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From: | hugh webber <hugh.webber@clear.net.nz> |
Date: | Tue, 02 Dec 2003 19:35:29 +1300 |
Agree wholeheartedly with Snoopy on this. I recall reading an article a few years ago in the Economist that something like 40% of South African gold mines would have to close if gold went under $US400 an ounce. Of course it did, well under, and SA devalued the rand to hell and back and brought in even cheaper immigrant labourers from Mozambique etc. in order to keep its gold mining sector going. The Black Tulip was a great book - there's a new version coming out called The Gold Tulip aka the South Sea Bubble. Incidentally I'm reading "The Reminiscences of a Stock Operator" by Edwin LaFevre recommended by Andrew Robinson as an old classic in the Sunday Star Times a few weeks ago. Damned hard to get hold of - some ratbag has pinched the Canty Public Library one (Snoopy?) and they had to send off to Waikato Uni. Very readable, altho absolutely no appreciation of what makes stocks move in the medium to long term. He states early on that there's nothing new under the sun and his references to the no tax situation brings to mind the tax free gold nibbling in Australia referred to. Nothing new under the sun - you can be sure that the next generation of gold buffs will be enthusiastically puffing gold in 20 years time completely oblivious of any lessons to be learned from the Great Gold Crash of 2004..... ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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