- Jamm, jamm, jammm,... - pecunia, 09.05.2001, 19:23
- Re: Jamm, jamm, jammm,... / hallohoo, pecunia:-) - Toni, 09.05.2001, 20:22
- Pecunia, Du lebst ja auch noch! Melde Dich doch öfter! oT. - BossCube, 09.05.2001, 22:07
Pecunia, Du lebst ja auch noch! Melde Dich doch öfter! oT.
>Gold sieht ECHT gut aus. Nutzt diese 'Einmal-im-Leben-Chance'
>Hier eine 'Leseprobe' meines Abos (vom 6. Mai 2001)...
>Ganz liebe Gruesse ans ganze Board
>pecunia
>Dear Outstanding Investments Reader,
>
>The hottest place for profits this year just might be in
>gold. Oh, I know how easy it is to roll your eyes and
>smile when you hear someone mention gold. Heck, I was
>doing it myself a couple of years ago. But nowadays I'm
>not so sure.
>
>First, regardless of what anyone says, gold is a dollar
>hedge. Twenty years of lousy returns doesn't change that.
>It just so happens that those were terrific days for the
>dollar. After all, consider what the greenback had going
>for it:
>
>-- Interest rates on long bonds that fell from 17% to 5%.
>-- A Cold War won by the United States.
>-- Oil supplies guaranteed for a decade after the war with
>Iraq.
>-- A record-breaking stock market and breakthrough
>technologies.
>-- One Asian debacle followed by another and almost outdone
>by the euro mess.
>
>I could go on and on, but you get my drift. Basically
>every good thing that could happen to the dollar did. So
>you have to think everyone that would ever want dollars has
>them.
>
>As Rick Rule of Global Resource Investments tells his
>clients, when people say,"Things couldn't possibly get any
>better," they probably won't. And as far as the dollar is
>concerned, things can't possibly get any better. Not
>unless little green men show up and trade in their space
>technologies for greenbacks.
>
>So let's assume that things may not go as well for the
>dollar. What could that mean for gold? First, worldwide
>gold production runs around 80 million ounces per year. In
>fact all the gold ever mined -- and almost all of it is
>still around -- is somewhere between 3 billion ounces,
>enough to fill a 48-foot cube -- or fit into a small
>gymnasium.
>
>In fact, $21 billion would buy one year's worth of gold
>production. Now that might sound like a lot, but look at
>it this way -- there are trillions of dollars tied up in
>the U.S. bond market. Let's take a conservative guess and
>say that there is $10 trillion in U.S. bonds. If just 1%
>went into gold, that would buy five years' worth of
>production at current prices. Could it happen again? It
>already has!
>
>In the '70s investors were getting their hats handed to
>them by skyrocketing inflation that pushed bond portfolios
>to where they were selling for 50 cents on the dollar.
>Where did they go? Not into the stock market. The Dow was
>lower at the end of the decade than at the beginning.
>Where the money went was into inflation hedges -- land,
>commodities and bullion. I saw it happen - the CBS news
>crammed into the small Spokane Stock Exchange, filming an
>old man working his hands to the bone on the chalkboard in
>a frenetic effort to keep on top of the skyrocketing bids
>on penny exploration stocks.
>
>I don't know if now is finally the time for this reversal
>and run-up in gold prices. But what I do know is if it
>ever gets going there will be no stopping it.
>
>I read an interesting report the other day by Paul van
>Eeden, a broker at Global Resource Investments. It is
>titled, How to Make Money Investing in Worldwide
>Exploration. I think you'd enjoy this informative report,
>and as a courtesy to Outstanding Investments subscribers,
>Paul will send you a free copy of this report, which has
>some in-depth analysis of gold.
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