Gold News

Gold Price "Could Hit $2400 in 2014" with Fed Policy "Geared to Weaken Dollar"

The Gold Price rose back above $1715 per ounce Wednesday morning, around ten Dollars up on the week so far, as stocks, commodities and the Euro also edged higher and US Treasuries dipped, ahead of today's Federal Reserve policy announcement.

Silver meantime edged above $33.20 an ounce this morning, a slight gain on where it started the week.

Several analysts have predicted the Fed will today announce open-ended Treasury bond purchases worth $45 billion a month. In September the Fed announced it will buy $40 billion of mortgage-backed securities a month, while its maturity extension program Operation Twist, through which it sells shorter-dated bonds to buy longer-dated ones, ends this month.

"We have a six-month [gold price] target of $2000 an ounce, but see scope as well for prices to rise to $2400 an ounce by the end of 2014," says the 2013 outlook from Bank of America Merrill Lynch metals strategists this morning, in contrast with the Goldman Sachs gold forecast for 2014 made last week.

"These targets reflect our view that the Fed will maintain mortgage purchases until the end of 2014 and will move to buy Treasuries following the end of Operation Twist in December 2012."

"Quite clearly the US wants a lower Dollar and its monetary policy is certainly geared to deliver it," says currency strategist Steve Barrow at Standard Bank in a note this morning.

"If policy is geared to weaken the Dollar even more, through further monetary easing today, it won't stop any short-term safe haven demand for the Dollar that might arise out of fiscal cliff, but it could impair the ability of the Dollar to continue any such strength into the longer term."

President Obama and House of Representatives speaker John Boehner exchanged new proposals on how to reduce the US deficit yesterday, press reports says, as part of ongoing negotiations aimed at avoiding the so-called fiscal cliff of tax rises and spending cuts currently due at the end of the month unless Congress passes legislation to prevent them.

Obama has reduced his request for additional tax revenue over the next decade from $1.6 trillion to $1.4 trillion, Associated Press reports, but has not changed his call for top income tax rates to be raised.

"I'm pretty confident that Republicans would not hold middle-class taxes hostage to trying to protect tax cuts for high-income individuals," Obama told ABC News Tuesday.

The two sides are yet to reach an agreement.

In Toronto meantime Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney, who takes over at the Bank of England next year, suggested Tuesday that central banks might consider adopting nominal gross domestic product targets as an alternative to inflation targeting.

Under NGDP targeting, a central bank would aim to promote economic growth by targeting a given level of economic output in a given year.

"Adopting a nominal GDP-level target could in many respects be more powerful than employing thresholds under flexible inflation targeting," Carney said.

"This is because doing so would add 'history dependence' to monetary policy. Under NGDP targeting, bygones are not bygones and the central bank is compelled to make up for past misses on the path of nominal GDP."

Greece concluded its debt buyback program Tuesday, with unnamed official sources reporting it has received bids to sell bonds with €31.8 billion face value – above the €30 billion needed to secure Greece's next tranche of bailout funding. 

The average price paid for the bonds was however slightly above that targeted, meaning Greece's debt to GDP ratio was reduced by 9.5 percentage points rather than the 11 targeted, according to the source.

The Euro extended yesterday's gains against the Dollar Wednesday, climbing back above $1.30.

China, the world's biggest gold producer and the second-biggest source of private demand last year, produced 34.6 tonnes of gold in October, China's Ministry of Industry and Technology said today. October's production brings the total for the first 10 months of 2012 to 322.8 tonnes, an 11% increase on the same period last year.

Over in India, which imports most of its gold and is traditionally the world's number one source of demand, efforts should be made to reduce imports of gold and so lower the current account deficit that has risen to record levels, the All India Gems & Jewellery Trade Federation said Wednesday.

Lending 10% of the gold held with temples and householders to jewelers would provide three years' worth of supply, according to federation chairman Bachhraj Bamalwa.

"The only way India can reduce its dependence on imports is to tap the gold lying with individuals and temples," agrees Kishore Narne, head of commodity and currency at Mumbai broker Motilal Oswal.

"By doing this, the country can reduce influx of gold at these high prices. Appetite for gold is never going to diminish."

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