
AMERICAN ADVISOR NEWSLETTERS
Goldline's newsletter, American Advisor, provides timely
information about our economy, precious metals and rare coins. You can read select excerpts from our current issue below.
There's no reason to miss a single issue. You can purchase a subscription by speaking with an account executive at 1-877-376-2646.

Debt Crisis Could Significantly Extend Gold's Bull Market
By Philip Klapwijk
Executive Chairman, GFMS
Gold's excellent performance in recent months owes a great deal to the sovereign debt crisis now raging in Europe. Once again it has been demonstrated how quickly highly rated paper assets can be downgraded to "junk". In contrast, the yellow metal's status as the ultimate safe haven has been bolstered. As will be explained below, there is a good chance that over time the sovereign debt crisis could widen...
Deficit Spending: Where the Cure is Worse Than the Disease
By Goldline
The federal government's response to "The Great Recession" has been largely in the form of massive government spending. The United States spent about $787 billion on economic stimulus programs plus another $700 billion allocated to the Troubled Asset Relief Program ("TARP") bailout, some of which has since been repaid. Our current national debt as of early June is a record $13 trillion dollars...
The Decline of the Dollar?
By Philip Klapwijk
Executive Chairman, GFMS
Over the last month the U.S. dollar has made a new record low on a trade-weighted basis against other currencies. As we will show, this is just the most recent phase in a long-run, secular decline. Although this fall has been punctuated by periods of strength, such as from 1981-85, the evidence is clear that the American currency has tended to weaken over the last forty years. Our contention is further weakness is probable in the future, even though this will be interrupted by occasional "bear market rallies" as we have seen in the past.
Economic Recovery: Fasten Your Seatbelts, It's Going to be a Bumpy Ride
By Robert J. Fazio
President, Goldline
On September 15, 2009, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke announced that the recession was over and we are "technically" in a recovery. If that news surprises you, you're not alone. By nearly all indications, our economy continues to flounder and will likely to do so for the near future.
Are You a Gold Bug?
By Mark Albarian
Executive Chairman, Goldline
For years, analysts and experts such as Jim Sinclair, Richard Russell, the Aden Sisters, and Peter Schiff have been cautioning investors about our economy and advocating that people diversify with gold. And for years, such experts were often marginalized by conventional pundits and the media as "gold bugs" whose opinions were unworthy of serious consideration.
There's no reason to miss a single issue. Get a FREE 1-year subscription by clicking here. Some limitations may apply. You can also purchase a subscription online by clicking here.

- S&P Capital IQ - Gold: $1,900 (in 2012) "Leo Larkin, metals and mining analyst at S&P Capital IQ, thinks that $1,900 gold might not be that much of a stretch [in 2012]. 'Gold has been ..."
- Citigroup - Gold: $2,300 - $2,400 (by end of 2012) "While we remain cautious on Gold in the near term...we continue to believe that the bull market remains intact...we believe that 2012 may be..."
- Leeb Capital Management - Gold: $2,500 - $3,000 (in 2012) "I'll give you my target for gold at the end of 2012, it's going to be trading somewhere between $2,500 and $3,000. This..."
- Global Hunter Securities - Gold: $1,800 (in 2012) "'What I am looking for is a gold price of $1,800 an ounce in 2012,' says Jeffrey Wright, senior research analyst at Global Hunter..."
- US Global Investors - Gold: $3,600 (by 2017) "'People get so caught up with the next three minutes for gold and they should really be focused on the next three years,' says Frank Holmes, ..."
- Goldman Sachs - Gold: over $1,900 (in 2012) "Wall Street investment bank Goldman Sachs predicts that gold's bull run will continue into 2012 with a low interest rate environment and..."
- CNBC - Gold: $2,400 (no period given) "Gold will top $2,400 an ounce. The long-term bull market in gold marches on. Gold won't make a straight shot to a new inflation-adjusted high. As long..."
- Nomura - Gold: $2,000 (by end of 2012) "Nomura has raised its forecast for gold prices to $2,000 an ounce by the end of 2012, from $1,800 earlier. The brokerage said the low-interest rate..."
- Morgan Stanley - Gold: $2,200 (in first half of 2012) "Gold will lead a rally in commodities in 2012 as Europe's sovereign-debt crisis continues to roil financial markets, spurring demand for ..."
- UBS - Gold: $2,050 average in 2012 "[Gold] remains one of the top commodity picks for 2012 as 'most of the factors that pushed gold higher in 2011 are not going away,' according to UBS..."
- Bank of America Merrill Lynch - Gold: $2,150 - $2,200 (average in 2012) "From a technical perspective we believe that the bull trend for gold remains intact… with gold having not yet met any of..."
- TheStreet.com - Gold: $2,500 (by May 2013) "I want to own gold here. I think gold is going to $2,500 eighteen months from now... Gold has been up for ten straight years and this going to be the..."


