12:18PM EDT Copper Jun 12 $3.35 0.04 (1.15%) 8:18AM EDT Gold 100 oz. Jun 12 $1,561.20 0.50 (0.03%) 12:33PM EDT Gold Jun 12 $1,567.70 4.30 (0.28%) 1:17PM EDT Palladium Jun 12 $611.45 6.75 (1.12%) 4:54AM EDT Platinum Jun 12 $1,389.00 10.70 (0.76%) 1969-12-31T19:00:00GMT-05:00 Silver 5000 oz. Jun 12 $28.38 0.00 (0.00%) 11:43AM EDT Silver Jun 12 $27.76 0.20 (0.70%) EUR/USD 1.2363 0.0006 (0.0517%) USD/JPY 78.3650 0.7530 (0.9517%) GBP/USD 1.5419 0.0061 (0.3970%) AUD/USD 0.9733 0.0020 (0.2085%) USD/CAD 1.0334 0.0036 (0.3462%) USD/CHF 0.9714 0.0004 (0.0427%) 1:10PM EDT Dow Jones Indus. Jun 12 $12,440.00 59.00 (0.48%) 1:13PM EDT E-Mini S&P 500 Jun 12 $1,312.00 3.50 (0.27%) 1:43PM EDT Mini Dow Jones Indus.-$5 Jun 12 $12,401.00 20.00 (0.16%) 1:13PM EDT Nasdaq 100 Jun 12 $2,533.50 2.75 (0.11%) 1:13PM EDT S&P 500 Jun 12 $1,311.20 2.60 (0.20%) 1:23PM EDT Crude Oil Jul 12 $87.35 0.47 (0.54%) 1:22PM EDT Heating Oil Jun 12 $2.72 0.02 (0.68%) 1:23PM EDT Natural Gas Jul 12 $2.48 0.06 (2.65%) 1:22PM EDT RBOB Gasoline Jun 12 $2.83 0.03 (0.99%) 1:38PM EDT Corn Jul 12 $560.00 0.50 (0.09%) May 18 Oats Jul 12 $296.25 8.75 (2.87%) May 30 Rough Rice Jul 12 $14.51 0.39 (2.62%) 1:42PM EDT Soybean Meal Jul 12 $397.20 12.70 (3.10%) 12:39PM EDT Soybean Oil Jul 12 $49.24 0.45 (0.91%) 12:29PM EDT Soybeans Jul 12 $1,350.75 22.50 (1.64%)
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Precious Metals News

By Jeff Clark, Casey Research

Let’s explore the advantages of saving in gold and silver over dollars. Here’s a hypothetical look at what could occur over the remainder of this decade.

The charts below compare saving $100/month in gold and silver vs. an interest-bearing money-market account. For our projections, we assumed gold’s average annual gain of 18% since 2001 will continue through 2020. For the money-market account, we used an annual interest rate of 1% in 2012 and added 0.5% each year, so that by 2020 it’s earning 5%.

Here’s what would transpire by 2020:

Read the rest of this entry »

Analysts at influential investment banks are finally coming around to realizing the driving forces for gold and leading indicators are signalling renewed strength in the yellow metal. Read the rest of this entry »

By Vedran Vuk, Casey Research

Exchange-traded funds have been all the rage in recent years – they are easy to buy, easy to sell, and often have lower expense ratios than index mutual funds. But the Casey Research team dug deep into the complex world of ETFs and found that in many cases, their names can be utterly deceptive.

Here are a few excerpts of our revealing special report, The Top Ten Misleading ETFs.

Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners (GDXJ) – This ETF sure has a funny definition of a junior mining company. In my opinion, a junior miner is a small, speculative company just getting off the ground. Our publication, Casey International Speculator, specializes in this particular kind of company. If I had to put a number on the market cap, I’d say that junior miners fall under the $500 million mark. If you really want to push the definition to its limits, maybe a market-cap ceiling of $1 billion could still qualify for junior status.

Regardless of the exact line of demarcation, most of us can agree that “junior” means “small.” Furthermore, most investors can agree that market caps over a billion dollars are anything but small. A billion isn’t a major, but it’s clearly in mid-tier territory. That said, the Junior Gold Miners ETF’s top 10 holdings are all over a billion dollar or more. The top holding, with 5.23% of assets, even has a market cap of $2.4 billion – that’s not exactly a junior, to say the least, and neither are the other companies on the list:

GDXJ was a flawed idea from the very start. Junior miners are necessarily bad choices for bundling into large ETFs. A large market cap ETF funneling funds into tiny mining companies sounds like a bubble waiting to happen. This is one area where carefully selecting individual plays is the only way to go. And this ETF has come no closer to changing that approach.

SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) – Since the last two funds had problems with rolling over futures contracts, you might be thinking to yourself, “Well, why not just buy funds that actually hold the underlying assets?” That’s a genius idea… if it were only so simple. Even SPDR Gold Shares (GLD), a fund that holds physical gold, has much hidden in its fine print.

At first blush, most investors think that GLD securely protects their gold and that they can retrieve it upon request. Yes, GLD has a giant vault where gold is actually kept. However, exchanging your paper shares for gold is much harder than the click of a mouse that gets you into GLD.

First of all, to retrieve the gold one must have special permission – meaning one is either a broker or market maker. And there’s another footnote worth mentioning: Gold can only be redeemed at a minimum of 100,000 shares of GLD, equivalent to 10,000 gold ounces (a little over $17 million at current prices). For the high rollers reading this article, that might mean something. For the average Joe out there, that means you will never be able to redeem your GLD shares for gold. Those shares are nothing more than pieces of paper – or worse yet, electronic bytes in your account.

With a closer examination of GLD, even the high rollers are misled by GLD. Deep in the SPDR Gold Shares prospectus, the fund includes an option to redeem gold requests in cash rather than physical metal. So, even if you are holding $17 million in GLD, you still might not receive your gold upon request in the case of a crisis in the gold market.

But wait – there’s more. Though GLD seems like any other ETF, it isn’t. GLD is structured as a grantor trust. Hence, the investor doesn’t pay taxes similar to regular ETFs. Instead, the investor pays taxes on the underlying assets – in this case, gold. Unfortunately, gold is taxed for long-term holdings at a higher rate of 28% as a collectible instead of the 15% capital gains tax. What seems like a simple fund actually has a world of complicated specifics in the fine print.

iShares MSCI Emerging Markets Eastern Europe Index Fund (ESR) – What do you think of when someone says “Eastern Europe?” The Iron Curtain, stuffed cabbage, kolaches, pierogies… No, besides that. For anyone who’s been asleep for the past few decades, Eastern Europe now has more countries than most can count. In the Balkans alone, there’s Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia, and even Kosovo… not to the mention all the other countries, such as Romania, Bulgaria, Lithuania, Estonia, the Ukraine… and the list goes on.

With so many different countries and stock exchanges, an ETF would seem like a perfect way to cover them all. Unfortunately, the MSCI Emerging Market Eastern Europe Index Fund (ESR) will cover none of those countries just mentioned. In fact, the ESR does a better job of covering Russia, with a 76% allocation, than the rest of Eastern Europe – a whole 21% of the fund is invested in Russia’s Gazprom alone.

Besides Russia, the fund only holds a couple of other countries including Poland at 16%, the Czech Republic at 4.1%, and Hungary at 3.4%. Though some companies in the fund may serve Eastern Europe, this is hardly what most investors had in mind for an Eastern European ETF. If investors really want a Russian ETF, those are not hard to find.

[To find out what the other 7 ETFs are – and whether you might own one yourself – click here for your FREE special report, The Top 10 Misleading ETFs.]

28

Mar 2012

ETFs: Do You Really Know What You’re Buying?

Author: goldnews | Filed under: Precious Metals News

According to Bloomberg’s news, today’s rebound of more than 1% in gold’s price is at least partly due to buying from China yesterday. Higher prices have deterred jewelry demand according to Thomas Reuters data, but the slack has largely been made up by investment demand. China’s buying is exactly the type of investment demand gold needs to solidify its price gains as purchases by China are unlikely to shift gears by market whims. Sovereign buyers have proven to be long term holders and governments in the far east have been the major accumulators over the last decade. Read the rest of this entry »

23

Mar 2012

China Buys More Gold for the Long Run

Author: goldnews | Filed under: Precious Metals News

By Doug Casey, Casey Research

In an interview with Louis James, the inimitable Doug Casey throws cold water on those celebrating the economic recovery.

Read the rest of this entry »

By Louis James, Casey Research

Economic crises signal that the current system isn’t working as expected and needs improvement. When it comes to monetary systems, questioning their fundamentals can lead to doubts about whether the preferred medium of exchange will continue to be preferred for long. The large-scale whirlwind of economic trouble around the globe has pushed some to rethink the role of gold in the economy – and to actually move toward bringing it back.

Read the rest of this entry »

21

Mar 2012

Iran Says “Gold Is Money”

Author: goldnews | Filed under: Political News, Precious Metals News

Jim Grant, editor of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer, gave a couple excellent interviews this week that all should watch (the full video interviews are available at the bottom of the post). Let’s go over the main topics of discussion: Read the rest of this entry »

Goldcorp founder and CEO of McEwen Mining Inc, Rob McEwen, went on record with Bloomberg news offering fresh precious metal price forecasts. The Canadian based gold icon sees significant gains ahead for both gold and silver. McEwen expects gold prices to hit $5,000 per ounce, a 300% increase from current prices, and silver to reach $200/oz, a 600% rise from today’s price. Read the rest of this entry »

By Jeff Clark, Casey Research

Do you own enough gold and silver for what lies ahead?

If 10% of your total investable assets (i.e., excluding equity in your primary residence) aren’t held in various forms of gold and silver, we at Casey Research think your portfolio is at risk.

Read the rest of this entry »

9

Mar 2012

Time to Accumulate Gold and Silver

Author: goldnews | Filed under: Precious Metals News

By Jeff Clark, Casey Research

On February 29, gold dropped 4.8% and silver 6.2% (based on London fix prices). That’s quite the fall for one day. We’ve seen prices that have risen that much, too. But as I’m about to show, these ain’t nothin’, baby. Read the rest of this entry »

6

Mar 2012

The Face of Volatility

Author: goldnews | Filed under: Precious Metals News