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March 21, 2011

BMR Morning Market Musings…

Markets are buoyant again today…as of 8:00 am Pacific, Gold is up $10 an ounce to $1,430 while Silver has climbed 66 cents to $35.94…the military action in Libya is also giving a lift to crude oil prices which are off their highs of the day but up about $1 a barrel at the moment to $102…the greenback’s weakness continues…the U.S. Dollar Index fell below 75.50 this morning and is currently off slightly at 75.61…with some bullish technicals and an array of geopolitical troubles, Gold bulls have reason to be optimistic and are hoping for a push to new highs through $1,450…stock markets are confronted with multiple risk factors at the moment – the war in Libya (coalition actions are also now being criticized by Russia, China and even the Arab League chief who earlier called for a “no-fly” zone), general unrest in the Middle East, the impact of the Japan earthquake, tsunami and nuclear reactor emergency, oil price volatility, Euro Zone sovereign debt, impending tightening of monetary policy in different parts of the world including Europe and China, U.S. budgetary woes, the list goes on…we remain extremely cautious with regard to the CDNX though it is strong again today (along with the Dow and the TSX), up 34 points to 2278…the current technical condition of the CDNX is simply not healthy and is flashing major warning signs as detailed in Part 1 of our Week In Review And A Look Ahead Saturday (this is in the context of an ongoing bull market, so our long-term view has not changed)…John has also prepared a chart which we’ll be posting shortly…it takes patience and discipline to sit on the sidelines when you see a market going up but impatience and lack of discipline can separate you very quickly from your money…the Gold stocks, however, are not really going along for the ride right now…you can see that with how the TSX Gold Index has been performing recently and also by checking the volume leaders on the CDNXNaikun Wind Energy Group (NKW, TSX-V) is the flavor of the day again today…it hit 43 cents this morning and is currently up 2.5 cents at 36 cents…in the BMR stable, all is generally quiet today…given that we’re anticipating a sharp correction in the markets, we’re busy putting together a “shopping list” of potential new opportunities for investors to check into when the CDNX Walmart-style “Rollback Sale” kicks into high gear…Gold Bullion Development (GBB, TSX-V) is up 1.5 cents at 42.5 cents…John’s updated GBB chart shows time is on the buyer’s side with GBB at the moment…

A couple of companies we believe investors should be watching closely in the days and weeks ahead are Visible Gold Mines (VGD, TSX-V) and Gold Canyon Resources (GCU, TSX-V)…we mentioned GCU last week when it was trading around $2.80 after releasing very impressive drill results, including 100.5 metres grading 7.23 g/t Au, from its Springpole Project, 110 kilometres northeast of the Red Lake Mining Camp…GCU is currently up another 13 cents at $3.49 after a big move Friday…we’re more familiar with Visible Gold Mines…we’ve been conducting extensive due diligence on VGD and we’re convinced it possesses a special dynamic as it has assembled a powerful team with levels of business, geological and marketing expertise that one rarely sees in a CDNX company…many companies have one or two of those elements but not all three…Visible Gold Mines is sitting on nearly $9 million in cash and has assembled an impressive property package in northwestern Quebec in the Rouyn-Noranda region…the company is currently drilling its Silidor Property and by the end of the month VGD should also start drilling at a property immediately adjacent to Vantex Resources‘ (VAX, TSX-V) Moriss Zone Discovery (Galloway Project)….VGD is currently up half a penny at 40.5 cents…we believe Visible Gold Mines is a major up-and-comer on the northwest Quebec Gold exploration front and is very worthy of our readers’ due diligence…

March 20, 2011

The Week In Review And A Look Ahead: Part 3 Of 3

GoldQuest Mining (GQC, TSX-V)

GoldQuest fell as low as 28 cents during Tuesday’s market sell-off but bargain hunters quickly stepped up to the plate and the stock finished the week at 33.5 cents for a loss of just a penny-and-a-half…for a company like GoldQuest to show weakness in its stock price at the moment underlines our point regarding the current poor technical health of the CDNXGoldQuest’s 50-day SMA is now declining for the first time since last summer…the rising 200-day SMA at 26 cents provides exceptional support, so it wasn’t surprising the stock reacted and turned higher after it touched 28 cents…the prospects for GQC this year are very bright given the company’s pipeline of quality Gold projects in the Dominican Republic where a mining boom is clearly in full swing…GoldQuest has been conducting a Phase 2 drill program at its promising La Escandalosa Property in the DR since mid-December and initial results are expected soon…based on the success of the last drill program, GoldQuest is getting closer to the centre of the mineralizing system at Escandalosa and we’re expecting results that could ultimately elevate this project to the 1 million+ ounce category…400,000 inferred ounces have already been outlined (43-101) based on just 25 drill holes…approximately 40 holes are being drilled in the current program…Escandalosa is a flat-lying, near-surface deposit where the Gold should be easy to extract…as Chairman Bill Fisher told us in a recent interview, “the economics could be really quite compelling”…proving up a 1 million ounce deposit at Escandalosa could give GoldQuest production of at least 100,000 ounces a year…GQC’s other promising priority projects in the DR are Las Animas and Jengibre which are next in line for drilling after Escandalosa…GoldQuest released a 43-101 resource estimate March 2 on its Toral zinc-lead-silver deposit in Spain…it showed slightly lower grades but much higher overall tonnage than the previous historical non-compliant estimate…as a result, total resources came out 15% higher…resources in the indicated category are 4.04 million tonnes grading 11.8% lead and zinc (5.3% lead, 6.5% zinc) as well as 41 g/t Ag and 0.11% Cu… inferred resources are 4.67 million tonnes grading 9.8% lead and zinc (4.44% lead, 5.4% zinc), 32 g/t Ag and 0.14 Cu…Toral has significant exploration and development upside as a majority of the historical drilling (40,000+ metres) was conducted over one relatively small part of the property…the zone of sulphide mineralization is open along strike to the northwest toward a known lead deposit as well as along strike to the southeast and downdip…the project is also an ideal candidate for a fast-track to production…the deposit is close to a power line, highway and rail line…a large smelter is located just 300 kilometers away by rail…GoldQuest is up 72% since we introduced it to BMR readers last fall…

Greencastle Resources (VGN, TSX-V)

Greencastle fell another penny last week, closing Friday at 19 cents which is 1 cent below its 200-day rising SMA…this was after a decent day Friday when VGN gained a penny-and-a-half on improved volume of 161,000 shares…this is a company with a market cap ($8.6 million) not far above its cash value of approximately $6 million…the potential of higher oil prices in the coming months could bolster Greencastle’s monthly cash flow of $100,000+ as it receives royalties from heavy crude production at Primate in Saskatchewan…Greencastle tripled in value over a six-week period from late October to early December…since the beginning of January, though, the stock has struggled due mostly to impatient investors frustrated with the lack of news…there hasn’t been news from Greencastle since November 30…however, with approximately $6 million in working capital, three Gold properties and monthly cash flow from an oil royalty, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that VGN is a bargain at current levels…Greencastle will shine again soon enough…the long-term chart remains very encouraging with rising 200 and 300-day SMA’s that are in no danger of reversing…it’s also interesting to note that President and CEO Tony Roodenburg, a large shareholder in VGN, has refrained from selling any of his holdings in recent months despite the fact the stock price more than tripled in value on high volume…this is different from past runs in the stock and adds further credence to our view that we haven’t seen the highs in this cycle yet from Greencastle – it’s poised for what we believe could be a massive breakout sometime this year…Pinetree Capital has also accumulated more shares in Greencastle, so there’s every reason to be very optimistic regarding this company’s prospects…investors need to be patient, however, as they often do with Roodenburg’s plays…Greencastle is up 36% since we added it back in to the BMR model portfolio five  months ago…

Adventure Gold (AGE, TSX-V)

Adventure Gold suffered with the overall market and fell to a low of 51 cents last week before recovering and closing Friday at 59 cents for a weekly loss of 3 pennies…the stock remains in an overall long-term uptrend with the supporting 100-day moving average (SMA) at 50 cents…the 10-day SMA is in decline for the first time since late January while the 20-day is currently flat but in danger of declining…the company released results recently from the first two holes at its Pascalis Colombiere Gold Property near Val d’Or…both holes were drilled approximately 150 metres west of the former L.C. Beliveau Mine and intersected Gold-bearing structures at various depths which is encouraging…the system is showing strong similarities to the one observed at L.C. Beliveau…hole #13 returned 5.4 g/t Au over 20 metres which included 2.9 metres grading 34.6 g/t Au…hole #14 intersected 7 g/t Au over 4.8 metres…results from seven more holes are pending…six of them were drilled west of the former mine while the other, which may prove to be very important, was drilled at depth to test the geometry of the Gold system below the underground workings…this former mine was a low cost producer and holds excellent potential for extensions laterally and at depth…it’s still early but Adventure Gold appears to be on track with its exploration goals at this property based on these early results…we expect AGE will begin drilling its Granada Extension Property in the near future…last month’s results from Gold Bullion and the latest drill map on the GBB web site reveal exciting new potential over the far western portion of GBB’s Preliminary Block Model which supports Adventure Gold’s geological interpretation that it holds part of the western extension of the LONG Bars Zone…we first mentioned Adventure Gold to our readers in an article September 29, just a couple of days following the company’s announcement that it had acquired land at Granada, when the stock was trading in the low 20′s…we officially added AGE to the BMR model portfolio at 34 cents October 28, so the gain since then is 74%…Adventure Gold has been around only since late 2007 and we are impressed by the company’s solid portfolio of properties (19 in six strategic areas in Quebec and Ontario)…also of immediate interest is AGE’s partnership with Lake Shore Gold (LSG, TSX) on the Meunier 144 Property where deep drilling is still testing the down plunge extension of Gold zones located at the Timmins and Thunder Creek deposits…the current initial deep drill hole onto the Meunier JV property is continuing…when completed it’s estimated the hole will provide a deep cut on the projected target area at about a vertical depth of 2,600 metres…this will enable shallower wedge cuts to be considered if significant mineralization is found to be present in this area…the initial deep hole was collared on LSG’s Timmins mine property last August…if this deep hole succeeds, AGE could absolutely explode…

Sidon International (SD, TSX-V)

Sidon held steady at 6.5 cents last week after a big drop the previous week…in fact, the stock has now closed at 6.5 cents for 7 consecutive trading sessions…the company came out with some positive news last Monday which gave support to the stock price…Sidon has arranged a private placement of up to $2 million at 8 cents, and the company also announced it has acquired an option to acquire 80% of a property adjacent to Canaco’s (CAN, TSX-V) Handeni Project…initial drill results from Morogoro, announced March 8, fell short of market expectations…the six shallow holes that were drilled in December did not produce significant results, the best hole showing 3 metres grading 1.7 g/t Au…the company has drilled four deeper holes with results for those still pending…what the initial six holes have given Sidon, however, is a better understanding of the Morogoro geological structure which should help in future drilling…exploration, especially at such an early stage, is never easy and disappointing initial results don’t necessarily mean a property doesn’t hold excellent potential…the company is also trying to develop a placer operation at Morogoro…ground near Canaco’s discovery also helps…there is certainly hope here for better days ahead…from a technical standpoint, previous support between 9 and 10 cents will now provide resistance over the short term…Sidon is up 30% since we introduced it to BMR readers a year ago at a nickel…

Seafield Resources (SFF, TSX-V)

Seafield gained half a penny for the week, closing Friday at 34 cents after briefly dipping below its rising 200-day SMA at 31 cents earlier in the week…declining 7.5 cents to 34 cents, but certainly not for a lack of decent drill results…on Monday the company reported assays from the first three holes completed at Dos Quebradas with hole #2 intersecting a whopping 511 metres grading 0.58 g/t Au…the hole ended in mineralization…hole #1 delivered 269 metres grading 0.37 g/t Au while hole #3 was drilled to define the eastern limit of mineralization and returned no significant results…a total of nine holes have now been drilled at Dos Quebradas with 11 planned for this phase of drilling…last month, the company reported that a second drill rig would start testing the nearby Santa Sofia Property by the end of February…the company has identified a promising porphyry target measuring 1,050 metres in length and 850 metres in width at Santa Sofia…a third target, La Loma, also appears very interesting…the geological case for Seafield’s Quinchia land package is compelling and we’re looking forward to more results from Dos Quebradas and elsewhere…the company has already outlined a 43-101 resource of nearly 800,000 ounces at its Miraflores Property, a number that’s expected to increase following the 12-hole, 4,000 metre program recently completed there…patient investors have an opportunity to do extremely well with this play given the geological merits of Quinchia and the real potential for 5 million+ ounces from several potential deposits…the company is sitting on at least $15 million in cash and has a very modest market cap of just over $51 million…Seafield has gained 475% since we made it the first company in the BMR model portfolio in the summer of 2009…

The Week In Review And A Look Ahead: Part 2 Of 3

Gold Bullion Development (GBB, TSX-V)

Gold Bullion dropped as low as 35 cents during the Monday-Tuesday market sell-off but recovered to finish the week unchanged at 41 cents…one of the first clear signs of a real turnaround in GBB will be a reversal to the upside in the 20-day moving average (SMA) but the earliest that is likely to occur is sometime in April…the 200-day SMA has flattened out and appears ready to go into decline, so that could keep the stock under pressure for a while yet…from a fundamental standpoint, however, as our recent article detailed, results from over 80 drill holes clearly demonstrate that the LONG Bars Zone continues to have multi-million ounce potential…mineralization remains open in every direction with six kilometres of untested strike length going east…continuity between the Preliminary Block Model and the Eastern Extension has been established in our view, though much more drilling in the Eastern Extension is still required…at 41 cents, Gold Bullion’s market cap is only $64 million…this seems incredibly cheap given the 2.4 to 2.6 million ounce potential of just the Preliminary Block Model area as outlined by GBB nearly a year ago…a 43-101 resource estimate, expected later this year, should provide a significant boost for Gold Bullion…on the negative side, the market is concerned with the company’s dwindling cash position ($8 million at the end of December) and the fact that in March, 2011, more than nine months after a second drill rig arrived at Granada, there are still just two drill rigs on this property…the LONG Bars Zone is all about massive tonnage and the only way to prove up massive tonnage is through a massive amount of drilling…given the apparent manpower shortage at Granada, the optics of a drill campaign (one rig) at Gold Bullion’s Castle Silver Mine are not good…our faith, however, in the Granada Gold Property remains as firm as ever and since we’re in the bull market of a lifetime in Gold, any company that appears to be sitting on A LOT of Gold, especially near-surface and in such an attractive jurisdiction as Quebec, is potentially worth much, much more than $64 million…GBB bargain hunters should be out in full force in the event there is a significant CDNX pullback from current levels…

Cadillac Mining (CQX, TSX-V)

Cadillac fell significantly for the second week in a row, falling 4.5 cents to 20.5 cents…no stock is immune to overall market weakness…Cadillac however remains one of our favorite opportunities for 2011 given the company’s properties in Quebec and Utah, its highly attractive share structure and the abilities and determination of management…at 20.5 cents, Cadillac’s market cap is only $5.2 million which allows for plenty of upside potential…technically, the stock is supported by a rising 200-day SMA at 15 cents…the risk-reward ratio with this one is extremely attractive… Richmont’s (RIC, TSX) success at its Wasamac Property west of Rouyn-Noranda is very bullish for Cadillac which is now preparing an exploration program including diamond drilling for its adjacent 100%-owned “Wasa” claims…Richmont has started a new 35,000 metre drill program of its own to upgrade and further expand resources at the growing Wasamac deposit where the principal structure hosting Gold mineralization plunges north at a dip between 50 and 55 degrees toward Cadillac’s claims…while there’s no guarantee, of course, there’s certainly the possibility that Cadillac’s Wasa claims could host a significant high-grade extension of Richmont’s deposit…this is what Cadillac will be exploring for…in addition they’ll be going after some highly prospective VMS targets on the property…the infamous Horne Creek fault runs right through the Wasa claims and Cadillac discovered a zone last year (by deepening the only hole they’ve ever drilled on the property) that’s interpreted to be a feeder system typical of those seen under VMS systems in the Noranda camp…Cadillac’s Wasa clams have excellent potential and we’re pleased to see they’re going to “seize the moment” and drill for a possible discovery…other CQX ground along the Cadillac Trend is also about to be drilled…Visible Gold is starting a 9,000 metre drill program this month as part of the agreement they worked out with Cadillac in December on over 7,000 hectares of land in the Rouyn-Noranda region…the first four holes of that program will be drilled on ground adjacent to Vantex’s (VAX, TSX-V) Moriss Zone discovery at the Galloway Project west of Wasamac…besides northwestern Quebec, Cadillac has secured an entire former mining camp in Utah near the Nevada border (the “Goldstrike District”) which has Carlin-type potential…Goldstrike produced over 200,000 ounces of Gold and 200,000 ounces of Silver from numerous open pits in the late 1980′s and early 1990′s…the area has never been properly explored and Cadillac is planning a major exploration program for later this year in order to unlock the potential value of Goldstrike…we encourage readers to listen to our informative interview with Cadillac President and CEO Vic Erickson posted March 4…Part 2 of that interview is coming soon…

Abcourt Mines (ABI, TSX-V)

Abcourt was off a penny for the week, closing at 17.5 cents…the stock has closed above its 100-day (SMA), currently at 16.75 cents, since the first trading day of the year…there is a very strong zone of technical support from 14 cents (the 200-day SMA) through to 17 cents…the 50-day SMA has flattened out at 19 cents where there is now some resistance…the Gold, silver and zinc assets this company has are much more significant than its current $19.25 million market cap would lead someone to believe, and the challenge for management is to unlock this value…Abcourt released more positive assay results recently from its ongoing 10,000 metre drill program at its Elder-Tagami Gold Project near Rouyn-Noranda…mineralization continues to expand to the west of the former underground Elder Mine…the Tagami area to the north, meanwhile, has major potential so by later this year we’re expecting a substantial increase in resources at this project…the last 43-101 resource estimate of 216,000 ounces was released in the summer of 2009…the possibility of Abcourt expanding that resource beyond 500,000 ounces certainly exists given the encouraging results to date…the company’s goal is to put Elder back into production by the end of next year…considerable mining infrastructure is already on site…Abcourt released assay results February 15 from six more holes at its Abcourt-Barvue Silver-Zinc Property near Val d’Or, and results continue to be very encouraging…the holes were all drilled 150 to 200 metres from surface and five of them intersected two zones of high-grade silver and zinc…Hole #16 cut 152.26 g/t Ag over 12.7 metres…the heavy accumulation that began in Abcourt in December was no fluke in our view…this is a company with significant assets that could justify a substantially higher valuation…nearly 60 million shares of ABI changed hands on the CDNX in December and January – record volume for this stock, accompanied by a price jump from 14.5 cents…we’ve seen these type of volume surges before and they are always a very positive sign…Abcourt is being accumulated, and our best guess is that some savvy players like the assets in the ground…the 10,000 metre drill program at Abcourt-Barvue continues with the goal of upgrading and augmenting existing 43-101 reserves and resources…the company is also trying to justify an expansion of the proposed mill from 650,000 tonnes to one million tonnes…Abcourt-Barvue is a former producer and one of the best silver assets in the country with nearly 20 million ounces in all-category reserves and resources (plus nearly 300,000 tonnes of zinc)…Abcourt completed a $4 million financing at the end of December…continued drilling success and even higher prices for Gold, silver and zinc would be exciting developments for this stock which has a history of major moves…from mid-2005 to early 2006, Abcourt rocketed from 15 cents to nearly $1.40…this is another gem to accumulate on any upcoming CDNX weakness…

Currie Rose Resources (CUI, TSX-V)

Currie Rose fell as low as 13.5 cents during Tuesday’s market mayhem before closing Friday at 15 cents for a weekly loss of a penny-and-a-half…the stock is now trading below its still-rising 200-day SMA for the first time since last summer…the 300-day at 12.5 cents offers huge support…the rainy season has not been as severe as usual in northwest Tanzania and that’s good news as Currie Rose prepares to launch a major drill program during the second quarter…one of the key technical events we’ll be looking for over the coming weeks with CUI is a reversal in the stock’s 50-day moving average (SMA) which has been in sharp decline since January and currently sits at 17.5 cents…significant accumulation started in Currie Rose during February as demonstrated by the CMF indicator…while its Tanzanian properties are the market’s major focus, Currie Rose could benefit over the coming weeks and months from continued good exploration news from Trueclaim Exploration (TRM, TSX-V) which is currently conducting an 8,000 metre drill program at the Scadding Gold Property near Sudbury…Trueclaim, which released assay results March 4 including 15.78 metres grading 5.36 g/t Au near-surface, is in the process of earning a 51% interest in Scadding by carrying out a $2 million work commitment…Trueclaim can acquire a full 100% interest by completing a feasibility study, paying $2 million to Currie Rose, and giving Currie Rose a 3% net smelter royalty…CUI announced a joint-venture deal January 25 with Australian-based Liontown Resources for Currie’s Jubilee Reef Gold Project in Tanzania…CUI’s focus is on the Sekenke and Mabale Hills Projects, so finding a partner for Jubilee Reef made sense…the deal commits Liontown to at least 5,000 metres of drilling at the property this year which will give Currie Rose a minimum of 23,000 metres of drilling at all of its properties in 2011…while Currie Rose has had its market cap shaved considerably, from a high of nearly $40 million to the current $13 million, what hasn’t changed is the quality of this company’s project portfolio which remains as high as it ever was in our view…Currie Rose has all the cash it needs ($2 million) to complete an initial major round of drilling (10,000 metres) this spring and summer in Tanzania, so there will not be any dilution of the stock at current levels as confirmed by President and CEO Harold Smith…

Richfield Ventures (RVC, TSX-V)

Richfield’s strength over the last couple of weeks in the midst of major CDNX weakness has been amazing to watch and testifies to the significance of its Blackwater Project which is clearly world class…Richfield gained another 64 cents last week to close at $6.64…it reached a new all-time high of $6.89…we suspect funds are accumulating…the company released a 43-101 resource estimate for Blackwater on March 2…using a 0.4 g/t Au cut-off grade, the estimated global indicated resource is 1.83 million ounces of Gold (53.46 million tonnes grading 1.06 g/t Au) with an additional 2.34 million ounces in the inferred category (75.45 million tonnes grading 0.96 g/t Au) for a total of 4.17 million ounces…some 20 million ounces of silver are also in the indicated and inferred categories…initial metallurgical testwork has indicated an average of 92-per-cent Gold recovery using conventional whole ore direct cyanidation…the company has also contracted a series of consultants to prepare a Preliminary Economic Assessment (PEA), planned for completion in the fourth quarter of 2011…the study will consider the potential for a large-scale, open-pit mine and ore processing facility…with cash on hand of $17 million, the company has ample reserves to complete a 30,000 metre drill program this year as well as the PEA…given the state of the Gold market and the likelihood of continued exploration success at Blackwater, Richfield’s current market cap of $285 million still gives it considerable upside potential for the balance of 2011… we were very pleased to see that Richfield got a well-deserved buy recommendation recently from GMP Securities which has initiated coverage on RVC with a 12-month target price of $11.10 per share…BMR introduced Richfield to its readers in December, 2009, when the stock was trading at only $1.20…the gain since then has been 453%…the primary trend remains up with Richfield and there’s every reason to expect more excellent drill results throughout 2011…we believe the company’s ultimate objective is to find a buyer who can put this deposit into production…if good drill results continue as we expect they will, we’re confident that objective will be met and the takeover price could be significantly higher than the current $6.64 per share…

March 19, 2011

The Week In Review And A Look Ahead: Part 1 Of 3

CDNX and Gold

It was a volatile week for the CDNX which shed 213 points or 9.4% over Monday and part of Tuesday and then gained 9.3% from the Tuesday low of 2054 to close the week at 2254, a loss of only 23 points from the previous Friday.   This article should bring clarity to any confusion investors are grappling with at the moment.

Our current bearish stance with regard to the CDNX has not changed and we continue to expect this market to sell-off to the 1900 level and perhaps a little lower in the coming weeks.  We view the near-term risk in this market as unacceptably high, so it’s a good time to be holding cash to take full advantage of the opportunities that we believe could soon be abundantly available.  Having said that, technicals and fundamentals confirm to us that the overall bull market remains completely intact.  So any significant additional weakness, if it occurs over the near-term as we believe it will, should be followed at some point by a fresh wave to the upside that ultimately will drive the CDNX decisively through strong resistance at the March 7 high of 2465.

At BMR, our niche is analyzing the CDNX and Gold markets as well as presenting possible individual company opportunities that investors can perform their own due diligence on.  Each investor has to develop their own investment strategy in accordance with their personal financial situation and their tolerance for risk.  Just because we see a high potential for a significant drop in the CDNX over the short term doesn’t of course necessarily mean this will play out, as good as our track record has been, or that you should be dumping everything you own.  But we strongly believe, based on the weakening technical condition of the CDNX and the overall negative geopolitical backdrop, that now is a time to be very cautious with the markets.  In the extremely speculative CDNX, ruled by greed and fear, it’s critical for an investor to always be aware of risks and maintain a proper balance between aggressively trying to grow capital and protecting it.  Patience and nerves of steel are also important – there will come a point when the fear level will spike and that’s when savvy traders and investors will swoop in to make potential fortunes.  Every major CDNX correction, including the most recent one that ended early last July, has presented investors with a golden opportunity to make boatloads of money.  Timing, as they say, is everything.

We’re going to go into detail on the CDNX and explain why we view the rally since Tuesday as a market “trap”.  First, the action in the CDNX since early this month appears to be a textbook pattern as John outlines below – a three-wave “A-B-C correction”:

As John points out in the above chart, CDNX volume Wednesday, Thursday and Friday was simply too weak to sustain this rally.  Yes, the market got back above 2200 which impressed some of our readers but it still faces stiff overhead resistance at a time when the 10 and 20-day moving averages (SMA’s) are in sharp decline.  The CDNX dropped below its important 50-day SMA March 10, a technical event that over the years has consistently preceded major corrections of 20% or more.  What’s worse, the 50-day (currently at about 2315 and just below the 20-day) then started to go into decline and has now temporarily flattened out after the strong gains Thursday and Friday.  Unless the CDNX continues to march significantly higher early this coming week (very unlikely), the 50-day is about to resume its downward trend which will put additional pressure on this market.

The CDNX has consistently proven to be an extremely reliable leading indicator.  What we find very revealing is that after leading all markets higher in the third and fourth quarters last year, the Venture Exchange is now leading markets lower.  So far in March, the CDNX has declined 6%.  The TSX has fallen 2.5%, the TSX Gold Index is down 4%, the Dow is off 3% while the Nasdaq has dropped 4.9%.  Gold is essentially flat for the month.  This kind of under-performance by the CDNX is a very bearish sign and suggests to us that there is trouble on the horizon for the broader markets.

Investors who are encouraged by the CDNX’s 9.3% advance and “turnaround” since last Tuesday only have to read this paragraph for a strong dose of reality.  Market traps can be deadly to your portfolio.  Just one example is how investors got caught in one of these traps in May-June, 2006.   In just six sessions the CDNX plunged 19.6%.  The market then quickly gained 9% or 230 points (just like now and on low volume) and the feeling among some was that the correction had ended.  And then bang – over the next 11 sessions the CDNX fell another 19% which is when the market finally hit bottom.

So let’s quickly recap in point form why we are so concerned about the CDNX at the moment:

  1. The market has clearly met powerful resistance between 2438 (the Feb. 22 high) and 2465 (the March 7 high).  Now there is new resistance from the current level through to the 20 and 50-day moving averages just above 2300;
  2. Exhaustion appears to have set in – the CDNX climbed 83.5% over the last eight months.  Buying pressure was at a level (“pivot point”) where other pullbacks have started;
  3. The CDNX is now significantly under-performing the major markets.  Given the fact the CDNX is such a reliable leading indicator, this suggests to us that the broad markets are about to go into a major reversal which will obviously negatively impact the CDNX;
  4. The CDNX fell below its 50-day SMA last Monday for the first time since the start of the big run last summer.  In almost all cases over the last decade, with the notable exception of 2009, a drop below the 50-day SMA following a significant uptrend has preceded a major correction;
  5. The CDNX’s 50-day SMA started to decline last Monday, a very negative sign;
  6. The 10 and 20-day moving averages continue to decline and are providing additional resistance;
  7. Volume on the rally the last few days has been low;
  8. A three-wave, A-B-C correction appears to have formed on the charts;
  9. The current market pattern is very similar to that witnessed in May-June, 2006, when the CDNX fell nearly 30%;
  10. Too many individual stocks have broken down on the charts;
  11. The fact the CDNX would experience major technical weakness at a time when Gold is hovering around all-time highs, and commodities in general have been very strong, is a serious negative development;
  12. The geopolitical backdrop increases the risk – major confusion and uncertainty on the world stage quickly chase investors away from the world’s most speculative market, the CDNX.

Fundamental factors could quite possibly create a very difficult environment for stocks over the coming  days and weeks.  Tonight, an international coalition, eight years to the day the Iraq war started, launched air strikes against Libya as Operation Odyssey Dawn commenced.  The goals make sense – protection of innocent Libyan citizens and the removal of Gadhafi’s evil regime, but there are risks nonetheless.   The United Nations has written a blank check for everything short of an armed ground occupation.  Continued unrest and uncertainty in the Middle East, the potential of rising oil prices due to this unrest as well as demand/supply dynamics, debt problems from Europe to the United States, U.S. budgetary battles, inflation concerns throughout the world, and now the devastation in parts of Japan from the recent massive earthquake and tsunami, plus the affects of the nuclear emergency, are all factors that could negatively impact the markets going forward.  Our thoughts and prayers are with our friends in Japan.  The Japanese have proven to be very resilient and their nation will recover.  But the damage to the world’s third largest economy, which accounts for 6% of global GDP, is likely worse than has been estimated.  Japan is back in recession.  The historic 9.0 earthquake shifted the axis of the earth, could lead to violent volcanic activity in Japan and will have global economic ramifications.  It was truly a “Black Swan” event.

In Canada there is a growing possibility of a federal election which introduces more uncertainty for Canadian investors.  Canadian markets have performed very poorly in three of the last four federal elections.

Gold rallied Friday to finish unchanged on the week at $1,420 while Silver, despite a strong move Friday, fell 62 cents last week to close at $35.28.

The fundamental case for Gold remains incredibly strong – currency instability and an overall lack of confidence in fiat currencies, an extended period of negative real interest rates (inflation is greater than the nominal interest rate, even in China and India despite increasing rates there), massive government debt from the United States to Europe, central bank buying, flat mine supply, physical demand, investment demand, emerging market growth, geopolitical unrest and conflicts (with the volatile Middle East being the focus right now), rising oil prices…the list goes on.  It’s hard to imagine Gold not performing well in this environment.  However, it’s possible Gold could suffer temporarily if a “flight to cash” scenario were to unfold in the markets with assets being sold across the board.

Despite signs of an improving U.S. economy, the Fed is expected to error on the side of caution and maintain its accommodative monetary policy for an extended period which is bullish for precious metals and commodities in general.  The Fed will want to see payroll gains in excess of 200,000 for at least six to nine months and a significant decline in unemployment before withdrawing its massive monetary support (QW2).  The current U.S. economic expansion is just 20 months old (expansions since WW2 have tended to be at least 60 months) and there are still significant risks to the economy including troubling high levels of debt at every level of government, a housing market that is still very weak (one in four mortgages are underwater and prices continue to decline in many areas) and now an increase in oil prices which has the potential of hitting consumers hard.  Interest rate increases in the U.S. appear to be out of the question until at least sometime next year.  Overall, this is the type of environment that’s very supportive of Gold and a speculative commodity-driven market such as the CDNX which is why we see any pullback in the CDNX, minor or major, as merely a correction within a powerful ongoing bull phase.  Any hint of a global economic slowdown, due to a combination of factors, may convince the Fed to launch QE3 after QE2 expires in June.

Editor’s Note

A very important Part 1 of our Week In Review And A Look Ahead will be posted by approximately 8:00 pm Pacific time tonight as we review the CDNX in detail.  Our bearish stance remains as we continue to see a high probability of a major correction (25% from the 2465 high) within the context of an overall bull market.

March 18, 2011

BMR Morning Market Musings…

4:00 am Pacific

Gold is trading higher early today in the wake of firmer crude oil prices and rising tensions in Libya after the United Nations approved a “no-fly” zone as well as “all necessary measures” short of a ground invasion in order to stop Gadaffi…while Gadaffi’s regime is evil and deserves to be overthrown, one should expect the law of “unintended consequences” to come into play now…no surprise but it’s interesting that China, Russia, Germany, India and Brazil all abstained in the UN vote…G-7 countries have intervened to curb the runaway Yen, hoping to calm global markets as Japan struggles with its worst crisis since World War 2…as of 4:00 am Pacific, Gold is $11 higher at $1,415 while Silver has gained 63 cents to $34.86…the U.S. Dollar Index is flat at 75.99…our Morning Musings are being posted earlier today due to business travel to Vancouver…futures point to gains in New York to begin the trading day…Japan’s benchmark Nikkei was up 244 points or 2.44% overnight…listening to a BBC Radio report this morning, the short-term economic impact of the devastating earthquake and tsunami in Japan, in addition to the nuclear reactor emergency, is likely going  to be greater for that country than the market currently anticipates…Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah is scheduled to make an important speech this morning with comments that could impact the oil market…in the United States, 19 systematically important banks are waiting for the results of the Federal Reserve’s stress tests this afternoon…if they pass, institutions will start to tell shareholders about dividend hikes and buybacks…despite the CDNX’s 58-point gain yesterday, we remain extremely cautious regarding the Venture Exchange at the moment and we believe it has also signaled that trouble is ahead for the broader markets…the CDNX has a major wall of resistance to climb with the path of least resistance to the downside…while the overall bull market remains intact, the next month or two could prove to be painful…we have no desire to be caught in a “bear trap”, so we are very wary of any upside moves at this point…yesterday’s strong move came on the lowest volume since New Year’s Eve…the TSX has regained almost half of the 1,091 points it shed after reaching an intra-day high of 14,329 March 7…the TSX closed at its still-rising 50-day SMA of 13,746 yesterday and could move higher again today which we believe will be a trap for the bulls…the CDNX‘s 50-day SMA is in decline and that market is our leading indicator…John has prepared an interesting long-term chart that compares the CDNX with Gold and the CRB Index…what this shows, we believe, is how both the CDNX and the CRB Index are tired and overbought and in need of a retracement…pay particular attention to the CDNX gradient on the left-hand side of the chart…

John: This morning we analyze a comparative long-term chart of the CDNX, Gold (continuous contract) and the CRB Commodities Index. The CRB Index is a good measure of commodity prices and inflation. It is an unweighted geometric average of important commodities. The Index averages prices across 17 commodities including energy, grains, industrials, livestock, precious metals and agriculturals and across time.

In this 15-year monthly line chart, the CDNX is in blue and red, Gold is in orange while the CRB is in green.  The base chart is the CDNX, thus the volumes shown are those of the CDNX only. Gradients have been drawn for each (dotted lines) and these indicate the rate of climb or growth of the uptrends of each. Comparatively the CDNX has the steepest gradient, then the CRB and lastly Gold. Gold was the only one with a sustainable rate of climb. This shows that both the CDNX and the CRB rose at an unsustainable rate and thus suffered major declines in 2007 and 2008. Gold declined too in 2008 but not to the same degree. The recovery for the CDNX started in Q4 of 2008 and the CRB in Q1 of 2009.

It is interesting to note that the present gradients of both the CDNX and the CRB are steeper than in their previous run-up from 2002 to 2008, consequently it is not surprising that a retracement is occurring now. Pullbacks or retracements are an interesting point here. There are two sets of Fibonacci values applied to the CDNX run-up between 2002 and 2004 and between 2004 and 2006. In both cases the CDNX retracements were down to the 38.2% level. Also, after the CRB run-up in 2009, the Fibonacci set shows the retracement was to the 38.2% level. The Fibonacci set applied to the present CDNX run-up shows the retracement levels of 38.2% to be 2014 and 50% to be 1899. Thus these are important levels to keep in mind.

We have mentioned many times how the CDNX is a leading indicator. By that we mean that at times it provides an early warning that a significant change in trend is about to take place in the markets. A good example of this is shown on the chart when the CDNX topped out early in 2007 and started to decline whereas Gold topped out early in 2008 and the CRB in May of 2008. The CDNX volume is interesting too. From the beginning of the uptrend in 2002 to the topping out in 2007, the average monthly volume rose exponentially. Then when the CDNX declined the volume dropped sharply until the Index bottomed out in 2008, indicating this was not a bear market and that the primary uptrend was still intact. When a small retracement occurred last year, the volume dropped off sharply for 4 months before almost doubling in September and has increased every month since until now.

This historical analysis has shown that at this time the CDNX and the CRB are tired, overbought and based on past market patterns they are due for a retracement. This retracement was going to happen with or without earthquakes and nuclear meltdowns as it is part of how the market works. As investors we should profit handsomely in the future.

Morning Musings Continued

Over the next month or two we expect some tremendous opportunities to open up in the CDNX…one company to watch closely is Greencastle Resources (VGN, TSX-V) which closed yesterday at 17.5 cents, giving it a market cap of only $7.9 million – just a couple of million dollars above its current cash value…while the chart below may give a bearish reading for the near-term, Greencastle has always been a smart buy for patient investors whenever it’s trading in the immediate vicinity of its cash value…VGN is one of the few CDNX companies with positive cash flow at the moment and the company also has three Gold properties, two in Nevada plus the recently acquired Nechako Property near Richfield Ventures’ (RVC, TSX-V) Blackwater Project in central British Columbia…disappointingly, there has been no news from Greencastle since November 30 which explains why the stock has gradually declined to its current level after closing 2010 at 36 cents…the stock still has rising 200 and 300-day moving averages, underscoring the fact it is still in an overall new uptrend after coming to life last fall…John’s chart below shows support levels…it’s never easy calling a bottom on a particular stock, but in this case we suspect there will be plenty of patient investors (perhaps even including Tony Roodenburg himself) who will be throwing in bids at Greencastle’s cash value of 15 cents…

March 17, 2011

BMR Morning Market Musings…

Gold has traded between $1,390 and $1,405 so far today…as of 8:10 am Pacific, the yellow metal is up $2.50 an ounce at $1,404…Silver is 32 cents higher at $34.58 while the U.S. Dollar Index has fallen sharply, down over half a point to 76.01…some encouraging signs on the U.S. labor front this morning, along with a report on inflation, have given the Dow a lift after yesterday’s 200+ point drop…new U.S. claims for unemployment benefits fell as expected last week and the four-week moving average has dropped to its lowest level in more than two-and-a-half years, pointing to a strengthening labor market…meanwhile, U.S. consumer prices rose at their fastest pace in more than a year-and-a-half in February, driven by higher food and energy prices, but underlying inflation pressures remained generally contained…the Labor Department said its Consumer Price Index rose 0.5%, the largest gain since June, 2009, after increasing 0.4% in January…Core CPI, excluding food and energy, increased 0.2% after advancing by the same margin in January…inflation continues to be a problem in Asia, however…the Reserve Bank of India has hiked key interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point and says it will continue to fight inflation while citing new risks arising from crude oil prices and demand-side pressures…this is the eighth time in a year that India’s Central Bank has lifted rates…more monetary tightening is expected in China where authorities are determined to cool inflationary fires…the CDNX is up 37 points this morning to 2169…significant technical resistance exists at 2200…the CDNX correction began March 7 and is now in its ninth trading day with the Index currently down 12% from the 2465 high…while the overall CDNX bull market remains intact, there’s no question we’re currently in the midst of a major correction that by historical standards still has a considerable way to go in terms of both magnitude and duration…the fact the CDNX has been leading the broader markets and precious metals lower over the last couple of weeks is very troubling and suggests potential major losses are on the horizon for the Dow, the TSX and commodities across the board…this could lead to some incredible buying opportunities during the second quarter of this year, so right now our view is that cash is king…with careful planning, fortunes could be made if we are correct in our analysis…for some historical context, let’s look at other major corrections the CDNX has experienced since 2004…

2004  – 19% drop over 31 trading sessions from early April to mid-May (1890 to 1530)

2005  – 21% drop over 50 trading sessions from March to May (2025 to 1590)

2006  – 29%  drop over 22 trading sessions in May (3300 to 2350)

2007  – 29% drop over 17 trading sessions in August (3320 to 2350)

2008  – 18% drop over 12 trading sessions in January (2875 to 2350)

2010  – 21% drop over 45 trading sessions from May to July (1688 to 1343)

If you were a buyer toward the end of the six major corrections cited above, you likely made A LOT of money…the CDNX rebounded sharply after each of those corrections…excluding the extraordinary fall of 75% over the last half of 2008, which we’ve left out as it was an anomaly, the average percentage decline in the six major corrections cited above between 2004 and 2010 was 22.75% over an average duration of 29.5 trading sessions…again, as of right now, the CDNX is off 12% over nine sessions…this implies the Index likely has further to go on the downside – a 23% drop would take it down to about 1900, the November low and very close to both the 200-day and 200-week moving averages…in our worst-case scenario, the CDNX could erase nearly half the entire gains from the low of 2008 and plummet to around its 500-day moving average (SMA) to about 1650…in otherwords, this is a time to be cautious and patient for the potential to make boatloads of money later this year…over the coming days, John is going provide charts and outline support levels for the CDNX companies we follow most closely…today, John begins with Adventure Gold (AGE, TSX-V) which is currently up a nickel to 56 cents….

Quebec unveils its budget later today and we’ll be watching for any potential changes regarding mining industry policy…uranium plays should be avoided like the plague right now, given what has occurred in Japan…a terribly unfortunate but once-in-a-lifetime disaster such as that, played out now over live television and through the Internet, is going to invoke a lot of unnecessary fear and silly government decisions…it will play nicely into the agenda of certain activists around the globe…Germany has said it will shut down all seven of its nuclear power plants that began operating before 1980 (ultimately they may never re-start them)…40% of all the world’s new nuclear reactors are currently being built in China and Beijing is now signaling a slowing of that program…in the United States, there is already mounting political pressure to delay or cancel construction plans for the 20 or so nuclear reactors that were expected to be built by 2020…Hathor Exploration Limited (HAT, TSX-V) is just one of many quality uranium plays that is down sharply this week, losing nearly half its value…

March 16, 2011

BMR Morning Market Musings…

Precious metals are slightly higher today after being under strong selling pressure yesterday…as of 8:00 am Pacific, Gold is up $7 an ounce to $1,403 while Silver is 62 cents higher at $34.86…the U.S. Dollar is up slightly at 76.56 but again the greenback has not been displaying its traditional safe-haven status…U.S. housing starts posted their biggest decline in 27 years in February while building permits dropped to their lowest level on record, suggesting the beleaguered real estate sector has yet to rebound from its deepest slump in modern history…one in four U.S. mortgages are underwater…wholesale prices in the U.S. jumped last month by the most in nearly two years due to higher energy costs and the steepest rise in food prices in 36 years…excluding those volatile categories, inflation was tame…Japan’s benchmark Nikkei snapped back 5.68% overnight after two days of heavy losses…the situation in Japan, though, is grim for the short term as the country grapples with its worst crisis since World War 2…Japan’s contribution to the world economy has fallen from 18% in 1995 to 9% in 2010…in 1995, Japan’s debt-to-GDP ratio was just 90%…today, the country’s debt is almost double its economic output and the Japanese population is aging rapidly…Japan will rebound, however, and the enormous reconstruction effort should give its economy a boost later this year…scientists are still very concerned, however, about the potential for an 8.0 aftershock, another tsunami and the possibility that the massive subduction earthquake last Friday could trigger volcanic activity…Mount Fuji, about 100 kilometres southwest of Tokyo, is a potentially dangerous stratavolcano that has not erupted for over 300 years (since the last huge earthquake in Japan)…a 6.2 earthquake occurred at a depth of 10 kilometres under the SSW flank of Mount Fuji a couple of days ago…former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan says the Obama Administration’s “activism” in handling economic affairs is hampering what could otherwise be a robust recovery from the recent recession…speaking to the Council on Foreign Relations yesterday, Greenspan argued that companies sitting on stockpiles of cash are unwilling to make long-term capital investments because of increased government regulation…in addition, hundreds of billions of dollars in stimulus spending has “crowded out” private investment opportunities…it’s a situation, he said, that closely models the trends during the Great Depression…the CDNX is stronger this morning, up 59 points at 2189 after falling as low as 2054 yesterday…the CDNX will likely face stiff resistance at the 100-day moving average (SMA) of 2200, so we see the turnaround yesterday and the strength today as another potential “bear trap”…traders/investors need to be careful as a significant decline from current levels is still very possible given how the technicals broke down last week (the long-term bull market however remains intact)…having said that, there are still some opportunities in this market for savvy traders…a good example is Gold Canyon (GCU, TSX-V) which released a terrific drill result yesterday morning (7.23 g/t Au over 100.5 metres at its Springpole Project near Red Lake)…the stock fell at the open due to the carnage in the markets but rebounded during the day from a low of $1.95 to a high of $2.81 before closing at $2.70…the stock hit $3.02 this morning and is currently up 25 cents at $2.97…GCU has an attractive chart and its Springpole Project is progressing nicely, so this is certainly a company to keep an eye on…we haven’t mentioned Currie Rose Resources (CUI, TSX-V) in a while…CUI dropped as low as 13.5 cents yesterday and is up half a penny at 14  cents…the long-term chart continues to look favorable for CUI…the company is gearing up for a drill program at its Sekenke Project in northwest Tanzania…exact timing of that has not been announced but the wet season there has not been as bad as usual…CUI has very strong technical support at its rising 300-day SMA of 12.5 cents…Currie Rose had a weak start to the year but we do expect excitement to return to this play once the company resumes drilling in Tanzania as it has many quality targets to pursue…we’re also bullish on the company’s Scadding Gold Property near Sudbury which it has optioned to Trueclaim Exploration (TRM, TSX-V)…Trueclaim is in the midst of an 8,000 metre drill program at Scadding and very encouraging early results have already been reported…Richfield Ventures (RVC, TSX-V) continues to roar along…RVC hit another new all-time high this morning and is currently up 43 cents to $6.88…it has jumped 474% since we introduced it to BMR readers in December, 2009…Gold Bullion Development (GBB, TSX-V) is recovering after touching a low of 35 cents yesterday as it reached a very oversold state…GBB is up a penny to 41 cents…Manitou Gold (MTU, TSX-V) is raising at least $7 million through a combination of hard cash and flow through shares at 55 cents per unit…the stock is up a penny this morning at 66 cents…

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