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Tom Szabo » Comments » ABX

  • Eldorado Gold: A Cost-Effective Way to Move into Gold [View article]
    Those GORO numbers are all internal projections without the benefit of a detailed, independent mine feasibility study and the company could be in serious violation of SEC regulations for disseminating them to the public. That is probably why they won't think about getting listed on an exchange until after they have been in production for a year -- by that time the internal projections will prove to be either farcical or prescient so there will be no consequence in having to withdraw all of the inappropriate management projections.
    Oct 25 17:26 pm |Rating: 0 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Larkin: Gold's Stealth Bull Market [View article]
    Kingsgate is pretty solid as are some other ASX listed mid-tier golds. If you are looking for maximum leverage and high risk/high reward, I'd pick Oceana -- our model gives it significantly more upside potential.
    Oct 24 15:06 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Why Are Large Hedge Funds Investing in Gold? [View article]
    Hedge funds are generally technical oriented trend followers, so they are mostly in gold because it is hot. Gold is NOT a hedge against uncertainty, it is a hedge against terminal economic crisis. In other words, it isn't health insurance, it's life insurance. And gold does serve as a hedge against inflation, but instead of tracking inflation in an orderly manner, gold makes its move in leaps and bounds such that all of the net rise in the gold price from $35 in 1971 to $1050 in 2009 took place on just a few monthly bars on the long term chart. The rest is back and fill action. So for example there have only been FOUR up months in the gold price between January 1980 and today: January-March 2008 and October 2009. Because of this, timing is of utmost importance when it comes to gold, and this type of situation is precisely where a hedge fund can potentially make that elusive "alpha". By the way, many people think that gold can also go up in a deflation because it was revalued from $20 to $35 during the Great Depression, but what actually happened there was an official currency devaluation.
    Oct 24 06:35 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Larkin: Gold's Stealth Bull Market [View article]
    He mentions Yamana and Agnico-Eagle, soon-to-be-million-ounce gold producers with 1/3rd the market cap of already-over-5-million... gold producers like Barrick and Newmont. Where is the leverage in that? What you have to find in this market are comparatively undervalued producers like New Gold and Great Basin Gold as indicated by our valuation model. If you don't mind a current copper producer that is a gold developer as well then you might look at Taseko. There are also a number of TSX-traded up and comers that have some good leverage.

    As for Mr. Larkin's statements about gold market fundamentals, they are very safe and pedestrian. He makes it sound like the gold price is going to slowly drift from $1050 to $1200. Moreover, he repeats the canard that gold will really soar when the public starts to participate in earnest. Whereabouts has Mr. Larkin been sticking his head in the sand? Did he not notice Jim Cramer, hedge fund advisor to the unwashed masses, already extoll the virtues of gold? And does he not realize there is already widespread participation by the public in the gold market --- as demonstrated by all those Cash4Gold commercials. Granted, the participation isn't a widespread buying frenzy but does he really believe this bull market will look EXACTLY like the one that ended in 1980?
    Oct 24 05:41 am |Rating: +2 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Eldorado Gold: A Cost-Effective Way to Move into Gold [View article]
    The production profile is impressive but with a $4 billion market cap (over $6 billion after Sino Gold acquisition), EGO does not offer compelling value among the mid-tier gold producers according to our comparative valuation model. Our database has about 50 mid-tier gold producers (basically all of them) and considers a number of factors including production rate and growth, cash mining cost, resource size, capital costs, etc. Better positioned rivals include Jaguar Mining and Gammon Gold on NYSE plus New Gold and Great Basin Gold on AMEX. Indeed, only Randgold rates lower than EGO on most metrics. There are also quite a few more attractively mid-tier producers on the TSX and ASX.
    Oct 24 05:21 am |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Commodities: Brief Correction or Bursting Bubble? [View article]
    There are quite a few small "commodity stocks" where the project economics are now underwater. If commodity prices slide far enough, the same thing could happen to some of the majors. Over time, the price of a given commodity (absent a monopoly like diamonds) will be slightly higher than the marginal cost of production. This is a reality that most current (sophisticated) investors recognize by awarding P/E ratios that are subpar to the market as a whole. If we do have confirmed peak production in a particular commodity, the paradigm may very well change but this is not something we will be able to confirm until several years of declining production in spite of higher prices. I agree that if and when the mom and pops buy up this sector, there could be other new paradigms to explain the overvaluations. Investing on that basis, however, is an application of the greater fools theory and not the way any billionaire got to be that way. Instead, if you have enough patience to wait for the type of absolute proof that is required to borrow every last penny you can to buy commodity stocks, you might be rewarded in the years ahead. And I don't think it will be too late if you just chill out now and wait for it. Remember the new paradigm: several years of rising commodity prices in spite of declining annual production. If it happens, that would be true alpha.
    Aug 22 17:10 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Leveraging Up on Precious Metals Ahead of Fed Meeting [View article]
    If the market does not expect the Fed to do anything at Tuesday's meeting, why would confirmation of that put any sort of fire under gold and silver prices, which are at the moment in free fall mode?

    The example of copper mining is not quite correct. At 80 cents copper the miners were basically breaking even. Now at $3.00 plus copper they make a margin around $1.50 to $2.00 or more per pound. That is huge and has already propelled many copper miners to multi-bagger gains. It could be the same in reverse on the way down, assuming copper prices collapse as have already lead, zinc, nickel, etc.

    We don't see this as much in gold and silver mining because the mentality is somewhat different--the gold miner wants to extend the life of his/her mine as long as possible and therefore will go after lower, previously uneconomic, grades that are now profitable to extract thanks to the higher gold price. This, too, works in reverse, allowing the gold miner to somewhat cushion profit margins. The problem here is not with the gold mine manager's attitude but rather with the gold mine investor's attitude.

    Silver Wheaton is a fine company with a great business model but it has risks as well and there are also limits to its leverage to silver prices. With respect to risks, consider that the mines contracted to deliver silver streams are primarily base metal operations (with the exception of Penasquito). If base metal prices fall far enough while silver prices remain high or even rise, these mines may not be profitable and could face shutdown or decreasing production (to conserve cash), thus depriving SLW of silver production. As far as leverage, I recently wrote a comment on a Seeking Alpha piece and don't wish to repeat it here, but suffice it to say that the leverage is something like 70% (ie., if silver prices go up 100%, SLW should go up 170%). Good but certainly not legendary.
    Aug 05 04:30 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Long Ideas for an Upcoming Crash [View article]
    These are not as much "top" picks as they are safe picks. Yamana? Everybody's favorite yet continues to be "undervalued" for some reason. Barrick--where is growth upside? Pan American--good but the obvious pick in silver along with Silver Wheaton. Hecla--this one has possibilities but again how "special" is this pick?
    Jul 04 08:06 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Junior Mining Companies Primed for Big Gains [View article]
    I see no sign that majors are particularly desperate to replace reserves at this point. Before going on a buying spree, they would first start lining up to do JV deals on the best projects, resulting in terms that are very favorable to the junior partners. I'm not seeing that yet. Quite the opposite, the majors are acquiring 50% equity interest in world-class properties by merely providing a portion of the financing and development expertise (think Novagold, Northern Dynasty).

    One of the problems is that there aren't that many great projects out there. Juniors put mines into production not by choice but because it is their only choice. Most majors think forward to the next cyclical downturn and wouldn't dare touch some of the "mines" being launched by the juniors these days. If you can tell the difference, you can probably do well buying specific juniors and then waiting for the big fish to bite but otherwise it might make more sense to buy just the majors or at least juniors that are partnered with majors.

    If you are buying stocks that appear undervalued to you based solely on "proven ounces in the ground", good luck to you (it will be needed).
    Jul 04 06:47 am |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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