Gold News

Gold Price Cuts Weekly Loss Near Record Highs, as India & China Continue to Grow, Continue to Buy Gold

Prices to Buy Gold held firm in London on Friday morning, nearing the end of what one London trader called “another roller-coaster week” some 1.7% lower for Dollar and Sterling investors but unchanged vs. the single Euro currency.

This morning's London Gold Fix was set at $1390 per ounce, some 2.5% below Tuesday's new all-time record.

Japanese equities ended the week unchanged, but Germany's Dax index crept back towards 7,000 – a level last seen in April 2008 – and Wall Street's Nasdaq tech-stock index was set to open near 3-year highs on Friday.

Major-economy bonds steadied, holding yields just below this week's 6-month highs, as US Treasuries headed for their worst weekly loss of 2010.

“We expect sellers of the metal near $1400,” says Gold Bullion market-market Scotia Mocatta's short-term trading note.

“The US interest-rate decision [next Weds] could give direction to the US currency and thus most probably have an effect on gold’s trajectory,” says Swiss refinery group MKS's trading desk.

“There has been an underlying shift to gold as an alternative currency,” said a London Gold Bullion trader to Reuters, “with both the Dollar and Euro weak, and a lack of confidence in global banking.”

But while “a general distaste for and distrust of fiat currencies and fears of future inflation [has] intensified investors’ desire to hold physical commodities,” notes Mitsui analyst David Jollie, “the description of gold as a currency rather than a commodity seems overblown, given the similar performance of copper.”

Both copper and Gold Prices have risen around 28% so far this year. A group of London metal traders last month wrote to City watchdog the FSA last month to warn that licensing exchange-traded investment funds – backed by physical copper stockpiles – may mean “approving the next financial bubble.”

J.P.Morgan has already received US regulatory approval for its forthcoming copper ETF, with competing products expected from BlackRock iShares, Deutsche Bank and ETF Securities amongst others.

“Output shortages of 800,000 metric tons may occur in 2011 and in 2012, compared with a balanced market this year, “ says Bloomberg, quoting Trafigura Beheer BV, “which considers itself the second-largest trader of industrial metals.”

New data from China today showed copper imports to the world's fastest-growing economy rising 29% last month from a 1-year low, while its crude oil imports rose 26% from Oct.

Crude oil prices today ticked higher above $88 per barrel, while copper held near Thursday's new record highs.

Silver Prices briefly touched $29 an ounce for the second day running. 

Rubber prices hit fresh 30-year highs. Heavy rains in southern Australia led ANZ Bank to warn that 60% of the country's wheat crop may be cut to animal-feed quality.

“We think the threat of bubbles is greatest [not in emerging economies but] in commodity markets,” says Capital Economics’ chief international economist in London, Julian Jessop.

“The prices of industrial metals and agricultural commodities have already returned to the pre-crisis levels of 2008 – levels which were only achieved after the world economy had been booming for four years.”

Already the world's No.1 importer of copper and the No.1 consumer of energy, rice and wheat, China may become the world's No.1 corn importer within five years, reckon analysts at Rabobank, as rising meat consumption demands increased pig and poultry production.

Gold Bullion imports to China have jumped 5-fold so far this year, reaching more than 200 tonnes according to the Shanghai Gold Exchange.

Now the world's largest single Gold Mining nation, China does not allow large-scale exports of its near-300 tonne output.

"Tighter global monetary policy is bad for gold, and this is tighter monetary policy,” said Japanese conglomerate Mitsubishi's chief analyst Matthew Turner today, commenting on China's latest increase in banking reserve ratios – the sixth such hike of 2010.

“But [it's] only slightly [tighter], and in one part of the world, so the impact is not huge.”

Demand to Buy Gold from Indian clients was the strongest mid-week since late Oct., just before the peak Diwali festival, Swiss bank UBS's London office reported today.

Back then, “Gold was trading around $1320," notes UBS chief analyst Edel Tully. Gold Prices this week dipped below $1380 an ounce.

New data today showed India's industrial production growing by nearly 11% in Oct. from a year earlier. Twenty-nine economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecast an average rise of 8.5%.

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Adrian Ash

Adrian Ash, BullionVault Gold News

Adrian Ash is director of research at BullionVault, the world-leading physical gold, silver and platinum market for private investors online. Formerly head of editorial at London's top publisher of private-investment advice, he was City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning from 2003 to 2008, and he has now been researching and writing daily analysis of precious metals and the wider financial markets for over 20 years. A frequent guest on BBC radio and television, Adrian is regularly quoted by the Financial Times, MarketWatch and many other respected news outlets, and his views from inside the bullion market have been sought by the Economist magazine, CNBC, Bloomberg, Germany's Handelsblatt and FAZ, plus Italy's Il Sole 24 Ore.

See the full archive of Adrian Ash articles on GoldNews.

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