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Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rarebird who wrote (42474)10/8/1999 11:49:00 AM
From: Zardoz  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116764
 
Wage pressures > Job growth.

I see the Inflation Rate outstripping Economic Growth as we move into the First Quarter of 2000.


And what exactly are you using to define inflation? Earlier this year, I suggest inflation was around 6.25%, now closing in on 4.5%. But that's because I follow the monetarist ideas of inflation. Tell me what you suspect inflation is, and what are your measures. Certainly the home prices are not running 1.5% are they?

Best of regards

Hutch



To: Rarebird who wrote (42474)10/8/1999 12:46:00 PM
From: Alex  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 116764
 
Most Shorts Not Covered Yet.................

NEW YORK, Oct 7 (Reuters) - The world gold industry is anticipating huge losses after
the long-depressed metal's recent price jump but it will take time to sift through the
damaged balance sheets of bullion bears to see if the worst fears are borne out.

The fallout from the textbook ``short squeeze' following an explosive $59 gold rally last
week should emerge anecdotally, in third-quarter corporate financial statements or as players simply drop from sight, market
watchers said.

``Months from now you are going to see people restructuring departments and getting out of the business. But you are not
going to know anything until these things happen,' predicted one chief dealer at a bullion bank.

``You just don't know what to believe any longer. There is hardly a name I haven't heard,' he said.

HEAVY SHORT-SELLERS WRONG-FOOTED BY EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANKS

Gold rocketed over the $300 an ounce threshold last Tuesday, the biggest jump in almost two decades, after European central
banks stunned the market by announcing a cap on fresh sales and lending of monetary bullion for five years.

The news, at the end of International Monetary Fund meetings in Washington, lifted the major weight from a supply-heavy
market that struck 20-year lows of $251.70 in August on assumptions that the world would stay awash in gold.

The rally, just days before the close of the financial accounting period, pushed prices to fresh two-year highs this week as
more market players who had sold large amounts of futures contracts bought back contracts to cut growing losses.

Many bullion-trading banks, and customers like miners and speculators, got caught invested the wrong way, after months of
selling forward and using complicated and risky gold options to bet prices would fall below the 20-year low set in August.

``Everbody is talking about people getting hurt in this market,' said another bullion bank dealer. ``I think there have been
people that have probably gotten hurt, like people who have credit exposure (to these gold customers). But nothing is
crystalized yet so nobody really knows what the damage is going to be.'

COMMERCIAL BANKS EXPOSURE UNCERTAIN

On Wall Street, references to gold-related earnings hits, if any, would probably be obscured under general trading results in
third-quarter filings of commercial banks, due in about two weeks. But bullion operations are small sidelines for most big
banks, analysts said.

``If they had weakness in trading results they might come in and say broadly there was a move down that was caused by
matching their commodity risks,' said Stephen Biggar, bank analyst at Standard & Poor's equity group.

``But I don't think you'd get (individual market) exposures,' he added. ``All that stuff they keep fairly close to the vest for
competitive reasons.'

CAUGHT IN A TANGLED WEB OF OPTIONS

Booking a short gold position is usually done by borrowing metal from a bullion dealer or central bank then selling it forward,
expecting to buy it back cheaper at a later date and repay the loan at a profit.

But many ``shorted' the market via customized options, derivative contracts they may have barely understood, analysts said.
These can expose investors to ghastly losses, being tricky to manage, very illiquid and apt to magnify moves of the underlying
investment -- in this case gold.

Traders said this week's continued gold strength showed the market was still positioned the wrong way. Mining companies
were now acknowledging to having hedged or sold years of future production, leaving little leeway to take advantage of the
sudden spot price rise -- and big paper losses.

For example, Ghana's Ashanti Goldfields Co Ltd (NYSE:ASL - news) faces a liquidity crisis and has become a takeover
target for the world's biggest miners. On Wednesday its hedging counterparties agreed not to make margin calls on options
issued to Ashanti, as they all seek a way out of the jam.

The Toronto share price of Canada's Cambior Inc (Toronto:CBJ.TO - news) lost more than 40 percent on Wednesday after it
revealed that it had sold forward 2.7 million troy ounces of gold through the year 2007, compared to total diggings of 638,000
ounces in 1998.

Based on estimates of bullion lending by central banks, hedged and speculative ``shorts' may total from 4,000 to 8,000 metric
tonnes.

In comparison, global mine output was 2,600 tonnes in 1998, according to consulting service Gold Fields Mineral Services.

SORTING OUT THE MELEE, WITH FUNDS EYED

COMEX dealers said transaction records this week were still not all sorted out for the exhange to clear trades frantically
agreed to during the melee and begin arbitration of disputes and compliance procedures if necessary.

``If a firm becomes an inactive member firm that would appear in our newsletter a month later,' said a COMEX
spokeswoman.

Well-known hedge funds -- pools of speculative capital -- have been grist for the rumor mill about gold losses, especially those
which experienced high-profile losses during last fall's global market turmoil.

Long-Term Capital Management, the hedge fund bailed out a year ago by a consortium guided by the U.S. Federal Reserve,
has been dogged this year with talk that it was short several hundred tons of gold.

But a spokesman told Reuters: ``Long-Term has never had any position in gold, in any derivative, in anything--zero...I dont
even think they followed the price in the newspaper.'

Spot gold bullion Thursday afternoon was at $322.30/5.30 an ounce, down from its 23-month high of $338 on Tuesday.



To: Rarebird who wrote (42474)10/9/1999 11:42:00 AM
From: Tunica Albuginea  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116764
 
Rarebird: Inflation;Wage pressures>Job growth. Part I

OCTOBER 11, 1999

Counter Intuitive

Friday's labor numbers aren't what they seem

By Gene Epstein

Has the labor market gotten so tight that there's no one left to hire? Or is
there actually a lot of hiring going on that the Bureau of Labor Statistics isn't
catching in its net?


As BLS statisticians are always ready to admit, that net has a lot of potential
holes in it. So when the agency reported on Friday that nonfarm payrolls had
fallen by 8,000 jobs in September -- an estimate that runs counter to
everything else we know about the economy's current strength -- then it
becomes appropriate to poke a little fun at the way the monthly payroll figures
are cobbled together.


But first let's look at what the BLS actually said. To begin with, it attributed
the reported decline in payrolls to Hurricane Floyd, which was on the
rampage during the September survey week. With millions of people
evacuated from their homes, and with stores and restaurants shut, jobs that
would normally have existed were temporarily out of commission. So if Floyd
hadn't been a factor, said the BLS, September payrolls would have expanded
by about 50,000.


The unemployment rate, which remained steady at 4.2%, wasn't affected by
Floyd. That's because, for purposes of calculating this figure, people are
counted as employed if they're temporarily absent from their jobs because of
bad weather. Also, average hourly earnings jumped 0.5%, which makes
sense when joblessness is so low.


But even that 50,000 adjusted estimate for September is nothing to write
home about, especially since it comes on the heels of an August advance of
only 103,000. And while two months don't make a trend, there are times
when they indicate turning points. So has hiring suddenly slowed to a crawl?


Probably not.

For starters, one major anomaly in the estimates is the
persistent contraction in manufacturing employment, which flies in the face of
all the available evidence that this sector has been on the rebound. In
particular, the NAPM index of manufacturing employment has been
telegraphing job growth for the past few months. As Jason Benderly of Vail,
Colorado-based Benderly Economics points out, the last time the NAPM
employment index was this strong was in 1994, when factory jobs grew by an
average of 50,000 per month.

Then, too, the low level of new unemployment insurance claims and the
Conference Board's Help-Wanted Index are indicating that overall payroll
gains should still be running about 250,000 per month. The rate of GDP
growth, which also correlates with employment gains, is saying the same thing.
So why the 75,000 average over the past two months?

True, the 4.2% jobless rate hasn't been this low on a sustained basis since the
late 1960s. So maybe those who believe there's no one left to hire have a
point. But if history is any guide, then at no time has low employment ever
prevented payrolls from growing along with the economy. In the late 'Sixties,
the unemployment rate continued to fall, hitting 3.5% by '69, and payroll
growth actually accelerated.


This tendency for job growth to quicken when labor is scarce shouldn't be
surprising. To begin with, firms become more eager to scoop up extra
workers in order to avoid a potential shortage. And for the same reason, they
become more reluctant to shed workers -- a process known as labor
hoarding.
While the point is often forgotten, payroll gains reflect net hiring,
after layoffs.

Of course, this time may be different, which is another common refrain.
Maybe the mismatch between geography and skills is worse than it used to
be, and that's why there's nobody left to hire. But for all the talk about the
needs of high tech, non-tech employment growth is still dominant. Over the
past year, the retail trade alone added nearly half a million positions. And if
anything, labor is more mobile than it used to be, with better access to
information about where the jobs are.

Which brings us back to the paltry August/September payroll gains. First,
these numbers are only preliminary and are subject to revision. Maybe next
month they'll be revised upward.


Also , October's estimate could compensate if it comes in very strong, which is
a pattern that often occurs. For example, July's gain stood at a revised
373,000, and with the expected bounceback from the hurricane effect,
October might print at better than 400,000.


But if none of these things happen, we may simply have to wait until next year
when these figures are benchmarked against the unemployment insurance
figures, which provide a near-universal count. Then we'll have some idea
about whether the BLS's sample was inadequate, or whether the bias
adjustment that it uses to boost these figures was insufficient -- or whether any
of the other things that could go wrong with these estimates did go wrong.
And then we'll know whether the no-one-left-to-hire argument holds any
water.