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Gold/Mining/Energy : An obscure ZIM in Africa traded Down Under -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: TobagoJack who wrote (236)8/19/2002 3:24:00 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 867
 
Hi Jay, I dumped Bank of China IPO shares at 6.x% gain after 4 weeks of duty in support of economic reform. While I am willing to contribute my support for an additional four weeks if I thought I may be rewarded with another 6% gain, but I do not see the upside at this moment.

IPOs are not what they used to be.

In the meantime, I may roll the sales proceeds into additional paper gold within the next 24 hours, giving support to a monetary system sponsored by no nation, and subscribing to cash that is the obligation of no state.

Chugs, Jay



To: TobagoJack who wrote (236)8/20/2002 6:29:44 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 867
 
Hello Jay, Just bought more taels of paper gold at 0.6% markup to spot, which seems fair.

Nothing out of the ordinary, just the usual weekly or twice weekly does of Collapse Antidote while reading the news, since ...

"On the other hand, Saudi Arabia would likely be only too happy to take a net trade gain of 30 tonnes or so a year out of Mahathir's hands, which, based on passed history, would be rapidly converted back into dollars"

... may no longer be true, given newer perceived realities ...

Message 17896979

Reference News Item:

mips1.net

>Assessing the impact of Malaysia's gold plan
By: Tim Wood

Posted: 2002/08/19 Mon 21:42 | © Miningweb 1997-2002

NEW YORK -- Malaysia has unveiled additional information about its ponderous Islamic dinar project and has set a date of 2003 to commence bilateral trade in the gold-backed currency. Nor Mohamed Yakcop, economic adviser to Malaysia's semi-permanent Prime Minister, Mahathir Mohamad, gave the news at a trade conference in Kuala Lumpur.
Malaysia has had a bee in its bonnet about Western complicity for the Asian meltdown of 1997-8. Thailand was the first domino to fall when the value of the baht was shattered and contagion spread throughout the region, inflamed by high risk lending practises.

Mahathir has since sought to lock up Malaysia's capital markets and insulate the country from the globalisation process – even as it seeks to ramp up the exports that drive the economy. The gold dinar is seen as a way to further reduce dependence on the Western finance-treasury complex after the ringgit was pegged at 3.8 to the dollar in September 1998 and the government tried to force hedge funds to be more transparent.

Nor Mohamed told reporters that Malaysia was proposing to use the gold dinar to settle bilateral trade with other Islamic states, hoping to build it into a multilateral arrangement in time. A quarterly exchange of bullion would settle trade balances, with day-to-day trade denominated in an electronic form of the dinar.

The dinar project has taken on added significance since 9/11 with some Islamic countries seeing it as a firewall against "an inherently unstable and ultimately unjust global monetary system", according to Nor Mohamed. The Koran has explicit injunctions against usury of any form and prohibits "infidels" managing "Muslim" money. Similarly partnerships with non-Muslims outside Islamic judicial areas is discouraged.

These prescriptions and prohibitions collapsed completely once petrodollar wealth flooded into Islamic states, where the beneficiaries soon repatriated it to the Western metropoles in order to earn a return.

Dinar history

The history of the gold dinar is traced to the second Caliph, Umar (632 AD), when a bimetallic standard was set of 1.43 gold dinars for every 1 silver dirham. The oldest dated coins come from the third Caliph, Uthman (644 AD), who compiled the Koran as we know it today, but was murdered by rivals for rejecting the prophecies of Muhammad, and ultimately sowed the seeds for the subsequent split between Shiites and Sunnis. After 695 AD Caliph Abdalmalik, famous as Islam's "first" chess player, began a systematic expansion of the bimetallic standard throughout the then rapidly expanding Islamic empire.

According to the World Islamic Trading Organisation, the dinar is equivalent to 4.3 grams of gold at 916 fineness (22 carat), or 4.22 grams of four nines gold (0.14 troy ounces). The dirham is equal to 3 grams of Sterling silver (925 fineness), or 2.9 grams at four nines (0.09oz).

Malaysia is expected to prefer a 1-ounce dinar to eliminate confusion about the precise value of the currency that is often quoted on commercial exchanges at 4.25 grams. If the silver dirhim is also introduced, there is likely to be an exceptional arbitrage market for bullion traders – which would probably raise the ire of Mahathir even further.

Trade numbers

Malaysia's trade with exclusively Islamic countries is tiny. Limited data is available, but using 2001 figures published by Malaysian trade officials, it is evident that total "Islamic trade" amounts to no more than 1.4% of the national total of $162 billion, and just 8% of exchanges with the United States.

In nearly every case, Malaysia has a net trade surplus and the imbalance is especially acute within the Islamic bloc it is now eyeing. Emirates and Saudi Arabia are the dominant partners, followed by Egypt and a clutch of minnows.

Since Malaysia is an aggressive exporter with a near obsession for accumulating trade surpluses, its Islamic trading partners may not be too happy at the prospect of leaking bullion to South East Asia. In 2001, the average price of gold at $271 per ounce would have netted Malaysia 66 tonnes, or around 58 tonnes at current prices.

The UAE would have been hard pressed by a dinar trade scheme in 2001, with gross national gold reserves worth less than two months of Malaysian import cover, or little more than that at present prices. On the other hand, Saudi Arabia would likely be only too happy to take a net trade gain of 30 tonnes or so a year out of Mahathir's hands, which, based on passed history, would be rapidly converted back into dollars.

If the scheme is implemented as promised next year, Malaysia would "tie up" between 230 tonnes (55 million dinars) and 200 tonnes (48 million dinars) a year at gold prices of $300 and $350 respectively. According to the latest World Gold Council figures, the Islamic bloc gold reserves cover liquidity requirements about two and a half times, which does not inspire great confidence.

Nevertheless, dinar trade would provide a solid pillar for the gold price, ensuring that an amount equivalent to nearly 10% of annual new mine production is more or less off limits to speculators, especially because of the quarterly settlements.



To: TobagoJack who wrote (236)9/12/2002 5:49:14 PM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 867
 
Hi Jay, This is an update on portfolio member, Hub Power of Pakistan ...

(a) Current annualized dividend yield of 27% appears secure as Pakistan has USD 7.2 billion of forex reserve, and state-owned utility (counterparty to the Power Purchase Agreement) default risk has gone down substantially;

(b) Expected annualized yield is around 35% assuming all goes well in WAT/WOT and whatnot, and that power payments in arrears are distributed (as opposed to reinvested);0)

(c) Project sponsors (National Power of UK, Xenel of Saudi Arabia, IHI of Japan, K&M of USA) should see that their interests are protected from one and all;

(d) The Pakistani government, both for international relations and domestic benefits (HUB accounts for 8.1% of Pakistan's installed generating capacity), should focus on protecting this jewel on the local stock exchange; and

(e) At a reasonable 15% discount rate, the share should zoom by 87% based on dividend flow.

I am wondering, supposing this is the bottom for the stock's price, why are folks not clamoring to buy;0)

Chugs, Jay



To: TobagoJack who wrote (236)9/30/2002 5:41:37 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 867
 
ALLOCATION DISCLOSURE:
Cash 45.5% (32% Euro, 23% USD, 19% AUD, 6% CHF, 15% HKD, CAN 5%)
Physical & paper metals 6% (>75% gold vs. platinum)
Bonds 21.5% (91% USD, 9% Euro, valued at lower of cost and market)
Rental Real Estate 21% (valued at cost)

Equity 6% (AAPTY, AMGN, AOL, AU, AWK, BP, CD, CHL, CMCSK, CWT, DROOY, EPEX, GFI, HGMCY, HOFF, IMPAY, NEM, PAAS, RAD, RD, SWC, UNT, USU, XOM; Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corp, CNOOC, Petro China, Sinopec, & Bank of China of Hong Kong, Newcrest Mining of Australia, IRSA & CRESY of Argentina, Hub Power of Pakistan GDR, Zimbabwe Platinum) w/ ZIM.au accounting for 0.2% of NAV, and a sliver of this biotech starter set (0.1% of NAV) - a private equity approach to public listed ventures - recommended by LLCF (DAK):
siliconinvestor.com

The above noted South African resource shares are in their ADR and regular flavors.

My MS Money morgue contains these residual shares that qualify me to receiving annual reports from AIG, INTC, MRK, MSFT, PFE, QCOM, WMT, and in HK equity morgue - Phoenix Satellite TV.

I have these internally not altogether consistent option positions:
Short SWC Oct Call 20 covered
Short HGMCY Nov Call 15 covered
Short NEM Dec Put 25
Short NEM Dec Put 20
Short CMCSK January Put 12.5
Short VZ January Put 25
Short BP January Put 40
Short HGMCY February Put 10
Short FCX February Put 10
Short AOL January Call 10 covered
Short CD January Call 12.5
Short CD January Put 10

I do not have debt, and NAV YTD appreciation is now @ 4.88%, and am no longer on track to what would be a fantasy 8% for 2002. This tally to date is conservative, based on always valuing the bonds and real estate at lower of cost and market.

Reference last tally:
Message 17888598
Message 17892945
Message 18017816
Message 18036505
Message 18044653
Message 18054382

Chugs, Jay