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Four Real Asset Picks From Byron King!

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Well, Byron King did it for you. Let?s look at getting ahead in our investments with “real th

Well, Byron King did it for you. Let’s look at getting ahead in our investments with “real things.” [The Rude Awakening] August 22, 2023 [WEBSITE]( | [UNSUBSCRIBE]( Four Real Asset Picks From Byron King! - Let’s preserve our wealth with hard, tangible assets. - Byron talks about plays in the most crucial base metal of all. - Read down to the bottom to see which four companies Byron likes. [External Advertisement] [Better Than Dividend Stocks?]( Quick warning: you’re running out of time to watch Jim Rickards private interview before it’s taken offline.. [Click here or the play button below to watch it right now.]( [Click here to learn more]( The best way to earn monthly income is NOT a stock, bond or option... Rather, it's [this little-known alternative investment](. [CLICK HERE TO FIND OUT MORE]( [Click Here To Learn More]( [Sean Ring] SEAN RING Happy Tuesday! I never let a chance to showcase Byron King’s excellent work in the Rude go by. He’s the best in the business when it comes to metals and mining. And I love to read his incredibly informative stuff, not just for the picks and advice but for his excellent storytelling ability. Have fun with this one, and see if one of these plays works for you. All the best, [Sean Ring] Sean Ring Editor, Rude Awakening Twitter: [@seaniechaos]( [CURRENCY WARS ALERT]( With Putin invading Ukraine…Rising tensions with China… Inflation, recession, supply chain issues, and the potential for greater violence is breaking out all over the world. It seems as if some of my worst fears have finally come true. [That’s why I’ve recorded this message from Pentagon City.]( To tell you exactly what you need to do to prepare for what comes next. Because if history is any indicator, soon…and I mean very soon… This war is not going to end well. [Click here to view my urgent message from Pentagon City.]( [Click Here To Learn More]( [Byron King] BYRON KING In this article, we’ll discuss mining, metals, and how to use hard assets – aka “real things” – to preserve wealth in a fast-changing world where the dollar's value is shrinking. But first, I want to tell you what happened in the Minneapolis airport as I passed through on a flight from Vancouver during the return leg of a trip to Canada. “Nobody Goes to Eritrea.” I stopped at a newsstand to buy… yes… a newspaper. The checkout clerk was a not-quite middle-aged woman, dark-complected. She wore a name tag that said “Kotb.” She was friendly and very courteous. On my end, I like to reinforce habits of friendliness and courtesy. So, to make conversation, I said, “Kotb, that’s a nice name. In Arabic, doesn’t it mean something like straight and pure, like the northern direction of the pole star?” She smiled and said, “Yes, not too many people know that. Have you been to the Middle East? I am from Eritrea.” To which I replied, “I’ve spent some time over there. In fact, I’ve actually been to Eritrea.” At this point, Kotb looked at me skeptically, tilted her head back, and said, “No. Nobody goes to Eritrea.” And I said, “Oh yeah? I have my passport, and I can show you a visa, issued by no less than the Eritrean embassy in Washington.” At this point, I reached into a pocket and pulled out the documentation. Kotb looked at the visa, with its fancy writing and decorative printing, then looked at me and said, “Oh, you must be in the mining business. Because nobody else ever goes to Eritrea.” I suspect that Kotb was correct. Few outsiders travel to Eritrea, certainly not many Westerners, because the place is not exactly on the tourist circuit. Nor is traveling to Eritrea convenient. Indeed, just to get to the capital city of Asmara, I had to fly out of Doha, Qatar, then track southwest over Saudi Arabia and the Red Sea. [Qatar Airways en route map of flight to Asmara, Eritrea.] BWK photo. And as I mentioned above, and still, as far as I know, you need a hard-to-get visa to enter Eritrea, which typically requires a sponsor, such as a mining company, to vouch for you. A Long Wait and the Struggle for Prosperity Eritrea is an ancient land. Anthropologists have discovered humanoid remains there, which date back about a million years. More recently, it was an Italian colony from the 1870s onwards. In the leadup to World War II, it served as the staging point for Mussolini’s invasion of Ethiopia in 1935. The British army wrecked much of the country during the war. This wreckage included a key east-west railway from the Red Sea coast to the country’s interior, an artery of commerce almost crossing the Sudan border. Postwar, Eritrea was unwillingly (if not forcibly) annexed to Ethiopia. Sad to say, the southern neighbor behaved like an overbearing, exploitative colonial master rather than a cooperative partner in a national federation. Before long, Ethiopian corruption and misgovernance led to Eritrean resistance, which transformed into a festering war from the 1960s to the 1990s. Among other things, the long conflict left armored relics littered across the landscape. [Wrecked Ethiopian tank from the days of war. BWK photo] Wrecked Ethiopian tank from the days of war. BWK photo Even today, Eritrea still has not resolved its border disputes with Ethiopia. While overall, the nation remains quite poor, although it hosts several mining ventures; I visited two projects while I was there. And as is the case with many emerging and developing countries across the globe, the political and economic struggle continues. When the West Doesn’t Hear You, Turn East. Right now, it’s fair to say that the struggle of Eritrea, and many other countries in similar straits, has distilled into a potent collective, geopolitical movement that affects us all, or will in the near- term, meaning probably this year. Along these lines, recall what’s happening with the BRICS nations; Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, which Jim described in a deep-dive discussion in the June issue of Strategic Intelligence. This organization will meet in South Africa towards the end of August, and it’s more than clear that we should expect important developments. Among anticipated outcomes, we’ll likely see a move to expand BRICS membership to include many more nations. These countries will join BRICS and add significant numbers of people, land areas, natural resources, geographic positions, economic outputs, and much else. For example, expect Saudi Arabia, one of the world’s three largest oil-producing nations, to become a formal member of BRICS. So, at the very least, BRICS will become larger and, in all ways, a more significant player in the world scene. Then there’s the issue of a BRICS currency unit, a means for nations and trading blocs to untether from the shackles of the U.S. dollar, the euro, and/or British pound. Likely, this won’t be an instant development. Don’t expect to see an overnight, competing, gold-backed unit of money. But we can expect to see the outlines of a future mechanism for world trade to evolve away from the use of Western currency, let alone Western banks or bankers. With this in mind, consider what the president of Eritrea, Isaias Afwerki, recently said at a major conference in St. Petersburg, Russia, before a gathering of almost all heads of state from the African continent: The West (meaning the U.S. and European Union) “is printing money. They are not manufacturing anything at all; it is all about printing money. And this is one of their weapons. The global monetary system is controlled by the dollar, and the euro is being used. They are introducing sanctions and freezing accounts – these are their tools. This is not going to continue indefinitely. We need a new financial architecture, globally, one that is not controlled by the euro, the dollar, or other currencies.” This commentary reflects a school of thought that’s quite common across the emerging and developing world. That is, many people and governments want a “new financial architecture.” In this sense, it’s fair to say that Mr. Afwerki is not alone in his anti-Western sentiments, particularly as they pertain to dollar or euro hegemony, because the leaders of many other nations have expressed similar views. And consider the evident disdain in Afwerki’s comment about how the West is “not manufacturing anything at all.” Well, that’s inaccurate because the West manufactures quite a bit of almost everything, and many of those goods include high levels of technology. I mean, aerospace, computers, and medical devices speak for themselves. But the man’s comments reflect a sense of long-term political and social frustration within developing nations; that is, of their appeals to the West that rebound and create a sense of not being heard, or worse, ignored, exploited, and disrespected. The raw history is that for the entire postwar period (meaning the Second World War, which ended in 1945), most emerging nations have been a source of energy, minerals, and commodity agricultural products for the developed world and not much else unless they also served as tourist destinations. And guess what? These long-suffering, post-colonial emerging nations know it and are now in a position to do something about it. The Looming Reboot of Cultural and Political Forces All in all, the world is on the cusp of a reboot – a realignment, one might say – of cultural and political-economic forces. The current ossified global situation, all tied together with Western currency and banking, is about to change in a big way, and BRICS will serve, in a metaphorical sense, as a geopolitical icebreaker. That is, the new, expanded BRICS entity will clear a path for its members and the rest of the world to move up the development ladder. Think of the possible future of Africa, with a large whack of South and Central America as well. Or look at it this way. In the past, when underdeveloped nations produced something – minerals, energy products, agriculture goods, or some other commodity-type item – the output was always priced in dollars, usually with the number set on one or another exchange in London, New York, or other Western venues. And the producing nation could take it or leave it. But with the new BRICS approach to international trade and using that organization’s version of a currency unit, many goods produced in a developing nation will find price levels that are far more independent of Western manipulation. That’s the idea, anyhow. Meanwhile, with a BRICS unit in effect to facilitate trade, more and more of present-day world commerce will not require dollars to set prices, let alone to buy or sell stuff. And many dollars that are currently overseas, serving as the underlying means for transactions, will migrate back to the U.S., where those Federal Reserve units will contribute to domestic monetary inflation. In other words, what happens overseas won’t stay overseas. Because for over fifty years, the U.S. has routinely exported to the world the consequences of its inflationary domestic monetary policies. Now we – that is, we in the U.S. and related economies – are about to confront a major reversal in monetary fortunes. So, stand by for a breakout in persistent inflation. How to Remain Ahead of the BRICS Developments and Inflation Okay, inflation is coming. What’s your plan? Cash in the bank is always nice because you want to be able to pay the bills (and taxes, alas). But inflation will rob cash of purchasing power over time, and it’s just a question of how much you’ll lose every year. So, cash is a short-term salve, although having some feels good. Other standbys include real estate, but the adage of “location-location-location” is critical. And what happens to the price mechanism of, for instance, U.S. land when the dollar inflates? What does “value” even mean when that happens, certainly when it comes to buying or selling? And don’t forget about other “real” things, like tools, machines, and spare parts that may become quite valuable as global trade patterns shift, and some items become hard to find, if not unavailable in a transformed economy. This brings us back to hard assets like energy, precious metals, and related base metals critical to keeping the world running. Let’s Talk About Copper I’ll round this out by discussing a more base-metal idea, mostly involving copper. I say “mostly involving copper” because most copper deposits are poly-metallic; that is, there’s copper, plus (not uncommonly) associated amounts of gold, silver, and perhaps lead, zinc, molybdenum, and other elements. It all depends on geology and geochemistry. Copper has strong days ahead for all manner of reasons. Up front, I’ll say that sure, if there’s a near-term recession then the economy will slack off, and copper prices will fall; but on the other side of that, there’s exploding demand, coupled with absolutely baked-in future shortages and higher prices. At the basic level, consider one thing: about three billion (billion with a “b”) people worldwide have access to no or minimal electric power. [Eritrean town and market square; not a power line or light bulb in sight. BWK photo. ] Eritrean town and market square; not a power line or light bulb in sight. BWK photo. Almost all of these souls live in developing lands like Eritrea (see above) or other similarly unprivileged locales across the globe. And just to string a few simple wires and light bulbs to these fellow earthlings will require immense volumes of copper. Indeed, and ironically, many places on earth with little or no electric power also happen to be areas where mining or other resource exploitation removes valuable products that ship out to the distant, developed world. So, you can get a feel for the resentment we see in the comments of future BRICS members. Meanwhile, the rest of the world is also on a development fast track, with everything you see in the YouTube videos, such as massive high rises popping up across China and sprawling urban landscapes from Mexico City to Lagos, Nigeria. And then throw in the developed world, with its focus on becoming “green” by taking gasoline cars off the roads and replacing them with electric vehicles (EVs). (And don’t fret; for every barrel of oil that the West doesn’t burn in its future car fleet, the developing world will find a use.) Along the foregoing lines, one figure I like is that your internal combustion vehicle has about 50 pounds of copper in it, give or take; it’s used in the alternator, wiring, etc. But add it all up, and it’s about 50 pounds. Now, take an EV apart, weigh everything, and get about 250 pounds of copper. This is for the traction motors, batteries, wiring, and everything else. An EV uses about five times as much copper as an old gasoline burner. And multiply that by tens of millions in terms of the projected output of new EV cars by the global auto industry in the years ahead. Right away, you can see that the world needs lots more copper and that copper miners have many good years ahead; well, many good years as long as they have access to copper resources and can mine ores, smelt them, and refine metal. And on this last point, you want companies with low levels of political risk. Opportunities In The Copper Space I should also note that the market has been bidding up the share price for strong copper companies. So even now, the charts are on the high side. But I believe there’s more upside ahead in the years to come. We’re early in this part of the copper cycle. You’re probably familiar with the names of a couple of the biggest big guys in copper. For example, there’s Rio Tinto Group (NYSE: RIO). At over $100 billion market cap, it’s global and diversified. It produces copper and many other metals, materials, and related products. Rio has a deep bench of technical talent and access to capital for operations and expansion. Then there’s Freeport McMoran (NYSE: FCX). This one is large at about $65 billion market cap. And it’s global, with many mines and various metals coming out of the facilities. Plus, many great people and access to capital. If you want a smaller company, look at Toronto-based Lundin Mining (OTC: LUNMF), with a market cap of about $7 billion. It has projects worldwide, in North and South America and Europe. It’s well run, with a substantial upside from a lower capitalization level. Finally, I’ll mention an advanced-stage developer that works in the copper space and is pioneering new technology in exploration and production, namely Ivanhoe Electric, Inc. (NYSE: IE). The market cap is about $1.6 billion, with a stellar list of projects in some of the best copper districts in the U.S. I won’t go deep into details, but this one is a rising star. Note that these ideas are not “official” recommendations. But I do follow the companies. If you buy, use limit orders. Always take advantage of down days in the market. And never chase momentum. As we confront a fast-changing global economy, remember that “real things’ continue to make the world go round. And copper demand will play a significant role in both the developed and underdeveloped nations of the world. The days of “Nobody goes to Eritrea” are ending. That’s all for now… Thank you for subscribing and reading. Best wishes… [Byron W. King] Byron W. King In Case You Missed It… There’s Only One Market Story [Sean Ring] SEAN RING Good morning on this fine Monday morning from Amsterdam. By the time you read this, I’ll be either on the train to Brussels or in Brussels already. It’s the final stop on our Family Grand Tour. It’s been a hoot so far. Thank you for indulging me. The Rude has become almost a travelogue over the past three weeks. But today, I want to return to the markets because I’ve had a cool five minutes to look at the charts. Let me show you what I see. The USD is Still The Story First, this simple truth: If it takes more USDs to buy something, the price increases. (Notice I didn’t say “value.”) That is, if the dollar weakens, you need more of them to buy anything that’s priced in dollars. That could be stocks, bonds, commodities… anything priced in USD. My friend and colleague Alan Knuckman has been a dollar bear for a while. That’s also the reason he was so stock market bullish. You’d need more weakened dollars to buy stocks. Sitting in Europe, where German deindustrialization is occurring, I couldn’t be more dollar bullish. The euro, which accounts for 57% of the dollar index basket, is utter crap. But what does the market think? Here’s the daily chart of the dollar index: [USD] Let’s zoom out to the weekly charts: [USD chart #2] From the weekly charts, this latest upswing could be yet another sucker’s rally, the third in the last year. And each successive peak has been slightly lower than the last. So there’s a possibility that we may be heading down again soon. We can’t discount that. What’s one of the main drivers of a dollar rally? Rates. Let’s look at them next. Rates Are Going Up? If we look at the CME FedWatch Tool, the markets are not pricing in a hike [Rates going up?] According to the Fed Funds futures contract, the market currently assesses the risk of a 25 bp hike at 11%. The thing is, this is only the short end of the curve. Here’s the ten-year yield: [USD10yr] And here’s the 30-year yield: [USD30yr] Both the 10Y and 30Y have nearly broken out past their most recent highs of 2022. And that means even if the short-end (Fed funds) isn’t tacking upward, the long-end seems to be heading up. That’s usually known as a bearish steepener. And it means that inflation expectations are increasing rather than decreasing. Not great. Why “bearish?” Because this kind of move is usually bearish for the stock market. The big question is, “Has Chairman Pow lost control of the curve?” [America no longer a superpower because of Biden?]( [James Altucher]( [Ever heard of America’s “Doomsday Deal”?]( It’s a deal so vital to our country’s wealth and security… Every President for 50 years has defended it at all costs. Until Calamity Joe Biden. Biden broke the deal. And I now predict… The America we love is doomed. And the biggest wealth transfer in US history is now underway. [>>See the truth about Biden’s terrible mistake HERE<<]( [Click Here To Learn More]( Equities Will (Probably) Head Down From a daily perspective, the SPX looks weak, but not terminally so. [Equities Will (Probably) Head Down] Last week was an up week, but it started far below the prior week’s close. We’re well below the 50-day moving average but well above the 200-day moving average. If we get below the prior low of 4,340 from June, the SPX may need the 200-day MA as support. Tech stocks look slightly worse, as they’ve broken through their prior June low of 13,320 already: [Tech stocks ] But what does increasing long-end rates mean for commodities? Commodities Will (Probably) Head Down Gold has had a terrible August: [Gold] It’s been pretty much straight down since August 1st, shaving almost 100 points. Silver has been awful, as well: [Silver] The same goes for copper: [Copper] Oil has been hit as well: [Oil] As has natural gas: [natural gas] For the latter two of oil and gas, it’s not been that hot where I am. I never have the AC on at night, and that’s part of the reason prices have fallen. But another reason, which affects all commodities, is carrying costs. If rates are increasing, it’s more expensive to own commodities. As commodities don’t produce dividends, carrying costs play a large role in how they’re priced. The question is this: how much are you willing to forego to own a commodity? When rates are at zero, you’re not giving up much. But when rates are at 5-6%, you’re giving up a load of yield to hold on to them. It looks like many investors have bailed on commodities for now. Wrap Up So there you have it. Chairman Pow may (or, likelier, may not) raise rates this coming September Fed meeting. But the long end of the curve has taken on a life of its own. If he’s gotten behind the curve, we may have some big, big problems down the road. The long end is the part of the curve we use to price assets like stocks, bonds, and commodities. Increasing rates means we’re discounting those cash flows at a higher rate. And that drags down asset prices. The opportunity cost of holding commodities is much higher than a year and a half ago. This is the part of the presidential cycle where the market flattens out. So I won’t call “panic stations” yet, as we need more evidence. But we’re probably going to have a bumpy next couple of months. Prepare accordingly. Have a great week ahead. All the best, [Sean Ring] Sean Ring Editor, Rude Awakening Twitter: [@seaniechaos]( [Paradigm]( ☰ ⊗ [ARCHIVE]( [ABOUT]( [Contact Us]( © 2023 Paradigm Press, LLC. 808 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202. By submitting your email address, you consent to Paradigm Press, LLC. delivering daily email issues and advertisements. To end your Rude Awakening e-mail subscription and associated external offers sent from Rude Awakening, feel free to [click here.]( Please note: the mailbox associated with this email address is not monitored, so do not reply to this message. We welcome comments or suggestions at feedback@rudeawakening.info. This address is for feedback only. For questions about your account or to speak with customer service, [contact us here]( or call (844)-731-0984. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized financial advice. We allow the editors of our publications to recommend securities that they own themselves. However, our policy prohibits editors from exiting a personal trade while the recommendation to subscribers is open. In no circumstance may an editor sell a security before subscribers have a fair opportunity to exit. The length of time an editor must wait after subscribers have been advised to exit a play depends on the type of publication. All other employees and agents must wait 24 hours after on-line publication or 72 hours after the mailing of a printed-only publication prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended in this letter should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. Rude Awakening is committed to protecting and respecting your privacy. We do not rent or share your email address. Please read our [Privacy Statement.]( If you are having trouble receiving your Rude Awakening subscription, you can ensure its arrival in your mailbox by [whitelisting Rude Awakening.](

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