Gold likely to gain another 30 % at least this year. John Embry
posted on
Mar 08, 2010 07:45PM
John Embry: As Confidence Returns, Gold Will Rise
Source: Interviewed by Gordon Holmes, The Gold Report 03/08/2010
The Gold Report caught
up with John Embry, Chief Investment Strategist, Sprott Asset
Management, to get his thoughts on gold and some mining stocks he
favors. Embry, an industry expert in precious metals, has researched
the gold sector for over 30 years. Read about why he thinks gold could
gain another 30% this year as a greater proportion of the public
realizes the degree of difficulty that sovereign debt is in. He
believes as confidence in gold returns people will seek an outlet in
gold stocks, especially small-cap gold producers and junior explorers
with solid projects.
The Gold Report: John, in Investors Digest of Canada you recently said you're expecting gold to gain another 30% this year.
John Embry:
I would say at least 30%. I said that I thought it would be the best
year to date. We've had nine years consecutive higher year-end prices
and the best year in that span for a year's return was 31%. I think
this will be the year that we exceed it in this, the 10th year of the
bull market.
TGR: What's driving this? Why is this year going to be the best year?
JE:
I think we're getting very close to the point when a greater proportion
of the public realizes the degree of difficulty that sovereign debt is
in. And at that point, when you can't depend on your government paper
as a safe haven, I think that fact puts gold in a much better light in
more people's eyes.
TGR: You might say the first leg
down were the individuals who couldn't pay their mortgages and that
caused part of the '08 collapse. And now it looks like it's the
government's.
JE: It's very simple, actually. Private
demand, as you know, was so weak that governments had to step in to
maintain order in the economy and in so doing, they spent an enormous
amount of money, at the same time that revenue streams fell because of
the weakness in the private sector. Governments spent dramatically more
money and the results are a budget deficit I never thought I'd see in
my life. I'm shocked at the numbers in many places.
TGR:
It's been unbelievable. Now when you talk about gold, you're talking
about bullion. How do you see the gold stocks? Do you think we're going
to have a pullback? Ian Gordon of Longwave Analytics and Richard
Russell (Dow Theory) predict the Dow will go to 1000.
JE:
I don't agree with them. As much as I love Richard Russell—he's
probably been as big an influence in my career as anyone—I don't think
that deflation is necessarily the outcome when you have a pure fiat
currency system. I think the far greater risk is hyperinflation because
I believe that these guys that are in control today have seen the
depressionary '30s, and they will move heaven and earth to prevent that
outcome. And when you've got the capacity to create unlimited money, I
believe you can do it. So I hear Gordon and Russell and I respect them,
but I'm in the camp that thinks we'll get hyperinflation first. We'll
eventually have to clean out the debt, but I think we go hyper before
that.
TGR: So hyperinflation. Would that include stocks as well?
JE:
I think stocks will do fine. They may have a violent correction first
because a lot of people don't know what the heck we're talking about
here. And when they see inflation mounting and economic conditions
being less than ideal, they'll sell their stocks. But the fact is that
if you go back and look at any hyperinflationary environment anywhere,
stocks did infinitely better than paper instruments. So precious metals
first, stocks second.
TGR: When you're talking about stocks, you're not talking just about gold stocks.
JE:
No, I'm talking about good businesses. I'm not talking necessarily
about banks and other stuff that's more dubious, based all on paper,
but businesses like breweries, for example. People are always going to
drink beer and a good brewing company will do exceptionally well in the
debased currency of whatever country it's in.
TGR: So you think that we might have a sell-off and in that sell-off all equities, including gold stocks, would go down.
JE:
Gold stocks, maybe. I believe the next time everything goes down, gold
isn't going down. And if that were to be the case, I think gold stocks
might surprise. They've been awful. Given what the gold price has done,
gold stocks, by and large, have been awful.
Well, the
well-promoted ones and the odd good one have done okay, but across the
whole list, it's been pretty hard slog over the last three or four
years, particularly 16 to 17 months ago when it we hit bottom. I
thought they were going to zero.
So many of them are trading
at less than they were back in November 2003, which was the real peak
of the excitement in gold stocks, if you can imagine. Six and half
years ago. The gold price has done nothing but go up in that time.
TGR: In this next cycle are you seeing better returns for producers or the juniors that have pounds in the ground?
JE:
Oh, I think the juniors. The whole thing is a matter of confidence.
They've got so much volatility in the gold price. You get a good thrust
up and you got a violent correction and I think they've got so many
people discouraged and going the wrong way on these gold stocks that
right now the degree of confidence is very low. If I'm right and the
gold price stages a dramatic breakout in the next 12 months—and I'm
talking hundreds and hundreds of dollars on the upside—then I think the
confidence will return and people will seek an outlet in gold stocks
because so many of them have been beaten up. More importantly, the
overall market cap of all the gold stocks is really small in the
context of all the money around.
TGR: What's the seasonality of this year?
JE:
I think that probably we may continue to wallow around here for maybe
the better part of another month. Maybe not quite that long. But,
historically, mid-March to mid-May has been a really good period. When
I look at the fundamentals and everything that's going on, I see no
reason why it shouldn't be a very good period this time. And there's
one other development. I don't know whether it will come to fruition,
but on March 25th the CFTC is going to be investigating position limits
in gold and silver on the COMEX. And if they ever put any teeth into
those things and kept these bullion banks from what they're doing on
the short side with their large positions, I think that could have a
salutary impact on gold and silver prices.
They're finally going
to have to address this because there's been so many complaints about
the bizarre price action on the COMEX in both gold and silver.
TGR: What about some individual stocks? Any that you'd like to comment on?
JE: Gold Fields (NYSE:GFI)
remains very cheap. It's been under a cloud, I think, because there's
been a lot of conversation among some of the more radical factions in
South Africa about nationalizing the gold mines. I don't believe it's
going to come to that. I talked to a chap who knows South African
President Jacob Zuma fairly well and Zuma is certainly not in favor of
that. There's always going to be radical factions. If they want to
destroy their gold industry, nationalize.
TGR: That'll do it.
JE: Hopefully, cooler heads will prevail. On that basis, Gold Fields is extraordinarily cheap based on its reserve base.
TGR: What about consolidation plays? Do you think the time is right for that?
JE:
I think the big problem is that the guys that head up some of these
gold companies don't have the confidence in their own product that they
should have. As a result, they're reluctant to pull the trigger on
acquisitions that to me would be brilliant at this stage in time. We've
seen some activity, as you mentioned, in Mexico. I know Goldcorp (NYSE:GG, TSX:G)
has been picking up a few around its big silver play down there. And I
think that's a great move. My attitude is that these guys, without
exception, all have long-term reserve issues. If there's ever been a
better time, based on my outlook for where all this is going, to pick
them up, I can't think of one. These guys should be looking for
anything that's real and using their paper right now to buy it.
Another stock I like that I sound like a broken record on is a Canadian-based company called Wesdome Mines (TSX:WD).
They've got two operating gold mines, one in Quebec and one in Ontario.
You couldn't be operating in a better geopolitical environment. They're
both profitable. They had a dividend last year; they will pay a
dividend this year. I believe the Canadian dollar, despite other
people's belief that it's going to be very strong, isn't. Given the
budgetary problems and everything that are coming up here, Canada will
move heaven and earth to make sure its currency doesn't move up against
the U.S. dollar, so I don't see any further cost pressures because of a
stronger currency in Canada. They're having success with extending
their ore bodies and they've got absolutely blue chip mining facilities
and the stock, which probably earned something like 20 to 25 cents last
year when it reports, trades at just over two bucks. I just think the
thing is dirt cheap. I look at a lot of stuff that's years from
production with market caps three times as big as this one. This one's
got a total market cap of $215 million. So I think, of all the small
stocks that I look at, I like small producers that are basically
overlooked and this, to me, is probably the most overlooked small
producer. I'm always interested in profitability and the ability to
extend their reserve life related to market cap.
TGR: Any others?
JE:
One that I like up here in Canada that I've liked for years that's just
coming into production, and they are really adding to their reserve
base, is Lake Shore Gold Corp. (TSX:LSG),
which trades around three bucks. I think that they'll eventually prove
up multi-three, four million ounces just outside of Timmins, which is
another great place to be operating because of its long mining history.
I'm a little less adventuresome these days in the sense that my
greatest concern down the road for gold stocks is if my maligned view
of where this is all headed occurs, one of the few sources of revenue
for governments may be taxing gold mines. So I want to be in a
geopolitical area where there is some respect for law and people aren't
totally rapacious like they are in some of the third world countries.
They'll
always go where the money is and in this case they may be even more
desperate for money, so that's why when people ask me how should I be
exposed to the gold industry, I say, well, the first thing you've got
to have as the core of your portfolio is bullion, because that's
forever. You don't have the same leverage to the upside necessarily,
but on the other hand you know what you've got. The gold stocks are
ephemeral, but if you hit them right, you're going to make a fortune.
You will get a three- or four-time bigger move than you will in bullion
at some point in time. But the long-term hold is bullion, in my opinion.
TGR:
Would you speculate? I read that the IMF is going to be selling some
gold and India stepped up earlier. What are your thoughts on that?
JE:
The whole thing irritates me. The IMF has announced the sale of this
gold 500 times and every time with the express purpose of knocking the
price of gold down. It was interesting the last time when the Indians
actually relieved them of over 200 tons because that was what basically
vaulted the market from about $1,045, which the Indians paid, up to
$1,225 in the space of less than a month. That has been followed by the
third significant correction in the last three or four years.
I
think we've seen the vast proportion of the correction and I think what
may be one of the factors that could get this thing going again is when
somebody does relieve the IMF of the gold, the 191 tons to be exact.
There's speculation that India might be prepared to go to the plate
again because the Chinese have been reluctant to step up. Number one, I
don't think they want to be seen publicly doing it. They'd probably
rather do it more clandestinely because they've got so much money to
convert into hard assets. And, secondly, as somebody pointed out, the
Chinese at least have a domestic supply of gold. They can buy all their
domestic to augment their reserves, where the Indians really don't have
that. So I think the Indians conceivably have a bigger vested interest
here in taking that IMF gold. And there's also sort of the suggestion
that the Chinese wouldn't want to be seen to be paying more than the
Indians did, so they're reluctant to step up with the gold price $50
higher currently than the Indians paid. If it was really a free market,
if they were really prepared to sell it to anybody, I think I could
name any number of institutions, organizations, individuals that would
be more than glad to relieve them of it. It's not much money. It's $6
billion. They throw it around as if it's a big deal. Heck, given the
budget deficits in some of these countries, $6 billion is literally a
piss in the ocean.
GR: That's right. What do you think when Soros came out and said that gold was a bubble?
JE:
I wrote about that and I got it right. I was very pleased about that
because some people got all upset. The people that were negative on
gold thought this was great, brilliant George Soros doesn't like gold.
But if you read between the lines, if you read really what he said, he
said gold is the ultimate bubble, but he didn't say gold is currently
the ultimate bubble. I believe that it will be the ultimate bubble. I
think the gold price is going to go crazy and at that point I'd be
worried about. And then it came out after the fact that Soros had been
a major buyer of gold for his funds in the fourth quarter. So who knows
what he was doing. The fact is, depending how you interpreted his
remark, he was speaking at Davos, which is a very mainstream event, and
he said something that can be interpreted any number of ways.
TGR: Right. And, again, I think the financial talking heads used it as the negative.
JE:
Absolutely. The mainstream guys were all over it. The guys who have
never like gold have been wrong all the way up and said, oh, my god,
George Soros doesn't like gold. But I think George Soros' remarks were
misinterpreted and if you saw what he was doing, not what he was
saying, he was buying gold.
TGR: Alright. Any last comments?
JE:
The only comment I'd make is I really think things are sufficiently
serious here in a financial or monetary debasement sense that
everybody—and I have never been a table pounder—but I think every
single person with a serious portfolio has got to have a reasonably
significant exposure to precious metals. This isn't something that's
just insurance for those who've got cold feet. This is something I
think is a mainstream thing that people must have.
TGR: When you say a significant portion, what percentages are you thinking?
JE:
I used to say 5% to 10% when it was just an insurance thing and the
market was pretty sanguine. I say at least 20% now. I see the other
assets as being less attractive. I wouldn't buy a bond if you gifted me
with the money to do it.
TGR: John, once again, I appreciate it.
John
Embry is chief investment strategist at Sprott Asset Management and
Sprott Gold and Precious Minerals Fund. He also co-chairs the Central
GoldTrust Board of Trustees. An industry expert in precious metals,
John's industry experience as a portfolio management specialist spans
more than 45 years; he's simultaneously researched the gold sector for
30-plus of those years. He joined Sprott in 2003, after 15 years as
Vice-President Equities at RBC Global Investment.