London Gold Market Report
from Adrian Ash, BullionVault
Tuesday, 2 July 08:10 EST
Gold Analysts Turn Bullish as Price Regains 40% of June Slump
The PRICE of GOLD rose in Asia and jumped at the
start of London trade Tuesday, hitting $1267 per ounce to recover 40% of
last month’s crash before easing back.
Prices for silver bullion also rose, but lagged gold’s rate of gain,
before slipping back below last week’s finish at $19.69 per ounce.
European stock markets meantime fell, as did the Euro – down 0.5¢
against the Dollar – after Eurozone and IMF officials said Greece has
just three days to prove its commitment to fresh budget cuts.
Prices to buy gold with Euros touched €970 per ounce, a near 1-week high more than 7% above last week’s 34-month low.
“We expect gold to trade with a positive bias going ahead,” says a
technical analysis of the gold chart from Sharekhan, India’s second
largest stock broker.
“The crucial support is placed at $1180,” says Sharekhan, “which is the low it touched” at the end of June.
“Friday’s multi-year low of $1180 looks like a bad quarter-end
liquidation memory,” agrees Canadian bank and London bullion
market-maker ScotiaMocatta.
On a technical analysis, “[Monday's] higher close confirms Friday’s
bullish hammer reversal warning on the daily chart,” says Scotia.
Last week’s record-large number of bearish contracts held by
speculative traders in US gold futures also “leaves gold open to a more
sustained short covering” as they scramble to close their positions at
rising prices, says fellow London market-maker HSBC.
“[This Thursday's] 4th of July holidays in the US also make it likely
the gold markets will be relatively thin,” HSBC adds. “This could all
contribute to a rally.”
After advising clients to sell gold in January, “At this time we
believe gold and gold miners represent good risk/reward,” says Carter
Worth, managing director and chief market technician at Oppenheimer
Asset Management Inc., which currently runs some $9 billion in client
money.
“Indeed, the recent extreme weakness is judged to be the
reciprocal…of the extreme strength witnessed in the summer of 2011. The
‘despair’ relating to gold now is as palpable as ‘euphoria’ then.”
Urging “immediate action” on Monday, investment and bullion bank
J.P.Morgan told clients to “go overweight” on commodities – a call last
made in October 2010 – because “consumers are likely already starting to
act on the 20%+ swoon” in natural resources prices.
“Price-driven involuntary production cuts in crude oil, copper, and gold” should also help buoy prices, says J.P.Morgan.
Bank of America agrees, noting today that “Around one-third of the
gold mining industry does not cover ‘all-in’ cash production costs.”
But while “in the long term [mining problems] will provide big
support,” says $2.2 billion fund manager Charlie Morris at HSBC Global
Asset Management in London, “in the short term it won’t really make any
difference at all.
“I’m still bullish [on gold prices] long term, but I just think we’ve got a big nasty bear market in the meantime.”
“Even if gold were to bottom off its current lows,” adds a note from
brokers Jefferies Bache, “we believe gold equities face further
downside.
“Gold mining is a very challenging and high risk business.”
Looking at the classical commodity-price cycle, falling prices to buy gold mean “New mines will be put on hold, old mines closed, some permanently, exploration will dwindle,” writes Lawrie Williams at MineWeb.
“Global gold production will fall, shortages will develop and then
prices will be ultimately forced up dramatically…Such is the cyclical
nature of the global mining sector.”
Western households choosing to buy investment gold in June again outnumbered sellers, according to BullionVault‘s latest Gold Investor Index, and also by the same proportion as in May.
Over in Asia today, gold demand was “strong” amongst wholesale
dealers said traders on Tuesday morning. But the pace of purchasing “is
not on the scale we saw in April,” Bloomberg quotes Citics Futures Co.
analyst Huang Fulong.
“The recent short-covering rally [in US gold futures] is expected to
continue,” says Huang, “before the US holiday and payrolls data later
this week.”
After Thursday’s Independence Day holiday, Friday will bring US jobs data for June.
Adrian Ash
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