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


To: Sergio R. Mejia who wrote (16778)8/28/1998 1:51:00 AM
From: Sergio R. Mejia  Respond to of 116823
 
"A sliding US$ would push gold prices up..."

By PAUL BAGNELL Mining Reporter The Financial Post
The price of gold sagged to a 19-year low yesterday as investors continued their flight to the US$. The spot price of gold closed at US$276.70 an ounce in New York, down US$5.50 from Wednesday and the lowest pricesince June 28, 1979.
Analysts blamed bullion's woes on the strong US$ and investors' belief the currency is now the only safe place to park their
funds.
Yesterday's massive selloff in world equity markets was part of the same phenomenon, they said.
Gold prices have been in a steady decline since early 1996, when they reached a five-year high of US$415.50 an ounce. The collapse has wiped out profits for most producers, pushed several mining companies toward insolvency and decimated the junior exploration sector.
"Money is fleeing the stock markets, the currency markets and the bond markets and going, not to gold, but to the US$," said John Ing, president of Maison Placements Inc. in Toronto. "The US$, for the past 12 months, has been the haven of choice."
But he said the stampede toward the US$ is "misguided" and predicted the currency is headed for a fall.
The U.S. economy's US$300-billion trade deficit will undermine the US$ sooner rather than later, he predicted. "History shows you can't run those deficits without having something go, and that's going to be the currency." A sliding US$ would push gold prices up, he said.

Economist Martin Murenbeeld, of M. Murenbeeld & Assoc. in Victoria, also said low gold prices are directly linked to the strong US$. "Gold is the second-best asset in the world today, but the US$ is the first," he said.
Rumors that Russia is selling some of its about 500 tonnes of gold may also be hurting prices, Murenbeeld said. He suggested a lowering of interest rates by the U.S. Federal Reserve, which he expects before long, will likely stem the decline.
The share prices of gold producers took a pounding on the Toronto Stock Exchange yesterday, with the TSE's gold and precious minerals subindex plunging 308.79 points, or 6.17%, to 4695.21.
Ing said the stocks of some gold companies are sharply undervalued, naming Prime Resources Group Inc. of Vancouver as an example. "They've got cash, low costs -- all the ingredients," he said.



To: Sergio R. Mejia who wrote (16778)8/28/1998 2:26:00 AM
From: Alex  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116823
 
Hi Sergio. Good to hear from you again. Two great posts. Japan is down 500 points as I type, below 14000. Gold continues down. I fear that there will be a backlash in much of the world, toward capitalism, before the smoke clears here. This is ugly. The debt structure that replaced the gold standard is coming unglued.