Sensex

Friday, September 17, 2010

**[investwise]** SENSEX 20000 NEXT WEEK? AT 32-MONTH HIGH

 

Can the market be seen 20,000 as its next levels @ sensex for the next week and nifty as 6000

Indian stocks rose to a fresh 32-week high on Friday, fuelling expectations of the benchmark Sensex topping the 20,000 mark as early as next week on the back of abundant foreign fund inflows. Investors continue to place faith in second-line stocks, pushing up the BSE Midcap index by 1.4%. This despite the fact that many brokers have advised their clients to pare exposure to mid- and small-cap shares in a rapidly rising market, since these stocks take a steep hit when the market corrects.


NEXT WEEK MORE GAIN EXPECTED IN NIFTY

NIFTY MAY TOUCH LIFE-TIME HIGH WITHIN SHORT TIME. UNEXPECTED BUYING WILL COME AND BOOST THE NIFTY IN THE NEXT WEEK. WHO ARE LONG IN NIFTY MAY ENJOY THE WEEK END WITH PEACE OF MIND.


SENSEX 20000 NEXT WEEK? AT 32-MONTH HIGH

SENSEX AT 32- MONTH HIGH 20000 NEXT WEEK? Sensex posts its best weekly gain in more in more than 1year and hits a fresh 32- month high. Is it all set to hit 20,000 points next week? 4.4% sensex has added this week – this is the best weekly gain since August 30th 2009

Register Now :
onlineequitytips.com/wp-login.php?action=register

Already Memeber ?Write for us - Stock Recommendation / Intraday Calls / etc : 
onlineequitytips.com/wp-admin/post-new.php


__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
*****************************************
http://in.groups.yahoo.com/group/investwise/

INVESTMENTS IN INDIA
We are low-risk, long-term investors. 

Stocks, mutual funds and the entire investment gamut.  Only financing/investment avenues in India will be discussed. 

For any assistance, questions or improvement ideas, contact investwise-owner@yahoogroups.co.in

****************************************************************

NEW! ==== Check our LINKS and FILES sections for a world of information. REGULARLY UPDATED.

NEW! ==== Check "Tracklist" in Links and Files sections for Investment Ideas.

****************************************************************
.

__,_._,___

**[investwise]** Mckinsey:India must build a Chicago every year, over the next 20 years

 

Traffic jams. Delayed flights. Crowded trains. That is the reality of any big city in India. The future could be much worse. 


The country's cities are expected to grow by an additional 250 million, mostly young people, over the next two decades. Without massive investment and thoughtful planning, chaos will ensue.


Or not. McKinsey, in an unprecedented nearly two-year study of Indian cities, envisions a way for India over the next 20 years to turn that influx of young population into a quadrupling of per-capita income.


This growth hinges on adequate investment in cities so they can handle the surge in people and the simultaneous increased demand on services. The urban migration, if properly handled, could generate 70% of net new jobs and produce 70% of India's GDP.


To meet their needs, McKinsey suggests that India must build--every year for the next 20 years--between 7 billion and 9 billion square feet of real estate (the equivalent of one Chicago) a year; 220 to 250 miles of metros and subways (more than 20 times what it has built in the past decade); and between 12,000 and 15,000 miles of road lanes (nearly equal to all the road lanes constructed in the past decade).


That's a pretty ambitious task, given India's infamous bureaucracy, corruption and a sketchy track record on accomplishing large-scale projects. Ajit Mohan, the lead author on the McKinsey report, says for the first time there's some recognition in India that urban development has to become a priority.


It could take one success in a single city to create the momentum for a national push, he says, comparing the current lack of infrastructure investment to the way the IT sector was developed in India. "When Bangalore became successful, other cities started to emulate it," he says.


The major changes will happen, adds Chetan Vaidya, head of the National Institute of Urban Affairs in New Delhi. "We can already see bits and pieces of that falling into place," he says.


Multiple infrastructure investment programs have launched in the last handful of years. One is the Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission, which is putting $28 billion into 65 cities over a seven-year period starting in December 2005. Once it runs its course, it could be replaced by a similar program. The government of India is also in talks with the World Bank for a $3 billion infrastructure loan.


India's federal treasury is increasing its grants to cities and states from the $960 million they received annually for the past five years to $5 billion each year over the next five years as long as they meet a nine-point agenda. 


The conditions attached to receiving funds in both programs are similar and focused on land and tax reforms, among other mandates. The idea is to improve governance and creditworthiness of cities, says Vaidya, and lead to commercial or market-based financing in urban investment.


Multinationals like Aecom, Veolias and Bombardier are in the process of bidding for various projects, including building portions of metro rails in Chennai and Kolkatta and supplying rail cars to Delhi's expanding metro network. 


Aecom was recently awarded a contract to do the master plan for two of the six satellite industrial cities India plans to build along the 1,700-mile Delhi-to-Mumbai corridor. Each city will house 5 million people.


"This is a huge investment opportunity, but you need to cherry-pick your cities," says Vaidya.


He recommends focusing on tier-2 cities like Pune in Maharashtra and Surat in Gujarat and investing in projects like ports and special economic zones (which typically build sector specific manufacturing or research hubs), and in affordable housing, as 90% of the demand is for those. 


He expects an average investment period to range from three to five years before investors can exit and move on to the next batch of cities.


Mohan, the author of the McKinsey report, too sees opportunity for the private sector (and multinationals, to boot) to provide services like water supply and waste management. "But," he admits, "the question is will we do it fast enough--and that's a political choice.


That will determine how dramatic the pace of the change will be and up until now no one has stepped up to champion that.


Safe Harbor Statement:

Some forward looking statements on projections, estimates, expectations & outlook are included to enable a better comprehension of the Company prospects. Actual results may, however, differ materially from those stated on account of factors such as changes in government regulations, tax regimes, economic developments within India and the countries within which the Company conducts its business, exchange rate and interest rate movements, impact of competing products and their pricing, product demand and supply constraints.
 
Nothing in this article is, or should be construed as, investment advice.
 
 
 

 
 

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
*****************************************
http://in.groups.yahoo.com/group/investwise/

INVESTMENTS IN INDIA
We are low-risk, long-term investors. 

Stocks, mutual funds and the entire investment gamut.  Only financing/investment avenues in India will be discussed. 

For any assistance, questions or improvement ideas, contact investwise-owner@yahoogroups.co.in

****************************************************************

NEW! ==== Check our LINKS and FILES sections for a world of information. REGULARLY UPDATED.

NEW! ==== Check "Tracklist" in Links and Files sections for Investment Ideas.

****************************************************************
.

__,_._,___
Apis India - Board to consider Bonus Issue
Apis India Ltd has informed BSE that a meeting of the Board of Directors of the Company will be held on September 21, 2010, for consideration of issue of Bonus shares.

Jubilant Org - Unsecured Creditors to approve Scheme of Amalgamation
Jubilant Organosys Ltd has informed BSE that by an order made on August 13, 2010, the Court has directed that a meeting of the Unsecured Creditors of the Company will be held on September 24. 2010., for the purposes of considering, and if thought fit, approving, with or without modification, the proposed Scheme of Amalgamation & Demerger between Applicant Companies - Jubilant Organosys Ltd, Speciality Molecules Ltd, Pace Marketing ...

IKF Finance - Board recommends Dividend
IKF Finance Ltd has informed BSE that the Board of Directors of the Company at its meeting held on August 30, 2010, inter alia, recommended 10% Dividend for the FY 2009-2010, subject to the approval of Shareholders.

Suraj Stainl - Board to consider Dividend 
Suraj Stainless Ltd has informed BSE that a Meeting of the Board of Directors of the Company will be held on September 24, 2010, inter alia, to consider and approve, Audited Financial Results of the Company for the year ended on March 31, 2010 and recommendation of dividend, if any along with other routine business.

**[investwise]** Gold At $ 1282/oz; Silver at $ 20.8/oz a 30 year High

 

Gold's Next Stop $ 1300/oz By Dec 2010

Gold closed a winning week with a bang Friday, notching a fresh record and helping silver settle at its best in three decades.

Gold for December delivery (COMMODITIES:GCZ10)  added $3.70 to $1,277.50 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. That supplants high marks reached Tuesday and Thursday.


The contract hit an intraday high of $1,284.40 in electronic trading, but prices faltered after consumer-sentiment data clouded markets earlier in the day.

Gold gained 2.5% this week, its fifth weekly advance in the past six weeks.

The small dent Friday was mostly due to light profit-taking, analysts said."There's nothing to imply that the gold rally has been reversed," said Jim Steel, a metals analyst with HSBC in New York.


Goldman Sachs said gold futures could reach $1,300 an ounce sooner than the investment bank expects if quantitative easing resumes. Quantitative easing, usually defined as a new round of monetary stimulus, "would likely accelerate the move to our 6-month price target and provide upside risk to our forecast," analysts at Goldman said in a note to clients Friday.


Central banks' efforts to buy private assets and engage in other measures to inject more cash into their countries' economies have raised concerns that the U.S. dollar and other currencies will lose value over the next few years — putting a premium on so-called hard assets such as metals.


"Gold remains the strongest beneficiary of uncertainty around the expansion of fiat-currency and competitive depreciation," said Australia-based analysts of Royal Bank of Scotland in a research note.


The analysts at Deutsche Bank reiterated their case for gold. "We believe exchange rate and interest rate trends as well as central bank purchases, heightened macroeconomic volatility and de-hedging programs across the gold mining sector will sustain the rally," they said in a note.


Central banks across the world are expected to buy about 15 metric tons of gold this year, GFMS Ltd. said in a white paper earlier this week.


"If anything, we think that this figure carries some risk to the upside. This is a noteworthy reversal from consecutive years of net official-sector sales," and 2010 could be the first year central banks buy gold since 1988, William Tankard, a senior mining analyst at the London-based consultancy firm, said in an e-mail.

Europe's last open-outcry trading

Andrea Hotter takes a look at the last bastion of open-outcry trading in Europe, the London Metal Exchange.


In another bullish factor for gold, top gold miner AngloGold Ashanti Ltd. earlier this week sold nearly $3 billion in shares and bonds to de-hedge -- buy itself out of contracts that tied the company to selling gold at guaranteed, but out-of-step, preset prices.


On Friday, gold pared gains after a survey released by Reuters and the University of Michigan fell to 66.6 in September, the lowest since August 2009, and short of economists' expectations of 70.


Silver seesawed in early trading, but managed to end the day at a 30-year high.The metal for December delivery added 4 cents to $20.82 an ounce. Silver is still low compared with the spring of 2008 when the ratio between gold/silver was 50 compared with 61 currently," noted analysts at Action Economics.

Safe Harbor Statement:

Some forward looking statements on projections, estimates, expectations & outlook are included to enable a better comprehension of the Company prospects. Actual results may, however, differ materially from those stated on account of factors such as changes in government regulations, tax regimes, economic developments within India and the countries within which the Company conducts its business, exchange rate and interest rate movements, impact of competing products and their pricing, product demand and supply constraints.
 
Nothing in this article is, or should be construed as, investment advice.
 
 
 

 
 

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
*****************************************
http://in.groups.yahoo.com/group/investwise/

INVESTMENTS IN INDIA
We are low-risk, long-term investors. 

Stocks, mutual funds and the entire investment gamut.  Only financing/investment avenues in India will be discussed. 

For any assistance, questions or improvement ideas, contact investwise-owner@yahoogroups.co.in

****************************************************************

NEW! ==== Check our LINKS and FILES sections for a world of information. REGULARLY UPDATED.

NEW! ==== Check "Tracklist" in Links and Files sections for Investment Ideas.

****************************************************************
.

__,_._,___

**[investwise]** Technically Speaking, Gold Is Headed Higher

 

Gold is at a new record high, and there's a lot of talk about it being time to take profits, to expect a serious decline, in fact the end of its 10-year bull market. Gold is up 16% so far this year. If it ends up for the year it will be its 10th straight year of gains, and the longest bull market for gold since 1920.


So yes, by that measurement gold's bull market is aged. Those claiming gold's bull market is ready to top out have sound arguments. Unfortunately, they're the same arguments we've heard several times over the last ten years.


1.Gold is a traditional hedge against inflation, and the threat of inflation has gone away this year. (This year the threat is so gone away it's been replaced with concerns that deflation is the more likely upcoming problem).


2.Unlike oil or corn, gold is a commodity that doesn't get consumed. Every ounce of gold ever mined in the history of time is still in existence on the planet. It's in the hands of central banks, investors, jewelry-makers, and the jewelry already stashed away in vaults and households. Yet still more gold is coming out of the ground every day. Why should it become more valuable?

Sound reasoning. But it's still a case of supply and demand.


The demand side still has considerable potential. For instance, central banks have always held significant amounts of gold as part of their reserves. However, as gold was declining in the 1990's central banks sold considerable amounts of gold from their reserves for various reasons. In fact, that central bank selling near the lows drove gold down to levels it may not otherwise have seen at its low in 2001.


There are rumors that central banks plan to bring the levels of gold in their reserves back up again over the next year. It makes sense given the losses they're seeing on the paper they replaced the gold with (primarily dollars), and the potential bubble in treasury bonds.


Demand for gold as a traditional safe haven by investors should also continue as uncertainties in currencies, markets, and economies are likely to be with us for some time yet.


But I prefer technical analysis as a better guide to the direction of gold than the always conflicting opinions regarding surrounding conditions.


And the consensus of our technical indicators remains on our latest buy signal for gold.

Gold lends itself quite well to trend following, and support/resistance levels. Its 30-week moving average continues to prove itself as important support, while the breaking of trendlines to the downside are negatives.


Currently, the support at the 30-week moving average and the trendline have been successfully tested again, and gold has rallied off those support levels and broken out above the previous resistance to a new high, a technically bullish event.



DJIA



I'm not saying you can buy gold and forget about it. It will need watching. But it looks to us like another leg up for gold is underway. I'm talking about the bullion. Gold mining stocks may be a different story, since they tend to move with the rest of the stock market, which is overbought and probably due for a correction.

Safe Harbor Statement:

Some forward looking statements on projections, estimates, expectations & outlook are included to enable a better comprehension of the Company prospects. Actual results may, however, differ materially from those stated on account of factors such as changes in government regulations, tax regimes, economic developments within India and the countries within which the Company conducts its business, exchange rate and interest rate movements, impact of competing products and their pricing, product demand and supply constraints.
 
Nothing in this article is, or should be construed as, investment advice.
 
 
 

 
 

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
*****************************************
http://in.groups.yahoo.com/group/investwise/

INVESTMENTS IN INDIA
We are low-risk, long-term investors. 

Stocks, mutual funds and the entire investment gamut.  Only financing/investment avenues in India will be discussed. 

For any assistance, questions or improvement ideas, contact investwise-owner@yahoogroups.co.in

****************************************************************

NEW! ==== Check our LINKS and FILES sections for a world of information. REGULARLY UPDATED.

NEW! ==== Check "Tracklist" in Links and Files sections for Investment Ideas.

****************************************************************
.

__,_._,___

**[investwise]** Bob Lenzner: If Gold Is In A Bubble, Who Will Bail Out Paulson, Soros?

 

"WE BUY GOLD!" screamed the metal sign hung around the neck of a hawker on Fifth Avenue in New York City this Friday morning, Sept. 17. This gold rush business is getting crazier and crazier.


Startled, I stopped and received a card from the hawker for Royal Gems, a dealer from the diamond district on West 47th Street. A gentleman there told me they were buying gold jewelry and bullion, either with cash or check, but refused to give me any more details over the phone. I was invited to go to 47th Street to learn more.


By the time I got to the Forbes building, the price of gold had moved up to $1,280 an ounce, and the bullish commentators at other financial websites were huffing and puffing about closing in on $1,300 an ounce. As I pointed out Thursday in my blog, The Bottom Line, conservative pundit Glen Beck was shilling for a gold investment firm, Goldline, on his television programs, as the cure for the hyperinflation that's around the corner.


Whoops. My friend, Ira Stoll, versatile author of the Spirit of Capitalism blog, had broken the news on Seeking Alpha that liberal Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., had scheduled hearings next week on a law that would regulate gold-selling companies, an industry with relentless advertising that is now a staple of cable television and AM radio.


Politics is fast becoming a controversial force in the maddening, widening gold rush. Weiner's proposed bill would require companies like Beck's Goldline and other merchandisers of the gold fad to "disclose the reasonable resale value of items being sold."


I have to agree with the ideologue Stoll that this displays a remarkably primitive and unrealistic view of how any market works. Have you seen the television come-on in the Cash for Gold commercial, which asks viewers to send their gold into cash?


State Street is the creator and purveyor of the mightiest gold ETF, the SPDR Gold Trust. It's known as GLD to the ticker-symbol conscious crowd. GLD holds current assets in gold of $52.96 billion, which has got to rank it in top ten institutional holders of the precious metal. GLD made its first purchase of gold bullion on Nov. 18, 2004, at $442 an ounce. Today's London evening fix was at $1,272.50. That means the gold price has gone up $830.50 in the past six years, a compound rate of return of 14% a year.

So far in 2010 the GLD's gold holdings have risen by $7 billion. There have been 433 increased positions in GLD and 240 who have decreased their positions. The unhappiest GLD investors must be the 59 shareholders who liquidated their positions entirely. Those who sold, but not entirely, include WS Management in Jacksonville, Fla, Altheia Research in Santa Monica, Calif., and Allianz Global Investors, which, much to its probable dismay, liquidated more than half its investment.


The five largest GLD holders are Paulson & Co., the hedge fund group that made an enormous killing going short subprime mortgages, with almost $4 billion, Northern Trust, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley and Blackstone Advisors. After that, the pecking order goes Eton Park Capital, Soros Fund Management, JPMorgan Chase, UBS AG, Wellington Management and Susquehanna International. These are all institutions holding the GLD for others.


All these folks together own 1,294,746 tonnes of gold, ranking the SPDR Gold Trust the sixth-largest holder of gold in the world, after the U.S., Germany, the IMF, Italy and France. Based on holdings as of April 2010, State Street's GLD owns more gold than China, Switzerland, Japan, Russia and the Netherlands.

Obviously there are gold investors who are surprised that the precious metal has risen to such heights. After all, AngloGold Ashanti, the third-largest gold mining concern, just threw in the towel on its trade hedging the price of gold, and intends to be stark naked on its annual production--a serious bet that prices are heading yet higher.

So far so good for the burgeoning gold crowd and GLD, but consider the risk. Supposing gold plummets several hundred dollars an ounce and Paulson, Blackstone, et al want to liquidate, will there be ready and willing buyers in size? Will there be liquidity if gold suddenly falls out of favor? This is the tremendous risk the giant bulls are taking.

Safe Harbor Statement:

Some forward looking statements on projections, estimates, expectations & outlook are included to enable a better comprehension of the Company prospects. Actual results may, however, differ materially from those stated on account of factors such as changes in government regulations, tax regimes, economic developments within India and the countries within which the Company conducts its business, exchange rate and interest rate movements, impact of competing products and their pricing, product demand and supply constraints.
 
Nothing in this article is, or should be construed as, investment advice.
 
 
 

 
 

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
*****************************************
http://in.groups.yahoo.com/group/investwise/

INVESTMENTS IN INDIA
We are low-risk, long-term investors. 

Stocks, mutual funds and the entire investment gamut.  Only financing/investment avenues in India will be discussed. 

For any assistance, questions or improvement ideas, contact investwise-owner@yahoogroups.co.in

****************************************************************

NEW! ==== Check our LINKS and FILES sections for a world of information. REGULARLY UPDATED.

NEW! ==== Check "Tracklist" in Links and Files sections for Investment Ideas.

****************************************************************
.

__,_._,___

Contra Funds - Ideal investment option in today's market condition

  
As you might have noticed, stock market is very much bullish and has rallied by more than 125% since early 2009.
 
But, still there are some stocks which are fundamentally very strong but got ignored in the recent rally.
 
"Contra Funds" identify those stocks and invest in them with a long term view. So, its high time for an investor with long term view to look into these funds.
 
FYI, we are providing the details of top performing Contra Funds.

 
Fund Name 
Launch Date 
Average AUM as on 31.08.2010 (Rs.in Crores)
NAV as on 09.09.2010 (Rs.)
Return as a % as on 09.09.2010
Value Research Rating 
1 year
3 years 
5 years 
Since inception
Kotak Contra
Jul 2005
88.94
23.20
33.41
12.27
16.41
17.59
êêê
 
Magnum Contra
Jul 1999
3624.14
61.05
21.28
10.75
22.27
27.70
êêê
 
Religare Contra
Mar 2007
69.54
16.89
28.44
13.64
        -
16.20
êêêê
 
Tata Contra
Oct 2005
124.87
18.30
33.69
14.14
        -
13.19
êêêêê
 
UTI Contra
Mar 2006
227.88
14.78
21.15
12.90
        -
9.13
êêêê
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Please note, you can invest in the above mentioned  funds though our NSE terminals also. Units will automatically get credited into your existing Demat account itself. 

For further details, please contact your nearest branch of Integrated.For list of branches Visit http://www.iepindia.com/contact.aspx 
 


**[investwise]** Adrian Ash: Let Us Just Speculate In Gold Or Inflation

 

So gold is now at "fair value" says Bill Bonner, long-time gold bug and my former boss/partner-in-crime at The Daily Reckoning's London HQ.

No, he won't sell yet...if ever...says Bill. But gold's huge under- pricing a decade ago has clearly passed by.
 
Value-hungry investors got their "reversion to the mean," and in the form of 400% gains, too. What one ounce of gold bought 2,000 years ago - a good suit of clothes, in Bill's oft-repeated example - it now matches, if not exceeds in price, here in late 2010.

From here, that makes it a "speculation".

Never mind that, around the birth of Christ, all clothes were hand-cut and sewn locally...rather than glued together by the world's cheapest labor, four or eight thousand miles away. A suitable outfit for visiting the coliseum or agora would have been made-to-measure, too...and today's finest tailors, at least in London or New York, will ask much more than the $1240 you'd raise by selling one ounce at current "spot gold" prices.

Never mind all that. Because Bill's point is well made, again...
Gold Purchasing Power in the US 1800-2008

Gold was a screaming buy at the start of last decade, sinking to its lowest price - in real terms - since the early '70s, as the chart above shows (courtesy of the World Gold Council, and taken from Roy Jastram's incomparable study, The Golden Constant).

But "Nobody cared! Nobody was interested," as a (very drunken) London dealer cried at me late last year. "I'd email out jokes, porn-site links, anything to get clients reading so I could repeat three simple words: 'Buy gold now!'

"But they didn't care... I don't even know if they looked at the porn..."

Today, in contrast, you can't move for anxious investors and bullish hedge funds piling into gold. Or so the media coverage would make it seem. New gold dealers - online and on Wall Street - are meantime sprouting like fungus to catch the "retail dollar", and the story's grown so old, it's even spawned its own calendar for financial hacks (the summer lull, India's post-harvest festivals, quarterly data from the mining-backed World Gold Council, the Sept-end of each year of the Central Bank Gold Agreement).
 
Wherever you look, the only debate that counts - "It must be a bubble, so when will it burst?" - rolls on for what is now more than two years.

As for the dumb lump of metal, yes - it continues to pull in new money, nudging its purchasing power ever-closer to the big top of 1980. But look again at that chart above. For while Roy Jastram saw a "golden constant" in his two centuries of US data (and four centuries of British gold prices), the shorter-term volatility is striking. Not least since gold ceased being money 39 years ago, and became mere trinkets and collectibles instead.
Gold Purchasing Power in England 1560-2008

"In terms of what gold will buy, it does not seem undervalued to us," Bill Bonner writes. "As near as we can tell, gold is now fairly priced.

"[So] the reward now is different. It is speculative...not inherent. We cannot expect to make money by waiting for the metal to revert to the mean. It's already at the mean."

But what is gold's mean purchasing power - the "golden constant" of Jastram's peerless research? By our reckoning here at BullionVault today, it has risen sharply since the US abandoned its last pretence of a gold standard and floated the dollar in August 1971.
 
Compared with the first seven decades of the 20th century, in fact, gold's real purchasing power has stood more than 75% higher on average. Which seems odd. Because without being used as money - its only utility beyond decoration - gold became only more valuable.
 
So while its purchasing power may have looked "constant" across long historical periods from Roy Jastram's vantage of 1977 (and again to die-hard gold bugs 20 years later), its utility had in fact changed.

Gold became more useful as a way of storing purchasing power, even though it was no longer money. Or rather, because it was no longer money, in an age where "Every morning, when you look in the mirror, I want you to think 'What am I going to do today to increase the money supply?'..." as John Ehrlichman, assistant to Richard Nixon, apparently told Fed governor Charles Pardee, sometime in the early 1970s.
 
Post-war economic policy across the West was haunted by the Great Depression, and thus flowed from the fear that, unless money was losing value, then spending and particularly investment growth would grind to a halt.

Without the spur of inflation, capital would choose to sit tight - in purses, pockets and deposit accounts - because its purchasing power today would be retained tomorrow.
 
Savers could thus spend (or not) as they chose, rather than being forced to exchange or grow their money to realize or maintain its present value. Devaluing their money, in contrast, via persistent (and obvious) inflation would force savers into the stores and stock-broker's office. And thus today's targets for persistent (and obvious) inflation were born.

"[Harvard professor] Kenneth Rogoff is proposing that the United States use a burst of inflation to get out of its slump," writes Princeton professor Paul Krugman. "I agree...[but] if central banks can gain any leverage at all, it's only by credibly committing to inflation over a fairly sustained period...[not Rogoff's] two or three years of slightly elevated inflation."

Bill Bonner is bang on the money, in short. Gold from here is a speculation, but a speculation only on academics getting their inside man (whether Mervyn King in London or Ben Bernanke in Washington) to apply their latest hare-brained scheme - massive new money inflation.

What price will you assign to gold's utility as a store of real value if...when...they succeed?

Safe Harbor Statement:

Some forward looking statements on projections, estimates, expectations & outlook are included to enable a better comprehension of the Company prospects. Actual results may, however, differ materially from those stated on account of factors such as changes in government regulations, tax regimes, economic developments within India and the countries within which the Company conducts its business, exchange rate and interest rate movements, impact of competing products and their pricing, product demand and supply constraints.
 
Nothing in this article is, or should be construed as, investment advice.
 
 
 

 
 

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
*****************************************
http://in.groups.yahoo.com/group/investwise/

INVESTMENTS IN INDIA
We are low-risk, long-term investors. 

Stocks, mutual funds and the entire investment gamut.  Only financing/investment avenues in India will be discussed. 

For any assistance, questions or improvement ideas, contact investwise-owner@yahoogroups.co.in

****************************************************************

NEW! ==== Check our LINKS and FILES sections for a world of information. REGULARLY UPDATED.

NEW! ==== Check "Tracklist" in Links and Files sections for Investment Ideas.

****************************************************************
.

__,_._,___