Spotlight Shines on 2010 World Investment Conference
Stock-Markets / Investing 2010 Jun 17, 2010 - 01:29 AM GMTBy: The_Gold_Report
 This year's iteration of Cambridge House's World  Investment Conference—a one-stop-shopping venue for resource education and  opportunities—may not have set attendance records, but the videographer found  plenty of people on the floors and in the halls to gather general observations  about this year's show, opinions on hot commodities and insights into  investment topics. Tune in for some snippets from the likes of Al Korelin,  Howard Fitch, Lawrence Roulston, Marin Katusa, David Coffin, Roger Wiegand and  many others in this
This year's iteration of Cambridge House's World  Investment Conference—a one-stop-shopping venue for resource education and  opportunities—may not have set attendance records, but the videographer found  plenty of people on the floors and in the halls to gather general observations  about this year's show, opinions on hot commodities and insights into  investment topics. Tune in for some snippets from the likes of Al Korelin,  Howard Fitch, Lawrence Roulston, Marin Katusa, David Coffin, Roger Wiegand and  many others in this
 Gold Report exclusive.
  
  Al Korelin, Korelin Economics Report: Welcome to the Cambridge  House World Investment Conference in Vancouver, BC, at the Convention Center  West. My name is Al Korelin. I am fortunate in that I take a part in this show,  and I have been taking a part in these shows every year for the past 15 or 20  years—excellent, excellent investment forums; excellent, excellent educational  forums. What you're about to see is not Al Korelin's opinion of the show, but  what other people are saying; and I think you'll agree you're going to want to  attend next year.
  
  Howard Fitch, Cambridge House:Oh, we're very pleased. This is our sixth  year doing the conference in June. Getting a little close to summertime, but a  great opportunity for investors to come out, hear what the gurus have to say,  what the experts have to say about what's coming down the road as far as  opportunities to invest in and profit from the resource sector. And there are a  lot of companies here—over 200 exhibiting companies that have lots of projects  going on through the summer, lots of development plans. Typically, the summer  is a bit of a soft time in the market; so it's actually a good time to get in  there, wade through a number of these quality juniors and pick them up  July–August. Oftentimes, you'll see a rally in the fall when drill results come  out; so it's an excellent time to be shopping for some of the juniors.
  
  GENERAL OBSERVATIONS OF THE SHOW
  
  Gary Freeman, Pediment Gold Corp.: Well, the conference has been a  little slower than is typical; but the markets are difficult, as everybody's  seen over the last little while. And, once again, this is an industry of  hard-core people—people who really believe in the precious metals industry as a  whole; so, like always, we see the people that matter here.
  
  Lawrence Roulston, Resource Opportunities: I think the attendance  is down; the buzz is down, because the markets in general are down. And when  the markets are down, people are just not feeling as enthusiastic, which is  really unfortunate because at a time like this—when the prices are down—it's  absolutely the best time to get involved. And whether it's commodity companies  or any other sector, the best time to be investing is when things are down.
  
  David Coffin, Hard Rock Advisory: I think the show's been a good one.  You have to look at any show in the context of the market and also the weather.  The weather's been lousy in Vancouver for the last two months, but there's a  very good attendance today. I think there's certainly a very good group of  companies, and for a gold- and base metals-oriented conference, I think it's  doing quite well.
  
  HOT COMMODITIESHoward Fitch, Cambridge House: Well, we've been hearing  that the rare earth element companies are out there. Lithium, vanadium,  rhodium—"iums" seem to be somewhat in vogue as part of the clean energy,  green technology spectrum (battery, electrical car power, etc). Gold's always a  big one here at our conferences, especially with the gold price over $1,200/oz.
  
  Marin Katusa, Casey Research: I think that people have to be careful  about the buzz right now. If you walk down any of the halls, it's very lithium-  and rare-earth oriented. You have to be very careful about these. They're rare  earths, but they're very far from rare. A lot of these companies are trying to  promote value in situ. There's a big difference between value in the ground and  outside the ground, so be careful with that.
  
  Roger Wiegand, Trader Tracks: Gold this morning was on another  tear. It was up $17–$20 this morning. We think it will do a top at around  $1,250. And silver, which had sold off considerably from $19.50 to around  $17.25, it was back up 40 cents again this morning. So we can see the  divergence among the metals and the shares. We can see that companies are going  to do well and have great a future. There's no question about it.
  
  Hugh Clarke, Endeavour Silver Corp.: Certain shows have a lot of buzz,  whether it's rare earths, silver or the base metals; but I don't find that this  time. Everybody seems to be fairly buoyant and optimistic about all the metals,  with a little bit of a backdrop of concern over the broader markets. But a  really hot item, like we saw with uranium perhaps a few years ago, I don't see  at this conference.
  
  Lawrence Roulston, Resource Opportunities: The reason for the  attention on gold is because people are looking for a safe haven. They're  looking for security; and for that reason, gold seems to be at the top of the  heap at this moment. The gold price is up near record territory right now, so  it comes back to the comments a moment ago that people are planning on gold at  the top of the market, and they're ignoring other commodities when probably the  greatest upside potential is in the other commodities being completely ignored  by investors at this time.
  
  Marina Trasolini, Resource Opportunities: I think right now  everyone's excited about gold. Some people are excited about base metals—we're  excited about base metals. And everyone's looking for a good, good company to  buy.
  
  David Coffin, Hard Rock Advisory: Gold, without question. The markets  are in turmoil. We're in the middle of a very major shift from a western to an  eastern focus in the markets. The West is indebted. People are unsure of paper  currencies, so they're buying gold. There was an old maxim that you should own  5%–10% of your portfolio in gold. It went by the wayside. That is coming back  very much into favor. During that process, gold should be a very good place to  be.
  
  Yale Simpson, Exeter Resource Corp.: In terms of hot commodities—as much  as nothing's that hot right now—the hot commodities right now are more in the  gold space. It's a difficult week to have a show because, if you look at the  copper graph, copper broke through its support level today. And if you're a  chartist, you'd say, "Oh, copper's going a lot—potentially a lot—lower."  Now, I'm not an expert on copper. The gold graph says I'm going higher. Most  base metal graphs say I'm going lower. It's always difficult around here to  tell a base metals story. In Canada, unless it's nickel, at times it's great.  But gold will continue because people know that for a gold story, and I'm a  technical, so I'll say it. With a gold story, if you find 100,000 ounces of  high grade, chances are you can mine it. In the base metals space, good luck.  You can have 100,000 tons of the highest-grade copper you want. Then what? So,  in a skeptical market, they'll always fall back on gold.
  
  BEST INVESTMENT ADVICE
  
  Lawrence Roulston, Resource Opportunities: What I like most right  now are companies that have already made a discovery—what we call  development-stage companies—where they're taking a deposit where they've  already outlined it and they're advancing toward production. The upside  potential there is enormous, and you're not taking on the discovery risk. So  you get that balance of still having great upside potential without having the  big risk of a company that hopes to make a discovery next week.
  
  Marin Katusa, Casey Research: I think the correction going on in the  U.S. geothermals right now—a company like Ram Power, which is well funded and  has a management team with a proven track record—that's where I think the great  value is. Magma Energy. But be careful with the companies that can't finance in  a bad market and need to spend money. And this is going to be a tough market.
  
  Marina Trasolini, Resource Opportunities: I like Millrock Resources Inc. (TSX.V:MRO). It's a  prospect generator that has joint-venture partners spending money on a number  of its projects. And their partners are major mining companies, so that's  always a plus.
  
  David Coffin, Hard Rock Advisory: East Asia Minerals Corp. (TSX.V:EAS), which is  here, has been a big, big success for us already. They are, in our opinion,  priced to their current results. They still have a lot of untested ground, so I  would have to put them at the top of the list. They have the success; and the  likelihood of being taken over by a senior producer, in our view, is very large.  That would probably top the list today. Another one here is more of a future  story—and perhaps a little more interesting in that sense—called Mirasol Resources Ltd. (TSX.V:MRZ). They're  working on high-grade silver-gold veins in Argentina, have had a success and  have been recognized for that success. They've put a second, very strong  project on the table that they'll be drilling later this year. That's one that  we're very much focused on right now, with the future accent towards the end of  the year.
  
  Yale Simpson, Exeter Resource Corp.: If people are looking at entering  the space, always go with a company—well, I mean, Rick Rule and other people  will tell you how to invest—but, apart from the management side, if a company  has cash that means they had the credibility to get there. Cash first, then  have a resource, a deposit; because you can always fall back on that. There's  always value in having a deposit. And then you say, "What's your burn  rate?. . .Are the rigs turning?. . .Give me that news flow." If they don't  have any almost-guaranteed news flow, where you can expect to have a positive  result, leave it alone. And that will separate—only 15% of the companies in  this room will give you the answers to those questions. The rest of them may  say, "Well, you know, we could do, we could be, that. We're trying to do  this." But they don't.
  
  Howard Fitch, Cambridge House: Well, we just want to encourage you to go  to our Cambridge House website. Keep an eye on our  upcoming events. We'll be in Toronto in September, Montreal in November and  back here in Vancouver in January. Again, our conference is free to attend and  we offer a wealth of information over the two days. People with any exposure to  investing in the resource sector really owe it to themselves to come to  conferences of this nature. It's one-stop shopping as far as education and  opportunities go—and they definitely need to make the time to attend.
  
  Al Korelin, Korelin Economics Report: Okay, there you have it.  It's been a pleasure attending the Cambridge House World Investment Conference  up here in Vancouver, BC. We'll be back next time.
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  DISCLOSURE:
  1) Gold Report Publisher Karen Roche personally and/or her family  own the following shares of companies mentioned in this interview: None.
  2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The  Gold Report: Great Panther Silver, Timmins and First Majestic.
3) Sean Brodrick: I personally and/or my family own shares of the  following companies mentioned in this interview: None. I personally and/or my  family are paid by the following companies: None.
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