Gold rose above $1,420 an ounce coming into 2011 within 1 percent of its  record high, and silver and palladium hit multi-year peaks, driven by  pent-up demand on the first trading day of 2011. 
 While a firm dollar is limiting gains, expectations for more bad news on euro zone debt, concerns over potential inflation in developing  economies and an increased focus on the U.S. deficit are set to maintain surging demand for gold, analysts said. 
 Pradeep Unni, senior analyst at Richcomm Global Services in Dubai,  said fresh highs in gold were “likely” this year after the metal was  becalmed over the Christmas holidays, with an initial target seen at  $1,455-$1,480. 
 “Gold (steps) into the New Year with all its current fundamentals  intact…. sovereign debt risk, macro uncertainty, concerns over currency  stability, medium-term inflation fears as the U.S. Federal Reserve  implements Quantitative Easing II, geopolitical tensions and low  interest rates.” 
 Spot gold was bid at $1,420.40 an ounce at 1035 GMT (6:35 a.m. ET),  against $1,419.45 late in New York on Friday. The precious metal hit a  record $1,430.95 an ounce in December. European trade is expected to  remain quiet, with London still on holiday. 
 U.S. gold futures for February delivery eased 40 cents an ounce to  $1,421.00. 
 Bruce Krasting, former hedge fund manager predicts, that “volatility  is going up across the board.  If you have the stomach for the swings  that are coming across all markets there is a ton of money to be made;  balls and timing are all that are necessary. 
 Gold will be higher a year from now but off its peak.  At some time in the  fall, gold will be near 1,800 and the New York Times will do a  front-page story that gold is on its way to 2,000.  That will be the  high point of the year.”  So watch out you skeptics…cause spot silver  has already risen to 30 year peak of 30.72 an ounce higher with our  short positioned, Copper right behind as one of the oldest metals used  in the development of civilization. 
 And, copper will continue to rise.  This metal will benefit as the  poor man’s gold.  Why buy an ounce of something for $1,600 when you can  have a whole pound of something else for only $5?  The logic is  compelling only because there is no logic.  Increasingly, it will become understood that money does not hold value, but gold, silver and copper  does and will. 
 These three metals remind me of the parable about the three men and  the elephant, who had never seen an elephant before and were  blindfolded, then asked to describe the new animal based on what they  could perceive by touch.  One man felt the trunk and said “It seems to  be a large snake.”  The second man felt the side of the elephant and  said “It seems to be built like a wall.”  The third man felt a leg and  said “It seems to be built like a tree.”  Neither had the ‘big picture,’ “As the central banks stimulate their economies for 2011, the ‘big  picture’ will be revealed”,” says Regal Assets, “as it will only add  fuel to the fire of the growing anxiety over rising inflation, and again bode well for gold. 
 Gold as a Reserve Currency 
 “Combining the fundamental factors discussed here and technical  signals,” said Krasting, “the euro could break below $1.25 or even $1.20 sometime this year, which could drive gold up towards $1,600 levels.   It is worth noting that gold priced in Euros has risen more than 38% so  far in 2010, reaching a new record high above €34,475 per kilo, far  outpacing gold’s nominal price gain (in dollars) of around 28%.” 
 “So in a way, gold is treated almost like a second reserve currency,  replacing the Euro, and you would have gotten a better return getting  into gold via the Euro.  If the US dollar shows strength then gold will  go to $2000/ounce.  If the US dollar shows weakness it will go to  $3000/ounce.  It clearly points the way to invest, is in gold, which is  the safest investment for 2011,” he added. 
 So, to recap, with the QE2, unemployment, foreclosures, geopolitical  chaos and huge global inflation that will all contribute to a strong  physical demand for gold, one needs to peak in on silver, which is already inching towards its  30-year peak supported by the strength in industrial metals such as  copper.  “Copper prices have been very firm, supporting silver as well  as palladium,” added Regal Assets, “and that short-covering in silver  also helped push prices higher.  We expect silver to trade in the range  of $30 to $35 this year, with $40 as a potential target.  Buying silver  isn’t just a way to back up your investments in the New Year.  It’s now a profit play, too.  And you could be earning real gains with the other  precious metal alongside gold.  The silver market is small.  But the  profits aren’t.  You can turn silver into golden gains!”   Call Regal  Assets today, and you’ll have a great year! 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment