Join today and have your say! It’s FREE!

Become a member today, It's free!

We will not release or resell your information to third parties without your permission.
Please Try Again
{{ error }}
By providing my email, I consent to receiving investment related electronic messages from Stockhouse.

or

Sign In

Please Try Again
{{ error }}
Password Hint : {{passwordHint}}
Forgot Password?

or

Please Try Again {{ error }}

Send my password

SUCCESS
An email was sent with password retrieval instructions. Please go to the link in the email message to retrieve your password.

Become a member today, It's free!

We will not release or resell your information to third parties without your permission.
Quote  |  Bullboard  |  News  |  Opinion  |  Profile  |  Peers  |  Filings  |  Financials  |  Options  |  Price History  |  Ratios  |  Ownership  |  Insiders  |  Valuation

Mercator Minerals Ltd MLKKF

Mercator Minerals, Ltd. is a mineral resource company engaged in the mining, exploration, development and operation of its mineral properties in Arizona, United States and Sonora, Mexico. The Company’s principal assets are the 100% owned Mineral Park Mine, a producing copper-moly mine located near Kingman, Arizona and the El Pilar Project located in Sonora Mexico. The primary focus of the Company is the expansion of copper production and molybdenum concentrate production at the Mineral Park Mine, and the development of the El Pilar Project. Its other projects include The El Creston molybdenum property, which is 175 kilometers south of the United States Border and 145 kilometers northeast of the city of Hermosillo; Molybrook, which is located on the south coast of Newfoundland, and Ajax, which is located 13 kilometers north of Alice Arm, British Columbia.


GREY:MLKKF - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by bigguy6on Dec 07, 2010 11:06am
468 Views
Post# 17811976

Another Bullish G+M Article

Another Bullish G+M Article

Fyi…from this mornings G+M ….another very bullish copper/base metals/commodities story.

Won’t be a surprise to seasoned investors here…but for any newbie or jittery investors…folks…news flash…we’re in a bull market…and commodities are the place to be for the foreseeable future!!!

“Metal hoarders playing a dangerous game

CARL MORTISHED

Special to Globe and Mail Update
Posted on Tuesday, December 7, 2010 7:09AM EST

A mystery investor has cornered the copper (HG-FT410.9010.102.52%)market in amassing a dominant position in the metal stored in London Metal Exchange warehouses around the world. Figures from the LME suggest a single investor is holding warrants for between 50 and 80 per cent of copper stocks and on Tuesday the copper price skipped $200 per tonne higher in a market already excited by inflation worries, dollar worries and news that President Obama was preserving some tax breaks for rich people.

More related to this story

It's not entirely unheard of for a single investor to get his hands on such a large pile of warrants for physical copper stocks but it is causing jitters in a feverish commodity market. Oil is hovering around $90 per barrel, gold is at an all-time high and silver has been added to the pack of metals deemed to be good homes for nervous money. The silver price jumped above $30 per troy ounce on Monday and rose again on Tuesday as investors searched for new bolt holes from what they see as the corrupt world of fiat money. The precious metals, such as gold, silver and platinum have always been seen as safe havens but in these uncertain times there isn't enough gold to calm everyone's money neurosis and now the funds have hit upon copper.

Several banks and funds, including JP Morgan and BlackRock Asset Manangement have signalled that they plan to create exchange-traded products in physical copper. Like the gold exchange-traded products, investors will be able to buy an amount of real metal, held on their behalf in warehouses, rather than copper futures and it is the need to acquire the physical product that has roused suspicion that it is a financial institution hoarding physical metal in preparation for the launch of its ETP.

The identity of the hoarder is less important than the signs that investors are becoming obsessed with the ownership of physical assets. Copper is not normally hoarded like gold, which is a largely useless metal except for vanity. Industrial uses of gold are almost irrelevant in the supply/demand equation but copper is vital.

Copper conducts power and water to the world in wire and pipes. Demand for copper is strong; 's copper appetite expanded by 26 per cent last year and is expected to gain 13 per cent this year, according to RBS. There are no big new mine supplies expected to come on stream soon and no buffer stocks. The effect of the exchange-trade funds could be to isolate stocks of physical copper from the underlying market, says Daniel Major, an RBS metals analyst.

That is a worry. If panicky financial investors begin to hoard industrial commodities as an inflation hedge we begin to move into dangerous territory. Prices will rise, not because of bottlenecks in supply but because a base metal has suddenly acquired allure as a store of monetary value.

Would we accept an exchange-traded product in a food commodity, such as wheat or rice? Even if storage of food was not a problem, public policy might intervene to ensure stocks were available and, it could be argued, the same should apply for useful metals. Farmers respond quickly to crop shortages and price spikes with additional planting for the next season.

However, a new copper mine or offshore oil project might take a decade of plannning and investment. It is hardly surprising that 's state industries are frantically buying physical assets - mines and oil wells - in Africa, and . You cannot blame them when your pension fund is hoarding copper.”

Happy investing and GLTA longs!

Bullboard Posts