by
GoldCore
U.S. & UK markets are closed today for a
national holiday.
Friday’s AM fix was USD 1,292.00, EUR 948.61 and GBP 767.18 per ounce.
Friday’s AM fix was USD 1,292.00, EUR 948.61 and GBP 767.18 per ounce.
Gold fell$1.60 or 0.1% Friday to $1,291.70/oz.
Silver slipped $0.18 or 0.5% to $19.388/oz. Gold was flat for the
week while silver gained 0.5% for the week. Palladium gained 0.6%
last week and platinum climbed nearly 2%.
Gold
remains in lock down in the unusually tight range seen in recent days
between $1,284/oz and $1,306/oz. Overnight, gold
in Singapore traded in a very narrow $3 range between
$1,291/oz and $1,294/oz and gold remained around the $1,292/oz level
in morning trading in London.
The gold market continues to digest the news
Friday, that the U.K.’s Financial Conduct Authority fined Barclays
£26 million ($43.9 million) after one of its traders manipulated the
London gold fix global price benchmark.
The fact that this was done over a long period
of time and even on the day after Barclays was fined £290 million
for manipulating Libor suggests that there may be more to this
manipulation and may be other skeletons in the gold rigging closet.
“The Barclays incident is likely just the tip
of the iceberg in respect of today’s gold market,” said Brien
Lundin, editor of Gold Newsletter told Dow Jones Marketwatch.
The
London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) has extended by one week the
deadline for a consultation on the future of the daily silver
fixing mechanism to give the industry more time to respond.
IMF data on Friday confirmed that Russia
increased its gold holdings by a hefty 27.7 tonnes in April taking
its total to 1,068 tonnes, while Turkey raised its bullion reserve by
13 tonnes to 497 tonnes. Kazakhstan raised its holdings by 2.7 tonnes
to 151 tonnes.
Eurosceptic nationalists saw stunning victories
in European Parliament elections in France and Britain on Sunday as
critics of the European Union more than doubled their seats in a
continent-wide protest vote against austerity, unemployment and the
centralisation of power in the EU. Some political analysts have
called the elections a political “earthquake”.
Marc Faber told Bloomberg in an interview that
he will “never sell his gold” and that “I buy more every
month.”
Faber, managing director and founder of Marc
Faber Ltd., discussed the state of the Chinese economy, the outlook
for the U.S. stock market, gold and bitcoin with Trish Regan on
Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.”
“The momentum sell-off has caused internal
market damage” and “every asset in the world is over-inflated
right now…” Faber warns.
China worries him the most and he warns that
Chinese growth figures are a fallacy.
“If one analyzes the data carefully” it is
clear that “China is growing at most 4%.” Given the“gigantic
credit bubble” the outlook is not hopeful as the sharp deceleration
in growth is likely to continue. Faber also has strong words for
Western nations treatment of the rest of the world and “the US will
have to back off.. because China is so important.”
“I like the concept of Bitcoin”…
“Bitcoin has its merits since you may not be able to carry gold
across borders,” Faber said.
“People think they know what the future
holds… and what Central banks are up to.. they don’t… I will
never sell my gold and I buy more every month… I would not be short
gold,” Faber said.
Faber adopts the prudent strategy of dollar
cost averaging or gradually accumulating a position over time rather
than investing a large lump sum at once.
Our
recent extensive interview with Faber on gold, silver and investment
risks and opportunities today can be watched here.
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