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Gold
Gold was down some 1.1% or $11.10 to $975.00 per ounce in trading in New York
yesterday and silver was down some 2.3% or 49 cents to $20.13 per ounce.
In Asian trading gold rose to $984.75 but has sold off slightly in early
European trading. The London AM Gold Fix at 1030 GMT this morning was at
$978.50, £486.14 and €635.18.
While gold is overbought technically in the short term and due a correction,
any correction is likely to again be short and shallow as the fundamentals
supporting gold remain extremely sound. With stock markets internationally
under pressure after more poor economic data in the U.S. yesterday ( home foreclosures
in the fourth quarter reached new record highs), gold's safe haven attributes
should mean that it remains well bid and should challenge the psychological
level of $1,000 in the coming weeks.
Record high oil prices and the continuing fall in the value of the dollar
(see FX Commentary below) and a general increase in macroeconomic and indeed
systemic risk is rightly leading to risk aversion and a flight to quality.
All eyes will be firmly fixed on the February non-farm payrolls report due
this afternoon. Should they confirm the markets' worst fears (a fall of some
110,000) then we will we see more of the same in financial markets - selling
off of risky paper assets and a flight to the quality of sounder paper assets
currencies and hard assets.

Stocks in the financial sector internationally have sold off and the immediate
catalyst may have been a new blow with news of a default at Thornburg Mortgage
Inc.. Thornburg is the second-largest independent mortgage lender in the United
States and is primarily a "jumbo" mortgage lender, and not a subprime lender.
This is a clear indication that the credit crunch is deepening and now affecting
far more than simply subprime mortgages.
The financial and economic news goes from the bad to worse and the Financial
Times and Wall Street Journal are not happy reading - particularly this morning.
The credit markets came under renewed strain on Thursday as investors showed
heightened risk aversion and even shunned the debt of Federal sponsored housing
finance guarantee agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

http://www.research.gold.org/prices/daily/
Carlyle Capital Corporation , a major private equity firm with a $21.7 billion
portfolio and an affiliate of private equity firm Carlyle Group , said on Friday
it had received substantial additional margin calls and additional default
notices from its lender which could deplete its liquidity. It is believed they
are overly exposed in the credit derivative market and particularly to Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac.
The 'Sage of Omaha' was prescient when he warned of the proliferation of trillions
of dollars worth of derivatives as "financial weapons of mass destruction."
The President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Timothy Geithner, said
that some banks had moved from being too willing to take on risks to being
reluctant to take any chance of losing money, a move that was making the crisis
worse.
FX Commentary
With investors and traders alike shunning risk in favour of the tangibility
of commodities and the security of not being long the dollar, FX market volatility
abounds. Carry trades are being unwound apace with the Japanese yen and the
Swiss franc being the main beneficiaries with the yen rallying against the
dollar to levels not seen since the end of 2004.
The main story though is the persistent dollar weakness. The greenback is
falling daily to record lows against the euro and while the ECB are concerned
about the absolute level they have one eye firmly fixed on inflation and as
a result will be handcuffed from using monetary policy to relieve the pressure
on the single currency. The Fed on the other hand appear to be letting the
dollar fall on the sword in order to stave off a recession. These two factors
will surely see the dollar continue to fall and fall hard. As the legendary
Commodities Investor, Jim Rogers said recently with respect to the fall in
the dollar; "You ain't seen nothing yet!"
While commodities are marginally off their recent highs, commodity currencies
are still performing well. The Australian, New Zealand and Canadian dollars
still remain at their elevated levels against the U.S. dollar, however sentiment
toward the South African rand remains very negative as it hovers around the
8.0000 level against the Greenback.
Support and Resistance
Short term support is now at $950 below that at $930 and $915. Strong support
in gold is now seen at $890 to $900. The $1000 price level remains a realistic
short term price target and $1,200 remains a realistic possibility in the
coming weeks.
Silver
Silver is trading at $20.80/20.84 at 1200GMT.
Another clear indication that silver is far from a speculative mania rather
in the early to middle stages of a secular bull market was seen in the fact
that silver had its largest daily gain on a closing basis in memory and yet
despite this the open interest actually fell. Again showing that speculative
longs have not entered the market rather it is speculative shorts that have
been exiting their humongous short position which is causing the price to surge.
PGMs
Platinum is trading at $2225/2235 (1200GMT).
Palladium is trading at $547/553 per ounce (1200GMT).
Platinum and palladium succumbed to profit taking after their recent sharp
run up. A likely brief respite regarding the power supply issues in South Africa
contributed to the PGMs sell off. Further weakness and some follow through
selling may be seen but the fundamentals remain sound especially in platinum
with large supply demand deficits predicted for this year.
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