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New Gold Inc T.NGD

Alternate Symbol(s):  NGD

New Gold Inc. is a Canada-based intermediate gold mining company, which is engaged in the development and operation of mineral properties. The assets of the Company, directly or through its subsidiaries, are comprised of the Rainy River Mine in Canada (Rainy River), the New Afton Mine in Canada (New Afton), and the Cerro San Pedro Mine in Mexico (for reclamation) (Cerro San Pedro). The Company also holds approximately a 5% equity stake in Artemis Gold Inc., and other Canadian-focused investments. The Rainy River is a gold mine located in Northwestern Ontario, Canada, approximately 50 kilometers (km) northwest of Fort Frances, Ontario. The New Afton mine is located approximately 10 km west of Kamloops, approximately 350 km northeast of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The Cerro San Pedro Mine is located approximately 20 km northeast of San Luis Potosi, Cerro San Pedro, Mexico.


TSX:NGD - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Comment by drg250000on Mar 05, 2009 9:15am
336 Views
Post# 15822282

RE: Pain

RE: Pain
"This is only temporary pain for long term gain. In 2 weeks this will be back around 2.85 ! Gold will rally again soon as their is too much going for it, these blips that knock it down are just bumps in the road. Does anyone really think the US dollaar will remain strong? I certainly do not!"

Errr, a - hem. I'm reminded of the old adage, "Never let the facts get in the way of a good story!"

Yes, the value of the US$ will eventually whither due to the extraordinary expansion of the monetary base. But not until this $2.2 trillion overhang is churned through. It could take up to a year or even two for this to occur.

Enjoy,
DRG
========================================================

Europe’s banks face a $2 trillion dollar shortage

European banks face a US dollar “funding gap” of almost $2 trillion as a result of aggressive expansion around the world and may have difficulties rolling over debts, according to a report by the Bank for International Settlements.


By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Last Updated: 8:41PM GMT 04 Mar 2009

The BIS said European and British banks have relied on an“unstable” source of funding, borrowing in their local currencies to finance “long positions in US dollars”. Much of this has to be rolled over in short-term debt markets. The currency mismatch has become a potential risk for banks as the dollar continues to climb against the euro and Swiss franc, and especially sterling and Sweden’s krona.

“The build-up of large net US dollar positions exposed these banks to funding risk, or the risk that their funding positions could not be rolled over,” said the BIS.

The report, entitled “US dollar shortage in global banking”, helps explain why there has been such a frantic scramble for dollars each time the credit crisis takes a turn for the worse. Many investors have been wrong-footed by the powerful rally in the dollar against almost all currencies, except the yen.

British banks have borrowed some $800bn in sterling to make dollar investments and loans. By mid-2007 they had accumulated what amounted to a $300bn net “short position” on the US dollar. The latest BIS data up to the third quarter of 2008 shows that this exposure has been trimmed by “deleveraging” but it still largely hanging over the UK financial institutions.

Swiss banks had a funding gap of $300bn at the onset of the credit crunch, an extremely high figure relative to Swiss GDP. German banks were $300bn short, and Dutch banks were $150bn short. Belgian and French banks were neutral.

The BIS said the total “funding gap” in dollars was around $2.2trillion at the peak, when money market liabilities are included. This had fallen to around $2 trillion by the time of the Lehman Brothers collapse. The data is collected with a lag but it appears that there are still huge dollar liabilities to be covered.

Simon Derrick, currency chief at the Bank of New York Mellon, said the implications are obvious. “The global bullion of the last eight years was funded on dollar balance sheets, so the capital destruction we’re seeing leaves banks starved for dollars. Dollar is clearly going to appreciate a lot further,” he said.


https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/recession/4939796/Europes-banks-face-a-2-trillion-dollar-shortage.html
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