Today’s AM fix was USD 1,339.50, EUR 1,008.05 and GBP 859.37 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,323.25, EUR 999.06 and GBP 855.53 per ounce.
Gold rose $13.30 or 1% yesterday, closing at $1,335.50/oz. Silver
climbed $0.39 or 1.82%, closing at $21.84. Platinum edged up .2% or
$3.24 to $1,500.74/oz, while palladium gained 16 cents to $736.66/oz.
Gold is ticking higher today after it hit a three week high
yesterday. Silver climbed another 1%, its highest price in a month as
the largest silver backed ETF, iShares Silver Trust, reached a four
month high. Platinum hit its highest price in over two months and
palladium also climbed.
Gold prices in India have risen this week, extending gains past their
highest level in four months, due to the import duty hike and rupee
weakness. India’s consumption of gold rose to 310 tonnes in the second
quarter ended June, highest in the last 10 years, despite government
curbs to restrict imports to rein in the burgeoning current account
deficit. Contrary to expectations that gold imports may fall, India's
appetite for bullion may pick-up later in the year due to seasonal
demand. Analysts say this could increase further illegal gold supply
into India.
The SPDR Gold ETF saw another day of inflows yesterday, this coupled
with last Friday's inflows hitting their most since June 10th added
bullish sentiment as did the increased geopolitical risk in Egypt which
appears headed for a civil war with implications for the already
troubled region.
Gold bullion gained as data showed that global physical demand remains very robust.
The latest World Gold Council Gold Demand Trends report,
which covers the period April-June 2013, confirms again how recent
falls in the gold price were due to speculators selling paper gold
rather than a decline in actual demand for physical gold.
It highlights, once again, that the price falls have generated
significant increases in demand, most notably from store of wealth,
jewelry, bullion coin and bar buyers in Turkey, Dubai and the Middle East, Vietnam, India, China and the rest of Asia.
Meanwhile speculators, primarily banks and hedge funds, exited their
positions in the gold ETFs and futures markets. This led to liquidations
of just 402 tonnes of ETF gold worth only $18.3 billion.
Support & Resistance Chart - (GoldCore)
To put this number into perspective, demand from India and China
alone in Q2 was 310 tonnes and 276 tonnes or 586 tonnes combined. This
demand alone vastly outnumbers the ETF outflows. Yet prices fell from
$1,598.75/oz (closing price on March 29) to a low of $1,180.50/oz
(closing price on June 28) - a very significant fall of 35%.
Monday, April 15 alone saw massive $20 billion paper gold sell orders
on the COMEX trigger stop loss selling and unfounded panic in the gold market.
Reports suggest that a futures sell order worth $6 billion, equal to 4
million ounces or 124.4 tonnes of gold, by a large investment bank sent
prices plummeting. The futures market then saw a further wave of
selling of contracts worth some $15 billion, equivalent to 10 million
ounces of selling or 300 tonnes, in just 35 minutes.
According to the report:
Globally, jewellery demand was up 37% in Q2 2013 to 576 tonnes
(t) from 421t in the same quarter last year, reaching its highest level
since Q3 2008.
In China, demand was up 54% compared to a year ago; while in India demand increased by 51%.
There were also significant increases in demand for gold
jewellery in other parts of the world: the Middle East region was up by
33%, and in Turkey demand grew by 38%.
Bar and coin investment grew by 78% globally compared to the same
quarter last year, topping 500 tonnes in a quarter for the first time.
In China, demand for gold bars and coins surged 157% compared with the
same quarter last year, while in India it jumped 116% to a record 122t.
Taking jewellery demand and bar and coin investment together, global
consumer demand totalled 1,083t in the quarter, 53% higher than a year
ago.
For the tenth consecutive quarter, central banks were net buyers
of gold, purchasing 71t, which reinforces the trend that began in Q1
2011.
Demand in the technology sector was stable once again, totalling 104t, a rise of 1% on last year.
Meanwhile gold held in gold-backed ETFs, which in 2012 accounted
for just 6% of the world’s gold demand, fell by just over 400t, driven
by hedge funds and other speculative investors continuing to exit their
positions. This was predominantly in the U.S.
Overall, demand for gold in Q2 2013 was 856t, down 12% on a year ago.
On the supply side, recycling fell 21% in the quarter while mine
production was 4% higher than a year ago, at 732t. In total, supply was
6% lower than a year ago.
All available data shows very strong supply and demand
fundamentals and yet a huge, historic 35% price fall in the quarter.
This lends credence to the allegations of market manipulation put
forward by the Gold Anti Trust Action Committee, whistleblower Andrew
Maguire, Max Keiser, Zero Hedge and many others in the blogosphere.
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