by GoldCore
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,469.50, EUR 1,113.60 and GBP 942.95 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,472.75, EUR 1,126.13 and GBP 950.04 per ounce.
Gold climbed $5.60 or 0.38% yesterday to $1,476.00/oz and silver finished down 0.27%.
Cross Currency Table – (Bloomberg)
In a remarkably candid interview, the President and Executive
Chairman of CME Group Inc, Terrence Duffy, told Bloomberg TV that today
gold buyers “don’t want certificates … They want the real product”.
When asked by Cristina Alecci at the Milken Institute 2013 Global
Conference in Los Angeles on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.”about
gold, Duffy says
“What’s interesting about gold, when we had that big break two weeks
ago we saw all the gold stocks trade down significantly, we saw all the
gold products trade down significantly, but one thing that did not trade
down, was gold coins, tangible real gold. That’s going to show you,
people don’t want certificates, they don’t want anything else. They
want the real product.”
“I think that is the value of gold.”
“Whether you are going to own mining stocks are anything else. I think the coins are probably of more value than anything else.”
The CME Group Inc or Chicago Mercantile Exchange is the world’s
largest futures exchange company. It owns and operates large derivatives
and futures exchanges in Chicago and New York City, as well as online
trading platforms. It also owns the Dow Jones stock and financial
indexes, and CME Clearing Services, which provides settlement and
clearing of exchange trades.
The CME’s President’s comments were noticed by Mike Krieger of Liberty BlitzKrieg and featured on Zero Hedge.
Slowly but surely, gold coins and bars value as safe haven assets,
unlike gold futures and other paper and digital forms of gold, is being
realised.
All paper forms of gold, particularly leveraged ones, should be avoided due to counter party and systemic risk.
The exception to the rule regarding certificates are Perth Mint
certificates. They are in effect warehouse receipts which are fully
backed by physical gold, silver and platinum – ounce for ounce – from
the AAA rated government of Western Australia.
Mints from the U.S., Great Britain and Australia have all seen a surge in demand after gold futures fell 13% in mid April.
The U.S. Mint’s gold coin sales have reached their highest level since December 2009.
Gold in USD, 5 Year – (Bloomberg)
Gold coin sales at the U.S. Mint in March were 62,000 ounces, while
in April sales reached 209,500 ounces and back in December 2009 they
recorded 231,500 ounces of coins sold.
Silver-coin sales in April were 4.2 million ounces up from 3.36 million in March.
Silver in USD, 5 Year – (Bloomberg)
The price drop has shifted investor sentiment out of gold backed ETF’s and into physical gold.
The yellow metal has fallen 12% this year, even after an 11% gain from $1,321.50/oz on April 16.
Demand was so strong after the price retracement that the U.S. Mint ceased sales of its .10/oz gold coins on April 23.
Platinum in USD, 5 Year – (Bloomberg)
In Australia, consumers were cueing in lines ½ of a kilometre to
purchase gold coins. In jewellery stores in China and India they had
their stock depleted in a day, according to The World Gold Council.
The heightened demand brings premiums that investors are paying to have the precious metal in their hands.
In India they are paying 5 times the amount before the price drop in
April. In Singapore and Hong Kong consumers are paying nearly $3/oz,
said to Ng Cheng Thye, the head of precious metals at Standard Merchant
Bank (Asia) Ltd.
In the U.S., the Arizona Senate passed legislation to make gold and
silver accepted as currency, and it now goes to the governor for
approval. This is a further step by citizens to protect themselves
against the lack of control and collusion in the current international
monetary system.
Palladium in USD, 20 Year – (Bloomberg)
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