by GoldCore
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,330.75, EUR 1001.24 and GBP 864.79 per ounce.
Friday’s AM fix was USD 1,327.75, EUR 998.76 and GBP 861.73 per ounce.
Gold rose $1.50 or 0.11% on Friday and closed at $1,333.00/oz. Silver
fell $0.17 or 0.84% and closed at $20.03. Gold and silver both gained
last week 2.98% and 2.77% respectively.
Gold inched lower today after three weeks of bullish sentiment saw
gains for the yellow metal. Caution arrived as investors await the U.S.
Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and the ECB’s policy meetings this
week. Bullish bets on gold futures and options increased this week from a
fourth month high seen last week; on speculation that the U.S. Fed will
keep interest rates low reported the CFTC on Friday.
Gold 5 Year – (Bloomberg)
At GoldCore we have been monitoring the activity of gold buyers with China and India top
of the list, in the main due to the significant quantities both
countries are ‘consuming.’ What is behind this significant rise in both
public and private sector purchases and is it sustainable?
The July edition of Insight aptly titled ‘As The Crisis Deepens, Gold Flows East’ builds on our recent commentary and offers another viewpoint on why there is a marked flow of gold from west to east.
The next three editions of Market Update will quote extensively from ‘As The Crisis Deepens, Gold Flows East’ as we delve deeper into the story and its implications for our financial well being.
Crisis: the new normal
The parlous state of world financial markets has been underlined in
the last few months with the selloff of all asset classes: stocks,
bonds, commodities, and of course, silver and gold. We are just about
due for a crisis.
We have had them like clockwork over the last thirty years. 1981-82,
1987, 1994, 2000-01, 2008-09: the intervening periods have been between
six and seven years. But today there is an additional factor: the world
faces a severe energy shortage that caps real growth prospects. Any
realistic “solution” to this is intergenerational, making that light at
the end of the tunnel very dim indeed for most adults alive today. One
doesn’t electrify a transportation network overnight, or even in ten
years.
World Conventional and Unconventional Oil Production and Price – (Campbell)
In spite of a huge rise in the price of oil, world oil production has
been unable to climb. The production plateau is bounded on the upside
by what the world economy can bear in terms of a price rise and on the
bottom by what most businesses and people can afford to pay. This regime
has ruled since the global conventional oil production peak in 2005,
and there is no sign of this ending.
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