The Daily Telegraph has report Vitamin D immune system boost?

The Daily Telegraph has report Vitamin D immune system boost?
The Daily Telegraph has reported that “vitamin D 'triggers and arms' the immune system”. It said that researchers believe that vitamin D plays a key role in boosting the immune system.

The study looked at human T cells in the laboratory, and found that vitamin D was part of a complex process in which T cells become 'primed' and help to fight infection. While these findings suggest that people with vitamin D deficiency are more susceptible to infection or that vitamin D supplements might boost immunity, such theories need to be tested further before drawing any firm conclusions.

It is important to have enough vitamin D to maintain a healthy body. Vitamin D forms in our skin in response to sunlight. However, care should be taken to avoid burning or over-exposure. Vitamin D is also found in foods such as oily fish, eggs, fortified margarines, some breakfast cereals and vitamin supplements.

Where did the story come from?

Dr Marina Rode von Essen and colleagues from the University of Copenhagen and Bispebjerg Hospital in Denmark carried out this research. The study was funded by the Danish Medical Research Council, the Lundbeck Foundation, the Novo Nordisk Foundation, the King Christian the 10th Foundation and the A.P. Møller Foundation for the Advancement of Medical Sciences. Some of the chemicals used in the study were provided by the manufacturer Bayer Schering Pharma AG. The paper was published in the peer-reviewed scientific journal Nature Immunology.

The study was reported in The Daily Telegraph, Daily Mail, and Metro . The newspapers give reasonable coverage of this complex research. Metro includes the study’s sensible warning that sunburn should be avoided.

What kind of research was this?

This laboratory research investigated what happens to human T cells when they respond to foreign molecules (called antigens). T cells are immune-system cells that recognise antigens (for example molecules on the surfaces of viruses) and kill infected cells. In particular, the researchers looked at the 'priming' of the T cells, a process by which T cells prepare to respond to antigens. When exposed to an antigen, primed T cells are able to multiply in number faster and produce more chemicals to help promote further immune response than naive T cells. They looked at the role of a protein called phospholipase C, which is involved in sending signals within cells. They also looked at how vitamin D and the vitamin D receptor are involved in this process.

This type of laboratory study helps researchers to unravel the complex events that occur in individual cells in the immune system. A better understanding of how the immune system works could suggest ways of boosting immune responses. In this case, if vitamin D was found to play a role in the immune system, this would suggest that people with vitamin D deficiency might be more susceptible to infection or that vitamin D supplements might boost immunity. Such theories would have to be tested in human research before any firm conclusions could be drawn.

 What did the research involve?

The researchers took 'naive' (unprimed by exposure to antigens) human T cells from freshly drawn blood and grew them in the laboratory. They grew some in solutions containing immune system molecules: conditions that 'primed' them for activation.

The characteristics and behaviour of the 'primed' T cells were then compared with the 'naive' T cells. This included the cells’ response to being 'restimulated' through re-exposure to the immune system molecules that originally primed their activation.

The researchers were especially interested in how much the cells produced a particular form of phospholipase C, called phospholipase C-γ1, and how this was linked to the presence of the vitamin D receptor. They also looked at what happened if they blocked the cells from responding to vitamin D. They carried out experiments to investigate how the cells switched on the production of the vitamin D receptor.

What were the basic results?

The researchers found that 'naive' T cells that had not been primed produced only a small amount of phospholipase C-γ1. However, following priming by exposure to the activator immune system molecules, the T cells began to produce far more phospholipase C-γ1. For this to occur, the T cells needed to be in the presence of vitamin D and the vitamin D receptor.

They also found that naive T cells did not produce the vitamin D receptors, and that these receptors were only produced when the T cells were primed.

How did the researchers interpret the results?

The researchers conclude that T cells produce vitamin D receptors when they are primed to respond to antigens. Vitamin D then acts via the receptor to stimulate production of phospholipase C-γ1. These changes are necessary for the T cells to be activated.

Conclusion

This research indicates that vitamin D is involved in the activation of the T cells of the immune system. It is important to note that this is a laboratory study, and it is useful in helping researchers to understand what happens in specific immune system cells when exposed to foreign entities such as bacteria or viruses. It does not tell us how variations in vitamin D levels might affect people’s susceptibility to infection, or what the ideal level of vitamin D is for supporting immune system responses to infection.

Other studies will no doubt look into these questions. However, as with other vitamins, it is clearly important to have sufficient vitamin D to maintain a healthy body. Vitamin D forms in our skin in response to sunlight, but care should still be taken to avoid burning or over-exposure. Vitamin D is also found in foods such as oily fish, eggs, fortified margarines, some breakfast cereals and vitamin supplements.

Analysis by Bazian

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Every time this happens gold stocks explode – Frank Holmes

Every time this happens, gold stocks explode – Frank Holmes

Major bull rallies in gold stocks have been preceded by generalist investors rushing back into the sector, and this is exactly what is happening right now, said Frank Holmes, CEO of U.S. Global Investors.

April saw historical highs in gold-backed ETF inflows, as well, record number of new online trading accounts have been opened during the last two months.

“This past quarter has been a game changer. We now have gold rally for three years, and we have many big gold producers promoting and telling the story, like Newmont and Barrick, that they have free cash flow,” Holmes told Kitco News.

Gold stocks have outperformed the broad equities index, with the VanEck Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX) up 23% year-to-date, while the S&P 500 has lagged with a -10% loss over the same period.

Holmes attributes this performance disparity on gold miners’ superior cash flows.

“We’re going to see falling cash flow, and no free cash flow [for the broad stock market]. Gold equities, on the other hand, look beautiful,” he said.

Holmes added that he likes royalty streaming gold companies.

“This past quarter, Franco Nevada, Wheaton Precious Metals, and Royal Gold, [posted] $300 million in the quarter for free cash flow. That’s really significant, because the S&P, in free cash flow, collapsed,” he said.

 

By David Lin

For Kitco News

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Supply crunch pushing silver price to 3-month high

Supply crunch pushing silver price to 3-month high

All eyes are on silver as prices are starting the week with some robust follow-through buying after Friday's breakout session.

In a comment to Kitco News, Phillip Streible, chief market strategist at Blue Line Futures, said that a perfect storm of increased investment demand and falling supply is expected to continue to push silver prices higher.

May silver prices last traded at $17.51 an ounce, up 2.5% on the day. Sunday's rally follows silver's 5.5% jump on Friday; silver futures are trading at their highest level since late February. The precious metal has now recovered all of its loss from the March selloff.

Streible noted that the silver's Friday rally picked up new momentum after the release of the Federal Reserve's industrial production data for April. The report showed that industrial production dropped 11.2% last month, the most significant drop in the report's century-old history.

One of the report's components showed that mining output, including gold and silver production, dropped 11.2%, the sharpest monthly decline in history.

"Nobody really talks about the mining numbers in this report, but someone was obviously watching it," said Streible. "The data points to tightening physical supply. Silver prices are going higher because the market is getting a lift from all different angles."

With silver prices back over $17 an ounce ounces, Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank, said that the next critical resistance level to watch is $17.50 an ounce.

He added that silver has room to rally as speculative interest in the precious metal has been declining since early March as investors shed their bullish silver bets as the COVID-19 pandemic was impacting the global economy.

"We have to contemplate the risk of a second wave of the virus wave in the second-half of the year, together with a developing Trump versus China blame game," said Hansen. "With these developments in mind, we see the risk of renewed stock market weakness, a stronger dollar and Japanese yen on safe-haven demand… precious metals look set to rally further on safe-haven and diversification demand."

Although speculative investors have been reluctant to hold silver, Hansen said that investor demand in silver-backed exchange-traded products remains robust.

"Apart from a small dip in March, ETF investors have been continued buyers of silver ETFs since January. Total holdings have reached a record 98 million ounces," he said.

 

By Neils Christensen

For Kitco News

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Eating too much salt seems to impair body’s ability to fight bacteria

Eating too much salt seems to impair body's ability to fight bacteria

Eating too much salt may impair the body’s ability to fight bacterial infections, according to studies in mice and in 10 human volunteers.

Christian Kurts at the University Hospital of Bonn in Germany and his team first showed that mice given a high salt diet were less able to fight kidney infections caused by E. coli and body-wide infections caused by Listeria monocytogenes, a common cause of food poisoning.

“The bacteria caused more damage before the immune system got rid them,” says Kurts

Next, the team gave 10 healthy women and men who were 20 to 50 years old an extra 6 grams of salt a day on top of their normal diet, in the form of three tablets a day. After a week, some of their immune cells, called neutrophils, had a greatly impaired ability to engulf and kill bacteria compared with the same tests done on each individual before they took extra salt.

The team didn’t examine the effect of high salt intake on the body’s ability to fight viral infections.

The World Health Organization recommends that people eat no more than 5 grams of salt a day to avoid high blood pressure, which can cause strokes and heart disease. In the UK, people eat 8 grams on average, suggesting many consume as much or more than the volunteers in the study.

 

Brian Jackson/Alamy

Boost your Immune system

 

 

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The biggest bad news out there’: Gold eyes US-China trade tensions next week

The biggest bad news out there': Gold eyes U.S.-China trade tensions next week

Gold prices are back in the rally mode Friday, rising above $1,750 an ounce, with analysts looking for more gains next week as U.S.-China trade tensions ramp up and the economic data worsens.

The rise in U.S.-China tensions is "the biggest bad news out there," and gold tends to rally on that, said Gainesville Coins precious metals expert Everett Millman.

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Trade tensions surged to new levels at the end of the week after U.S. President Donald Trump said on Thursday that he had no interest in speaking to Chinese President Xi Jinping while adding that he could potentially cut ties completely with China. Trump has been calling out China, stating that he is disappointed with its failure to contain coronavirus.

Tensions ramped up further on Friday when the Trump administration announced that it is moving to block shipments of semiconductors to Huawei Technologies from global chipmakers. In response, China said it was ready to place U.S. companies on an "unreliable entity list," which could include Apple, Cisco Systems, and Qualcomm. China also said it could suspend purchases of Boeing Co airplanes.

Going forward, the U.S.-China issue will once again become a big deal, Millman told Kitco News. "I don't see those tensions improving. If anything, the longer we have any kind of problem with coronavirus, the more it will ramp up that rhetoric between the U.S. and China," he said.

For gold, the next step is to reach the $1,800 an ounce level, which is now just a question of time, said FXTM market analyst Han Tan.

"The coming months remain paved with downside risks and the threat of chilling U.S.-China relations amid this global pandemic will only further inhibit global risk appetite," Tan noted on Friday. "Gold's path of least resistance remains to the upside, so hitting the $1,800 handle is just a matter of time. A host of potential positive catalysts for Bullion remain in the offing, including … a spike in US-China trade tensions."

The $1,800 target is even possible next week, if we see further outflows from the U.S. equity funds, said Blue Line Futures chief market strategist Phillip Streible. "Gold looks like it is starting to gain some momentum. We should continue to see investors pile in," Streible said.

At the time of writing, June Comex gold futures were trading at $1,756.90, up 2.5% on the week.

 

Anna Golubova
Kitco NEWS

 

 

 

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9000 gold and triple-digit silver prices will come but do this first – Midas Touch Consulting

$9,000 gold and triple-digit silver prices will come, but do this first – Midas Touch Consulting

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Long-term, investors can expect gold prices to climb multiple times its current value, and silver prices to rally into the triple digits, but they should not count on the precious metals to break out in the short-term.

In , a correction is due and investors should take this as a buying opportunity, said Florian Grummes, managing director of Midas Touch Consulting

“It looks like [gold will get] a consolidation on the higher levels, with one nasty, little pullback where all the weak hands are shaken off and then the next wave up towards $1,800 and then the all-time highs of $1,920,” Grummes told Kitco News. “Once gold sustainability takes out the all-time high of $1,920, it can run easily a few hundred dollars further.”

In the next five to ten years, gold prices could climb to $8,000 to $9,000, with silver following suit in this bull-run, due to the similar macroeconomic environment that we currently share with that of the 1970’s, when gold prices climbed several hundred percentage points, Grummes noted.

“If you look at it from a very long-term perspective, and you can only compare it to the bull market of the 1970’s. Once the bull market started again in 1976, it went up for four years and it went up basically from $100 to $890, so nearly nine-fold. If you use the same ratio to today’s numbers, we would end up having gold, at some point in the future, $8,000, $9,000 gold, but we’re talking five to 10 years, I think,” he said.

What makes our situation similar to the economic landscape of the 1970’s is the potential for stagflation to set in, Grummes noted.

Silver’s outlook is equally positive on a long-term basis, and investors should not worry too much about the entry point if their time horizon is sufficiently long.

“Silver has huge upside potential. It’s extremely undervalued in comparison to gold. It’s a very cheap inflation hedge. I think at some point over the next few years silver will run up against the $50 level again,” he said. “There will be another breakthrough over the next two to five years and once that happens, I think silver is off to three-digit numbers.”

On bitcoin, Grummes said that the largest cryptocurrency is like the digital version of gold in its hedge properties, and should be owned in the same portfolio as the yellow metal.

 

By Kitco News

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Corvus Gold jumps 15 on Nevada drill results

Corvus Gold jumps 15% on Nevada drill results

Nevada explorer Corvus Gold (TSX:KOR) traded up 15% to $2.58 a share on Wednesday after announcing a new discovery below its Mother Lode deposit.

The company highlighted a drill result showing 125.5m @ 2.6 g/t gold including 14.8m @ 8.9 g/t gold & 24.7m @ 4.9 g/t gold.

In a news release Jeffrey Pontius, President and CEO of Corvus, said the results reveal the potential of CIZ.

“These new results now reveal the potential of the CIZ. We will be evaluating this exciting target with our ongoing innovative core drilling program at Mother Lode. In addition to the ongoing exploration work that is expanding the Mother Lode deposit, development work is also rapidly progressing on our low-Capex, quick to account, Phase1 starter project at North Bullfrog. These exciting Corvus Gold developments are highlighting the potential of the Bullfrog District and along with new land acquisitions and discoveries by our neighboring production companies it is shining a bright light on this under explored area of Nevada. We expect that the Bullfrog District and Corvus Gold will become one of the major focuses of the Nevada and North American gold sector in 2020.”

By Kitco News
For Kitco News

 

 

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Osisko Gold Royalties reports higher adjusted 1Q profit

Osisko Gold Royalties reports higher adjusted 1Q profit

Osisko Gold Royalties Ltd. (TSX & NYSE: OR) posted a larger adjusted profit in the first quarter as revenues were boosted by higher prices of precious metals, the company said late Tuesday.

Revenues from royalties and streams totaled $37.8 million, an increase of 13% from $33.5 million in the same quarter a year ago. The company listed 18,159 gold equivalent ounces, down from 19,753 a year ago. However, the average gold rose to $1,583 an ounce.

Osisko listed adjusted earnings of $7.5 million, or a nickel per share, up from $5.8 million, or 4 cents, in the same quarter of 2019.

However, the company recorded a net loss of $13.3 million, or 9 cents per share. This included a non-cash impairment charge on the Renard diamond stream of $26.3 million, or $19.3 million net of income taxes. The COVID-19 pandemic delivered a double whammy to the diamond stream – the selling price of diamonds fell sharply, and even when the Quebec government ended a temporary mine shutdown due to the virus, the operator of the mine extended the care-and-maintenance period due to the depressed market, Osisko explained.

Osisko withdrew its 2020 production guidance as a result of uncertainties related to the pandemic.

“Even though our business has been impacted by the measures taken to contain the spread of COVID-19, the revenue deferral is manageable given our efficient business model,” said Sean Roosen, chair and chief executive officer. “We further believe that our opportunity set will grow in the coming quarters, and we are well positioned to deploy capital toward royalty and streaming transactions and create value for our stakeholders.”

The company said it improved the silver stream on the Gibraltar mine by investing $8.5 million to reduce the transfer price from $2.75 per ounce of silver to zero as of last month.

The company announced a second-quarter dividend of 5 Canadian cents per share to be paid on July 15 to to shareholders of record as of the close of business on June 30.

 

By Allen Sykora
For Kitco News

 

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Hold on for inflation equities trade JP Morgan says

Hold on for inflation equities trade, JP Morgan says

HANDOUT – 18 September 2019, US, Washington: US Federal Reserve (FOMC) chairman Jerome Powell speaks during a press conference. The US Federal Reserve on Wednesday lowered the target range for interest rates by a quarter point – the second cut in just ove

Equity investors should not worry about inflation for the time being despite central banks unleashing monetary policy, JP Morgan said.

The investment bank said it had received questions from clients about a potential surge in inflation caused by extreme stimulus measures from the US Federal Reserve, led by Jay Powell. Such a surge could put an end to strong outperformance by growth and quality stocks.

Mislav Matejka, JP Morgan's head of global and European equity strategy, said he had sympathy with this view but that investors should consider the timing and the sequence of events. In the meantime, technology and defensive shares are winners and gold will perform well during deflation and reflation, he said.

Economies need to work through a deflationary phase before reflation, which is unlikely before the fourth quarter of 2020, Matejka said in a note to clients. A technical rebound in PMI surveys in May or June will fade, he said.

Inflation tends to be a lagging growth indicator, trailing improvements in economic output by about six quarters, JP Morgan said. Given current weak activity inflation could pick up in the second half of 2021, it said.

Tighter bank lending standards also need to start relaxing to make an inflation trade to take hold properly, JP Morgan said. There will be short-term bounces along the way, though.

"These rotations will not be able to sustain as long as bond yields are constrained, oil is directionless, inflation forwards are down, lending standards are tightened, and actual core inflation, as well as wage growth and labour market, remain weak," Matejka wrote

 

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Gold prices today fall for second day in a row silver edges higher

Gold prices today fall for second day in a row, silver edges higher

Gold prices have struggled at higher levels due to weak physical demand

But in the past one year, gold prices are up about 40%

Gold prices in India fell for the second day in a row despite positive global cues. On MCX, June gold futures were down 0.2% to ₹45,722 per 10 gram, after falling 0.70% in the previous session. Silver prices however edged 0.42% higher to ₹43,475 per kg.

In global markets, gold prices were higher, holding above key $1,700 per ounce level. Despite firmer equities and a stronger dollar, gold held firm on worries about a new wave of coronavirus infections as many countries are gradually reopening their economies. Spot gold climbed 0.2% to $1,704.26 per ounce. Among other precious metals, platinum rose 0.7% to $770.66 while silver climbed 0.4% to $15.51.

The second tranche of government of India's gold bonds of this fiscal year opened for subscription today at a time when the investment demand for the precious metal is rising. It will close on May 15. The price of per gram of gold has been fixed at ₹4,590 while those applying online and making payment through digital mode will get a discount of ₹50 per gram.

South Korea has warned of a second wave of the new coronavirus while China on Sunday the highest daily increase in cases since April 28. Wuhan, the epicentre of the outbreak in China, reported five new locally transmitted COVID-19 cases, the highest since March 11.

On the other hand, some increase in physical gold demand improved was seen in China, the world's biggest consumer, though activity remained muted in other countries due to lockdowns and holidays.

Later this week, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is due to give a key note speech, an event which will be on the radar of gold traders.

Though analysts remain positive on gold amid the coronavirus crisis and massive stimulus announced by central banks, they say that weak physical demand may put pressure on prices at higher levels. Besides, supply worries have eased as some refiners have resumed operations.

Data released on Friday showed the US shedding a staggering 20.5 million jobs in April, the steepest plunge in payrolls since the Great Depression. The head of the International Monetary Fund on Friday warned the United States and China against rekindling a trade war that could weaken recovery from the pandemic.

US President Donald Trump said on Friday he was "very torn" about whether to end the so-called Phase 1 U.S.-China trade deal, just hours after top officials from both countries pledged to press ahead with implementing.

 

11 May 2020, 09:35 AM IST

Written By Surajit Dasgupta

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