Silver
has risen another 1.4% today to a high of $34.44/oz and above the 31-year
interday high of $34.33/oz reached last Tuesday (February 22nd). Silver is
higher in all currencies this morning, especially the Japanese yen. The news
that Saudi Arabia may be sending tanks to crush anti-government protests in
Bahrain saw buying of silver, gold and oil.
Cross
Currency Table
Silver rose another 2% yesterday and reached a new 30-year record high close,
but remains more than 30% below its March 1980 record nominal high, when
silver reached a record high of $50.35/oz (see long term chart below).
Gold
is also higher in all currencies as oil prices remain near recent highs on
geopolitical concerns. Both gold and silver would be expected to see a period
of consolidation after the sharp gains seen in February. However, the strong
fundamentals may lead to further upward pressure on prices.
Silver
remains in backwardation going out as far as the December 2014 contract which
is trading at $33.03/oz while spot (for immediate delivery) is at
$34.25/oz.
The
majority of the media continues to completely ignore the developments in the
gold market and, especially, in the silver market. Tech stocks and
speculation regarding banks, Twitter, Facebook and other individual companies
remain far more fashionable and the primary focus of the mainstream media
(not to mention Charlie Sheen and Lady Gaga).
Nominal Silver Prices – 1979 to Today (Weekly)
The backwardation and news regarding delays and difficulty of securing silver
bullion in volume including the Royal Canadian Mint having difficulty
sourcing physical bullion from bullion banks suggest that silver could soon
break out and move sharply higher.
The
moves in silver have been greeted with the usual silence by mainstream
financial media with little or no coverage or fanfare about the record highs.
Indeed, only those who peruse the specialist press and make it their business
to inform themselves about silver, would even be aware of the record highs.
CNBC
ran a piece on silver yesterday which was unusually bullish and suggested (as
we have done since 2004) that in time silver could reach its inflation
adjusted high in 1980 of over $130/oz.
The
Financial Times reports on the front page of their Company and Markets
section (see news below) that Italian banks are seeking to use gold in order
to strengthen their balance sheets ahead of coming stress tests. They wish to
mark-to-market the considerable gold reserves of the Bank of Italy (Italian
central bank), of which they are shareholders, in order to transform their
core capital ratios.
As of
December 2010, the Bank of Italy had gold reserves of 2451.8 metric tonnes
(68.6% of their foreign exchange reserves) which makes them the fourth
largest sovereign owner of gold in the world – after the US Federal
Reserve, the German Bundesbank and the International Monetary Fund
(IMF).
“Senior
bankers say taking into account the surge in gold prices the Bank of Italy
could have a mark-to-market value of about €30 billion.”
The
move would mark a further remonetisation of gold in the world financial and
monetary systems and may be a prelude to similar actions (revaluation of gold
reserves or possible devaluation of currencies versus gold reserves) being
done by other central banks.
The
Federal Reserve may be forced into such an action in order to protect the US
dollar. The Federal Reserve’s financial position has deteriorated
drastically in recent years and is being constantly diminished by
quantitative easing and the electronic creation and printing of money to buy
mortgage backed, Treasury and other securities.
The
Fed's asset holdings in the week ended February 23rd, climbed to $2.537
trillion and have expanded almost US$225 billion in just the last 16
weeks.
This
is currency debasement on a scale never before seen in history and will have
ramifications for bond markets, interest rates, the dollar and all fiat
currencies.
Gold
Gold
is trading at $1,419.68/oz, €1,028.16/oz and £873.06/oz.
Silver
Silver
is trading at $34.44/oz, €24.88/oz and £21.12/oz.
Platinum
Group Metals
Platinum
is trading at $1,816.50/oz, palladium at $805.00/oz and rhodium at $2,350/oz.
News
(Reuters)
- Daily gold transfers rise in January - LBMA
Gold ounces
transferred between accounts held by bullion clearers rose 7.1 percent to a
daily average of 19.2 million ounces in January from a month earlier, the
London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) said on Monday.
The
clearing statistics measure how much gold and silver are transferred on a net
basis between the accounts held at the bullion clearers.
The
average fixing dropped 2.5 percent, but value rose to a daily average of
$26.1 billion. The number of transfers climbed 11.7 percent to a daily
average of 2,034.
Measured
year-on-year, gold statistics were mixed. Ounces transferred fell 3 percent,
value rose 17.7 percent and the number of transfers increased by 13
percent.
Ounces
transferred in silver rose 20.1 percent to a daily average of 119.7 million.
The value of transfers rose 16.3 percent to a daily average of $3.4 billion,
the highest figure since LBMA clearing statistic began in 1998.
The
number of transfers rose 4.7 percent to a daily average of 597. Measured
year-on-year, ounces transferred surged 69.9 percent and value leapt 171.4
percent. The number of transfers rose 100.4 percent.
(Reporting by Jan Harvey; editing by James Jukwey )
(Bloomberg)
-- U.S. Mint Says Eagle Gold Coin Sales Increased 10% in February
Sales of
American Eagle gold coins by the U.S. Mint were 92,500 ounces in February, 10
percent higher than a year earlier and 31 percent below January’s
sales, data on its website show.
The
mint sold 3.24 million ounces of silver coins last month, up 58 percent from
a year earlier. That’s still 50 percent less than in January, the data
show.
(Financial
Times) --
Italian banks go for gold in move to transform core capital ratios
Italian banks, which by a quirk of law are shareholders in the
country’s central bank, are lobbying to have their stakes in the Bank
of Italy marked-to-market on the back of surging gold prices in an attempt to
ease regulatory pressure on them to raise capital in advance of this
summer’s stress tests.
The
move comes as Mario Draghi, Bank of Italy governor, over the weekend stepped
up pressure on Italian banks, which are some of the lowest capitalised in
Europe, to increase their core capital ratios or make clear to the market any
plans to do so.
The
Bank of Italy currently has a nominal value of just €156,000 ($215,000)
divided into 300,000 shares which are distributed among Italy’s retail
and savings banks according to their size.
Senior
bankers say taking into account the surge in gold prices the Bank of Italy
could have a mark-to-market value of about €30bn. Analysts estimate the
Italian banking sector has combined recapitalisation needs of much the same
amount to comply with new Basel III capital rules.
Any
debate over the value of the Bank of Italy has met with opposition from the
central bank concerned that it could harm governance. For the same reason,
executives at Italy’s banks are not involved in the central
bank’s decision-making process.
But
several sources familiar with the talks say Italy’s banking lobby is
gaining political traction amid opposition from its core shareholders, the
local banking foundations, to capital increases as they fear a dilution of
their stakes.
Italy’s
government has also indicated there is a political will to reduce the need
for Italian banks to access the capital markets.
After
heavy lobbying from banks and foundations, the government last week forced
through a motion, using a confidence vote, that will ease capital pressures
on the banks by allowing them to book some deferred taxes as assets.
Monte
dei Paschi di Siena and Banca Popolare di Milano, a regional lender, are the
banks seen as most likely to have to tap the market as they have core tier
one capital ratios of under 8 per cent and little room for assets sales. Both
banks have denied any such plans. The capital structure of UniCredit,
Italy’s largest bank by assets, is also in the spotlight as the future
of its main shareholders – the Libyan Central Bank and Libyan
Investment Authority – is unclear. Intesa Sanpaolo, Italy’s
largest bank by retail network, has core capital of about 8 per cent, which
could also be considered too low for a potentially systemically important
bank.
Intesa
Sanpaolo would be the biggest beneficiary of any capital revaluation with a
30 per cent stake in the central bank.
(Bloomberg) -- Silver may rise to $40
to $50 an ounce, said Sean Boyd, the chief executive officer of Agnico- Eagle
Mines Ltd.
Boyd
spoke today in a Bloomberg Television interview in Hollywood, Florida.
(Bloomberg) -- Silver in last two weeks
cleared “resistance” at $31-$32 range; patterns “point to a
full retracement” back to 1980 high when Hunt brothers tried to corner
the market, says Bank of Amer. Merrill Lynch market analyst Mary Ann
Bartels.
Silver
futures would need to rise $8.58 or 26% to reach 1980 high from today’s
$33.61
Silver
set for breakout vs gold: Bartels
If silver relative to gold exceeds 1998 high “would confirm
multi-decade base and set the stage for longer-term silver
outperformance.
(Bloomberg) -- Following is a table
of sales of gold and silver coins by the U.K.’s Royal Mint, as
confirmed by a spokesman by phone today. The figures are in ounces.
|
2010
|
2009
|
Gold
|
110,287
|
118,374
|
Silver
|
368,991
|
388,129
|
(Bloomberg) -- Gold prices may average 8
percent more in 2011 at $1,320 an ounce because of investment demand driven
by risks linked to global economic growth and fiscal stability, an Australian
government agency said.
The
price may peak this year before declining, in real terms, to average around
$975 an ounce in 2013, and then increase to $1,064 in 2016, said the
Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences. The
appeal of the metal could weaken in the second half and in 2012 if the U.S.
economy improves and the possibility of monetary tightening increases, it
said.
“The
assumption of world economic recovery over the next few years is expected to
lead to a reduction in speculative investment demand,” Abares said in
the report. “The appetite for higher risk assets such as shares and
property is likely to increase.”
Gold
climbed about 5.7 percent last month to $1,408.07 an ounce as of 4:38 p.m.
Singapore time yesterday as riots in North Africa and the Middle East and the
toppling of autocratic leaders in Egypt and Tunisia spurred demand for a
haven. Bullion gained 30 percent last year as investors sought to preserve
their wealth against currency debasement.
World
mine production is forecast to increase 2 percent to 2,703 metric tons this
year, the report said. Australian mine output may rise 14 percent to 274 tons
in 2010-2011 as Newmont Mining Corp.’s $3 billion Boddington
development in Western Australia ramps up, it said.
(Bloomberg) -- Gold is poised to
advance to a record with the bull trend targeting $1,460 to $1,500, according
to technical analysis by Barclays Capital.
“Gold
is oscillating around the bull-flag trigger in the $1,410 area,”
according to a report from analysts including Jordan Kotick and Phil Roberts.
“We maintain our bullish view and expect a clear break over there to
confirm gains through the all-time high at $1,432.”
Bullion
for immediate delivery has advanced 6 percent this month as riots in North
Africa and the Middle East and the toppling of autocratic leaders in Egypt
and Tunisia spurred demand for a haven. Gold climbed 30 percent in 2010 and
reached a record $1,431.25 an ounce on Dec. 7.
The
metal faces resistance levels at $1,432, $1,465 and $1,500 an ounce and
support at $1,370, $1,340 and $1,300, the report said.
In
technical analysis, analysts study charts of trading patterns to try to
predict changes in a security, commodity, currency or index.
(Financial
Times) -- Vietnamese weigh impact of bar on gold trade
The desire among many Vietnamese to keep gold as a store of value is both a
cause and a symptom of the fast-growing nation’s economic
trouble.
Now
the government has said it will ban the trading of gold bars in the
“free market” as part of a package of measures designed to rein
in soaring prices and tackle deep-seated economic imbalances. But it has
befuddled investors and ordinary people alike.
Buffeted
by persistent inflation and weakness in their currency, many Vietnamese
prefer to save in gold and dollars. Their fondness for gold, which is often
used to settle property deals and other large transactions, and dollars puts
further downward pressure on their currency, the dong, in a negative feedback
loop from which it is hard to escape.
Vietnam’s
central bank said on Friday that in order to prevent speculation and market
manipulation, the government would issue a decree in the second quarter of
this year banning the free-market gold trade and thereby preventing
cross-border smuggling. But, given the government’s tendency to issue
decrees and circulars by the truckload, gold traders and economists say the
real impact of this latest pronouncement will be determined by
officials’ actions rather than words.
Cao Sy
Kiem, a former central bank governor, told the Tuoi Tre newspaper that while
the government needed to tackle the proliferation of gold and dollars in
order to be able to make sound monetary policy, a “detailed road
map” was needed to ensure the problems caused by unofficial gold
trading were not made worse.
A gold
trader on Ha Trung street in Hanoi, one of the most popular locations for the
gold shops that double as black-market dong-dollar exchange houses,
questioned how effective this latest move would be.
He
said: “The government needs a clear definition of gold bars, or else
gold shops will make whatever shape necessary to avoid the law.”
One
economist said that, as transactions in gold and dollars were circumscribed
by law, what was needed was serious enforcement and serious alternatives, not
more decrees. Given much of the gold in Vietnam is held in people’s
home safes, accurate statistics on the amount of the metal in the country are
nigh on impossible to collate. Last year the central bank governor denied
speculation that there was as much as 1,000 tons of gold in Vietnam,
equivalent to 45 per cent of annual gross domestic product.
The
onshore gold price, which trades at a premium to international prices, fell
initially at the end of last week as news of the proposed trading ban broke.
But it stabilised on Monday at 37.6m-37.7m Vietnam dong per tael, equivalent
to 37.5 grammes or 1.21 troy ounces, according to Reuters.
Evidence,
if it were needed, that it will take a lot more than another decree to coax
the gold out of Vietnamese savers.
(Bloomberg) -- Silver for immediate
delivery climbed as much as 1.4 percent to $34.3775 an ounce, the highest
price since March 1980.
It
traded at $34.3525 at 11:21 a.m. local time
Mark O’Byrne
Goldcore
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