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The Buy of the Century
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud

November 27, 2006

Few people have noticed…

But the bull market in gold is back in full swing. As I write, the price of gold is at $638, roughly 10% away from highs reached this summer.

While some have noticed this, absolutely nobody has noticed the complete detonation of rare gold coin prices this year. While the price of gold is near its highs, coins have gotten crushed - creating what I believe is the buy of the century in pre-1933 graded U.S. gold coins.

Take a look at the two charts below… the first one is the price of gold over the last two years. The second chart is the price of pre-1933 graded gold coins since 1970.

While gold is near new highs, pre-1933 graded gold coins have lost a third of their values. It’s extraordinary:

So what's happening? The story from coin dealers is that the new issue of 100% gold coins from the U.S. Mint sucked up any money that investors would have moved into rare coins. This is the first issue of a 100% gold coin in the U.S. (most other U.S. gold coins are not quite 100% gold).

The popularity of this issue caught the rare coin market by surprise. Don't quote me on this, but I've heard that the U.S. Mint has sold something like $350 million dollars of these since they began issuing them this past summer.

For following the rare gold coin market, the metric I like to track is the "premium over melt value." In recent years, rare gold coins have been trading at all-time lows in relation to their meltdown values.

But with this complete trashing of the pre-1933 graded gold coin market--a 33% fall based on the index above--high quality, graded gold coins are the cheapest they've ever been in terms of premium over melt value.

I want to own gold for the long run… and right now, the best way to own gold is through graded pre-1933 U.S. gold coins. Your downside is limited, as they've fallen closer to their melt value than they've ever been.

And if gold keeps going up, I expect these will go up even more.

If a bull market in gold really takes off, these things will absolutely go nuts. In previous gold coin bull markets, rare coin indexes from PCGS (like the one above) have risen by over 1,000% in just a few years.

The buy of the century--so far--is pre-1933 graded gold coins, right now.

Don't miss it.

Good investing,

Steve

Editor's note: Steve Sjuggerud is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Steve Sjuggerud.

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NEW HIGHS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

iShares Canada (EWC)… commodity stocks
Oracle (ORCL)… the return of big tech
Microsoft (MSFT)… the return of big tech
Lockheed Martin (LMT)… defense
Rockwell Collins (COL)… defense
Curtis-Wright (CW)… defense
Syngenta (SYT)… agriculture
Agrium (AGU)… agriculture
Tejon Ranch (TRC)… Dan Ferris Extreme Value pick
Advisory Board (ABCO)… Dan Ferris Extreme Value pick
American Real Estate Parterns (ACP)… Dan Ferris Extreme Value pick
Google (GOOG)… first time above $500
InterActiveCorp (IACI)… Internet commerce
PetroChina (PTR)… Big Oil
Eni (E)… Big Oil
Lafarge (LF)… world’s largest cement company
Diageo (DEO)…world’s largest wine and spirit company
BASF (BF)… they make the products you buy better
First Israel Fund (ISL)… Israeli stocks
U.S. Global Investors (GROW)… commodity-focused asset manager
Phelps Dodge (PD)… mining takeover
Corn, Soybeans, and Soybean Oil

NEW LOWS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

The U.S. Dollar
U.S. Oil Fund (USO)… oil ETF
Nomura Holdings (NMR)… Japan’s largest brokerage firm
LoJack (LOJN)… anti-theft devices
James River Coal (JRCC)… coal
Volatility Index ($VIX)… a record in investor complacency

-Brian Hunt

“Thanks to video sites like YouTube, News Corp.'s social networking phenomenon MySpace and online videogame services like Microsoft's Xbox Live, U.S. Internet carriers saw usage increase up to 90% in the past year, Nortel estimates.

It's not that more people are getting on the Web; it's what they're doing when they're on there. A conventional Web site may push a few hundred kilobytes of data across the Internet over a three-minute span, but watching a streaming video clip for the same amount of time requires moving ten times as much data.

The increased traffic demands are forcing giant telecommunications carriers that carry much of the world's Internet traffic to keep sinking billions of dollars into their networks. Research firm Infonetics projects that major carriers will spend $203.1 billion worldwide on capital expenditures this year, up 5% from last year.”

-Forbes

“We expect U.S. broadband penetration to reach 72% of total Internet households in 2006, 84% in 2007, and 90% in 2008.

We believe that low prices for broadband, increasing consumer adoption of music and video downloads, and the decision by AOL to shift away from the paid-access business will continue to drive dial-up subscribers to broadband access.”

-Cowen & Co.,
as quoted in Barron’s

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