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Gold/silver stock indices experienced another severe correction (averaging
17%) from the top set in early November. As a result, there is the threat of
returning to a trading range which has exhausted most precious metals investors
for the past two years.

The good news is that the upside breakout that occurred in September is still
in effect, and the $HUI Index would have to fall and remain below 375 for a
few days to negate the breakout. The bad news is that indices are just 3-4%
away from pivotal points where many stop orders could be triggered. The level
of fear and frustration is so high among smaller investors that it is possible
that many will once again sell at an inopportune moment.

A more dreadful picture emerges for the S&P/TSX Venture Composite Index
which consists mainly of metal mining and oil and gas companies. After doubling
two years ago, the index has been and remains range bound. It spends months
climbing slowly and then gives up all of its gains in just a matter of weeks.
And this is happening while oil and gold are near all-time highs?
Is gold going to proceed higher and pull lagging gold stocks along? Or are
the gold stocks predicting upcoming weakness in the yellow metal?
The latest round of selling on all equities including gold and silver stocks
was related to the investors' perception that the Fed, seeing inflation numbers
creep up, will not be aggressive enough in lowering interest rates.
In reality, it is becoming clear that the central banks' attempts to stabilize
the financial system are failing. The banks are not taking advantage of the
discount window and the recently announced $40 billion auction of cheap funds
is nothing but a drop in the bucket. The Fed has no choice but to continue
to lower interest rates and inflate. We have a slowing US economy in an election
year together with falling prices on the most important asset for American
consumers - housing. Combine that with increasing uncertainty in the financial
markets, a weak banking sector and a stabilizing USD, and there is no doubt
left that monetary inflation - increase in money supply - will continue.
We are marching on a path toward stagflation and as a result the fundamentals
for gold remain very bullish. Investment demand is getting stronger and stronger.
Over the past year, StreetTRACKS Gold ETF alone added 167 tonnes of gold, a
37% increase compared to the previous year, while gold is up 27% over the same
period. India, China and Russia have all substantially increased their gold
purchases in 2007.
What is in for gold? Technically, the metal is currently consolidating its
gains. This is not surprising as it has just hit a psychologically important
level of $850 and it may take some time before a breakout higher becomes likely.
Consolidation in gold coincides with the highly anticipated rebound in the
US dollar.
Eventually, the dollar is likely to reach 79 or even 80. If this happens in
the near future, gold could easily test $750 and $HUI fall to 350-360. From
that point on, we think that upside in the dollar and downside in gold will
be minimal.

For the US Dollar Index, the level of 80, which used to be a multi-year support,
is likely to become an important resistance level. It is possible that we will
not see the greenback above 80 for a long time to come.
Many gold and silver stock investors tend to focus solely on the action of
gold and the US dollar. Equally important, however, are costs related to mine
development and production, which have often been rising as fast as gold itself.
The net effect on gold stocks has been nothing other than the hype created
by investors who link gold and the dollar together with gold stock profits.
And once reality sets in, it becomes evident that profits for most producers
are stagnating or even falling while new mine developers are faced with prohibitive
capital expenditures. This is the principal reason why every rally in gold
stocks over past two years has been met with formidable selling pressure.

Energy expenses often make up about one third of total operating costs for
many mines, especially open pits. As gold underperforms oil and base metals,
gold miners cannot expect a substantial improvement in operations. As it is
clear from the chart above, the gold/oil ratio is in a downtrend, meaning that
cost pressures remain.
There are some encouraging signs on the horizon. The US economy is undoubtedly
slowing, while the Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)
revised down expectations for 2008 economic growth in almost every country
around the world. One of the first symptoms of slowing growth is the current
decline in base metal prices.
In this environment, it is doubtful that oil prices will rise any further.
On the contrary, speculative demand will subside and oil should level out or
even fall. This will cause a long-awaited stabilization in mining/development
costs. We believe this will happen in the coming year, and gold
stocks will regain their leverage against gold and outperform the metal
to the upside. This is not the time to let fear take over. Those investors
that stay patient will reap bigger rewards since the longer the consolidation
period lasts, the stronger the next advance will be.
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