Fed Minutes Split Metals Traders, India’s Festival Gold “Already Stockpiled”
BULLION prices recovered most of an earlier dip lunchtime
Wednesday in London, with gold trading 1.2% lower for the week so far
ahead of policy-meeting minutes from the US Federal Reserve.
Asian and European stock markets fell once again, as did commodities and major government bond prices.
Analysts and wholesale gold dealers said
they would look for discussion of reducing quantitative easing – held
at $80 billion per month – in the US central bank’s notes.
“Wednesday could turn out to be a rather strong day in most markets,” reckons Edward Meir writing for brokers INTL FCStone.
“Should central bank deliberations reveal that officials remain
uncertain as to whether or not to remove stimulus, we could see a rather
sharp move higher…including [in] gold and silver.”
But “market participants will be looking for some clarity,” says a
note from French bank BNP Paribas, “[plus] a possible timeline on the QE
tapering plans.”
Silver prices rallied alongside gold ahead of today’s US Fed minutes,
recovering 20 cents to rise back above $23 per ounce but holding 1.2%
down for the week.
“Any hawkish comments could see small-scale profit taking in gold,”
says VTB Capital strategist Andrey Kryuchenkov, speaking to Bloomberg.
What’s more, he adds, “It will be harder to sustain physical demand
at higher prices with bargain hunting clearly running out of steam.”
World #1 gold consumer India “remains largely absent [from the
market] amid tighter regulations and a weak currency,” says Swiss
investment bank and major world bullion dealer UBS in a note.
“Conversations with local participants suggest that there is good
interest to re-start import activities soon, especially with authorities
currently working to clarify the new rules.”
Looking ahead to Diwali however, “The retail trade has built
sufficient stock to cover much of the wedding and holiday season,” says
the latest Precious Metals Weeklyfrom Metals Focus.
Reporting from this week’s India International Gold Convention in
Jaipur, as well as other major gold centers, “Unofficial flows [ie,
smuggling] appear to have increased too,” says the new London-based
consultancy.
“We are keeping an eye out for any increase in shipments of 100g bars
(at times prefered for this activity) at the expense of kilobars.”
Indian interest rates meantime edged back today from Tuesday’s
12-year highs, with the 10-year bond yield slipping from 9.48% after the
Reserve Bank vowed to buy eight thousand crore Rupees ($1.3bn) worth of
government debt this coming Friday, injecting cash into the banking
system.
Gold futures in Mumbai rose to 8-month highs however as the Rupee fell further, hitting fresh record lows against the US Dollar.
Mumbai shares dropped the same amount, down 1.8% for the day and extending their fall since a month ago to more than 11%.
Ahead of today’s US Federal Reserve minutes, “I think it is the lack
of Dollar supply than anything else to blame,” reckons fixed-income
analyst Suyash Choudhary at IDFC, quoted by the Economic Times of India.
“Unless QE is to be wound up completely,” says a trading note from
Marex Financial’s London-based head of precious metals David Govett –
and “it won’t be – I would look to buy dips in the case of a reaction
sell off” in gold.
Adrian Ash
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