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Strategies & Market Trends : The coming US dollar crisis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Real Man who wrote (25415)12/11/2009 9:18:11 AM
From: DebtBomb  Respond to of 71456
 
Central Banks In Rising Nations Bulk Up On Gold, Fueling Prices
Norm Alster Norm Alster
Thu Dec 10, 7:07 pm ET

As gold has stormed to new highs, a well-endowed class of buyers has joined the stampede.

After two decades in which they were net sellers of gold, the world's central banks have been loading up on the precious metal.

China, India, Russia and others have made major gold purchases in recent months. Gold market gurus and investors believe the central banks helped push bullion above $1,200 an ounce.

Even after a recent sharp pullback, some believe that with more central bank buying in the cards, gold still has head room.

"It's very positive for the price of gold," said Leo Larkin, equity metals analyst with Standard & Poor's. "We're at the early stages of central banks becoming buyers."

The greatest buying potential comes from the banks of developing nations. Even after selling gold for much of the last two decades, Western banks hold huge shares of their foreign reserves in gold.

For the U.S., it's 77.4%, reports the World Gold Council. For France, just over 70%. For Germany, it's 69.2%.

But developing countries often hold little gold. Russia had just more than 4% of its foreign reserves in gold as of Sept. 30. Brazil and Mexico had less than 1%.

What if former have-nots now evolving into have-lots decide to boost their gold reserves to match Western hoards?

Gold bulls would carry the day should there be "a wave of manifest transfer of wealth from West to East," said Jon Nadler, senior analyst with Kitco Metals, a Montreal-based bullion dealer and refiner.

Nadler, who is actually bearish on gold, concedes that the recent and prospective buys of central banks have contributed to gold's strength. "Perceptually, they've been a psychological boost."

He also argues that gold prices have raced ahead of fundamentals. "My feeling is that a pullback will eventually ensue," he said.

Nadler sees $680 to $880 as a "much healthier" price range.

Central bank buying is certainly not the only force fueling gold. Geopolitical concerns, the eroding dollar and worries over huge budget deficits in the U.S. and elsewhere are all factors, says Thomas Winmill, portfolio manager for the Midas Fund.

"There's a real concern that we're moving into a world where we'll see massive printing of currency. There's interest in finding an asset that protects against currency devaluation," said Stephen Land, lead portfolio manager of the Franklin Gold & Precious Metals Fund.

Leveraged hedge funds plying the dollar carry trade also have been a major factor in pumping up the price of gold. The carry trade involves borrowing dollars at near zero-interest rates and pouring the proceeds into other investments -- including gold.

"The market is running primarily on investment fumes that are fueled by the dollar carry trade," Nadler said.

Gold is in large part a play on rock-bottom interest rates and a plunging dollar. Last week's jobs report and speculation that the Federal Reserve might tighten a little earlier buoyed the buck and pushed gold below $1,120 by Wednesday. But February gold futures steadied Thursday, closing at $1126.20.

India, China Key

Gold bulls are counting on further central bank buying. The intentions of China, Russia and India loom especially large.

India in early November announced it would buy 200 metric tons of gold from the International Monetary Fund. Since then, rumors have surfaced that India is looking to buy still more. An IMF spokesman declined comment on Indian buying interest.

China is the gorilla peering down the mineshaft. The World Gold Council estimates that with recent buying, China has more than 1,000 metric tons of gold reserves, making it the sixth largest government holder of bullion.

That's still well behind the U.S., the global market leader with more than 8,000 metric tons as of last September. China has the resources to dramatically increase its gold stores. Even with recent buys, gold represents less than 2% of its total currency reserves.

Like other central banks, China has been tight-lipped about its plans. Many of its purchases have also been off-market, escaping detection.

"The Chinese have no interest in showing their cards," Land said.

Some watchers speculate China could seek to equal or exceed U.S. gold stores. This would require purchases of 7,000 metric tons and would certainly "shoot prices higher," Nadler said.

He doesn't expect these buys to materialize. Instead, he expects China to "slowly accumulate" further reserves.

In the past, China has pointed to a goal of gold as 2% of currency reserves. As China's holdings of dollars soared, it's had to buy gold just to keep bullion's share of total reserves constant. At 1.9% of reserves, China is near its oft-stated target.

Russia and India have been determined buyers in catch-up mode. The question is just how much they want to catch up.

India once had 20% of its reserves in gold, Nadler says. As it earned huge stores of foreign currency in recent years, that share dropped to 4%. Its recent IMF buy lifted that to 6%, Nadler estimates.

If India intends to get anywhere near its former 20% level, it will continue to be a major buyer.

Russia once had large stores of gold. In a massive liquidation of commodities, it "cleaned out its vaults when the regime fell," said Nadler. Russia has built back up to over 560 metric tons.

Stability in oil prices would help Russia continue to buy, the Midas Fund's Winmill says. Like China, Russia has first crack at gold mined in its borders. The central banks in both cases can absorb massive output before it even comes to market.

"Central bank buying will be an important psychological factor for the next two to nine months," Winmill said.

He figures the price of gold will stabilize around $1,200 the next few months. He expects a $100 rise per quarter beginning in Q2 2010. That would take gold to around $1,500 by the end of 2010.

Bad Market Timing

Investors might want to think twice before following the lead of central bankers.

The central banks of Europe were big sellers in the '80s at prices of $400 or less an ounce. The worst market timer was Britain, which sold a huge chunk of its reserves.

"They pretty much were selling around the $255 to $270 range," said S&P's Larkin. "I think they're awfully embarrassed about what happened."

As Nadler put it, "Central banks are notoriously bad market timers."
news.yahoo.com



To: Real Man who wrote (25415)12/11/2009 9:21:09 AM
From: DebtBomb  Respond to of 71456
 
Hedge Funds Buying as Individuals Sell in Bull Signal (Update3) Share Business ExchangeTwitterFacebook| Email | Print | A A A
By Lynn Thomasson and Mary Childs

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Hedge funds are shoveling money into stocks as individuals exit at the fastest rate in a year, a sign to professional investors that the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index is poised to extend its gains.

About $37.3 billion has been pulled from U.S. mutual funds since August, according to the Investment Company Institute. Hedge funds -- which lost half as much on average as the S&P 500 since stocks peaked in October 2007 -- boosted bets to the highest level since the end of that year in the third quarter and have kept buying, according to data compiled by Goldman Sachs Group Inc., industry consultants and Bloomberg.

“The more sophisticated investors are seeing the opportunity, but retail investors are still scarred,” said James Dunigan, the Philadelphia-based chief investment officer for the wealth management division at PNC Financial Services, which oversees $104 billion. “It suggests that the rally still has room to go.”

Before credit markets started to freeze in August 2007, the last time mutual funds saw outflows this big was in the nine months up to February 2003, just as the S&P 500 began a five- year rally. Now, the sales are offering opportunities to Paulson & Co., Christofferson Robb & Co. and Passport Capital Management LLC to bet the more than $11 trillion lent, spent or guaranteed by the U.S. government to end the recession will lift stocks.

Individuals, who account for 82 percent of mutual fund owners, took $21.4 billion more out of equities than they’ve added and put $312.8 billion into bonds this year through the end of October, according to Washington-based ICI.

Bearish Bests

Investments designed to profit when stocks retreat increased. So-called bear-market and long-short mutual funds attracted a record $10 billion this year through October, more than double the previous high in 2006, according to Morningstar Inc. So-called retail managers have opened 19 long-short funds, the most in a year.

By contrast, hedge funds raised their stakes by 21 percent to $604 billion in the third quarter, according to Goldman Sachs. They held $363 billion in short sales, or bets that stocks will drop, the data show. The funds now own 3.8 percent of the Russell 3000 Index, which includes the largest American companies, the highest percentage this year.

Hedge funds, mostly private pools of capital whose managers participate substantially in the profits from speculating on whether the price of assets will rise or fall, got $1.1 billion of net investments in the three months through September, according to Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research Inc. The increase was the first in a year for the $1.53 trillion industry.

March Rally

The S&P 500 advanced 15 percent in that period and has rallied 62 percent since reaching a low on March 9, for a 2009 return of 24 percent including reinvested dividends. The gauge added 0.4 percent to 1,095.63 as of 4 p.m. in New York.

“It makes sense hedge funds are getting long given that the market’s up so much in a six-month period,” said Harry Rady, who oversees $250 million as chief executive officer of Rady Asset Management LLC, a La Jolla, California-based manager whose hedge fund has been adding to stocks. “The Fed has said they’re not going to let the market go down and they’ve done it by pumping liquidity into a variety of markets and that’s spilled into the equity market. People have the confidence to take equity risk.”

Most U.S. stocks fell last week as speculation Dubai may default spurred concern that the recovery in the global financial system will stall, overshadowing fewer American jobless claims and increasing home sales. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 0.1 percent to 10,309.92, while 273 companies in the S&P 500 declined compared with 224 that rose.

Buying Stock

Managers added to stocks in the last two months, according to London-based investment adviser Kinetic Partners, which includes two-thirds of the 50 largest U.K. hedge funds as clients, and Conifer Securities LLC in San Francisco, which executes trades for more than 100 of the firms.

About 900 went out of business during 2008 as the S&P 500 fell 38 percent, the steepest drop in seven decades, according to data compiled by Hedge Fund Research and Bloomberg.

Hedge fund assets may increase to $1.75 trillion by the end of 2010, Morgan Stanley’s Huw van Steenis wrote in a Nov. 23 report. Peter Clarke, chief executive officer of Man Group Plc, the biggest publicly traded hedge-fund manager, said in a meeting with reporters Nov. 23 that he expects the industry to receive as much as $50 billion a quarter next year.

New Cycle

“The whole idea of hedge funds is very flexible: you can use your initiative to back the horse that’s winning this particular race and then move on,” said Andrew Shrimpton, a hedge-fund adviser at Kinetic. “It’s the beginning of a new cycle, really. Money’s starting to flow in and there is ability to leverage up on that money especially if the collateral is liquid collateral such as equities.”

Stock speculation is increasing after the Federal Reserve held its target rate for overnight loans between banks near zero since December. Three-month dollar Libor, a benchmark for lending by brokerages for stock purchases, fell to a record low of 0.254 percent this month.

Equity buying by hedge funds may be less bullish because managers are using options, short sales and credit-default swaps to protect their investments, according to Mark Yusko, president of Morgan Creek Capital Management LLC, an adviser to funds of funds in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, based on prices paid to insure against losses in the S&P 500, slipped to 20.05 last week, the lowest level in 15 months, before jumping to 24.74.

Shorting, Options

“Yes, hedge funds are buying stocks, but they’re also shorting stocks in record numbers and buying put options in record levels,” Yusko said in a telephone interview. “It basically neutralizes a lot of their equity exposure.” Puts are options that pay off when a stock, commodity or index declines.

Short interest on the New York Stock Exchange jumped in March and remains above historic levels. Stock sold short equaled 3.51 percent of shares outstanding at the end of October, or 40 percent above the average this decade.

“Most of the managers we know think the rally’s far overextended, that equities are way overpriced, and that they’re due for a very significant, long correction,” Yusko said. Morgan Creek manages about $9 billion for institutions and wealthy clients.

Valuations

The S&P 500 traded last week for 21.9 times the past year’s earnings from its companies, the highest since 2002. The Labor Department may say on Dec. 4 that the U.S. unemployment rate held at 10.2 percent this month, according to the median estimate of 65 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. A report this week is projected to show growth in construction spending slipped.

Paulson, the hedge-fund manager whose wagers against the U.S. housing market helped him earn an estimated $2 billion last year, bought Bank of America Corp. stock in the second quarter, while adding to stakes in gold companies. Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America has climbed 127 percent since the end of March, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Paulson told investors in a quarterly letter this month that he expects Bank of America stock to almost double in the next two years as writedowns ease.

Christofferson’s Brad Golding, whose CRC Financials Opportunities fund beat 95 percent of its peers in 2008 with a 109 percent gain, said he bought shares of Oppenheimer Holdings Inc. because the firm trades below book value, or the cost of its assets. The New York-based brokerage has rallied 23 percent since the end of the third quarter.

Favorite Stocks

Pfizer Inc., Bank of America and Apple Inc. ranked as the most popular stocks among hedge funds with more than 147 owning shares, according to Goldman Sachs’s survey of 13F regulatory filings. New York-based Pfizer, the world’s biggest drugmaker, added 45 percent since the S&P 500 fell to a 12-year low on March 9, while Cupertino, California-based Apple, maker of the iPhone, surged 141 percent.

“This is a phenomenon that should continue into next year and perhaps far into next year,” said John Burbank III, the chief investment officer of Passport Capital, a $2.1 billion hedge-fund firm in San Francisco that began adding shares halfway into the rally. Individuals “may never believe in equities again, we don’t know,” he said. “But hedge funds are generally increasing, partly because they’ve been conservative, and partly because they see opportunities to make money.”

bloomberg.com



To: Real Man who wrote (25415)12/11/2009 9:25:11 AM
From: DebtBomb  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71456
 
China could buy 7000 metric tons of gold to catch up to the u.s.. ;-O



To: Real Man who wrote (25415)12/11/2009 9:58:12 AM
From: DebtBomb  Respond to of 71456
 
Rating agencies still screwing with the dollar, LOL.



To: Real Man who wrote (25415)12/11/2009 10:09:37 AM
From: ggersh  Respond to of 71456
 
Yield curve bullish for dollar!

It's the last trick, but the trick could be on them1

I know it went w/out a blip, but the 30 year auction

absolutely stunk, which could be the final nail in

Ben's coffin