| Thanks Mike, This could help MIQ along :-)
 
 9:30p EST Monday, February 14, 2000
 
 Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:
 
 Here's tonight's "Midas" commentary by GATA
 Chairman Bill Murphy.
 
 Please post this as seems useful.
 
 CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer
 Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
 
 * * *
 
 MIDAS COMMENTARY FOR FEBRUARY 14, 2000
 
 By Bill Murphy
 www.LeMetropoleCafe.com
 
 This past week Barrick Gold CEO Randall Oliphant and
 other Barrick executives did their dog-and-pony show in
 New York trying to pump up analysts and investors about
 how brilliant they are. Barrick?s chairman, Peter Munk,
 even took the time to do an interview with Janet
 Whitman for Dow Jones News Service.
 
 Barrick Gold is making the rounds for a reason. The
 company?s share price is stinking up the place.
 
 >From The New York Times, Feb. 13:
 
 "This investor preference is seen in a comparison of
 the recent performance of Newmont Mining, which is not
 a hedger, and Barrick. Since the gold rally began in
 August, Newmont stock is up 24.4 percent. Barrick,
 which had a guaranteed price of $370 an ounce this
 year, is down 1.7 percent."
 
 Cafe members know that Midas and GATA have urged
 investors for eight months now to dump Barrick stock as
 a protest to their EXCESSIVE hedging strategies, which
 were hurting so many in the gold industry. We hoped
 that Barrick?s stock would underperform so other big
 hedgers would notice and do something about their own
 hedging to prevent their stock prices from suffering
 the same fate. We even hoped that Barrick would finally
 get its act together and buy back its forwards.
 
 Whether we had anything to do with what has gone on in
 the gold industry about reducing forward selling is
 anyone's guess. Of course we would like to think we did
 make some kind of difference. What I do know is that
 that the publicity generated by Cafe member and GATA
 supporter Arthur Hailey (the prolific novelist who
 wrote such blockbusters as "Hotel" and "Airport") DID
 cause many investors to unload Barrick shares. In fact,
 we know one who sold 3 million shares. All this
 occurred because Arthur responded to GATA's plea to
 protest Barrick's hedging policy by faxing Barrick's
 executives at the Denver Gold Conference in October. He
 did just what we had hoped for by telling the company
 in a letter that he had sold all his Barrick stock,
 which he had held for many years. We publicized his
 letter. The press was all over it.
 
 In the spring of 1999 Barrick CEO Oliphant told a
 popular New York journalist that the GATA folk were a
 "bunch of nuts." This past Thursday at a presentation
 to loyal Barrick shareholders, press people, and market
 analysts, Oliphant told everyone from the podium that
 "the only problem with Barrick's stock was the
 conspiracy crowd."
 
 I guess he could not say "those nuts" in public.
 
 Now I have a question for Oliphant. What exactly did
 you mean by that statement? Are you suggesting that
 investors have analyzed the gold market and have
 concluded that GATA is right about the manipulation of
 the gold market and thereby are declining to buy the
 shares of your company?
 
 Could a bunch of "nuts" really do that?
 
 Well, maybe they can! Financial Times columnist Barry
 Riley may be most widely read and respected financial
 journalist in the Britain. That is what London's
 Marshall Auerback tells me.
 
 The most respected financial journalist, who writes for
 the most respected financial newspaper in the world --
 that is what we have here, Mr. Oliphant.
 
 While many of you read the Financial Times article, I
 want to highlight some of what Riley wrote as it
 relates to Barrick Gold and the manipulation of the
 gold market.
 
 >From the Financial Times, London, February 12:
 
 "The Long View -- The Battle Over Bullion.
 
 "All the attempts over the years to downgrade gold to
 the status of a routine commodity such as, say, zinc or
 aluminium have failed. This week the gold price has
 again looked quite frisky at above $300 an ounce. The
 sector was also enlivened by Barrick's refusal to
 abandon its hedging programme and by the sad plight of
 Ashanti Goldfields, which is teetering on the edge of
 collapse after losing a court action in Ghana....
 
 "The weakness of the gold price, which tumbled from
 $400 in 1996 to $250 last summer, has encouraged
 elaborate conspiracy theories. Now, though, the gold
 bugs are getting excited. The bullion price, they
 claim, could be on the edge of a breakout; many years
 of oppression by the central banks and their
 collaborators might be about to end. Gold, say the
 conspiracy theorists, could be about to reclaim its
 leading position among precious metals. There is, after
 all, plenty of action in platinum and palladium, which
 have both risen in price by about two-thirds since last
 summer....
 
 "The gold bugs of GATA (it stands for Gold Anti-Trust
 Action) have an entertaining web site where the
 conspiracy theory is debated endlessly. GATA blames the
 U.S. government; it has more or less accepted the
 Federal Reserve's pleas of innocence but thinks the
 Treasury Department has been operating heavily through
 the Exchange Stabilisation Fund, aided by big bullion
 traders such as Goldman Sachs....
 
 "When mining companies behave more like hedge funds
 than metal producers, they actually can be bankrupted
 by a rising price. But, allegedly, the U.S. Treasury
 then intervened on a bigger scale to limit the damage.
 The bullion price hovered around $280 an ounce for
 several months but recently has pushed higher again....
 
 "The reasons, as always, are obscure. But some of the
 mines are changing or abandoning their hedging
 strategies and one or two might even collapse, while
 bullion banks are running some very dangerous
 positions. The market could be vulnerable to a
 speculative attack....
 
 "The gold manipulation might well have started as a
 minor smoothing operation that got out of control. For
 central banks to lend out their gold reserves has
 seemed a promising way to earn modest revenues from an
 otherwise unrewarding asset. But the speculative
 institutions that borrowed it realised that, if they
 could drive down the bullion price, they could make
 useful profits from short sales....
 
 "The miners, meanwhile, decided they could protect
 their profits by selling forward for future delivery at
 roughly today's price -- although now they are starting
 to realise that a long-term downtrend in the price
 cannot possibly be in their interests, quite apart from
 the dangers of an incompetently run hedge book
 vulnerable to enormous margin calls if the gold price
 takes an unscheduled upturn....
 
 "That the U.S. Treasury apparently has helped to mess
 up the gold market is perhaps not very surprising when
 it has plunged even its own domestic bond market into
 near-chaos. Last week Larry Summers, the treasury
 secretary, effectively lowered long-term bond yields at
 the same time that the Fed was raising short-term
 rates. He did this by announcing he would focus buy-
 back activities on the 30-year bond."
 
 Would you not say that Riley  has listened to what GATA
 has to say and that he tends to agree with us? His
 commentary had almost a casual, factual tone.
 
 This is a stunning development. So how can Randall
 Oliphant and Barrick's PR crew go around denigrating
 GATA without also denigrating this most highly regarded
 of financial journalists?
 
 Other financial journalists can now pretty much what
 GATA has to say and always refer to Barry Riley as the
 precedent setter. It will give them more confidence to
 write about the manipulation of the gold market. I
 cannot tell you how important a development this is.
 Certain members of Congress and certain committees
 (like Banking) are receiving copies of  Riley?s column
 in the Financial Times. It is an eye-opener for them, I
 can assure you.
 
 In that regard, Reginald H. Howe deserves much credit,
 as it is clear to me that Riley has read what Reg has
 to say on the subject. Three cheers for Reg!
 
 The "enveloping horn" juggernaut rolls on.
 
 Oh yes, after all Barrick's rah-rah of last week, the
 company's share price closed today at 17 1/2, down
 13/16.
 
 Midas has been bullish on oil for a long time now,
 predicting this big oil move, and now we have $30+ oil.
 It is conceivable oil is headed for $40 a barrel.
 
 So you can get the flavor of what is going on out
 there. Here's oil market feedback from Cafe member Jon
 R.:
 
 "When the dust settles, today's close will be the
 highest close for crude since January 16, 1991....
 Today's buying came on the heels of reports from global
 analysts who warned that worldwide crude inventories
 can't drop further without risk of outages in some
 markets."
 
 "Texas Markets See Severe Product Outages.
 
 "Several Texas markets are experiencing significant
 product outages. Koch notified its marketers that as of
 February 11 it would have no No. 2 oil or gasoline
 available in Corpus Christi, Waco, San Antonio, Austin,
 and Fort Worth at Koch terminals. The most critical of
 the markets is Austin, where Koch is the only terminal
 operator, meaning that all suppliers in Austin have no
 product. Koch told jobbers that they would have no
 product until further notice."
 
 Another headline: "Spot gasoline soars in Chicago."
 
 Who knows how high oil can go?
 
 Then there is palladium. Barry Riley must know about
 the Cafe's John Brimelow, who predicted this mega-move.
 March palladium closed at $605.50. That is where the
 price of gold is going to close when we get these
 manipulators out of the way.
 
 Methinks it is time for the gold shares to do their
 thing and start a long-overdue move much, much higher.
 Portfolio managers have been forced to sell gold shares
 because they have not been momentum plays, etc. With
 $30+ oil hitting the headlines, bells and whistles have
 to be going off behind the scenes in investment board
 rooms, signifying that the inflation game is changing.
 So is the investment scene. My guess is that the big
 money crowd is about to wake up and charge into the
 gold shares any day now.
 
 There is one more thing. As a result of Barry Riley's
 column, GATA, Reg Howe, Frank Veneroso, and all of you
 GATA supporters who have helped make a difference, the
 investment world is going to realize that the gold
 price has been held down, and as Harry Shultz says,
 "not allowed to rise." Thus too much gold has been
 devoured at too cheap a price for too long. As that
 becomes known and accepted by that big money crowd,
 they will pile into gold and the gold shares, for they
 will know that the price of gold is going to explode --
 as if price controls were suddenly lifted.
 
 -END-
 
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