by GoldCore
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,313.75, EUR 859.22 and GBP 998.21 per ounce.
Friday’s AM fix was USD 1,286.00, EUR 981.53 and GBP 843.45 per ounce.
Gold rose $10.70 or 0.83% on Friday and closed at $1,294.40/oz. Silver climbed $0.11 or 0.57% and closed at $19.49.
Gold was up 0.77% for the week while silver was down 2.01%.
Gold is higher in all currencies and 1.4% higher in dollars. It has
climbed above the key technical level of $1,300/oz reaching a one month
high on technical buying and short covering as the U.S. dollar fell.
Gold remains in backwardation with stresses being felt in the physical market due to a lack of supply.
Hedge funds and speculators increased their net long positions by 56%
last week according to the Commodities Futures Trading Commission but
the short position on the COMEX remains near record levels meaning that a
significant short squeeze is on the horizon.
Gold Prices/Fixes/Rates/Vols – (Bloomberg)
COMEX inventories continue to fall and JP Morgan saw its eligible
gold inventories fall a very large 90,311 ounces as reported by Zero
Hedge. This is a massive 66% withdrawal of the firm’s entire inventory
of non-Registered gold. It leaves a token 46,000 ounces of gold which
means that there is just a little over 1 tonne of gold remaining in JP
Morgan’s possession.
Gold is moving from the West to the East and yet the market has yet
to appreciate the scale of Chinese demand and Asian physical demand and
the scale of the flows.
Buyers in Asia and the Middle East are strong hands who will hold
onto their metal as a store of wealth. Their significant, and still very
robust, demand should support prices between $1,000 an ounce and $1,200
an ounce.
We are likely to see a resumption of gold’s bull market before the
end of the summer and into 2014, however short term weakness is, as
always, possible.
The South Korean government said today it plans to set up a spot gold exchange by the first quarter of 2014.
Support & Resistance Chart – (Bloomberg)
South Korea’s financial regulator, the Financial Services Commission,
said that it will open the gold exchange next year where gold spots can
be traded in the public market.
The South Korean gold exchange, will be open in the first quarter of
2014 to allow gold spots to be traded in the public market like listed
stocks, according to the Financial Services Commission (FSC) as reported
by Xinhua.
The introduction came amid growing ‘underground’ gold transactions to
evade value-added taxes. Underground gold trading accounts for more
than half of the country’s annual gold transactions, the regulator said.
Cross Currency Table – (Bloomberg)
Market players will be licensed members that will meet certain
financial requirements. Those will include smelters and importers of
gold as well as gold craftsman and distributors.
To stimulate transactions in the new gold market, tariff tax
exemption will be offered while providing reductions in corporate and
income taxes in order to help the fledgling market.
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