Best of the Week
Most Popular
1. Will Iran Kill the PetroDollar? - Marin Katusa
2. Tail Events, Isolation, New Normal Of Hyper Monetary Inflation - Jim_Willie_CB
3. Kodak's Former Moment, A Lesson for You, Me and America - Gary_North
4.The Five Stages of Collapse and the Coming Paradigm Shift in Silver - Steve_St_Angelo
5. UK Recession 2012 Certain as Bank of England Prepares to Ramp Up Money Printing Presses - Nadeem_Walayat
6. HMRC Extends Tax Deadline by 2Days for Self Assessment Online Filing - Nadeem_Walayat
7. Gold GLD ETF Investors Mass Exodus - Zeal_LLC
8. Credit Crisis Perfect Storm, Robert Prechter Discusses What's Backing Your Dollars - Robert Prechter
9. Best Cash ISA 2012 to Reduce Stealth Inflation Theft of Value of Savings - Nadeem_Walayat
10.Financial Markets 2012, When Leverage Fails - Ty_Andros
Last 5 Days Analysis
Learn How to Apply Fibonacci Retracements to Your Stock Index Trading - 8th Feb 12
Do Low Interest Rates Power Stock Markets Higher? - 8th Feb 12
SILVER: The Illegitimate Child Of The Commodities Family - 8th Feb 12
A New Reason Gold Stocks Will Soar - 8th Feb 12
The Deception of 0% Interest Rates, High Costs and Capital Destruction - 8th Feb 12
Bring Down the New World Order with Free Market Education - 8th Feb 12
Gold Increases In Value During Inflation or Deflation Scenarios - 8th Feb 12
Gold Holds Steady as U.S. Dollar Hits 2-Month Low - 8th Feb 12
Markets Risk Train Chugs Along, Overbought Does Not Mean a Correction is Coming - 8th Feb 12
Banking, U.S. Housing Market and Mortgages - 8th Feb 12
Has Zero Interest Rate Policy Held Back Economic Recovery? - 8th Feb 12
Graphite and Rare Earth Metals for the 21st Century - 8th Feb 12
Gold Odysseus Journey Continues! - 8th Feb 12
The Fed Resumes Printing Money to Monetize U.S. Government Debt - 7th Feb 12
Timing the Market: Predicting When the FED Will Act Next (Feb 12) - 7th Feb 12
U.S. War With Iran? - 7th Feb 12
Abandoning the U.S. Dollar for Gold - 7th Feb 12
Financial Crisis American Gridlock, Why The “Left” And The “Right” Are Both Wrong - 7th Feb 12
The Fed is Engineering Barack Obama’s Re-Election Campaign - 7th Feb 12
Finding Fundamentals Key to Gold Stocks Investing - 7th Feb 12
US Debt Will Explode Without Changes - 7th Feb 12
Gold Compared to Past Bubbles - 7th Feb 12
Illusion Of Economic Recovery – Feelings & Facts - 7th Feb 12
In the Gold Bullring - 7th Feb 12
This Precious Metal Could Rise 125% Over the Next 10 Months - 6th Feb 12
Washington Heading for War on Syria - 6th Feb 12
Gold "Rollercoaster" Heads Yet Lower as Greece Hits "Crunch Time for Bankruptcy" - 6th Feb 12
Did Friday's Gold Price Action Signal a Stock Market Top? - 6th Feb 12
Monday Financial Markets Madness – What’s This Greece Thing? - 6th Feb 12
Stock Market Investors Dangerous Times Ahead, Will Impact Gold - 6th Feb 12
Gold, Stocks and Euro Fall As Possible Greek Debt Default Looms - 6th Feb 12
Bond Investors Pour into Emerging Market Debt in Hunt for Higher Yields - 6th Feb 12
New Spy Technology Could Be Worth Billions - 6th Feb 12
U.S. Fraudulent Election Year Unemployment Data, Lies, Lies, More and Bigger Lies - 6th Feb 12
Double Liability for Bank Shareholders, Officers and Directors - 6th Feb 12
Stock Market Next Short-term Top in Sight - 6th Feb 12
U.S. Home Foreclosures and Shadow Banking: Why All the "Robo-signing"? - 5th Feb 12
Look at What 'Worked' in the Great Depression - 5th Feb 12
Putting Good U.S. Employment Numbers in Perspective, College Education Isn’t Enough - 5th Feb 12
Stock Market Weekend Update - 5th Feb 12
The Doomsday Machine - 4th Feb 12
Are US Treasury Bond Markets a Sell? - 4th Feb 12
Obama’s Refinancing Swindle, Banks Want to Dump Millions of Risky Mortgages Onto FHA - 4th Feb 12
The Euro Zone and the Crisis of Sovereign Debt - 4th Feb 12
Is the U.S. 'Decoupling' From the European Debt Crisis? - 4th Feb 12
The Crucial Pillar of the New World Order - 4th Feb 12
Gold Junior Mining Stocks Poised to Rebound - 4th Feb 12
U.S. January Employment Situation Shows Widespread Improvement, but Short of Full Employment Mandate - 4th Feb 12
U.S. Non Farm Payrolls Interesting Market Divergences - 4th Feb 12
Gold and Silver Mining Stocks Tops Might Be Just Around the Corner - 4th Feb 12
Critical Materials for Critical Technologies - 3rd Feb 12
Junior Gold Mining Stock - 3rd Feb 12
SOPA, PIPA, The State of US Surveillance - 3rd Feb 12
Essential Investor Preparations for The Big Crisis - 3rd Feb 12
U.S. Jobs, El-Erian U.S. Structural Issues Aren't Being Dealt With - 3rd Feb 12
What Every U.S. Investor Should Know About Inflation - 3rd Feb 12
U.S. Mint Gold Coin Sales Return to Fundamental Driven Demand - 3rd Feb 12
Gold Bull Market Bigger than Ever - 3rd Feb 12
Banking Crisis 2012 "Robo-Signing" of Foreclosure Affidavits Just Tip of Iceberg - 3rd Feb 12
Stock and Financial Markets Crash is Coming, Key Signs of Reversal - 3rd Feb 12
Real U.S. Economic Picture: "There is No Recovery" - 3rd Feb 12
Poland Gives Green Light to Massive Natural Gas Fracking Efforts - 3rd Feb 12
Where to Invest 2012 and What to Avoid - 2nd Feb 12
Liquid Natural Gas Stocks Are Set to Take Off - 2nd Feb 12
Godzilla Will Come Out of Tokyo Bay Before Japan Economy and Stock Market Rebounds - 2nd Feb 12
Gold Challenges Resistance at $1,750/oz – Technicals and Fundamentals Remain Very Positive - 2nd Feb 12
German Central Bailing Out Europe - 2nd Feb 12
In the Wake of Davos: "Strong Economic Medicine" for the European Union - 2nd Feb 12
The American Economy is "Dead": The Illusion of Economic Recovery - 2nd Feb 12
Irish People Bailout of Bond Holders, Vincent Browne v The European Central Bank Video - 2nd Feb 12
How Far Will Debt Deleveraging Go? How Much LSD Can an Elephant Take? - 2nd Feb 12
Great Deals on Gold and Silver 2012 - 2nd Feb 12

Free Instant Analysis

Free Instant Technical Analysis


Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

How You Can Identify Stock Market Turning Points Using Fibonacci

PDAC and Gold Fever

Commodities / Gold and Silver 2010 Mar 16, 2010 - 01:50 AM

By: The_Gold_Report

Commodities

Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticlePerhaps something akin to prospectors rushing from around the world in the grips of gold fever to California in the middle of the 19th century, thousands flock to the annual PDAC (Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada International Trade Show & Investors Exchange) to pan for nuggets for their organizations or for themselves. For this exclusive interview, The Gold Report caught up with Kaiser Bottom-Fish Report editor John Kaiser on the last day of the 2010 PDAC last week in Toronto. John finds that the bigger the event gets, the more patience and effort it seems to take, but those who are persistent and willing to dig can still cart away useful information and insights. Read on as he shares his takeaways.


The Gold Report: You're a long-time participant in the annual PDAC convention. Everybody who wasn't able to be there wants to know about any compelling stories or particularly interesting tidbits that you learned this year, when the event brought people into Toronto from more than 100 countries around the world.

John Kaiser: In the past few of the 20 years I've been going to this conference—and this year is no exception—it has become increasing difficult to pick up any prominent buzz, be it about a sector being red hot or be it about a major new discovery.

TGR: Why do you suppose that's happening?

JK: The reason is simple; this conference has become so big, so global. What in 1994 would have been the big Voisey's Bay's buzz that everybody was talking about or Bre-X in the following year, even if something like this did come along now, the collective size of 400 companies exhibiting would dwarf it. There are several hundred trade show exhibitors; numerous talks covering everything from country-focused issues to deposit models to new discoveries and so on. It's very difficult for any single thing to stick out.

Even worse, because it is now so large and dispersed, you do not have that intensity of networking of the past, the random networking where you would bump into people you hadn't seen for a long time and hear about this or that. By the end of the conference you had all these bits and pieces gelling in your head and you could say, "Oh, yeah, this was what was interesting." No, now it's the more you know in advance what you're looking for; you make the sessions; you track down those companies, and you have the face-to-face you planned with these. So, the old aspect of serendipity of bumping into stuff and stuff floating to the surface just does not happen in this environment.

TGR: Did you have any specific goals for your newsletter or your personal business that you were able to accomplish at the conference?

JK: I always take in the commodity talks on Sunday. This year I found that very helpful, and one theme that did emerge is the growing role of hard assets as a target for managed money. Martin Murenbeeld (Commodities and Market Outlook, Gold/Silver; DundeeWealth Economics) emphasized that $40 trillion of about $117 trillion worth of financial assets in the world is so-called managed money. In other words, fund managers are running it. Of this $40 trillion, about $200 billion is in what you would call hard assets such as gold, silver, copper, ETFs, futures; these sorts of instruments linked to raw materials. Martin suggests that the trend is going from this relatively small sum to nearly $1.3 trillion; in other words, 3% of the managed money going into this category. Should this happen, there's nowhere near enough gold at the current prices.

In another talk on copper, a similar theme was raised. When you look at a 50-year chart, copper has historically followed this pattern when inventories in the warehouses build up—which is usually during a business cycle downturn such as we've just been in—the price of the commodity collapses along with it until all the inventories have been drawn down. And then they spike upwards.

After the spike downwards in 2008, copper prices are back almost where they were before the collapse. Warehouse levels—while not as bad as they were at the end of the '90s when inventories were very high and copper was at 60 cents—are about halfway there. Yet we have the higher inventories and higher prices tracking each other. The analysts are attributing this to the movement of investor capital into these hard assets that Martin was talking about, and they say that the inventories aren't just stuff parked in the warehouse because there's nobody to buy it. Instead, it's already allocated to investors speculating on higher prices down the road or even treating it as a hedge against a debasement of the currencies and so on.

TGR: So we're seeing that kind of growth not just in the precious metals space, but also in base metals. Did anybody address the idea of that kind of big money investment or fund investment in other metals besides even just base metals and gold?

JK: Yes, for example, nickel is really not supposed to be back at $9 because the old pig-iron nickel, which helped bring nickel back down from the $22 levels, was working at $11 and $12. Now they're able to make it work at $7 and $8, so there's plenty of nickel supply coming into the system. Still, nickel has managed to climb back to $9, while inventories are very, very healthy.

TGR: So it's affecting copper, nickel and gold.

JK: We are seeing it in all the categories. Even zinc, which is in surplus this year and is supposed to say in surplus next year, but then is expected to go into deficit. At that point, suddenly demand is greater than the supply. It is a $1 or higher and has bounced back significantly from the low reached during the 2008 meltdown.

TGR: Did you observe a lot of activity at the conference that you hadn't seen before, with fund managers sniffing around for compelling plays to work in what you're basically describing as a groundswell of money being diverted into these hard assets?

JK: I polled exhibitors as to what kind of traffic they were getting, and yes, they are receiving a lot of inquiries. They're coming from a range of sources, from the traditional European and North American institutional fund managers to a lot of overseas Asian-style managers. Of course, there's also interest from the end-user crowd.

A big theme has been China's movement to convert some of its foreign reserves into hard assets in terms of ownership of physical deposits. That's why we have seen buyouts and significant investments or large equity stakes in a number of important projects stranded during the 2008 meltdown. That was the nature of feedback I got from exhibitors.

TGR: Do you then anticipate more of the global relationships blossoming and developing as we saw last year with a major Asian investor—actually Japanese rather than Chinese—coming in as a strategic partner with a North American company?

JK: You're referring to the deal between Copper Mountain Mining Corp. (TSX:*****) and Mitsubishi Materials Corporation (PS:MIMTF). Yes, more of that sort of thing, but really it all hinges on what happens in global economic trends.

There was no irrational exuberance at all at this conference. In fact, it's a bit like a teeter-totter poised to go either way. There is hope that China will pull the global economy back on track and reinvigorate Europe and the United States. On the other hand, there also is concern that this will fall apart, and that as the fiscal stimulus packages come to an end interest rates start to rise that we will see a double dip recession in the North American markets. And if that happens to coincide with a problem in China, which has been going hell-bent at an incredible pace thanks to its $585 billion fiscal stimulus program, there is concern that his could end very badly.

So we are almost in the eye of a hurricane, and everybody's wondering where we will be next year.

TGR: Which way are you leaning?

JK: My own feeling is that if we come out of this with the global economy back on track and the disparate signs of life that we see in the North American economy are actually more than just flickers, next year we should see the supercycle that dominated the talk at this conference from '03 to '08. This time it will be taken seriously, and massive amounts of money will flow into the sector. But as I say, it all hinges now on where the global economy goes.

TGR: In that context, it's interesting to see a lot of the money still going into the hard assets as we wait for the global economy to recover.

JK: We may have to stumble for a couple of years; in which case commodity prices will sag. But if that happens, all the talk about fiscal austerity and so on will go out the window. Every nation in the world will start to print money to reflate their economy and through brute force get liquidity in the economy going again.

And when that happens, because of the conservatism that on the mining side—the supply response—there is now money ahead of that curve saying, "Okay, we don't really need to buy copper right now. We need to buy a copper development story and put up the capital and give them the money to push it closer to the feasibility stage. Then, when we have greater clarity on the direction of the economy, we plunk down the billion dollars or whatever is needed to put this asset into production."

That's actually a very bullish sign for the companies exhibiting at the conference because it's a shift away from just, say, buying physical gold to buying the ounce-in-the-ground companies. Pierre Lassonde (Franco-Nevada Corporation (TSX:FNV), in his talk ("Is $1,000 gold sugar coating Peak Gold?") had an interesting chart that plotted the average cost per ounce, which had been rising steadily for the past two decades. But in the last year, that cost per ounce flattened even as the price per ounce of gold went up significantly. Now, what he's saying is that a real margin is reappearing. It's not as if the companies are finding higher-grade deposits; they are not. They have simply been able to contain costs in the aftermath of this meltdown.

TGR: What made that possible?

JK: This meltdown was very different from past economic busts because the industry had spent the entire cycle worrying that this would happen. As a result, when it finally did happen, their supply response was immediate. They cut marginal operations; they laid off people; they stopped it on a dime. This has made the cost structure quite robust, and the producers are set to benefit significantly if the metal prices stay where they are and/or perhaps go even higher.

For investors seeking larger returns, these development projects look quite good at these current prices in terms of ounces or pounds in the ground, but the companies are not reflecting valuations that take these prices seriously. These types of projects are attracting capital on the basis of speculation that today's higher commodity prices stay and go higher in the long run.

TGR: Bargain shopping.

JK: In a sense, but it's speculative bargain shopping. It's speculating that your particular Beanie Baby that is cheap now is going to be very dear three or four years from now.

TGR: That takes us back to what, the '90s? Back to the future now, what else caught your eye at the PDAC this year?

JK: I was checking out the rare earth space. Quite a few of the rare earth companies were represented, there were several rare earth receptions and a whole morning devoted to talks about the rare earth deposits, geology, market and so on. These were surprisingly well attended for a Wednesday morning, when traditionally 90% of the delegates are still in bed. So that is actually a pretty good indicator of the interest in this space.

Particularly with the assistance of one of the stocks listed going up during the days of the conference, I would say that the rare earth space is probably on the threshold of achieving a whole new level of serious attention from investors.

TGR: Any companies in that space that you find particularly interesting?

JK: The interest has been a lot of talk and a lot of tire-kicking, but not really a lot of money going into the treasury. This may change in the not-too-distant future, though.

TGR: How so?

JK: I had an interesting meeting with a representative of Molycorp Minerals, who explained their timeline of activities. If I understand it correctly, we could see a Molycorp IPO before the summer. What the institutional market is missing in the rare earth sector is a vehicle large enough for serious investments. There has been incredible media buzz about the rare earth space. The Chinese are very clearly interested in seeing rare earth deposits developed outside of China to take the pressure off them to export what they consider a resource they need to hoard for the long term.

Having said that, nobody wants to buy stocks such as Quest Uranium Corporation (TSX.V:QUC) or Avalon Rare Metals Inc. (TSX:AVL) to any large degree. With these smaller players, there are so many uncertainties about whether the feasibility study will indicate a profit margin, whether they'll ever get a permit to get to production, or whether the metallurgical process actually will work. An aversion to investing in these very risky single-asset projects has inhibited the serious money coming into these plays. If a major company such as Molycorp does an IPO and lists on the New York Stock Exchange, though, it will validate the space and pull a lot of money into all the smaller companies. So I sense the timeliness for this improving over the next two or three months.

TGR: Do you see any other companies besides Molycorp with an asset base that could actually pull off something as significant as an IPO and list a rare earth play on the New York or Toronto Exchange?

JK: A counterpart is Lynas Corporation (ASE:LYC), listed on the Australian Stock Exchange. This company has a market cap of AU$815 billion, and last year raised AU$450 million basically from institutional investors around the world after the Australian Foreign Investment Review Board said no to a Chinese proposal to put up debt and equity financing in exchange for majority control of Lynas. So this has already happened in Australia, but that market is not as liquid and popular as, say, the New York Stock Exchange.

I wouldn't be surprised if Lynas Corp. also seeks a New York Stock Exchange listing; however, the significance of Molycorp is that this is a home-grown, American deposit, and on April 1, we're supposed to hear the results of the RESTART bill proposal, an analysis of what America's vulnerabilities are to rare earth supply. If they decide that we have a problem here, the intensity of the hand-wringing about what to do about it would increase and companies such as Molycorp will receive a lot of attention as at least a major part of the solution to the problem. As you may know, Molycorp has been in the process of getting its Mountain Pass deposit back into production, and it also has the ability and the knowledge base necessary to acquire other projects elsewhere in the world to beef up its rare earth supply potential.

TGR: Thank you, John. You'd also mentioned RESTART in a conversation with our sister newsletter, The Energy Report, a couple of months ago. We recently saw a news release about this, and for readers who aren't familiar with it, RESTART stands for "Rare Earth Supply-chain Technology and Resources Transformation." Proposed as a means of reviving a competitive rare earths industry in the U.S., it has been put forward as potential legislation by an organization known as USMMA, the United States Magnet Materials Association. USMMA reported submitting this proposal, designed to create a path forward toward "a ‘whole-of-government' approach to resolving the Rare Earth Elements (REE) supply crisis," to a number of federal entities—the U.S. Department of Commerce, U.S. Department Energy, U.S. Department State, U.S. Department of Defense, Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, and Office of Science and Technology Policy within the Executive Office of the President. The RESTART proposal calls for up to $1.2 billion in funding to reestablish domestic rare earth mining as well as U.S. facilities for refining, alloying, melting and production of rare earths and rare earth-based products.

USMMA said that it has already successfully advocated for inclusion of a congressionally mandated study of the rare earth supply-chain in the FY10 National Defense Authorization Act. The organization was founded by three high-performance magnet producers and suppliers in 2006: Thomas & Skinner, Inc. (Indianapolis, IN), Hoosier Magnetics (Ogdensburg, NY) and Electron Energy Corporation (Landisville, PA) in 2006. U.S. Rare Earths, Inc. (a private company) joined the group in 2009.

John Kaiser, a mining analyst with 25-plus years of experience, produces the Kaiser Bottom-Fish Report. It specializes in high-risk Canadian resource sector securities and seeks to provide investors with a framework for intelligent speculation. His investment approach integrates his "bottom-fishing strategy" with his "rational speculation model." After graduating from the University of British Columbia in 1982, John joined Continental Carlisle Douglas, a Vancouver brokerage firm that specialized in Vancouver Stock Exchange listed securities, as a research assistant. Six years later, he moved to Pacific International Securities as research director and also became a registered investment adviser. Not long after moving to the U.S. with his family in 1994, John cast his own line in the water, so to speak, with publication of the premier edition of the Kaiser Bottom-Fish Report.

Want to read more exclusive Gold Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you'll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Expert Insights page.

DISCLOSURE:
1) Karen Roche, of The Gold Report, conducted this interview. She personally and/or her family own none of the companies mentioned in this interview.
2) The following companies mentioned in the interview are sponsors of The Gold Report: Avalon Rare Metals; Revett Minerals, Goldcorp.
3) Michael Berry—I personally and/or my family own the following companies mentioned in this interview: Senesco Technologies, Goldcorp, Quaterra Resources, and Galway Resources.
I personally and/or my family am paid by the following companies mentioned in this interview: Revett Minerals.

The GOLD Report is Copyright © 2010 by Streetwise Inc. All rights are reserved. Streetwise Inc. hereby grants an unrestricted license to use or disseminate this copyrighted material only in whole (and always including this disclaimer), but never in part. The GOLD Report does not render investment advice and does not endorse or recommend the business, products, services or securities of any company mentioned in this report. From time to time, Streetwise Inc. directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned and may make purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise.


© 2005-2012 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.


Comments


Post Comment (Moderated)




Commenting Issue - If on submitting you are returned to the main Index Page (50% chance) then your comment has not been accepted, Follow below steps for 95% chance of comment being accepted.

  1. Click your browser Back button (from main index page).
  2. COPY your comment text from Comment box (i.e. copy to clipboard).
  3. Press PAGE Refresh - You should see the message "You are not authorized to carry out this operation"
  4. Paste your comment back into the comment text box.
  5. Click Submit - If everything goes okay you will remain on the article page with the message "Your comment was held for moderation and will be reviewed shortly".
  6. If instead you are again returned to the main index page then repeat 1-5, alternatively EMAIL to comments @ marketoracle.co.uk quoting the article number.

FREE Deflation Survival GuideFREE Updated 118 Page Independant Investor E-book