Saturday, December 24, 2011

Buying Silver Is Like Buying Gold At $554 Today

I think that buying silver today is like buying gold for $554 an ounce. Let me explain: As I am writing, silver is currently trading at about 65.2% (32.6/50) of its 1980 high. If gold was trading at 65.2% of its 1980 high, it would be trading at $554 (0.652*850).
Now, I really like gold, even at today’s price of $1 738, but why should I pay $1 738, if I can get it for $554 by buying silver and then exchanging it for gold when the gold/silver ratio is at an extreme (in favour of silver). The reason for this logic comes from the fundamental relationship between gold and silver as explained in my previous article.
For my argument to be valid, silver has to outperform gold over my investment period, and at least equal gold’s performance relative to its 1980 high. That is, for example, if gold reaches five multiples of its 1980 high ($4250), then silver should do the same ($250), in this example, giving us a gold/silver ratio of 17.
Now, if silver outperforms gold, then that means that the gold/silver ratio should decline over my investment term. In my previous article called: Why Silver for a Monetary Collapse, I analysed the gold/silver ratio from a very long perspective (200 years). Here I would like to take a slightly more short-term view (40 years).
Below, is a long +/- 40 year chart of the gold/silver ratio:
On the chart, I have identified two fractals, which I have both marked with points 1 to 3. The two patterns are visually very similar. I have indicated two option of where we could be currently (on the current pattern), compared to the 70s pattern. The ratio appears to be at a major crossroads, ready to make a big move, up or down. This could means that a massive move in the gold and silver price is due shortly.
Based on the patterns, if it moves up, it would likely signal the end of the precious metals bull market, similar to January 1980. A move down would be an acceleration of the current bull market in gold and silver, similar to August/September 1979.
The question is therefore: Do you think the bull market in precious metals is over? Before you answer that, first consider the following:
On the above graphic, the top chart is the current gold bull market from 1999 to date, compared to the bull market of the 60s and 70s, the bottom chart. The previous bull market in gold was about 14 years long, from a peak in the Dow/gold ratio to the bottom in Dow/gold ratio. The current bull market is 12 year old, from the peak in the Dow/gold ratio to date.
The previous bull market ended with a parabolic move in gold (on the above scale). The current bull market has not made a parabolic move (on the above scale); in fact, it has been rising steadily over the last 12 years.
To me, these two charts suggest that we are more likely to have a parabolic rise in the gold price, than being at the end of this bull market. Therefore, it also suggests that price action for gold and silver, and the gold/silver ratio is likely to be more like 1978/1979 than like January 1980.
So, back to my argument of buying silver, in order to get gold at $554: I certainly think that silver will outperform gold over the remaining part of this bull market in precious metals, as well as, at least equal gold’s performance relative to its 1980 high. I can certainly see how gold could be at $4250 with silver being at $250, or at higher prices, with the gold/silver ratio being at 17 or less.

By: Hubert Moolman

source: http://news.silverseek.com

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Gold & Silver Prices Daily Outlook 10.31.2011

Gold and silver traders enjoyed from sharp gains to gold and silver prices during most of last week. The G20 summit, the FOMC meeting, the ECB rate decision and the U.S. labor report are the main events for the upcoming week that could influence bullion traders.

Gold & Silver Prices - Daily Outlook October 31
Gold and silver traders enjoyed from sharp gains to gold and silver prices during most of last week. The G20 summit, the FOMC meeting, the ECB rate decision and the U.S. labor report are the main events for the upcoming week that could influence bullion traders. The yen is sharply falling against the USD as Japan intervened in the forex market. Today, Euro Area Annual Inflation will be published, Canada's GDP report, China Manufacturing PMI and BOA Cash Rate Statement.
Gold slipped on Friday by 0.03% to $1,747.2; silver on the other hand slightly inclined by 0.50% to $35.29. The chart below presents the development of gold and silver during October (normalized gold and silver (September 30th 2011=100)).
Guest_Commentary_Gold_Silver_Prices_Daily_Outlook_10.31.2011_body_Gold31.png, Guest Commentary: Gold & Silver Prices Daily Outlook 10.31.2011
The ratio between gold and silver slightly fell on Friday, October 28th to 49.51. During October, silver inclined by a slightly larger rate than gold as the ratio slipped by 8.2%.
Guest_Commentary_Gold_Silver_Prices_Daily_Outlook_10.31.2011_body_Ratio_1.png, Guest Commentary: Gold & Silver Prices Daily Outlook 10.31.2011
Japan Weakens its Currency Again
Japan stepped into the forex exchange rate markets again and caused a sharp depreciation of he YEN against the USD and other currencies in order to protect the county's exporters. This news may also be among the reasons for the sharp appreciation of the USD against other currencies and consequently could also be a partial explanation for the sharp falls in major commodities.
On Today's Agenda:
Euro Area Inflation:the inflation in Euro Area grew to 3.0% in September; if the upcoming report will show a rise in the inflation rate, it may further lower the chances of an ECB interest rate reduction;
China Manufacturing PMI: this index will cover 800 companies in 20 industries in China; this index indicates the changes in China's manufacturing sectors growth rate;
Forex / Gold & Prices – October
The Euro/USD slightly slipped on Friday by 0.30% to reach 1.4147; other currencies also were traded slightly down against the USD. During last week, the sharp gains in the "risk currencies" coincided with the rally of gold and silver. If said currencies will continue to decline today, this shift may also pull down gold and silver.
Gold and Silver Outlook:
Gold and silver ended the week with light changes after they had rallied during the week. The current drop in bullion might be related to the "last day of the month speculation", as traders are closing positions on their gold and silver contracts. The current drop also coincides with the sharp falls in the major currencies against the USD such as YEN, EURO, AUD and CAD. Following the sharp gains during recent days in gold and silver, there might be a correction today as we are existing October.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Gold Update



As Governments Continue to Perpetuate the Chaos that is Already Occurring in the Currency Markets, Make Sure You Own Some Gold.

The price of gold pushed through and held above the key resistance level of $1700 an ounce last week, as the US dollar dropped sharply due to the euphoria from Europe about the agreement made at the Euro Summit in Brussels. No one was more excited about the outcome than French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, who seems determined to save the world. I wouldn’t be surprised if he puts on a Superman costume every night before going to bed and I am sure he is saving himself and not the rest of the world.

With regard to the recent summit in Brussels the key issues agreed on were, that the euro currency remains at the core of the European project of peace, stability and prosperity. The leaders also outlined certain steps that have to be taken in order to solidify the economic union. And, commensurate with the monetary union, they agreed on certain key issues.

They all agreed that the Greece’s debt to GDP ratio with should decline to 120% by 2020. They also agreed that the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) resources can be leveraged. The leverage could be up to 4 or 5, which is expected to yield around 1 trillion euro (around 1.4 trillion dollar).

It was also agreed that it was necessary to raise confidence in the banking sector by (i) facilitating access to term-funding through a coordinated approach at EU level and (ii) the increase in the capital position of banks to 9% of Core Tier 1 by the end of June 2012.

The agreement also included a deal between Eurozone leaders and banks to force private investors to take a 50% loss or "haircut", slicing 100 billion euros off the 350-billion-euro debt pile hampering Greece.

There was also an unequivocal commitment to ensure fiscal discipline and accelerate structural reforms for growth and employment.

As far as I am concerned the deal clinched in Brussels offers nothing but a short-term reprieve and is unlikely to be enough to stop the crisis from spreading in the long run. Now, governments can’t even afford to service their own debts without having to resort to trickery such as suspending “mark-to-market” accounting rules and printing more money to buy their own bonds (effectively a Ponzi scheme). Frankly, all they are doing is perpetuating the chaos that is already occurring in the currency markets.

According to Jim Rogers, a world-renown commodity advisor, who has been consistently correct about precious metals since the beginning of the bull market in 2001. "Politicians have delayed addressing the problem yet again."

"It will come back in a few weeks or a few months and the world will still have the same problem, but this time only worse because the European Central Bank and other countries will be in deeper in debt."

Rogers reiterated that widespread haircuts across Europe are necessary to truly resolve the crisis. "Greece is bankrupt, but others are too, and these haircuts will have to come back and be wider," he says, adding that this morning's global stock market rally had the potential to last for a while.

"There has been a major overhang, so we will see the easing of some pressure, but the problem will come back because the Western world still has not dealt with its debt," says Rogers.

"Most European countries are increasing their debt rather than decreasing their debt. Until that changes, the problems are going to continue, just as they will in the U.S.," he added.

Even though global markets surged after the summit deal was announced, contagion in Spain and Italy remain a real risk. Italy’s debt alone is €1.8 trillion which in itself is larger than the €1 trillion bailout fund. And, their 10 year bond has risen to close to 6% in recent days.

The deal "has the merit of validating a European framework, not to resolve the debt crisis, but at least reassures and (tries) to convince markets of Europe's collective will," said Barclays Bourse analyst Frankin Pichard.

The crisis that started in Greece two years ago has successively hit Ireland and Portugal and threatened to spill over to the euro area's third and fourth economies, Italy and Spain.

"The next meeting on November 3-4 (at the G20 summit in Cannes) should provide more details on how the new formula EFSF will function," said Pichard.

"We're also waiting for further indications on states' credibility, notably Italy and France, concerning their ability to reduce their budget deficits. Chaos has been distanced but the path is still long before crying victory."

The head of the European bailout fund Klaus Regling said that he expects the Eurozone's economic problems will last two to three years, and long-term issues will remain. Regling's remarks suggest Europe still faces a long road to recovery from its sovereign-debt crisis.

"I think the European problems will be well-tackled and overcome over the next two to three years," Dow Jones quoted Regling as saying during a talk at Beijing's Tsinghua University.

"But it does not mean that all problems in this world will have disappeared," the chief executive of the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) said.

Longer-term challenges include: a "big structure shift in financial markets" caused by the damaged appeal of sovereign debt among investors, and boosting competitiveness in some countries, Regling said.

"Sovereign debt, which for decades or centuries was the predominant risk-free asset, may be losing that status, not only in Europe but also in other countries," he said.

Far from gold being in a bubble, the real bubble is the Eurozone, US and global debt bubble which is unravelling right in front of us. And, as central bankers try to manipulate the markets in attempt to escape the inevitable, the outcome will be a massive financial collapse just as Ludwig von Mises once stated:

“There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as the result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved.”

Japan intervened in the currency market on Monday morning for the third time this year, sending the U.S. dollar and the euro climbing sharply against the currency. The intervention came after the dollar touched a record low of 75.31 yen and pushed the world's main reserve currency up past 79 yen within two hours.

"We started currency intervention this morning in order to take every measure against speculative and disorderly moves and to prevent risks to the Japanese economy from materializing," Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda told parliament.

Noda, who took over as Japan's sixth premier in five years last month, served as finance minister in the previous cabinet and led three past interventions between September 2010 and August, including joint action with G7 partners in March 2011. The September 2010 intervention was Japan's first in six years.

Azumi said that while Japan acted solo on Monday, he remained in close contact with his international counterparts.

As central banks print more money to pay, the outcome is going to be a further depreciation of the major currencies, an escalation in global currency wars, increased capital controls, exchange controls, tariff hikes etc. All of this action is going to cause more volatility and uncertainty in global financial markets as well as an increasing loss of confidence in fiat currencies. And, as this happens, more individuals will turn to gold and silver to protect their wealth. Gold has always been the oldest form of sound money. It has endured countless economic collapses and has retained its purchasing power through the decades. On the other hand, every single fiat currency has ended in failure.

Both the FOMC and the ECB meet this week, and neither is expected to make changes to short-term interest rates. FOMC members Tarullo, Yellen, and Dudley made dovish comments a week ago which suggested that QE3 was a possibility in the long-run but gave no indication that changes would be made at this week’s meeting. Given the 2.5% growth in US GDP reported last week, the Fed appears to have some breathing room.

The ECB had been expected to make a 25 bps rate cut several weeks ago. However, that may also be pushed back in the wake Thursday’s agreement on Greek debt and bank recapitalization. Some expectations now put the next ECB rate hike into December.

In the meantime, I remain extremely bullish on gold and urge investors to accumulate or add gold to their investment portfolios.

TECHNICAL ANALYSIS


The recent break of $1700/oz (R) suggests that gold prices are gaining upward momentum and that a bottom of the correction was posted at $1600/oz. However, I would like to see prices remain above this level for at least another week before I declare this a decisive break.

By: David Levenstein

source: kitco.com

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

John Taylor says Gold to Top $1,800 by November

source: http://goldnews.com
John Taylor, the famous manager of the world’s largest hedge fund, FX Concepts, has come out with his recent view for gold and currencies.
Taylor believes the markets are ready for another risk rally into November which will ultimately fall off sharply. Through this rally, gold prices may reach $1,800/oz again, according to Taylor which should coincide with risk currencies rallying as well. Taylor’s views align with some other major traders as a recent Bloomberg survey indicated that 22 out of 25 traders are bullish on the metal at present. In addition central bank and fund buying is likely to ensue as prices have fallen recently, an event predicted by famed trader Marc Faber. As late November approaches, however, Taylor and his firm see the next of leg of an economic downtrend emerging and gold will not be unscathed in his view. Taylor explains in his recent weekly market insight report,

“…excessive debt built up during the good times must be paid back, investors are forced to sell assets and drive down financial markets. The liquidation even hits ‘safe’ investments like gold.”
The metal could fall as low as $1,000-$1,200 an ounce, by the end of the first quarter of 2012, according Taylor who then advocates buying the metal with both hands. If the metal drops,

“I think it’s probably a big buy… There’s nothing to stop it from going up. Monetary systems are grotesquely screwed up, especially in Europe and also in the U.S. There’s going to be an awful lot of confusion going on for the next decade.”
Taylor says.
Gold prices are down more than -1% today, holding steadily above $1,600 per ounce however. The metal hit a high of $1,921/oz last month before dipping back sharply to $1,532/oz where it entered a major support range:

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Don't Panic on Metal Tumble

Fall officially began on September 21, but it's not just leaves that are cascading downward. In the few market days of the new season, precious metals prices have seen significant drops, some 11% for gold and 31% for silver. In its lurch downward, gold plowed through support levels at $1,750, $1,700, and $1,645 an ounce. I'm sure many readers are concerned. 
 
After all, by the time gold put in its recent peak on August 22, it had logged a stunning 44% appreciation in calendar year 2011. And even after its recent tumble, the metal is still 22% higher than it was on January 27, the 2011 low. Therefore, some may conclude that gold has further to fall, and that the descent could be steep.
 
Given this anxiety, it might be helpful to summarize some factors we see impacting prices. Emotions loom large in the financial world, and it is easy to lose one's focus during periods of uncertainty. From as rational a perspective as I can gain during these irrational times, here is my view on why precious metals have recently pulled back so violently:
 
Market Technicals. Given the swift rise of gold and silver during the first half of 2011, precious metals were due for a correction - especially following the parabolic increases that we saw in August. Markets never go up in a straight line, and often the biggest downward movements occur in bull markets. These sharp movements are common in gold, especially during short periods of financial panic. For instance, gold fell more than 25% in the second half of 2008, and almost 15% from February to April 2009. Yet after the dust settled in those earlier corrections, gold resumed its upward march with even more gusto.
 
The progressive rise in margin requirements is another technical factor that has weighed on gold and silver. In recent months, many of the exchanges that offer margin accounts for metals futures contracts have made it significantly more expensive to hold those positions to maturity. This has caused many forced liquidations, putting downward pressure on prices. Many have even speculated that that these dramatic changes in margin requirements were deliberately planned to undermine confidence in gold as a safe haven asset.       
 
Recession Risk. Recently, it has become clearer to more people that the economy is not recovering. Just last week, Fed Chairman Bernanke offered his most gloomy economic outlook since 2009. Many people recognize however that the Fed Chairman is sugar coating the truth and that the real economy is actually even worse. Some believe we are headed for a full-blown depression. In such conditions, liquid cash becomes king and, typically, commodities fall. In this respect, silver, which has more industrial use than gold, can be expected to fall faster in the short term.
 
But even gold can be expected to fall under these circumstances, especially if official inflation reports stay relatively calm. Unfortunately, what the markets have yet to grasp is that this time, recession will likely be accompanied by high inflation and a risk of currency collapse. To investors who understand this logic, precious metals are still highly attractive.
 
Liquidations. It has been rumored that some major investors, including hedge funds, have liquidated large precious-metal positions in recent weeks. Many of these investors were likely sitting on large gains in gold & silver, but with the broader equities markets taking a tumble, they may have decided to lock in profits to offset losses in other positions.
 
Recently, as political and banking problems have loomed larger, liquidity has become a primary factor in determining investment decisions. In other words, big investors are just trying to cover their debts instead of investing for the long term.
 
The Greek Bailout Plan. Many investors seem to have placed great hope in the recently announced Greek bailout plan to solve the sovereign debt crisis, driving down their appetite for gold as a long-term safe haven. This is overly optimistic. An orderly Greek default is not in our future. The German plan is a poor imitation of the Fed's "extend and pretend" policy that was the basis of TARP, also known as the bank bailouts. It is likely that when markets perceive the gaping holes in the plan, fears of a currency crisis will return, and gold will benefit accordingly.
 
US Dollar Strength. As it has so often in the past, the US dollar has gained strength in the early days of an economic slowdown. This has put downward pressure on the price of precious metals. We believe that dollar strength is a temporary phenomenon, for reasons with which our readers are quite familiar.
 
Central Bank Intervention. Central bankers have long been embarrassed by the price of gold, which exposes their surreptitious currency debasement. For many years, the central banks of major debtor countries have sought, via IMF intervention under Central Bank Gold Agreements I and II, to magnify any natural market volatility in order to dispel the perception that precious metals can be a superior store of wealth. Although the central banks of surplus nations are accumulating gold, it is possible that the IMF is acting still to magnify any market price volatility.
 
While some or all of the above factors may have contributed to the recent fall in precious metals prices, investors continue to face the prospect of a currency crisis that will cause gold & silver to soar. Even at $1,600 an ounce, gold is still only at some 64 percent of its all-time 1980 inflation-adjusted high. Readers should consider these factors before selling their holdings of precious metals and capitulating to the eradication of their wealth by central banks.
 
Only time will tell how far precious metals will fall. But if we are correct and gold reaches into the many thousands of dollars per ounce, our future selves will care little whether we bought at the absolute bottom. We will just take comfort in having bought.
Source: http://news.goldseek.com

Sunday, September 18, 2011

China Weakens Dollar By Buying MORE Gold

Posted by Brittany Stepniak - Thursday, September 15th, 2011
A recently released WikiLeaks cable shows that China is converting much of its foreign holdings in gold; far away from the U.S. dollar.
A majority of China's gold reserves are located here in the U.S and in some European countries.
While the U.S. and Europe have an alternative agenda to dissuade people from viewing gold as an international reserve currency, China's upping their ante. In doing so, China aims to push other countries towards reserving in more and more in gold; leaving the U.S dollar by the wayside.
Last week, European business officials announced that China plans to make its currency, the yuan, fully convertible for trading on international markets by 2015. Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of China's central bank, said the offshore market for the yuan is "developing faster than we had imagined" but there is no definitive timetable for making the currency fully convertible. Presently, the yuan cannot be easily converted into other currencies, because of government restrictions.
China's gold holdings are small compared to other major economies. It has 1,054 tonnes, the sixth-largest reserves in the world, according to data from the World Gold Council. 
This only furthers the complications and growing weakness of the dollar. As China is buying tons of gold and the yuan is traded freely, the dollar's dominance is under great pressure to maintain its status as the international reserve currency. These changes could very easily make it much more expensive for our government to borrow money, and to “run perpetual trade and budget deficits."
The U.S should prepare for a major wake-up call, because we may not have the #1 reserve currency for long...
As a reserve currency, the US dollar is the default for international transactions. If, for example, a South Korean company wants to buy wine from Chile, chances are they will carry out the transaction in dollars. Both companies must then purchase dollars to conduct their business, leading to greater demand. The value of global commodities, such as oil, is also generally demarcated in US dollars.
Being a reserve currency allows the US to borrow at low interest rates, as central banks around the world are eager to buy US government debt. "Any country that can finance its expenditures by printing money or selling bonds is essentially getting a free lunch," Aizenman told Al Jazeera.
With China's apparent change of heart, that "free lunch" now might come with a hefty tab. Given the massive US trade deficit, average Americans might be sent to the restaurant's kitchen to wash dishes if the dollar loses its status as the world's reserve currency. 
Many experts suspect other countries will follow China's lead and invest more heavily in gold reserves themselves. The good news for China is that large gold reserves help promote the internalization of its RMB (the official currency of the People's Republic of China). That's just more bad news for the U.S. and the dollar...
This further signals how crucial our relationship with China has become. Currently, “ChinAmerica” – a term for the Chinese/American relationship coined by historian Niall Ferguson – is the most significant economic relationship in the world. Three decades ago, no one foresaw this shift in dynamics.
Source: http://www.wealthwire.com

CORRECTION: Strong gold and silver bullion coin sales for August

The U.S. Mint reported 54,000 ounces in sales last month of the new America the Beautiful 5-oz silver bullion coins.
CORRECTION AND UPDATE 9/5-- A weekly report of the U.S. Mint sent to news media including Mineweb, reported total American Eagle gold bullion coin sales of 104,500 ounces for the month of August as of Aug. 29, 2011, more than double the 41,500 ounces of gold bullion sales reported during August 2010.
However, figures posted on the U.S. Mint website as of Sept. 5, 2011, reveal a total of 112,000 ounces of American American Eagle gold bullion coins were sold at the end of August of this year. 
The Mint media release also reported total American Eagle silver bullion coins sales of 2,264,500 ounces for the month of August as of Aug. 29, 2011, down from the 2,451,000 ounces reported during August 2010. However, the U.S. Mint website revealed 3,679,500 ounces of American Eagle silver bullion coins were actually sold in August of this year.
A total of 26,500 American Buffalo one-ounce gold bullion coins were sold for the month of August as of Aug. 29, 2011, according to the Mint media release. The one-ounce bullion coin was not minted last year.
However, the U.S. Mint website now says that 28,000 American Buffalo one-ounce gold bullion coins were sold during the month of August.
The Mint news release said 54,000 America the Beautiful five-ounce silver bullion coins were sold for the month of August as of Aug. 29, 2011.
The release also said combined American Eagle gold bullion coin sales and American Buffalo gold bullion coin sales for the month of August as of Aug. 29, 2011 was 131,100 ounces. However, the figures posted on the U.S. Mint website as of Sept. 5, 2011, show the combined total for August is 140,000 ounces.
The news release also revealed that the combined America the Beautiful silver bullion coin sales and American Eagle silver bullion coin sales for the month of August as of Aug. 29, 2011, were 2,318,500 ounces. However, the Mint website figures for August reveal the combined total would have actually been 3,733,500 silver ounces.
Last month the U.S. Mint took the unprecedented step of suspending the online sales of gold collector coins for the first time recent memory in order to re-price the coins as gold prices neared $1,800 an ounce on Aug. 9, 2011. The move did not affect U.S. Mint gold bullion sales. 
source:
http://www.mineweb.net

Friday, September 2, 2011

Gold production in China set to climb over 10%

China's gold production is expected to rise by more than 10% in 2011 from a year ago period. During the first half of the year, China's gold output grew by 5.18 tonnes, or 3.25% year on year to 164.42 tonnes, said the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
In June alone, the country produced 32.39 tonnes of gold, according to a statement on the ministry's website. The combined output value of Chinese gold producers amounted to $18.55 billion during the first half, up 23.37% from a year ago period. 
Moreover, the gold producers' first half profits jumped 34.19% year on year. China is the world's biggest gold producer, having raised production every year since 2004. In 2010, output was pegged at 340.880 tonnes, up 8.6% from 2009.
In a recent report on the Chinese gold market, J P Morgan has noted that the China Gold Association expects Chinese gold investment demand to double within the next two years.
"Going forward, we believe the widening structural deficit in the supply and demand picture, long term demand for gold jewellery in China, India and other developing countries, persistent concerns regarding inflation, as well as the less transparent factor of sovereign purchases (that is likely to skew demand to the upside), will continue to give long term support to gold prices,'' the investment banker has said in a note to its clients.
In 2007, China made the most of its cost advantage to become the world's largest gold producing country, replacing South Africa. Analysts said China had long anticipated taking the No 2 position from the United States in 2009, but the rapid decline in output in the traditional major gold producing countries gave China the title about two years ahead of its own expectations.
Gold production is concentrated in the eastern provinces of Shandong, Henan, Fujian and Liaoning in China. Remote western provinces such as Guizhou and Yunnan, which have vast quantities of the yellow metal, has also attracted keen investment interest from firms in Australia and Canada.
Sajesh Patel, investment consultant at a foreign bank here said, ``China's gold output has been increasing for three consecutive years along with the rising prices. According to the China Gold Association, China's output of gold in 2009 totaled 314 tonnes, an increase of 11.34%. Despite this, the country imports about 100 tonnes of gold each year.''
Analysts have added that China is finding new gold reserves faster than it is producing the precious metal.
Source: http://www.mineweb.com

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Gold Futures Rise in New York, Halts Slide, as Weaker Dollar Boosts Demand

Gold futures gained for the first time in three sessions as the dollar’s decline revived demand for the metal as an alternative investment.
The greenback headed for the biggest drop in three weeks against a basket of six currencies. Gold climbed to a record $1,817.60 an ounce on Aug. 11 as escalating debt woes in the U.S. and Europe drove global stocks markets lower. Credit risk fell today, and equities climbed.
“The weaker dollar is definitely providing some support” to gold, Matthew Zeman, a strategist at Kingsview Financial in Chicago, said in a telephone interview. “The market will likely remain rangebound as people are returning to equities because of positive economic numbers.”
Gold futures for December delivery rose $15.40, or 0.9 percent, to settle at $1,758 at 1:39 p.m. on the Comex in New York. The price fell 2.3 percent in the previous two sessions. The metal has jumped 45 percent in the past year.
The MSCI All-Country World Index of equities climbed for the third straight session after a report showed Japan’s economy shrank less than forecast. U.S. retail sales rose the most in four months in July, while applications for jobless benefits were the lowest since April, reports last week showed,
Global equities plunged last week to the lowest since September after Standard & Poor’s lowered its credit rating for the U.S. from AAA, stoking concern that the global economic recovery may be at risk.
Gold ‘Standout’
The “uncertainty in financial markets, whether from the growth outlook or the ongoing sovereign-debt crisis, is expected to remain a benefit to perceived safe-haven commodity assets, of which we believe gold is the standout,” Morgan Stanley analysts, led by Hussein Allidina in New York, said today in a report.
Silver futures for September delivery rose 19.3 cents, or 0.5 percent, to $39.307 an ounce on the Comex.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, palladium futures for September delivery fell $1.85, or 0.2 percent, to $746.35 an ounce. Platinum futures for October delivery climbed 50 cents to $1,797.20 an ounce.
To contact the reporters for this story: Nicholas Larkin in London at nlarkin1@bloomberg.net; Debarati Roy in New York at droy5@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Steve Stroth at sstroth@bloomberg.net
Source: http://www.bloomberg.com

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Gold, silver emerge best bets in last 1 year

MUMBAI: Last year, if you had adhered to the age-old advice to invest in precious metals when the chips are down for the global economy, you would be rolling in the moolah today. Investments in gold and silver have yielded the best returns during the current period of uncertainty, which began in January 2010 with economic troubles arising out of the ballooning debt in the European Union.

Consider this: Since January 1, 2010, if one had bought silver worth Rs 1 lakh, that investment would now be worth Rs 2.25 lakh. If the same was invested in gold, it would have been worth Rs 1.44 lakh. True, silver has given much better returns than gold, but the same might not be repeated year after year. Compared to this, the sensex has barely moved. In case you had played it safe and had put the same amount in a bank FD, it would have maounted to nearly Rs 1.12 lakh now. While gold is currently hovering around Rs 24,000 per 10 gram, silver, after touching Rs 75,000 per kg, is now down at about Rs 61,600.

Precious metals, especially gold, for long has been considered a hedge against inflation and also one of the best bets in uncertain times, which continue to play out with even the US joining the league of nations negotiating substantial economic head winds. The outlook for the yellow metal for the next few years also paints a rosy picture . India is the largest consumer of gold and recent analyst reports suggest that the demand for the precious metal can only go northward.

The same factors that got gold to the current record high level, is also expected to keep it going for some more time. "Higher level of insecurity , weak US dollar, low interest rate in most countries around the world and lack of alternate investment options are driving up gold prices," said Jayant Manglik, president , Religare Commodities. His advice.

"For retail investors there is still something to buy. One should buy at dips, say after gold prices fall about 4% after a rally and then wait for it to rally again and book profit when the gain is about 15-20 % annually," Manglik said.

The idea that the demand for gold in India could defy Newton's law of gravity, i.e. what goes up comes down, at least for a couple of decades, is based purely on the country's demography, a report by the World Gold Council says. About 50% of India's 1.2 billion population is below 25 years of age. Going by the numbers, it is estimated that over the next decade, every year there would be about 1.5 crore weddings in the country . And since gold is an integral part of most Indian weddings , this itself will create an additional demand of about 500 tonne of gold annually , the report said.

And this is over and above an estimated 500 tonne of gold that would be transferred between the families involved in each wedding. If the WGC's estimates are extrapolated at present prices of about Rs 24,000 per tola, about Rs 1.2 lakh crore will be spent each year on buying gold for weddings alone. For the sake of comparison, with that kind of money every year one can buy half of RIL or nearly the whole of SBI at current prices.
Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com

Gold heading for $1850 this year as rising global risk giving gold a lift

Gold rallied to a fresh all time high of over $1640 today following a rash of poor economic data from the US, Europe and China which suggests that the global economy growth is sliding.

Despite news that the US had tentatively reached an agreement to extend the debt ceiling, this important news seems to have now been eclipsed with the markets also very much concerned that the US may see a downgrading by credit agencies. In short, persistently weak economic data coupled with rising global risk sentiment is giving a lift to gold.

The markets focus has been very much on the US over the last fortnight but not exclusively so. Italian and Spanish 10 year bond yields are back above 6% (last was 6.14% and 6.31% respectively) with many market observers seeing 7% very much as a ceiling which would trigger margin calls and potentially a crisis in those important countries.

News that both the Korea and Greek Central Banks had both acquired gold has provided a powerful indicator that investor interest is not the only factor driving the market higher. The switch into gold by Central Banks is very much a reversal of the policy a decade ago and with concerns about the ratings attached to US debt that momentum can only intensify.

Looking ahead we see the momentum amongst gold buyers being maintained and fully expect gold to achieve $1850 this year. Gold is a barometer and it is giving a very clear signal - that signal is saying that there are some deep and fundamental economic issues that remain unresolved and it does not see the political will or courage to make the changes that are necessary. 
Source: http://www.mineweb.com

US debt still a threat to global economy: China media

BEIJING: The United States’ debt woes still threaten the global economy despite a last-minute deal struck by the White House and political party leaders, China’s main official newspaper said on Tuesday, nonetheless adding there was no short-term escape from the dominance of the dollar.

The comments were published by the People’s Daily, the chief paper of China’s ruling Communist Party, in anticipation of a final debt deal reached in Congress between Republicans and Democrats.

“Although the United States has basically avoided default, its sovereign debt problems remain unresolved. They have merely been pushed off, and there is a tendency for them to grow,” a brief commentary in the paper said of the U.S. debt deal.

“This has cast a cloud over U.S. economic recovery, and also increased the risks and perils facing the world economy.”

Such comments in an official Chinese newspaper do not necessarily reflect the conclusive views of top leaders. But these latest wary comments echo other recent critical remarks in official media from Beijing, which is worried about its big holdings of dollar assets.

The House of Representatives on Monday approved a last-gasp deal to raise the U.S. borrowing limit in a decisive step toward averting a catastrophic debt default by the world’s largest economy. The Senate will vote on the deal on Tuesday. and it will then go to the desk of President Barack Obama.

As the largest creditor to the United States, China has repeatedly urged Washington to protect its dollar investments, estimated to account for about 70 percent of its $3.2 trillion in foreign exchange reserves, the world’s largest.

But Chinese officials have avoided publicly commenting on the debt showdown in Washington.

The People’s Daily said the credibility of U.S. treasury debt had been damaged since the outbreak of the sub-prime mortgage crisis, but other economies still have no way of shaking off dependence on the dollar.

“Although confidence in U.S. debt has suffered a short-term fall, and credit agencies could downgrade its rating, its basic credibility has not altered,” said the paper.

It added that “the dollar remains a hard currency that all countries have no choice but to accept.”

The official China Daily said Beijing is likely to view the plan as a positive step in restoring investor confidence in the dollar and the U.S. bond market.

“The agreement is likely to avert default by Washington and it certainly is a relief for China,” Chen Daofu, a researcher at the State Council’s Development Research Centre, was quoted as saying by the newspaper.

Several Chinese economists fretted that the world’s largest economy is still saddled by a mountain of debt.

Zhu Baoliang, chief economist at a government think-tank the State Information Centre, said a $1 trillion reduction in the U.S. fiscal deficit over the next 10 years was not enough to avert another debt crisis in future.

“As alarm over a debt default eases, China will not suffer any immediate impact,” he was quoted as saying in the China Daily. “But any impact would eventually be seen in the long term.”

Although the deal prevented a sudden shock to the U.S. economy, Li Xiangyang, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said U.S. politicians in the future could ignore creditors’ interests while pursuing domestic politics.

To escape the dollar trap, China must stop investing its foreign exchange reserves in dollar assets in future, he said.

“The raising of the U.S. debt ceiling is a double-edged sword for China,” Li wrote in an article published in the People’s Daily’s overseas edition.
Source: http://www.thenews.com.pk/

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Gold: Plenty of room to move higher - and higher

Despite gold's recent run up to new historic highs, I believe the yellow metal's price has far to go - both in future percentage appreciation and duration before the great gold bull market comes to its ultimate cyclical end.
Right now, there is no evidence of a buying frenzy to suggest we are anywhere near a long-term top . . . but there are plenty of rock-solid fundamentals that suggest the market is healthy with plenty of room to move higher.  Moreover, the world economic and geopolitical environment remains very supportive - and seems likely to remain pro-gold for years to come.
My forecast, published onNicholsOnGold and in other speeches and reports, of $1700 gold by year-end 2011, now seems within easy reach.
And this is just the beginning of gold's next great leap upward, a leap that will carry the metal to $2000 an ounce in 2012 - with prices heading still-higher, quite possibly to $3000, $4000 and maybe even $5000 an ounce by the mid-to-late years of the decade.
From a long-term perspective, gold prices near $1500, should we ever return to that level, $1600, or even $1700 an ounce will prove to be bargains.
As I have cautioned in the past, expect high two-way price volatility and periodic sharp corrections, corrections that some will mistake as the end of the bull market - but consider these opportunities for "scale-down" buying, opportunities to acquire additional metal at bargain-basement prices.
A PAUSE THAT REFRESHES
Rising some $300 an ounce from its January 2011 low point and more than $120 in just the past few weeks, gold has scored a series of successive all-time highs.  Now, however, there is certainly some risk of a sharp short-term correction, particularly if the political-economic news on either side of the Atlantic looks less threatening to financial market stability.
A political compromise to raise the U.S. Treasury debt ceiling and agreement to narrow the Federal deficit in future years that avoids any downgrading of Treasury debt by the rating agencies would remove or reduce an important source of anxiety that has contributed to gold's recent strength.  News of positive movement toward or actual completion of an agreement could trigger a swift - but temporary - gold-price retreat.
Speculative long positions held by institutional traders on world derivative markets have increased sharply in recent days.  Should the market lose upward momentum, speculative pressures could quickly turn negative.  Moreover, if the short-term news turn bearish for gold, liquidation of these long positions and/or institution of new speculative short positions could leave the market especially vulnerable to a swift correction .
Adding to my short-term caution has been a price-related relaxation of physical demand and the appearance of increased quantities of gold scrap returning to the market, especially from India and other price-sensitive national markets in recent weeks as prices rose above $1550 and approached $1600 an ounce.
I expect Indian and Chinese scrap reflows will diminish significantly over time, even at high price levels.   In the meanwhile, should gold approach or fall below the $1550 level, scrap supplies will quickly abate and price-sensitive demand, smelling a bargain, will re-appear.
HOT SUMMER, HOTTER AUTUMN
Contrary to the view expressed by most serious gold analysts, we said in past reports that gold would not pause for its typical summer vacation - and it hasn't!  Nor would we see this summer a seasonal relaxation in price volatility.  Indeed, it has been a very hot summer as gold moved up smartly to achieve new all-time highs with plenty of fireworks and price volatility both up and down.
However, come September, positive seasonal factors will kick in - and, other things being equal, give gold still more firepower. There are three distinct sources of seasonal demand, all of which will likely contribute to demand and higher prices as we move into the later few months of 2011:  First, jewelry manufacturers step up fabrication demand ahead of Christmas gift-giving late in the year; second, Indian dealers begin stocking up ahead of the autumn festivals and wedding season, and in expectation of good harvests and healthy household incomes in the gold-friendly agrarian sector; and, third, later in the year and in early 2012, we should expect a sharp rise in gold investment and jewelry demand associated with the approaching Chinese lunar new year.
For sure, irrespective of the season, price-sensitive Asian demand - principally from China and India - for physical metal will continue to underpin these markets and limit downside risks.
So too will bargain hunting by a number of central banks eager to raise their official gold holdings without disrupting the world gold market by increasing upward price volatility.
CENTRAL BANKS REDISCOVER GOLD
Official statistics published monthly by the IMF show that central banks, as a group, have been busy buying gold.  Russia, India, China, Saudi Arabia, Mexico, and Brazil have been among the big buyers in recent years and a number of other countries have added smaller amounts of gold to their official reserves.  One big surprise was Mexico's purchase of some 100 tons earlier this year as a hedge against the possible decline in the value of their U.S. dollar reserve holdings.
Moreover, a recent survey of 80 central bank reserve managers predicted that the most significant change in their official reserve holdings in the next 10 years will be their intentional build up in gold reserves.  They also predicted that gold will be their best performing asset class over the next year and sovereign debt defaults will be their principal risk.
 
OVEREIGN DEBT CRISIS PROMPTS SAFE-HAVEN DEMANDS
European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet a few weeks ago raised the alarm level on Europe's debt crisis to "red," warning that the crisis is nowhere close to being resolved . . . and he also warned of the "potential contagion effects across the [European] Union and beyond."
Meanwhile, Europe's sovereign debt problems are worsening and the likelihood of sovereign default by one or another of the more vulnerable periphery economies is increasing, despite the past week's patchwork aid package that avoided (or more likely postponed) a sovereign default by Greece.
Despite all the talk among finance ministers and the European central bank, it looks like the future fate of "periphery' country debt is increasingly in the hands of the credit rating agencies who view any delay in full repayment as partial default.
Several factors suggest that the European debt crisis will continue to worsen:
Longer term, the more restrictive fiscal policies the periphery nations (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, and Spain - the so-called PIIGS) have been asked to accept will push their economies deeper into recession - and increase, rather than decrease, government deficits and borrowing needs for years to come.
More immediately, the downgrading of sovereign debt by the rating agencies raises interest rates and borrowing costs - and pushes these countries closer to the brink (a lesson that the United States needs to learn before it also finds itself with higher Treasury borrowing costs should we suffer a cut in our own debt ratings on U.S. Treasury securities).
As credit ratings decline for the peripheral countries, the rising cost of refinancing maturing debt make it all that much more difficult to keep their heads above water.  Reflecting the recent deterioration in credit ratings, Greek two-year bond yields last week were over 35%, Spanish 10-year bonds hit a record 6.3%, and Italian 10-year bonds were  also yielding around 6%.  Higher borrowing costs will increase government deficits and make repayment of past debt all the more difficult.
An important aspect of the crisis is that default on European sovereign debt, debt that is held by many European banks, will require the banks to write-down these questionable assets, leaving them with insufficient capital and effectively bankrupt.
The broader effect of bank failures on the European economy, capital markets, and banking system could be far more devastating than the Bear Sterns and Lehman Brothers debacle in the United States - and would likely result in the European Central Bank along with the U.S. Federal Reserve flooding financial markets with newly created money, depreciating paper currencies, inflating prices, and boosting gold.
I continue to believe that ultimately the euro, Europe's single currency, will be replaced by a multi-currency system - with the core countries possibly retaining the euro while the periphery nations will revert each to their own monetary unit or a deeply devalued renamed euro of their own.
With no solution in sight, Europeans will continue to abandon the euro for "safe havens" including gold and, ironically, the U.S. dollar.  At the same time, the problems of the euro will discourage its acceptance as a reserve currency by some central banks - and make gold an even more attractive alternative.
MEANWHILE, BACK AT THE FED
The U.S. economy is still mired in recession, or worse.  Nearly everyone knows it, even if the official statistics show some positive growth in real GDP.  Unemployment remains stuck at over 9 percent.  The huge inventory of foreclosed homes held by banks continues to weigh heavily on home prices.  Various economic indicators released in the past few days and weeks are pointing to the second dip in what may be called a double-dip recession.
So far, most Washington politicos and Wall Street bankers are in denial, refusing to see the worsening signs of renewed recession.  Instead, they are arguing for restrictive economic policies that, if enacted, would exacerbate the developing downturn . . . and which future history books will liken to the policy mistakes of the 1930.
The Fed also fails to see, at least publically, the writing on the wall.  Having ended its program of quantitative easing at the end of June as scheduled, it will - in my view - soon be forced by rising unemployment and sluggish business activity to resume monetary stimulus in one form or another.  Contrary to popular belief, the Fed can stimulate the economy and liquefy the financial system through open-market purchases of securities and even real assets, not just Treasury securities but stocks, corporate bonds, commercial paper, mortgages, credit-card debt, student loans and even real estate.
The resumption of quantitative easing (QE3) or some other program of monetary stimulus will be reflected in a swift and significant jump in gold prices.
As I have said in past reports and speeches, the only viable and politically acceptable means for America to dig itself out of its unbearable burden of excess debt - federal, state and local, housing, and other private-sector debt - is to pursue a pragmatic policy of higher inflation that will deflate the ratio of outstanding debt to nominal gross domestic product (GDP) to historically acceptable and manageable levels.  This is what we did in the 1970s, a decade of stagflation, and we're already doing it again.  Indeed, under Chairman Bernanke's lead, the Fed is quietly pursuing this policy of targeting somewhat higher U.S. price inflation.
Pursuit of a mildly inflationary monetary policy will not however excuse the Congress and Administration from developing a responsible believable program of long-term spending restraint and deficit reduction.  However, now is not yet the time to impose these restrictions on an ailing economy - though articulation of a realistic bi-partisan plan for long-run deficit and debt reduction would help calm world financial and currency markets.
Whatever happens in the U.S. and European economies, it is hard to imagine a realistic scenario that won't push gold prices significantly higher in the months and years ahead.
OTHER PRO-GOLD TRENDS CONTINUE
Meanwhile, other important pro-gold trends continue unabated.  These bullish trends include:
The growth in Chinese, Indian, and other Asian gold demand accompanying their expanding economies, growing wealth, rising inflation, and historic affinity to gold in jewelry and as a saving and investment medium.
The expansion of the gold investment infrastructure around the world - such as the development of gold exchange-traded funds and other forms of physical gold . . . or the implementation of gold distribution systems through banks and other retail outlets in China, India, and elsewhere).
The recognition of gold as a worthy asset class for inclusion in investment programs and portfolios of individuals; pensions, endowments and other institutions; sovereign wealth funds; and central banks.
The relative stagnation of new gold-mine production (certainly in comparison to the growth in gold demand) and the rising costs of discovery, development, and operation of new mines.
 
http://www.mineweb.com

No Matter What… Buy Silver

By TaipanPublishingGroup.com
A lot of my friends are having kids right now. Over the weekend, we had some friends over for dinner. One of them brought his eight-year-old daughter. She loves animals, and was great with all our dogs and horses, but we ended the night exhausted! Explaining the rules, keeping a watchful eye over the bigger dogs, reminding her to use her inside voice... I'm still tired from the visit. And I can't begin to imagine how much harder it would be with two kids. Especially with the arguments, trying to decide who's right and who needs a time-out. The mainstream financial media is like a couple of eight-year-olds. We hear arguments from both sides -- corporate earnings are beating records, but at the same time joblessness could jump to 10% again. Which is it? And how do you plan an investment strategy against such bipolar predictions? Here at Smart Investing Daily, we believe the U.S. economy is at another tipping point. The recent market rallies are unsustainable, are similar to an extinction burst... You know, when a child is throwing a tantrum and he lets out one last big scream before he falls asleep. But in case I'm wrong, wouldn't it be nice to know of an investment that could make you profits if the market rises or falls? Well, I've got one for you...
Invest in Silver
Silver is an interesting precious metal. It protects against inflation like gold. But silver also has a lot of industrial uses. That makes it like copper, which booms during economic recoveries. One of the toughest aspects of gold is to find out if it's trading more as a currency or a commodity. Is gold demand up because of concerns about the debt crisis? Or is gold up because of jewelry demand in India and China? It's an important question, but one that doesn't apply in the same way to silver. Silver straddles the metals industry. Certainly, gold and platinum have industrial uses, and we like both of these precious metals as investments right now. Consider this, though. About a quarter of all platinum consumption came from recycled platinum. That's not the case with silver, and that could mean increased demand during an economic recovery. In fact, 487.4 million ounces of silver were used for industrial purposes in 2010. That's well over four times the amount of silver used to make coins and medals. That's also a gain of about 20% from 2009. Not bad in a struggling economy. With uses that span electrical circuits, water purification, photography and other industries, industrial silver demand makes up 66% of silver production. But there's another aspect of silver that should get your attention -- silver investments. World investment demand climbed 40% last year to more than 279 million ounces. And get this... Hedge funds and money managers increased their silver positions by 19% last week, according to the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission... the third week of gains. (Don't forget to sign up for Smart Investing Daily and let me and fellow editor Jared Levy simplify the market for you with our easy-to-understand articles.)
How High Could Silver Prices Go?
Bloomberg reports that silver could climb as high as $70 an ounce by next March... a jump of almost 75% from current prices. Let's take a look at a chart to see if this is a realistic forecast.
View Larger Chart
This is a chart of silver futures for September delivery. See that pop from late April? A huge move... but prices fell short of silver's all-time high of $50.35 an ounce in January 1980. Since January 2011, silver prices have climbed 26%. That's not a bad gain; it beats gold's gain of 12% handily. But that's not near the pace silver would need to climb in order to meet a 75% gain by next March. Is it possible? Yes. Between September 2010 and May 2011, silver prices climbed 140%. But just as quickly, a huge chunk of that gain disappeared when silver prices dropped from $48 back below $35. Realistically, silver prices may test that all-time high by Thanksgiving. At that point, smart investors should ruthlessly protect their gains. That strong resistance silver shows around $50 an ounce will be tough to beat. Expect a drop in prices anywhere above $48. For investors considering an exchange-traded fund like the iShares Silver Trust (SLV:NYSE), look to the price spike in late April to find your resistance point. For investors looking at silver mining companies, be aware that mining costs, like fuel prices, impact profits. Keep an eye on operating margins as companies report earnings. Lower margins could mean lower earnings moving forward. Publisher's Note: Taipan's Michael Robinson is the best in the business when it comes to playing the silver market. So far this year, he has led American Wealth Underground subscribers to gains of 200%, 68%, 140% and 353%... all thanks to silver and the metals market. Michael recently unveiled his latest special report. There is a strong chance it will lead to his biggest gains yet. To learn what our silver expert has uncovered, follow the link.
Article brought to you by Taipan Publishing Group. Additional valuable content can be syndicated via our News RSS feed. Republish without charge. Required: Author attribution, links back to original content or www.taipanpublishinggroup.com.
Source: http://countingpips.com

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Gold Jumps Above 1,600-Dollar Mark On U.S., European Debt Concerns

CHICAGO, July 18 (Xinhua) -- Gold futures on the COMEX Division of the New York Mercantile Exchange extended its winning streak into a 10th session on Monday, settling above 1,600 dollars per ounce, as concerns about the eurozone debt crisis and the lack of agreement on raising the U.S. debt ceiling prompted investors to flock to the precious metal as a safe haven.
The most active gold contract for August delivery rallied 12.3 dollars, or 0.8 percent, to 1,602.4 dollars per ounce.
Analysts mentioned that there are growing concerns among investors that Europe's debt crisis will spread to Italy and Spain, ahead of an emergency meeting of EU leaders later this week, amid continuing uncertainty over the ability of European officials to agree on a second aid program for Greece and stop Greece's trouble from spreading to other debt-plagued eurozone nations.
A trader mentioned that investors are also worried by the inability of U.S. politicians to work out a deal before Aug. 2, the deadline for Congress to pass legislation to raise the debt ceiling and effectively prevent a default.
Silver for September delivery surged 1.271 dollars, or 3.3 percent, to 40.342 dollars per ounce.
Source: http://news.xinhuanet.com

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Gold Prices Rise Highest Since 2009

The price of gold recorded the largest increase since November 2009. This safe-haven commodity prices could rise to 3.9 percent scored at the weekend. Gold prices are skyrocketing because of poor employment data in the United States. As a result, market participants expectations the country’s slowing economy would seem to prove.
In early trading today, gold prices rose to USD1.544, 14 per ounce. This is the highest level in two weeks. As quoted by Reuters on Monday (7/11/2011), the gold price this morning was observed stagnant amid poor sentiment coming from the U.S. economy and fears of debt crisis of the Euro Zone. Gold prices fell 0.1 percent to USD1.542 per ounce. U.S. gold GCcv1 gold was little changed at USD1.542, 80.
President Barack Obama met with leaders from both parties, trying to break the deadlock with a Republican plan related to deficit reduction and to avoid debt default.
European Council President Herman Van Rompuy said it had an emergency meeting with officials related to the debt crisis of the Euro Zone on Monday morning. The trigger is a crisis fears spread to Italy, the third largest country in the region.
 
Read more:http://cnbusinessnews.com

Friday, July 8, 2011

Family fights government over rare ‘Double Eagle’ gold coins

A jeweler's heirs are fighting the United States government for the right to keep a batch of rare and valuable "Double Eagle" $20 coins that date back to the Franklin Roosevelt administration. It's just the latest coin controversy to make headlines.

Philadelphian Joan Langbord and her sons say they found the 10 coins in 2003 in a bank deposit box kept by Langbord's father, Israel Switt, a jeweler who died in 1990. But when they tried to have the haul authenticated by the U.S. Treasury, the feds, um, flipped.
They said the coins were stolen from the U.S. Mint back in 1933, and are the government's property. The Treasury Department seized the coins, and locked them away at Fort Knox. The court battle is set to kick off this week.
The rare coins (pictured), first struck in 1850, show a flying eagle on one side and a figure representing liberty on the other. One such coin recently sold at auction for $7.6 million, meaning the Langbords' trove could be worth as much as $80 million.
The coins are part of a batch that were struck but then melted down after President Roosevelt took the country off the gold standard in 1933, during the Great Depression. Two were given to the Smithsonian Institution*, but a few more mysteriously escaped.
The government has long believed that Switt schemed with a corrupt cashier at the Mint to swipe the coins. They note that the deposit box in which the coins were found was rented six years after Switt's death, and that the family never paid inheritance tax on the coins.
A lawyer for the Langbords counters that the coins could have left the Mint legally since it was permissible to swap gold coins for gold bullion.
Authorities in the Roosevelt era twice looked into Switt's coin dealings, including his possession of Double Eagle coins. In 1944, Switt's license to deal scrap gold was revoked.
The battle over the Double Eagles is hardly the only recent coin contretemps. Two British metal-detecting enthusiasts are said to be locked in a bitter dispute over how to divide the profits from a horde of Iron Age gold coins that they unearthed together in eastern England in 2008.
And an 80-year-old California man was jailed in 2009 after allegedly hitting another man in the head with a metal pipe and firing a gun at a third man during a dispute over missing gold coins.
Some coin disputes involve more than wrangling over valuable collectors' items. In 2007, Secret Service and FBI agents raided an Indiana company called Liberty Dollar, in a bid to stamp out illegal currency. The firm was making "Ron Paul Silver Dollars," in honor of Rep. Ron Paul, whose presidential campaign advocates bringing back the gold standard.
And since we're talking about coins, here's a list of the ten most valuable coins you might find in your pocket change.
* This sentence previously referred incorrectly to the "Smithsonian Institute."

Source: www.yahoo.com

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Silver Prices & Gold Prices Unsurprisingly Will Definitely Unquestionably Climb To New Highs!

PRLog (Press Release)Jul 04, 2011– At the time of this composing, Gold rose in spot trading by $7.30, or 0.49 %, to $1,494.80 an ounce, bringing the loss this last thirty days to 3.18 %, while silver jumped 0.71 % to $34.19 an ounce. In the mean time, gold bar and coin need within the Middle East jumped 39 percent within the fourth quarter from the year previously, based on World Gold Council figures. Visit http://silver-dollar-values.com for a lot more silver coins and gold coins tips and ideas.

Collectively with gold, silver prices are in the mercy of investment option demand, safe-haven purchasing, inflation fears, momentum purchasing and selling and cost manipulation. The one facet that silver prices have going for them that gold does not are an enormous amount of industrial need.

Certainly, silver may be discovered within a selection of products, from iPads to autos to photovoltaic panels, which tends to create it the ideal metal for all these looking for a hedge in opposition to currency debasement as well as publicity to some worldwide monetary recovery.

David Morgan, the founder of Silver-Investor.com, states he could see silver prices as significant as $45 in 2011 "and if things get really crazy we could go beyond that." Visit
http://www.silver-dollar-values.com for a lot more silver coins and gold coins tips and ideas.

Silver is likewise in the mercy of stocks and bonds. Whenever equities plummet, investors are frequently pressured to market silver for cash, but any substantial dip can set off a wave of purchasing as investors buy silver at a lot less costly prices, resulting within a powerful tug of war. Simply because less individuals own silver than gold, the marketplace is smaller sized, which results in violent price actions.

Turmoil is nonetheless evident in the Middle East nations. Bahrain’s police forces attacked demonstrators for another day. Gunfire started in Yemen’s capital as pro-democracy protests pass on to Libya and Iran.

“If you see violence, you would buy precious metals for a safe haven,” states Peter Fertig, the operator of Quantitative Commodity Research Ltd. in Hainburg, Germany. Visit
http://silver-dollar-values.net for more profitable silver and gold tips.

Gold would appear to have room for a lot more gains no matter further Chinese monetary tightening, states HSBC. The gold metal at first dipped Friday subsequent China announcing a 50-basis-point hike in the reserve ratio for banking establishments, the eighth hike of the stage. “The ability of gold to bounce back after the sell-off in the aftermath of the China rate announcement is impressive, in our view,” HSBC states. “It displays underlying strong demand that is not necessarily dependent on China.” HSBC’s economics adviser on China looks to get at least an extra one hundred basis points in reserve-ratio hikes via the People’s Bank of China all through the next 6 months. “The gold market is unlikely to cool significantly in response to further Chinese tightening until that tightening is seen to be effective, we believe," HSBC says. "This leaves further room to the upside, as Chinese bullion demand remains strong.”

Expanding food and commodity prices have contributed to uprisings within the Middle East. “There are still flare-ups and people getting hurt,” stated Adam Klopfenstein, a senior marketplace strategist at Lind-Waldock in Chicago. “There’s more talk of inflation, and no one wants to be short of precious metals heading into the weekend.” Time for you to buy gold and silver is now!
Silver Dollar Values is the premier coin price guide website for information on old coin values and silver dollar values, as well as gold prices, silver prices, silver bullion, gold bullion, gold coins and much more.