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Kirkland Lake Gold Ltd. T.KL

Kirkland Lake Gold Ltd is a Canada-based gold mining, development, and exploration company with a diversified portfolio of exploration projects. The production profile of the company includes the Macassa mine complex located in northeastern Ontario and the Fosterville gold mine located in the State of Victoria, Australia. Also, the company owns the Holt mine and the Detour mine. The company's mines and material mineral projects are located in Canada and Australia.


TSX:KL - Post by User

Comment by Whistler1122on Jan 08, 2021 1:46pm
194 Views
Post# 32255316

RE:RE:RE:Something wrong in the state of..................

RE:RE:RE:Something wrong in the state of..................
BasesAreLoaded wrote:
JRafflesUK wrote: The rationality per the Kitco article below, is that 10 Year T-Bond interest rates have risen fractionally above 1%. However, the commentary also adds that rising yeilds are a harbinger of inflation - good for gold. 

https://www.kitco.com/news/2021-01-08/Metals-traders-keep-a-very-close-eye-on-U-S-Treasury-yields.html

 
A feature in the marketplace this first week of the trading year is the push higher in U.S. Treasury market yields. The benchmark 10-year note yield is presently fetching around 1.10%, after trading below the 1.0% level since late last winter. Combined with a rally to multi-month and even multi-year highs in many raw commodity futures markets recently and the U.S. dollar index this week hitting a 2.5-year low, the prospects for problematic price inflation are now very real.

Add this important element to the inflation argument: For anyone who has studied economics, it seems nearly unfathomable to think that the massive injections of liquidity into global financial systems over the past months (read that central banks printing money) cannot produce problematic inflation down the road.

Rising bond yields and commodity prices are a harbinger of that problematic inflation scenario. And remember that history reminds us that significant price inflation is bullish for hard assets, including the precious metals.
 
 

Anyone who has studied economics, which I have, knows that economists are usually wrong.


Casey

yes, its all BS, because nothing ever Ceteris Paribus!
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