London Gold Market Report
from Adrian Ash, BullionVault
Thurs 2 May, 08:10 EST
Shanghai’s Gold Premium “Crashes” as China Returns from Labor Day, ECB Cut Buoys Euro
LONDON PRICES for gold and silver both ticked higher Thursday morning, recovering half of Wednesday’s 2.4% and 4.6% falls respectively.
European stock markets reversed earlier losses and commodities also
bounced after the European Central Bank decided – as widely expected –
to cut its key interest rate to a new all-time low of 0.5%.
Priced in the Euro both gold and silver were little changed as the
single currency bounced back towards yesterday’s 2-month highs.
“The Chinese market opened again overnight,” says dealer Marex
Spectron in a note after the Labor Day holidays, “but little in the way
of gold buying was seen.”
Shanghai premiums “crashed out to $10″ above London benchmark prices
in fact according to another trading house, “having opened today at $25,
down from a recent high of $65″ per ounce.
“[This] certainly sends a signal that physical buying has seen some
kind of peak, and the price may need to lower to re-kindle demand.”
Consumer spending on gold and jewelry in Shanghai more than doubled
last weekend from the same Labor Day holiday in 2012, according to the
Commission of Commerce.
Hong Kong retailers report being “swamped” by gold-buying tourists
from the Chinese mainland – now the world’s 2nd largest gold consumer
nation – seeking to enjoy the city’s lower premiums above international
wholesale prices.
In the developed West, sales of newly-produced American Eagle gold coins last month hit a 3-year high the US Mint said Wednesday.
The Austrian Mint says it sold 10 times as many gold Philharmonic coins as it did in April last year.
“[But] truth is,” says a London bullion bank dealer in an email, “the
hedge fund world has been busy placing barriers [for the gold price] at
around $1490,” with portfolio managers using the week’s earlier rally
to exit positions in exchange-traded trust funds.
Estimating that a further 124 tonnes of exchange-traded trust fund
holdings are still showing a loss for investors, “As long as those gold
bars at stake are not cleaned out we will face a bearish bias,” he adds.
“It’s the end of an era,” Bloomberg quotes Michael Haigh, New York’s head of commodities analysis for Société Générale.
“ETF
flows and hedge fund flows have gold changing direction for the first
time in a long, long time. Prices are going to be dropping.”
Meantime on the data front, both Eurozone manufacturing and UK
construction activity slowed their contractions in April, new PMI
numbers from Markit said.
Ahead of tomorrow’s key US non-farm payrolls data, the private-sector
ADP report came in below expectations, while US central bank the
Federal Reserve left its key interest-rate at 0.25% and kept its
quantitative easing program at $85 billion per month.
“Household spending and business fixed investment advanced,” the Fed’s policy statement said,
“and the housing sector has strengthened further, but fiscal policy is
restraining economic growth” – an escalation of its previous calls for
more deficit spending by the government.
“While for the moment,” says a report from the fund managers at
Blackrock Gold & General – now celebrating its 25th year – “the
recovery in the US, the associated strengthening of the Dollar and the
lack of imminent inflation are taking centre stage, we believe gold’s
journey is far from over.”
Amongst other factors, says Blackrock, “the risk of rising
inflationary pressures in the medium term, and the regular reminders of
the structural imbalances within the financial system…should continue to
drive the gold price in the coming years.”
Eurozone government bonds meantime rose in price Thursday, nudging yields lower except on Greek and Portuguese debt.
Interest rates on 2-year French and Italian bonds both fell to record lows.
Asked if they would support using Italy’s gold reserves
– the world’s 3rd largest national hoard – as collateral for new bonds
at cheaper rates, 52% of the public and 61% of business leaders said
yes, according to a survey conducted for the World Gold Council.
Adrian Ash
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