Jim Rogers 'I Will Buy More' Gold – Still Long-Term
Bullish
Gold's London
AM fix this morning was USD 1,622.50, EUR 1,239.21, and GBP 1,022.82
per ounce. Yesterday's AM fix was USD 1,631.75, EUR 1,239.65
and GBP 1,027.75 per ounce.
Silver is trading
at $31.36/oz, €24.00/oz and £19.80/oz. Platinum is trading
at $1,595.75/oz, palladium at $635.80/oz and rhodium at $1,350/oz.

Cross Currency Table (Bloomberg)
Gold fell $27.90
or 1.69% in New York yesterday and closed at $1,618.40/oz. Gold
ticked higher in Asia prior to further slight gains in Europe.
Gold dropped
to its lowest level since January but remains higher on the year.
It is poised for its first lower weekly close since mid March adding
to the poor technical picture.
The very poor
Spanish debt auction and renewed concerns about the euro zone debt
crisis has led to another sharp bout of risk off in global markets.
Euro zone concerns and concerns that cheap money and QE policies
may end saw world stocks (MSCI World) fall 1.9% while gold fell
1.7% yesterday.
European indices
are lower again today on renewed risk aversion.
Commodities
fell too yesterday. Platinum for July delivery fell $61.90, or 3.7%,
to $1,598.60/oz. Palladium for June delivery fell $26.85, or 4.1%,
to $632.75/oz and copper for May delivery fell 12.85 cents to $3.7905
a pound. U.S. crude oil fell $2.54, or 2.4%, to finish at
$101.47 a barrel in New York.
Comments from
ECB President Mario Draghi that the euro zone's growth economic
outlook is subject to downside risks related to the debt crisis
and inflation upside risks were gold bullish.
It sounded
if the ECB President is concerned about and warning about stagflation
in the Eurozone.
This and concerns
about the possible abandonment of QE led to hedge funds, traders
and more speculative players selling many of their positions and
again piling into the perceived safety of US Treasuries and the
US dollar.

Gold 1 Year Chart (Bloomberg)
Gold's short
term correlation with equities and commodities has been seen frequently
in recent months and years with gold falling in unison with riskier
assets in the initial stages of sell offs and at intermediate stock
market highs. However, what has happened subsequently is that gold
has fallen less than equity and commodity markets and then recovers
faster and rises again soon after short periods of correction and
consolidation.
We expect this
pattern to be seen again. While gold's sell off has been sharp,
the charts below put them into context and should help create perspective.

Gold, Silver, S&P, DJIA, US 10 Year – YTD
The GoldCore
trading desk was unusually busy yesterday with a large percentage
of clients selling their bullion holdings including some quite large
sell orders. It could be indicative of a bottom as there has been
capitulation by weak hands concerned about the recent price fall.
Despite a recent
decrease in physical demand both from Asia and in western markets,
the fundamentals driving the market have not changed and will be
supportive. Demand has abated after the record levels of demand
seen at the height of the Greek debt crisis in November and December.
However, this
demand will likely return in the coming months when Spain, Italy
and potentially the UK, Japan and US all experience similar debt
crises.

Gold, Silver, S&P, DJIA, US 10 Year 1
Year
Risk adverse
investors and the prudent should maintain a "buy and hold"
strategy and should continue to accumulate on the dip.
Jim
Rogers "I Will Buy More" Gold Still Long Term Bullish
The smart money
continues to accumulate gold and silver on the dip.
Investor Jim
Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings, said he remains bullish on
gold and silver in the long term and he "will buy more"
on price weakness.
Rogers predicted
a global commodities rally and the gold and silver bull markets
in 1999. He also predicted much of what has transpired in financial
markets in recent months and years and has consistently warned about
the risks posed to the US dollar and other fiat currencies.
In the short
term he is not so optimistic about gold and silver prices. "I
expect the price to decline and when that happens I will buy more,"
Rogers said at a conference in Bucharest yesterday.
He recently
said that he would buy gold at $1,600/oz and would increase position
by even more at $1,500/oz reiterating that gold is going
much higher in the coming decade.
Rogers did
not elaborate, nor was he asked, how much higher, but he said in
November 2011 that gold "will easily go to $2,000 but it will
reach $2,400 over the course of the bull run, which has years to
run."
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OTHER
NEWS
(Bloomberg)
Jim Rogers Plans to Buy More Gold, Silver, Sees Falling Prices
Investor Jim
Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings, said he's "not so optimistic"
about gold and silver prices.
"I expect
the price to decline and when that happens I will buy more,"
Rogers said at a conference in Bucharest today.
Silver dropped
as much as 4.2 percent today and gold declined 2 percent after the
Federal Reserve signalled it may refrain from more monetary stimulus.
The dollar rose as much as 0.6 percent against a basket of six currencies,
curbing demand for precious metals as an alternative investment.
Today's declines
pared gold's gain for this year to 3.4 percent and silver's advance
to 13 percent. Rogers predicted a global commodities rally in 1999.
(Bloomberg)
Ex-Official Vavilov to Form Russia's First Gold ETF, RBC
Reports
Russia's former
Deputy Finance Minister Andrei Vavilov may become the country's
first businessman to create an exchange-traded fund backed by physical
gold supplies, RBC Daily said.
Vavilov plans
to deposit gold bullion in Zurich or London banks and trade the
derivatives on them on the Irish stock exchange and Moscow's Micex-RTS
exchange, the newspaper said, citing unidentified people familiar
with the plan.
(Bloomberg)
Top 10 Gold-Mining Countries in 2011, According to CRU (Table)
Following is
a table of the world's 10 biggest gold-producing countries ranked
by 2011 output, compiled by London-based metals-consulting company
CRU. Figures are in metric tons.
| Country |
2011
Output
|
2010
Output
|
| 1. China |
380
|
341
|
| 2. Australia |
272
|
260
|
| 3. U.S. |
243
|
236
|
| 4. South
Africa |
221
|
209
|
| 5. Russia |
205
|
197
|
| 6. Peru |
156
|
163
|
| 7. Ghana |
102
|
92
|
| 8. Canada |
101
|
91
|
| 9. Indonesia |
97
|
128
|
| 10. Mexico |
82
|
72
|
| World Production |
2,789
|
2,638
|
(Bloomberg)
Vietnam State "Monopoly" on Gold Trade to Enter
Force May 25
Vietnam's Prime
Minister Nguyen Tan Dung approved a regulation giving the state
a "monopoly" on the trade and production of gold bullion
from May 25, according to a statement posted on the government's
website today.
Under circular
24, dated April 3, domestic gold businesses will only be able to
produce and sell jewelry, and will have to re-register with the
central bank in the next six to 12 months.
Reprinted
with permission from GoldCore.
April
6, 2012
Jim
Rogers has taught finance at Columbia University's business school
and is a media commentator worldwide. He is the author of Adventure
Capitalist, Investment
Biker, Hot
Commodities, A
Gift to My Children, and A
Bull in China. See his
website.
©
2012 GoldCore
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