London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor, BullionVault
Wednesday 20 March 2013, 08:45 EST
Gold & Silver Trade Lower, Germany “Could Live Without Cyprus in Euro”
GOLD dropped below $1610 an ounce Wednesday, as stocks,
commodities and the Euro all regained some ground lost since news of the
Cyprus bailout negotiations broke over the weekend.
“We still believe that an interim low was made in February and that
the precious metal should reach the January low at “1625.77 in the weeks
ahead,” says Commerzbank senior technical analyst Axel Rudolph.
Gold in Euros fell back below €1250 an ounce as the Euro rallied from
a four-month low against the Dollar, following news that Cypriot
lawmakers have rejected plans to impose levies on bank depositors.
Silver prices meantime
failed to break above $29 an ounce, drifting down towards $28.80 by
lunchtime in London following what Rudolph calls a “sluggish bounce”.
Banks in Cyprus remained closed Wednesday as part of the extended
bank holiday that could now last until next week, while press reports
suggest Cyprus is discussing the option of capital controls.
Cyprus central bank governor Panicos Demetriades predicted yesterday
that depositors could withdraw 10% or more of total deposits when banks
reopen.
The Cypriot parliament yesterday rejected revised plans to impose a
levy of 6.75% on bank depositors with more than €20,000 and 9.9% on
those with more than €100,000. No member of parliament voted for the
proposals, which form part of a €10 billion European Union-International
Monetary Fund bailout out currently under discussion.
Cypriot president is expected to speak to Russian president Vladimir
Putin today, after Cyprus’s finance minister flew to Moscow last night.
“The Cypriot authorities wanted to conduct [Tuesday's] vote so that
they could reaffirm the extent of their difficulties to the
Europeans…[it] is not the end of the process, but instead kicks off a
further round of negotiation with Moscow and Berlin,” says Alexander
White, London-based European political analyst at JPMorgan Chase.
“[Germany's] objective in this case is to remove the implied support
for the Cypriot banking system, so that it can no longer function as a
large offshore financial center whilst receiving a European [Central
Bank] backstop… absent such a transformation, Germany appears ready to
live with the consequences of Cyprus stepping out of Europe.”
“Germany wants a solution,” said German chancellor Angela Merkel this morning.
“We will continue negotiations, primarily via the troika [of the EU, ECB and IMF].”
“As recently as in January, Cypriot banks offered 4.5% for a 1-year
deposit while other peripheral countries, including Italy and Spain,
offered about 2.5%, and Germany 0.9%,” points out a note from UniCredit,
adding that depositors putting their money in Cypriot banks would have
made around €23,000 more since 2008 than those depositing in Germany.
“Why does the Cypriot parliament (and many commentators) seem to
suggest that a 15% tax on such deposits…would be unreasonable now the
banks are in trouble, but that German, Italian and other Eurozone
taxpayers should rather foot the bill? To me, the Cypriot position is
simply un-sellable in the rest of the Eurozone.”
The situation in Cyprus is “a good thing for Russia,” says Sergey
Cheremin, head of Moscow’s department for economic and international
relations.
“It’s totally changed the perception of Cyprus…it shows those
Russians who keep their accounts in Cyprus that it’s not a heaven, it’s a
hell. It will encourage a lot of Russian companies to concentrate their
resources in Moscow.”
In London meantime, UK chancellor George Osborne unveiled his latest
Budget Wednesday, announcing that the official growth forecast for the
UK this year is 0.6%, down from its previous forecast of 1.2%.
The Pound fell against the Dollar following the news, reversing gains
made earlier in the day following the publication of Bank of England
minutes.
BoE governor Mervyn King, who steps down this summer, again voted for
an extra £25 billion of quantitative easing at this month’s Monetary
Policy Meeting, the minutes show. As in February’s meeting, King was in
the minority of a 6-3 vote.
Over in the US, the Federal Reserve makes its latest policy
announcement later today, with most analysts predicting no change to the
Fed’s $85 billion a month QE purchases.
Gold’s premium over platinum meantime narrowed to around $50 an ounce
this morning, having hit $60 yesterday, from a discount of $80 a month
earlier.
Ben Traynor
Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter,
the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics
graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist
interest in monetary economics. Ben can be found on Google+
(c) BullionVault 2013
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