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Over the last eight years, economic and geopolitical uncertainty combined with a weakening dollar and explosive growth in Asia...particularly in China...have created unprecedented opportunities for profits in natural resources.

Over this period, gold has more than doubled in price. And, thanks to the economic juggernauts of China, India and other rapidly developing nations, just about every precious and industrial metal you can think of has followed gold higher.

Along the way, many of the resource companies that have been recommended in the pages of Gold Newsletter, the world’s oldest and most respected gold and precious-metals-related journal in the world, have gone on to multiply five, 10...and even as much as 44 times in value.

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The so-called experts will tell you that modern investment markets are far too efficient to consistently generate those kinds of profits. Well, that may be true for the S&P 500 companies that Wall Street watches like a hawk, but when it comes to the lightly-covered junior mining sector, it's a whole different story.

Every month for the past three decades, Gold Newsletter has unearthed unique investment opportunities that mainstream investors didn’t even know existed.

That's been especially true of late, as gold and commodities...along with the companies that explore for and produce them...have enjoyed a resurgence unlike anything seen since the 1970s.

Gold Newsletter subscribers hold a special place in their hearts for that decade. Not only did it generate then-unheard-of returns for resource stock investors, it also heralded the beginning of our founder Jim Blanchard's fight to return the right of private gold ownership to American citizens.

Jim founded Gold Newsletter in 1971 as his principal weapon in that fight. It was a weapon that proved unusually effective — three years after its inception, President Gerald Ford signed a bill that restored Americans' gold ownership rights. Over the next three decades, the publication would go on to feature some of modern history's greatest free market economists and investment analysts.

Edited by noted investment expert Brien Lundin since 1993, Gold Newsletter continues to provide its readers with timely and profitable analysis of the precious metals and mining share markets and the economic and geopolitical issues that impact them.

Under Mr. Lundin's leadership, the publication has cemented its reputation as the most profitable newsletter in this sector. Drawing on two decades of experience in the industry and an unmatched rolodex, he has consistently steered Gold Newsletter readers into the biggest winners.

While no stock-picking strategy is foolproof, Gold Newsletter has produced an enviable track record over its three decades of publication. We've found big winners even during market bottoms, and unearthed companies that have multiplied as much as 4,396% on the back of the current bull market in precious metals and commodities.

Best of all, as exciting and lucrative as this era for gold has been for our readers, the best is still to come. The multi-year trends that have underpinned the yellow metal's latest renaissance will take many more years to play out, giving those who subscribe to Gold Newsletter today ample opportunity to find companies that could double, triple, and quadruple in value...and beyond.


News Flash

Taseko Mines: Copper gains
by Brien Lundin, editor Gold Newsletter

Taseko Mines Limited (TGB) began January by announcing its fourth quarter and year-end production results for 2011 at its 75%-owned Gibraltar Mine in British Columbia.


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Select Dividend for equity income
by Benjamin Shepherd, editor Wall Street

For just the second time since 1947, the dividend yield on the S&P 500 exceeds the yield on 10-year US Treasury notes. The S&P 500 currently yields 2.2 percent, while 10-year Treasuries yield just 1.85 percent.


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Goldcorp: 'My favorite major'
by Curtis Hesler, editor Professional Timing Service

The secular bull in gold and the commodity sector is not over. However, it is not at the ground floor any longer either; as such, stock selection must be more carefully considered.


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Money manager's small cap buys
by Jim Oberweis Jr., editor The Oberweis Report

Small-cap growth stock valuations are cheap, and like most things in life, economies are cyclical, even if this is a long and painful one. For the rare, brave contrarian with a reasonably long time horizon, that spells opportunity.


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Opportunities in homebuilding?
by Bernie Schaeffer, editor Schaeffer's Investment Research

Based on our "expectational analysis" strategy -- which  combines fundamental, sentiment and technical metrics -- I initiated long positions in two homebuilding stocks: Lennar Corporation (LEN) and Toll Brothers (TOL).


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Cliffs Natural: A DRIP favorite
by Vita Nelson, editor MoneyPaper

Our latest featured dividend reinvestment stock is Cliffs Natural Resources (CLF). Founded in 1847, the former Cleveland-Cliffs is the largest producer of iron ore pellets in North America.


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S&P's trio of info tech ETFS
by Dylan Cathers, S&P Capital IQ Equity Analyst, S&P The Outlook

Information technology is one of four sectors that S&P Capital IQ’s Sector Strategy Group currently recommends investors overweight in their portfolios.


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Crescent Point: Bakken bet
by Brian Hicks, editor Wealth Advisory

Master Limited Partnerships (MLPs) are unique investments that combine the tax benefits of a limited partnership (LP) with the liquidity of common stock.


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Natural gas: A bottom?
by Jason Cimpl, editor Daily Profit

Natural gas has collapsed for the past four years and has been on a gradual decline for almost a decade. Prices topped near $16 in 2005 and then declined to $2. So did natural gas just bottom?


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FBR Focus bests 99% of peers
by Walter Frank, editor MoneyLetter

Funds that invest in a relatively few stocks or sectors are less diversified than broadly invested funds and their volatility can be much higher. But the team at FBR Focus (FBRVX) seems to be getting it right.


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