Gold’s London AM fix this morning was USD
1,652.50, GBP 1,077.11, and EUR 1,296.18 per ounce.
Yesterday's AM fix was USD 1,641.00, GBP 1,063.51, and
EUR 1,286.25 per ounce.
All eyes are glued to the European Central Bank’s
monetary policy and interest rate announcement scheduled later today.
Gold rose above $1,650 an ounce in Europe on Thursday as the euro
climbed against the dollar after a well-received auction of Spanish bonds,
but its gains were limited by uncertainty ahead of a European Central Bank
interest rate decision later in the day.
Economists polled by Reuters say the ECB will take a
breather this month after unleashing back-to-back interest rate cuts, so they
can assess the impact of the their actions in the final two months of 2011.
The wording post announcement will be closely watched for any suggestion
of further monetary easing, however.
Worries that the Eurozone is still stuck in its debt
crisis at a time when the US economy is improving has pressured the euro and
lifted euro-priced gold. Gold in euro terms has outperformed the yellow
metal this year, rising 7.4 percent against dollar gold's 5.6 percent.
Demand in Asia continues to be strong. China
remains the world’s largest producer of mined gold.
Premiums for gold bullion bars in Asia are rising again
and are at their highest since October in Hong Kong and Singapore. Premiums
are at $2.15/oz in Hong Kong and $1.65/oz in Singapore. Bullion’s strength was also
attributed to the euro’s 16 month low, with Fitch warning the ECB to
purchase assets to try to stabilize the euro.
Spot gold was up 0.6 percent at $1,650.34 an ounce at
1009 GMT, having earlier touched a one-month high at $1,652.30. U.S. gold
futures for February delivery were up $12.60 an ounce at $1,652.20.
A stronger rupee has boosted the purchasing power of
gold bullion consumers in India. This is in the run up for the Indian
Wedding Season which resumes January 15th and continues until April, leaving
a few weeks break for a period that is considered bad luck for
nuptials. Chinese demand will weaken next week as many factories and
businesses are set to close for the Lunar New Year’s celebrations.
Eurozone leaders will come and go but gold cannot be
printed like paper money from central banks. Investors here in Europe who
have had to survive austerity measures, cuts in social services, rising
prices on consumer goods and unemployment are losing faith in the politicians
that represent them. Gold bullion still represents a positive play for
any diversified portfolio.
Silver & Platinum
Demand for silver coins has been strong at the start of 2012, with the U.S.
Mint reporting American Eagle silver coin sales of 4.257 million ounces in
January, a higher volume than recorded in any of the previous three months.
U.S. Mint gold coin sales have also been healthy at
82,500 ounces so far this month, already 26% higher than in the entire month
of December.
Platinum climbed for a fourth day on Thursday, on track
for its largest weekly gain since October with a rise of 7%.
For breaking news and commentary on financial markets
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NEWS
(Reuters)
Gold steady as Spain auction, ECB meeting loom
(India Reuters)
Gold buying firm as wedding season restarts
(BusinessWeek)
Asian Stocks Fall on Economy Concern; Gold, Europe
Futures Climb
(MarketWatch)
Record-high imports from Hong Kong lift bullion;
platinum rallies
COMMENTARY
(The Telegraph)
Eurozone waters down its tough fiscal rules in new
treaty
(ZeroHedge)
Iran: Oh, No; Not Again
(TheStreet)
Gold-Silver Price Ratio Getting Silly Again
(MoneyWeek)
The Wart on the Skin of Capitalism
(BullMarketThinking)
“There’s Physical Gold and Paper
Gold–The Closer You Are to Physical the Higher the Price”
Mark
O’Byrne
Goldcore
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