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London Gold Market Report
THE WHOLESALE LONDON PRICE of physical gold held onto
this week's early rise again on Wednesday, pushing back above $1400 per ounce
as world stock markets fell and crude oil rose to new two-year highs as fresh
anti-government protests hit the Gulf state of Bahrain.
More gunfire was reported in the Libyan capital Tripoli, but eastern cities
enjoyed "delirious celebrations" at the demise of Colonel Gaddafi's
forty-year regime, according to the BBC.
King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia – jointly the world's biggest oil
producer alongside Russia, and immune so far to civil unrest – returned
from 3 months of medical treatment abroad to announce a near US$38 billion
package of housing projects, pay rises and unemployment insurance.
"We have to appreciate that in the west, what is happening in Egypt and
North Africa results in stagflation in the short term," says Dr. Mohamed
El-Erian, CEO and chief investment officer at US bond-fund giant Pimco,
writing in the Financial Times.
"Because of higher oil prices," warns El-Erian, stagflation in the
rich West means "higher inflation and lower growth that take away
purchasing power and transfer wealth somewhere else."
"Taking advantage of the rise in the price of oil and its effect on the
Russian economy," says the FT, Russia will launch a 7-year
Ruble-denominated government bond on the European money markets tomorrow.
Moscow was the world's heaviest gold buyer for its central-bank reserves
throughout 2010.
"Should Brent crude oil reach $110 per barrel," writes
Walter de Wet at Standard Bank today, "the world would be paying almost
6% of global GDP towards oil – well above the 2-3% level seen between
1985 and 2005."
The US Dollar fell on Wednesday, as did US Treasury bonds, ahead of today's
$35 billion sale of new 5-year debt and Thursday's $29bn sale of 7-year debt.
Back in precious metals, "There [was] still bargain hunting [in gold] at
the lower end," Reuters quotes Ronald Leung of Lee Cheong Gold Dealers
in Hong Kong.
"This Middle East crisis won't be easily solved in a short time. There
are so many nations involved."
South Korea's banking run continued, meantime, with the closure of the 8th
lender this week closing.
Middle East and North Africa region accounted for almost 70% of South Korea's
total construction project orders in 2010 according to the government's trade
and investment agency.
Wholesale Asian gold trading "was more orderly but directionless"
says another Hong Kong dealer, with Tuesday's "enthusiastic" buyers
content to sit on their new positions.
"My concern is the [US-listed gold-backed] ETF" trust fund, says a
Singapore trader. "The volume is not picking up."
The SPDR Gold Trust yesterday shed another 5 tonnes of gold bullion, taking
its holdings down to a 9-month low of 1218 tonnes as investors pulled money
out.
Silver ETF holdings have also been falling, with the Silver iShares Trust
ending last night with 6.2% less metal than it held the previous Tuesday.
"If this is the start of a correction [in Silver Prices] we see good
buying interest toward previous January high 31.23," says the latest
technical analysis from bullion bank Scotia Mocatta.
Silver prices today rose back above $33 per ounce, but held more than 3% shy
of Tuesday's new 31-year highs.
"We must make policy based on the best available [inflation] forecast,
learning from our past mistakes, and not be tyrannized by popular fears or
spectres of expectations," said career US academic Adam Posen –
who voted for the fifth month running to increase the Bank of England's
quantitative easing program at this month's meeting – in a speech on
Tuesday.
For three of his eight colleagues on the monetary policy committee, however,
"the case for removing some monetary stimulus at this month's meeting
was compelling," minutes from the 10th Feb. decision showed.
Martin Weale and fellow academic Andrew Sentance were joined by senior Bank
insider Spencer Dale – ex-advisor to the US Federal Reserve and former
secretary to governor Mervyn King – in voting for a hike in rates.
Sterling was little moved by the news, holding the gold price for UK buyers
just below £865 per ounce.
Adrian
Ash
Head of Research
Bullionvault.com
You can also Receive
your first gram of Gold free by opening an account with Bullion Vault : Click
here.
City correspondent
for The Daily Reckoning in London, Adrian Ash is head of research at BullionVault.com –
giving you direct access to investment gold, vaulted in Zurich, on $3 spreads
and 0.8% dealing fees.
Please Note: This
article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best
place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk.
Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events
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