Welcome To the Copper Fox Metals Inc. HUB On AGORACOM

CUU own 25% Schaft Creek: proven/probable min. reserves/940.8m tonnes = 0.27% copper, 0.19 g/t gold, 0.018% moly and 1.72 g/t silver containing: 5.6b lbs copper, 5.8m ounces gold, 363.5m lbs moly and 51.7m ounces silver; (Recoverable CuEq 0.46%)

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Message: Stars are aligning?

Fed moves ahead with more stimulus. Metal prices rise.

Euro is actually looking positive, for now. Long article below.

Fall usually brings stronger trading on the markets anyway. We might be in a real sweet spot, at least temporarily, until CUU gets bought out.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-09-17/draghi-euro-humbles-thought-leaders-seeing-end-of-union-1-.html

European Central Bank President Mario Draghi, embracing policies dismissed by his predecessor, is forcing euro bears to capitulate.

Since July 26, when Draghi said he would do “whatever it takes” to save the 17-nation euro, the currency has appreciated versus each of its 16 major counterparts tracked by Bloomberg. The cost to protect against a default on government debt in western Europe tumbled to a 15-month low and confidence in the region’s banking system is improving, with bank stocks rallying 33 percent since June 1, exceeding the 18 percent gain in the Stoxx Europe (SXXP) 600 Index.

While former ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet kept the central bank from propping up debt-laden governments by limiting purchases of their securities as the almost three-year crisis deepened, Draghi has done the opposite since he took over in November. His decisions are placing everyone from former International Monetary Fund (MERKX) Chief Economist Kenneth Rogoff to fund manager Axel Merk on the wrong side of the market.

“It has been a game changer, and Draghi has done the heavy lifting,” Merk, president and founder of Merk Investments LLC in Palo Alto, California, said in a Sept. 13 telephone interview. His $526 million Merk Hard Currency Fund has jumped 3.38 percent in the past month, beating 92 percent of its peers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Breakup Odds

Draghi, 65, has shown a greater willingness than Trichet to use the ECB’s balance sheet to aid Spain and Italy, and he relaxed his predecessor’s insistence that senior bondholders at crippled banks shouldn’t suffer losses in bailouts.

Merk, who said he was “very negative” on the euro earlier this year because of what he called the dysfunctional process in resolving Europe’s crisis, has turned into a buyer. “The euro has much higher to go from here, though it’s not out of the woods yet,” he said.

Chances of a breakup of the monetary union by the end of 2013 fell to 50 percent from more than 60 percent in late July, according to Dublin-based Intrade.com data, after Draghi gave details last week of a plan announced in August to buy debt of members including Spain and Italy.

The euro soared to a four-month high of $1.3169 on Sept. 14, before trading at $1.3126 as of 11:11 a.m. in Singapore. It appreciated 3.7 percent over the past month against a basket of nine other developed-market currencies, including the yen, pound and Australia dollar, and is the biggest gainer, according to Bloomberg Correlation-Weighted Indexes

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