a nice public thank you from Midas to Eric Hommelberg
posted on
Oct 22, 2009 06:58PM
Golden Minerals is a junior silver producer with a strong growth profile, listed on both the NYSE Amex and TSX.
The HUI lost 3.31 to 433.95. The XAU gave up .22 to 174.17.
I would like to publicly thank Eric Hommelberg again of The GoldDrivers Report for his kind words for GATA in his recent The Gold Report interview. His final comments about staying the course are right on…
TGR: Any final thoughts you'd like to give our readers?
EH: Yes, most likely you'll be hearing bearish gold tunes in coming months from the traditional gold institutions, saying that gold's rise is not justified by its fundamentals and therefore bound to fall. They did so in 2003, they did so in 2005 and now they are at it again. The traditional gold institutions simply don't appreciate the fact that gold is money and how it has been manipulated over the years. Traditional gold institutions in 2005, with gold prices at $425, were saying that increased gold production would bring down gold prices; that certainly didn't boost their credibility. Still many analyst quote these very same institutions today for the very same argument— that increased gold production will bring down gold prices in the years ahead. GATA, on the other hand, said in 2001 that gold was going to $850 and that central bank selling wouldn't be an issue anymore within seven to ten years from then. We find ourselves right in the middle of that projection and gold is trading well above $850 and central bank sales have dried up completely. You are not going to hear these kind of predictions from the traditional gold institutions. No one has been right on the money more than GATA. It's therefore no wonder that GATA's credibility is rising fast. To give you an example here, the Chinese sovereign wealth fund ,which manages over $200 billion, has held already three teleconference calls with GATA—they wanted to know what GATA knows. We all know now that China has been accumulating gold for years; we all know now that China wants a new world reserve currency. This, of course, won't happen overnight, but it's quite obvious that the U.S. dollar as a world reserve currency is not going to survive. Gold will continue to rise until something new has been put in place on the monetary front and I think we are years away from that. So what I'd say is. "Stick to it and stay the course."http://www.golddrivers.com/blog/post/2009/10/2
0/Eric-Hommelberg-Hold-That-Gold!.aspx
-END- Staying the course has been the way to go and will be for some time to come … especially now. Rarely during the course of this nine year bull market have I seen the sentiment so bearish and unenthusiastic. Bulls at the present $1050+ price level are rare. Much of the apathy is due to constant disinformation or bearish propaganda, such as this Telegraph article today…