by GoldCore
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,386.00, EUR 1,038.59 and GBP 881.79 per ounce.
Friday’s AM fix was USD 1,379.75, EUR 1,035.54 and GBP 882.76 per ounce.
Gold climbed to $1391.50/oz on Friday, its first close above $1390/oz
in four weeks and silver climbed 1.2 percent to $22.07 an ounce.
Gold is marginally lower today in most currencies after last week’s small gain which was positive from a technical perspective.
Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East looks set to again brandish
gold’s safe-haven appeal and will support prices. Gold is higher in yen
today as the yen has fallen against all currencies.
Demand in India and across much of Asia has fallen from the record
levels seen in April but remains robust nevertheless which will support
prices. Extraordinary demand from India and China has received all the
attention in recent weeks while equally extraordinary demand in other
Asian countries, such as Vietnam, has been completely ignored.
Cross Currency Table – (Bloomberg)
The Vietnamese Central Bank sold another 25,700 taels (37.5 grams,
1.2 troy ounces) at a gold bar auction on Friday in order to try and
satiate the massive public demand for gold in Vietnam.
The Central Bank hopes that the sale of gold into the market will
reduce the very high premiums paid by gold buyers in Vietnam, the
largest buyer of gold in Southeast Asia after Thailand and one of the
largest physical buyers of gold per capita in the world.
Vietnamese people hold gold as a store of wealth for protection
against war, inflation and currency depreciation. In recent months, the
bursting of bubbles in the stock market (see chart) and property market
and the continuing devaluation of the dong has led to record demand in
Vietnam and a surging premium over the spot price of gold.
Today, the premium was close to 5.5 million dong which is the equivalent of a very high premium of $217 per ounce over spot.
Gold in Vietnamese Dong, 2000 to June 2013 – (Bloomberg)
The premium reached an all-time high of more than $210 per ounce or 6
million dong in April, when gold prices were hammered by what appeared
to be manipulative selling on the COMEX futures market.
The Vietnamese Central Bank has held sales since the end of March to
help banks return deposits by June 30. So far 709,800 taels, or about 27
tons, have been sold in 28 auctions through June 7, according to the
bank.
It is hoped that the gap between domestic and global prices for
immediate delivery will probably drop to 4 million dong a tael ($158 an
ounce) by the end of July, according to Nguyen Thanh Truc, vice chairman
of the Vietnam Gold Traders Association.
Vietnam Stock Index – 2000 to June 2013 – (Bloomberg)
Vietnam’s central bank has, like the Reserve Bank of India,
tightened rules on gold trading. These include making itself the sole
importer. This is an attempt to limit gold demand, the impact of gold
prices on the exchange rate and in a misguided attempt to prevent a
further devaluation of the dong.
As part of the drive, banks must return all gold deposits to
investors by June 30, while the State Bank of Vietnam is selling gold to
lenders and trading companies to boost domestic supplies.
Vietnam consumed 77 metric tons of gold last year. This compares
favourably with massive gold buyers in India and China – 864.2 tons in
India, 776.1 tons in China, where the populations are over 1 billion.
Vietnam has a population of just 87 million and thus is one of the
highest buyers of physical gold per capita in the world.
Purchases of physical gold between 2011-2012 accounted for over 3% of GDP.
Interestingly, property prices are often quoted in taels of gold
rather than the local currency due to the Vietnamese experience of
monetary inflation and currency debasement.
“The stricter regulatory measures implemented by the State Bank of
Vietnam and the fear of a steep decline in gold’s price may affect gold
demand temporarily,” Albert Cheng, Far East managing director at the
council, said in an e-mail.
“In the long run, for the majority of Vietnamese, particularly those
who have lived through the war years and the ensuing economic
regression, gold is still considered as the favorite tool for saving and
investment.”
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