by GoldCore
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,273.00, EUR 938.17 and GBP 750.06 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,261.75, EUR 932.90 and GBP 749.66 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,261.75, EUR 932.90 and GBP 749.66 per ounce.
Gold jumped $12.80 or 1.02% yesterday to $1,273.80/oz. Silver surged $0.35 or 1.82% to $19.56/oz.
Middle East ‘Powder Keg’
Gold consolidated near a
two-week high today and is set for the first back to back weekly advance
since April, as concerns that a U.S. recovery may be stalling and
geopolitical risks in the Middle East led to safe haven demand.
Gold is 1.6% higher this week,
after rising 0.3% last week. Silver is also poised for the second week
of gains. In the physical gold market, premiums on gold bars are quoted at 80 cents to $1.20 an ounce in Singapore and Hong Kong.
The unrest in Iraq drove oil to
an eight-month high and sent stocks tumbling globally. U.S. crude
touched an intraday high of $107.68, and was up 75 cents at $107.28,
extending the previous session’s $2.13 gain on concerns about oil
supplies.
After a long period of
consolidation, oil prices look like they could be on the verge of
breaking out of their range and moving higher (see chart).
Iraq and disappointing U.S.
economic data propelled gold and silver higher yesterday. Disappointing
U.S. retail sales and an uptick in weekly jobless claims led to investor
buying of haven assets.
The Commerce Department
reported a gain in retail sales of 0.3% in May. Economists were
expecting a gain of 0.6% last month. Jobless claims rose 4,000 to a
seasonally adjusted 317,000 according to the Labor Department. This is
7,000 more than economists were expecting.
Uncertainty has returned and in
a big way. This is favouring safe haven assets such as gold and
weakness in toppy looking risk assets such as many stock markets.
The combination of poor
economic data along with the risk of war in Iraq could be the catalyst
that gold needs to get out of its recent funk.
NYMEX Light Sweet Crude Oil (WTI) – 20 Years (Thomson Reuters)
NYMEX Light Sweet Crude Oil (WTI) – 20 Years (Thomson Reuters)
Violence in Iraq exploded as
Iraqi separatists, the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS), took
over the second largest city in Iraq. ISIS forces are just 50 miles from
Iraq’s capital, Baghdad.
Sunni Islamist militants gained
more ground in Iraq overnight, moving into two towns in the eastern
province of Diyala. U.S. President Barack Obama is considering military
strikes to halt their advance towards the capital Baghdad.
To the north, a Kurdish militia
known as Peshmerga took over key government installations in
strategically important, oil hub of Kirkuk. The situation in Iraq has
deteriorated significantly in a very short period of time and an
all-out sectarian conflict is looking more likely as each day goes by.
With Syria’s Kurds already
exploiting civil war there to run their own affairs, Iraqi Kurdish
expansionism is worrying U.S. ally Turkey, which has its own large
Kurdish minority and fears a renewed attempt to redraw borders and
create a Kurdish state.
Iraqi President Maliki’s army
already lost control of much of the Euphrates valley west of the capital
to ISIS last year, and with the evaporation of the army in the Tigris
valley to the north, the government could be left with just Baghdad and
areas south – home to the Shi’ite majority in Iraq’s 32 million
population.
Gold in U.S. Dollars – 5 Year (Thomson Reuters)
The Wall Street Journal is
reporting that Iran sent two battalions of Iranian Revolutionary Guards
to help the Iraqi government in its battle against ISIS. This is an
important development. Iran has already intervened in Syria and has the
power to crush ISIS in open combat.
Iran, which it is believed
funds and arms Shi’ite groups in Iraq, could be brought deeper into the
conflict, as could Turkey to the north. In Mosul, 80 Turks were held
hostage by ISIS after Ankara’s consulate there was overrun.
Iranian or Turkish intervention
would make the conflict inside Iraq much worse. Israel wants to see a
continuation of the tough line against Iran which it continues to see as
an existential threat.
Gold bullion has increased 6%
this year in part as tension between Russia and the U.S. and EU led to
some haven demand. Developments in the Middle East are likely to deepen
geopolitical tensions between Russia and the West and this should
support gold and indeed lead to higher gold prices in the coming months.
There is still the potential
for a wider Middle East conflict as the region remains a ‘powder keg.’
Iraq may be the match that sees the region explode into chaos and war –
with attendant effects on global oil prices and the global economy.
Read more at http://investmentwatchblog.com/gold-silver-oil-gas-jump-on-middle-east-powder-keg-concerns/#uPRcoPg6syKxtFlj.99
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