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Reuters has released their Reuters Precious Metals Poll 2009 in which Gold
and Silver Investments Limited has taken part. The survey of 56 precious metals
analysts, traders and banks was carried out over the last three weeks. The
Reuters poll finds that "gold prices are expected to hold firm this year as
investors, looking for safety away from the mayhem in financial markets, pile
into the precious metal used as a store of value." The poll found however that "industrial
precious metals prices will behave differently this year, reliant as they are
on real economy demand."

https://customers.reuters.com/d/graphics/CMD_GLDPL0109.jpg
Bulls Versus Bears - Bearish Sentiment is Bullish from Contrarian Perspective
The Reuters poll has a larger sample (56) than the recent Bloomberg gold survey
(20) and has more bearish respondents than those polled by Bloomberg. The bearish
response of some half of the analysts is bullish from a contrarian perspective.
As is the fact that the poll respondents believe gold prices would average
$862.50 an ounce this year -- about $10 below the 2008 average price of $871.21
an ounce and more than 5% below today's price of $905/oz.
It is worth remembering that many, if not most, of the respondents have been
bearish in recent years despite gold rising every year since 2001.
Some of the most bearish participants are SGCIB, UBS, Commerzbank, the Economist
Intelligence Unit (EIU), Kitco Bullion Dealers and Goldman Sachs.
Participants who are most bullish on gold, include Gold and Silver Investments
Limited, Merrill Lynch and Goldmoney. With gold already up some 10% since the
start of the year, their predictions are looking better than those of the bears.
However, it is early days yet and a lot will happen between now and the end
of 2009.
Best to Avoid Predictions in 2009
We would prefer not to get into the forecasting and predictions business as
predictions and forecasts are fraught with uncertainty at the best of times
and this is particularly the case in 2009 given the massive macroeconomic and
geopolitical uncertainty and risk. As many have found to their cost in recent
years it is nigh impossible to predict the future movement of any commodity,
currency, equity indices, property market or any other asset class (particularly
in the short term) as there are so many variables.
Having said that, in terms of accuracy Gold and Silver Investments have been
far more accurate than most other commodity brokers, bullion dealers and banks
in recent years.
Gold and Silver Investments were one of the few analysts to predict gold would
rise above $1,000/oz in 2008 and we have called these markets right on a consistent
basis and hopefully we can predict lines of probability. Continuing massive
volatility and unpredictability in all markets is why we advise avoiding leverage
as leveraged players will likely again have a very torrid time in 2009.

Gold and Silver Investments are the sixth most bullish on gold and the second
most bullish on silver, after Merrill Lynch (see silver table on jpg hyperlink
below) . We believe our estimates to be conservative as the average price of
gold in 2008 was some $872/oz and thus an average price of some $1,020 is only
some 20% above the 2008 average price. Similarly a high of $1,250 is only 21%
above the 2008 high.
There is potential that prices rise far above these levels, particularly as
the (Commodity Futures Trading Commission) CFTC is now investigating the massive
concentrated short positions in the COMEX gold and silver markets - if these
short positions get squeezed and some of the bullion banks are forced to buy
back their huge short positions, prices could rise to levels that will surprise
even the bulls.
Uncertain Macroeconomic Outlook
Many of the bears have been bearish for a number of years and have failed
to realize that we are in a bull market. Given the deflationary headwinds assailing
us early in 2009, they may be proved right this year as further massive deleveraging
could affect the gold price.
However, we believe this to be unlikely given the massive macroeconomic and
systemic risk and increasing monetary and geopolitical risk. And we believe
that should the deflationary pressures continue throughout 2009, then most
commodities and asset classes will again fall sharply in 2009 but gold will
again outperform. As gold did in 2008 when it was up 6% in USD terms and by
far more in most other currencies. Importantly, gold also rose during the last
bout of sharp deflation in the Great Depression of the 1930s when Roosevelt
revalued gold by some 70% and devalued the dollar by some 70%, from $20/oz
to $35/oz.
Also there is the significant risk that deflation will gradually give way
to virulent stagflation (especially in the US) if the dollar resumes its bear
market and begins to fall sharply again.
All in all it promises to be a very uncertain and volatile year and it will
be interesting to see how gold and silver actually perform.
To read the full article please go to
POLL - Fear to boost gold, industry pain to hit platinum
http://www.forbes.com/feeds/reuters/2009/01/26/2009-01-26T130132Z_01_LN75298_RTRIDST_0_PRECIOUS-POLL-GRAPHIC.html
(Additional reporting by Michael Taylor, Pratima Desai, Frank Tang, Carole
Vaporean, Alden Bentley, Chris Kelly, Nick Trevethan, Lewa Pardomuan, Ruchira
Singh, Chikako Mogi, Bruce Hextall, Polly Yam, Jonathan Leff, Alfred Cang;
editing by Anthony Barker)
For graphics, please see the following
Gold: https://customers.reuters.com/d/graphics/CMD_GLDPL0109.jpg
(Silver: https://customers.reuters.com/d/graphics/CMD_SLVPL0109.jpg;
Platinum: https://customers.reuters.com/d/graphics/CMD_PLTPL0109.jpg;
Palladium: https://customers.reuters.com/d/graphics/CMD_PLDPL0109.jpg;
Median forecast with all four metals on one chart: https://customers.reuters.com/d/graphics/PRC_FC0109.jpg)
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