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bsiong
    02-Mar-2012 09:45  
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Closing Gold & Silver Market Report – 3/1/2012

By  Craig C. CalvinMarch 1, 2012


GOLD, OTHER METALS END THE DAY UP

IMF SAYS EUROPE STILL A THREAT   

Prices for all four precious metals ended the day up in afternoon trading, with Silver and Platinum in particular both continuing to gain since the posting of the  Mid-Day Gold & Silver Market Report. The Gold price has seen a slight drop since noon, although it still ended the day in positive territory, while Palladium has stayed relatively flat. Yesterday’s downward movement in precious metals came in response to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s testimony before a congressional committee in which he gave no indication that a third round of quantitative easing is under consideration by the Fed. Julian Jessop of independent macroeconomic research consultancy Capital Economics called the movement by the metals overdone and said that he feels the appeal of Gold will make up for the unlikelihood of a QE3. Referring to that appeal, Jessop said, “It is the risk of a renewed escalation of the eurozone crisis that underpins our forecasts.” Analysts with bullion broker Sharps Pixley in London suggested that yesterday’s Gold pullback could be a window of opportunity for investors looking to get into Gold, saying in a note to clients, “The long-term Gold story remains unchanged.”

In a report prepared for the so-called Group of 20 nations, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) stated that  economic hazards in Europe still threaten the recovery of the world economy. The report described the global economy as facing “major downside risks.” Based on the IMF’s report, the forecast for the eurozone’s economy is that it will undergo a 0.5 percent contraction in 2012. Additionally, economic expansion worldwide will experience a slowdown from last year’s rate of 3.8 percent to a rate of 3.3 percent this year. According to the report, “The overarching risk remains an intensified global ‘paradox of thrift’ as households, firms, and governments around the world reduce demand. This risk is further exacerbated by fragile financial systems, high public deficits and debt, and already-low interest rates.” The report also stated that policy-makers in the United States have yet to make any progress toward a “credible medium-term fiscal adjustment plan.”

At 4:13 p.m. (CST), the APMEX precious metals spot prices were:

  • Gold - $1,719.60 – Up $7.80.
  • Silver - $35.58 - Up $0.92.
 
 
bsiong
    01-Mar-2012 22:45  
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Gold &  Silver Plunge – Called “Intervention”, “Window Dressing”, “Temporary Smash”, “Paper Fiasco”
March 01, 2012 • 06:37:00 PST

Gold & Silver Plunge – Called “Intervention”, “Window Dressing”, “Temporary Smash”, “Paper Fiasco”

tt provides yet another great buying opportunity for gold & silver bullion buyers whose are focused on the long term to protect & preserve wealth. Read More

 

 

 
 
bsiong
    01-Mar-2012 22:11  
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Last Updated :  01 March 2012 at 18:35 IST

Gold bounce back strong as investors resume buying on price crash

NEW YORK (Commodity Online):  Gold prices have bounced back strongly on Thursday as investors rushed to acquire the precious metal after its $100 crash on Wednesday. COMEX gold March contract is trading at $1709 as of 05:37 AM CT, more than 2.30% up from the lows of $1670 it hit yesterday.

Ben Bernanke's testimony did not suggest the possibility of the next round of quantitative easing. And since most investors were expecting the US Fed to resort to more monetary stimulus, Bernanke's contradictory action made investors sell gold. The fact that gold was also trading around the resistance near $1800/oz also complicated the selling and seemed to have deepened it.

But after prices dropped by $100/oz yesterday, buying started to kick in. Demand from Asia is reported to have increased following the price decline while in New York, the SPDR Gold Trust holdings rose by over 9 tonnes on Wednesday alone-its biggest one day increase since Jan.


Some analysts believe that since the market had pre-decided on Bernanke unleashing QE3 and factored the same into the gold price, Bernanke's contradiction made prices to correct. However, gold's long term bullishness remain intact. 

 

 
bsiong
    01-Mar-2012 22:09  
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Gold rebounds after price rout draws buyers



 


* Rebound after biggest 1-day drop in 3-1/2 years

* Buyers rush to Asia's physical gold markets

* Gold/silver ratio bounces off 5-month lows, nears 50 (Updates prices)

By Jan Harvey

LONDON, March 1 (Reuters) - Gold rebounded on Thursday as physical bullion investors were tempted back to the market by the previous session's 5 percent price plunge, its biggest one-day drop since before the collapse of Lehman Brothers in October 2008.

Spot gold was up 1.1 percent at $1,703.00 an ounce at 1218 GMT, while U.S. gold  futures  for April delivery were up $2.40 an ounce at $1,713.70.

Spot prices fell more than 5 percent on Wednesday after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke gave no hints that a third round of quantitative easing, which had been a key support of gold prices, was imminent in the world's largest economy.

Activity in COMEX gold futures spiked to 342,000 lots that day, more than double the previous session's volume and the one-month rolling average.

" We had a sense that the gold market was increasingly pricing in QE3, and obviously Bernanke has put a dampener on that," said Standard Bank analyst Walter de Wet.

In key Asian physical gold markets overnight, jewellers, traders and investors rushed to take advantage of the nearly $100 drop in prices. " It's been a long time since we (saw) such decent buying," said one Hong Kong-based dealer.

" We've seen physical flows coming off steadily since the beginning of February," said de Wet. " The physical demand is just not there when gold is at $1,750-$1,800, and you really need that on top of the financial demand to push gold much higher."

He added: " We've seen some decent buying below $1,700 early this morning. That is coming through, but it will probably fall away as we reach the $1,750 level."

Investment in gold-backed exchange-traded products, which issue securities backed with physical bullion, also rose on Wednesday, with holdings of the largest, New York's SPDR Gold Trust, up just over 9 tonnes, the biggest one-day rise since January.

A lack of demand for physical bullion in recent weeks meant gold had little additional support once selling got underway on Comex, after Bernanke's remarks.

" We think a large part of why gold conceded so much came down to three other factors - $1,800 was proving to be too much of a hurdle and a certain staleness had entered the market positioning had increased very swiftly in recent weeks and physical demand has been non-existent," said UBS in a note.

" What the physical community do from here is hugely important," it added.

 

MARKETS RECOVER

A recovery in other markets, many of which also suffered heavy losses on Wednesday, helped gold move higher in early trade, although it surrendered some gains as the euro steadied midmorning. The euro was up 0.1 percent against the dollar after earlier hitting a one-week low.

European shares reversed early losses to move higher, with investors cheered by this week's ECB cash injection on the banking sector. German government bonds hovered near record highs after the news.

 

Among other precious metals, silver was up 0.8 percent at $34.85 an ounce. It also fell more than 6 percent on Wednesday. The gold/silver ratio, the number of silver ounces needed to buy an ounce of gold, jumped to 49.4 from a five-month low of 48.4 on Wednesday.

" Silver did manage to hold its short-term uptrend support, off the Dec. 29 low, currently around 34.37, on a closing basis," said ScotiaMocatta in a note.

" What was notable in the silver technicals was the strong rejection at 37.31, which is the 61.8 percent Fibonacci retracement level of the August to December downtrend," it added. " Key support is at 33.00, which has held on a closing basis since Jan. 25."

Spot platinum was up 1.1 percent at $1,693 an ounce, while palladium was flat at $698.45 an ounce. (editing by Jane Baird)

 
 
bsiong
    01-Mar-2012 22:07  
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Morning Gold & Silver Market Report – 3/1/2012

By  Timothy OakesMarch 1, 2012


IRAN SANCTIONS ALREADY EFFECTIVE QE3 SQUELCHED?

Precious metals prices have rebounded slightly from yesterday’s volatility. The gold market was largely influenced by the perception presented in prior remarks by Fed Chairman Bernanke, but were almost roundly squelched in prepared statements before the House of Representatives yesterday. Today he is scheduled to sit in front of the Senate. Standard Bank’s Walter de Wet echoed that sentiment, having said, “We had a sense that the  gold market was increasingly pricing in QE3, and obviously Bernanke has put a dampener on that.” However the drop in prices really pushed physical sales of the metal, with some dealers saying, “It's been a long time since we (saw) such decent buying.”

In his speech before the House yesterday, there was a lot of cautious optimism surrounding comments made by Chairman Bernanke. Although there are “positive developments” in the job market it is still “far from normal.” He also mentioned that any impact of higher gas prices would most likely be temporary. He also said, “Monetary policy is not a panacea… It can help offset cyclical fluctuations and financial crises like we’ve had, but the long-term health of the economy depends mostly on decisions taken by the Congress and the administration.” Time to look forward to today’s message and economist Eric Green probably says it best, “The nice thing about this is  he always has a chance to refine his message  on the second day.”

The global economy stands on a precipice of uncertainty surrounding oil. A U.S. advisory body has found that  trade sanctions against Iran are already having an impact  before they officially go into effect. There are already talks of shortages in supply, which will just drive the price up even higher. The biggest customers of Iranian oil China, Japan and India are entangled with the U.S.-led sanctions. Another key issue is the OPEC supply is fulfilled by Iran. They are the second largest OPEC producer behind Saudi Arabia, so any additional supply is going to be very limited. Former State Department adviser Trevor House affirmed that sentiment when he said, “With oil inventories and spare OPEC production capacity running low, consumers don't have much buffer against additional disruptions in supply… That means the needle the administration has to thread to pressure Iran without raising oil prices has gotten even smaller.”

At 8:00 a.m. (CST) – the APMEX precious metals spot prices were:

  • Gold - $1,705.70 – Up $8.60.
  • Silver - $34.68 – Even
 
 
bsiong
    01-Mar-2012 09:52  
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Eveillard - Desperate Central Banks Intervene in Gold Market
February 29, 2012 • 13:24:03 PST

Eveillard -

Desperate Central Banks

Intervene In Gold Market

So with all of this as the backdrop, I wouldn’t worry too much about what happened today with gold and silver.” Read More

 

 
bsiong
    01-Mar-2012 09:51  
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QE3 Or Not To Be, A Brief Q &  A
February 29, 2012 • 10:41:44 PST

QE3 Or Not To Be, A Brief Q & A

the risk in question is nothing less than a wholesale run on the fiat money system. Read More

 
 
bsiong
    01-Mar-2012 09:48  
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Last Updated :  01 March 2012 at 05:25 IST
Source :Sharps Pixley

Gold tumbles as US Fed signals no further stimulation measures



 

By Ross Norman

LONDON:  Gold shed 5% on Wednesday afternoon following the the U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's semi-annual testimony on monetary policy before the House Financial Services Committee this afternoon. In his report he gave no clear indication of further economic measures to stimulate the US economy and the outlook for inflation being " subdued'. The effect on gold was palpable.

In early London trading gold had been trading at $1790 and expected to launch an assault on resistance at $1796 (the November 14 2011 high) as well as the psychologically important $1800 level. The news that the US Federal Reserve may desist from further QE, threw the market into reverse, shedding $84/ounce. The news had a more modest impact on the US dollar index which rallied by approximately 1%.

Bull runs are characterized by retracements such as these and in fact confer greater strength and validity on higher prices in the year to come. What will be most interesting is to see just how quickly gold recovers from this set back as it will be a good test of the resolve of gold bulls. A test of character if you like.

US April gold futures settled lower at $1711 per ounce representing a fall of 4.3%.


(The author is CEO of Sharps Pixley, London) 

 
 
bsiong
    01-Mar-2012 09:46  
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Last Updated :  01 March 2012 at 02:30 IST
Source :Sharps Pixley

Why are gold and equities moving together?

By Ross Norman
Since late October 2011 gold and the equity markets have become closely correlated. This raises two rather more important question than it at first appears. Firstly why - and secondly what does this mean for gold's safe-haven status. ?

In a recent survey of hedge funds by Barclays Capital this week, it was stated that " PORTFOLIO DIVERSIFICATION" is the number one reason for buying into commodities, supported by over half of all respondents. If, however, gold and equities are becoming increasingly correlated then this could potentially kill the most important motivation for would-be buyers.

On the year to date spot gold has gained 12.5%, the S& P 500 is up 7.5%, the DJIA is up 5% and oil is up 5%. Meanwhile the USD dollar index is off nearly 3%.

Our reading of this is that there are two reasons for the correlation - one coincidental and the other a natural consequence of economic remedies. The 'coincidental' argument runs that gold is still benefiting from a technical correction following the 25% fall in September of last year - the current price strength should be seen within the context of the 50% price retracement. In addition, there has been some phenomenal buying from China (quite at odds with a near vacuum conditions in Europe at this time !) which is quite probably linked to buying for the Chinese Central Bank. Meanwhile oil is  fixated upon Iran, while the equity markets have been given a shot in the arm from some hitherto positive economic data out of the USA.

The economic remedies argument runs that the 'easy money' and low interest rate economic remedies favour both gold and equities, but for quite different reasons. It helps gold because it creates the possibility of inflation down the line while low interest rates continue to make it unappealing for gold producers to want to sell forward and thereby effectively killing the bull run. For equities it eases concerns about the availability of credit for companies plus it makes equities look more appealing than other interest-bearing asset classes.

So what does this tell us about gold's role as a safe-haven asset ? In short, gold seems to adopt that guise only during an economic but (and this is the important bit) only when it moves above a threshold (for example the VIX index above 30 (it is currently 18)). Below that threshold and gold returns to more prosaic drivers.

Gold bulls can therefore be assured that the uncomfortable correlation between gold and equities means relatively unimportant for now - correlation and causality are, after all, not the same. The second most popular motive for hedge funds for buying gold in the Barclays Survey was " absolute returns" with about 30% support. In that desire the funds have certainly been well rewarded.

Gold is currently trading at $1784 having received a short sharp lift following the E530 ECB injection. The market looks likely to test the highs from November 14th 2011 at $1796 plus possibly the psychologically important $1800 level thus week, while support is pegged at $1767.


(The author is CEO of Sharps Pixley, London) 

 
 
bsiong
    01-Mar-2012 09:38  
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Gold edges back after fall on Bernanke comment



 


SINGAPORE, March 1 (Reuters) - Spot gold gained more than half a percent on Thursday, pulling back from a fall of 5 percent in the previous session after U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke failed to signal further bond buying, dashing hopes of more monetary easing.

FUNDAMENTALS

* Spot gold rose 0.6 percent to $1,705.19 an ounce by 0020 GMT, after posting its biggest one-day drop in more than three years.

* U.S. gold edged down 0.3 percent to $1,706.90.

* U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke offered a tempered view of the economy, and disappointed investors by stopping short of signalling further asset buying.

 

* Hopes of further monetary easing had helped gold rise as much as 14 percent this year. Gold will remain attractive as long as real interest rates stay low, analysts have said.

* In contrast to a selling frenzy in spot and futures markets, the SPDR Gold Trust, the world's biggest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, gained 0.7 percent on the day to 1,293.676 tonnes, its highest in two and a half months.

* Eyes are on China's official purchasing managers' index for February, due about 0100 GMT, which is expected to edge up to a five-month high of 50.7.

* The European Central Bank pumped 530 billion euros into the euro zone's troubled financial system for the second time since late last year, in what it hopes to be its last major crisis-fighting act.

* Other precious metals rebounded too. Spot silver also gained 0.6 percent to $34.80, after shedding more than 6 percent in the previous session. Platinum group metals posted modest gains as well.

 

MARKET NEWS

* U.S. stocks slipped on Wednesday, snapping a four-day winning streak after comments from U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke disappointed investors hoping for a strong signal of more stimulus.

* The euro and commodity currencies nursed heavy losses in Asia on Thursday as investors cut bullish positions after key events, including the European Central Bank's cash injection, passed without surprise.

 

DATA/EVENTS

0100 China NBS Manufacturing PMI Feb 2012

0230 China HSBC Manufacturing PMI Feb 2012

0500 India HSBC Markit Mfg PMI Feb 2012

0843 Italy Markit/ADACI Mfg PMI Feb 2012

0853 Germany Markit/BME Mfg PMI Feb 2012

0858 EZ Markit Mfg PMI Feb 2012

1000 EZ Inflation, flash yy Feb 2012

1330 U.S. Initial jobless claims Weekly

1500 U.S. Construction spending February

2330 Japan CPI, core nationwide yy Jan 2012

Russia HSBC Mfg PMI Feb 2012

 

 
 

 
bsiong
    01-Mar-2012 09:36  
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Closing Gold & Silver Market Report – 2/29/2012

By  Craig C. CalvinFebruary 29, 2012


SHARP SELL-OFF FOR GOLD, SILVER

FANNIE MAE TO SEEK $4.6 BILLION   

Gold and Silver experienced drastic sell-offs today after testimony by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke before the House Financial Services Committee. Bernanke indicated that  the Fed is not likely to consider a third round of quantitative easing. Prices for Gold and Silver ended at their lowest points since December. With the view of the market being that a QE3 might not happen or even be needed, the dollar has surged at the same time that the outlook for commodities such as precious metals has turned bearish. Jim Steel, chief commodities analyst for HSBC, said, “In recent trading, Gold neared but was unable to get over the most recent high of $1,803 per ounce set in November 2011.” Steel said the factors were right for a Gold sell-off due to sell-stops that were triggered today, a decrease from emerging markets for physical demand, and continued declines in oil prices. However, Steel said he anticipates continued volatility in precious metals markets and suggested that today’s activity might be the result of a pullback. “Accommodative monetary policy is still there, and so are the underlying factors for higher Gold prices.” Meanwhile, his firm’s expectation is that the Gold price will climb again and average $1,850 per ounce this year.

Another piece of news that came out of Bernanke’s testimony Wednesday was the revelation that work by the Fed and other regulators on  the Volcker Rule won’t be finished in time for its July deadline. Named for former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker, the Volcker Rule’s goal is to prevent banks from engaging in proprietary trading while also limiting their ability to invest in hedge funds and private equity. Bernanke said, “I don’t think it will be ready for July. Just a few weeks ago, we closed the comment period. We have about 17,000 comments. We have a lot of very difficult issues to go through, so I don’t know the exact date.” When asked by a committee member whether the rule would be proposed again, Bernanke avoided a direct response, instead saying that the Fed wanted to ensure that firms “have an adequate period of time to adjust their systems and comply with the rule.” When the committee member then expressed the view that the Fed wouldn’t be enforcing a rule that wasn’t officially in place, the chairman responded, “Obviously.”

After reporting a $2.4 billion loss for the fourth quarter of last year, government-controlled mortgage finance company Fannie Mae said today it will seek  additional financial aid in the amount of $4.6 billion. The company, which together with its fellow government-run mortgage finance company Freddie Mac backs about half of this country’s outstanding mortgages, already has borrowed more than $116 billion in government funds. Both declining home prices and the “soured” loans Fannie Mae still has on its books from 2008’s housing crisis have made being profitable a challenge for the mortgage firm.

At 4:15 p.m. (CST), the APMEX precious metals spot prices were:

  • Gold - $1,697.10 – Down $90.30.
  • Silver - $34.68 - Down $2.51.

 
 
bsiong
    01-Mar-2012 09:33  
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FLASH: Gold Falls Below $1,700 Silver Below $35

By  Peter LaTonaFebruary 29, 2012


In most cases, when Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke speaks, precious metals prices go up. But not today.  Bernanke’s comments  have created a sharp selloff in Gold and Silver. In testimony before a congressional committee, Bernanke said he would not take the possibility of QE3 off the table, but his comments have been interpreted to mean that another round of quantitative easing is unlikely. “Bernanke said that another round of bond buying is not off the table,” said Shelley Goldberg of Roubini Global Economics. “But, the overall perception in the market is that there will be less of a need for QE3, and that has rallied the dollar and is bearish for commodities.”

At 3:20 p.m.(CST), the APMEX precious metals spot prices were:
  • Gold - $1,695.90 – Down $91.50.
  • Silver - $34.66 – Down $2.53.
 
 
bsiong
    01-Mar-2012 00:23  
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Gold tumbles 3 pct, set for biggest drop since Dec



 

LONDON  |  Wed Feb 29, 2012 10:58am EST

Feb 29 (Reuters) - Gold prices tumbled more than 3 percent in volatile trade on Wednesday to a session low at $1,724.40 an ounce, putting the precious metal on track for its biggest one-day drop since Dec. 14, as the dollar hit a session high versus the euro.

In 2-1/2 hours of open outcry trading on COMEX, the volumes of gold traded were greater than those seen in the whole of Monday, data from the CME Group showed.

Spot gold was down 3 percent at $1,731.70 an ounce at 1556 GMT. (Reporting by Jan Harvey editing by Keiron Henderson) 

 
 
bsiong
    01-Mar-2012 00:21  
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Morning Gold & Silver Market Report – 2/29/2012

By  Ryan SchwimmerFebruary 29, 2012


LITTLE MOVEMENT AHEAD OF BERNANKE TESTIMONY

Precious metals are trading relatively flat this morning,  echoing U.S. stock futures.  The European Central Bank’s refinancing operation resulted in 529 billion euros of three-year loans being auctioned to the banking sector.  This was higher than some analysts expected, and markets were flattened after the news.  The latest revision of 2011  fourth-quarter U.S. gross domestic product showed that the economy grew 3%  that quarter, up from 2.8%.  This had little effect on market movement or precious metals.

A possible reason for the lack of market movement is that investors are waiting for Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s testimony before the House Financial Services Committee later this morning.  Performance Trust Capital Partners’ Brian Battle said that he doesn’t “expect any surprises in the written testimony, but the Q& A portion could be interesting.  This is the new era of transparency and the Fed has been trying to be more detailed and descriptive.”  Regarding the economic data due later today, Battle added, “Unfortunately, economic numbers aren’t real drivers [of the market] these days.  We’re still driven by headline news.”

U.N. sanctions on Iran are underway, though some nations are struggling to comply.    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that some allies, such as Japan, face unique situations in the effort to  reduce Iranian oil imports.  The sanctions are an effort to hamper the ability of Iran to produce atomic bombs, since oil exports account for much of its economy.  She said, “I think that there’s a very clear-eyed view of Iran and Iranian objectives and that’s why the president’s policy is so clear and adamant that the United States intends to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.”  Iran has previously threatened to counter sanctions either by military force or by blocking the Strait of Hormuz, which could severely impact the transportation of oil from the most oil-rich region in the world.

At 8 a.m. (CST), the APMEX precious metals spot prices were:

  • Gold - $1,781.00 – Down $6.40.
  • Silver - $37.03 – Down $0.15.
 
 
bsiong
    29-Feb-2012 10:39  
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  STI



 

 

 

 

 
 

 
bsiong
    29-Feb-2012 10:20  
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Gold hovers below 3-month high before ECB




SINGAPORE, Feb 29 (Reuters) - Gold hovered below a three-month high on Wednesday, after rallying 1 percent in the previous session, supported by expectations for more cheap loans to be offered by the European Central Bank later in the day. FUNDAMENTALS

* Spot gold was little changed at $1,784.64 an ounce by 0026 GMT, after hitting $1,789.40 on Tuesday, its highest level since mid-November.

* U.S. gold edged down 0.1 percent to $1,786.50.

* Investors will be watching the second tranche of a three-year, low-interest financing operation by the European Central Bank later in the day. The expectation of the liquidity boost helped lift gold to its highest in more than three months on Tuesday.

* A survey showed that confidence in the euro zone's economy rose for a second successive month in February, confirming a wider stabilisation across Europe that probably signals only a mild recession this year.

* Uncertainty lingers over the euro zone's effort to solve the debt crisis, as Ireland planned a referendum on a euro zone budget discipline pact and a German court overruled government efforts on a fast-track panel on bailout funds.

* The latest U.S. data painted a mixed picture, showing that consumer confidence rose to a one-year high this month while orders for long-lasting factory goods plunged sharply.

 

* Spot silver inched down 0.1 percent to $36.86, after surging more than 4 percent and reaching a five-month high of $37.21 in the previous session.

* Spot platinum gained 0.1 percent to $1,716.49.

* Impala Platinum, the world's second-largest platinum producer, said on Tuesday the costs of an illegal strike at its key Rustenburg operation in South Africa have reached 100,000 ounces and a loss of income of 2 billion rand ($263.66 million).

MARKET NEWS

* The Dow closed above 13,000 for the first time since May 2008 on Tuesday and the S& P 500 also hit a milestone, as buoyant U.S. consumer confidence data and a sharp drop in oil prices nudged the nearly five-month rally forward.

* The euro and commodity currencies held their ground in Asia on Wednesday as hopes that European banks will take up a large offer of cheap three-year cash from the European Central Bank bolstered risk appetite.

DATA/EVENTS

0500 Japan Construction orders yy Jan 2012

0530 India Quarterly GDP yy Feb 2012

0855 Germany Unemployment rate sa Feb 2012

1000 EZ Inflation, final yy Jan 2012

1020 EZ Results of ECB's LTRO

1330 U.S. GDP Oct

1445 U.S. Chicago PMI Feb

2350 Japan Business capex (MOF) yy Oct 2011  

 

 

 
 
 
bsiong
    29-Feb-2012 10:18  
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Closing Gold & Silver Market Report – 2/28/2012

By  Craig C. CalvinFebruary 28, 2012


Gold Hits a Three Month High,

Silver a Four Month High

Pimco CEO Says Greek Bailout Will Fail

Shaking off yesterday’s downward ending, the price of Gold  ended the afternoon at its highest point in three months. With analysts saying that long-term support for gold is solid, investors took advantage of the previous two sessions’ price drops and enthusiastically purchased the precious metal. The price of Silver also saw a healthy jump today, rising over 4.5% and ending its highest since this past September. Precious metals prices in general were helped out by rise in the euro and a drop in the dollar, and Platinum and Palladium ended the day up as well. According to precious metals analyst Jim Steel with HSBC in New York, “We’ve got a very nice jump for the euro. That has lifted gold up pretty strongly,”

In an interview with CNBC today,  Pimco CEO Mohamed El-Erian stated that the Greek bailout package will probably fail. The real issue now, said El-Erian, is if Greece’s debt crisis can be contained or if they will spread to other countries in the eurozone. " Greece has been sacrificed in order to build that firewall," said El-Erian, referring to efforts by European leaders ensure that Europe’s banking system stays capitalized in the event of a member-country default. “In Greece, we are sustaining the unsustainable, and it comes at a cost and the cost is a society that has to put up with tremendous austerity without seeing a light at the end of the tunnel. That's why this package will fail just like the previous package failed.” El-Erian also said that if and when the Greek bailout fails, Portugal, which also has significant debt issues, will be the next country in the eurozone’s spotlight.

There has been a reasonable amount of speculation about the effects of rising fuel prices on consumers, with the general view being that the positive outlook on employment and the drop in natural gas prices have compensated for the increase in the cost of gas. However,  recent data from research firm Consumer Edge Insight provides information about the possible consequences of a reversal in current optimism about employment. It also indicates that despite those trends, consumers are actually curtailing their spending. The firm’s data, which comes from measuring and comparing 32 discretionary categories against their performance from the previous year, shows that despite positive employment news, consumers had a negative outlook on the job market in February. Additionally, January’s pessimism by consumers about family income potential continued through February as well. The data also shows that consumer spending has dropped dramatically over the past month. Discretionary spending for February only increased by 0.4%, versus 1.3% in January and 2.3% in December. One has to wonder if consumer spending is slowing in the face of relatively good employment news, what would happen if employment numbers took another downturn, and what would be the overall affect on the economy?

At 4:09 p.m. (CST), the APMEX precious metals spot prices were:

· Gold - $1,784.20 - Up $10.30.

· Silver - $36.97 - Up $1.39.

 
 
bsiong
    28-Feb-2012 20:47  
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Gold firms with euro, stocks ahead of ECB financing

* ECB to launch second three-year financing operation

* Stocks, euro climb confidence lifts gold prices

* Gold-silver ratio drops to four-month low (Updates throughout, changes dateline, pvs SINGAPORE)

By Jan Harvey

LONDON, Feb 28 (Reuters) - Gold prices rose towards $1,775 an ounce in Europe on Tuesday, benefiting from gains in the euro ahead of an expected injection of cheap money from the European Central Bank this week, which is lifting appetite for assets seen as higher risk.

Spot gold was up 0.4 percent at $1,773.89 an ounce at 1025 GMT, while U.S. gold futures for April delivery were up $1.60 cents an ounce at $1,776.50.

The precious metal is up 13 percent so far this year, boosted in part by gains in the euro and consequent weakness in the dollar, which makes commodities priced in the U.S. unit cheaper for holders of other currencies.

The euro climbed to a three-month high against the dollar ahead of an expected cash injection of 500 billion euros from the ECB on Wednesday. This is seen as buying more time for authorities to sort out the sovereign debt crisis.

Analysts say with much euro-positive news now largely priced into the market, gold may struggle to rise significantly more.

" I think at this point in time, the markets are well aware of what the ECB is going to do. I don't think it is likely to act as a further catalyst for strengthening gold prices," said Deutsche Bank analyst Daniel Brebner.

" In the near term, I'm more inclined to sell into this strength," he said. " We've had a nice little recovery from very attractive levels in the 1,600s, but at these levels, I think we're due a bit of a pullback."

But gold benefited as other markets climbed ahead of the refinancing operation. European stock markets rose, while safe-haven German government bonds retreated.

Industrial metals like copper and nickel edged higher, although crude oil slipped as investors worried about recent gains hurting demand.

Gold rallied 3.3 percent to three-month highs last week, but failed to maintain traction as they neared $1,790 an ounce.

" Gold may be entering a period of consolidation, we believe," HSBC said in a note. " The inability of the market to clear the November 8 high of $1,803 an ounce is leading to light profit-taking."

 

 

PHYSICAL GOLD DEMAND SUFFERS

Rising prices weighed on physical demand from major consumer, India, however. Gains in the rupee made the metal nominally more attractive to local buyers, but rising spot prices kept cost-sensitive buyers on the sidelines.

Among other precious metals, silver was up 0.6 percent at $35.56 an ounce. The grey metal is facing resistance at $35.70, but a breach of this level could spark significant fresh gains, analysts said.

The gold/silver ratio, or the number of silver ounces needed to buy and ounce of gold, dropped below 50 for the first time since late October as silver outperformed.

Holdings of the world's largest silver exchange-traded fund rose 22.7 tonnes on Monday, and are up 109.8 tonnes since the beginning of the year. In the same period of 2011, they fell 255.2 tonnes.

Elsewhere, spot platinum was up 0.3 percent at $1,707.99 an ounce, while spot palladium was up 0.6 percent at $705.72 an ounce.

Platinum group metals prices have retreated from five-month highs, although a strike in major producer South Africa persisted. Impala Platinum, whose Rustenburg mine has been affected by the action, says it has already lost 80,000 ounces of platinum output to the stoppage.

 

" The situation is continuing to progress slowly... with the company announcing yesterday that it will re-hire about 87 percent of the dismissed workers. As of yesterday, 9,000 workers had returned to work," said UBS in a note.

" Nevertheless, we doubt that the potential for a supply shock out of South Africa is enough to justify a significantly higher platinum price." (Reporting by Jan Harvey Editing by Alison Birrane)
 
 
bsiong
    28-Feb-2012 09:59  
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Gold steady ECB funding move to support



 

SINGAPORE, Feb 28 (Reuters) - Gold traded steady on Tuesday after posting modest losses in the previous session, tracking a pullback in oil prices, while sentiment is supported ahead of a major cash injection action from the European Central Bank later this week.

FUNDAMENTALS

* Spot gold was little changed at $1,767.14 an ounce by 0034 GMT. U.S. gold inched down 0.3 percent to $1,768.80.

* Banks will guzzle another half a trillion euros of cheap three-year loans offered by the European Central Bank on Wednesday, according to a Reuters poll of money market traders, who said the opportunity would be the last of its kind.

* The first 3-year funding operation by the ECB late last year flooded the market with 489 billion euros of ultra-cheap cash and helped avert a credit crunch in the region.

* U.S. crude oil futures extended losses, after overbought conditions and a warning from G20 officials about the impact of higher oil prices on global growth prompted investors to book profits, and ended a seven-day winning run in the previous session.

* Standard & Poor's on Monday cut Greece long-term ratings to " selective default" , the second ratings agency to proceed with a widely expected downgrade after the country announced a bond swap plan to lighten its debt burden.

* The U.S. economy continued to show signs of recovery. Pending homes sales neared a two-year high in January, an industry group said on Monday, further evidence the housing market was slowly turning the corner.

* South Africa's National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) urged its members on Monday to accept an offer by Impala Platinum to rehire miners at its Rustenburg operation, the scene of a violent, illegal strike that has pushed platinum prices higher.

 

MARKET NEWS

* The euro nursed modest losses in Asia on Tuesday, while the yen held on to overnight gains ahead of another flood of cheap cash from the European Central Bank that could bolster risk appetite and put the yen under pressure again.

* The benchmark S& P 500 closed at its highest level since mid-2008 on Monday, extending gains for a third session as oil prices retreated after a recent rally and data showed further improvement in the U.S. housing market.

  DATA/EVENTS

1000 EZ Business climate Feb 2012

1000 EZ Economic sentiment Feb 2012

1400 U.S. CaseShiller 20 mm nsa Dec

1400 U.S. CaseShiller 20 yy Dec

1500 U.S. Consumer confidence Feb

2350 Japan Industrial output prelim Jan

2350 Japan IP forecast 1 mth ahead Jan

 
 
 
bsiong
    28-Feb-2012 09:52  
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Closing Gold & Silver Market Report – 2/27/2012

By  Craig C. CalvinFebruary 27, 2012


GOLD PRICE RISE SEEN THIS WEEK

BEARS PREDICT MARKET CORRECTION   

After significant gains pushed Gold to end the previous week up by 2.9 percent,  profit-taking by investors caused the price to end the day slightly down in afternoon trading. The metal ended the day down just 0.1 percent based on Gold futures for April delivery. Platinum and Palladium were slightly down, as well. In contrast, the Silver price ended the day slightly up. However, an analyst with CPM Group in New York said Gold is still “well supported,” and this week should see the price per troy ounce climb to more than $1,800 as investors react to economic news over the next few days. Expected to drive the Gold price this week will be the release of consumer confidence, gross domestic product, and manufacturing data for the United States. In addition, the Federal Reserve will release its Beige Book of economic conditions, and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will begin a report to lawmakers on monetary policy that is expected to last two days. Both Fed events are set for Wednesday.

In the face of positive performance by Wall Street stocks, many analysts have predicted a correction that hasn’t happened so far. The first two months of 2012 have been the best start of any year in the market’s history, declines for a single day have stayed below 1 percent, and the S& P 500 Index has surpassed forecasts for the full year. But those who take a bearish view of the market say that this abundance of seeming good news makes a  big market pullback even more likely (based on continued geopolitical turmoil, among other things), and they expect a drop in stock prices of at least 10 percent, if not more.  A recent survey by the Bespoke Investment Group shows that the bears outnumber the bulls these days, and many of those polled expect the S& P 500 to fall within the next month. In a note to his clients today, Jeff Saut of Raymond James wrote, “The rise since the ‘buying stampede’ ended, which stopped on Jan. 26, 2012, at Dow 12,841.95, has felt unnatural to me.” Many bearish analysts point to the Dow Jones Transportation Average’s failure to match the highs of the Dow’s Industrial Average -- as would be expected according to “Dow Theory” -- a sign of an inevitable market correction.

At 4:01 p.m. (CST), the APMEX precious metals spot prices were:

  • Gold - $1,767.80 – Down $7.60.
  • Silver - $35.43 – Up $0.04.
 
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