Hi Fuller & all..... This might help:-)
  10:30p EST Tuesday, November 16, 1999
  Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:
  I haven't had much to share with you for the last week,  so GATA Chairman Bill Murphy has agreed to my  distributing his latest "Midas" commentary at  www.LeMetropoleCafe.com. It follows. Please post this  as seems useful.
  CHRIS POWELL, Secretary Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
  * * *
  "MIDAS" COMMENTARY FOR NOVEMBER 16, 1999 BY BILL MURPHY, www.LeMetropoleCafe.com  
  November 16, 1999  Spot Gold $294.30 up $2.90  Spot Silver $5.14 up 6 cents 
  Technicals 
  The $288 floor. For the fourth or fifth time, gold  retreated to $288 only to bounce off that solid support  level. It still feels like this market is sold out in a  big-picture sense. Many of the $290 December call  option holders took delivery of December futures  positions as that option closed well in the money.  Yesterday's early market activity was an attempt by the  bears to flush out these new longs. The December Comex  contract sold off $2 in the morning to $290.10 before  rallying back to close 40 cents higher on the day. That  move down would have been enough so scare off weak new  longs. 
  Today's price action was unusual. In recent years the  manipulators of the gold price have kept the gold price  steady to lower ahead of most financially related  announcements. Today gold came out of the box very  strongly and stayed that way ahead of and through the  Federal Reserve Borad's 25-basis-point rate hike  announcement. That is very encouraging. Maybe the New  York Fed is beginning to realize it makes no sense to  hold the price of gold down at such unsustainable low  levels when the Fed is raising interest rates due to  inflationary pressures -- or is that a stretch on my  part? 
  The open interest pattern is interesting. On Friday the  open interest shrank some 18,407 contracts, with the  December contract declining to 59,904 contracts.  Yesterday the December open interest rose 4,760  contracts bringing the total back up to 64,664  contracts. My take on that is that the trade does not  want to be short the December contract because it could  be squeezed, so they are covering shorts and not  rolling over their positions at the moment -- hence the  big Friday reduction. The increase yesterday (even  after the morning bear raid) in the December contract  might be due to longs who want to take delivery, or at  least hold on to the December contract while they view  the delivery and price action during the month of  December. 
  There are only five full trading days until the U.S.  Thanksgiving Day recess. The Comex is closed on  Thursday and Friday next week while Wednesday is a half  day of diminished, pre-holiday trading activity. That  brings us back to the gold game on Monday, November  29, and the next Bank of England auction followed by  first notice day for the December Comex gold contract  on Tuesday, November 30. 
  Let the fireworks begin. 
  Silver is doing its diddle thing. "The wrong kind of  funds are now short." As previously stated, our floor  sources tell us that these outfits are almost always  wrong in their silver trading. Looks like they will be  so again. 
  I cannot stress this enough: Silver is a different  trading animal. It probably will rally $2 to $4 over a  brief time, just when you think it will stay right  about $5 forever. 
  Fundamentals 
  On that note, Bob Hoye of Institutional Advisers sent  me this oil/silver chart with silver trading about  $5.06. It enunciates some key silver buy signals as  related to oil. He has another one and Bob presents the  following chart for your perusual: 
  (CHART WAS HERE)    Spot crude oil closed in new high ground once again  today. December finished this session at $25.70 per  barrel, up 57 cents. Of course there is no inflation  anywhere to be seen, according to most of the  mainstream pundits. 
  A comment on oil technicals. During the Iraqi war, oil  spiked to $42 when it took out $27 per barrel. There is  little technical resistance if $27 is taken out. If  there are serious Y2K pipeline breakdowns, $42 is not  an unreasonable price objective. 
  Just in: Oil statistics announced after the close are  very bullish. Crude oil is now trading above $26 per  barrel as the API stocks were down an unexpected 2.49  million barrels. Gasoline stocks were down 4.94 million  barrels. Even the heating oil stocks (with this very  warm fall season thus far) were reduced by .93 million  barrels. 
  By all accounts the U.S money supply has exploded  recently. According to the St. Louis Federal Reserve,  the Adjusted Monetary Base has been rising 20.1 percent  since Sept. 8, while the Adjusted Reserves have been  rising at a compounded annualized rate of 78.5 percent.  Geez, a zooming money supply, soaring oil prices, the  Fed hiking rates, strong physical gold demand. Why is  the gold price not approaching $400 instead of $300? 
  The cafe's John Brimelow attended the Johnson Matthey  platinum/palladium gathering this morning. John will  have more for us later. For now: Demand for both  platinum and palladium is very strong, Russian supplies  are in doubt, Chinese platinum demand is very robust.  John sees both platinum and palladium challenging $500.  Hello gold! Hello silver! Shake a tail feather here.  Overpower the conspiracy crowd again. 
  Goldman Sachs makes no sense. James Riley, their top  commodity guy, touts $375 gold next year. He must have  shaken the politicos at Goldman that know the New York  Fed and some of the Goldman crowd have been trying of  late to hold DOWN the gold price. That is probably why  they called on Steve Strongin, a former Fed official  and the director of commodities research at Goldman  Sachs, to counter Riley with the following statement  last Thursday: 
  "LONDON (Reuters) -- Commodities investors seeking to  profit from the projected rise in global growth should  look to oil, base metals, and farm commodities rather  than gold, U.S. bankers Goldman Sachs said on Thursday. 
  "'The gold market has been and likely will continue to  be driven by central bank actions. I tend to view those  as unforecastable,' Steve Strongin told an analysis  briefing. 
  "'The core issue remains how fast the central banks  dispose of those assets. That's likely to be a long  process.'" 
  What central banks, Mr. Steve, Former Fed Official? Did  you not hear about the European central bank  communique? Who has enough gold to supply the 125-tonne  monthly deficit that is ongoing? Can you name the  selling central banks for us, please? Are you referring  to your former colleagues? If that is the case, don't  you think the American public should be advised that  the U.S. gold reserves might be a part of a giant  giveaway to protect the bullion dealer crowd and the  big New York banks? Scandal is coming, Steve. Will you  be called to testify about these remarks when the  manipulation game blows up? 
  Potpourri and the Gold Shares 
  Recently I pointed out that the gold trading volume is  much greater on up days than on down days, on balance.  Joe Granville, the on-balance volume guru, says the  same is true of the leading gold stocks. 
  Lehman Brothers, which is more bearish about the gold  market than any other Wall Street firm (that is saying  something), downgraded Barrick Gold today. Even the  bears see no reason to own the super-hedged company.  Perhaps that is why stocks like Newmont Mining are  outperforming Barrick. Over the summer Barrick and  Newmont were trading around the same price. Today's  closes: Newmont 22 3/4, Barrick. 17 3/4. 
  GATA's fax campaign and common sense are prevailing.  Why own a company like a Barrick if you are bullish on  the gold market? One of these days Barrick CEO Randall  Oliphant is going to wake up. I wonder if it will be  before the price of gold goes $350 bid. 
  I received word from the Comex floor today that hedge  funds were on the buy side. Could the latest and  greatest hedge fund trade be to go long gold futures  and sell Barrick Gold? That would make sense. I spoke  with some big-time gold share money managers and asked  if they still owned some Barrick. Sheephishly, one said  yes, but just in case, he might buy back his hedge  positions. He reasoned that would cause the stock to  fly. Most likely it would, as the gold industry would  be ignited. But for that to happen, gold futures would  go up that much more than Barrick, so the trade appears  to be well conceived -- especially with Barrick STILL  espousing the virtues of being so hedged. If Barrick  does not cover, shareholders will rightly become  concerned as more hedge fiascoes surface on the next  big gold price rise. 
  Hold that Tiger! Scratch that. Pitch that Tiger! Cafe  sources told you months ago that $6 billion in  redemptions were going to plague this one high-flying  hedge fund. It was a Cafe bulletin. The bulletin spread  around the internet and reached Wall Street. Tiger was  confronted by CNBC and Julian Robertson's response was  that our information was "obscene." 
  It was not our information that was obscene; it was the  performance of his hedge fund. Last night the news   services reported that Tiger's assets had sunk to $5.3  billion at the end of September. That compares to $9.69  billion at the end of June. Before the June numbers  were announced, Tiger was supposed to have around $11.5  billion in assets, which was down from its all-time  high of around $22 bullion. 
  The source that gave us the news on Tiger months ago  was the same source who told the Cafe this summer about  government-to-government negotiations that would boost  the gold price, not long before the European central  banks' announcement. 
  There are several points to be noted here. One, you  have to wonder how this horrendous performance from  this once- revered outfit will affect other hedge  funds. Two, it was also reported that Tiger sold 90  percent of its Intel position after hiring the Merrill  Lynch high-tech guru. Wonder why? Midas' guess: They  got murdered in a short gold position and had to sell  what was liquid to accommodate their redemptions.  Three, last June Midas speculated that the emergency  secret banking meeting in Philadelphia concerned  serious hedge fund problems and was just another reason  to cap the gold price. That was just our hunch -- Tiger  is a reality. Intel was easy to dump. What about  Tiger's exotic, illiquid investment positions? Who  wants to be the last man out the Tiger door? 
  Nesbitt Burns and Scotia McCleod lit into Cambior  because of the company's current exposure to a rising  gold price. They both state that the recent gold price  spike has created risks that investors should be aware  of -- meaning the company's ability to negotiate a  satisfactory resolution of its debt problems with its  banks and counterparties is in jeopardy. 
  Ashanti update: Refco reports there may be some  political challenges in Ghana over Ahsanti. 
  The former mining minister of Ghana, Fred Ohene-Kena,  demanded an open investigation to determine if there is  any wrongdoing over Ashanti Goldfields as it relates to  President Jerry Rawlings and his political advisers.  Ohene-Kena, who was dismissed recently as minister for  mines, was replying to accusations made by President  Rawlings when he accused some Ghanaians of  collaborating with foreigners to manipulate the gold  industry. 
  This is another example of how twisted the gold share  investment arena is. A once highly regarded gold  producer is downgraded because the gold price went UP.  No wonder the XAU went down 1.14 today and closed at  69.94. Confusion about gold companies still reigns. 
  Goldfields Ltd. and AngloGold stepped up to the plate  at the last Bank of England gold auction. Newmont  shareholders should urge CEO Wayne Murdy and crew to  bid this time. It would be a great public relations  move and could make up for their mistake of listening  to Hannibal Cannibal Chase Bank and selling at the  bottom of the gold market. 
  Anglogold is on the hunt for assets. 
  "SYDNEY (Reuters) Nov. 16 -- South African miner  Anglogold Ltd. on Tuesday gave its strongest indication  yet that it was on the acquisition trail in Australia. 
  "Anglogold has made its first foray into the Australian  gold mining sector with a share swap bid for Acacia  Resources Ltd., a half-million-ounce-a-year producer,  less than a month's output for the South African miner. 
  "'Acacia is certainly the first word. I don't think it  will be the last word,' chief executive officer Bobby  Godsell told Reuters." 
  I had a nice chat at the Jim Blanchard New Orleans  Investment conference with long-time GATA supporter Bob  Bishop. He sent me his recent Gold Mining Stock Report  today and I picked out a couple of highlights for you.  He expects there to be strong demand at the upcoming  Bank of England gold auction and he also expects gold  mining companies to be in there bidding. 
  Bob says: "Having been in Vancouver for most of the  past week, I can confirm what I have known for some  time: that we're looking at an exceedingly selective  market that is very much dependent on the next leg up  in gold. This is compounded by the annual event known  as tax loss season, which is characterized by extremely  low liquidity and a virtual news blackout on most  companies. There are some exceptions, but as a general  rule, companies with gold news to share with the market  have little incentive to share it at this time,  principally because it will simply mean that someone  taking a tax loss gets to sell stock at a higher price.  Good news has a much better chance of producing  sustainable gains after the first of the year, so don't  expect too much news between now and year-end. The  reality is that it is simply not in the interest of  most companies to be wasting good news in the current  environment." 
  This highly regarded natural resources vet is so right.  Today was a good example. Golden Star Resources  reported an $18 million loss, or 65 cents a share,  compared to a loss of 6 cents a share last year. Sounds  like a sinking ship, eh? In fact, that could not be  further from what is really going on. I learned today  from good sources that GSR cash flowed over $1 million  in the company's new Bogosu gold mining operation in  Ghana. The company, after its burn rate, actually  netted about $500,000 cash flow for October, the first  monthly profit in the company's 15-year history. GSR  has already found six future gold mines. Now it is  becoming a successful producer. That means certain  financial institutions can add this stock to their  portfolios. Yet if one just read the November tax-  selling time headlines, one would say "ouch." 
  >From Cafe member Benduki: 
  "I don't know if you watch Durban Deep (DROOY), but  somebody wants that stock. It has been under incredible  accumulation for a week. If gold ever takes off, that  one is going to be a rocket ship. It has been out  trading them all." 
  If one is bullish on gold, Durban Deep is a goodie. So  is Harmony Gold, a South African gold producer that is  unhedged. A couple of winners in my book. 
  -END-
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------ |