by GoldCore
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,322.25, EUR 996.65 and GBP 864.05 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,330.75, EUR 1001.24 and GBP 864.79 per ounce.
Gold fell $3.60 or 0.27% yesterday and closed at $1,329.40/oz. Silver fell $0.19 or 0.45% and closed at $19.84.
Gold is remaining steady ahead of the key U.S. Fed policy meeting
later today. Mixed economic data from the U.S. has left no clues as to
when the Fed will taper its stimulus program. Gold bullion prices
reached a five week high of $1,347.69/oz last week.
Support & Resistance Chart, 5 Year – (GoldCore)
In yesterday’s Market Update we
began this 3 part series with a look at the global ‘power play’
currently in full swing where Organisation for Economic and Co-operation
and Development (OECD) members are working assiduously to reduce their
dependency on fossil fuels. The growth rates achieved by China and its
rapidly industrializing neighbours has in part been made possible by the
efficiencies achieved by OECD members. There is no doubt about that and
as Sanders quite rightly points out, ‘The first major player to
successfully make the switch to renewables will be the technology
provider of choice to everyone else.’
Against this backdrop gold is emerging as a key component of China’s
future economic plans. There is no official figure from the Chinese
authorities that gives an exact statement of how much gold they hold but
as we wrote back in February, ‘China’s gold imports from Hong Kong doubled to a new record in 2012.’ What
is notable about this statistic is that the doubling in demand in 2012
is solely private demand and does not take into account official Chinese
Central Bank purchases.
Chinese citizens were banned from owning gold bullion by Chairman Mao
in 1950 and this prohibition continued until 2003. The current demand
is coming off a very small base? and with a population of over 1.3
billion, the Hong Kong import figures may well be breached again in
2013.
Heading into today’s second Insight installment from As The Crisis Deepens, Gold Flows East’ the headline signifies that the stakes are high. In the shadow of this game, gold looks like a solid investment.
In A Zero Sum Game, Someone Has To Be The Loser
What is at stake is illustrated by the difference in oil
consumption between Asia and the West. The former, exemplified by China
and India, is still increasing its consumption growth. The latter,
basically the OECD, has been using less oil each year since the crisis
began in 2008. This is unsustainable. The OECD’s deepening recession is
evidenced by its falling oil use while the fragility of the export
dependent and imported energy dependent East’s growth prospects suggests
that its real growth rate is about to peak or already has.
Energy & Metals: 2 Day Price Average – (Bloomberg)
Complicating matters is the zero interest rate policy and quantitative easing now being pursued across the OECD.
This has further exacerbated a forty year growth of income and wealth
disparities that is displaying its tangible face in huge unemployment
and underemployment rates and widening hunger as the unemployed fall out
of the social safety nets that we have become accustomed to depending
on to alleviate the human cost of recession.
These in any event are being reeled in everywhere even while taxes
and user fees multiply and rise. The reality of ZIRP and QE is that they
are starving the real business of investment incentives and destroying
the consumption base on both of which growth depends.
This is a subsidy of the core of the money system, the largest
international financial institutions. Subsidy it may be, but it is
proving an effective if cruel way of reducing oil consumption. It has
also preserved for the time being the capital structure of the
industrial world by inflating the nominal value of the world equity and
bond markets.
In the U.S., at least, this has received considerable help via stock
buy backs. Nothing could illustrate the real outlook better when you
think about it: if business prospects are so good why are so many
corporations returning cash to their shareholders via buy backs, while
an overwhelming proportion of insider trades are sales?
Unfortunately, business prospects are not good at all.
They couldn’t be when you consider that the marginal sources of
petroleum and petroleum substitutes have very low net energy yields
relative to conventional oil (or for that matter to conventional gas).
At the margin, as I and many others have pointed out in the past, this
means that the marginal unit of energy consumed in the process of
powering economic activity is costing society at large exponentially
more energy to produce that marginal energy for consumption. This is at
odds with continued growth in the world population as well as with
trends in finance.
To download a copy of ‘As The Crisis Deepens, Gold Flows East,’ please clickhere.
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