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


To: Alex who wrote (50949)3/30/2000 6:37:00 PM
From: Lalit Jain  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116762
 
Gold 'on the brink of a breakthrough' U.S. dollar the trigger

Keith Damsell
Financial Post

The inflated U.S. dollar is long overdue for a major correction, a day of
reckoning that will mean dramatic gains in the price of gold, a Toronto
investment advisor says.

"We are in the early stages of the next up cycle for gold," David
Chapman, investment advisor at Gorinsen Capital Inc. in Toronto, told
the Canadian Society of Technical Analysts yesterday. "If the U.S.
dollar stands to slide, make sure you've got gold on board."

Within the next two years, he forecasts gold will rise to its rough
historical median near "the value of a good suit," suggesting a price
range of between $600 (all in U.S. dollars) an ounce to $1,500.

A price spike as high as $5,000 "may very well happen if we get a deep
enough crisis," Mr. Chapman said.

The unique correlation between the value of the U.S. dollar and gold
figures prominently in the analyst's forecast. In the 1971, the U.S.
abandoned the gold standard, a move that has put pressure on the U.S.
Federal Reserve to support the value of the dollar -- and drive down
gold -- for much of the past 30 years. In 1994 and 1995, the Fed and
the Bank of Japan undertook a "massive intervention" campaign to boost
the ailing currency, sparking a chain of events that led to further
pressure on bullion and a flood of capital into the U.S. stock market,
Mr. Chapman said.

Gold eventually sank to a 20-year-low of $250 an ounce in August last
year. Despite an agreement among Europe's central banks to limit sales
and lending and dramatic hedging reductions by gold producers, the
precious metal continues to hover in the $280 range. "Gold has slipped
into oblivion," he said. "There is a lot of negative sentiment out there."

But "astounding" U.S. debt levels suggest a dramatic change is in the
works, Mr. Chapman said. The U.S.'s record 10 years of economic
growth have been fuelled largely by debt, especially corporate and
household debt. The U.S's total debt has climbed from about $14-trillion
10 years ago to more than $24-trillion today, more than twice the size
of the U.S.'s gross domestic product.

Meanwhile, the U.S. trade deficit is rising at an alarming rate, with
consumers and corporations buying a record $28-billion more foreign
goods than U.S.-made goods in a recent month. Savings rates have hit
record lows as more dollars make their way into soaring stocks.

"Why preserve regular economic activity when I can make more money
chasing stocks?" Mr. Chapman said. "It's debt that's holding the glue
together and when that becomes unhinged, the whole house of cards
will come down."

nationalpost.com



To: Alex who wrote (50949)3/30/2000 7:10:00 PM
From: William Harvey  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116762
 
UPDATE 1-Stock values seen adding to imbalances - Greenspan
biz.yahoo.com

Asked to end speculation that the New York Fed had intervened in the gold market, Greenspan responded: ``I can say unequivocally that the Federal Reserve Bank of New York has not intervened in the gold market in an attempt to manipulate the price of gold on its own behalf or for the U.S. Treasury or anyone else.'

BTW, gold is already up a buck from the NY close: kitco.com