Buenos Aires Taxi

Looking back on the past decade, gold and real estate investors in Argentina fared best. (Photo: Johann Rela)

If hindsight is 20/20, what would it tell us about the best and worst investments one could have made in Argentina following the collapse of convertibility and the ensuing crisis in 2001? Reuben Ramallo of iProfesional recently tested that premise, as four fictional friends met for lunch in Palermo Hollywood to reminisce about the good old days and see who had made the best investment.

Fernando put his money in real estate, Pablo kept his pesos in dollars, Eduardo kept rolling his money over in short-term bank CD’s, while Juan Martín stocked up on gold. The clear winner, says Ramallo, was Juan Martín whose gold bars accumulated 1,613% in peso-denominated value since 2002.

The real estate investor came out in second place, assuming he bought in Capital Federal where peso-denominated values have risen 500% over the last eight years. Third place went to Pablo whose choice of greenbacks would have netted him a 300% gain, while Eduardo’s relatively safe CD play appreciated roughly 160%.

The infamous “inflacion de bolsillo” (pocket inflation) was the key differentiator separating the best and the worst investments. It rose 454% over the period in question meaning those who invested in gold and real estate were the clear winners compared to those whose investments were weighed down by a weakening peso. The director of ZonaBancos.com says the situation was most volatile in the first year post-Convertibility when the peso dropped from $1.40 to $3.82. In contrast, the past seven years have been much less volatile under the Central Bank’s policy of floating administration. (Full article in Spanish)

For more information on investment opportunities in Argentina, download IncomeBA and the new issue of InvestBA Privada.

Pan American Silver Mine in Argentina

Argentine workers enter the Melissa Underground Mine operated by Pan American Silver Corp.

Whether its G. Gordon Liddy or the guy who Matt Damon beat up in Good Will Hunting, you can’t turn on the TV without being bombarded by gold pitchmen. And while yearly gold charts look like the left side of a mountain, the rise in silver prices over the past two years is equally impressive.

Marc Davis of BNW Newswire says the impetus for greater silver exploration is definitely there, but we’re just not seeing it worldwide…with one notable exception. “Argentina posted a 55% jump in silver output in 2009 to 15.5 million ounces over the previous year.

One of the world’s few remaining stable democracies that is mineral-rich but underdeveloped, this geographically large Latin American nation is set to continue to ramp-up its output in the coming years,” writes Davis.

He says the major players in the region are three Vancouver-based companies: Silver Standard Resources (NASDAQ: SSRI), Pan American Silver Corp. (NASDAQ: PAAS), Extorre Gold Mines (TSX: XG) and Australia’s Andean Resources (TSX: AND).

Davis explains why silver is a good play going forward: “A number of key 21st century applications such as solar panels and flat screen television panels are forecast to contribute strongly to heightened demand. Furthermore, the marketplace for semiconductors, which are used in an array of portable electronic devices and other high-tech applications, is experiencing explosive growth.” (Full story at Resource Investor)

casposo-mine

Foreign investors like Troy Resources are tapping abundant mineral deposits in San Juan Province.

Casposo, a gold and silver mine in Argentina’s San Juan province is on the fast track toward producing its first gold in September, less than a year after initial excavation commenced. The news was the highlight of Troy Resources (ASX:TRY) quarterly earnings call earlier today.

Australia-based Troy is an aggressive mid-tier gold producer with South American mining operations in Argentina and Brazil. Troy purchased the Casposo project in May 2009, delivered an encouraging resource estimate in July and received board approval to move forward in August.

While the company lowered full-year production estimates for their Brazilian project, Andorinhas, the progress at Casposo was described by CEO Paul Benson as “the highlight for this quarter.” According to Mining Weekly, “Troy estimated that the Casposo project hosted an indicated mineral resource of more than 2.3 million tons, grading at 5.4 grams/ton gold and 201.7 grams/ton silver.”

The company’s indicated resources for the mine are 414,600 oz gold and 15.3MM oz silver, and the block model above indicates the depth and quality of the resources at Casposo. Troy anticipates the project will produce its first gold in September, which is good timing considering the planned cessation of operations later this year at the company’s Australian mine, Sandstone.

For more information on investment opportunities in Argentina and Uruguay, download IncomeBA and the new issue of InvestBA Privada.

 

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