by
GoldCore
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,318.75, EUR 959.09
and GBP 791.14 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,314.00, EUR 957.59 and GBP 787.44 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,314.00, EUR 957.59 and GBP 787.44 per ounce.
Gold climbed $3.40 or 0.26% yesterday to
$1,322.00/oz. Silver rose $0.51 or 2.38% at $21.96/oz.
Gold slipped on Wednesday and came off 14 week
highs hit in the previous session as traders booked profits.
Worries about global economic growth are
underpinning gold’s safe-haven appeal and the technicals suggest
that after a pullback, the precious metal may continue to rise in
dollar and other fiat currencies and in terms of the Dow Jones
Industrial Average (see long term chart). A period of correction and
consolidation would ordinarily be expected after such rapid gains.
Gold
touched $1,332.10 an ounce yesterday, the strongest since October
31st, before shedding some of the gains. Bullion has risen around 9%
so far this year. Premiums for gold
bars in Singapore and Hong Kong remain steady and Hong Kong
premiums were at $1.30 to $1.70 an ounce over spot London prices.
Hedge funds and money managers have raised
their speculative long positions in gold futures and options to a
three-month high on signs the Fed will not rush to cut its stimulus,
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) data showed on Friday.
The Federal Reserve’s January policy meeting
minutes, when it decided to trim its money printing and U.S.
government debt buying by $10 billion, are due for release at 1900
GMT. Traders will scrutinise the minutes for clues regarding whether
the Fed will maintain their ultra loose monetary policies.
Trends
forecaster, Gerald Celente, who correctly forecast the recent $10
billion taper, told Russia
Today overnight that the Federal Reserve is again “blowing
bubbles,” as is the ECB.
After the Nasdaq and property bubbles, we now
have huge debt bubbles being created, said Celente. This is leading
to BRICS nations having concerns about a “monetary tsunami” and
concerns about the euro and dollar and may lead to a new reserve
currency for the world – possibly a basket of currencies.
This poses risks to both the dollar and the
euro and both may fall in value in the coming months and the question
is “which one is going to go first?”
Celente again warned of the economic parallels
with the 1930’s and said that we are again seeing recession and
depressions, currency wars, trade wars and that this would lead to
actual wars.
He warned that the cost of living is going to
continue to rise and standards of living are set to fall. Although
the official government inflation data may not show this, as they do
not include energy and food. “After all we don’t have to eat or
use fuel. What deranged mind would really include that into a core
index.”
Celente concludes that the “books are being
cooked, the numbers are a lot worse than they are showing and all the
Fed is doing is pumping this up so that it looks like there is a
recovery up until Election day.”
Webinar:
Gerald Celente On Strategies For Protecting Your Wealth In 2014 And
BeyondJoin
Gerald Celente on this broadcast tomorrow as he examines the
opportunities in 2014 and in the coming uncertain years.
Gerald Celente needs little introduction: Founder of The Trends Research Institute in 1980, Gerald Celente is a pioneer trend strategist. He is author of the national bestseller Trends 2000 and Trend Tracking (Warner Books) and publisher of the internationally circulated Trends Journal newsletter.
Gerald Celente needs little introduction: Founder of The Trends Research Institute in 1980, Gerald Celente is a pioneer trend strategist. He is author of the national bestseller Trends 2000 and Trend Tracking (Warner Books) and publisher of the internationally circulated Trends Journal newsletter.
Celente’s Trends Research Institute has been
featured on Oprah Winfrey amongst hundreds of media interviews and
credited with forecasting many major geopolitical and economic
trends.
These
include the “Panic of ’08,” the collapse of the Soviet Union,
the dot-com bust, the 1997 Asian currency crisis, the 1987 world
stock market crash, increased terrorism against America, “Crusades
2000,” and the quagmire in Iraq … before war began and the last
two recessions.
This webinar is scheduled for tomorrow, February 20, 2014 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM GMT and will be moderated by Mark O’Byrne, Head of Research at GoldCore.
This webinar is scheduled for tomorrow, February 20, 2014 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM GMT and will be moderated by Mark O’Byrne, Head of Research at GoldCore.
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