
I'm the natural resources analyst for
MoneyandMarkets.com, and I trot the globe to bring you the best in
gold, silver, oil, and other commodity stocks.
I'm the natural resources analyst for
MoneyandMarkets.com, and I trot the globe to bring you the best in
gold, silver, oil, and other commodity stocks.









The latest Oilwatch Monthly is out. Its track of global crude oil production is an eye-opener.

The December 2008 edition of Oilwatch Monthly can be downloaded at this weblink (PDF, 1.6 MB, 24 pp).
Finally, I want to point you to some analysis by Merrill Lynch's David Rosenberg.
He says 2009's dominant themes could include political risk,
"Beggar-thy-neighbor" policies, rising gold prices, a bearish trend in
consumer spending, and a perhaps surprisingly bullish turn in
commodities.
Other stuff I'm reading ...
Gold Rises for Ninth Day in London as Dollar Extends Decline
Gold rose for a ninth day in London, its longest winning streak in two years, as the dollar’s slide boosted the metal’s appeal as an alternative investment and physical bullion purchases increased. The precious metal gained 15 percent in the past eight days, as the dollar lost 12 percent against the euro in the same period.
The foreign nonunion auto companies located in the South have a plan to reduce wages and benefits at their factories in the United States. And to do it, they need to destroy the United Auto Workers.This Is What a Crisis Looks Like in the Balance of Payments Data
They claimed that they couldn't support the bill without specifics about how wages would be "restructured." They didn't, however, require such specificity when it came to bailing out the financial sector. Their grandstanding, and the government's generally lackluster response to the auto crisis, highlight many of the problems that have caused our current economic mess: the lack of concern about manufacturing, the privileged way our government treats the financial sector, and political support given to companies that attempt to slash worker's wages.
When one compares how the auto industry and the financial sector are being treated by Congress, the double standard is staggering. In the financial sector, employee compensation makes up a huge percentage of costs.
At Goldman Sachs, for example, employee compensation made up 71% of total operating expenses in 2007. In the auto industry, by contrast, autoworker compensation makes up less than 10% of the cost of manufacturing a car. Hundreds of billions were given to the financial-services industry with barely a question about compensation; the auto bailout, however, was sunk on this issue alone.
An internal Toyota report, leaked to the Detroit Free Press last year, reveals that the company wants to slash $300 million out of its rising labor costs by 2011. The report indicated that Toyota no longer wants to "tie [itself] so closely to the U.S. auto industry." Instead, the company intends to benchmark the prevailing manufacturing wage in the state in which a plant is located. The Free Press reported that in Kentucky, where the company is headquartered, this wage is $12.64 an hour, according to federal labor statistics, less than half Toyota's $30-an-hour wage.

A run out of all US assets and the dollar would look very different.
Obama Considers Stimulus Spending Exceeding $850 Billion to Spur RecoveryBarack Obama may ask Congress next year to approve a stimulus plan of around $850 billion, an amount that has grown as the U.S. economy sinks deeper into recession, an adviser to the president-elect said.2009 to witness global agri-commodity shortage
LONDON: Despite stronger production and falling prices for many food staples in the second half of 2008, the risk of food supply shortages remains acute in world markets. These supply shortage risks stem from reduced producer incentives – and ability - to boost food production.Reduced access to trade credit, rising costs, bio-fuel competition, and infrastructure shortages are among key factors that continue to weigh on trend growth in world agriculture supply. Inventory levels are also low relative to their long run averages, highlighting the underlying tightness in food markets at present.
Tightening and more expensive credit is limiting the ability of producers to borrow to finance seasonal inputs – notably seed and fertilizer. The costs of these inputs has increased dramatically over the past few years, with the USDA estimating that US total inflation-adjusted farm costs have increased 28.5% since 2002 (a 52% increase in nominal terms).





It's not just jobs -- retail sales collapsed in November, and other indicators are negative across the board. In case you haven't guessed, I am a reluctant supporter of the bail-out. I think letting a US car company go bankrupt in the current economic environment is like pouring gasoline on a fire. I didn't think Congress would be this stupid. After all, they don't raise a peep when Citibank got $300 billion. But some in Congress are apparently more interested in pursuing long-held ideological dreams -- like breaking unions -- than they care about this nation's well-being and health.
So is there hope? Well, if GM and Chrysler can hang on until the next Congress, sure. The final vote was 52 to 35 (12 didn't vote). Four Democrats did not vote, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid voted with Republicans (as a procedural matter). With 10 Republicans defecting, seven of whom will be around in 2009, new legislation will easily pass in January upon the arrival of at least seven new Democratic votes, unless Reid allows a filibuster. Reid is a total wimp, so car makers shouldn't hang their hopes on him suddenly growing a spine.
Meanwhile, everyone should read this Joseph Stiglitz piece. He's a Nobel-prize winning economist, and he identifies five key mistakes—under Reagan, Clinton, and Bush II — that laid the groundwork for financial apocalypse.
So what does this mean for gold? Gold is keying on the US dollar which has run into major problems over the past week.
The dollar has some final support at 83.75. If that fails, we could see the US dollar fall to 81. And that would be bullish for gold. Let's see how things develop today.
Now, how about my trip? I'll be telling my Red-Hot Global Small-Caps subscribers about it pretty soon, and I expect I'll make it my MoneyandMarkets piece for next week.


Maybe the dollar will be able to go higher, but it doesn't look good. So why is gold weaker? I talkeed to a Chicago broker about this late yesterday. He says too many speculators have been burned, and gold buyers are "on strike" until they get lower prices.
This is a good area for a bounce in the SCC, and the fundamentals for consumers continue to be dismal.


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