Today’s AM fix was USD 1,644.00, EUR 1,233.22 and GBP 1,060.37 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,648.00, EUR 1,223.55 and GBP 1,054.59 per ounce.
Silver is trading at $30.85/oz, €23.24/oz and £19.98/oz. Platinum is
trading at $1,730.84/oz, palladium at $765.00/oz and rhodium at
$1,200/oz.
Cross Currency and Precious Metal Table – (Bloomberg)
Gold fell $8.50 or 0.51% yesterday on closing at $1,643.00/oz. Silver
slipped to as low as $30.72 and ended with a loss of 1.09%.
Gold edged up on Thursday, as bargain hunters showed buying interest
and gold was particularly strong in euro terms after data from Europe
confirmed the continent remains very vulnerable to economic shocks.
The euro area recession deepened and data showed that the euro area
economy shrank the most since 2009 and its three biggest economies,
Germany, France and Italy, suffered slumping output.
G20 nations should take a stronger stance against currency
manipulation the Russian Finance Minister said this morning after G7
conflicting statements about currency wars in recent days.
Hong Kong opened trading today and is seeing the physical jewellery
demand pick up, but the bulk of Asia is still closed for the entrance of
the Year of the Snake for the lunar New Year.
U.S. weekly jobless claims are reported at 1330 GMT.
The world's largest gold-backed ETF, SPDR, said its holdings edged
off 0.07% to 1325.99 tonnes on Wednesday from 1326.89 tonnes on Tuesday,
but remains near record highs.
Central Bank Gold Demand (1971 to Today)
According to the World Gold Council’s Q4 2012 report issued today,
Global gold demand in Q4 2012 reached 1,195.9 tonnes, up 4% from Q4
2011. In value terms gold demand for the quarter was 6% higher
year-on-year at $66.2bn marking the highest ever Q4 total and driving
annual demand in 2012 to a record value of US$236.4bn.
Gold demand ended a challenging year on a strong note, with a level
of demand in Q4 2012 second only to the record level in Q3 2011,
highlighting gold’s ongoing attraction and resilience to economic
uncertainty. Overall gold demand remains above the five year average
with demand in Q4 2012 driven by India, China and the official sector.
In India, investment and jewellery demand reached their highest
levels for six quarters with overall demand up 41% on Q4 2011. China
recovered from a difficult start to the year, with strong demand in
investment and jewellery, both up marginally on the high levels from the
final quarter in the previous year.
Indian Gold Demand (2005 to Today)
Central bank purchasing was up 29% on Q4 2011 marking the eighth
consecutive quarter of official sector net purchasing, with full year
2012 seeing the highest levels of central bank purchasing since 1964.
The key findings from the report are as follows:
• Whilst Indian full year demand was down 12% on the
previous year, the market performed strongly in the final quarter with
total demand at 261.9t, an increase of 41% on the same period last year.
Both jewellery and investment demand reached their highest levels for
six quarters. Demand for jewellery was up 35% year-on-year to reach
153.0t, and strong retail demand led to 108.9t of investment buying. In
India the prospect of duty increases, which came in to force in January
2013, may have added to strong buying in the final quarter to beat the
anticipated price rises.
• Chinese demand was flat year-on–year, reflecting
the impact of economic slowdown. However looking at Q4, total demand was
up 1% on the previous quarter to 202.5t. Jewellery demand was137.0t up
1% on Q4 2011 and investment demand was 65.5t, up 2% on the previous
year. These increases may reflect the fact that the economic slowdown in
China appears to have been shorter than expected.
• Central bank buying for the full year rose by 17%
compared to 2011, totaling 534.6t, the highest level since 1964. Central
bank purchases stood at 145.0t in Q4, up 29% on the corresponding
quarter in the previous year, making this the eighth consecutive quarter
in which central banks have been net purchasers of gold.
• Global investment in ETFs in 2012 was up
significantly by 51% on the preceding year, though Q4 was down 16% to
88.1t when compared with the high levels recorded in Q3 2012.
The World Gold Council’s Gold Demand Trends report for Q4 2012 and full year 2012 is now available to download from here.
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