| OUTSTANDING INVESTMENTS E-ALERT
 Jive Talking
 June 26, 2001
 
 
 Dear Outstanding Investments Reader,
 
 "The lady doth protest too much, methinks," wrote
 Shakespeare. So too does Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill.
 
 This past Sunday on ABC's"This Week", O'Neill pronounced
 that the current economic slowdown is an"adjustment
 period." But O'Neill also said that the country is"on
 the edge of a golden age of prosperity," and added,"we're
 not doing badly for the kind of correction that we're in
 right now."
 
 It always makes me nervous when people tell me not to be
 nervous. Imagine yourself flying across the Atlantic and
 you hit some turbulence. As you are bumping along trying
 to keep your food atop those crummy little trays, the pilot
 comes over the intercom and says:"Everybody be calm. The
 plane is holding up well considering the conditions."
 
 Most disconcerting is that past stock markets have
 unraveled on the heels of public assurances. In early
 1929, after the markets had gone through a choppy period
 and just months before the worst stock market crash of the
 20th century, Bernard Baruch said the following to an
 interviewer for American Magazine:
 
 "For the first time in history, we have sound reason to
 hope for a long period of peace. For the first time, the
 business men of all nations are supplied with statistical
 information, together with some understanding of the laws
 of economics. For the first time, we have sound
 centralized banking systems in all the countries and closer
 cooperation between those systems internationally. Because
 all these factors are favorable, and because of the
 universal stirrings of desire and ambition... I believe in
 the industrial renaissance."
 
 Knowing that Baruch, one of the great speculators of his
 time, was already shorting stocks during that period, I
 began to wonder about this quote. Lynn Carpenter, editor
 of The Fleet Street Letter, explained it to me.
 
 "At one point," says Lynn,"the government supposedly
 asked Baruch to talk up the economy."
 
 And you don't have to go all the way back to '29 to find
 examples of talking up the market or the economy. In the
 late-'80s I had some inside information that the Savings
 and Loans were on the brink of collapse. Yet you could
 hardly go a day without some S&L executive or Bush cabinet
 member announcing that the thrift system was rock solid.
 
 
 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
 
 I have received some letters from loyal subscribers
 wondering why several of our winning energy stocks have
 corrected. The truth is, nothing goes straight up. In
 fact, I've been expecting this correction. That is why I
 always advise profit taking whenever possible, like I
 suggested with some of our picks just recently -- Fox
 Energy (FEC: CDNX, C$0.64), Wheaton River Minerals (WRM:
 TSE, C$0.79) and Metallica Resources (METLF: OTC BB, $0.79;
 MR: TSE, C$1.15) just to name a few.
 
 Remember the biggest bull markets always face setbacks.
 Richard Russell calls it climbing a wall of worry. Every
 once in a while there is a slip. It happened to gold in
 the '70s, blue chips in the '80s and tech stocks in the
 '90s. The bottom line is that the fundamentals for hard
 assets remain rod iron strong. So, don't fret. The money
 supply numbers continue to stoke the flames of future
 inflation while summer demand for energy will soon kick in.
 
 
 And the specific stocks we've examined in Outstanding
 Investments are no less attractive for being a little bit
 cheaper. To the contrary, savvy investors may want to take
 advantage of the"discount pricing" to add to their
 positions. Clearly, the"smart money" sees unique value
 among hard asset stocks.
 
 On Monday, for example, Barrick Gold Corp. agreed to buy
 Homestake Mining Co. in a $2.3 billion stock deal. The
 purchase of Homestake will make Barrick the world's
 second-largest gold producer. According to Barrick CEO
 Randall Oliphant, the merger will save the company millions
 of dollars in the taxes and exploration costs. This is just
 the latest takeover in the exciting mergers and
 acquisitions wave that is sweeping across the resource
 stock sector.
 
 
 Your humble correspondent,
 
 John Myers
 
 <center>
 
 <HR>
 
 </center>
 |