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Politics : Welcome to Slider's Dugout

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To: SliderOnTheBlack who wrote (1644)5/19/2006 12:42:17 AM
From: Jamey  Read Replies (1) of 50480
 
Jim Rogers Says Gold Will Reach $1,000 as Commodity Prices Soar
April 19 (Bloomberg) -- Jim Rogers, the former George Soros partner who foresaw the start of a commodity rally in 1999, said the boom in energy and raw material prices will endure, driving gold to a record $1,000 an ounce.

``The shortest bull market for commodities lasted 15 years, the longest 23 years,'' Rogers, 63, said in an interview. So if history is any guide, ``they've got a long way to go.''

Prices of crude oil, copper and zinc are at records, and other commodities are at multiyear highs, as speculators and hedge funds seek investments delivering greater returns than stocks and bonds. Global demand led by China, the world's fastest growing major economy, has outstripped supply curtailed by lack of investment and output disruptions.

``Supply and demand is terribly out of balance for nearly all commodities right now,'' Rogers said in Singapore April 17. ``This is not a bubble.''

Gold for immediate delivery reached a 25-year high of $624.70 an ounce today, still below an all-time peak of $850 for spot gold in 1980. Crude oil rose to a record $71.60 a barrel in New York yesterday and copper gained the most in nine years.

``Economies around the world, especially in Asia, are growing very rapidly,'' said Rogers, who co-founded the Quantum hedge fund with Soros in the 1970s.

China Demand

China, home to 1.3 billion people, grew 10.2 percent in the first quarter, up from 9.9 percent in the previous three months, fueling demand for energy and raw materials in homes, factories and cars. The country is the world's biggest consumer of steel, copper and zinc and the second-largest user of energy.

``Nearly everything makes a new all-time high in a bull market,'' said Rogers. He didn't predict when gold would reach $1,000 an ounce.

The Goldman Sachs Commodity Index of 24 commodities rose to a record yesterday, led by gains in metals, sugar and natural gas. The index has increased 13 percent this year, compared with a 4.8 percent gain in the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index. Benchmark U.S. Treasuries have lost about 1.6 percent, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. indexes.

Lack of investment in new supply is driving up prices.

``Nobody has discovered a major oilfield in over 35 years. All the major oilfields are in decline,'' said Rogers. ``Unless someone does something quickly, the price of oil is going to go a lot higher over the next decade.''

He depicted a similar scenario for metals. ``Nobody has opened any major mines anywhere in the world for many years and it takes a long time to bring new mines on stream,'' he said. ``All the old mines are in the process of being depleted and demand is continuing to grow.''

IMO, we are not even close to the final or manic phase in metals. Reasons; World unrest with the prospect of WWlll in our future. There is huge demand on all commodities from growing population centers with billions of people entering the marketplace from farming in China and India. The world is teeming with new and future investors in metals. The $USD is continuing to be printed like there is no tomorrow. The dollar is a promise to pay. Gold and silver is "paid in full."

Slider, remember how the tech boom developed and the final mania before the blow off had people buying anything tech no matter the rediculously high P/Es of 100 +. Mining stocks have not even begun to emulate what happened during the tech bubble of 1999- 2000.

I believe we are still in the second phase of a remaining 5 to 10 year bull remaining in metals.

As for what I see in the shadows I would have to say energy- especially electricity generation and major electrical grids to be built. During that time Natural Gas will be a top contender.

Santi
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