Today’s AM fix was USD 1,568.50, EUR 1,189.34 and GBP 1,030.96 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,602.00, EUR 1,195.34 and GBP 1,045.76 per ounce.
Silver is trading at $28.73/oz, €21.87/oz and £18.91/oz. Platinum is
trading at $1,608.50/oz, palladium at $716.00/oz and rhodium at
$1,200/oz.
Gold fell $40.30 or 2.51% yesterday in New York and closed at
$1,564.30/oz. Silver slipped to a low of $28.28 and finished with a loss
of 2.99%.
Cross Currency Table – (Bloomberg)
More speculative gold buyers appear to have been spooked by the FOMC
minutes from the Fed’s January 30th meeting which “said the central bank
should be ready to vary the pace of their $85 billion in monthly bond
purchases amid a debate over the risks and benefits of further
quantitative easing.”
Gold rebounded this morning from a 7 month low as physical buyers in
Asia bought the dip and it is likely that central banks are also
accumulating after this sharp correction.
The RSI or relative strength index is near 20 which suggests that
spot gold is deeply oversold and strong support is seen at the $1,500/oz
level (see chart below).
Other indices like the S&P 500 index has climbed 6% year to date
while gold has fallen 6% during the same period. The largest ETF, SPDR
Gold Trust, has fell 1.57% from the prior session to 1,299.164 tonnes on
Feb 20th, its lowest in over five months.
Gold in USD, 50, 100, 200 Day Moving Average and Support – (Bloomberg)
Gold has come under pressure from heavy liquidation by hedge funds
and banks on the COMEX this week. The unusual and often 'not for profit'
nature of the selling, at the same time every day this week, has again
led to suspicions of market manipulation.
Short sellers, technical and momentum traders have the upper hand and
are pressing their advantage with momentum and sentiment on their side.
Nervous longs are being stopped out through stop loss orders and
concerns regarding the clear downward short term trend.
Gold market sentiment is the most negative that we have seen in
recent years. The ratio of sell orders to buy orders was the highest it
has ever been in recent days. Yesterday, for the first time ever we had
all sell orders for gold and silver coins, bars and certificates and not
one buy order.
This shows that many retail buyers are very nervous about the outlook
for gold and concerned about the risk of further price falls.
There has been more selling from retail clients today and we are
getting a sense of fear from clients that they have not had in the last
ten years. Interestingly, long term buyers of gold and silver bullion,
particularly high net worth individuals were evident this morning and
flows from this demographic look set to continue.
Fear in the gold market and retail buyers selling their gold suggest that we are very likely to close to a bottom.
Still it is important to always remember the old Wall Street adage to "never catch a falling knife."
More risk averse buyers would be prudent to hold off buying the dip
until we get a higher weekly or even monthly close. Alternatively, they
should consider dollar, pound or euro cost averaging into a position at
these levels.
Gold’s ‘plunge’ is now headline news which is bullish from a
contrarian perspective. As is the fact that many of the same people who
have been claiming gold is a bubble since it was $1,000/oz have again
been covering gold after periods of silence.
Silver in USD, 50, 100, 200 Day Moving Average and Support – (Bloomberg)
Gold’s so called ‘death cross’ scare is simplistic, bogus nonsense
that should be ignored by all. Gold experienced a ‘death cross’ in April
2012 (see gold chart above) and similar alarmist analysis was put
forward about the death of the gold bull market and the likelihood of a
1980 style plunge.
This did not come to pass, nor will it come to pass now given the real world fundamentals driving the gold market.
Single technical indicators in and of themselves are completely
useless. It is far more important to focus on the real fundamentals of a
European and coming UK, U.S. and Japanese debt crises’, global currency
wars and the real risk of recessions and a Depression.
It is far more important to focus on the hard facts and the hard data
on money supply growth rather than mere words of central bankers.
Currencies globally continue to be debased.
Less informed money is again selling gold or proclaiming the end of
gold’s bull market. The smart money such as Marc Faber, Jim Rogers and
those who predicted this crisis and have constantly advocated a long
term allocation to gold bullion to hedge systemic and monetary risk,
will accumulate again on this dip.
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