Tag: Gold Price

Gold Index up 60% since November – Are you on board the new Gold Bull Market?

by Barry Dawes

Key Points

  • Gold price now surging – up 15% from US$1130 low
  • Gold stocks jumping - ASX Gold Index 61% from Nov 2014 low
  • Rising dividend streams now apparent
  • 23 ASX stocks Gold sector universe FY16 PER of 4.0X and high yields
  • Did you get on board?
  • Long term gold bull market Stage II still only in infancy
  • Industry costs tumble for energy, labour and equipment
  • Opportunity in Blackham Resources (BLK.ASX) for eligible investors (see at end of note)
Further rises in US$ gold prices have given strong support for gold mining shares and these are now acting to reassert reasonable valuations after >3 years of savage underperformance against gold and general equities. A pullback is possible after such as strong rise but these stocks are so underowned that pullbacks in this bottoming and upturn process should be shallow and short-lived. The December Qtly and Half Yearly Reports are now coming through so more output and earnings surprises should be expected. This rise in US$ gold is extremely important and when put in the perspective of the BIG PICTURE so much is now becoming clear.  Gold in many currencies is now surging.  I strongly consider a US$ gold price of $5,000 is achievable in the coming cycle. First of all, do you have enough gold and gold mining shares?  A gold holding is ESSENTIAL for everyone and quality dividend paying gold stocks should be there beside your Telstra shares. If you don’t hold gold or these gold shares contact me NOW!  bdawes@psec.com.au The Australian Gold Sector over the past two years has been forced to adjust to very difficult conditions after the sharp escalation in costs for capital, equipment, labour and energy and it has recovered so very well since mid 2013.  The benefits were already being shown in 2014 but low gold prices deflected the gains.  So now the Dec 2014 Quarterlies to date are showing some excellent cost reductions and with a A$1600/oz gold price the operating margins are often over A$500/oz (for a 100,000ozpa producer this is A$50m pretax and A$35m after tax.) and PERs are low single digits for many. The Australian Gold Industry has also completed  most of its capex for the last cycle and much of its debt has been repaid. Now, A$ gold prices in the past two months have averaged about A$100/oz (~8%) higher than for the whole 2014 year average of around A$1400/oz. With capex completed and banks being repaid it is now the time for shareholders. Everyone needs to keep in mind that resources stocks in steady times (have there ever been steady times?) traditionally paid 50-65% of earnings as dividends.  This is what should happen now. And if gold prices continue to rise as I expect over the next few years then the dividends should only grow.

Strong market performance

The ASX Gold Index is now up 61% since the November 2014 low at 1642.  A strong move that I have suggested could occur and that if it came it could be violent.  Violent, yes.  Many large stocks have had +10% daily jumps.  Look what has happened in the ASX Gold Index since then.
Week Ending

Weekly Close

Weekly Change %

Cumulative % gain

7-Nov-14

1642*

14-Nov-14

1746

6.4

6.4

21-Nov-14

1852

6.1

12.8

28-Nov-14

1922

3.8

17.1

5-Dec-14

1913

-0.5

16.5

12-Dec-14

1968

2.9

19.8

19-Dec-14

1972

0.2

20.1

26-Dec-14

1932

-2.0

17.7

2-Jan-15

2069

7.1

26.0

9-Jan-15

2315

11.9

41.0

16-Jan-15

2504

8.1

52.5

23-Jan-15

2643

5.5

61.0

* XGD low But this index is still 70% BELOW the 2011 high which occurred at about A$1403/oz and the current price is A$1630.  Something is not adding up so the solution is gold stock prices at levels above the 2011 high again in the next few years.  Or sooner. Have a look at the performance of the 17 chosen stocks from 1 December 2014.  And look at my targets from 7 January 2015. Please note these are initial targets for end 2015 but many should be exceeded well before.

Stock

Price 1 Dec

Price 23 Jan

Change

Target

Potential

1

BDR

19

38

100%

40

5%

2

DRM

27

59

119%

110

86%

3

EVN

43

94

119%

180

91%

4

KCN

62

79

27%

180

128%

5

MML

57

90

58%

250

178%

6

NCM

918

1362

48%

2000

47%

7

NST

96

214

123%

450

110%

8

OGC

207

260

26%

600

131%

9

RRL

129

204

58%

450

121%

10

RSG

23

42

83%

60

43%

11

SAR

21

40.5

93%

90

122%

12

TBR

265

330

25%

450

36%

13

GOR

20.5

39

90%

200

413%

14

CGN

12.5

11.5

-8%

50

335%

15

ABU

22

33

50%

60

82%

16

MLX

70

106

51%

180

70%

17

BLK

6.7

10

49%

25

150%

Has the market run too far too quickly?  Possibly.  A 60% move certainly needs some correction but consider that the market place is extremely underweight gold and gold shares so the run may be longer than expected and the pull back may come later.  Who knows? A 60% rise after a 80% fall to a very low base ( ie to the levels of 2002) is not a big move when you consider we are still 70% below the 2011 high. Looking at a collection of many companies shows some very attractive sector investment arithmetic. How is a sector average of 4.0xFY16 EPS with an average yield of 10.0% at the current A$1630/oz? That is the average so some PERs are actually very low indeed. The matrix below gives a fair view of 23 mostly producing stocks that I follow. I cannot over emphasise that there are dozens more out there but you can’t follow them all and many are too early.  However, this is a very long term bull market now and there will be time for them to catch up. The first item to focus on is annual gold production.  Then look at market cap.  Note the revenue.  Note the Revenue/Market Cap.  This is your key to leverage.  The higher the better.  If a stock has revenue equal to market cap and has average A$1100 AISC costs (All In Sustainable Costs) it will have a 30% operating margin.  Price to Operating Cash Flow ratio of 3.5x. My model takes the current A$ gold price, annual production, AISC costs, total pre tax costs and applies a 30% tax rate to give EPS and generate the PER.  A dividend of 50% is assumed unless a company has otherwise stated. Many companies have some forward sales but these are generally small and are unlikely to statistically change the received annual price averages. This universe has A$7bn revenue from 4.5moz in FY16 and a market cap of A$7.5bn. Earnings could be A$1.6bn after tax. Are these attractive enough for you now at A$1630? PER 4.0x FY16  and 4.1x FY17 this universe? And yields of 10.0% and 15.0%. And at a range of higher prices?
Gold Price PER FY16 PER FY17 Yld% FY16 Yld%FY17

A$1200

18.1

57.1

3.5

2.1

A$1300

10.8

14.2

5.0

5.1

A$1400

2.9

5.1

6.5

8.1

A$1600

4.1

4.3

9.6

14.2

A$1700

3.3

3.4

11.1

17.2

A$1800

2.8

2.8

12.6

20.2

A$1900

2.4

2.4

14.1

23.2

These figures are very attractive but these next few figures put them in perspective. The ASX Gold Index fell 80% from the April 2011 high at 8499 to the low in November 2014 at 1642. It is still 71% below that high.  Cheap here. And gold stocks have fallen against the A$ gold price.  About 73% from the April 2011 highs and 78% from the 2008 relative value.    Very cheap here. And with XGD market share so low at about 1.5% of ASX All Ordinaries turnover (it was down to just 1% in August 2014!) compared with 4.5% in 2011-12 and over 6% in 2010, NO-ONE owns these stocks.  A downtrend break has occurred. Huge pent up demand coming here.  Remember the A$1,660bn in bank deposits. And just remember the ASX Gold Index history. Well, did you get aboard?  And do you have in your portfolio these producing stocks that will be big dividend payers in 2015 and beyond now that most sector capex is complete and debts are being paid down? If not, contact me.  bdawes@psec.com.au Here is another perspective from Avi Gulbert, an Elliot Wave aficionado, who thinks we might get another sell off to new lows before his BIG PICTURE comes into play. He is open to the turn having occurred already but his interpretations are useful. The concept of the `irregular B wave’ for the rally into 2011 for gold and gold shares gives a powerful underlying force that reflects all the previously raised concerns about public sector debt and the debasement of currencies.  This wave model projects the US HUI (Gold Bugs Unhedged Index) out to a level 20 times higher by the mid 2030s.   You might need to enlarge this diagram to see the targets. https://www.elliottwavetrader.net/images/charts/full-dshel4r7qDCriXl8CP5xP.png Those large dividend blue chip gold companies should be making shareholders very wealthy over a very long time.  Have you enough gold and gold shares? I am going to come back to this concept in another Dawes Points very soon.  The implications are extraordinary.

Gold Outlook

Rising gold and rising gold stocks are a welcome and long overdue experience. Nice to be making money again. But why is gold now rising? The price history of US$ Gold since 2000 shows a long term uptrend with a 38 month decline. The 10 year bull market was saying something and something big was afoot.  Many reasons.   Currency, debt, inflation, wars and deficits.  All contributed.  Many more reasons out there too. For me, the build up in public sector debts and the gyrations in currencies are my preferred reasons. Who can really trust politicians or their government bureaucracies and their welfare recipient supporters to protect a currency and the population’s wealth? But then we had the extension of the 30 –year rally in the US T-Bond market that brought yields down even lower and bond prices into the sky.   And a US$ that rallied hard. Do keep in mind that the US$ Index is made up as follows:- Not a good index because weightings make it Euro dominant and the US$ has fallen against the Swiss franc and also the Indian rupee and the Chinese Yuan is not included.  Nor the A$.

I don't buy the US$ strength argument but then I have not got it right on either the US$ or the Tbonds. Gold in Yen, Euros, Pounds and A$ has broken 3 year downtrends and is heading up sharply.

These suggest the rally is real and, even with some technical pull back, gold in these currencies will be heading higher. This `market breadth’ says buyers everywhere are buying gold not just arbitraging currencies. The big buyers throughout 2014 have been India, China and, surprisingly, Turkey. Here we have gold in Indian rupees, Chinese yuan and Russian roubles. http://www.24hgold.com/graphiques/picturedata.aspx?graphParam=Gold%2bUSD-INR%2boz%2byy%2b1&format=172 Source:24hGold.com Demand from China has continued to explode with recent figures indicating 70 tonnes of gold withdrawn (i.e., acquired by Chinese citizens) from the Shanghai Gold Exchange in Week 2 of 2015 and have brought the year to date figures to 131 tonnes ahead of the Chinese 2015 Spring Festival starting on 19 February. Source: Koos Jansen Bullionstar This is 3400 tonnes annualised from China alone and EXCEEDS annual global gold mine production of 3100 tonnes! The numbers from India are reported to be even more after the new Modi government made major changes to import restrictions.  More market liberalisation could take place and further increase demand for gold from India. Note that the Shanghai and Mumbai equity markets have been on a strong tear in the Dec Half of 2014.  Shareholder wealth has increased and demand for jewellery has been boosted. I have adjusted my Supply/Demand graphic to show this increased demand from China and India. Demand for gold from Europe in recent months has also increased sharply to reflect fears of Islamic State terrorism, QE threats by the European Central Bank and the continuing general European malaise. I consider that jewellery and bar demand will be higher and central banks and ETF demand will exceed my projections. I consider that jewellery and bar demand will be higher and central banks and ETF demand will exceed my projections. The `Deficit’ may also in fact be exacerbated by a decline in the 1400t annual availability of scrap.  The GFMS numbers indicate that high prices in 2008-2012 drew out an extra 3000 tonnes of scrap gold.  Aunt Audrey probably doesn’t have any scrap jewellery left now. Where will the gold come from? These numbers do show that there is a real game in play for physical gold and the market manipulators in gold futures markets do not have much more time to cover before the final whistle is blown.  If large short positions do in fact exist it will be very difficult to buy back any such gold. The playground is also being tested by the emergence of the new gold exchanges in Dubai (for Indian demand), Shanghai and Singapore.  New gold only contracts are now being used so unless traders have the gold, they can’t sell.  In addition a new 24 hour COMEX 1 kilo physically-delivered contract is planned to accommodate Asian buyers who will now be able to have a real pricing presence in the US time zone with physical delivery in Hong Kong.  It will be interesting to see if the gold price manipulators try to attack the futures market while the physical market stays aloof.  No gold to sell, no play. The retreat by Switzerland from its peg to the Euro has added another dimension to the declining trust in central banks and fiat currencies.   I understand it has been an important game changing event in Europe. The demand for gold keeps rising, the supply is inflexible and so the gold price must rise. A major turning point was probably seen in the Dec Qtr of 2014 and the outlook for gold is very strong. Account Opening forms for Paradigm Securities are available to download here. Barry Dawes 27 January 2015 I own TBR, BLK, DRM, GOR, NST, CGN, MLX, ABU, KCN  

Blackham Resources Placement stock offer to eligible investors

Blackham Resources (BLK.ASX) is in Trading Halt to raise A$2.5m through the issue of 27.8m shares@ A$0.09 (close A$0.098 on 23 Jan). BLK has 4.4moz at its Wiluna Project and is seeking equity and debt funding to reopen the Wiluna Plant using nearby off site ores from the Matilda Project and from newly recognised high grade quartz reefs.   A full year production would produce over 80,000ozpa at <A$1000/oz ASIC. Contact me if you are interested  bdawes@psec.com.au BLK Term Sheet Download | BLK Jan 2015 Presentation Download  

Dawes Points Where are we now

by Alison Sammes

Where are we now?

Key Points

  • US equity markets hit new all time highs
  • Asian markets surge
  • Economic data showing robust growth in many countries
  • Global cash levels still very high
  • Commodity prices may be readying for a surge in 2015
  • Chinese steel production still over 820mtpa and 820mt YTD (+5.3%)
  • Iron ore imports into China up 15% YTD and likely to exceed 900mt
  • US$ still strong for now
  • Japanese yen breaking down
  • Global bonds have spike high then sell-off
  • Gold price hammered into an important low?
  • All these indicators say BUY RESOURCES  STOCKS!!
Interesting and volatile times we live in!  As hoped, the recent stock market decline wasn't one to be concerned about after all and now we have all time highs in the US and market surges in most places from India to Shanghai, Tokyo and even Australia.  What are these markets telling us about where we are now?  The thought of the global economic boom is still there in my mind and these actions give me more confidence that the likelihood is increasing. Don't laugh.  Look at the data. Dawes Points has continually emphasised that the markets are telling us that the outlook is far better than the commentariat would have you believe and the markets last week certainly gave some evidence that more is to come.  The Dow Theorists, mostly bears, now have to turn bullish because all three Dow Indices (Industrials, Transports and Utilities) are at all time highs and have confirmed the next leg of the Bull Market is underway.  Many other bears will be forced to change their stances. The 4.8% jump by the Nikkei, and >1% by Mumbai, Shanghai, Singapore, Hong Kong on Friday followed the lead from the US and are likely to be firmer again this week to reflect Friday's US action.  Shanghai is up 21% since June and India is up 21% since May in the latest stage of these moves. The US economic growth numbers of +3.5% for the Sept Qtr are part of a line of results that have given 4 of the past 5 qtrs at above 3.5% (5qtr ave 2.8%pa) and a general uptrend for the past two years and certainly don't suggest the end of the world. United States GDP Growth Rate Corporate earnings for many companies in the US have been good and FactSheet reports for Sept Qtr 2014 that, for the 362 companies it follows, 78% have had earnings above the mean estimate and 59% had sales above the mean estimate. EPS figures for these companies are 7.3% higher than a year ago and about 28% higher than in 2007 pre GFC. The good US economic growth data have been above expectations and many other countries are also providing this better data. More recent data and IMF forecasts* for 2015 paint a positive picture although much of the recent data in UK and Europe are better than IMF forecasts* and its very recent outlook downgrades.
% GDP growth

2014

2015*

US

3.2

3.1

Japan

0.9

0.8

UK

3.2

2.7

Germany

1.4

1.5

China

7.4

7.1

Taiwan

3.9

4.0

India

5.6

6.4

In contrast to the strength of so many markets and all these positive economic and business data it seems the world still is in love with defensive positions in cash and fixed income.  Australia has A$1,640bn in bank deposits and recent discussions in SE Asia and China suggest investors and businesses currently have 35-50% of investable assets in cash. A survey by UK firm Hogan Lovells has an interactive website that uses Bloomberg data to give corporate cash balances for the top 1000 global corporations. Data for August 2013 was US$5,623 billion, up 39% from US$4,044 billion in August 2012. Look at these numbers in US$bn and what they might be now.
Region August 2012 August 2013

+%

Now??

Nth America      1,850      2,462

33%

3,000??

Asia Pacific      1,100      1,790

63%

2,000??

Europe         837      1,033

23%

1,100??

UK         147         186

27%

200??

Latin America           71           97

37%

110??

Other           39           55

41%

60??

Total      4,044      5,623

39%

6,470???

It seems highly likely to me that the rising stock markets and quite reasonable economic growth figures will be giving a great boost to confidence in the corporate sector and this should be flowing into the consumer and SME sectors.  And the first change will be for new orders for inventory to meet anticipated or received increased demand. These large cash inventories should be very important in determining economic activity everywhere over the next few years This issue of inventory really fascinates me. In the resources sector we are all familiar with the inventory data for metals on LME, COMEX and Shanghai Metals Exchange and export and import port stockpiles.  We all currently expect mine stocks to be minimal and sometimes data is available for smelter and steel mill raw and finished inventory. But inventory in the hands of users/developers/intermediaries/resellers can be difficult to ascertain.  And all these people see the same papers, TV, blogs, trade journals and watch the daily markets as we do.  Fear affects everyone's mood. Dow down 250 points means everyone buying a little less this week to ensure cashflows are OK. It has always been clear from previous cycles that when a recovery takes hold and business and consumer confidence picks up then demand exceeds consumption as downstream inventories are rebuilt. If copper is used as an example, the International Copper Study Group is forecasting copper consumption in 2014 to grow 4.4% from 20,525 ktonnes to 21,429kt, being about 900kt.  Refined copper production is expected to rise by about 1,100kt so that a net surplus of about 200kt is expected in 2014 on top of a surplus of 400kt in 2013. At current consumption rates the world uses almost 60kt per day. 410kt per week. Current LME copper inventories are just 160kt whilst COMEX is 30kt.  Total identifiable inventories are about 1,100kt. Should the processing stream decide to increase copper inventories by three days or 180kt then the demand for metal would rise not by 4.4% in 2014 but by 5.4% and the current LME and COMEX inventory would be absorbed. The mountains of corporate cash could easily find the US$1.2bn to fund this increase. Recent reports have suggested UK hedge fund Red Kite has already acquired more than 50% of these LME copper inventories. This extra demand can often remove a sizeable chunk of LME inventory and change the market balance for the year ahead. Note that LME inventories for copper, aluminium, zinc and tin have been declining in 2014 and have to be considered to be tight.
000t

1-Jan-13

1-Jul-13

1-Jan-14

1-Jul-14

current

Jul-13

Jul-14

Copper

320

665

366

155

162

-75.6%

4.8%

Zinc

1220

1061

933

668

698

-34.2%

4.5%

Lead

320

198

214

194

227

14.4%

16.9%

Tin

12

14

10

11

10

-25.8%

-8.8%

Nickel

139

187

262

305

385

106.0%

26.4%

Aluminium

5210

5435

5458

5046

4429

-18.5%

-12.2%

Price would then be set by willing buyers and sellers and not unwilling buyers and desperate sellers. Many of these commodities could benefit. Speaking of inventory, it certainly seems that investors holdings in resource stocks are very low and will need to be increased!

Commodity outlook encouraging

Commodities have been weak recently with iron ore, oil and gold as good examples. But it is notable that many commodities and other markets (especially the A$) have had declines but are bouncing off on a long term support line.  Many agricultural commodities have had typical selling exhaustion patterns (as if from liquidation of long positions) and fit along these support lines. Should these commodities bounce then the uptrend can be quickly re-instated. Much has been made of the influence of a strong US$ but individual supply demand patterns are more important than just a currency adjustment. Oil and natural gas need to be closely followed because a strong US$ won't have much of an impact on these prices.The Islamic militants in Iraq may affect oil and gas fields and also may try to intercept tankers in the major choke points such as Straits of Hormuz to give some supply problems for the West.  Also US natural gas inventories are relatively low ahead of what could be another cold winter.

Steel in China

Consumption of steel is forecast by the China Metallurgical Industry Planning and Research Institute in Beijing (Sept 2014) to peak in 2017 at 763mt and decline to about 696mt by 2025. China Crude Steel Production was 779mt in 2013 and should be 820-830mt in 2014 and 850mt in 2015.  It should peak in the mid-term of 13th Five-year Plan Period (2016-2020) in 2017 at approximately 870mt before declining to 850mt by 2020 and 800mt by 2025.  Note that RIO and BHP have a longer term growth rate that takes crude steel production above 1,000mtpa. The most recent World Steel Association data gives 821mtpa for September for China but this should slow seasonally ahead of the 2015 Spring Festival to give the 820-830mt for 2014. To achieve this crude steel production rate, iron ore imports have been surging and are up about 15% YTD and have exceeded 1,000mtpa on a monthly basis.  The full year should be about 10% higher than in 2013. Domestic magnetite concentrate production should decline by as much as 140mtpa by 2018 such that total imports should exceed 1,150mtpa basis 62%Fe and with lower grade iron ores around 58% Fe this figure should exceed 1,200mtpa. Source: China Metallurgical Industry Planning and Research Institute I continue to be amazed at the incessant calls for crude steel production in China to decline sharply and to hear that demand for raw materials into China is slowing.  15%pa growth in 2014 after 10% in import growth in 2013 is a decline? Nevertheless, the iron ore price has slipped below US$80/t causing hardship for high cost producers, especially those in China.  This graphic suggests about 85% of China magnetite concentrate production is losing cash.  Perhaps 30% is losing over US$40/t. The steel mills do not appear to have yet rebuilt depleted inventories and port inventories are now declining and are at a 7 month low.  Some of the ore accumulated for low cost financing and placed on these port stockpiles may have now been already sold off and might reduce the additional pressure on the market. The major producers from BHP, RIO, FMG to Vale have been aggressively producing and selling ore to hurt the Chinese producers and to place pressure on potential new entrants.  What is really interesting is the indications that iron ore production costs are coming down rapidly for these big players and should all be below US$60/t CFR basis 62%Fe. US$80 should be an important level but Chinese steel mills inventory actions will have the final say by the end of the year.

US$ strength

The rise in the US$ against most currencies has been seen to be the main driver behind the decline in commodity prices and that the market place sees a strong US$ as deflationary. This is all very nice but look at these numbers.  The CRB Index (basis CCI – graphic above) has been declining in US$ since highs in March Qtr 2011 but despite the strong US$ it is actually up for most currencies in 2014! CRB Index rebased to 100 for 2011 highs in each currency, with Dec 31 and current figures.
  2011 High

2011

2012

2013

2014

From high

2014

US$

100

82

80

74

70

-30.0%

-5.1%

Euro

100

88

85

75

78

-21.8%

4.5%

Yen

100

74

82

91

93

-7.2%

1.7%

SF

100

82

79

71

72

-27.6%

2.7%

A$

100

81

78

84

81

-19.5%

-3.6%

This graph of the CRB Index in Euros says something more.  This is likely to break upwards as global demand improves.  Copper has been rising gently in Euros since the March Qtr. While the US$ has been strong the Yen has not and the Yen makes up 13.6% of the USDX.   The Euro makes up 57.6% of this US$ Index and a close look at the cross rates doesn't suggest the US$ is going a lot further from here although it might not fall back much for a while.  The Yen is certainly going to be weaker but probably not many other currencies will. A weaker Yen is also obvious from this graphic says the A$ should be very strong against the Yen. Outflows of capital from Japan must be expected.  The gold price in Yen is also looking quite strong.

US T Bonds  - Surge then selloff

The remarkable surge in bond prices in mid October seemed to be a last gasp run and the decline since then still makes these bonds very vulnerable as global economic growth improves and deflationary risks recede. These bonds will also provide much of the capital that will join with cash to move into equities and commodities. The parallel of US TBonds with the US$ still needs to be considered. The US$ must follow its bond prices.

Gold price hammered into an important low?

Gold and gold stocks have been a hard road to follow but I think the fundamental arguments for a strong gold price and much higher gold shares remain. Governments destroy currencies by spending too much and racking up debts.   People who have lived through violent currency depreciation know the value of gold and the two biggest populations in India and China are showing this by buying as much gold as they can get their hands on.  Central banks are buying gold again.  Demand is stronger than mine and scrap supply so it can only be banks and hedge funds selling volume. How much do they have left? The evidence is clear that this uptrend has been broken.  A fair technical target could be US$700/oz if you wanted to be bearish. But this is also valid technical support with yet another market having three bounces along the support line. And this graphic is back to crisis levels.  Back below 2008 lows and back to 1986 levels.  Extreme long term support here for the US Gold Index! And to clutch at some other straws the sell off in the GDX ETF has been on massive volume and back to this pervasive and remarkable three point downtrend support line that we see  in so many markets this year. And when we look at gold shares against gold it suggests that this is the final selling and capitulation stage - or else gold is going to US$700 and most of the gold industry will close. This just screams that we must be near the end of the 42 month decline in gold shares. I particularly like NST, MML and DRM here as low cost producers and GOR, ABU, KGD, BLK and CGN as developers. Paradigm has opened an account with a bullion dealer which allows clients to invest directly into gold with delivery or to be held in storage.  Talk to me about it if you are interested. Stocks to BUY The major resources stocks BHP, RIO, FMG, WPL, STO, OSH are attractive opportunities and so many of the juniors are so cheap and very good value where currently funded. The Dawes Points Outlook is for this market to run for many years to the upside so there will be many opportunities coming through. For those seeking a general exposure to non resources stocks I can recommend the new A$50m IPO of CBG Capital LIC with a manager whose two funds have outperformed the ASX 200 reliably over the past 8 and 12 years respectively. Good growth and a fully franked dividend yield of 5-6%pa.   The minimum of A$16m has already been reached and the offer has a closing date of 20 November. A flyer on this will be circulated this week, but please call me on +612-9222-9111 if you'd like to discuss this. 5 November 2014