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From: | "David & Jill Stevenson" <djstevo@quicksilver.net.nz> |
Date: | Wed, 1 Oct 2003 12:20:41 +1200 |
At risk of accusation of long-windedness et. al.
from some quarters. But that is all healthy stuff - when viewed correctly.
The subject of early warning indicators rattles the memory as well
as one`s feelings of security somewhat.
Let us reflect upon just how
times have changed relative to how a fragile human psyche reacts and over-reacts
to events. The sharemarket, for instance. Starting with the 1960`s minerals boom
in Australia . Who followed the dizzying heights of Poseidon and Tasminex
phenomena in particular? Those were good days to cut one`s teeth in the
face of the unreal .Whether as an emergent winner or loser . In
those days a mineral prospecting license could be taken out one day. A week
later a company prospectus issued to a gullible public sustained in an
ephemeral market. All takes place on few fundamentals other than
sometimes a contrived pipe-dream. A company flotation follows
with over -generous option issue to founding shareholders.
On the first day of trading
a nervous public mingles with founding shareholders . To one side a bikey ,
apparently carelessly, drops from a back pocket an official looking document. A
timid investor picks it up when "nobody "is looking. It has all the hallmarks of
being an official Geological Assay Report following laboratory analysis of ore
samples from the prospect subject of that day`s share float - By coincidence !
In professional understatement therein it seems we have a
re-discovered King Solomon`s Mines situation. Within minutes the atmosphere
is electrified from a simply expectant mood. Imagination now rules events.
Hollywood could not match
that type of reality. As they say - truth is stranger than
fiction.
They were heady, exciting
and euphoric times. Motor-cycle gang members, who could not/ would not and later
need not / find work spent their days on the Exchange floor . They
soon adapted to the lingo and market jargon of mining technology . They were
more savvy than the conventional dealers. It was not long before they up graded
their Harley Davidsons for Rolls Royces and the latest Mercedes-Benz
.
That was illustration of
fortuitous events providing market indicators to astute observers in a long gone
era.
By contrast, let us
examine the present and the future in the light of the different times in
which we live.Terrorism is a prime factor now. Their impact is
rather greater , philisophically , as an impending rather than actual
threat ./ Either prospect is equally devastating on a nervous investing public.
The 9/11 disaster clearly was preceded by speculative buying short on the
US Exchanges . The CIA is still attempting to trace and freeze foreign bank
accounts harbouring those ill-gotten returns. Let us visualise a scenario that
just maybe the recent spate of International power breakdowns were connected and
an experimental prelude to subsequent events.Have the appropriate security
and consumer protecting watchdogs ability to read future indicators
and implement controls against market speculators acting for those terrorist
forces? There is immense potential market manipulative power in the hands of
those terrorists for as long as we allow buying short in anticipation
of events of which those terrorists have total control.
We certainly live in
uncertain times whether as investors or as participants in the very act of
living in a dangerous world. I apologise for the digression.
David S.
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