April, 2009

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NORTH AMERICAN TUNGSTEN CORPORATION LTD. FILES THE FEASIBILITY STUDY TECHNICAL REPORT ON THE MACTUNG PROPERTY-YUKON, CANADA ON SEDAR

Monday, April 13th, 2009

North American Tungsten Corp. Ltd.’s National Instrument 43-101 compliant technical report on the Mactung property, Yukon, Canada, prepared for the company by Wardrop, a Tetra Tech company, dated April 3, 2009, has been filed for public access on SEDAR (see news in Stockwatch dated Feb 23, 2009).

Highlights:

– Mactung economics are positive with a 23.5-per-cent iInternal rate of return and a pretax net present value discounted at 8 per cent of $277-million; – The technical report is based on an initial 2,000 tonnes per day underground mine with an 11-year life of mine (LOM); – There is potential to expand the initial LOM with exploitation of the open pit resource; – Mactung is forecast to produce an average of 749,000 metric tonne units (MTUs) of WO3 over the first five years of operation; – The average operating cost for the first five years of operation is estimated to be CDN$104/MTU; – The estimated capital cost is $356.5 million plus a CDN$45.6 million contingency; – Capital payback is expected to be in 2.9 years.

The Mactung Project is forecast to run at 2,000 tonnes per day from an underground operation using conventional long hole plus cut and fill mining methods. An underground primary crusher and conveyor will supply ore to the surface facility where the ore will be processed into both a premium gravity concentrate (67% WO3) and a flotation concentrate (55% WO3). Recovery of WO3 is expected to average 81.7% and the mine will average 749,000 MTU’s of WO3 in concentrates during the first five years of operation.

Key parameters that form the basis of the economic evaluation of the Mactung Project are as follows:

Underground Life of Mine Production: 8.1 million tonnes of 1.09% WO3

Annual Throughput: 730,000 tpa

Recovery first 5 years: 81.7%

Average annual production first 5 years: 749,000 MTU’s

Operating cash cost first 5 years: CDN$104/MTU

Capex including contingency: CDN$ 402.1 million

APT pricing: US$300/MTU of WO3

Exchange Rate $US/$CDN: 0.88 The pre-tax net present value of the project based on an 11.0 year mine life and the base case parameters as previously indicated are as follows:

Discount Rate Pre-Tax Net Present Value

8% CDN$276.8 million

6% CDN$346.4 million 

The pre-tax internal rate of return for the project is 23.5%. Payback of invested capital is anticipated to occur in 2.9 years after commencement of production.

Crisis Altering Wall Street as Big Banks Lose Top Tale

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

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By GRAHAM BOWLEYand LOUISE STORY Published: April 11, 2009

The turning point for Stephan Jung came in February, around the time bonus checks were slashed. A veteran of UBS, one of many banks tarnished by the financial crisis, Mr. Jung realized that the old Wall Street would not be bouncing back any time soon. It was time to head for the new. Michael Appleton for The New York Times

Rick Crescenzo, formerly of Bear Stearns, works at Broadpoint. Smaller firms have been hiring hundreds from bigger banks.

Alan Zale for The New York Times

?After 10 years, I did not see a future for myself,? said Stephan Jung, who quit his job at UBS to work at Aladdin Capital.

?After 10 years, I did not see a future for myself,? said Mr. Jung, 42, who quit to parlay his sales expertise into a career at Aladdin Capital, a small but rising investment firm run by others who had also left some of the most venerable names in finance.

There is an air of exodus on Wall Street ? and not just among those being fired. As Washington cracks down on compensation and tightens regulation of banks, a brain drain is occurring at some of the biggest ones. They are some of the same banks blamed for setting off the worst downturn since the Depression.

Top bankers have been leaving Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Citigroupand others in rising numbers to join banks that do not face tighter regulation, including foreign banks, or start-up companies eager to build themselves into tomorrow?s financial powerhouses. Others are leaving because of culture clashes at merging companies, like Bank of Americaand Merrill Lynch, and still others are simply retiring early.

This is certainly a concern for the banks losing top talent. But other financial experts believe it is the beginning of a broader and necessary reshaping of Wall Street, too long dominated by a handful of major players that helped to fuel the financial crisis. The country may be better off if the banking industry is less concentrated, they say.

?If the risk-taking spreads out to these smaller institutions, it is no longer a systemic threat,? said Matthew Richardson, professor of finance at the Stern School of Business at New York University. ?And innovation is spreading out too. This is a good thing.?

In past downturns, the big firms suffered but bounced back when the economy returned to health. This time, their pain may be more lasting given the depth of the crisis and the government?s efforts to rein in Wall Street?s practices as it tries to turn around the economy, a process that may take years.

To deter the people it thinks caused the crisis, the government is clamping down.

Sensing a shifting tide, talented bankers who fear a dimmer future at banks that have taken taxpayer money are migrating to brash boutique firms like Aladdin, which are intent on proving their critics wrong by chasing fast profits and growth in hopes of one day rising up as challengers to the old guard.

The New York Times canvassed more than a dozen new boutiques and found that several hundred bankers had been snapped up since the summer of 2007 after layoffs or being lured by smaller firms like Broadpoint, Pinetum Capital and BTIG ? and bringing their accounts, trading flow and profits with them.

?We have the opportunity to step into the shoes of a Bear Stearnsor a Lehman,? said Lee Fensterstock, the chief executive of Broadpoint, a Manhattan firm that has hired more than 240 people since fall 2007, when the financial crisis started taking root. ?We would never have been able to do this five years ago, but now, it?s as if all of Wall Street got turned upside down, and they shook out all these people.?

Michael O?Hare, who used to run North American equity cash trading and sales at JPMorgan Chase, is building a new sales and trading operation at LaBranche Financial Services, an established firm that is starting a line of business that was traditionally done only within investment banks. ?We are attracting people from Merrill, from JPMorgan, from Bear,? he said. ?I?m not talking the second tier. We have the cream of the crop.?

One of the most prominent new banks, Moelis & Company, an advisory boutique that has offices in New York, Los Angeles and London, among other centers, was founded in 2007 by Ken Moelis, the former president of investment banking at UBS. Mr. Moelis has hired 100 bankers, including 17 from UBS, 9 from Bear Stearns, 3 from Morgan Stanley and 3 from Goldman Sachs.

These kinds of start-ups emerged in earlier cycles, and many remained small and inconspicuous. But some evolved into scrappy rivals. In 2006, senior bankers from Goldman and Morgan Stanley formed Perella Weinberg, a top boutique. Roger C. Altman, a former Lehman banker, created Evercore, another top performer, a decade earlier.

Today?s upstarts aim to do the same by hiring away the industry?s talent and, in some cases, trying to replicate the entire investment banking model that was largely dismantled after Lehman Brothersfell last fall.

Still others are moving to foreign competitors. According to the banks and executive recruiters, hundreds of bankers have been jumping to Deutsche Bankand Credit Suisse, neither of which took a government bailout.

They see a rare chance to upgrade talent and standing on Wall Street ? and globally ? by luring top minds who would not have considered moving from a Goldman Sachs or a Morgan Stanley in flush times. Now that their rivals must accept compensation limits and other restrictions that come with the use of taxpayer support, the foreign banks are finding more eager takers.

Over all, head counts at the 12 biggest global investment banks were cut, on average, by about a fifth in 2008, according to data compiled by Oliver Wyman, a consultancy.

Financial services companies have announced more than 400,000 layoffs in the United States in the last two years, including 148,000 in the final quarter of 2008 alone, when the financial crisis hit a zenith, said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody?s Economy.com .

For the chiefs of Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase and other United States banks that have received government money, the implications are worrisome, even though plenty of their workers have stayed put for now.

Vikram S. Panditof Citigroup and Jamie Dimonof JPMorgan, for example, say it will be harder to break away from taxpayer support if the workers most capable of steering their banks toward recovery walk away.

Of course, their new competitors have greater flexibility to attract talent with creative pay structures. With the public outcry over bonuses, some boutique firms are instead dangling hefty commission packages.

Banks paid out some $18 billion in bonuses last year, down 44 percent compared with a year earlier, and many workers viewed them as paltry payouts. Some lawmakers and members of the public expressed outrage that billions in bonuses were paid at all, and suggested that most traders and bankers were unlikely to find better jobs elsewhere, any time soon, making retention bonuses unnecessary.

Brian McGough, 36, considered himself a rebel when he left Morgan Stanley in early 2008 to help start an independent research shop, Research Edge, in New Haven, Conn. Morgan had just reported a devastating mortgage write-down, but Mr. McGough?s friends and mentors were trying to persuade him to stay, he said.

All that has changed. ?I can?t tell you how many of my former colleagues whose names used to be up in the lights are calling me asking me for jobs,? he said. A version of this article appeared in print on April 12, 2009, on page A1 of the New York edition.

Chasing the world’s top gold stock targets

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

A selection of 20 listed gold stock “top potential acquisition” targets hold 258m ounces of the stuff, valued at just USD 32.61/oz, with billions of pounds of copper, to boot. Author: Barry Sergeant Posted: Wednesday , 08 Apr 2009

JOHANNESBURG –

Recent patterns in the pricing of listed gold stocks around the world shows a firm trend where investors tend to favour potential acquisition targets, typically companies with great discoveries but lacking either the balance sheet or full access to capital required to develop appropriate mines. Depending on the potential target, valuations vary widely; 20 of the most likely targets show numbers where proven gold in the ground is valued from as little as USD 3.11/oz to USD 152.69/oz.

At the same time, major mining stocks have been relatively quiet on the acquisitions front, even over the past few months when valuations for smaller mining stocks, in particular, were often decimated. Looking back, Tier I gold digger Kinross has been among the most active; earlier this year, it spentUSD 250m buying Lobo-Marte in Chile; during 2008 Kinross completed a CAD 1.2bn merger with Aurelian, and, in 2006, completeda USD 3.1bn merger with Bema.

Newmont , also a Tier I gold stock, this year boughtfor more than USD 1bn the 33% it did not own in Australia’s Boddington gold mine, which boasts 20m ounces of proven and probable gold, and is close to start-up. During 2008, Newmont tookits stake in Gabriel up to just under 20%. During 2007, Newmont acquiredMiramar for CAD 1.5bn.

Among other major gold transactions, Tier I member Goldcorp in 2008 acquiredGold Eagle in a CAD 1.5bn transaction, and Australia’s Lihir , likewise a Tier I member, made a friendly USD 1bn acquisitionof Equigold. Kinross most recently bought a stake in beleaguered diamond stock Harry Winston , possibly indicating either that diamond stocks are an absolute bargain, or that nothing is wildly attractive in the far broader gold universe.

For investors who dream of elephant country, most of the world’s top ten gold deposits are well accounted for. Starting from the top, the Witwatersrand Basin has been mined by dozens of companies for more than a century; Muruntau (which also contains silver) is State-owned and run; then there is Grasberg (primarily copper, owned mainly by Freeport-McMoRan ), Olympic Dam(copper, BHP Billiton ), Pebble (copper, Northern Dynasty , and Anglo American ), Natalka (Polyus), Sukhoi Log (Polyus, maybe), Oyu Tolgoi(copper, Ivanhoe Mines , and Rio Tinto), Reko Diq(copper, Barrick , the world’s biggest gold stock), and Lihir .

Leaving aside complete company takeovers, only two of these assets, Pebble and Oyu Tolgoi, are readily available, so to speak, and both projects have senior miners as partners, as indicated: Northern Dynasty/Anglo American and Ivanhoe Mines/Rio Tinto. Even if the two senior miners are the only likely predators, investors believe the story; Northern Dynasty and Ivanhoe Mines both rank as among the best performing stocks in the world over the past while.

Assuming Ivanhoe Mines ends up with half of Oyu Tolgoi – something not yet settled with the Mongolian government – that would be an attributable 15.8m ounces of gold. Based on Ivanhoe’s market value of USD 2.4bn, that means that the Oyu Tolgoi gold ounces attributable to Ivanhoe Mines are valued at some USD 152.69 each. This is very high indeed; Northern Dynasty’s gigantic 47.1 m attributable ounces of gold at Pebble are valued at a mere USD 12.10/oz. Both Oyu Tolgoi and Pebble rank as primarily potential copper mines.

Compare these numbers with Western Copper, which holds 8.0mounces of gold at its Casino project in the Yukon; the deposit also holds economic copper, silver and molybdenum. While the project as a whole is more advanced than either Oyu Tolgoi and Pebble, the market values Western Copper’s gold ounces at Casino at a mere USD 3.22 each. The 3.0mounces of gold held by San Anton Resource at Mexico’s San Anton Property (Goldcorp , 34%), which hosts the near-surface Cerro del Gallo gold-silver-copper deposit, are valued by the market at USD 8.31 each, compared to USD 26.70/oz for the 6.7 m ounces of gold (some of it attributable from silver) held by Minefinders, also in Mexico. Again, the 13.8 m ounces of gold held at the Volcangold project by Andina Minerals in Chile’s Region III are valued at USD 6.56 each.

Taseko ‘s Prosperity, one of Canada’s biggest undeveloped copper-gold deposits, holds 13.3 m ounces of gold valued at USD 15.74 each, and Detour Gold ‘s property on the Abitibi greenstone belt in Ontario holds 13.2m ounces valued at USD 29.64 each; yet Osisko ‘s 8.9m ounces at its Malarctic project in Quebec scores a rating of USD 121.33/oz. Northgate holds 6.9 m ounces of gold (plus copper) at its Kemess North project in British Columbia and scores a rating of USD 46.77/oz.

Gold Reserve , which has been in something of a fray with Rusoro Mining , holds 11.8m ounces of gold at its Brisas project in Venezuela, with a value of just USD 3.11 each. Crystallex , also in Venezuela, holds a magnificent 16.9 m ounces of gold at its La Cristinasproject, valued at a very conservative USD 3.74 each. While permitting complications and delays inevitably rank high as concerns in developed countries, political and people issues often come to the fore in developing nations.

Moto Goldmines and Banro, both with significantly endowed gold projects in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, show valuations of USD 25.34/oz and USD 8.50/oz, respectively, while Greystar ‘s great 15.0 m ounce Angostura discovery in Colombia scores a valuation of USD 9.84/oz. Centamin Egypt , which is close to production in an ancient country, holds 12.3 m ounces with a relatively lofty valuation of USD 64.29/oz, yet Great BasinGold, which is also close to production in South Africa, holds 13.3m ounces valued at less than half the number for Centamin Egypt. The 5.4m ounces held by Guyana Goldfields at its Aurora project score a rating of USD 26.70/oz.

Novagold , which holds 14.7 m ounces, its 50% attributable number for Alaska’s huge Donlin Creekdeposit, shows a valuation of USD 34.91/oz. The partner at Donlin Creek is Barrick , which agreedwith Novagold as early as August 2007 to settle disputes over the property and advance it on a 50:50 basis. Over the past 12 months, Novagold’s market value collapsed from USD 1.47bn to a paltry USD 70m. The stock price has since risen by 635% from the bottom. For some rough guidance, consider that Newmont reckons that capital costs (on a 100% basis) at Boddington, which is set to produce around 1m ounces of gold a year, will total betweenUSD 2.6bn and USD 2.9bn. Striking it rich in elephant country may be one thing, but having gorilla money to build it is another thing completely.* *

SELECTED “TOP ACQUISITION” GOLD TARGETS

Stock

Value

Gold

USD/

price

USD m

ounces m*

ounce

Western Copper

CAD 0.44

26

8.0

3.22

San Anton Resource

CAD 0.29

25

3.0

8.31

Andina Minerals

CAD 1.40

91

13.8

6.56

Taseko

CAD 1.69

209

13.3

15.74

Northern Dynasty

CAD 7.61

570

47.1

12.10

Detour Gold

CAD 10.75

391

13.2

29.64

Moto Goldmines

CAD 2.83

200

7.9

25.34

Great Basin

CAD 1.44

370

13.3

27.95

Gold Reserve

CAD 0.79

37

11.8

3.11

Ivanhoe Mines

CAD 7.89

2413

15.8

152.69

Crystallex

CAD 0.27

63

16.9

3.74

Novagold

CAD 3.49

513

14.7

34.91

Centamin Egypt

CAD 0.99

791

12.3

64.29

Banro

CAD 1.89

96

11.2

8.50

Greystar

CAD 3.47

148

15.0

9.84

Gabriel

CAD 2.38

492

12.6

38.90

Osisko

CAD 5.25

1083

8.9

121.33

Guyana Goldfields

CAD 3.03

144

5.4

26.70

Minefinders

CAD 8.97

428

6.7

63.55

Northgate

CAD 1.56

323

6.9

46.77

8413

258.0

32.61

** Main project only; attributable ounces.*

*Source: market & company data, compiled by Barry Sergeant*

trade MONSTER Introduces Twitter “tradeSHARE”

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

*Becomes First Online Broker to Integrate Platform with Twitter*

CHICAGO–(BUSINESS WIRE)–trade MONSTER (http://www.trademonster.com), a next-generation online brokerdesigned by professional traders for self-directed investors, today became the first online broker to integrate Twitter, with tradeSHARE?. With one click from the trading platform, trade MONSTER customers can now post micro-blogs onto Twitter, the popular social networking site used by more than 14 million people every month.

Other firsts from trade MONSTER include being the first browser-based broker with real-time, streaming data throughout its trading platform, the first to offer customizable trading screens through a browser-based platform, the first to allow RSS feeds of market news and the first to feature one-click integrated investor education.

Wherever a trade MONSTER customer looks at a quote or potential trade, they are given the option of posting their trade information to Twitter. If they opt to do so, an editable message is automatically generated summarizing the trade within the 140-character Twitter message limit. This new Twitter functionality is present on both is real and paper trading platforms and, like all of the tools and resources available on the trade MONSTER platform, tradeSHARE is available at no cost to the customer.

?Investors love to share trading ideas with the community of their choice, but don?t want to be confined to their online broker?s internal forums and discussion boards. tradeSHARE gives investors that choice,? said Jon Najarian, co-founder of optionMONSTER and trade MONSTER (Twitter handle: @optionMONSTER). ?We are thrilled to bring our message of educated, self-directed investing into this global market dialogue that is happening on Twitter everyday.?

When looking at social networks and online communities engaging in conversation about investing, trade MONSTER analysts noted that Twitter users engage in specific conversations about current activity in the financial markets with great regularity, significantly more so than other existing online communities.

Wade Cooperman, CEO of trade MONSTER (Twitter handle: @trademonster) added, ?Twitter is a vibrant medium for the sharing of financial ideas, perceptions and achievements. We wanted our customers to have the freedom to contribute to that stream should they choose. Initial customer feedback has been fantastic and members of the Twitter community have already sent us ideas for future applications.?

This news follows the recent introduction of two major new tools which help investors gain experience without risking real capital: Trade Simulator, which gives investors the ability to see how particular trading strategies and positions behave in a live account, and paperTRADE, which lets investors test new strategies and gain experience using trade MONSTER.

*About trade MONSTER*

trade MONSTER, at www.trademonster.com, is an online broker that combines the power and flexibility of professional trading software with the convenience and reliability of a browser-based trading platform. trade MONSTER is the first browser-based broker to offer: a single-screen trading experience, RSS feeds of market news, one-click integrated investor education, customizable trading screens through a browser-based platform, and the first to integrate Twitter onto a trading platform. trade MONSTER features dynamic, customizable screens, integrated investor education, transparent commissions and high-quality, informed customer service. The company?s management team comprises former executives at Schwab, Fidelity, optionsXpress, ThinkorSwim and E*Trade, with an average 20 years of brokerage experience. Trade MONSTER is on Twitter @trademonster .

*About optionMONSTER*

Co-founded in 2006 by Jon (?DRJ?) Najarian and Pete Najarian, a pair of professional traders, financial executives, and CNBC contributors, the optionMONSTER group of companies provides tools and information intended to narrow the gap between self-directed and institutional investing. optionMONSTER’s unique perspective marries high-tech analysis of the day’s market activity to the pro trader’s insights and makes it accessible to everyone. At www.optionmonster.com, the Chicago-based company delivers news and analysis, educational resources, and subscription products in the fields of options, equity, and exchange traded funds, helping investors evaluate trading opportunities and make disciplined decisions about their portfolio. OptionMONSTER is on Twitter @optionmonster

Gold to Hit New Highs in 2009

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

Marc Davis, BNW Business News Wire

A continued global economic tsunami and the increasingly urgent scramble for an investment lifeline will combine to power gold prices ominously higher and into uncharted territory later this year. This is the consensus of opinion among the CEO?s of a dozen emerging to mid-tier gold mining companies who were recently interviewed by BNW Business Newswire.

Gold will be trading in the $1,100 to $1,500 range by year?s end, they all agreed.

However, several of these captains of industry forewarned of a cyclical summer slump to as low as $750 an ounce. Among them is David Hall, CEO of Aurizon Mines Ltd. (TSX: ARZ) (NYSE Alternext: AZK), who suggests that gold?s normal cyclical ?pullback? during summer months will probably be repeated this year. The likely continuation of a worldwide deflationary environment over the next several months will also contribute to keeping gold prices in check, Hall adds.

What nearly all of these pragmatic business leaders did agree upon was that the nearly $800 billion U.S. economic stimulus package will spark the onset of hyper inflation as early as this fall. And that will swiftly and unequivocally establish the $1,000 mark as gold?s next key support level, they say.

The one dissenting voice is Neil McMillan, CEO of Claude Resources Inc. (TSX: CRJ) (NYSE Alternext: CGR), who doesn?t believe that gold?s popularity is set to soar, along with consumer prices. Instead, he suggests that the ?implosion of debt in the system? will continue to exert deflationary pressure on the economy well into 2010.

?Gold is the ultimate form of money that people trust the most. So, its current appeal is that it represents a flight to safety for investors,? he adds. ?I think gold will still end up in the $1,200 to $1,500 range by year?s end. But it?s a fallacy that you need inflation for gold prices to perform well.?

However, gold?s future is not tied exclusively to the health of the economy. Another key value driver for gold prices is the continuation of a supply/demand imbalance, according to Bob Gallagher, CEO of New Gold Inc. (TSX: NGD) (NYSE Alternext: NGD). And his newly beefed-up company is moving aggressively to capitalize on the investment world?s glowing appetite for physical gold.

?Year-on-year gold production is decreasing globally. As gold mines age and get depleted, gold reserves are not being replaced. This situation is happening at a much greater rate than new ore bodies are being discovered and put into production?, he adds.

This scenario is a key reason why New Gold announced a $280 million merger with Western Goldfields Inc. earlier this month. Gallagher explains that the added cash flow from Western?s Mesquite gold mine will underwrite the cost of putting New Gold?s New Afton deposit in British Columbia into production. This should add a further 85,000 ounces of gold to New Gold?s expanding annual output. In the short term, the combined annual yield from the merger?s three existing mines is projected to be around 335,000 ounces in 2009.

Gallagher is gambling that there won?t be any significant retreat in gold prices this summer. He reasons that the unprecedented order of magnitude of the global economic crisis will continue to deflate stock prices this summer. He therefore doesn?t foresee any serious slackening in demand for gold, which offers a last vestige of hope for an otherwise gloomy investment public.

?Market sentiment suggests that other assets and other commodities aren?t going to perform anywhere near as well as gold. That?s why mints are struggling to keep up with the investment demand for gold,? he adds. ?So we?ll see gold continue to gain momentum and stay above $1,000 by the year?s end.?

Others CEO?s also share his optimism for bullion prices, especially since gold and silver are the only hard assets that haven?t been seriously debased by a global deflationary vortex.

They include Aurizon?s David Hall, who says that sophisticated investors are not only hoarding gold bullion; they are also increasingly betting big on emerging to mid-tier gold mining stocks. The attraction, he declares, is that gold producers ?represent a flight to quality? in the form of ?low balance sheet risk? and leveraged exposure to a rising tide market for the noble metal.

Heightened investment demand will help gold achieve an all-time high of $1,500 an ounce in 2010, he adds. Hall reasons that this will constitute the next psychologically important price threshold for the growing ranks of gold bugs who believe that the recession will continue to be painful and protracted.

Another key lever for gold prices is a likely end to the U.S. dollar?s strong rally of the past few months, according to Dale Ginn, CEO of one of North America?s fastest growing and lowest cost gold producers, San Gold Corporation (TSX.V: SGR).

?I think the U.S. dollar will weaken in response to America?s huge debt load and as a result of the Chinese and other major investors diversifying into other assets other than the greenback. Assets like oil and gold, and maybe even the Euro. All of this should help to push gold prices higher,? he adds.

?But if the U.S. dollar continues to strengthen in relation to the Canadian dollar, then San Gold gets more Canadian dollars for each ounce of gold that we sell. So we win either way.?

Indeed, Ginn believes that there are especially powerful dynamics converging to create a ?very bullish? upside for gold in the coming months with the prospect of a $1,500 an ounce milestone being reached even before the year?s end.

*Marc Davis: Managing Editor*

A veteran stock market commentator, Marc Davis experienced his “baptism of fire” in this high-stakes business as a floor trader on the frenetic Vancouver Stock Exchange in the 1980s. He left the business for a few years after the stock market crash, known as “Black Monday”, in late 1987. During this hiatus, he developed a successful career as a financial journalist. Working both in newsprint and in television, he insightfully covered the action on Wall Street, as well as the London, Tokyo and Toronto stock exchanges, and the Foreign Exchange currency markets. This includes working for the Dow Jones News Agency in London, as well as the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) in Canada.

In recent years, Marc has focused on Canada’s venture capital markets, working as a mining research analyst, a financier and as a corporate development consultant. In mid 2002, he launched SmallCapMedia to fulfill the need for an electronic media publication that insightfully and comprehensively covers up-and-coming North American small cap and micro cap equities. Also, this web site offers numerous other features, including broad-ranging commentary on oil and gold prices, as well as analysis of the events that shape equity markets and the U.S. economy. http://www.smallcapmedia.com