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February 8, 2016

BMR Morning Market Musings…

Gold has traded between $1,163 and $1,200 so far today…as of 7:30 am Pacific, bullion is up $20 an ounce at $1,193….Silver has jumped 33 cents to $15.34…Copper is off a penny at $2.09…Crude Oil has slipped 97 cents to $29.92 while the U.S. Dollar Index is flat at 97.06

Year of the MonkeyAs China ushers in the Year of the Monkey – a holiday that tends to bring about heightened Gold demand – the Royal Mint announced that it has sold out of its 2016 Lunar New Year one-ounce Gold and silver coins. “This is the first time that the Royal Mint’s bullion business has sold out of coins from its Lunar Shengxiào Collection and highlights the growing ambition of the business,” the mint said in a news release Friday…

Mining stocks – the market’s punching bag of 2015 – have been the darlings of 2016 with a bounce in commodity prices driving the rally…even Iron Ore, which slid a whopping 40% in 2015, is up 14% since mid-January…Copper, which hit its lowest level since early 2009 in mid-January, has rallied more than 8%…

There are indications that demand could pick up in China, despite official annual growth at 6.9% in 2015 being the slowest in a quarter-century…in December, China posted a 26% annual rise in imports of unfinished Copper and products, the 2nd-highest monthly figure on record, if one can believe the figures from the Chinese customs authority…

According to The Wall Street Journal, traders for the past year have said a new breed of Chinese hedge funds have been making huge wagers that commodities will fall, pulling prices lower…the short commodity trade worked well for them in 2015…this year could be a different story…

Interestingly, the Venture has significantly outperformed the broader equity markets over the last couple of months, and even going back to the beginning of Q4…that’s a clear change in the longer-term trend since early 2011, and clearly suggests that Gold and perhaps commodities in general may surprise a lot of investors in 2016 for reasons we can’t fully understand at the moment…

Iran wants to recover tens of billions of dollars it is owed by India and other buyers of its Oil in euros and is billing new Crude sales in euros, too, looking to reduce its dependence on the U.S. dollar following last month’s sanctions relief…Iran has pushed for years to have the euro replace the dollar as the currency for international Oil trade…in 2007, Tehran failed to persuade OPEC members to switch away from the dollar…that day may yet come…

Euro 2-Year Weekly Chart

Speaking of the euro, the currency has broken out above a downtrend line going back to 2014 and its 200-day moving average (SMA) is reversing to the upside, another indication the greenback’s worst single day performance in 7 years last Wednesday was no aberration…the euro formed a double bottom in 2015 and Gold is leading it to the upside…

Euro Feb 8

In today’s Morning Musings

1.  Lake Shore Gold (LSG, TSX) climbs even higher on a $945 million all-share buyout from Tahoe Resources (THO, TSX)…

2.  Gold Standard Ventures (GSV, TSX-V) hauls in another $12.6 million from a 2nd major, hits new 2+ year high…

3.  NexGen Energy (NXE, TSX-V) threatens to break out…

4.  Garibaldi Resources (GGI, TSX-V) firms up on potential discovery news and high-grade Mexico plays…

Plus more…to view the rest of today’s Morning Musings, login with your username and password, or click here to gain full access to this and other exclusive BMR content and features…

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Top 50 Opportunities Review

Gold producers (up 21.3% in just 2 months) continue to be the leaders in the BMR Top 50 Opportunities list (#1) that was unveiled December 4.  Seven of the 8 picks in that category have jumped in value with Richmont Mines (RIC, TSX) leading the way with a robust gain of 34.7%.  Richmont will be reporting its Q4 and 2015 financials pre-market Monday, February 22.

OceanaGold (OGC, TSX), Detour Gold (DGC, TSX) and Claude Resources (CRJ, TSX) have also been stellar performers among producers, climbing 31.9%, 30.8% and 28.6%, respectively.

In this morning’s report is a performance review of each category.  Combined, the 50 picks (39 resource and 11 non-resource) have returned 8.6% over the last 2 months – particularly impressive considering the weak performance of all equity markets during that time.  The NASDAQ has fallen 15.1%, the Dow is off 9.2%, the TSX has lost 4.4% while the Venture has retreated 1.7%.

1.  The Gold explorer with a 120% gain since early December on high volume…

2.  The Lithium space remains hot…

3.  Certain non-resource plays that could surge during this 1st half of 2016

Plus more…to view the full report, login with your username and password, or click here to gain full access to this and other exclusive BMR content and features…

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February 7, 2016

Market Alert: Gold Update

Gold is coming off its best weekly advance since 2013, rising nearly 5% and reaching its highest level since early October.  Investor holdings of Gold in exchange-traded products have posted the longest continuous increase since 2012, thanks to a myriad of factors including global growth concerns, a weakening U.S. dollar, the Oil price collapse, geopolitical hotspots and struggling equity markets with the NASDAQ already down 13% this year.

Keep in mind, too, that China continues to strongly support the physical side of the market.  In 2015 China consumed more than 90% of the total annual global output of Gold, and in December the country imported 180 tonnes from Switzerland alone.  That was an 86% increase over December 2014.

With a 10.5% jump in just the first 25 trading sessions of 2016, Gold is so far this year’s most beloved global asset.  That’s a far cry from the beating it took from many pundits, especially in the U.S., during 2015.

Tonight’s chart from John has been an amazingly accurate guide for the direction of Gold over the past few years.  Each time the yellow metal has hit the bottom of the channel, it has bounced back vigorously which is why we turned bullish on bullion in November and recommended going long on the HGU (double long Gold stock ETF) around $3 ($15 post-consolidation, it closed Friday at $26), in addition to high quality Gold producers, near-producers and explorers.

On our 2.5-year weekly chart, Gold is now up against RSI(14) resistance – 60% – where it has turned away from on previous occasions in 2014 and 2015.  It’s possible this time could be different.  Significantly, the Gold price has yet to reach the top of the downsloping flag which leaves a potential $40 or so on the upside over the near future after Friday’s close at $1,173.  A general band of resistance stretches from $1,175 to the low $1,220’s. 

Investors love to chase and a lot of people, including fund managers, are just waking up to Gold’s momentum.  This is why it wouldn’t be surprising to see bullion mount a vigorous challenge to the top of the downsloping flag around $1,200 before a healthy pullback to unwind temporarily overbought conditions.  At the time when $1,200 becomes new support and Gold starts to gain traction above that key level, that’s when everyone will start talking about a new Gold bull market.

Gold 2.5 Yr Weekly Feb 7

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Sunday Sizzler Report (Pro Subscribers)

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The Week In Review And A Look Ahead

TSX Venture Exchange and Gold

It was an important week for the Venture as the Index held critical support at 495 and suddenly gained momentum Wednesday as the greenback went into reverse, thanks to some weak economic data and rather timely bashing from an important Fed official, while Gold took off and pushed above its 200-day moving average (SMA) for the first time since October.

The Venture closed at 508 Friday, confirming a breakout above resistance at 500, and the nearly 2% gain for the week compared very favorably with a 5.4% pullback in the NASDAQ, a 1.6% drop in the Dow, a slight loss in the TSX, and an 8.1% tumble in WTIC.  The Venture clearly benefited from the powerful move in Gold with the yellow metal advancing $55 or 4.9%, while the TSX Gold Index rocketed 17% higher.  It pays to be a contrarian which is why 6 of our Gold stocks from our December Top Opportunities List are already up 30% or more, while the HGU ETF has delivered a 50% return.

The Fed will once again be the center of attention this coming week as Janet Yellen gives 2 days of testimony on the economy before congressional committees Wednesday and Thursday.  Last Wednesday, New York Fed President William Dudley (a voting member of the Fed’s policy making committee) “talked down” the greenback in an interview when he warned that additional strength in the U.S. dollar could have “significant consequences” for the U.S. economy.  He also stated financial conditions were “tightening”.  Those comments were music to the ears of the Gold bugs and put the dollar bulls on the defensive.  Even some positive components in Friday’s U.S. jobs report couldn’t hold back bullion which has been the top performing asset class so far in 2016.

Venture Updated Chart

There’s little ambiguity in the Venture chart at the moment as the Index has recaptured the modest momentum it had at the end of 2015 and appears ready to quickly challenge next resistance at 520.  An inverted head and shoulders pattern could be forming as we pointed out Thursday.  If that analysis is correct, the right shoulder could emerge on a healthy pullback from 520 or perhaps the next Fib. level just above 530.  Notice how sell pressure (CMF) has gradually declined since mid-November with buy pressure now building rapidly.

For a sustained move, the Venture needs help from more than just Gold and a weakening U.S. dollar – in fact, bullion will likely need to take a breather at some point very soon while the greenback could temporarily recover some of its lost ground.  An Oil rebound, broader market strength, drill results, takeovers – those are factors the Venture will need in its favor.  We look forward to positive developments over the near-term on several key exploration fronts.

Venture 6-Month Daily Feb 7

The Seeds Have Been Planted (And Continue To Be Planted) For The Next Big Run In Gold Stocks

There’s no better cure for low prices than low prices. The great benefit of the collapse in Gold prices in 2013, and last summer’s fresh weakness with the drop below $1,100, is that it has forced producers to become much more lean in terms of their cost structures. Producers, big and small, continue to make hard decisions in terms of costs, projects, and rationalizing their overall operations. Exploration budgets among both producers and juniors have also been cut sharply. In addition, government policies across much of the globe are making it more difficult (sometimes impossible) for mining companies to carry out exploration or put Gold (or other) deposits into production, thanks to the ignorance of many politicians and the impact of radical and vocal environmentalists (technology has made it easier for groups opposing mining projects to organize and disseminate information, even in remote areas around the globe). Ultimately, all of these factors are going to eventually create a supply problem and therefore historic opportunities in Gold and quality Gold stocks.  Think about it, where are the next major Gold deposits going to come from?  On top of that, grades have fallen significantly just over the past decade.

Keep in mind, as well, that in currencies other than the U.S. dollar, Gold has been performing exceedingly well over the past couple of years, and is now starting to advance sharply in greenback terms, too.   So don’t get fooled by the widespread negativity/indifference in the American media toward Gold.  Bullion in Canadian dollars, for example, is in a major bull phase and certain high-quality Canadian Gold producers have given investors tremendous returns since late 2013.

U.S. Dollar Index Update

Last weekend, with the Dollar Index threatening to break out to the upside – something the U.S. economy can’t afford to have happen – we speculated the Fed might actually try to talk the dollar down if it felt it needed to.  And that’s exactly what occurred.  As the saying goes, bulls make money, bears make money, but pigs get slaughtered.  The record run in the greenback since the summer of 2014 created a lot of pigs, and some of them got slaughtered as the Dollar Index suffered its sharpest single day decline in 7 years Wednesday.  A period of consolidation is likely to follow.

The only bright spot for the dollar was a bullish engulfing pattern Friday when the Index regained more than one-third of a point at the same time as Gold powered $18 higher.  A mild recovery in the greenback is possible in the coming days but deteriorating technicals will likely constrain the dollar or keep it under pressure over the next few months at least. 

Dollar Index 9-Month Daily Feb 7

Gold

Gold has been the 2016 “safe haven” so far and enjoyed a tremendous week, adding $55 an ounce to finish at $1,173 (the October high was $1,192).

Bullion in 2015 posted its 3rd straight annual loss in U.S. dollar terms for the 1st time since 1998.  As we’ve been pointing out, however, the bear market that started in Gold in late 2011 reached the long-term average late last year in terms of both duration (47 months) and decline (44%).

A year from now, it’s entirely possible that investors will look back at January 2016 as the beginning of a new bull market in Gold.  That’s what we’re anticipating but right now it’s simply too early to tell.  The first major technical evidence of a new bull market would come if the metal were to blast through the $1,200 level with that key resistance then acting as new support.

This 6-month daily chart shows RSI(14) conditions now in overbought territory at 77% which likely means that $1,200 for now is probably the high-water mark for bullion.  A band of resistance on this chart runs from $1,175 to $1,222 (Fib.).  If the $1,130 area (200-day SMA) can hold as support on any pullbacks, Gold will be well positioned to overcome $1,200 resistance at some point during 2016.

Gold 6-Month Daily Feb 7

Silver jumped 77 cents last week, closing at $15.01 (updated charts in Monday’s Morning Musings).  Copper enjoyed another good week, adding 4 pennies to finish at $2.10.  Crude Oil fell nearly $3 a barrel to $31.00 while the U.S. Dollar Index tumbled 3 points to finish at 96.96.

The “Big Picture” View Of Gold

As Frank Holmes so effectively illustrates at www.usfunds.com, the long-term bull market in Gold has been driven by both the Fear Trade and the Love Trade.  The transfer of wealth from west to east, and the accumulation of wealth particularly in China and India, has had a huge impact on bullion and will continue to support prices.   Despite Gold’s largest annual drop in 3 decades in 2013, and current weakness, the fundamental long-term case for the metal remains solidly intact based on the following factors (not necessarily in order of importance):

  • Growing geopolitical tensions, fueled in part by the ISIS and al Qaeda, and a highly dangerous and expansionist Russia under Vladimir Putin, have put world security in the most precarious state since World War II;
  • Weak leadership in the United States and Europe is emboldening enemies of the West;
  • Currency instability and an overall lack of confidence in fiat currencies;
  • Historically low interest rates/highly accommodating central banks around the world;
  • Continued solid accumulation of Gold by China which intends to back up its currency with bullion;
  • Massive government debt from the United States to Europe – a “day of reckoning” will come;
  • Continued net buying of Gold by central banks around the world;
  • Mine closings, a sharp reduction in exploration and a lack of major new discoveries – these factors should contribute to a noticeable tightening of supply over the next couple of years.
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February 5, 2016

BMR Morning Market Musings…

Gold has traded between $1,144 and $1,163 so far today…as of 8:30 am Pacific, bullion is flat at $1,155…Silver has retreated 9 cents to $14.76…Copper is off 3 pennies at $2.10…Crude Oil is unchanged at $31.74 while the U.S. Dollar Index has recovered half a point to 97.08

An investor exodus from low quality U.S. corporate bonds should be a supportive factor for Gold prices, according to analysts at HSBC…yields on those bonds are now at their highest levels since 2009, at the depth of the financial crisis…

“In that same year,” HSBC commented,Gold climbed from $800 an ounce at the beginning of January to $1,225 an ounce by early December, a rally of more than $400 an ounce.  The current surge in yields and the rally in Gold prices are unlikely to be a coincidence.”

Producer Hedging Remains Limited

The global hedge book for Gold producers expanded modestly by a net 500,000 ounces, or 16 tonnes, during the 3rd quarter of 2015, largely driven by companies with operations in Australia as they apparently took advantage of a higher Gold price in that country’s currency, according to a report released yesterday by the GFMS team at Thomson Reuters and Societe Generale…the global hedge book stood at 6.2 million ounces, or 193 tonnes, as of the end of September…

U.S. Jobs Number Disappoints

The Labor Department reported this morning that the U.S. economy created just 151,000 jobs in January, the latest sign that growth is slowing…behind the headline number, about 20% less than the consensus estimate, there were nonetheless some positive components…average hourly earnings, average hours worked and labor force participation all rose last month, and those are important metrics for the Fed…the unemployment rate ticked down slightly to 4.9% while average weekly earnings increased 12 cents per hour or 0.5% on a monthly basis…

This morning’s report comes after the Fed’s first interest rate hike in 9 years in mid-December and as Wall Street speculation intensifies over what the central bank might do over the coming months…Fed officials have indicated a desire to hike rates as many as four times in 2016, though market expectations are for fewer or even no moves…amid volatile financial markets and clear signs of contraction in manufacturing and corporate profits, a slowdown in job creation would complicate matters for the Fed especially if it were accompanied by very limited wage growth…it’s also not inconceivable the Fed may have to return to QE later this year…

This week’s sharp move to the downside in the U.S. dollar is a significant development and suggests the central bank will not be tightening in the way it envisioned late last year…despite so many tools at its disposal, the Fed’s read of the U.S. economy and global conditions at the time it decided to go into a rate hike mode was off…they simply waited too long to pull the trigger…

Crude Oil Update

Oil tycoon T. Boone Pickens, who made and lost fortunes targeting some of the largest U.S. explorers over the past 40 years, has cashed out as the worst Crude market downturn in decades drags on…Pickens, who had forecast a big rebound in Oil prices by the end of 2015, has sold all of his Oil holdings and is waiting for the best moment to get back in, he said yesterday in an interview on Bloomberg Go…Pickens won’t start investing again until Crude inventories start to fall…in the U.S., commercial stockpiles have risen in 16 of the past 19 weeks and now stand at more than 500 million barrels for the first time since 1930 at the height of the East Texas Oil boom.  “I will not re-enter, I’m sure, until we start to draw on inventories,” Pickens said. “That’s a key point.”

East Texas Oil Boom 1930

U.S. Crude inventories are at their highest level since the East Texas boom in 1930 as seen in this historical photo.

Canada’s largest integrated energy company posted a surprise $2 billion loss in the 4th quarter and said it will need to cut further into its spending plans to ride out the prolonged slump in Oil prices.  “It’s not a crash diet, it’s a change in lifestyle,” Suncor Energy (SU, TSX) President and CEO Steve Williams on an earnings call yesterday as the company further reduced the capital budget it first announced in November by $700 million for the year…

Standard & Poor’s Ratings Services has the ratings of 10 U.S. Oil and gas exploration and production companies, citing the sharp drop in Crude Oil prices…Chevron Corp. (CVX, NYSE), the second-largest U.S. energy company by revenue, was among the companies that had its credit rating cut…just a week ago, Chevron said it would lay off workers and slash more than $9 billion in capital spending this year after reporting it had swung to a 4th quarter loss..

In today’s Morning Musings

1.  Obama’s plan to tax Oil companies to pursue “climate change” agenda – will Trudeau follow suit?

2.  Fresh chart for TSX Gold Index after this week’s big move…

3.  Why a reversal in the U.S. Dollar Index is so important for the Venture

4.  Updates on WRR, PGM and RRS

Plus more…to view the rest of today’s Morning Musings, login with your username and password, or click here to gain full access to this and other exclusive BMR content and features…

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February 4, 2016

BMR Morning Market Musings…

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Gold Hits $1,150 U.S., Key Breakdown In Dollar Index

Hugely significant developments started in the markets yesterday and have continued this morning with an important breakdown in the U.S. Dollar Index.  We’ll examine the greenback situation in more detail in today’s Morning Musings, and how it may kick-start the Venture which is showing some patterns similar to a critical recovery phase in 2009.

Gold, meanwhile, has done exactly what John’s charts were predicting – bullion has climbed to the $1,150 level where there is considerable resistance.  Given that the U.S. dollar has finally lost momentum after a record run that started in the summer of 2014, the possibility that Gold’s $100 move from its November multi-year low is more than just another “dead-cat” bounce has to be taken very seriously.

As of 6:00 am Pacific, bullion is up $11 an ounce at $1,153.  Measured near-term Fib. resistance after the recent breakout from the cup-with-handle pattern is $1,175.  Temporarily overbought conditions in Gold could easily emerge at some point this month to be followed by a modest but healthy pullback, but there appears to be something different about this latest rally in the yellow metal.

As we mentioned last week, what we’ve been watching over the last couple of months could in fact be the start of a new bull market in Gold, something that could become much more obvious to most investors later this year.

Gold 3 Month Feb 4

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