by GoldCore
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,292.00, EUR 972.97 and GBP 840.38 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,311.00, EUR 986.83 and GBP 852.91 per ounce.
Gold fell $6.30 or 0.48% yesterday and closed at $1,301.40/oz. Silver fell $0.14 or 0.71% and closed at $19.68.
Gold edged off over 1% as some positive global economic data
tarnished its safe haven appeal coupled with quiet physical demand in
Asia and technical selling which added pressure after $1,300/oz was
breached.
Gold is now down for the 5th straight trading day breaking below the
psychological $1,300/oz and was not helped by the release of better than
expected U.S. non manufacturing data.
Comments from the Dallas Federal Reserve President, Richard Fisher,
that the Fed was a step closer to withdrawing from its unorthodox QE
programmes may have driven the decline. Mr. Fisher joins a growing
chorus of voices calling for a tapering of the QE programmes believing
that they have created a burden on savers and retirement pools, via low
interest rates and could ignite an inflationary “conflagration”. Mr.
Fisher stated that the Fed now owns 20% of Treasury Notes and T-Bonds
outstanding and 25% of Mortgage-Backed-Securities.
The markets are now focusing on when and how the Fed will extricate
itself from its policy of quantitative easing. Debate is focusing on a
date between September and December for the first stages. It will all
come down to timing and language and the management of market
expectations. Powerful forces are in play and with the debate over the forthcoming appointment Fed Chairmanship the timing could not be worse.
Support & Resistance Chart, 5 Year – (GoldCore)
If the Fed drop the ball and move too quickly they could endanger the
fragile economic recovery, on the other hand if they move too slowly
they could stoke inflation in the near term.
In the near term gold prices will likely move as this debate ebbs and
flows. The long term fundamental arguments for gold are still very much
intact. The world is still in the midst of a massive economic and
socio-political storm stretching from Asia to Europe and to the U.S.
In an article published in MIT’s Technology Weekly titled “How Technology Is Destroying Jobs”
a very interesting analysis of the modern economic technology driven
model is made. The article written by David Rodman reviews MIT research
into the relationship between productivity gains and employment and very
clearly demonstrates that the social contract at the heart of the
capitalist system may be in trouble. Essentially even though the economy
may grow and industry may profit the benefits are not being translated
in terms of jobs and by extension worker earnings. Interesting stuff,
and this thesis may make the entire policy of QE, its attack on pensions
and savers plus the ever increasing social unrest seen all around the
world; be seen for what it is – unorthodox and very, very risky.
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