London Gold Market Report
from Adrian Ash, BullionVault
Tues 9 Apr, 08:55 EST
Strong Gold Demand in Asia “Should Offset” ETF Selling, But More Banks Slash Forecasts
The PRICE of GOLD and silver was little changed
Tuesday morning near last week’s finish, while European stock markets
rose but Japan’s Nikkei stalled its 5-day surge as the Yen bounced
higher from 4-year lows on the currency market.
Silver prices ticked higher to $27.40 per ounce, while gold regained $1574.
Energy and industrial commodity prices also edged higher. Major
government bonds eased back, nudging up the interest rate offered to
buyers.
The US Treasury will this week auction $66 billion in new debt, according to Bloomberg data.
“The [quantitative easing] actions of the Bank of Japan are having a
profound effect on bond yields,” notes the commodities team at Standard
Bank today, “across especially emerging markets.”
Because the BoJ’s promise of $1.4 trillion in new money creation by
2015 is weakening the Yen, sats Standard Bank, “some gold-consuming
countries, such as Thailand, [are] seeing their currencies stronger
against the Dollar.”
So “there’s been fairly strong gold buying interest from South East Asia…which should partly offset the ongoing ETF liquidation.”
China’s net imports of gold through Hong Kong doubled in February
from January’s 3-month, new data showed today, rising to more than 60
tonnes.
New York’s $61-billion SPDR Gold Trust meantime ended Monday with the
quantity of bullion backing its shares unchanged from Friday’s new
21-month low of 1205 tonnes.
“Physical demand [has been] offset by professional investor
liquidation,” says the latest quarterly review from German refining
group Umicore.
Swiss bank and major bullion dealer UBS today cut its average 2013 gold price forecast from $1900 to $1740 per ounce.
“We continue to expect the price of gold to moderate over the year
ahead,” says a note from Australian retail bank NAB, forecasting a 2014
average of $1410 and citing economic recovery and lower risks in the
developed world.
“Partly offsetting this is our expectation for central bank purchases
by the emerging economies [plus] continued strong consumer demand from
India and China.”
Germany’s Deutsche Bank today cut its 2013 price forecast by one
eighth to $1637, saying that the forces pushing gold prices higher over
the last 10 years “have all moved into reverse”.
Danske Bank analysts are more aggressive, cutting their 2013 gold
price forecast below $1500 and targeting $1294 per ounce for next year.
“Gold is in our view still in bubble territory,” they write, “despite
the extended price drop seen since the autumn [and] the signs of global
currency war earlier in 2013.”
Commenting on the price action in gold, “I can say the chart doesn’t
look good,” Reuters quotes a Hong Kong trader at Lee Cheong Gold
Dealers.
“I think $1585 is the crucial point. If it can break above this
level, another bull run or short covering will push up the market to
$1600.”
Reviewing the relative moves in gold and silver meantime, “The
gold/silver ratio’s rally picked up the pace last week,” says technical
analyst Axel Rudolph at Germany’s Commerzbank.
The number of silver ounces you can buy with one ounce of gold “has
so far reached 57.85, a nine-month high,” Rudolph goes on. If the peak
of 58.72 from June 2012 is broken, he says, “the psychological 60.00
region will be targeted as well.”
Adrian Ash
Adrian Ash is head of research at BullionVault,
the secure, low-cost gold and silver market for private investors
online, where you can buy gold and silver in Zurich, Switzerland for
just 0.5% commission.
(c) BullionVault 2013
Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead
it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision
you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here
may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified
elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.
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