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Gold Bounces as Euro Hits 2009 High, But "No Strong Investment" Despite
US Hyper-Inflation Fears
THE PRICE OF WHOLESALE GOLD bounced in London on Tuesday morning, reaching
$983 an ounce for Dollar investors and recovering from near 5-week lows versus
the British Pound.
The Gold
Price in Euros held steady at €689 as the single currency also leapt,
jumping to new 2009 highs against the Dollar above $1.4270.
"Upside for gold could be limited today," reckons Walter de Wet at Standard
Bank in a note. "There were fairly large volumes of physical gold selling [on
Monday] when the price moved above $980."
But with US Treasury bond prices down more than 5% for the year to date, and "while
higher yields increase the cost of holding gold in the longer run," de Wet
adds, "right now it signals reduced investment appetite for exposure to the
US and a weaker Dollar."
"Don't be complacent and think there isn't any alternative for China to buy
your bills and bonds," warned former central-bank advisor Yu Yongding - scheduled
to meet US Treasury secretary Tim Geithner in Beijing today - in an interview
on Monday.
"The Euro is an alternative. And there are lots of raw materials we can still
buy."
According to data from Bloomberg , foreign investment in US Treasury debt
rose nearly $69 billion in May, with strong foreign demand for last week's
auction of $101bn in new bonds.
The Federal Reserve will continue its $300bn "quantitative easing" of longer-term
interest rates by purchasing 10- and 2-year bonds in the open market tomorrow
and Thursday.
"Most of the ongoing rally in the precious metal is more driven by a stark
weakness in the US Dollar than the risk averse buying we saw last winter," agrees
Andrey Kryuchenkov at VTB Capital in London, quoted by The
Telegraph.
"Inflation concerns are gradually creeping onto the investor agenda."
Gold Investment continues "to
track moves in the Dollar, the key factor driving gold," said Pradeep Unni
at Richcomm Global Services in Dubai, in a note today, quoted by Bloomberg.
The negative correlation between Gold and
the US Dollar - meaning that gold rises as the Dollar falls - has returned "as
optimism grows that the worst of the economic downturn is over."
Monday showed US Personal Incomes rising sharply in April, but only due to
tax cuts and stimulus government spending. Wages and salaries were flat.
New data this morning said unemployment in the 16-nation Eurozone rising to
9.2%, while growth in the UK's broad money supply slowed from 18.2% year-on-year
to 17.4%.
The FTSE100 index here in London dropped 0.5% from Monday's 5-month closing
high. Germany's Dax held near its best level since late November. UK gilts
and German bunds both rose as equities drifted, pushing 10-year German yields
back down to 3.65%.
Switzerland meantime reported a 2.4% drop in its GDP from a year earlier for
Jan. to April '09 - during which the Swiss Franc dropped almost 10% of its
value vs. the Dollar.
Since the Swiss National Bank (SNB) then announced "quantitative
easing" to sell Francs and depress their value on March 15th, the currency
has regained all those losses.
Today the Gold Price in
Swiss Francs held near CHF 1,040 per ounce - some 12% off its record top of
late Feb.
"We are seeing no strong physical Gold
Investment and we hold our one-month forecast for gold at $950 an ounce," says
UBS chief metals strategist John Reade in London.
Yesterday the New York SPDR Gold
ETF added another 15 tonnes to the hoard backing its shares, taking the
total to a new record above 1,134 tonnes with the first rise in 6 sessions
and only the third rise since Jan-to-April saw the trust swell by 44%.
But "One day of decent flows is not enough to change our minds on the near-term
outlook for gold," says Reade.
Each share in the SPDR trust fund - nominally equal to one-tenth of an ounce
- is now backed by 9.82% of an ounce.
"There's a lot of concern about inflation, even talk about hyper-inflation
down the road," said Christoffer Moltke-Leth at Saxo Capital Markets in Singapore
to the AP earlier.
"Oil right now is a freight train barreling upward."
US crude prices slipped 0.8% early Tuesday, but held above $68 per barrel,
its best level since November. Copper also retreated from 7-month highs as "People
question the speed of the recovery," according to Alex Heath at RBC Capital
in London, speaking to Bloomberg.
"I am sure that the US will go into hyperinflation," said Marc Faber, publisher
of the Gloom, Boom & Doom report, in an
interview with the newswire last week.
"The problem with government debt growing so much is that when the time will
come and the Fed should increase interest rates, they will be very reluctant
to do so and so inflation will start to accelerate."
Analysis by USA Today says federal liabilities - including Medicare
and social security - rose 12% last year to equal $546,668 per US household.
Of the record $63.8 trillion in tax-paid obligations, some $11.2 trillion
is currently being financed by US Treasury bonds.
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