Long-Term Gold and Silver Stocks Investing Tips
Commodities / Gold & Silver Stocks Sep 22, 2011 - 02:19 AM GMTBy: The_Gold_Report
 Downgrades for U.S. debt, austerity programs across Europe and  political uncertainty all point to a continued uptrend in gold prices according  to Brien Lundin, publisher and editor of Gold Newsletter. For long-term  investors, Brien Lundin says in this exclusive interview with The Gold  Report, small-cap, precious metals equities are one place to take advantage  of the coming upward gold price trend.
Downgrades for U.S. debt, austerity programs across Europe and  political uncertainty all point to a continued uptrend in gold prices according  to Brien Lundin, publisher and editor of Gold Newsletter. For long-term  investors, Brien Lundin says in this exclusive interview with The Gold  Report, small-cap, precious metals equities are one place to take advantage  of the coming upward gold price trend. 
The Gold Report: Brien, cited the escalating European and U.S. debt crises as triggers for the  August 22 spike in gold prices, when it briefly eclipsed the $1,900/ounce (oz.)  mark. Since then, the French bank Société Générale has been downgraded and  austerity measures are forcing the Greek economy further into recession.  Despite these significant catalysts, the gold price remains range-bound between  $1,750 and $1,850/oz. Why isn't gold reacting?
  
  Brien Lundin: If the European debt crisis and the S&P downgrade of  U.S. sovereign debt had happened separately, say a couple of months apart, I  think gold would have risen just as far, but the rise wouldn't have been as  steep and the market wouldn't have overheated. But they happened to occur right  on top of each other, so the market got ahead of itself and went nearly  parabolic. Speculators who were merely trend-following traders came into gold,  but the end of the rally sent them all packing at once. That dealt a sharp  psychological and emotional blow to the market that we are still recovering  from. Since then, we have seen a lot of very fluid, hot money coming in and out  of the market. 
  
  More recent news from Europe hasn't had quite the same effect. We have seen  some itchier trigger fingers, people playing the news of the day and getting  right back out. We have also seen physical gold buyers from Asia come in on the  price dips. 
  
  The result has been rallies tempered on the upside by the speculators  abandoning trades more quickly. We have also seen drops tempered by  bargain-hunting, physical gold buyers coming in on the downside. In short, gold  is in a consolidation phase, awaiting the next trend, which I think will  continue to be headed upward. 
  
  TGR: You mentioned Asian physical buying. Recent rumors suggested China  could be buying Italian debt to help Italy out of its problems. Is that  bolstering the euro and keeping investors out of gold?
  
  BL: I think that China helping out Italy hurts the gold price in an  indirect way. It's a sign of China knowing which side its bread is buttered on  and knowing that it needs a stable Europe to support its economy. 
  
  We saw that need for stability when the European Central Bank and other central  banks announced a coordinated U.S. dollar liquidity program and Germany and  France said that Greece would definitely stay in the euro. All of this is part  and parcel of trying to calm the markets down in the interim and to show that  the gold price is essentially capped or that the rise is being dampened by  official intervention.
  
  TGR: Are you implying that the euro is doomed? 
  
  BL: I believe the euro is doomed as it currently exists. I think there  is very little chance Greece will remain in the European Monetary Union. The  rest of the PIIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Spain) remain to be seen. After  all, what's the use of a club if you can't kick anyone out? 
  
  Obviously, the risks here are the implications of such an event, the dominos  that would fall in the European banking system. The fact that Germany and  France are so reluctant to kick Greece out of the euro zone shows that the  problems could be very deep and widespread. I think they are just prolonging  the situation. Ultimately, the euro of the future will not be the euro we see  today. 
  
  TGR: What effect has the news out of Europe had on the gold price?
  
  BL: There may have been some official manipulation in the gold price  recently to bolster the idea that things are calming down. When the Swiss  announced its cap on the franc, the news was incredibly bullish for gold; gold  in effect became the last safe-haven investment standing. But shortly after  that news broke, the metal sold off about $50/oz. overseas in just a few  seconds. Investors wondered who could have known that news was coming, who  could have reacted that quickly and sold so dramatically. The evidence points  toward official management of the gold price.
  
  TGR: In the September issue of Gold Newsletter you wrote that  "long-term factors still favor a continued uptrend" in the gold  price. Can you give us more detail? 
  
  BL: When we look at the S&P downgrade of U.S. sovereign debt, the  problems in Greece and the potentially cascading effects across the banking  system in Europe, what we see is the result of far too much debt being created  on both the governmental and private level. Too much money has already been  created and will have to be created in the future to inflate away all that  debt. It is mathematically and politically impossible for austerity programs to  be severe enough to overcome these debt loads. There is no way, especially  under the weight of those austerity programs, that growth can be robust enough  to overcome these debt burdens. At some point and to some degree, inflation  will have to depreciate those debts away. That is the very reason why investors  with a long-term view are buying gold. They aren't concerned about gold having  come so far over the past 10 years. They are looking down the road and seeing  the amount of currency that will have to be created to get out of our  tremendous fiscal problems. 
  
  TGR: With the aid of Ron Greiss, at thechartstore.com, you note that  gold prices should continue to move higher at least until the 2012 election in  the United States. Why?
  
  BL: I don't see any chance of fundamental fiscal reform in the U.S. to  address the debt problems before the 2012 elections. No one is going to move  off center and no one is going to take the political heat to make the dramatic  reforms necessary to get the U.S. back on its feet. 
  
  We have about 14 more months, at least, in this bull market. If you look at the  long-term trading channel for gold going back to the beginning of this bull  market in 2000, you see that that channel, while fairly broad, has not really  been violated, except by the 2008 credit crisis. If you extend that trading  channel, it brings gold up to a price range of around $2,100 to $2,500/oz. by  the 2012 elections. That would be a very nice gain from current levels. 
  
  After 2012, gold's future depends on the results of those elections. If it is  status quo politically, I think all bets are off on the gold price. I wouldn't  even hazard to guess what the ultimate upside could be. 
  
  TGR: And who knows where the euro will be by then.
  
  BL: Right. We are on the brink of a massive inflationary reaction to the  debt loads around the world. A number of people are afraid of a deflationary  collapse, but I learned long ago that central bankers will never let that  happen. Their primal instinct is to inflate in a situation like that and that's  exactly what they'll do. They will take the lesser of two evils.
  
  TGR: Nonetheless, most precious metal stock prices are falling,  especially among the juniors. It's increasingly difficult to convince people  that small-cap, precious metals equities remain the place to be. You recently  heartened Gold Newsletter readers by reminding them that you recommended Millrock  Resources Inc. (MRO:TSX.V) "at $0.06 a share in November 2008 and it  subsequently traded well over a dollar a share. I expect similar profits to be  created in the months ahead." Which profit makers are you high on now?
  
  BL: Back then, I recommended Millrock because of the company's  extraordinary attributes and an overriding belief that, at some point, the sun  does come out. I still like Millrock. They will have a lot of news out in the  weeks ahead. 
  
  Looking at the Yukon, I like Wolverine Minerals Corp. (WLV:TSX.V). I have owned that  stock for some time and recommend it because the company has a truly  exceptional property portfolio, one that gives them a lot of kicks at the can  in the Yukon. 
  
  TGR: Brent Cook called Wolverine a high-risk exposure to the Yukon when  it was trading at $0.63. He called that a good entry point. Now it is trading  at around $0.38; I guess that would make a very good entry point. Do you agree  with Cook that it is high-risk exposure to the Yukon? 
  
  BL: Brent is a very conservative speculator, if you can imagine such a  thing. When he recommends something, he must really, really like it. He is such  an astute geologist and has seen so much in his career that he picks holes in  just about anything. 
  
  I think what he liked about Wolverine, much to my consternation because he beat  me to the punch, was the property portfolio, the people behind it and the  management team. I think folks from Strategic Metals Ltd. (SMD:TSX.V) put the  property portfolio together and are acting as operators in the exploration  program. 
  
  Good management, good expertise in the ground, an outstanding property  portfolio and a varied property portfolio gives you a number of tickets in the  lottery. 
  
  As far as being high risk, these are all high-risk plays. You need to have  companies with a number of properties and a number of these companies in any  kind of a serious portfolio to spread the risk around. You also need to get out  when you make some profits or take some money off the table along the way.
  
  TGR: Any other names? 
  
  BL: Another one that I own and recommend is Golden Predator  Corp. (GPD:TSX). This company also has an extensive property portfolio and  a very astute management team. It has already made a couple of very exciting  discoveries. 
  
  TGR: That includes impressive drill results on the Sleeman zone, which  is part of the Brewery Creek project. What can you tell us about those results?
  
  BL: Today's exploration market is not so much in a phase of discovery,  but of rediscovery right now. Companies are going back and reworking projects  that were economic failures at much lower gold prices. Resources in the ground  that weren't economic with gold prices of $400/oz. are wildly economic and  profitable at today's prices.
  
  That's precisely what Golden Predator is doing with Brewery Creek. The company  is not only expanding on the resources that were left there, it is making some  really dramatic discoveries of new zones, like Sleeman, that previous operators  overlooked. It is benefiting from the power of current prices and applying some  really innovative new geological thinking to these projects. 
  
  TGR: Golden Predator has been rewarded with some good gold-silver intercepts  so far. It also helps to have Mike Burke, who used to head up the Yukon  Geological Survey, working for you.
  
  BL: Yes, and Bill Sheriff, Golden Predator's president, has done it  before as well. 
  
  TGR: In February, you told our readers about Revolution  Resources Corp.'s (RV:TSX; RVRCF:OTCQX) efforts to find gold in the  Carolinas. Recently, Revolution acquired the rights to Lake Shore Gold Corp.'s  (LSG:TSX) New Mexican property portfolio. Is this just a matter of diversifying  or are things not going well in the Carolinas?
  
  BL: I think everything in the Carolinas is going according to plan. I  think the key to the Carolinas is that the region represents an emerging gold  play. What Revolution is doing is twofold. First, the company is building value  in the property it has. Second, it is expanding its property position to make  it a must-have company or must-have land position for a big company wishing to  get into that play.
  
  The New Mexico acquisition wasn't a matter of diversifying Revolution's  geographical position; it was just too good of an opportunity to pass up. The  portfolio of properties Revolution acquired includes some outstanding  prospects. If there aren't proven resources, there are identified high-grade  intercepts that scream to be followed up on. 
  
  TGR: What are other companies that you are following or that you think  offer value in this economic climate?
  
  BL: One company we have followed for some time is Rye Patch Gold  Corp. (RPM:TSX.V; RPMGF:OTCQX). This company is making progress and has a  great business plan in this high gold price market. It is building up a  multi-million-ounce inventory of lower grade resources in Nevada using a number  of deposits around existing central milling and processing operations to which  ore can be trucked in. It is trying to consolidate a number of different  resources, perhaps any single one of which would not be sufficient to support a  standalone operation, but together represent a sizeable resource. It is also  packaging that for eventual sale to a major and it has been getting good  results as well. 
  
  TGR: Isn't Rye Patch drilling the Garden Gate Pass property, not far  from Barrick Gold Corp.'s (ABX:TSX; ABX:NYSE) Cortez Hill Gold Mine? Barrick  has also discovered what it is calling the Red Hill and Goldrush deposits. Rye  Patch believes it owns property that also encompasses the gold structure that  hosts Barrick's newly found deposits. That has to be good news.
  
  BL: We have seen a nice uptick in Rye Patch's share price as a result.  The project lies along the strike of the Barrick discoveries, around 3  kilometers away. The structure looks good. Coincidentally, a drilling program  was already in progress and we are eagerly awaiting results on that. 
  
  TGR: Are we six months or so away from a resource? 
  
  BL: I think longer than that. The program is only 5,000 meters. We hope  to get a sniff of the kind of results that you look for in Nevada that are  indicative of a much larger deposit.
  
  TGR: Any other companies that you would like to talk about?
  
  BL: Rare earth plays have come back a bit and represent great long-term  opportunities regardless of what happens with gold. They are longer-term plays  on the growth of technology. We were the first to recommend Rare Element  Resources Ltd. (RES:TSX; REE:NYSE.A) and we still like it at current  levels. We like Quest  Rare Minerals Ltd. (QRM:TSX.V; QRM:NYSE.A) and were also among the first to  recommend that. Tasman  Metals Ltd. (TSM:TSX.V; TASXF:OTCPK; T61:Fkft) is also very attractive  right now.
  
  We just started recommending Elissa Resources Ltd. (ELI:TSX.V; E30:Fkft). It is a very  early stage REE play. Its Thor Project in Nevada is only about 16 miles away  from Molycorp Minerals' (MCP:NYSE) Mountain Pass project. The idea is that if  Elissa proves up or gets any solid indications of a REE close to Molycorp's  project, the share price will fly. It's really an exploration play—high risk,  but very high potential reward.
  
  I also like Hathor  Exploration Ltd. (HAT:TSX.V). It is the subject of a takeover bid from  Cameco Corp. (CCO:TSX; CCJ:NYSE) that dramatically undervalues the company's real  value. That is a uranium play. It is a very high grade, probably the  third-highest grade uranium deposit in the world. 
  
  I like a lot of plays in West Africa, for example, Keegan Resources  Inc. (KGN:TSX; KGN:NYSE.A). I also like the Yukon. We recommend an array of  companies in that area. It's just a matter of buying on the dips and having the  12–18 month timeframe to see any real results. 
  
  TGR: Is that the advice you would give to a novice investor right now,  to invest long term?
  
  BL: Yes. You have to think down the road a bit, especially with  strategic investments in plays like the Yukon, where news shuts down in the  winter and you can pick up bargains at that time. It typically takes at least  two exploration seasons for companies in the Yukon to get indicative results. A  number of the companies that were hotly recommended last year aren't going to  make any real news until next fall. You can pick up bargains now; you just need  the patience to wait 12–24 months rather than expecting drill results within a  few weeks.
  
  TGR: Brien, as always, thank you for your time and insights.
  
  With a career spanning three decades in the investment markets, Brien  Lundin serves as president and CEO of Jefferson Financial, a highly  regarded publisher of market analyses and producer of investment-oriented  events. Under the Jefferson Financial umbrella, Brien publishes and edits Gold Newsletter, a  cornerstone of precious metals advisories since 1971; he digs into not only  small caps of every type but also macroeconomics and geopolitical issues that  ultimately affect every resource investor. Brien also hosts the New Orleans  Investment Conference, the oldest and most respected investment event of  its kind that, each year, gathers together the giants of investing, economics  and geopolitics. Touted as "the world’s greatest investment show" by  Money Magazine, the New Orleans Conference stands today as one of the few  investment events that maintains a focus on value for the attendee, presenting  independent, objective views from top experts, and charging attendees for the  value they receive.
  
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  DISCLOSURE:
  1) Brian Sylvester of The Gold Report conducted this interview. He personally  and/or his family own shares of the following companies mentioned in this  interview: None.
  2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Gold  Report: Millrock Resources Inc., Wolverine Minerals Corp., Golden Predator  Corp., Revolution Resources Corp., Rye Patch Gold Corp., Rare Element Resources  Ltd., Quest Rare Minerals Ltd., Tasman Metals Ltd.
3) Brien Lundin: I personally and/or my family own shares of the following  companies mentioned in this interview: Millrock Resources Inc., Golden Predator  Corp., Wolverine Minerals Corp., Tasman Metals Ltd., Elissa Resources Ltd.,  Hathor Exploration Ltd. and Keegan Resources Inc. I personally and/or my family  am paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: None. 
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