by
GoldCore
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,299.00, EUR 938.58 &
GBP 773.03 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,311.50, EUR 950.43 & GBP 784.06 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,311.50, EUR 950.43 & GBP 784.06 per ounce.
Gold dropped $23.80 or 1.79% yesterday, closing
at $1,302.90/oz. Silver lost $0.37 or 1.85% yesterday to $19.62/oz.
Gold was pinned at $1,300 an ounce, well off
Monday’s high at $1,330.90. The sharp sudden price fall yesterday
in early afternoon trade in London (see chart) was attributed to more
peculiar computer-driven concentrated selling of huge tranches of
gold futures contracts on the COMEX, which then saw heavy stop-loss
orders placed by momentum traders.
Data from Nanex shows that gold futures
contracts with a notional value of nearly $500 million dollars were
sold in minutes. This, not surprisingly, hammered gold futures down
over $12 and led to the futures exchange having to halt gold trading
for 10 seconds. This sudden price fall resulted in gold falling below
its 200-day moving average (DMA) and to selling by momentum traders
piling in and shorting gold.
Meanwhile, holdings in the SPDR gold fund rose
by 0.6 tons to reach 806.82 following a three-week downtrend in
holdings. Assets rose by 1.8 tons on Monday to 806.22 tons, the first
inflow the fund has seen since March 24th.
Gold’s losses were kept in check by fears of
further escalation of tension in Ukraine. Our warning yesterday of
conflict and a civil war in Ukraine was echoed by Putin and Medvedev
overnight.
Ukrainian forces began a military crackdown
against what are being called pro-Russian separatists in the eastern
regions of the country. The so-called ”anti-terrorist” operation
is the new government’s response to people, some armed, taking
control of administrative and police buildings in the East.
The local parliaments of the Donetsk and
Lugansk regions elected the creation of independent, sovereign
states, and called for referendums on ceding from Ukraine, much like
the events in the Crimea.
Ukrainian troops retook state buildings from
ethnic Russians in the eastern Donetsk region yesterday. White House
spokesman Jay Carney said while the U.S. is considering military
assistance to Ukraine, lethal aid isn’t an option at this time.
Thursday will see 4 way talks in Geneva,
hosting senior representatives from Ukraine, Russia, the EU and U.S.
It is hard to see how progress will be made given that economic
sanctions remain and look set to intensify.
Yesterday, these not inconsequential
geopolitical risks and robust physical demand internationally could
not overcome the speculative selling and possible high frequency
trading (HFT) manipulation on the COMEX.
BAIL-INS
APPROVED BY EU PARLIAMENT YESTERDAY – DEPOSITS OVER €100,000
VULNERABLE
Yesterday the EU Parliament adopted three key
texts outlining common rules on how to restructure and resolve
failing banks.
The laws make up what has become more commonly
known as Europe’s banking union and include the creation of a
Single Resolution Mechanism and a €55 billion Single Resolution
Fund for banks in difficulty. The law was approved by the parliament
with 570 votes in favour and 88 against.
Importantly and little commented on is the fact
that they also include the Bank Restructuring and Resolution
Directive, which seeks to shift the burden of bank failure from
taxpayers to creditors – both bond holders and depositors.
Another key piece of legislation approved
yesterday was the Directive on Deposit Guarantee Schemes, which says
that bank deposits up to €100,000 will remain protected from any
loss that a bank may incur. This means that deposits over €100,000
are now vulnerable to bail-ins and deposit confiscation.
Now shareholders and creditors including
depositors over the €100,000 level will be the first to face losses
from a bank failure.
“Bail in will be the main way to solve the
problems,” said Swedish MEP Gunnar Hökmark. “Bank resolution
will be funded by creditors via bail ins and will also by resolution
funds which will be funded by banks for banks.”
“Bail-in” enshrined in the two laws, means
that the bank’s owners – the shareholders, and creditors – the
bondholders and depositors, will be first in line to absorb losses
banks will incur, before outside sources of finance may be called
upon.
The
two EU laws on bank resolution will also require banks to finance
reserve funds to cover further losses, but only after bail-ins have
been used.
Bail-In Regimes are coming in the EU, the UK, the U.S. and internationally:
Bail-In Short Guide: Protecting your Savings In The Coming Bail-In Era
Bail-In Research: From Bail-Outs to Bail-Ins: Risks and Ramifications
Bail-In Regimes are coming in the EU, the UK, the U.S. and internationally:
Bail-In Short Guide: Protecting your Savings In The Coming Bail-In Era
Bail-In Research: From Bail-Outs to Bail-Ins: Risks and Ramifications
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