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Strategies & Market Trends : VOLTAIRE'S PORCH-MODERATED -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Cactus Jack who wrote (53742)7/12/2002 12:26:58 AM
From: Dealer  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 65232
 
Well let me tell you a thing or two......there were times in the past that I needed a word of encouragement and I received a pm from you encourageing me.

Now that I think of it.....I was having a hard time (how wonderful that I can't remember what the hard time was all about :-)) and remember you sending me a great poem .....I carried it around with me.

You also are a great asset to this porch..........thanks for the part you play and.......

Thanks for being here.

dealie



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (53742)7/12/2002 1:39:42 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 65232
 
Homes, Gold Attract Investors Seeking Alternative to Stocks

By Craig Torres

Washington, July 12 (Bloomberg) -- Falling stock prices, investigations of corporate deceit, and money-market funds that yield little more than inflation have pushed investors to real estate and precious metals as a shelter for their cash.

U.S. homebuyers are increasing down payments as a share of property values, and consumers are becoming reacquainted with gold pieces such American Eagles and Krugerrands. Bullion has won converts among younger Japanese investors, even as the government is trying to entice them into bonds with ads by a movie star.

Tangible assets such as homes may become even more attractive to U.S. investors, who this week saw the Standard & Poor's 500 Index drop to its lowest level since 1997. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. joined the list of companies, including WorldCom Inc. and Adelphia Communications Corp., whose financial and accounting practices are under federal scrutiny.

``I want to be able to understand where my money is,'' says Martha Kumar, a political science professor at Towson University in Towson, Maryland, who recently made a down payment worth 36 percent of the value of her new home in Washington, D.C. ``In real estate, you can see that.''

Median down payments for repeat home buyers are up to an average of 25 percent of U.S. home values, compared with 19 percent in 1999, according to the National Association of Realtors, a Washington-based trade group.

More Americans are seeking the comfort of precious metals as well. This week, a banker bought 1,524 one-ounce American Gold Eagle coins, worth about $500,000, says Michael Kramer, head trader at Manfra Tordella & Brookes Inc., a metals dealer in New York.

First Profit in Years

``One guy is buying 200 to 300 ounces of gold a week,'' Kramer says. Many people started picking up bullion at below $300 per ounce earlier this year, he says, so ``it is the first time in years that somebody has been able to have a profit.''

At FH Coins & Collectibles, a dusty, standing-room-only shop crammed with old porcelain and crystal as well as coins on New York's Upper East Side, owner David Heller says people are calling up or walking in off the street three out of five days a week and asking how to buy gold. Usually, he sells them American Eagle, Canada Maple Leaf, or South African Krugerrand coins.

``A year ago, you couldn't give it away,'' he says. Gold, which doesn't pay dividends, was trading below $300 an ounce and ``you couldn't interest anybody in buying.''

Demand at his shop now is almost as strong as it was in 1999, when investors hoarded gold on fears that the arrival of Jan. 1, 2000 would cause computers to malfunction and throw business into chaos. ``With everything going on in the economy, people want something substantial,'' he says.

Gold Highest Since 1997

Gold for August delivery rose June 4 to $328.80 an ounce, the highest closing price for the metal since October 1997. Back then, stocks had tumbled in reaction to a slump in Asian economies. Last month, investors were concerned that India and Pakistan were going to war. A year ago, gold fetched $266.

Few analysts expect gold, trading at more than $310 since mid- May, to exceed $400 an ounce this year. Sales of jewelry, the largest consumer, have declined. And central banks, which hold about one-fourth of above-ground reserves, continue to sell.

The gold market, ``has an 800-pound gorilla in it and that is the world central banks,'' says Joseph Haubrich, an economist at the Fed Bank of Cleveland. Holdings have declined from an estimated 45.8 percent of total government reserves in 1985 to an estimated 12.2 percent in 2001.

Japan: `The Longest Streak'

The recent price gains are attracting investors in Japan who have few other investment options. Bank deposits yield 0.01 percent, and land prices are down 75 percent since 1991. An additional blow came in May when Moody's Investors Service lowered the government bond rating to below Botswana's. The government has hired movie star Norika Fujiwara to market the securities.

``People just don't have any place to put their money,'' says Hitoshi Kosai, general manager at the precious metals division of Tanaka Kikinzoku Kogyo, the country's largest bullion dealer. Japanese started buying bullion after Sept. 11, and haven't stopped, Kosai said.

``This is the longest streak for a gold boom in Japan,'' he says. ``Usually, they end after a month.''

Japanese investments in gold bullion and coins rose to 47.5 tons, or about $487 million, in the first quarter, almost a fourfold increase from a year earlier, says the World Gold Council, a Geneva-based trade group.

In the U.S., homes continue to trump gold and other precious metals as the investment of choice for those diversifying into tangible assets.

Record U.S. Home Sales

U.S. home buyers are being helped by low borrowing costs, with rates averaging less than 7 percent on conventional, 30-year mortgages since the start of 2001, compared with more than 8 percent in 2000. Home sales will probably set a record this year, says Fannie Mae, the largest buyer of U.S. home mortgages.

Typically, homes and precious metals are snapped up in inflationary times because they hold their value. Indeed, gold reached a high of $834 an ounce in January 1980 after a year in which U.S. consumer prices rose 13.3 percent. By comparison, U.S. consumer prices were up 1.2 percent in May from a year earlier. Low inflation is also a reason why U.S. Treasury securities remain a popular haven for cash.

Gold-stock funds in the U.S. received $760 million in new cash in the first five months of the year, representing a 39.4 percent rise over year-end asset levels for those funds, according to Lipper Inc., a mutual fund analysis firm.

Demand for gold bullion and coins in the U.S. was 2.8 tons, or approximately $28.7 million, in the first quarter, according to the World Gold Council, a rise of 13 percent over the first quarter of 2001.



To: Cactus Jack who wrote (53742)7/12/2002 1:57:25 AM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 65232
 
The Boomerang Economy

By David Ignatius
Washington Post Columnist
Friday, July 12, 2002

PARIS -- An investment banker who has probably moved trillions of dollars in and out of financial markets in his lifetime confided recently that he was waiting for a "real" blowout, with the Dow collapsing to 6000 and the dollar evaporating to $1.15 for a measly euro. Then, he said, he was going to put every penny he could raise into the U.S. stock market.

It's no wonder, given the behavior of people like my investment banker friend, that financial markets always seem to overshoot realistic price levels, on the downside as well as on the upside. Driven by the volatile expectations of investors, markets move in stampedes rather than the orderly flows described in economic texts. Let's call this the "boomerang economy," whose operating principle is that what goes around comes around. So perhaps it's inevitable that the "irrational exuberance" of the late 1990s has given way to what I find an equally irrational pessimism today.

What's ailing Uncle Sam? The economic fundamentals for America look solid enough. The U.S. economy grew at a gee-whiz 5.8 percent rate during the first quarter, and at a respectable 2.5 percent or so clip during the second quarter. Inflation is low, consumer spending has remained strong and productivity keeps growing. A Wall Street Journal survey this month of 55 economists found a consensus forecast that the U.S. economy will grow at a 3.5 percent rate in the second half of 2002 and a 3.6 percent rate during the first half of 2003.

So what is Wall Street's take on all this good news from Main Street? Head for the hills! The Dow closed yesterday at 8802, down from Monday's 9275.

Yes, yes, there's the steady beat of stories about financial scandals, which begin to make you wonder whether the whole of the U.S. economy is one big Enron scam. But a sensible person shouldn't wonder about that for very long. The fact that greedy executives at go-go companies were playing games with their numbers during the recent Gilded Age cannot be surprising to students of human nature. And it certainly shouldn't overrule the evidence in front of our noses of the strength and durability of the real U.S. economy.

And yet daily the financial panic spreads, as if this is some sort of general crisis of capitalism. Perhaps now Americans have a better sense of what it feels like to be an Argentine, or a Thai, or a Turk -- and feel that your economic livelihood is at the mercy of capricious financial markets and mendacious crony capitalists.

What's confounding is how far and fast the pessimism is spreading. At a gathering of prominent European investors here yesterday, the bad vibes were positively contagious, as speakers warned that Enronitis could easily spread to Europe.

Indeed, you could argue that it already has: So far this year the CAC 40 index of French stocks is down 23 percent; the German DAX index is down 20 percent; the British FTSE 100 is down nearly 18 percent; and the Stockholm OMX is off 32 percent. The Dow, by comparison, is down "only" about 13 percent this year.

What's going on? Has Osama bin Laden become a short seller?

When economists can't identify the variable that is causing a change in economic conditions, they sometimes refer to an "X factor." It seems increasingly likely to me that the X factor in the global economy is the performance of George W. Bush and his administration. For some reason, the administration has behaved as if its purpose was to cause investors to lose faith in the dollar and the U.S. economy.

What would you say about an administration that issued near-daily warnings about mega-terrorist attacks; abandoned free trade for short-term political reasons; maintained a daily drumbeat of stories about its vague plans for toppling Saddam Hussein in Iraq; had a president who was touched by the same sort of financial legerdemain he so portentously criticized in others; let the budget deficit swell back toward its 1980s levels; and tried to stanch the financial crisis of confidence with a limp speech that made even members of Congress look visionary by comparison.

You'd say that such an administration would have difficulty maintaining the confidence of investors. And so it has come to pass.

In the end, financial markets are about trust. When it's there, they prosper; when it disappears, they begin to wither and die.

That essential trustworthiness built the first banking fortunes. Extended families such as the Rothschilds and the Lazards could move money around the world because they trusted each other. Their word was their bond.

Trust and the confidence that flows from it remain the bedrock of economic growth. And the problem with trust is: It's so hard to accumulate, and so easy to fritter away.

© 2002 The Washington Post Company

washingtonpost.com