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Strategies & Market Trends : MARKET INDEX TECHNICAL ANALYSIS - MITA -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: J.T. who wrote (9890)1/26/2002 4:49:01 PM
From: JohnG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19219
 
Gold rush hits Japan as savers seek out havens
Financial Times; Jan 25, 2002
By BAYAN RAHMAN and ADRIENNE ROBERTS

Last month a customer walked into The Gold Shop in Tokyo's Otemachi district, put Y30m (Pounds 158,000) on the
counter and asked for it to be converted into bullion. He left with 26kg of gold bars.

Two weeks ago, Yoshihiro Matsumoto, head of the gold retail division at Mitsubishi Materials, helped a customer
carry 20 kg of gold out of the shop.

"He and I each carried 10kg in some paper bags he'd brought along. It was a long 10-minute walk to his car," he
says.

This is hardly a typical day's business for Japan's gold retailers. "Normally our customers buy 1kg-5kg of gold, but
recently they're buying in huge amounts," says Mr Matsumoto. "And most people want to take their gold home rather
than have it in a bank deposit box."

With the government planning to curb protection on bank deposits, many savers would rather hold their wealth in
gold than as money in a bank account.

According to John Reade, precious metals analyst at UBS Warburg in London: "This is potentially the biggest gold
demand story of the decade."

With an average nest egg of around Y14m per household, Japanese investors have a high propensity to save. They
also have a reputation for caution. An estimated 45 per cent of their massive Y1,400,000bn savings is held in bank
accounts, with less than 10 per cent invested in the stock market.

The existing deposit insurance regime provides a guarantee that if a financial institution fails, the government will repay
depositors in full. But now, as part of its banking reforms, the government will impose a payout limit of Y10m on
time deposits from April 2002 and on all accounts from April 2003.

"With no safe place to keep savings and other Japanese asset classes looking weak after a 10-year fall in equity prices
and mushrooming government debt, physical gold and other precious metals look very attractive," said Mr Reade.

About 50 small deposit-taking institutions collapsed last year, and Junichiro Koizumi, the prime minister, has said
several times recently that the government would ensure Japan avoided a financial crisis.

"Even though the yen price of gold is going up, people want to buy. And the April change is the main reason for
that," said Yoshiko Mizutani, manager of The Gold Shop. "Customers tell me that even if the price of gold falls, it'll
never fall to zero. But if their bank goes under, they worry their savings could disappear."

Ms Mizutani thinks the recent bank bail-out of Daiei, the supermarket chain, has further undermined people's
confidence in institutions that have been part of the fabric Japanese society for decades.

Since September 11, Japanese investors have become more concerned about currency market volatility. And the
collapse of US energy group Enron undermined confidence in fixed-income assets as many retail investors had put
their savings into money management funds that included Enron bonds. Concern about Argentina's economy has also
rattled investors who bought Argentine Samurai bonds, yen-denominated bonds by an overseas issuer.

Retailers say most of the customers coming in are male and over 50 years old. Many are retired and fear their lifetime
savings will be wiped out if there is a financial crisis. Not all of them live in the big cities. Tanaka, the largest bullion
house, estimates that this month's sales at its 130 affiliated retailers in provincial cities will be five times their January
2001 levels.

But whether Japanese savers' banking fears translate into a boom in gold demand will depend on marketing,
according to Mr Reade. He says bodies such as the World Gold Council will need to ensure that gold and other
precious metals "gain their share of investment" as savers seek out havens. www.ft.com/markets

Copyright: The Financial Times Limited 1995-1998

globalarchive.ft.com.



To: J.T. who wrote (9890)1/26/2002 7:22:24 PM
From: Moominoid  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 19219
 
Commercials have apparently reduced their short stock index positions or gone net long - haven't seen the numbers just read it on SI. That is bullish too IMO.



To: J.T. who wrote (9890)1/28/2002 5:21:07 PM
From: High-Tech East  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 19219
 
... where is everyone today? ...

... and the next day UP is going to be a barnburner ...

... all right now J.T., tomorrow is the last day I can trade until next Tuesday or Wednesday ... is tomorrow the big day? ... should I buy the SPH2 tonight and stay long until the close at 4:15 PM tomorrow ...

... please tell me, my cheeseheaded friend ... <g>

Ken Wilson

... I will be in State College, PA next Sunday night ... how many points should I give those St Louis "indoor" Rams ... <VBG>

... maybe I should go to Louisiana instead and cheer for dem Pats ... last time I was drinking "sazaracs" on Bourbon Street, it was "We're #1 ... At Last" ... January 2, 1983 ... YES

... word has it from State College that Paterno is about to sign his best class ever, and that Joe is comitted to win the National Championship again before he retires ... hmmmmmmmmmmm ... that should be the 2003 season!



To: J.T. who wrote (9890)1/28/2002 10:12:56 PM
From: J.T.  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 19219
 
Rydex Total Assets Update for Monday, January 28th, 2002:

Regular Series:

SPX Long - NOVA 259.3 Million**BULLISH
SPX Short- URSA 261.1 Million**Inversion
NDX Long - OTC 937.4 Million**BULLISH
NDX Short- ARKTOS 143.2 Million**BULLISH
RUT 2000 - MIKROS 81.2 Million**BULLISH


XAU Precious Metals 62.7 Million**BEARISH
XOI Energy 15.9 Million**BULLISH
BKX Banking 37.0 Million**BULLISH
BTK Biotech 255.5 Million
Money Market 1.484 BILLION**BULLISH Overbought

*******************************************

Dynamic Series (200% correlation to Index)

SPX Long - TITAN 97.6 Million**Inversion
SPX Short- TEMPEST 137.4 Million**BULLISH
NDX Long - VELOCITY 189.4 Million**Inversion
NDX Short- VENTURE 196.4 Million**BULLISH

*********************************************

VIX 21.77 books its second back to back close below 22 for the first time since June 7 and 8 2001. The last close below VIX 21 was September 14, 2000 (VIX 20.69), below VIX 20 was September 1, 2000 (VIX 19.63) and below VIX 19 was August 28, 2000 (VIX 18.23).

I believe after this rally is over we will pierce in the VIX 18 - 18.25 range before the market turns smartly back down.

Regular Series: 100% Long NDX OTC
Dynamic Series: 100% Long SPX TITAN

Best Regards, J.T.