by GoldCore
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,373.00, EUR 1,037.32 and GBP 874.30 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,386.00, EUR 1,050.56 and GBP 884.27 per ounce.
Gold fell $2.00 or 0.14% yesterday, closing at $1,386.50/oz. Silver
fell $0.14 or 0.59%, closing at $23.67. At 2.48 EDT, Platinum fell $9.90
or .7% to $1,479.00/oz, while palladium dropped $15.28 or 2.2% to
$682.22/oz.
Gold fell again on investor jitters over Syria and also the U.S.
Fed’s imminent decision on tapering expected at the FOMC meeting next
week.
COMEX Gold Inventories, GOFO Rates and Leverage – (Bloomberg)
Gold tracked oil lower today after Russia offered to work with
Syria’s Assad to put their chemical weapons under international control.
Firmer equities and equities at record highs showed risk appetite
remains very high and “irrational exuberance” is back despite
significant risks, including geopolitical risk.
Other risks worth keeping in mind are the likelihood of the Eurozone
debt crisis flaring up once the German elections on September 22 are
over. It is worth bearing in mind too, the coming political and possible
financial fracas over the U.S. debt ceiling – U.S. Federal debt
recently surged over $16.9 trillion.
The immediate risk of a unilateral bombing of Syria has abated but
there remains a real risk of confrontation in the region and the
possibility of a wider war in the Middle East involving Iran and Israel
and their respective allies. This will support gold and could contribute
to materially higher prices.
However, of far more importance to gold is the very tight physical
market place which is manifest in the negative gold forward interest
rates, gold futures still in backwardation and perhaps most importantly
plummeting inventories on the COMEX.
Comex gold inventories have plunged more than 36% year to date,
creating a market more leveraged than it has been for the last nine
years. Inventories are down from 11.059 million ounces to 7.034 million
ounces today.
As gold fell in recent months or was manipulated lower, depending on
your viewpoint, store of wealth interest in physical gold rose,
elevating physical premiums. This has also given traders incentives to
take delivery and sell paper gold.
This shortage of readily available physical gold in large volumes
will likely lead to even higher premiums by lowering gold’s forward
rates, straining borrowers and raising the likelihood of something we
have warned of for some time – a COMEX delivery default.
A COMEX default on delivery of precious metals and specifically of
gold bullion bars remains a risk. It is of significant importance and
that is why we have covered its possibility since 2011. A COMEX default
would have serious ramifications not just for precious metals markets
but for the wider commodity markets, for the U.S. dollar and all fiat
currencies and our modern monetary system.
COMEX Gold Inventories, 5 Years (Bloomberg)
As long as gold remains in backwardation and COMEX inventories
continue to fall the possibility of a COMEX default cannot be ruled out –
especially as gold and silver bullion inventories are very small
vis-a-vis possible capital allocations or foreign exchange
diversification to gold in the coming weeks and months.
We believe that the sharp fall seen in emerging market currencies in
recent weeks will lead to an increase in central bank demand for gold in
order to buttress and support devaluing paper currencies.
COMEX gold inventories are down from 11.059 million ounces at the
start of the year to 7.034 million ounces today. This is worth $9.66
billion at today’s prices meaning that a handful of billionaires or just
one powerful creditor nation state with large foreign exchange
reserves, such as Russia, could corner the COMEX gold market and cause a
default.
Russia’s foreign exchange reserves are at $508 billion . Mainland
China still holds the largest foreign exchange reserves in the world,
with US$3.4967 trillion at the end of June. It is followed by Japan,
which had foreign exchange reserves of US$1.1876 trillion at the end of
July.
Gold In US Dollars, 5 Years – (Bloomberg)
The possibility of an attempted cornering of the bullion markets
through buying and taking delivery of physical bullion remains real and
would likely lead to a massive short squeeze which would see gold and
silver surge to well over their inflation adjusted high of $2,500/oz and
$140/oz.
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