Thoughts About the Current Bear Market Among Junior Miners [View article]
Great insight, but of course this failure for the banks and the markets to commit to any risk is the same reason that commodities, metals, food and oil are in such demand right now. In the dot com days and before, paper projects and paper investments were short term, quick return and had a degree of certainty... until they failed!
Now commodities are high, costs are high and the time, expenditure and risk involved in getting a new mine off the ground is even higher than before, right at the time that the traditional risk taker, the small investor is feeling the pinch.
The need to get starter projects going so that the world will have adequate supply of commodities has never been greater, but investors time horizons have never been shorter, so where will it end.
IMO the solution lies with the few majors who are doing well with their high cash flows and diminishing reserves. They have to step up and start aquiring and investing in the junior sector. Only then will we get the investor interest returning. The majors are not doing themselves an favours with their current "just in time" mentality, as they well know that new projects always take longer and cost more the longer they delay commencement...
Once they start to lose production as mines become depleted, they will lose their income and the currency of their high stock price regardless of the current spot price of their production. Gold at $5000 an ounce is of no help if production has dropped to a pittance.
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Great insight, but of course this failure for the banks and the markets to commit to any risk is the same reason that commodities, metals, food and oil are in such demand right now. In the dot com days and before, paper projects and paper investments were short term, quick return and had a degree of certainty... until they failed!
Jul 15 18:30 pm
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All Comments by The Vet »Thoughts About the Current Bear Market Among Junior Miners [View article]
Now commodities are high, costs are high and the time, expenditure and risk involved in getting a new mine off the ground is even higher than before, right at the time that the traditional risk taker, the small investor is feeling the pinch.
The need to get starter projects going so that the world will have adequate supply of commodities has never been greater, but investors time horizons have never been shorter, so where will it end.
IMO the solution lies with the few majors who are doing well with their high cash flows and diminishing reserves. They have to step up and start aquiring and investing in the junior sector. Only then will we get the investor interest returning. The majors are not doing themselves an favours with their current "just in time" mentality, as they well know that new projects always take longer and cost more the longer they delay commencement...
Once they start to lose production as mines become depleted, they will lose their income and the currency of their high stock price regardless of the current spot price of their production. Gold at $5000 an ounce is of no help if production has dropped to a pittance.