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Gold has moved with the € and in the opposite direction to the U.S.$
for months now. The main reason is because U.S. Investors have linked the
performance of the $ to the € as a true reflection of the $ currency
value. Of course this implies that the € is the defining currency against
which to measure the performance of the $. But is that even reasonable? We
think not.
The €.
We are now seeing the U.S. economic malaise cross the Atlantic and affecting
Europe. Inflation is running and growth is sagging with many believing that
Europe is already in a recession. It's now felt that this has not just hit
Europe but the rest of the world excluding Asia. But in the Eurozone such an
event is likely to have a more disruptive effect than in the States for so
many unevenly matched economies are situated there. With one currency, the €,
providing the means of exchange for all, capital can flow wheresoever it wishes
with no restraining influence of a changing exchange rate. So a strong economy
is likely to draw from a weak one potentially sucking the economic strength
from it in economically pressured times. Right now the South of the Eurozone
from Spain through France etc, are performing considerably weaker than the
North, in particular Germany. The pressure on national governments to take
action to protect themselves from this is great and posing a danger to the
single currency, for it is most unlikely that any European sovereign nation
will quietly accept the loss of its economic force. The benefits of the Eurozone
will pale in the face of such disruption.
The mere fact, now established, that the exchange rate of the €:$ needed
'management', first by holding it in a trading range of $1.60 - $1.54: €1
shows how the € will not be allowed to be the measuring line for the $.
Second, in the interests of international competitiveness and monetary harmony
the € will not be allowed to continuously move higher against the $.
So why should gold move with the €?
Both economic areas are facing similar problems including rising inflation,
both are currencies based on the same criteria and both economies are slowing,
but most important of all is that the G-7 group of nations do not want a separation
of the two currencies beyond certain limits. No such restraint should be placed
on gold, which knows no nation. It should move against all currencies and may
well have started to do just that already. As the $ rises against the €,
now almost 10% in the last month having broken out of its trading range [with
intervention?] gold fell through support in almost a straight line, forced
down by short-term traders until it hit the $780 area.
Gold beginning to de-couple?
Then in the face of continued $ strength gold became vigorous, once this support
was hit, fully. Physical demand appeared almost prematurely, out of India,
the world's largest gold buying nation, one that has been almost absent from
the gold market for the last six months to a year. Now in the belief that the
gold price is going to hold these levels or rise, they felt secure enough to
buy again. Investment demand, having been almost paralyzed in the face of a
strong $, still sits on the sidelines, while long-term demand for silver is
now appearing in quantity. Some long-term holders of gold sold, but not large
quantities, in the belief that the rise in the gold price is far from over.
Central Bank selling has reverted back to a trickle of sales, so the force
driving the gold price down has come almost entirely from COMEX in New York.
The futures market will create opportunities, but will not hold a direction
once other demand factors push the other way. They look for short-term opportunities
only and close them as fast as they were opened. If they can drive a price
either way they will and then change in a heartbeat. At this moment, they have
largely shot their bolt, having taken the net long speculative position [relative
to the gold price] down to what we consider a low point. To sell more would
be to expose themselves to dangerous 'short' risks, positions they will only
hold briefly. The moment they feel a fundamental upward force, have no doubt
about it, they too will change direction and buy in bulk.
So now we are at the point where the gold market is poised to see rising long-term
demand on the physical front, as the high season for gold is about to begin
and the funds on COMEX have drawn back the string of the bow to its maximum.
The action in the gold market of a recovery back above $820 is in the face
of a slightly weakening $ only. So we feel that it is likely
that the $ can continue strong, while gold rises as well.
As the $ still holds strength, it is logical that the next phase of the evolution
of gold is for the gold price to move with a strong $ upwards and upwards in
the € too. This is a large step for gold and for the market, because it
accepts that currencies, no matter which ones, are not effective value measurers,
relative to gold, but gold is an effective counter to all currencies
including the €.
Once gold is seen to have de-coupled from the € and by extension the
$, the gold market will come into its own internationally. Demand from Europe
as well as the Far East will ensure that it is not simply a counter to the
$ but extends to a counter to rising inflation and falling markets alongside
falling economic confidence in general. Then gold will have matured into a
truly global investment medium capable of reaching new heights and beyond.
In the next few months we expect this evolutionary step to be completed.
Is your wealth effectively structured to avoid the pernicious effects of
the regulatory climate we have moved into? It should be and we can help you
to do that effectively and within the law. Please contact us for any help
regarding these issues at gold-authenticmoney@iafrica.com .
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