Constitution of the
Bolivarian Republic
of Venezuela

Member: 
Password: 
Register Now   
Tuesday, February 09, 2010  / 4:03:44 PM

VHeadline.com remains 100% independent of all political factions in Venezuela
Mining & Resources
| More

Published: Tuesday, May 05, 2009
Bylined to: Caps.fool.com

Venezuela has the cajones to do first what many other nations will soon be doing

Caps.fool.com: This development in Venezuela is linked to the country's decision to nationalize mines like those of Crystallex (KRY). Basically, Venezuela simply has the cajones to do first what many other nations will soon be doing... nationalizing gold supply in one way or another in order to preserve the purchasing power of their reserves (especially US$ reserves).

  • We can only hope that few follow Venezuela's lead of nationalizing mines licensed to foreign corporations without due process nor due compensation, but I could see this type of Central Bank action being copied all over the world.

Most importantly, look for Russia or China to make such a move sometime this year ... declaring a quota of domestic production that must be offered to their central banks.Venezuela's central bank corners local gold production on weak dollar expectations

Venezuela more than doubled the amount of gold that local producers must offer to the central bank in a bid to increase its reserves of the metal and reduce reliance on supporting them with US dollars.  The Finance Ministry said today that 70% of gold produced in Venezuela must be sold domestically, and 60% must be offered first to the central bank, in a resolution published in the Official Gazette. The remaining 30% can be exported. Previously, 20% had to be offered to the central bank.

The resolution affects Vancouver-based Rusoro Mining, said Andre Agapov, the company's CEO. Rusoro will still have the right to sell its gold elsewhere should the central bank refuse to purchase it, he said today in a telephone interview.  "It's a political decision," he said. "Why ship it from Brazil when you could buy it from local producers?"  Agapov said that his company always sells to local buyers because the central bank hasn't ever exercised its right to purchase 20% of Rusoro's production. Buyers of the company's output pay in local currency, he said.

Rusoro plans to increase production to between 250,000 and 270,000 ounces by next year, as it brings two new mines into production in the first quarter. The company is reviewing investing in more deposits and mines in the South American country, which would be developed through joint ventures with the government, Agapov said. Rusoro aims to produce between 175,000 ounces and 195,000 ounces of gold in Venezuela this year, he said.

  • Gold futures for June delivery jumped $14, or 1.6%, to $902.20 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. That's the biggest gain for a most-active contract since April 23. The price fell 2.8% last week, the most since the first week in April.

The Venezuelan resolution may be a first step in a regional trend to rebuild government gold reserves on expectations that the US$ will weaken, said Philip Gotthelf, president of Equidex Brokerage Group in the US. "Venezuela has decided to take a lead in rebuilding government gold reserves," Gotthelf said today in a telephone interview. "If we see this as a catalyst for other emerging economies we will probably see the value of gold rise."

Read more: http://caps.fool.com/Blogs/ViewPost.aspx?bpid=190055&t=01006124249416869148

Enter Stock Symbol

Foreign Exchange Rates

Caracas Stock Exchange

Argentina

  Sao Paolo

Chile

  Mexico

Spain

  Toronto

London LSE

  France

Italy

  Germany

Israel

  Hong Kong

Korea

  Singapore

Editorial:

Roy S. Carson
Editor@VHeadline.com

Patrick J. O'Donoghue
news.editor@VHeadline.com

telephone
Caracas-VZ
(
0212) 335 7531
HOUSTON
(713) 893-1433

The Chavez Code: Cracking US Intervention
Bush Versus Chávez:
War on Venezuela
CODIGO CHAVEZ: DESCIFRANDO LA INTERVENCION DE LOS EE.UU. EN VENEZUELA
Hugo!: The Hugo Chavez Story
from Mud Hut to Perpetual Revolution
HUGO: THE HUGO CHAVEZ STORY
Alarm over Chavez ignores complexity
 Class, Conflict,
and the Chavez Phenomenon
Venezuela: Hugo Chavez and the Decline of an Exceptional Democracy
Changing Venezuela by Taking Power
 

facebook.com/vheadline -- twitter.com -- youtube.com/vheadline
spanish.vheadline.com - vheadlinevenezuelanews.blogspot - vheadlinevenezuelaenespanol.blogspot

Any opinions expressed in various VHeadline.com storyfiles across
this e-publication are the sole responsibility of the individual authors

If you find this site informative please help by clicking here  Thanks!

Now with cyber-charged Super Search
for high power researching performance


VHeadline.com remains 100% independent of all political factions in Venezuela
-- our aim is to report what's happening without submitting to lawlessness

VHeadline.net VHeadline.org VHeadline.biz VHeadline.info
VHeadlines.net VHeadlines.org VHeadlines.biz VHeadlines.info

Our editorial statement reads:
VHeadline.com Venezuela is a wholly independent e-publication promoting democracy in its fullest expression and the inalienable right of all Venezuelans to self-determination and the pursuit of sovereign independence without interference. Our stance is decidedly pro-governance (defined as being contrary to anarchy) and pro-government to the extent that we support all and any government policies aimed at consolidating and improving the living conditions and future prosperity of ALL Venezuelans, regardless of race, color or creed. We also seek to shed an international spotlight on nefarious practices and corruption which, for decades, has strangled this South American nation's development and progress. In every respect VHeadline Venezuela's declared editorial bias is most definitely pro-Constitutional, pro-Democracy and pro-VENEZUELA.
-- Roy S. Carson, Editor/Publisher Editor@VHeadline.com
VHeadline.com Venezuela is a foreign-based e-publication entirely focused on news & views from and about Venezuela in South America.  It is registered in the United States (Worth, Illinois) and hosted on dedicated servers in Vancouver (Canada) providing an active 24/7 network for Venezuelan businesses and information workers worldwide. VHeadline.com is read frequently by top decision-makers in over 142 countries -- 92.7% are based in North America while 97.63% of VHeadline.com readers are located in the commercial/ finance, high-tech sectors as well as at more than 2,360 universities, academic and research institutions around the globe.

With regularly updated news & views of Venezuela, VHeadline.com is monitored 24/7 by major global news gatherers and opinion builders!
Fair use notice of copyrighted material: This site contains some copyrighted material that in some cases has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance the understanding of politics, human rights, the economy, democracy, and social justice issues related to Venezuela. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
 
Editorial:
Editor
Roy S. Carson
News Editor
Patrick J. O'Donoghue
Caracas
(0212) 335-7531
Locations of visitors to this page
           

 
 
.
.