London Gold Market Report
from Adrian Ash
Mon 28 Oct 08:25 EST
Urge to “Dump Gold” Finished as US Fed
“Turns Dovish”, Diwali Begins
WHOLESALE London prices of gold sat
tight Monday morning, holding onto Friday’s 6-week closing high as
European stockmarkets failed to continue a rise in Asian shares.
Silver was unchanged with commodities, major
government bonds and gold, sitting at $22.58 per ounce by lunchtime.
The US Dollar rallied after hitting a new
9-month low on its trade-weighted index against major competitor
currencies.
Gold last week enjoyed its strongest rise in
almost 3 months, adding 2.6% as silver rose 2.9%.
“Gold’s ascent above $1350, to one-month
highs, has been driven by investor interest,” says a note from
Barclays Capital, pointing to the “largest daily increase” in
exchange-traded gold funds, which give investors exposure to the
metal’s price without them taking physical ownership, since
January.
Over the week as a whole, however, the largest
gold ETF – the SPDR Gold Trust listed in New York (ticker: GLD), as
well as in Hong Kong and other financial centers – saw its holdings
drop 10 tonnes, hitting new 54-month lows of 871.
The GLD started 2013 with near-record holdings
of 1,350 tonnes, before shedding 380 tonnes as prices crashed in the
first half of the year.
“There’s
not much reason anymore to dump gold further,” says one London
trading desk in a note, “[not] while the US
Fed renews its dovish stance after a miserable attempt at the
medium-rare hawk side of things.
“In truth, the USA are cornered by a sluggish
growth.”
The US central bank begins a two-day meeting on
Tuesday, announcing its monetary policy on Wednesday. Many analysts
now expect it to stick with $85 billion of monthly quantitative
easing.
Looking
at short-term interest rates, now held at zero for almost four years,
“the implied
yield on the Fed funds futures contract for December 2015 has
fallen from a recent peak of 1.45% percent to 0.65%,” says Reuters,
“highlighting that investors have scaled back rate hikes
expectations in 2015 and beyond.”
“There’s no real indication,” said Thomas
Capalbo at New York brokers Newedge, speaking after Friday’s
weaker-than-expected US data, “that things are getting much better,
and no indication saying that we are going to see tapering soon.
“So that’s going to be beneficial for gold
and probably silver too.”
US regulator the CFTC is currently three weeks
behind with its Commitment of Traders data for gold and silver
futures, owing to this month’s debt-ceiling shutdown.
Gold in India – the world’s heaviest
consumer nation – meantime held near record highs above
international benchmarks on Monday, with the premium in Mumbai at
$120 per ounce.
The peak gold-buying festival of Diwali begins
on Saturday. After surprising market analysts with a small
interest-rate rise in September, Reserve Bank of India governor
Raghuram Rajan will announce the latest policy move on Tuesday.
“Impact of high gold premiums will be there
on prices on the [start of Diwali] Dhanteras day,” says Haresh
Soni, chairman of the All India Gems & Jewellery Trade
Federation, “because supplies have dried up in the absence of
imports in the last three months due to government curbs.”
Jewelry
sales are stable from Diwali last year, says Soni, but sales of
investment
gold bars and coins are running at half 2012 levels.
Former president of the Bombay Bullion
Association Suresh Hundia disagrees, says MoneyControl,
putting India’s jewelry sales down by 60%, with coin and gold bar
sales 70% lower.
“Government
has banned import of bars and coins,” says Hundia. “So, there is
no
supply to meet the demand for such items on the festival day.”
The
Times of India
today reports what it calls a
“treasure trove” of mineral resources discovered in Uttar
Pradesh, including up to 0.25 tonnes of gold.
India last year imported some 845 tonnes of
gold to meet domestic demand.
The
number of Indian customs gold seizures is little changed from 2012,
the Business
Standard
says, but the value
of those hauls has jumped by well over 300%.
Over in China, meantime premiums on the
Shanghai Gold Exchange briefly went negative overnight, recovering to
$1.50 per ounce above London spot gold prices but down from this
spring’s record levels of $30.
Next month’s planning meeting for Beijing’s
politburo will see “unprecedented” reforms, according to Yu
Zhengsheng, the fourth-highest member of the Communist Party’s
Standing Committee.
Interbank interest rates rose again in Shanghai
today, taking the annualized cost of 1-month money to 6.48%, the
highest level since June’s spike to double digits.
Adrian Ash
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