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The new report for Summer 2011 from Peter Macfarlane and the Q Wealth team
"The US government is using the same strategy which has once already failed with oil: begging foreign countries not to take advantage of their monopolies."
Jim Rogers, December 30th, 2010
As a prudent investor and free thinking individual, you clearly want the strongest and most watertight asset protection structure. Yet all the options out there can be bewildering to say the least!
More than $4.6 trillion in commerce (5% of the global economy!) depends on a critical group of rare metals. China has a near monopoly (97%) on the supply, with unstable countries like Bolivia dominating other important parts of it. The battle to secure these vital resources will make some people very rich. Will you be among them?
These metals are essential components in things like:
- The mass production of miniaturized electronics and associated devices, like cellphones, Ipads, and TVs.
- Advanced weapons systems and platforms for national defense
- The generation of electricity using 'alternative' sources such as solar panels and wind turbines, an area governments are throwing money at right now.
- The storage of electricity using cells and batteries.
Here's Why You Should Read This Report Today!
Back in January 2011, after reading the words of Jim Rogers, we wrote in The Q Wealth Report about the investment potential we saw in rare earth metals or technology metals.
Since then we've done a lot of research and due diligence, in order to present readers with our vision and practical investment strategies - it's all in this brand new and exclusive report, free of charge and exclusively for Q Wealth members.
If you are an existing member, please log in to download the report immediately. If you are not yet a member, click here to see how you could benefit from membership.
Why would you want to know about investing in rare metals? Here's why:
- Potential double digit gains or even more
- It's completely legally non-reportable
- Confidential, can even be held anonymously
- No tax at source
- Physical delivery of the metals is possible
You'll be pleased to hear that we have discovered a solution for holding these
rare metals in physical form for investment purposes in tax-free, secure and
insured Swiss vaults. This offshore investment is completely independent of
manipulated commodity markets, stock markets, fiat money and the global
financial system generally.
Why We Are Excited About This New Opportunity
Regular readers will know that here at Q Wealth, we are self-declared 'gold bugs.'
While gold and silver have certainly provided us with a healthy return in dollar or
pound terms over the past few years, the main reason we recommend gold is not as a
speculation, but as a store of value. By basing your holdings in gold, you will
protect yourself against the decline of fiat money such as the dollar and the euro.
Rare industrial metals are something different, more speculative for sure, but with
a higher potential return. We are by design not a stock-tipping newsletter, and
readers come to us because of our healthy disrespect for the products of Wall Street
or the City.
We like this investment (rare metals) because it is all about investing in
something physical that you can touch and feel, and take possession of if you want,
rather than numbers on a screen. In the event of a financial crisis, banking
collapse or market closure, physical investments will be the only ones worth having!
This report analyzes various forms of investing in rare metals, such as ETFs, funds and junior mining stocks. But more importantly we also tell you how to buy these metals for yourself, so you have full physical and legal ownership, in a numbered storage facility deep in a Swiss tax-free vault.
Rare Metals are an indirect play on the Chinese economy
The other reason we like this opportunity is as a China play. Many of these metals
are principally priced already in Yuan Renminbi, meaning that it's also an indirect
play on the Chinese currency. So whilst you can buy by paying into a bank account
in the US, Switzerland or Panama, when you choose to sell, you can be paid out in
Yuan or any other currency you wish, to any bank account worldwide.
For People Who Value Privacy
Unlike gold held by an offshore financial custodian under new FATCA and HIRE Act regulations, and unlike shares in a foreign company, you don't have to report this investment to the government. Why? Because this is a physical item you are buying that is titled in your name, just like buying a car or a computer for example. It is not considered a financial investment. Indeed, if you want to buy completely anonymously, you can (we tell you exactly how on page 18 of this report). Nobody but you and anyone you choose to tell needs to know about this investment and it's completely legal to keep it that way.
Here are some more things you will learn in this report "Rare Industrial Metals: for Profits, Protection and Privacy":
- How and why to be ahead of the trend, by building up your personal stockpile in Switzerland that you can sell at any time.
- What exactly are rare metals? What is the difference between rare metals, rare earths, technology metals, and minor metals? How rare are they really?
- How and where rare metals are traded
- How and where to invest in rare metal production through funds and ETFs such as REE Fund, Dacha Capital and REMX.
- Which junior mining companies have sideline exposure to rare metals
- Why you probably should NOT invest in a certain sector that has already become an investment bubble.
- The big Chinese company you can invest in through the US markets to gain exposure
- Why the US military is worried about metals on the "criticality matrix" and what they are doing about this - plus how you can benefit.
- Why technology metals are headed up as base metals head down
- Four critical elements that experts agree are set to soar, and how you can stockpile them.
- How to Create Your Own Bearer Instrument backed by physical metals
And much more!
We suggest you read this report today. If you are a member already, simply check
the "Special Reports for Members" section in the members area to download this
report in pdf format. If you are not yet a member, remember that membership
costs just $87 per year and gives you instant access to a wealth of information
and research reports on freedom, wealth, offshore banking, asset protection and
personal privacy. Membership is also covered by a full money-back guarantee. To
join now or view a full list of membership benefits click here.
Kind regards,
Peter Macfarlane
P.S.... Investing in rare industrial metals is a great way to hedge against inflation. As the USD, Euro, and others are going south, hard assets are the best place to weather the storm. Yes, gold and silver are fantastic safe havens, but rare metals offer a chance for greater excitement for a small part of your portfolio, while still owning hard metal assets.
MORE INFO AND SNEAK PREVIEW OF THE NEW REPORT ON RARE EARTH METALS INVESTING:
Whereas more than 21,000 tonnes of silver are produced each year, and more than 2,000 tonnes of gold, here we are talking about metals like Gallium and Hafnium - of which 78 and 25 tonnes respectively were produced worldwide in 2009 - with production rates decreasing and demand increasing. These metals are vital components in various industrial processes and products such as consumer electronics.
Other rare metals include Neodymium, Terbium, Gadolinium, Europium, Dysprosium, Yttrium, Lutetium, Indium, Selenium, Tellurium, and Rhenium.
Although the prices have increased a lot in recent years, industrial buyers haven't cared too much.
For example: Indium. Indium is critical to flat televisions, smart phones and solar cells. In 2003, Indium's price was $60 per kilo. At the time of writing, in a world with an average annual output over 1.2 billion smart phones and 200 million flat screens, Indium hovers around $700 per kilo.
Up until now, industrial buyers have been pretty complacent. They haven't bothered to adopt hedging and forward pricing strategies that would be normal for industrial users of things like silver or oil. They have always relied on the market being able to supply the product on a 'just in time' basis - something that is only now being called into question. All these rare industrial and rare earth metals were viewed as commodity metals, subject to and reacting in the same way to market forces.
You can see however that for a speculator who is hoarding a few kilos of that metal that's needed for making the TVs, that ten-fold price increase would make quite a difference! Yet up until now, there has been very little speculation in these metals. Again, this is changing….
Industrial buyers are getting smarter and are looking for more control of the supply chain, and access to stockpiles. Major industrial buyers are now paying close attention to these developments. For example, The Korea Times recently reported that their Ministry of Knowledge and Finance is slated to add Indium to its critical substances list in June 2011, since the nation's heavy hitters, like Samsung and LG, are dangerously dependent on the element.
Rare metals that you should consider buying include:
Neodymium, Gadolinium, Europium, Terbium, Dysprosium, Yttrium, Lutetium, Indium, Gallium, Selenium, Tellurium, Rhenium and Hafnium.
Companies mentioned in this report include:
Avalon Rare Metals (TSE: AVL or PINK: AVARF).
Great Western Minerals (CVE: GWG)
Lynas Corporation (ASX: LYC)
Arafura Resources Limited (ASX: ARU)
Quest Uranium Corporation (CVE: QUC)
Rare Earth Resources (CVE: RES)
Molycorp (NYSE: MCP)
Quest Rare Minerals (CVE: QRM)
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