About Me
Basic Information
Contact Information
Education
- Profile Video
- My Profile Video
- Karma

- Member since
- Monday, 03 August 2009 18:04
- Last online
- 17 hours 10 minutes ago
- Profile views
- 793 views
I'd try and catch them all if I could but if I had to choose, I would personal start there.
The latest performance figures from John Paulson’s massive $31 billion hedge fund are in, courtesy of the Financial Times, and they aren’t pretty. Paulson & Co., which reaped huge gains betting against the U.S. housing market and financial system in 2008, and continued to post gains during the equity rebound in 2009, now sees its flagship Advantage Plus fund down by more than -11% in 2010. Anonymous investors told the FT that the fund lost -4.3% in August, compared to a -4.7% loss by the S&P 500, and the Recovery fund, which was designed to profit from the expected economic recovery, lost -9.3% for the period.
A look at Paulson’s top-15 U.S.-listed equity picks from across all the firm’s funds, as disclosed in the latest regulatory filings, shows that top bets on the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), banks Bank of America (BAC) and Citigroup (C), and miner Anglogold (AU) were all left unchanged during the second quarter.
Elsewhere, Paulson was upping his stakes in insurer Hartford Financial Services (HIG) and biotech firm Mylan (MYL), while adding a new position in energy giant ExxonMobil (XOM).
It will be interesting to see whether Paulson can stage a turnaround in the remaining months of 2010. Investors can view more stocks that Paulson & Co. has invested in and a chart of their combined performance.
Pro portfolio performance is based on institutions’ top-15 holdings as disclosed in quarter-end filings with the SEC. Pro performance does not take into account additional holdings beyond the top 15 nor does it include positions that are not required to be disclosed by the SEC. As such, Pro portfolio performance should be considered an approximation and not a precise record of how an institution has performed over time.
US would like to think of itself as tolerant of diverse cultures and religions. We do however have seperation of church and state as an underpinning.
How does a country with religious tolerance, and seperation of church and state alow for cultures that will not adapt to our vision, culture and values?
How do we tolerate the muslim culture, which when gaining traction through numbers, seeks to enact Sharia Law? Which as I understand it, is a complete way of life, not a type of faith. When again given sufficient numbers, the more intolerant and extreme members of Islam hold their citizen hostage to a fundmental, and very intolerant view of other cultures and women in general.
Where would go, the checks and balances built into our country? Where is legal system, the bill of rights, the constitution, when Sharia Law is upheld through sufficient numbers and intimidation?
Sharia Law would seem to be the antithesis of the vision of the forefathers that created the US. I would prefer to love them, visit them, be enriched with their culture as diverse from ours. In short, I would love to love them from a distance. I would love to continue seeing my wifes face see the light of day. We in the northern climes get pale enough during the winter. With a burka on, she would be damned near translucent.
As for the others, I bought most of them in the spring when everyone was getting out. I have been patiently waiting and stalking. One silver miner , USSIF or US Silver is up over 800% since its spring low. I intend to sit on most of these for a while.
My alternative is to cash out and sit on greenbacks. Now I ask you, which would you rather be sitting on? Boot
Analysts raised their 2011 forecasts for gold more than any other precious metal
More analysts and investors are increasing their bets on gold, with some forecasters saying the rally in the yellow metal will continue no matter what happens with the U.S. economy
.
"Either a swift economic recovery
or further dismal economic performance should bring new buyers into the market," Eugen Weinberg, an analyst at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt who expects gold to rise as high as $1,400 next year, told Bloomberg News. "A stronger economy would create more jewelry demand. If the economy stays weak or gets worse, then investors will be looking for a safe haven."
Gold will continue its longest rally in at least nine decades and may rise as high as $1,500 next year, about 21% higher than current levels.
Dan Brebner, an analyst at Deutsche Bank in London
who is the most accurate forecaster so far this year, told Bloomberg gold prices
might reach $1,550.
Altogether, analysts raised their 2011 forecasts for gold more than any other precious metal, predicting it will post its 10th consecutive annual advance.
Buyers have accumulated a record total of 2,078 tons of gold in 10 exchange-traded funds (ETFs), adding almost 278 tons worth $10.4 billion in 2010 alone, Bloomberg reported. Total holdings are almost twice Switzerland's official reserves of 1,040 tons, figures from the World Gold Council (WGC) show.
Leading the buying binge has been Soros Fund Management LLC, with total assets of about $25 billion. In January, George Soros described gold as "the ultimate asset bubble" at the World Economic Forum's meeting in Davos, Switzerland, and said that buying at the start of a bubble is "rational."
Even after selling 341,250 shares of the SPDR Gold Trust ETF (NYSE: GLD) in the second quarter, Soros' fund still held 5.24 million shares equal to almost 16 tons of the yellow metal.
Soros, who made $1 billion betting against the British pound in 1992, also purchased 11,000 call options that would allow him to buy an extra 1.1 million shares should gold prices move higher, according to the London-based Daily Telegraph.
Gold prices have gained 13% since January, beating the 8.4% return posted by U.S. Treasuries, and a roughly 6% decline in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index.
Investors are concerned about an economic recovery that appears to be weakening. Sales of U.S. homes fell to an all-time low in July, and the economy grew at a 1.6% annual rate in the second quarter, less than previously thought, the Commerce Department
said Aug. 27. U.S. growth will slow to 2.8% next year, compared with 3% in 2010, according to forecasts compiled by Bloomberg.
But while the U.S. economy struggles, investors betting on gold may do well if emerging market economies continue to support the global economy with strong growth. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said on July 7 that global economic growth would be 4.6% this year, the most since 2007.
Under that scenario, purchases of jewelry could increase, reviving demand that fell to a 21-year low in 2009, Jochen Hitzfeld, an analyst at UniCredit SpA in Munich, told Bloomberg.
Investment demand last year exceeded jewelry consumption for the first time in three decades, according to London-based GFMS Ltd. That trend continued in the second quarter, with total demand advancing 36% to 1,050.3 tons, the WGC in London said Aug. 25.
Imports by India, the world's largest bullion buyer, may hit 625 tons this year, compared with an estimated 480 tons to 485 tons last year, according to Anjani Sinha, chief executive officer of National Spot Exchange Ltd., the country's biggest exchange for trading physical gold.
In the long run, the likeliest possible outcome of the planet's economic troubles is inflation, given the recent actions of spendthrift governments like that of the United States. And gold offers investors a tangible asset that has inherent value, compared to a fiat currency that's only as good as the word of the government that issued it.
Even though investors have made the SPDR GLD ETF into the world's largest holder of bullion, Peter Krauth, a well-known commodities expert who is also the editor of the Global Resource Alert thinks there's no substitute for physical gold.
"There's nothing like holding a gold coin or gold bar in your hands. This is the oldest and most direct form of gold ownership," Krauth, recently said in an interview for Money Morning.
And Peter D. Schiff, President and chief global strategist at Euro Pacific Capital Inc., seconds that notion.
"I continue to recommend that investors hold 5% to 10% of their wealth in physical precious metals," he wrote in a recent Money Morning article.
"Aside from the likelihood that gold and silver will rise in price, precious metals offer timeless benefits, such as financial privacy, elimination of counter-party risk (if you store them yourself), as well as protection from government confiscation, onerous securities regulation, and punitive tax rates."
Time to grab a pitch fork and storm the corporate doors and demand work. An honest days work. Work with a concience, work that produced something tangeable. Working for a boss that lives in the same neighborhood. Working for a country promotes work. Working in a system that doesn't facilitate laziness with unemployment and welfare laws that create a subculture. Old school, like the values the country was founded on. Then the *%$ did we hand over the system to corporations, large banks and buggers without concience.
Why are we putting up with this crap? Hmmm, I do have a pitfork in the garage. I think I will start sharpening those tines up a bit. Gooday. Thanks for putting up with my rant ahead of time. Boot
Groups
JomComment
Latest Photo
My Articles
MyBlog
My twitter updates
My kunena updates
-
Re:ANOTHER excellent read in General Market Chat on Sunday, 20 December 2009 18:25 -
Re:Canadian Banks for American Depositors? in General Market Chat on Wednesday, 16 December 2009 18:12 -
Re:What's Up With Palladium? in General Market Chat on Thursday, 19 November 2009 20:38 -
Re:Tungsten-filled gold bars? in General Market Chat on Thursday, 19 November 2009 19:06 -
Re:impact of India gold-purchase on Russia's plans in General Market Chat on Thursday, 05 November 2009 21:22 -
Re:No Silver? in General Market Chat on Thursday, 05 November 2009 21:05 -
Re:No Silver? in General Market Chat on Thursday, 05 November 2009 16:46 -
Re: Let's get talking! in General Market Chat on Tuesday, 27 October 2009 16:45 -
Re:Russia to SELL gold in General Market Chat on Tuesday, 27 October 2009 16:26
Wall
Latest Commentary
-
The Solution to Sovereign Insolvency, Part III: Taxation Salvation Is there anyone out there who would like to live in a world with no...
-
The Solution to Sovereign Insolvency, Part II: Taxation Follies In Part I, I explained how our system of income taxation was a horrible...
-
The Solution to Sovereign Insolvency, Part I: Taxation History “An imbalance between rich and poor is the oldest and most fatal...
-
Member Contest: Free Bullion As promised, Bullion Bulls Canada is pleased to announce two contests...
-
Commodities: Hoarding Versus Shorting Given the decades of rampant manipulation of the precious metals markets...
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
- 11
- 12
Newly Added Company Profiles
Latest Comments
-
Moving into Bonds: From Frying Pan to Fire
Gawd Jeff, my eyes are Bleeding , i need to bleach...
-
Moving into Bonds: From Frying Pan to Fire
Better than me ! BENNY AND
TIMMY ARE TRADING ... -
Paulson’s 2010 Slump Continues (GLD, BAC, C, AU, HIG, XOM, MYL)
There are two things I don't understand here. 1) ...
-
Conquest Resources Limited
I took the liberty of looking over some of the com...
-
Brigus Gold Corp
Interesting. I remember hearing about the merger, ...
-
Brigus Gold Corp
Brigus Gold Corp was created from the combination ...
-
The Solution to Sovereign Insolvency, Part II: Taxation Follies
Navderek, your confusion is understandable. With ...
-
The Solution to Sovereign Insolvency, Part I: Taxation History
Yes, Paxjds, the average citizen is CONTINUALLY be...
-
The Solution to Sovereign Insolvency, Part I: Taxation History
Harold, I think you missed my point. In forming t...
-
The Solution to Sovereign Insolvency, Part II: Taxation Follies
This article really opened my eyes in a BIG way. I...
