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Gold/Mining/Energy : byg

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To: JUNIORSPECULATOR who wrote (579)11/2/1997 7:11:00 PM
From: M5PRO  Read Replies (1) of 769
 
JS,

Thanks for posting the news regarding ABB. There was a cross by McDermid for 200,000. Month end is over. Will be interesting to see what happens this week!
Here's an article from the Financial Post regarding the latest Swiss announcement and the outlook for gold by Pierre Lasonde! :-( Let's hope he is wrong!!!

C-YA

Matt

Saturday, November 1, 1997

Swiss add to gold market's tarnish

By PAUL BAGNELL
Mining Reporter The Financial Post
For the second time in seven days a
committee of the Swiss government has
thrown cold water on the gold market,
sending the price of bullion down by
US$5.10 an ounce on Friday.
Gold closed at US$311.30 in New York,
close to a 12 1/2-year low.
The Toronto Stock Exchange's gold and
precious minerals subindex fell 1.6%, or
122.42 points, to 7548.04 points.
Investors sold gold on news a Swiss
government committee is recommending the
government sell 800 tonnes of gold, instead
of the 400 tonnes it has pledged to unload to help finance a fund for Holocaust
survivors.
In another proposal, made public Oct. 24, the Swiss finance ministry and
national bank approved in principle a plan from another committee to sell 1,400
tonnes of gold. That plan will be put to voters in a referendum in 1999.
The two proposals have convinced many in the gold market a large Swiss gold
sale is on the horizon.
Central banks, including Canada's, sold record volumes of gold in 1996 and
1997. The fear more such sales are in the works has cast a chill on the gold
market.
Most market watchers expect gold to fall below US$300 an ounce later this
year or early in 1998, said Walter Baici, a gold trader at Bank of Nova Scotia
in Toronto.
Meanwhile, the chief executive of a major Canadian gold company said Friday
he expects depressed prices for at least two years.
"I think it's a very real possibility that gold will be undervalued for a couple of
more years," said Pierre Lassonde, president of Franco-Nevada Mining Corp.
Franco-Nevada and its sister company Euro-Nevada Mining Corp. Ltd. are
gold royalty companies, holding profit interests in other companies' mines.
The problem of central bank sales, Lassonde said, is being made worse by
excessive hedging by gold producers themselves.
In his view, the producers have shot themselves in the foot this year by
increasing their sales of gold in futures contracts.
Gold miners, able to earn higher prices in forward sales, have sold about 400
more tonnes of gold this year than during 1996 in futures contracts, he said.
The stepped-up forward sales add to a market already beset by a historic high
level of central bank sales and the 2,300 tonnes of gold the producers will turn
out this year.
"The central banks are to blame and the producers are just as much to blame."
The gold market will firm up when the spread between spot sales and futures
sales closes, Lassonde added.
"But I don't believe it's going to happen in the short term."
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