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Gold
Gold was up $2 to $923.20 per ounce in trading in New York yesterday and silver
was up 17 cents to $16.87 per ounce. Gold traded flat to slightly up in Asia
and then surged in early trading in Europe (from a low of $924 to $936.70)
Silver surged to new highs at $17.28.
The monthly close above $900 yesterday, the first ever, is very bullish from
a technical point of view and should see $1,000 reached in the coming weeks.
With gold up by more than 10% in January, some profit taking and consolidation
could be seen prior to then. However, if gold begins to move in a parabolic
fashion, as it did in the 1970s, then those waiting for the correction will
be left waiting on the sidelines. Our direct experience is that clients in
the current bull market who try to 'time the market' end up buying at higher
prices. Only some 1 in 100 clients has managed to successfully time the market.
Anything can happen in the short term and buyers are advised to make the trend
their friend and focus on the strong fundamentals and the very good medium
to long term outlook.
Gold is being supported by the dollar which remains under serious pressure
and is very likely to remain so (see FX below) and oil remaining at elevated
levels above $90 a barrel.

The London AM Fix at 1030 GMT this morning was at $933 (up from $923.75 yesterday).
Gold surged to close to new record highs in British pounds and euro. It fixed
at £468.75 (up from £463.85 yesterday) and €627.06 (up from €621.59
yesterday).
Support and Resistance
Support is now at $900 to $915 and strong support remains at $845 to $850
which was previous resistance and interestingly the 50 day moving average (DMA)
continues to move up and is now up to $846.70.
FX
All eyes will be on the U.S. Employment Report this afternoon, due to be released
at 1.30 pm. The Non-Farm Payroll number is expected to show an additional 130,000
jobs were created in January. The recent release of a strong ADP employment
number would support this expectation, however sentiment and anecdotal evidence
suggest otherwise. As a result the FX market is just marking time until its
release. The Euro has been trading in a narrow range and a weaker than expected
figure could be the trigger needed to propel the single currency through the
psychological 1.5000 against the Greenback. The risk today surely has to be
for a weaker number, but either way Non-Farm Payroll Fridays are historically
the most volatile days in the FX Market.
This period of consolidation is also manifesting itself in the other FX crosses.
Sterling has remained in a relatively small range against the dollar and the
euro too, and the yen which had been very volatile of late appears to be consolidating
against the major currencies as well.
And finally the commodity markets yet again underpin a bullish market for
the commodity currencies with the Aussie, Kiwi and Canadian dollars all strengthening
in the Asian trading session. The South African rand remains weak and would
appear to continue to weaken as power infrastructure and supply problems persist.
Silver
Silver is trading near new 27 year record highs at $17.17/$17.23 at 1200GMT.
Silver has lagged gold in recent weeks but will likely surge in the coming
weeks and months and $25 per ounce will likely be reached this year and the
nominal 1980 high of $50 per ounce reached in the next 2 to 3 years.
PGMs
Platinum is consolidating at higher levels and trading at $1717/1723 (1200GMT).
As we pointed out, the production problems in South Africa are not a short
term anomaly and production in the world's largest producer of platinum, with
some 80% of world supply, is likely to be continually affected by huge infrastructural
challenges facing the electrical system in South Africa.
In Goldfield's (GFI) quarterly report, Ian Cockerill, the CEO, said "Current
power shortages in South Africa will impact production in the March quarter
and into the foreseeable future." Yesterday, ESKOM withdrew authorization for
the gold and silver mines to increase to 90% of normal electricity load and
informed them they could have only 80% electricity supply. This is barely enough
for maintenance and not enough for mining operations.
These are significant and very real supply concerns with platinum in what
was already a tight market place with a deficit predicted for this year. Platinum
could surge to $2,000 per ounce faster than many participants anticipate. Interestingly
the inflation adjusted high in 1980 for platinum is at $2,800 per ounce which
will also likely be reached in the next two to three years: http://www.moneyweek.com/file/40649/why-you-should-invest-in-platinum-this-year.html
Palladium has rallied in unison with platinum and was trading at $402/408
an ounce (1200GMT).
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