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Gold continues to surprise to the downside on the COMEX and the futures markets
in spite of huge physical demand, increasing supply issues and surging premiums
on bullion products.
Speculative paper players using huge leverage continue to exit positions for
the relative safety of cash due to margin calls on other bets and some investment
banks continue to short gold despite the incredibly strong fundamentals for
bullion itself. Once the AM and PM gold fixes for physical bullion took place
yesterday (at $772.25 and $755.25 respectively) gold was again aggressively
sold short by some US investment banks. The selling is very determined and
suggests that there is a strong desire not to have gold surging back above
$800/oz.
Gold remains extremely oversold as evidenced in the commitment of traders
report (COT) which shows that open interest has recently dropped to just over
300,000 open contracts from a record of 490,000 contracts last October. This
is due to the relentless unwinding of long positions by speculators in the
massive deleveraging seen in recent months.
However, the unwinding of leveraged positions and short term manipulations
by the leveraged paper players will prove to be just that - short term manipulations.
The laws of supply and demand will triumph over the irrational casino type
behavior seen in the gold market in recent weeks.
The laws of supply and demand will result in sharply higher bullion prices
in the coming weeks. Already the premiums on one ounce gold coins and bars
are as high as 15% - if the coins or bars can be sourced at all. Silver coins
and bars are attracting even higher premiums of as high as 50% to 100% as there
is little or no supply of 1 oz, 10 oz and 100 oz silver products. Only 1000
oz silver bars are available and even they are seeing their premiums rise.

Performance Table in US dollars for comparison

Investors are increasingly wary of high risk, new fangled and complex financial
derivative products designed to make large returns. Return of capital is now
more important than return on capital.
Wealth accumulation is rightly being shunned in favour of wealth preservation
and bullion and those investors who have wisely diversified into bullion will
be the beneficiaries of this in the coming weeks.
Investors want hard tangible assets in their portfolio that have little or
no counterparty risk and cannot collapse in value in a matter of days as many
share prices have done in recent weeks. Systemic risk also has savers concerned
about the security of their deposits despite recent government guarantees.
The counterparty risk posed by spread betting companies and CFD providers is
now being reassessed.
Gold is Up 12% while S&P is Down 37% Since Credit Crisis Began
As expected, the finite currency that is gold has held up better than any
of the commodities. Gold had fallen about 32% since hitting a record nominal
high in March, compared with a 57% decline in oil, 54% drop in copper, and
65% decline in platinum. Stock markets have not fared much better than commodity
markets in the last year with declines of between 35% and 50% seen on the major
international indices.
The Performance Table above and the table below (Physical Gold Versus the
S&P 500) conclusively show how gold has acted as a safe haven in recent
months and gold will continue to act as a safe haven in the medium to long
term as it always has.
Physical Gold Versus the S&P 500

The table above is a clear example of gold's historic role as a safe haven
asset in times of economic uncertainty. It shows the industry performance of
Physical Gold Versus the S&P 500 during eleven stock market declines of
15% or more in the Post-War period (since 1946).
Since August 2007 gold has risen from $650 to $730 today or more than 12%
and the S&P 500 has fallen by 37% (1500 to 954). Other stock market indices
have fallen by much more.
This is clear evidence if any were needed of gold's role as a safe haven in
a properly diversified investment portfolio.
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