Emas boleh bergerak kemana aja, ANTM sih stabil di 1700. Payah nih!

rz

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http://www.caseyresearch.com/reports.php?id=10

Six Reasons to Back Up the Truck on Gold
By: Doug Casey

Since reaching a recent peak of $427.25 in early April 2004 both gold 
and silver have suffered significant corrections. These moves have 
apparently scared a lot of people (mostly latecomers in the market) 
and they're wondering if the steep drop signals an end to the metals 
bull market.

In my view, the fall shouldn't concern anybody but a futures trader 
who was long and who didn't have a close enough stop-loss. Markets 
fluctuate more or less randomly in the short run, which helps account 
for why 95% of futures traders walk away losers. People with such a 
short time frame shouldn't be in the markets; they should go to 
casinos.

The skilled speculator and the experienced investor, however, take a 
longer view. The key is to identify major trends in the markets, 
understand why they're occurring, and stay with them for as long as 
possible. Jitterbugs that worry about daily movements will eat their 
capital up with commissions, fees, taxes, and bid/ask spreads in the 
process of whipsawing their accounts to death with the vagaries of 
their own psychology.

I don't have a crystal ball, but I do have a sense of market history. 
Most of the people that were active players in the last real gold 
bull market, from August 1971 to January 1980 (which took gold from 
$35 to over $800) are now either dead or retired. Most of the players 
in today's markets only know of gold as a dog, dropping from over 
$800 to under $253 in July of 1999. Those few who even watched it 
came to see every rally over a 22-year slide as nothing more than a 
selling opportunity. Understandably, people tend to predict the 
future by the past. So they expect both bull markets and bear markets 
to go on forever. Right now most of those who've even noticed gold 
has moved from $252.80 at the bottom to its present levels see it as 
just another rally in a never-ending bear market.

How do I know they're not right? Well, nobody can know that until 
long after the fact. But I've been long both the metal and gold 
stocks since the late 90's (I was early; generally speaking only 
liars buy at the exact bottom), and I'm planning on staying long for 
the indefinite future, but at least several years. Why am I so 
bullish? The purpose of this article isn't to make a definitive case 
for gold, but I will list six outstanding factors worth noting.

1. THE FOREIGN TRADE DEFICIT. The US is currently importing about 
$500 billion more than it exports every year. That's been going on 
for many years, so there are trillions of US dollars now held outside 
of the US. Since US dollars are only "legal tender" within the US, 
whether foreigners continue holding them depends on whether they have 
confidence in the dollar; confidence can vanish like a pile of 
feathers during a hurricane. I would suggest that they're becoming 
increasingly aware that the dollar is, in fact, an "IOU Nothing" on 
the part of the US Government, which is itself bankrupt.

2. US GOVERNMENT DEFICITS. The US Government is also running $500 
billion domestic deficits, and that number is not only grossly 
understated—because of (a) off-balance sheet spending; (b) cash 
rather than more appropriate accrual accounting; and (c) the adding 
of Social Security funds into the general revenue—but it's likely to 
go way, way up. Why? It's being financed with some of the lowest 
interest rates in history, and when rates cyclically rise to more 
normal levels (forget about 15% long rates of the last generation—
which I expect will be exceeded), the deficit could reach a trillion. 
That's not counting greatly diminished tax revenues and the greatly 
increased government spending that always accompany a recession. And 
I think we're heading for something worse than a recession.

3. THE WAR. My guess is that the adventures in Iraq and Afghanistan 
are, for reasons I won't go into now, going to get much, much uglier. 
And likely spread to other parts of the Islamic world. The US, which 
has troops in over 100 countries, isn't going to withdraw; it's going 
to become more involved. This could be a $200 billion per year drain, 
on top of the regular Defense Department and Homeland Security 
budgets, for many years to come.

4. SUPPLY/DEMAND. Although most of the gold that's ever been mined is 
available (either as bullion, coins, or jewelry), the fact is that 
more is being consumed than is being mined each year by a substantial 
margin—by about 640 tons in 2003 alone. Most of this deficit has been 
made up by sales and loans from Central Bank inventory, compounded by 
forward sales from gold mining companies. The loans and forward sales 
constitute a short position of substantial size that will have to be 
covered. And my suspicion is that, at some point in the next few 
years, Central Banks will go from being net sellers to net buyers.

5. THE REAL PRICE. At $35 in 1971, gold was artificially suppressed 
in price by government edict. By the time it reached $800 in 1980, it 
was caught up in a speculative mania. Since then it's been able to 
achieve something of an equilibrium. But $400 today is really only 
worth about $75 in 1971 dollars—so it's quite under-priced. And, in 
real dollars (whatever they may be), gold isn't down just 50% from 
its 1980 peak; it's still down about 85%. I expect the conditions 
that drove the bull market in the 70's are going to be much, much 
stronger this time around.

6. GOLD AS A CURRENCY. Take your pick: a piece of paper with less 
than zero intrinsic value, or a tangible and relatively rare metal 
that has been viewed as a store of wealth over thousands of years? In 
addition to holding the physical metal, new services such as 
GoldMoney.com that offer electronic transaction services based on 
gold will revolutionize the ways you can buy and sell the metal.

In essence, you want to own gold because of all these reasons. But 
above all because it's the only financial asset that is not 
simultaneously someone else's liability— which is why I expect 
Central Banks around the world will increasingly be selling dollars 
and buying gold in the future.

I believe we're looking at a gold bull market of historic proportions 
in the years to come. Retrenchments such as we're seeing now are not 
only normal, but trivial. You should use them to buy bullion and 
aggressively add to your mining share positions.

Despite strong returns almost across the board in these stocks, 
there's every reason to believe that when the gold bull really gets 
under way, these stocks will be wilder than the internets were in the 
late 90's. And, thanks to the recent correction, the prices on many 
of the most attractive stocks have fallen back – providing what I 
think may be the last great opportunity to jump on board.








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