Today’s AM fix was USD 1,591.00, EUR 1,213.39 and GBP 1,049.20 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,608.50, EUR 1,228.80 and GBP 1,062.28 per ounce.
Silver is trading at $28.94/oz, €22.15/oz and £19.12/oz. Platinum is
trading at $1,598.50/oz, palladium at $738.00/oz and rhodium at
$1,200/oz.
Gold fell $16.80 or 1.04% yesterday in New York and closed at
$1,597.10/oz. Silver slid to a low of $28.84 and finished with a loss of
1.4%.
Gold in Euros (5 Year) – (Bloomberg)
After the fall of yesterday, gold recovered in Asian trading and
traded over $1,604/oz prior to renewed selling sent prices below
$1,600/oz again.
Gold rebounded on concern that automatic U.S. spending cuts that are
due to take effect from tomorrow may hurt the recovery of the U.S.,
still the world’s largest economy.
More than $85 billion of across-the-board U.S. cuts start tomorrow
for the current fiscal year, followed by a March 27 expiration of a
funding measure for U.S. agencies.
This should support gold at the $1,600/oz level which is at an
“attractive entry point for investors” according to an analyst at CITICS
Futures, a unit of China’s biggest listed brokerage.
Chinese demand should support gold and the Shanghai Gold Exchange
daily volumes for the benchmark cash contract have been more than double
the average in 2012 since February 18, when it reached a record 22,024
kilograms, according to exchange data.
Gold is over 1% higher this week after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben
Bernanke defended the central bank’s asset purchases and currency
debasement, in addition to the political turmoil in Italy after an
election plus the renewed risk of contagion in the Eurozone led to a
pickup in demand.
German Gold Coin Imports Are Strong As Euro Falls Against Gold - (Bloomberg)
The ECB’s grand bond plan is now in jeopardy after Italian voters
rejected EU conditions. Italy's electoral earthquake is “a catastrophe
for the euro and the European Union”, according to Luxembourg’s foreign
minister, Jean Asselborn.
During the past four years, whenever the euro has declined
significantly versus the U.S. dollar, German investors have fled to
the safety of gold and been rewarded.
Historically, when the Euro has declined by 8% to 20% since the start
of 2008, gold in local currency Euro terms has risen by 14% to 41%,
compounded annually.
So far the majority of demand for gold in Europe has been from more
conservative German investors and savers due to their knowledge and
experience of inflation and hyperinflation.
As the Eurozone debt crisis escalates, demand will be seen across the European Union and not just in Germany.
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