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Gold declarations to end year 22% down

Posted By Stabroek editor On December 20, 2014 @ 2:39 pm In Local News | No Comments

With only a few more days before the year ends, gold declaration has dropped by 22.61% compared to the same period last year.
A statement today from the Guyana Gold Board (GGB) said gold purchased by the GGB has fallen by 41.24% and revenue to the board has declined by 43.48%.
The gold sector here has been hit by falling international prices for the precious metal. This has led to a reduction of operations in gold mining areas and the departure of Brazilians who have been a key part of the sector for years.

The GGB press release follows:

The Guyana Gold Board has recorded lower levels of gold declaration for the various periods of 2014 as compared to 2013. The combined statistics of all mining operations and gold dealers’ data for 2014 have indicated that the expected levels of gold output for 2014 will not be met as was originally set at the beginning of the year. The major factor for these lower levels of declarations are as a result of the fall in the global price for the yellow metal on the world economy during this year.

Total declaration as at December 20, 2014h has decreased by 22.61% when compared to 2013, whilst gold purchased by the Guyana Gold Board (GGB) has fallen by 41.24% for the comparative periods. Dealers’ quantity of gold exported has increased by 10.16%, whilst the GGB quantity of gold exported has fallen by 40.26%. Thus, the overall quantity of gold exported for the two periods being compared are down by 22.73%. Moreover, the value of gold exported by dealers have increased by 10.86%, whilst the revenue garnered by the GGB has decreased by 43.48% during the comparative periods. The total revenue for the two comparative time periods have fallen by 23.45%.

In 2013 it was forecasted that gold might fall to $1,050 an ounce before this downturn is over. The yellow metal duly fell by a quarter in 2013, when compared to its highest level in 2011 and has made little headway in 2014, despite lots of geopolitical uncertainty. It stood at $1,198 an ounce on Friday evening. The sentiment is bearish and miners are being forced to curtail production or shelve investment plans.

Gold stocks have suffered a miserable few years, becoming a laughingstock even among contrarians. However, this despised sector’s seemingly-endless downward spiral has left gold stocks vastly undervalued relative to gold, which drives their profits. The fundamentally-absurd disconnect between gold-stock price levels and gold can’t last. And it sure looks ready to end, making 2015 the year gold stocks shine again.

In the gold-mining industry, the price of gold is the dominant driver of corporate profits by far. Mining costs are largely determined by the particular deposit being mined, and are largely fixed when any mine is designed and constructed. So gold miners’ profits are almost totally dependent on the price of gold. The higher it happens to be, the larger their margins grow since their costs generally don’t change much.

This dynamic is what has long made gold stocks attractive to investors. When the gold price rallies, the profits of gold miners rocket higher much faster. If a miner can produce gold for $900 an ounce, and sell it for $1200, its profits are $300. But, if gold merely climbs 25% higher to $1500, that same miner’s profits double to $600. This inherent profits leverage to gold makes the gold stocks really amplify gold’s moves.

Nonetheless, as in all stock-market sectors, this key fundamental relationship between earnings and stock prices can be temporarily derailed by sentiment extremes. Sometimes investors get greedy, and bid gold-stock prices up far higher than their gold-driven profits could ever support. And other times they get scared, selling so aggressively that prices fall far below their earnings-supported levels. Great fear has plagued gold stocks.

Hence, it must be emphasized that the Ministry of Natural Resources and the Environment along with its supervisory and regulatory authorities; Guyana Geology and Mines Commission and Guyana Gold Board is continuously working with all stakeholders of the gold mining industry, in particular the Guyana Gold and Diamond Miners Association, to ensure the sustainability of the sector. Specifically, some of the interventions of the Government and its agencies are as follows:
i. Duty Free Concessions for All Terrain Vehicles (ATV), Excavators, Bulldozers and other machinery, Double-Cab Pickups, Spares and Equipment
ii. Fuel Licence
iii. Mercury Free Mining Development Fund
iv. Access to Foreign Currency (USD)
v. Hinterland Infrastructure
vi. Availability of New Areas for Mining
vii. Reduction in Royalty and Property Rental Rates
viii. Work Permits
ix. Hinterland Security
x. Firearm Licences
xi. Human Resources development through the Guyana Mining School and Training Centre Inc.

Moreover, the year-on-year decline may suggest a weak market, but such comparisons are still heavily influenced by the events of last year. Longer term analysis shows a market in good health. Year-to-date volumes continue to extend the broad uptrend from the low seen in 2009. The quarterly volatility in the US dollar gold price was among the lowest levels seen over the past two decades, both a cause and effect of the benign demand environment. The lack of a clear price signal, as well as continuing to digest last year’s demand surge, caused investors to hold back from buying gold. The ongoing economic and geopolitical instability encouraged central banks to continue to seek the protection and diversification of gold. Thus, the broad themes surrounding gold supply during the first half of the year continued to play out in second half.

 

FM
Originally Posted by skeldon_man:
Originally Posted by Tola:
Originally Posted by Mitwah:
Originally Posted by JB:

Look how Guyana economy great

 

Yugi22 look cute in his blue overalls.

But the jackass gold teeth missing.

The opposition stole them and called the theft a well deserved fund raiser event.

No problem, Kwame  got yugi back covered.  

Tola
Originally Posted by Tola:
Originally Posted by skeldon_man:
Originally Posted by Tola:
Originally Posted by Mitwah:
Originally Posted by JB:

Look how Guyana economy great

 

Yugi22 look cute in his blue overalls.

But the jackass gold teeth missing.

The opposition stole them and called the theft a well deserved fund raiser event.

No problem, Kwame  got yugi back covered.  

It's funny that you guys have a GPS on Kwamee's back and can trace his every move. Is there a hidden reason for this..jealousy perhaps???

FM

These projects have set Guyana backwards

DECEMBER 21, 2014 | BY  | FILED UNDER FEATURES / COLUMNISTSPEEPING TOM 

The PPP has a point. The opposition has setback the development of the country by about five years by their obstructionist policies.
The opposition parties have nixed important developmental initiatives being undertaken by the PPP as part of its modernization drive. The first of these is the Amaila Falls Hydroelectric Project. The investors walked after they were not assured of opposition support. The political risk was too great and so the investors issued an ultimatum: either all parties were on board or they would walk. APNU was concerned about the financial architecture and the AFC was waiting on some IDB report. In the end, the investors walked.
The second is the extension of theTimehri Airport. The opposition is not convinced about this project. Many others are also not convinced that we should be going this route.
The PPP will argue that time and the world will not wait for them, and therefore the loss of time in relation to these projects would have seriously hurt Guyana’s developmental prospects. The government will also point to budget cuts and non-approval by the opposition parties as a method used to frustrate the government’s development plans. The government has a point.
But if you examine the Jagdeo regime closely, if you go beyond the appearances, you will discover that the deals that were made under that administration have set Guyana back far more than the opposition’s antics during the 10th Parliament.


The largest public investment made in Guyana was the Skeldon Sugar Factory.  This was supposed to be the investment that would have saved the sugar industry. It was supposed to concentrate sugar production at Skeldon and reduce the cost of production. The factory is still limping along. It has encountered major mechanical defects. Fixing it seems something like high science, because it is taking a very long time to fix these defects. And of course the fixing is costing the corporation a fortune.


The taxpayers of this country are now burdened with a colossal debt because of the construction of this factory, which is not helping Guysuco’s competitiveness. This translates to a wasted investment and one that has now saddled future generations of Guyana with an onerous debt burden. That failed investment alone has put the county back fifteen years and has permanently harmed the viability of the sugar industry.


Another factory was built along the East Coast to package sugar for export. At one stage it was being suggested that there was not enough sugar to keep the factory running. This was another massive investment and has set Guyana back because of its underperformance.
There were concerns over the cost of this project. This newspaper even offered to pay for someone to undertake an audit of the cost of the factory. The offer was predictably refused by the government.

 

Then there was the road contract to Amaila that was handed to someone with no known experience in even building such roads. The man was given a fifteen million US-dollar contract and then let go. The final cost of the project is now expected to exceed three times that price. This is money that could have been deployed otherwise to benefit the Guyanese people.
Guyana is building the road with no prospects that the hydroelectric plant will materialize. And now that oil prices have dipped, it is doubtful whether Guyana can even go ahead with the original terms. So what happens to the road built with taxpayers’ monies?


The Marriott Hotel is another project in which billions of taxpayers’ dollars have been pumped. Many knowledgeable persons are predicting that this hotel will become a white elephant. In fact, this hotel is now almost complete, but the equity investors are not yet on board. This must be the first of its kind in the world.
All of these plans made under the Jagdeo regime have set Guyana backwards. Far more than anything the opposition has done in the National Assembly.

FM

 



ANOTHER SKELDON FACTORY AND SUPERNAAM STELLING

 

When you get a lil boy to do a man's job, the Guyanese taxpayers suffers the consequences.

 

Ramotar and his Jagdeo gang must go... 





Salvaging fibre-optic cable would be costly exercise, experts say

Salvaging fibre-optic cable would be costly exercise, experts say

– complete honesty necessary

Salvaging the multi-billion dollar fibre-optic cable project will be costly and will require government to be frank about key attributes of the project which may in turn expose poor decision-making .

Tola
Last edited by Tola
Originally Posted by JB:

These projects have set Guyana backwards

DECEMBER 21, 2014 | BY  | FILED UNDER FEATURES / COLUMNISTSPEEPING TOM 

The PPP has a point. The opposition has setback the development of the country by about five years by their obstructionist policies.
The opposition parties have nixed important developmental initiatives being undertaken by the PPP as part of its modernization drive. The first of these is the Amaila Falls Hydroelectric Project. The investors walked after they were not assured of opposition support. The political risk was too great and so the investors issued an ultimatum: either all parties were on board or they would walk. APNU was concerned about the financial architecture and the AFC was waiting on some IDB report. In the end, the investors walked.
The second is the extension of theTimehri Airport. The opposition is not convinced about this project. Many others are also not convinced that we should be going this route.
The PPP will argue that time and the world will not wait for them, and therefore the loss of time in relation to these projects would have seriously hurt Guyana’s developmental prospects. The government will also point to budget cuts and non-approval by the opposition parties as a method used to frustrate the government’s development plans. The government has a point.
But if you examine the Jagdeo regime closely, if you go beyond the appearances, you will discover that the deals that were made under that administration have set Guyana back far more than the opposition’s antics during the 10th Parliament.


The largest public investment made in Guyana was the Skeldon Sugar Factory.  This was supposed to be the investment that would have saved the sugar industry. It was supposed to concentrate sugar production at Skeldon and reduce the cost of production. The factory is still limping along. It has encountered major mechanical defects. Fixing it seems something like high science, because it is taking a very long time to fix these defects. And of course the fixing is costing the corporation a fortune.


The taxpayers of this country are now burdened with a colossal debt because of the construction of this factory, which is not helping Guysuco’s competitiveness. This translates to a wasted investment and one that has now saddled future generations of Guyana with an onerous debt burden. That failed investment alone has put the county back fifteen years and has permanently harmed the viability of the sugar industry.


Another factory was built along the East Coast to package sugar for export. At one stage it was being suggested that there was not enough sugar to keep the factory running. This was another massive investment and has set Guyana back because of its underperformance.
There were concerns over the cost of this project. This newspaper even offered to pay for someone to undertake an audit of the cost of the factory. The offer was predictably refused by the government.

 

Then there was the road contract to Amaila that was handed to someone with no known experience in even building such roads. The man was given a fifteen million US-dollar contract and then let go. The final cost of the project is now expected to exceed three times that price. This is money that could have been deployed otherwise to benefit the Guyanese people.
Guyana is building the road with no prospects that the hydroelectric plant will materialize. And now that oil prices have dipped, it is doubtful whether Guyana can even go ahead with the original terms. So what happens to the road built with taxpayers’ monies?


The Marriott Hotel is another project in which billions of taxpayers’ dollars have been pumped. Many knowledgeable persons are predicting that this hotel will become a white elephant. In fact, this hotel is now almost complete, but the equity investors are not yet on board. This must be the first of its kind in the world.
All of these plans made under the Jagdeo regime have set Guyana backwards. Far more than anything the opposition has done in the National Assembly.

BAR-RAT will use it to keep his gay party,special invitees yugi,nehru,skeltoman,billy ram goat conman demguy 

FM

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