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08:30 EST, Fri 10 July
Gold Fix Hits Two-Month Low, But Demand Solid, "Big Picture Bullish"
THE PRICE OF GOLD SLID yet again early Friday in London, recording
the lowest AM Gold Fix since
8th May at $910 per ounce, and nearing Wednesday's two-month lows in the spot
market at $905.
Down 2.5% down from last Friday's finish, the Dollar-price of Gold showed
its worst weekly performance since the start of June ahead of today's Wall
Street opening.
"In the near term, day-to-day moves continue to be influenced by the direction
the Dollar takes," said one Shanghai analyst to Reuters this morning.
"In the longer term, inflationary expectations remain."
Japan however reported the fastest drop in wholesale prices since at least
1960 today, while US crude oil contracts dropped below $60 per barrel for the
first time since mid-May, down 18% from the 2009 high hit just over a week
ago.
The FTSE100 stock index here in London fell to its lowest level since late
April. Tokyo's Nikkei ended the week down more than 5% from last Friday.
"Physical [Gold] demand
remains depressed and it may take lower prices to prompt buying," says the
July edition of Metal
Matters from London market-makers Scotia Mocatta, pointing to a short-term
technical target of $896 after the Dollar-price completed a head-and-shoulders
pattern last month.
"However, the big picture outlook for Gold remains
bullish...Competitive devaluation amongst numerous hard currencies will lead
to further trouble for the financial markets. This is likely to keep interest
in Gold running at a high
level.
"As such, we would see any sell-off in Gold as
a medium term buying opportunity."
On the currency markets today, the zero-yielding Japanese Yen pushed higher
against all other major currencies, signaling "risk aversion" amongst Tokyo
funds pulling cash home.
The Euro also fell against the US Dollar, but Gold
Prices fell faster still, dropping to a 3-month low of €652.60 per
ounce.
For UK investors now Ready
to Buy Gold, the price bounced off a fresh 6-month low of £557.60
overnight.
Sharply lower from the first quarter of 2009, daily volatility in the British
Pound's effective exchange rate, the Sterling Index, remains twice the level
of its two-decade average.
"Aggressive global monetary stimulus is reflationary, [it] has defused the
tail risk of deflation, and has helped to lift commodity prices," reckon Richard
Berner and David Greenlaw, the chief US and fixed-income economists at Morgan
Stanley in New York.
Calling the ongoing drop in asset and consumer prices "disinflation" rather
than deflation, "The near-term risk of lower underlying inflation gives the
Fed latitude to maintain accommodation [i.e. zero rates and Quantitative
Easing] for now," they go on.
But "unlike those who believe that low inflation and easy money will persist
into 2011, we think that tighter monetary policy will be needed in 2010 to
prevent inflation from rising too far too fast."
Over in India, meantime, the world's hungriest gold market, the federal government
in Mumbai yesterday said it's issued 6,775 new licenses to jewelers to use
its hall-marking centers and adding to a 20% increase for the year-to-April.
The Gold Hallmarking Scheme was launched in 2008 to encourage consumer confidence
in bullion jewelry, obliging manufacturers to hit mandated standards of fineness.
Earlier this week, the Indian government also doubled import duties on Gold
Bullion, despite a 50% drop in metal inflows from this time last year.
"Strong physical [Gold]
demand is not likely to be triggered unless the metal breaks below the 900
level," says MKS Finance, a division of the Swiss refining group.
"Ironically, it is the marginal physical demand coming in above 900-905 that
is preventing an aggressive selloff to penetrate that level."
Walter de Wet at Standard Bank meantime believes that "Buyers of gold in the
physical market are now willing to pay a higher price for gold than a few months
ago," pointing to strong physical flows in the wholesale market centered in
London.
"We believe that sellers of scrap gold now require a much higher Gold
Price to part with their gold than in February. Against the global economic
backdrop, we view this as bullish for gold over the next six months. "
On the supply side of the market yesterday, South Africa reported a 10.5%
drop in May's Gold Mining output
from 12 months before.
"Gold Mining is
a shrinking industry, it's been like that for almost a decade," says Dave Mohr,
chief economist at Citadel Investment Services.
"We have run out of our high-grade gold deposits," he told AFP, adding that
after dropping to second and then third place in world rankings behind China
and the United States, South Africa is now likely to be overtaken by Australia.
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