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All That You Want To Know About Coin Sorters ect the imbalance between demand and supply. I don’t care how much gold Central Banks sell, ultimately they are going to have no gold. I think people realize that Central Banks have made a big mistake selling their gold.A coin sorter is a small device which lets you sort coins of different denominations in a jiffy. Suppose your kid suddenly decides to empty his piggy bank and empties it. Now you can't possibly sit and count the coins! This is where it comes in handy. After a hard day you return home and your work is such that you get a lot of change like in tips and so on. Then it is just the thing for you. You simply pour all your loose change into it and in a moment it sorts and counts and rolls the change for you.It is a device which is used chiefly by banks, currency exchanges. Restaurants, stores and any other place which deals with a lot of loose change. You may even keep one at home. It is very simple to use. You just have to pour all your loose change into it and then press a button. There are different slots made for coins of different denominations. The machine does everything. It sorts and counts and then rolls the change in a roller. It even separates the counterfeit coins from the original ones. There is a Motorized coin sorter and roller for at-home use. It handles up to 20 coins at a time and also stacks coins directly into roll wrappers. It can also hold $1 coins.There is a built-in overflow tray which doesn't allow the coins to overflow. Thus you can well imagine its importance for your business. Suppose your business is of such a nature where you have to deal with a lot of loose change then such a machine is indeed a blessing for you. Just think of the time and energy you would otherwise spend on counting all that loose change and to top it all the monotony of it all Interviewer: The China card keeps driving global commodities as they bring their country more technology. How do you feel about the base metals? Eric Sprott: We haven’t really gotten involved in the base metals. One of the reason we haven’t gone there is we have believed we are in a secular bear market, and there could be a financial implosion. In that kind of scenario the base metals don’t do well. But the precious metals can provide safety. That’s the distinguishing mark we make between the two. On the China thesis, the demand for all of these things would go up. Our problem is we still expect some fallout in the financial arena, which ultimately would even affect China. We feel more comfortable with the precious metals, and we feel more comfortable with energy. Simply, energy demand in an economic implosion is pretty inelastic. It doesn’t fall off the table. Demand for zinc, lead, copper, and aluminum can fall quite precipitously if there was an economic slowdown. Interviewer: Are you expecting an economic slowdown? Eric Sprott: Absolutely, yes. We might be in it now. There are certainly lots of signs that there is not much robustness in the U.S. economy. I have some very strong views as to what should ultimately happen in the U.S. My views are predicated on the fact that the government reports a deficit of $400 billion, but there are also government reports that suggest, on a GAAP accounting basis, that the true deficit in 2003 was $3.4 trillion. We can all ignore it, and everyone has ignored it. But, the reality is that the liabilities are accruing for Social Security and Medicare in the U.S. at a tremendous rate. There has been no provision for it. There was a paper released by the U.S. Treasury Department about a year ago that said the present value of their obligations, that are not funded, is $44 trillion. Again, we can choose to believe it or not believe it. I happen to believe it. I made the point that politicians are in it to be re-elected, and they are not dealing with the real issue. The real issue is they are making pr In Praise Of Entreprenuers Eric Sprott may be Canada's answer to Warren Buffet. He's got the Midas Touch and currently manages more than $3 billion. We talk to Eric Sprott about uranium and why is bullish on nuclear energy.There is no sector of the U.S. Economy that is more vital, yet often ignored' than small business sector. While many thought that big business drove the U. S. Economy by virtue of employment and the ability to produce products at lower prices, that is not necessarily the case. While we are currently appalled and angry at the excess of some of the biggest businesses, the fraud and destruction of many employees' life savings and the large number of cutbacks in employment of these companies, the small business sector continues to make its mighty contribution to our economy. A better measure is that out of almost 5 million corporations in the U.S. there are less than a million corporations with annual revenues of more than a million dollars. More than 80% of all corporations can be considered small business. They employ 51% of all public sector workers and represent nearly all of the self-employed, which makes up about 7% of the civilian workforce. In the face of the wide layoffs caused by the current market disruptions, the small business sector still provides about 75% of the net new jobs.The small business sector also makes a large contribution to federal government activities, capturing about one third of all prime and subcontract dollars.In Texas the story is much the same. There are almost 400,000 employer businesses and over 98% have fewer than 500 employees. Small business employment represented 47.6% of the states total employment according to the U. S. Department of Commerce. In 2000, the non-farmers proprietors' share of small business income totaled $68.1 billio Interviewer: Uranium had been inching higher from 2001 until a year ago. Since then, it has soared up the price chart. What is a realistic price for uranium and how high can you envision it reaching? Eric Sprott: There is obviously a shortage between current mine production and current uranium consumption. In order to correct that imbalance, it would have to be economic to open up new deposits. I’m not suggesting that it (uranium) has to go to $100 to become economic. I don’t think that’s true. Probably at $50, it becomes very economic. The reality is that we’ve been so slow in getting started that I think the whole nuclear industry will ultimately prove to be the key energy source of the future. With demand today at 170 million (pounds), who knows? It might be 300 million pounds in twenty years. The argument in the article we wrote is that based on the previous peaks, prices if you put a normal inflation rate on it, it would equate to something like $100. So, it’s not that far fetched that we might get there. Interviewer: If it takes four or five years, or up to a decade, to get a nuclear reactor going, why are the Chinese building so many so quickly? Eric Sprott: Because they’ve been doing it right. One of the nice things about a centrally organized government is they deal with big issues. Obviously, China has a big issue in energy. If you were sitting over there, you would realize, ‘My god, we’re starting to import two million barrels of oil. We used to export coal and now we don’t export coal. What are we going to do if our growth rate continues to grow at eight or nine percent per year? How much power are we going to need? And where is it all going to come from when there are already shortages of the two most commonly used energy sources in the country?' The option you fall back on is, ‘Well, let’s go nuclear. We have to go into all of them.’ And of course, now they’re predicting two nuclear reactors every year for the next ten years. Who knows? Maybe five years from now, that will be four reactors every year. Perhaps when we all realize the extent of the energy shortage. Interviewer: How is this going to be sold to North America and Europe in the wake of Three Mile Island and Chernobyl? Eric Sprott: The way things might change is now that we have $50 oil, and the price is almost going up in an unlimited fashion. Now that we’ve got coal at double and uranium that’s gone up, people might finally realize there is not an infinite supply of certain things that we rely on. And that we might have to take a more pragmatic view of the nuclear option. I’m sure that is exactly what certain countries, including Japan, China and France, have done. The other thing is that there is a new reactor where you can’t have a meltdown. I’m not technically strong enough to explain it. The uranium is in graphite spheres, and they won’t melt down unless temperatures reach 2000 degrees. The highest it ever goes to is 1600 degrees so it’s just not going to melt down. It doesn’t matter if things are out of control. They won’t break down. If that kind of assurance were accepted by the public – if someone could prove that that was the case – I think the nuclear option would be an incredibly viable option. Another thing that would make people think differently would be having brownouts for a while, or hyperinflation because of the shortage of coal, natural gas, and diesel fuel. If we had brownouts for a while, and of course they have brownouts in China, which is probably why they are proactive in moving nuclear along. Interviewer: How realistic is the global energy crisis moving toward a Hubbert’s Peak, an energy scenario from the year 1970? Eric Sprott: My view is that it seems very realistic. I think it is very important that we do go back to 1970. Look at the fact that Hubbert said in 1956 that 1970 will forever peak out (in terms of energy production). Lo and behold, it peaked out! It almost goes down every week in the United States. Almost every week, there is a little less production. This is now with very high oil prices. It looks like his theory, for the geographical area called the United States, worked. Do we think it is going to work in the world? I tend to believe it is. I believe there are projections for Great Britain, which I think are at about 4.2 million barrels/day right now, that in ten years from now, will be down to 700,000. That’s what happens when fields go into decline. They go down, and you can not resuscitate them. Everyone who studies the topic knows that no significant discoveries have been made since the 1960s. What I mean by significant are giant oil fields – like Ghawar. For example, people now consider a 100-million barrel field a big deal, and 500 million is great. Well, one hundred million is like 1.2 days of world’s supply, and 500 million is eight days supply. You have got to find a lot of those every year. We don’t find them. We have hardly found anything. The Caspian Sea? I am guessing it is 500 to 700 million. It’s the one thing we point to, the thing in the Caspian Sea, which we have been pointing to for the last three years. Let’s say it is 800 million barrels, it is ten days’ supply. It’s nothing. Interviewer: There have been some pretty incredible estimates as to how high oil can go. The highest we’re read of stands at $182 for a barrel of oil and $15 per gallon of gasoline. Your comments? Eric Sprott: When you get into any commodity, where there is a bonafide shortage, there is no limit on the price. There is hardly any limit on the price. Because that last guy still wants that last barrel of oil. I always say, when a commodity is starting to break loose, ‘Never put a ceiling on it because you never know where it is going to go.’ You look at what is going on in the world oil situation. If I was (in charge of ) certain countries, I would probably be changing what I’m doing. You can see China going throughout the world signing agreements with countries to assure oil supplies. It’s a government mandate to go out and secure their supplies. I think people at the government level realize, ‘We have issues here that we have to solve. If we don’t have assurance of supply, what happens?’ One thing about Hubbert’s Peak that most people don’t go to is the economic impact. Forget the price of oil. What if we produce 83 million barrels today, and in 25 years we have 55 million barrels? What is the world going to do? Do we just have to shut down economies because we don’t have a replacement for hydrocarbons? Interviewer: Do you think the world governments are prepared for this? Eric Sprott: Not at all. They show no interest. In fact, I would say one of the real problems with the democratic process is, unfortunately, too much time is spent thinking about politics. Hardly any time is spent planning for the future. Interviewer: On uranium, you recommended a number of uranium companies in your special report. Cameco (NYSE: CCJ) seems to be the one many recommend. Other uranium companies seem to be in the exploration or the more speculative category, and now have some momentum because of the bull market in uranium. How strong are the fundamentals in those companies? Eric Sprott: I think the fundamentals for some of the companies are spectacular, quite frankly. It’s interesting for us because we had the same thing happen in gold, when the price of gold was $250. We tried to imagine what we should buy if, and when, gold went to $400, which we thought it would, or $500 or higher. The real opportunity always lay in, ‘We’ll find someone who has a large resource that is uneconomic today, but if you move the price up, it becomes quite economic.’ I would say Strathmore Minerals (TSX-V: STM). They have a large resource already identified. In fact, they are acquiring properties all the time that were identified years and years ago. Yet, at $20/pound uranium, they probably don’t make any sense. But, at $40/pound uranium, they are likely to make tremendous economic sense. Of course, the value of the shares can almost – not go up exponentially – but they can go up a lot. You finally tip over that breakeven level, and everything after that is profit. We had an analogy like that in gold area, where one guy went out and bought all these deposits that would make sense at $400 gold. The stock has been a tremendous winner. I think it is up 500 percent. I think the same can happen in uranium. That’s why we go to Strathmore and UEX (TSX: UEX). Interviewer: How do you feel about precious metals? Eric Sprott: We feel pretty good about precious metals. We’ve been pretty bullish for quite a while now. We have liked the fundamentals for gold for a long time for any one of ten different reasons. The one reason I fall back on, that gives me tremendous comfort, is the fact the world consumes 4,000 tons of gold per year, but mine production is 2,500. Anybody who uses any bit of logic knows, in due course, the price will go up to reflect the imbalance between demand and supply. I don’t care how much gold Central Banks sell, ultimately they are going to have no gold. I think people realize that Central Banks have made a big mistake selling their gold. Interviewer: The China card keeps driving global commodities as they bring their country more technology. How do you feel about the base metals? Eric Sprott: We haven’t really gotten involved in the base metals. One of the reason we haven’t gone there is we have believed we are in a secular bear market, and there could be a financial implosion. In that kind of scenario the base metals don’t do well. But the precious metals can provide safety. That’s the distinguishing mark we make between the two. On the China thesis, the demand for all of these things would go up. Our problem is we still expect some fallout in the financial arena, which ultimately would even affect China. We feel more comfortable with the precious metals, and we feel more comfortable with energy. Simply, energy demand in an economic implosion is pretty inelastic. It doesn’t fall off the table. Demand for zinc, lead, copper, and aluminum can fall quite precipitously if there was an economic slowdown. Interviewer: Are you expecting an economic slowdown? Eric Sprott: Absolutely, yes. We might be in it now. There are certainly lots of signs that there is not much robustness in the U.S. economy. I have some very strong views as to what should ultimately happen in the U.S. My views are predicated on the fact that the government reports a deficit of $400 billion, but there are also government reports that suggest, on a GAAP accounting basis, that the true deficit in 2003 was $3.4 trillion. We can all ignore it, and everyone has ignored it. But, the reality is that the liabilities are accruing for Social Security and Medicare in the U.S. at a tremendous rate. There has been no provision for it. There was a paper released by the U.S. Treasury Department about a year ago that said the present value of their obligations, that are not funded, is $44 trillion. Again, we can choose to believe it or not believe it. I happen to believe it. I made the point that politicians are in it to be re-elected, and they are not dealing with the real issue. The real issue is they are making pro Top 7 or Top Ten Articles rgy shortage.Why do humans love to read top 7 or top 10 articles so much? Have you ever wondered? It is a known fact that very few article titles are as effective as Top 7 or Top 10 ways to do something or steps to achieve something. Titles like; “Top 7 Things to Make You Successful,” “Top 10 Halloween Costumers for 2005,” and “Top 7 Ways to Get the Girl You Want!” It is truly amazing how well these work, people like these titles and they really like to read articles with bullet points and lists. It is easy reading, it cuts to the chase and they feel they can learn something very fast without all the fat and fluff.You see the new paradigm of the stressed out consumer and citizen in our society is too busy with 2.2 kids, white picket fence, college degree, credit card debt, mini-van and getting the kids to soccer practice to read anything too complex. They want the information fast with no BS. Even the Televisions and News Networks give information this way now have you noticed; seven-minute segments and snippets at a time, then commercial and then NEXT. Just the way the Internet clicking, BMW driving, traffic induced, caffeine driven crowd wants it. Give it to me now, give to me fast, thank you very much got to go; places to go, people to see, emails to return; you understand. Think on it. Interviewer: How is this going to be sold to North America and Europe in the wake of Three Mile Island and Chernobyl? Eric Sprott: The way things might change is now that we have $50 oil, and the price is almost going up in an unlimited fashion. Now that we’ve got coal at double and uranium that’s gone up, people might finally realize there is not an infinite supply of certain things that we rely on. And that we might have to take a more pragmatic view of the nuclear option. I’m sure that is exactly what certain countries, including Japan, China and France, have done. The other thing is that there is a new reactor where you can’t have a meltdown. I’m not technically strong enough to explain it. The uranium is in graphite spheres, and they won’t melt down unless temperatures reach 2000 degrees. The highest it ever goes to is 1600 degrees so it’s just not going to melt down. It doesn’t matter if things are out of control. They won’t break down. If that kind of assurance were accepted by the public – if someone could prove that that was the case – I think the nuclear option would be an incredibly viable option. Another thing that would make people think differently would be having brownouts for a while, or hyperinflation because of the shortage of coal, natural gas, and diesel fuel. If we had brownouts for a while, and of course they have brownouts in China, which is probably why they are proactive in moving nuclear along. Interviewer: How realistic is the global energy crisis moving toward a Hubbert’s Peak, an energy scenario from the year 1970? Eric Sprott: My view is that it seems very realistic. I think it is very important that we do go back to 1970. Look at the fact that Hubbert said in 1956 that 1970 will forever peak out (in terms of energy production). Lo and behold, it peaked out! It almost goes down every week in the United States. Almost every week, there is a little less production. This is now with very high oil prices. It looks like his theory, for the geographical area called the United States, worked. Do we think it is going to work in the world? I tend to believe it is. I believe there are projections for Great Britain, which I think are at about 4.2 million barrels/day right now, that in ten years from now, will be down to 700,000. That’s what happens when fields go into decline. They go down, and you can not resuscitate them. Everyone who studies the topic knows that no significant discoveries have been made since the 1960s. What I mean by significant are giant oil fields – like Ghawar. For example, people now consider a 100-million barrel field a big deal, and 500 million is great. Well, one hundred million is like 1.2 days of world’s supply, and 500 million is eight days supply. You have got to find a lot of those every year. We don’t find them. We have hardly found anything. The Caspian Sea? I am guessing it is 500 to 700 million. It’s the one thing we point to, the thing in the Caspian Sea, which we have been pointing to for the last three years. Let’s say it is 800 million barrels, it is ten days’ supply. It’s nothing. Interviewer: There have been some pretty incredible estimates as to how high oil can go. The highest we’re read of stands at $182 for a barrel of oil and $15 per gallon of gasoline. Your comments? Eric Sprott: When you get into any commodity, where there is a bonafide shortage, there is no limit on the price. There is hardly any limit on the price. Because that last guy still wants that last barrel of oil. I always say, when a commodity is starting to break loose, ‘Never put a ceiling on it because you never know where it is going to go.’ You look at what is going on in the world oil situation. If I was (in charge of ) certain countries, I would probably be changing what I’m doing. You can see China going throughout the world signing agreements with countries to assure oil supplies. It’s a government mandate to go out and secure their supplies. I think people at the government level realize, ‘We have issues here that we have to solve. If we don’t have assurance of supply, what happens?’ One thing about Hubbert’s Peak that most people don’t go to is the economic impact. Forget the price of oil. What if we produce 83 million barrels today, and in 25 years we have 55 million barrels? What is the world going to do? Do we just have to shut down economies because we don’t have a replacement for hydrocarbons? Interviewer: Do you think the world governments are prepared for this? Eric Sprott: Not at all. They show no interest. In fact, I would say one of the real problems with the democratic process is, unfortunately, too much time is spent thinking about politics. Hardly any time is spent planning for the future. Interviewer: On uranium, you recommended a number of uranium companies in your special report. Cameco (NYSE: CCJ) seems to be the one many recommend. Other uranium companies seem to be in the exploration or the more speculative category, and now have some momentum because of the bull market in uranium. How strong are the fundamentals in those companies? Eric Sprott: I think the fundamentals for some of the companies are spectacular, quite frankly. It’s interesting for us because we had the same thing happen in gold, when the price of gold was $250. We tried to imagine what we should buy if, and when, gold went to $400, which we thought it would, or $500 or higher. The real opportunity always lay in, ‘We’ll find someone who has a large resource that is uneconomic today, but if you move the price up, it becomes quite economic.’ I would say Strathmore Minerals (TSX-V: STM). They have a large resource already identified. In fact, they are acquiring properties all the time that were identified years and years ago. Yet, at $20/pound uranium, they probably don’t make any sense. But, at $40/pound uranium, they are likely to make tremendous economic sense. Of course, the value of the shares can almost – not go up exponentially – but they can go up a lot. You finally tip over that breakeven level, and everything after that is profit. We had an analogy like that in gold area, where one guy went out and bought all these deposits that would make sense at $400 gold. The stock has been a tremendous winner. I think it is up 500 percent. I think the same can happen in uranium. That’s why we go to Strathmore and UEX (TSX: UEX). Interviewer: How do you feel about precious metals? Eric Sprott: We feel pretty good about precious metals. We’ve been pretty bullish for quite a while now. We have liked the fundamentals for gold for a long time for any one of ten different reasons. The one reason I fall back on, that gives me tremendous comfort, is the fact the world consumes 4,000 tons of gold per year, but mine production is 2,500. Anybody who uses any bit of logic knows, in due course, the price will go up to reflect the imbalance between demand and supply. I don’t care how much gold Central Banks sell, ultimately they are going to have no gold. I think people realize that Central Banks have made a big mistake selling their gold. Interviewer: The China card keeps driving global commodities as they bring their country more technology. How do you feel about the base metals? Eric Sprott: We haven’t really gotten involved in the base metals. One of the reason we haven’t gone there is we have believed we are in a secular bear market, and there could be a financial implosion. In that kind of scenario the base metals don’t do well. But the precious metals can provide safety. That’s the distinguishing mark we make between the two. On the China thesis, the demand for all of these things would go up. Our problem is we still expect some fallout in the financial arena, which ultimately would even affect China. We feel more comfortable with the precious metals, and we feel more comfortable with energy. Simply, energy demand in an economic implosion is pretty inelastic. It doesn’t fall off the table. Demand for zinc, lead, copper, and aluminum can fall quite precipitously if there was an economic slowdown. Interviewer: Are you expecting an economic slowdown? Eric Sprott: Absolutely, yes. We might be in it now. There are certainly lots of signs that there is not much robustness in the U.S. economy. I have some very strong views as to what should ultimately happen in the U.S. My views are predicated on the fact that the government reports a deficit of $400 billion, but there are also government reports that suggest, on a GAAP accounting basis, that the true deficit in 2003 was $3.4 trillion. We can all ignore it, and everyone has ignored it. But, the reality is that the liabilities are accruing for Social Security and Medicare in the U.S. at a tremendous rate. There has been no provision for it. There was a paper released by the U.S. Treasury Department about a year ago that said the present value of their obligations, that are not funded, is $44 trillion. Again, we can choose to believe it or not believe it. I happen to believe it. I made the point that politicians are in it to be re-elected, and they are not dealing with the real issue. The real issue is they are making pr Choosing a Reliable Web Host: A Beginners Guide o 700,000. That’s what happens when fields go into decline. They go down, and you can not resuscitate them. Everyone who studies the topic knows that no significant discoveries have been made since the 1960s.Most people don’t have a personal web page or a business web site. But there may come a day when you feel the urge to promote a product or invention or just share your thoughts with the online world. There are thousands of web hosts to choose from out there. But the question is how do you go about choosing the right one for you and do it without getting ripped off in the process. Most people feel they do not have enough knowledge or experience to get a web page or web site up on the Internet. So they are afraid to even try. This article will help those of you who want to but are either too afraid or don’t know how to get started.You have a choice of using free hosting which gives you a small amount of space and bandwidth on their domain. Or you can have your own domain name and pay a small fee for this privilege. If you decide to use a free host provider then your site address will be something like: YourName.HostDomainName.com or HostDomainName.com/YourName. The free services also force you to have advertisements on your website to pay for your free service. Some people prefer not to have advertisements on their sites and they want to have their own personal and/or business domain name. For instance www.YourName.com or YourName.US or .org or .net. If this is what you want then you want to find the web host that is right for you.First you should make a short list of things you want to do on your web site and make a list of things you want from your potential web host. As far as things you want to do on your site, that is a personal choice and I cannot tell you what you What I mean by significant are giant oil fields – like Ghawar. For example, people now consider a 100-million barrel field a big deal, and 500 million is great. Well, one hundred million is like 1.2 days of world’s supply, and 500 million is eight days supply. You have got to find a lot of those every year. We don’t find them. We have hardly found anything. The Caspian Sea? I am guessing it is 500 to 700 million. It’s the one thing we point to, the thing in the Caspian Sea, which we have been pointing to for the last three years. Let’s say it is 800 million barrels, it is ten days’ supply. It’s nothing. Interviewer: There have been some pretty incredible estimates as to how high oil can go. The highest we’re read of stands at $182 for a barrel of oil and $15 per gallon of gasoline. Your comments? Eric Sprott: When you get into any commodity, where there is a bonafide shortage, there is no limit on the price. There is hardly any limit on the price. Because that last guy still wants that last barrel of oil. I always say, when a commodity is starting to break loose, ‘Never put a ceiling on it because you never know where it is going to go.’ You look at what is going on in the world oil situation. If I was (in charge of ) certain countries, I would probably be changing what I’m doing. You can see China going throughout the world signing agreements with countries to assure oil supplies. It’s a government mandate to go out and secure their supplies. I think people at the government level realize, ‘We have issues here that we have to solve. If we don’t have assurance of supply, what happens?’ One thing about Hubbert’s Peak that most people don’t go to is the economic impact. Forget the price of oil. What if we produce 83 million barrels today, and in 25 years we have 55 million barrels? What is the world going to do? Do we just have to shut down economies because we don’t have a replacement for hydrocarbons? Interviewer: Do you think the world governments are prepared for this? Eric Sprott: Not at all. They show no interest. In fact, I would say one of the real problems with the democratic process is, unfortunately, too much time is spent thinking about politics. Hardly any time is spent planning for the future. Interviewer: On uranium, you recommended a number of uranium companies in your special report. Cameco (NYSE: CCJ) seems to be the one many recommend. Other uranium companies seem to be in the exploration or the more speculative category, and now have some momentum because of the bull market in uranium. How strong are the fundamentals in those companies? Eric Sprott: I think the fundamentals for some of the companies are spectacular, quite frankly. It’s interesting for us because we had the same thing happen in gold, when the price of gold was $250. We tried to imagine what we should buy if, and when, gold went to $400, which we thought it would, or $500 or higher. The real opportunity always lay in, ‘We’ll find someone who has a large resource that is uneconomic today, but if you move the price up, it becomes quite economic.’ I would say Strathmore Minerals (TSX-V: STM). They have a large resource already identified. In fact, they are acquiring properties all the time that were identified years and years ago. Yet, at $20/pound uranium, they probably don’t make any sense. But, at $40/pound uranium, they are likely to make tremendous economic sense. Of course, the value of the shares can almost – not go up exponentially – but they can go up a lot. You finally tip over that breakeven level, and everything after that is profit. We had an analogy like that in gold area, where one guy went out and bought all these deposits that would make sense at $400 gold. The stock has been a tremendous winner. I think it is up 500 percent. I think the same can happen in uranium. That’s why we go to Strathmore and UEX (TSX: UEX). Interviewer: How do you feel about precious metals? Eric Sprott: We feel pretty good about precious metals. We’ve been pretty bullish for quite a while now. We have liked the fundamentals for gold for a long time for any one of ten different reasons. The one reason I fall back on, that gives me tremendous comfort, is the fact the world consumes 4,000 tons of gold per year, but mine production is 2,500. Anybody who uses any bit of logic knows, in due course, the price will go up to reflect the imbalance between demand and supply. I don’t care how much gold Central Banks sell, ultimately they are going to have no gold. I think people realize that Central Banks have made a big mistake selling their gold. Interviewer: The China card keeps driving global commodities as they bring their country more technology. How do you feel about the base metals? Eric Sprott: We haven’t really gotten involved in the base metals. One of the reason we haven’t gone there is we have believed we are in a secular bear market, and there could be a financial implosion. In that kind of scenario the base metals don’t do well. But the precious metals can provide safety. That’s the distinguishing mark we make between the two. On the China thesis, the demand for all of these things would go up. Our problem is we still expect some fallout in the financial arena, which ultimately would even affect China. We feel more comfortable with the precious metals, and we feel more comfortable with energy. Simply, energy demand in an economic implosion is pretty inelastic. It doesn’t fall off the table. Demand for zinc, lead, copper, and aluminum can fall quite precipitously if there was an economic slowdown. Interviewer: Are you expecting an economic slowdown? Eric Sprott: Absolutely, yes. We might be in it now. There are certainly lots of signs that there is not much robustness in the U.S. economy. I have some very strong views as to what should ultimately happen in the U.S. My views are predicated on the fact that the government reports a deficit of $400 billion, but there are also government reports that suggest, on a GAAP accounting basis, that the true deficit in 2003 was $3.4 trillion. We can all ignore it, and everyone has ignored it. But, the reality is that the liabilities are accruing for Social Security and Medicare in the U.S. at a tremendous rate. There has been no provision for it. There was a paper released by the U.S. Treasury Department about a year ago that said the present value of their obligations, that are not funded, is $44 trillion. Again, we can choose to believe it or not believe it. I happen to believe it. I made the point that politicians are in it to be re-elected, and they are not dealing with the real issue. The real issue is they are making pr Earning Money From Your Web-Host the real problems with the democratic process is, unfortunately, too much time is spent thinking about politics. Hardly any time is spent planning for the future.There are various web-hosting companies available on the internet. However, not all web-hosting companies are created equal. Here are a few things you may want to consider before engaging your web-hosting company.If you start out with a "free" web-hosting package you stand a great chance of having your website visitors distracted by clicking on the advertising banners or ads that are placed on your website pages. Let's face it, we need all the traffic we can get and this is somewhat self-defeating. My suggestion is to spend the few extra bucks to get off to a good start.And if your free web-hosting company experiences 'downtime' and your visitors are not able to access your website, you lose valuable income-producing revenue. So before considering a "free" web-hosting account research this subject well. Following are a few considerations you may want to ponder before engaging your web-hosting company. Exactly what does your web-hosting company support:Free Web-Hosting CompaniesCheck to see that services are available 24/7, are adds/banners placed on your webpage(s), what's the amount of disc space available, are sub-domains supported, and is FTP transfer available?Fee Paid Web-Hosting AccountsCheck to see if set-up fees or transfer fees are required, check amount of disc space, whether FTP Transfer is enabled, or if they support Front Page Extensions, Sub-domains, Url Redirects, or MYSQL Databases. Also, Mail/List Newsletters, Auto-Responders, POP E-mail Accounts, E-mail Aliases, Site Stats, Mail Manager, Control Panel, Site Creation Tools a Interviewer: On uranium, you recommended a number of uranium companies in your special report. Cameco (NYSE: CCJ) seems to be the one many recommend. Other uranium companies seem to be in the exploration or the more speculative category, and now have some momentum because of the bull market in uranium. How strong are the fundamentals in those companies? Eric Sprott: I think the fundamentals for some of the companies are spectacular, quite frankly. It’s interesting for us because we had the same thing happen in gold, when the price of gold was $250. We tried to imagine what we should buy if, and when, gold went to $400, which we thought it would, or $500 or higher. The real opportunity always lay in, ‘We’ll find someone who has a large resource that is uneconomic today, but if you move the price up, it becomes quite economic.’ I would say Strathmore Minerals (TSX-V: STM). They have a large resource already identified. In fact, they are acquiring properties all the time that were identified years and years ago. Yet, at $20/pound uranium, they probably don’t make any sense. But, at $40/pound uranium, they are likely to make tremendous economic sense. Of course, the value of the shares can almost – not go up exponentially – but they can go up a lot. You finally tip over that breakeven level, and everything after that is profit. We had an analogy like that in gold area, where one guy went out and bought all these deposits that would make sense at $400 gold. The stock has been a tremendous winner. I think it is up 500 percent. I think the same can happen in uranium. That’s why we go to Strathmore and UEX (TSX: UEX). Interviewer: How do you feel about precious metals? Eric Sprott: We feel pretty good about precious metals. We’ve been pretty bullish for quite a while now. We have liked the fundamentals for gold for a long time for any one of ten different reasons. The one reason I fall back on, that gives me tremendous comfort, is the fact the world consumes 4,000 tons of gold per year, but mine production is 2,500. Anybody who uses any bit of logic knows, in due course, the price will go up to reflect the imbalance between demand and supply. I don’t care how much gold Central Banks sell, ultimately they are going to have no gold. I think people realize that Central Banks have made a big mistake selling their gold. Interviewer: The China card keeps driving global commodities as they bring their country more technology. How do you feel about the base metals? Eric Sprott: We haven’t really gotten involved in the base metals. One of the reason we haven’t gone there is we have believed we are in a secular bear market, and there could be a financial implosion. In that kind of scenario the base metals don’t do well. But the precious metals can provide safety. That’s the distinguishing mark we make between the two. On the China thesis, the demand for all of these things would go up. Our problem is we still expect some fallout in the financial arena, which ultimately would even affect China. We feel more comfortable with the precious metals, and we feel more comfortable with energy. Simply, energy demand in an economic implosion is pretty inelastic. It doesn’t fall off the table. Demand for zinc, lead, copper, and aluminum can fall quite precipitously if there was an economic slowdown. Interviewer: Are you expecting an economic slowdown? Eric Sprott: Absolutely, yes. We might be in it now. There are certainly lots of signs that there is not much robustness in the U.S. economy. I have some very strong views as to what should ultimately happen in the U.S. My views are predicated on the fact that the government reports a deficit of $400 billion, but there are also government reports that suggest, on a GAAP accounting basis, that the true deficit in 2003 was $3.4 trillion. We can all ignore it, and everyone has ignored it. But, the reality is that the liabilities are accruing for Social Security and Medicare in the U.S. at a tremendous rate. There has been no provision for it. There was a paper released by the U.S. Treasury Department about a year ago that said the present value of their obligations, that are not funded, is $44 trillion. Again, we can choose to believe it or not believe it. I happen to believe it. I made the point that politicians are in it to be re-elected, and they are not dealing with the real issue. The real issue is they are making pr Article Marketing to Generate Backlinks for Search Engine Optimization ect the imbalance between demand and supply. I don’t care how much gold Central Banks sell, ultimately they are going to have no gold. I think people realize that Central Banks have made a big mistake selling their gold.Article marketing is one of my favorite methods of generating traffic to my web site, and one of the ways I do that is through the creation of backlinks to my web site via the article marketing process.One of the widely popular uses of article marketing is that of creating multiple backlinks which the search engines can use to estimate the popularity of a website. The theory is this: if one website has more webpages from other websites linking in to it than another website, it must have a greater ‘popularity’ than the other websites. And the process of article marketing, when done correctly, can add to the number or websites you have linking to your web site.Some search engine formulas are purported to use this concept as one of their main ranking criteria, so a popular form of search engine optimization and promotion is that of creating backlinks. Obviously those backlinks can be created through a number of methods, including website submission to web directories, link exchanges, link purchases, and simply asking webmasters to link to one’s website. Article marketing provides a powerful method of creating backlinks to your web site while simultaneously creating exposure for you and your name online.However, writing articles, including a link to your website, and submitting that website to multiple article directories can create a massive number of backlinks that are relatively inexpensive (only your time if you do all the work yourself) and do not involve swapping links or otherwise personally asking for favors or reciprocity. So article marketing is one o Interviewer: The China card keeps driving global commodities as they bring their country more technology. How do you feel about the base metals? Eric Sprott: We haven’t really gotten involved in the base metals. One of the reason we haven’t gone there is we have believed we are in a secular bear market, and there could be a financial implosion. In that kind of scenario the base metals don’t do well. But the precious metals can provide safety. That’s the distinguishing mark we make between the two. On the China thesis, the demand for all of these things would go up. Our problem is we still expect some fallout in the financial arena, which ultimately would even affect China. We feel more comfortable with the precious metals, and we feel more comfortable with energy. Simply, energy demand in an economic implosion is pretty inelastic. It doesn’t fall off the table. Demand for zinc, lead, copper, and aluminum can fall quite precipitously if there was an economic slowdown. Interviewer: Are you expecting an economic slowdown? Eric Sprott: Absolutely, yes. We might be in it now. There are certainly lots of signs that there is not much robustness in the U.S. economy. I have some very strong views as to what should ultimately happen in the U.S. My views are predicated on the fact that the government reports a deficit of $400 billion, but there are also government reports that suggest, on a GAAP accounting basis, that the true deficit in 2003 was $3.4 trillion. We can all ignore it, and everyone has ignored it. But, the reality is that the liabilities are accruing for Social Security and Medicare in the U.S. at a tremendous rate. There has been no provision for it. There was a paper released by the U.S. Treasury Department about a year ago that said the present value of their obligations, that are not funded, is $44 trillion. Again, we can choose to believe it or not believe it. I happen to believe it. I made the point that politicians are in it to be re-elected, and they are not dealing with the real issue. The real issue is they are making promises to their citizens that they can’t keep. And they’re not going to keep them. I would hate to be a retired person or a young person in the U.S. Somebody is going to have to bear the brunt of all these funding issues that haven’t been taken care of. Beginning in 2008, the baby boomers start collecting these things. That’s a real cash problem. Before, it was just a bookkeeping problem. You’ll have a huge influx of people collecting their Social Security and getting free Medicare. It’s got to be funded. Anyone who’s looked at the problem has agreed that no one has done anything about funding it. You have to cut what your promises were, which is what all the European governments are now trying to do. They’re all cutting back on the pension. Most companies are cutting back on them because they can’t fund them. The trend is in place here: What we thought we were going to get, we’re not going to get it. Am I bearish? Gosh, we’ve had forty years of living off of savings that were supposed to be saved to provide this future. It was all spent. Everyone just chooses to ignore it. COPYRIGHT © 2007 by StockInterview, Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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