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Welcome to Call to Decision
Subject: Get Ready - Here Come the Gold Stocks! - John Mauldin's
Outside the Box E-Letter
Date: Mon, 25 Feb 2008 17:19:39 -0600
Reply-To: wave@frontlinethoughts.com
I have known Doug Casey and David Galland a very long time. Doug got
me into my first natural resource stock almost 25 years ago (which
ran up 8 times before we sold). They take their research on gold
stocks very seriously, and have been quite successful over the past
years. While they are more bearish on the economy than I am, their
analysis of the natural resource markets and gold stocks in
particular has been spot on. In the mid-80's I wrote my first
newsletter which focused on gold stocks. I sold it after about a few
years as I became bearish on gold, but kept up the interest in the
stocks.
But one thing I learned. If you are not on the ground talking to the
men who are doing the work, getting into the behind the scenes
facts, you are going to have a hard time making money even in a gold
bull market. Doug is one of the few guys that truly know what is
going on in the market. He knows the difference between those who
are serious about mining and those who are simply promoters.
If you are interested in specific gold stocks and gold stock
investing, I strongly suggest you subscribe to Doug Casey's letter
The International Speculator. Going it on your own or taking tips
off a few web sites is dangerous to your portfolio. If you
subscribe, they will send you their recent update which covers
in-depth all the stocks he likes and a few he says to avoid. I got
them to give my readers a risk free trial for three months. For more
information on how to subscribe, please click below:
Find
out more about International Speculator...
John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box


Get Ready - Here Come the Gold Stocks!
By David Galland
Casey Research
You'd have to be a monk living in isolated penury to miss the fact
that gold is on a tear. Specifically, it has risen from $277.75 on
January 4, 2002 to $950 last week, a gain of 242% in just over 6
years. Over the same period, the trembling S&P 500 is up an
anemic 22%.
In a gold bull market, an investor would expect the profits on gold
stocks to be a multiple of those to be had from bullion. That
leverage comes from simple arithmetic: once a gold producer covers
its production costs, then each 1% rise in the price of gold can
translate into a 5%, 10% or even richer improvement in the bottom
line. For a company such as Barrick, with 125 million ounces in
proven and probable reserves, even a $1 per ounce increase in the
price of gold can mean big money.
And so we see that between January 2002 and last week, the gold
stocks were in fact up 612%. So far, so good.
Yet, the gold stocks have stalled in recent months; between August
1, 2007 and February 21, 2008 gold bullion rose 42%, but gold stocks
were up just 37%.
What's going on? Is it that, in their concern over the broader
equity markets, people have forgotten that gold stocks are
associated with gold? Or is something else at work here?
The answer is "something else."
The Mothball Years
While there are a number of plausible reasons for gold stocks
lagging of late, we have come to the conclusion that the true
explanation reaches much farther into the past. It's that the
managements of the gold producers have only recently escaped the
state of fear they operated under during gold's 20-year bear market.
Consider: as recently as the year 2002, gold was still trading near
$280. Against that number was a cash cost of around $250 per ounce
for a typical company. That cost figure is about as low as the
number could go, and it was the response of an industry beaten down
and huddling in a trench.
Caution lingers after the reason for it has gone. As gold began its
upward move in 2002, it did so against the backdrop of an industry
still in mothballs and still run by managers whose primary skills
were cost cutting and frugality. This is important on a number of
fronts.
1)Having been trained in the acid bath of razor-thin margins,
management was intensely skeptical about gold's rally. They
suspected it might be just another bear market trap, ready to punish
unwary optimists who parted with cash to ramp up production.
2)In the hunkered-down years, miners focused on the higher-grade,
easy-to-mine material that gave them the best shot at turning a
profit, however small that might be. And being in survival mode,
they were extremely cautious about buying new equipment or
maintaining a large workforce. Employee rosters were reduced to the
bare minimum.
3)Because staying in business was such an urgent goal, they were
willing, even eager, to sell future production at a set price -- a
perfectly rational strategy in a bear market, because it at least
assured they would receive a price that covered the known costs.
With all these factors taken together, it's easy to understand why
the industry was slow to respond when gold started rising. In fact,
it was only in February 2003, with gold trending over $350, that
Barrick Gold Corp., the world's largest gold miner, began the
expensive process of unwinding its hedges. And it wasn't until
November of that year that the company announced it would stop
forward selling altogether and would eliminate its entire hedge
book.
Once the turning point came - when management finally realized the
bull market was for real -- the industry began to scramble to catch
up. Which, in a choo-choo industry like mining, means hiring and
training lots of people, buying or refurbishing the equipment needed
to reestablish production on second-tier deposits, upgrading
facilities, building expensive new mills, etc., etc. And, of course,
dealing with the challenge and expense of unwinding hundreds of
millions of dollars worth of forward hedge contracts.
The rebuilding of the gold mining industry, in short, really only
began in earnest over the past few years.
The Ugly Duckling Years
As would be expected, the costs associated with rebuilding the
industry sent big hits to the bottom line, resulting in the kind of
ugly financial metrics that repel institutional investors.
The metrics were not at all helped by the shift away from high-grade
ore, because the lower the grade, the more the material you have to
dig, hoist, haul and process, meaning increased production costs. In
addition, the industry rebuild occurred against a backdrop of
generally rising inflation and a falling dollar, which helped push
the cash cost of production up by more than double from the mothball
years, keeping the miners unattractive as investments.
By contrast, the base metals companies, which had hit bottom
earlier, near the end of 1998, had already emerged from the mothball
stage, thanks to increasing demand from China and elsewhere. They
were, as a result, well on the road to recovery when the big price
increases for base metals kicked off in 2004. So, while the gold
miners have been widely shunned as ugly ducklings in recent times,
the base metals sector has been enjoying salad days, reflected in
multi-billion mergers and acquisitions and, of course, sharply
higher share prices.
The Golden Years
Here at Casey Research, we are of the firm opinion that, now that
the biggest costs related to restarting their industry are behind
them, the big gold companies are poised to take off. The proof
should come in rapidly improving margins which, lo and behold, we
have begun to see in the quarterly reports now being released.
Just last week, Goldcorp announced that fourth-quarter profit had
nearly quadrupled over the same quarter the year before. And then
Kinross announced that it, too, had posted a record quarter, with
profits up almost three-fold over Q406. Meanwhile, Barrick reported
that net profit for 2007 was 28% ahead of 2006. In addition, Barrick
is feeling sufficiently flush (and optimistic) that it's buying out
Rio Tinto's 40% interest in the Cortez Hills joint venture for
$1.695 billion... cash.
And the exception to this picture of profit eggs finally hatching is
only superficially an exception. Newmont announced a loss of $1.8
billion in 2007. But most of it came from a one-time house cleaning
-- $531 million to unwind 18.5 million ounces of forward gold sales
and a $1.6 billion non-cash charge to terminate operations related
to merchant banking. Look past those elements, which are an
overdue recognition of money that went down the drain years ago, and
you find that Newmont's mining business is actually in a healthy
position. Looked at from another angle, Newmont took these charges
now because they could afford to do so and because they felt that
the damage to their share price would be softened by the strong
performance of their current operations. Now that they've cleaned up
the books, they too are dressed up to join the profit party.
How to Profit
It won't be long before others also note the pending improvements to
the bottom lines of the big gold companies. The investment herd, we
are convinced, is coming and, we expect, coming soon.
How to profit?
First and foremost, you want to be moving into the established
producing companies post haste. The gangway on this ship is getting
ready to be pulled up.
Secondly, you should seriously consider moving some funds into the
higher-quality junior exploration stocks. History has proven that,
absent an exciting discovery story, the big gold stocks must get in
gear before investor sentiment can reach the critical mass needed to
ignite the juniors.
History also shows that as profitable as the big gold companies are
in a bull market, returns on the juniors can blow those away.
Exponentially. This upside, of course, comes with a greater degree
of risk.
But paradoxically, this risk has been largely mitigated by the
majors' slow take-off. That's because, anticipating that the gold
stocks would follow the metal higher - and history shows no example
of them not doing so - investors have already poured record amounts
of money into exploration programs. As a result, we now know
which companies have the goods -- significant discoveries that
juniors have spent tens of millions to define and prove up with the
clear intent of selling to the majors.
The missing element, of course, has been that, until recently, the
majors didn't have enough free cash to make those acquisitions. That
is about to change.
While you don't know me and so will have to take my word for it, I
am not the type of person to fall in love with any investment. And
any time I feel such an urge coming on, I check all my assumptions
twice and then check them again. That said, I will also say that I
have never been more bullish than I am now on the gold mining sector
as a whole, with an added nod to the well-run exploration companies.
David Galland is the managing director of Casey
Research, publishers of Doug Casey's monthly International
Speculator advisory. For over 27 years Doug Casey and the
Casey Research team have provided self-directed investors with
unbiased research on investments with the potential to provide
double- and triple-digit returns by tapping into evolving economic
and investment trends ahead of the crowd.


I trust you learned something. I don't write about natural resources
stocks, but Doug and David do. If you want to put some money to work
in that market, they are one of the best resources I know. To learn
about the their newsletter, the International Speculator and
how you can try it free of risk with an unhesitant 3-month, 100%
money-back guarantee click
here now.
We live in interesting times.
Your still bullish on natural resources analyst,

John F. Mauldin
johnmauldin@investorsinsight.com

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