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29 October 2009 at 21:45 IST
'Believe in gold. But gold is not a religion'
By Jon Nadler
The US dollar fell along with the yen overnight, as speculation ahead of the release of US GDP data pushed stock index futures higher and reignited a modicum of risk appetite. Following four days of climbing against the euro, and backing away from the 75 mark on the trade-weighted index, the greenback slipped 0.20 this morning, coming down to 76.27 and this action resulted in partial repairs of yesterday's $12 rout in
Gold prices. Yesterday's sell-off capped the longest slide in gold since March - the dollar was cited a the prime mover, yet again.
A couple of fresh charts shown by Zwermann Financial from Frankfurt on CNBC television this morning, show a developing 'diamond' formation on the gold charts, indicating a potential move towards $1015, and possibly to as low a price as $980. That second number presents a big question mark for gold and the confirmation of a possible major trend turn. The same scenario, in reverse, applies to the USD index. A vault to the break-down point of 77.50 could mark the first level of a comeback, but a move to 79.20 on that same gauge could confirm a major turnaround by the US currency against its rivals.
Bullion recovered from the $1025 lows seen on Wednesday, adding about three-quarter percent in the hours ahead of the NY opening this morning. Also recovering, was
Crude Oil - it climbed 38 cents to $77.84 . Not faring too well overnight, was the Nikkei average - it fell 183 points on the session.
New York spot prices opened as follows this morning: Gold was up $5.80 an ounce, quoted at $1033.50 bid, while
Silver rose 18 cents to start at $16.31 per ounce.
Platinum climbed $11 to $1316 and
Palladium moved $3 higher, quoted at $317.00 the troy ounce. GDP data will be the focus as we move into the active part of the day. Some recovery is expected in gold, perhaps back to the $1044 area, but the jury is out on the nature and size of the overall correction and rebound that has now followed, as you will read below. The GDP data did not disappoint analysts - it was, in fact, right on target. Going forward, they expect less of the same...
On the ground, where prices meet the man in the street, and where the bars and coins of gold actually change hands, the picture is not so rosy, still. Bloomberg reports that: "Gold imports by India, the world’s biggest buyer, probably fell for the sixth month in October as record prices curbed demand from jewelers, a traders’ group said. Purchases this month are 27 tons compared with 44 tons a year earlier.
Mr. Suresh Hundia, president of the Bombay Bullion Association Ltd., said, citing preliminary data, that: “Retail demand was absent except during Diwali festival because of high prices,” he said in a phone interview. “The price will have to fall significantly for demand to revive.” India’s imports may be 40 percent less than last year’s purchase of 420 tons, Hundia said. " If anyone is still sitting out there, writing sky-high gold price predictions, and believing that India is irrelevant to gold, we would advise a thorough re-think of that flawed assumption.
Elliott wave analysis shows a largely similar picture in terms of the dollar and gold.
"Prices have already come back under the March 2008 intraday extreme at $1033 (basis spot). The 240-minute chart shows that gold is in the process of tracing out “five down” from the $1071.29 high on October 14. Once five waves are complete, odds would be extremely high that Primary wave C (circle) was underway to below $680. At the current juncture, only an unexpected rise above $1068 would denigrate the bearish case." The firm's analysts also observe a now tandem-pattern move between
Gold and equities, called "all the same market."
What's the latest word on 'that gold' from Russia? Well, that depends on the day of the quote coming from officials. After announcing that the news leak regarding the planned 20-50 tonne gold sale placed the liquidation on hold for a while, yesterday's tune sounded more like this:
"Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin said Wednesday that Russia is considering selling gold on world markets to cash in on high prices as the government faces its first budget deficit in a decade. Kudrin's remarks follow a report last week that the Gokhran precious metals depository was planning to sell up to 50 metric tons, or 1.6 million ounces, of gold in London by the end of the year. With gold prices reaching record highs of over $1,000 per ounce, the sale could bring Russia some $1.7 billion. The finance minister gave no details Wednesday in remarks to journalists carried by state news agencies.
"We will continue to study this issue and the decision may come in the next few days," Kudrin was quoted by the ITAR-TASS news agency as saying. The head of the state diamond and precious metals exporter said Tuesday that no sale was planned this year, in what analysts described as an attempt to prevent expectations of a major sale from affecting the market price. Russia is running a budget deficit of 7.7 percent of gross domestic product -- its first in a decade -- and expects a 6.8 percent deficit next year." On again, off again. In any case, is appears that the sale -whenever it comes- will bring along the surprise factor that the market probably wishes it did not have to deal with.
Next, what market (and marketing) signals are coming from Vienna's Austrian Mint? I will say, level-headed ones, but...will, let Bloomerg fill you in on the latest, as: " the world’s largest marketer of pure gold coins, plans to slash output by 32 percent next year from a record, forecasting the end of the financial crisis will weaken investor demand.
Muenze Oesterreich AG aims to cut production of Philharmonic gold coins to 650,000 ounces in 2010 from an estimated 950,000 ounces this year, mint President Kurt Meyer said in an interview in Tokyo. Output in 2009 is set to reach an all-time high for a second year after financial turmoil triggered by the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. spurred demand, he said.
“The crisis is over, and economies are recovering,” Meyer said yesterday during a visit to Japan to promote sales of a new 20-ounce version of the coin. “Gold investment stimulated by concerns about the financial system will subside,” he said. The coin design depicts musical instruments representing the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, according to the mint’s Web site.
“Gold rallied on speculation that the dollar will weaken because of low U.S. interest rates,” said Kazuhiko Saito, chief analyst at commodity broker Fujitomi Co. in Tokyo. “If these conditions change, the metal’s advance will come to a halt.” The 800-year-old Austrian mint, located in a former Habsburg palace, sold 908,721 ounces of gold coins so far this year, exceeding overall sales last year by 14 percent, Meyer said. Including bars, the mint sold 1.9 million ounces of gold this year, 23 percent more than last year’s total sales of 1.54 million ounces, he added.
The Austrian mint became the top marketer of pure gold coins, taking a 30 percent share in the global market in the three months ended Dec. 31, as producers in other countries failed to catch up with growing demand on a lack of available metal, Meyer said."
MCX Brent Crude Oil 09 March 2012
contract was trading at
Rs 5888 . What's your view on it?
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