I cannot argue with either one of you on both your points as you are correct. I agree that both gold and Uranium stocks have not done well. Gold and silver have outdone their stocks. Uranium is an anomaly because it is not really traded on the free markets so the only way to trade is through the stocks. This is where Uranium differs as a commodity to Gold and Silver. While Gold and Silver can be purchased on the common market there is that advantage, Uranium in reality cannot though there is a kind of ETF through which one can invest in the metal . Uranium due to its nature is not worthwhile as a hedge against inflation and its use is simply as an alternative energy. However energy is a constant requirement and cannot be replaced once used. I know its an age old argument. Like oil we use it and cannot be replaced or renewed as coal cannot similarly, the difference is the Uranium deposits are not massive in comparison to the former two. Yet the fuel is more efficient and cleaner than either. As a future replacement to coal it looks likely. Hence the stocks have good potential. While presently these stocks are far below their 2007 highs, since then they provide better value than ever before because these companies have garnered bigger deposits and added good value while the price of the underlying stocks has dropped. Apart from that many of the producers have merged and overall provided a greater capacity to develop their deposits. Politics plays a major part on the down side. Fukushima type incidents do not help either. Every commodity has a bubble. Uranium deflated in 2007/2008 like many others and has not recovered significantly. However as the fundamentals become stronger it is likely that this bubble is ready to inflate. I think we will see significant upside in the coming 5 years. Its been a long time coming. Often stocks have other valuables such as MAW.TO which has gold potential, or GGG.AX which has rare earths as well as Uranium or others that have silver and Uranium. I do not advocate a pure portfolio of Uranium, hence it plays a part in the portfolio. Gold and Silver's price has been moving up significantly in the last six months, but the underlying stocks as you stated have not moved significantly, could that be because the stocks moved up far before gold or is it because investors have lost faith in the paper? While the US does not increase interest rates the price of gold going up plays right into the hands of the US government as it makes it more unavailable to private hands and effectively the same result as the law that did not allow US citizens to hold gold. Gold price moving up shows the increase in fiat currency and at the same time may also indicate the decline in confidence in holding fiat currency. going back to Uranium do countries have an alternative to uranium? Sure they do provided they ignore pollution or some radical research shows that carbon increase in the atmosphere is actually helping the planet. That would be the death of Uranium. Aside from such, it would be difficult to argue that the stocks are not worth while investing for the longer term NOW and in the future. As the price for gold increases the demand eventually will wean as it goes beyond comfort of investment especially for the generation that saw prices of 250 dollars. This may not be the case for the next generation that may grow up with the new higher prices and accept this as the norm. It is human nature we must study to understand the desire to buy or sell stocks not the commodity or the stocks.
SAGI







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