merging with Takara Resources (TKK, TSX-V)…the business combination may make sense strategically for the two companies but GoldQuest has been around for many years and some investors will no doubt be disappointed…GQC is up half a penny at 17 cents…Visible Gold Mines (VGD, TSX-V) continues to have an explosive chart and the stock’s pullback from a high of 43.5 cents last week has simply brought it back down to its rising 20-day moving average (SMA) which has to be considered a normal technical development in the context of an overall strong uptrend…VGD has been getting very encouraging early indications from its Wasa Creek and Wasa East properties, immediately adjacent to Wasamac, and drill results are still pending for 12 out of 13 holes drilled in Phase 1 at Wasa Creek…the company has already committed to a Phase 2 program at Wasa Creek during the fourth quarter which gives us reassurance that indeed they believe they are closing in on something potentially significant…VGD is unchanged at 38 cents…

New Gold Inc. (NGD, TSX) has released an updated NI-43-101 resource estimate for its Blackwater Project in central British Columbia…we believed this deposit (formerly Richfield’s) would eventually exceed 5 or 6 million ounces and indeed it has…the indicated Gold resource is 165 million tonnes at an average grade of 1.01 g/t containing 5.4 million ounces of Gold…the inferred Gold resource is 39 million tonnes at an average grade of 0.94 g/t containing 1.2 million ounces of Gold…the updated estimate incorporates drill results from both the 100%-owned southern portion of the project and the 75%-owned northern portion, where Silver Quest Resources Ltd. (SQI, TSX-V) owns the remaining 25%…Blackwater will get bigger yet…

Gold Bullion Development (GBB, TSX-V) has just announced  that its wholly owned subsidiary, Castle Silver Mines Inc., has filed a preliminary prospectus for an initial public offering of 4,750,000 flow-through units at a price of 40 cents per unit and a minimum of 3 million and a maximum of 5 million units at 30 cents for maximum gross proceeds to Castle Silver Mines of $3.4 million…Gold Bullion shareholders will receive one common share of Castle Silver Mines for approximately every 85 issued and outstanding Gold Bullion shares on the distribution record date (to be announced)…Gold Bullion will retain approximately 7.8 million shares of Castle Silver MinesGBB released assay results from 28 more holes at Granada last Wednesday…the results were solid as assays from half of the holes (14) showed intercepts of 100 metres or more grading between 0.31 g/t Au and 0.50 g/t Au…the northern part of the Eastern Extension continues to show excellent potential and tonnage is adding up in that area…so, overall, we continue to like how the LONG Bars Zone is coming together…however, the market is anxious for a NI-43-101 initial resource estimate and GBB made the mistake last March of stating, “The company remains very focused on generating a 43-101-compliant resource calculation by early summer”… we’re now approaching the end of summer and there is still no 43-101…companies are rewarded when they exceed the market’s expectations and are punished when they don’t fulfill them which is why GBB has been struggling of late…as of 12:15 pm Eastern, Gold Bullion is off 2.5 cents at 31 cents…

Drilling at the waste pile near Pit #2 at Granada

Adventure Gold (AGE, TSX-V), unchanged at 57 cents, continues to look strong and a turnaround in its 50-day moving average (SMA) is possible this week…last week the company released solid initial results from Phase 2 drilling at its Pascalis-Colombiere Gold Property near Val-d’Or which included 7.1 g/t Au over 4.3 metres and 4.5 g/t Au over 9.3 metresAGE is working on a NI-43-101 resource estimate for Pascalis and our belief, based on results to date, is that the property likely holds significantly more ounces than what Cambior mined at the property (L.C. Beliveau Mine) between 1989 and 1993 (nearly 170,000 ounces)…Pascalis is a property we believe Richmont may have interest in potentially acquiring given that its Beaufor Mine is located adjacent to it and Richmont’s Camflo Mill has unused capacity…Richmont President and CEO Martin Rivard is obviously keeping an eye on developments at Pascalis given his response to one of Jon’s question’s last Friday…some readers have inquired about Alexandria Minerals (AZX, TSX-V) which has a nice package of properties along the Cadillac Trend in the Val-d’Or area…technically, the stock does have some challenges at the moment with declining 100, 200 and 300-day moving averages…the declining 1,000-day SMA at 13.5 cents has been providing support but a test of the 10-cent support area can’t be ruled out…that’s just a technical perspective…fundamentally, the company’s properties have good potential (they do have some advanced situations) but will likely require more time to generate market excitement…

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »
  • All Posts: