Posts Tagged ‘India’
Gold Up 1.5% As Stocks Globally Fall After Nikkei Crashes 7.3%

Today’s AM fix was USD 1,386.00, EUR 1,074.92 and GBP 919.16 per ounce. (Read more…)  
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,385.25, EUR 1,071.43 and GBP 917.75 per ounce. 

Gold fell $10.20 or 0.74% yesterday to $1,367.60/oz and silver finished up 0.07%.  Click here to download our free guide to gold.

Gold is up today while stock indices globally are sharply down after the Nikkei crashed 7.3%. The stock crash in Japan is leading to weakness in European equities and will lead to losses when U.S. markets open.


Gold – 1 Day – (Bloomberg)

The Nikkei decline is being attributed to the poor Chinese PMI data but the more likely reason is speculators profit taking leading to panic selling. Currency debasement and rampant speculation had led the Nikkei to increase by an incredible 85% in just over 6 months.

Bernanke hinting at reducing Federal Reserve bond buying and balance sheet expansion and a more prudent U.S. monetary policy and the still very fragile Japanese economy likely also contributed. 


Nikkei – 1 Year – (Bloomberg)

Gold is oversold on a host of benchmarks and was due a bounce and the Nikkei plummet and stock weakness in Europe, the FTSE is down by 1.9% and the CAC and DAX by more than 2.4%, have led to gold buying.

Stock losses appear to have contributed to speculators covering short positions and some speculators and investors buying gold again. 

Silver too has benefitted from the renewed ‘risk off’ environment and risen 1.4%.

If there are sharp losses on Wall Street today –increased safe haven demand should be seen. Sharp falls in U.S. equities seem possible given the recent outsize gains despite increasingly poor fundamentals.

However, sharp losses on Wall Street could lead to further short term gold weakness if there is margin call selling. 

There was short covering action yesterday and we expect more short covering however the scale of the losses in Japan overnight and risks of sharp falls in European and U.S. markets mean that in the short term, gold may be vulnerable.

There remains the risk of a massive short squeeze in the gold market as speculators such as Wall Street banks and hedge funds have made “the biggest bet ever against gold prices.” 


Chart courtesy of Zero Hedge

This is likely to propel gold higher recovering much of the losses in recent months. It is likely to do so as the shorts are trend following speculators who are again completely ignoring the very positive gold fundamentals with massive demand for physical and rising premiums globally.

Gold’s price premium on the Shanghai Gold Exchange stood at $22/oz and remained above $20/oz for a fourth consecutive trading day overnight.

India is paying a premium of nearly $40 per 10 gramme bars. Dubai buyers are paying a premium of $7-10 per kilogramme. 

Turkey is reported to be paying a premium of $25 an ounce over spot prices. Hong Kong and Singapore buyers are paying premium of $5 per ounce for gold bars.

Markets are becoming more and more casino like and are now the preserve of speculators.

For prudent pension owners, investors and savers this makes an allocation to physical gold more important than ever.

 
Precious Metals Currency Ranked Returns in USD – (Bloomberg)

Gold’s fundamentals remain sound and volatility in stock markets will lead to renewed safe haven demand for the precious metals.

Gold has had a difficult few months but will reassert itself as an important diversification and safe haven asset in the coming months.

NEWS
“Gold is up today, so far, while everything else is down” - Bloomberg

Gold rebounds from losses as Nikkei falls 7.3% - Reuters

Gold Halts Two-Day Decline as Stocks Drop Globally - Bloomberg

US Treasury Secretary Tapping Federal Retiree Pension Fund To Avoid Default – Washington Post

COMMENTARY 
They Better Pray There Is No Short Squeeze… – Zero Hedge

Why Ounces Are More Important Than False Paper Prices – Max Keiser

Big Silver Shorts cover Madly – Got Gold Report

Jim Sinclair Gold Seminar – London, June 1 – JS Mineset

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So You Want To Work In JPMorgan’s Legendary Gold Vault? This Is Your Chance

For all those whose lifelong ambition has been to work with the recently reappointed joint Chairman/CEO of JPMorgan in the firm’s legendary and infamous gold ‘clearing’ operation (whose formerly classified New York, the largest in the world, and London vault locations were exposed here and here), today is your lucky day:

 

But more important than what the firm is looking for, is what is willing to provide. Information. (Read more…) Such as:

  • JPM currently holds a 45 % market share of the London Clearing: not quite a monopoly but close enough
  • The London clearing transacts approx $ 40 bn value in metal transfers each day on behalf of participants in the London market
  • It conducts Location swaps: literally, what it sounds like
  • The firm has consignment agreements in India, China, Thailan, and… Turkey: the infamous gateway to Iran?
  • The firm’s gold clearing and physical desk engages in liquidity management between London, Zurich and… the Bank of England?

h/t Ro

    



 
Silver Recoups Sharp Loss And Rises 2% On Record Volume

 

Today’s AM fix was USD 1,378.75, EUR 1,070.21 and GBP 908. (Read more…)39 per ounce.  

Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,353.75, EUR 1,051.95 and GBP 890.86 per ounce. 

Gold climbed $19.40 or 1.43% yesterday to $1,384.30/oz and silver finished 2% higher. 

Silver’s recovery yesterday from being 10% lower at one stage to recouping these losses and then rising over 2% was very positive technically. The key reversal is leading some to postulate that we may have seen the bottom or are close to a bottom. 


Spot Silver in USD, 3 Days, May 17, 20, 21 – (Bloomberg) 

This theory is bolstered by the fact that the 10% losses were due to a handful of a very large trades in a low volume session in Asia, while silver’s subsequent 12% reversal to the upside came amid extremely high trading volume with silver trading volume 82% higher than the 100 day moving average on the COMEX.

Silver’s fall could have been related to the gyrating yen dollar price as some hedge funds and banks use proprietary trading systems and sharp losses in a leveraged yen dollar position could have led to forced liquidation of silver.

However, the scale of the 10% loss in the silver market, and only the silver market suffered such large losses, would suggest that it was not simply due to margin selling on yen speculation losses. 

Rather, the scale of selling suggests one or two massive sellers, likely institutional, who were determined to force the silver price lower, possibly in order to close or buy back underwater short positions.

Resistance in silver during the period March 2008 to September 2010 was $20/oz and this level provided support overnight and is an important long term support level.

While paper gold and silver is being manipulated though the use of leveraged selling on commodity exchanges and other gold and silver investment vehicles are being  liquidated – especially the ETFs, demand for physical gold and silver remains very robust as seen in high premiums internationally and lengthy waiting times for delivery.

The paper players have won the recent skirmishes but those who own gold and silver bullion and focus on the long term will win the price war.

The scale of demand from China and India continues to be underestimated and this demand has accelerated after the recent price weakness. Large buy orders from China, India and other Asian markets are pushing the physical premiums to record levels.


Spot Silver in USD, 2007-2013 – (Bloomberg)

India is paying a premium of nearly $40 per 10 gramme bars. Dubai buyers are paying a premium of $7-10 per kilogramme. 

Turkey is reported to be paying a premium of $25 an ounce over spot prices. 

Hong Kong and Singapore buyers are paying premium of $5 per ounce for gold bars.

Demand is not just very strong in Asia. Bullion coin and bar demand also remains very robust in the U.S. and in Europe where premiums have also risen.

Government mints in Australia, the U.S, Canada, South Africa, Austria and the UK are reporting soaring bullion coin demand and are having difficulty meeting the scale of demand. 

Silver coins, in particular, are seeing rising premiums and delays in delivery.

Also little reported is the fact that refineries in Switzerland and elsewhere are also finding it hard to cope with the scale of international demand for gold and silver bars. 

It is clear that the recent fall in gold and silver prices was triggered by speculative traders operating in the futures markets and to a lesser extent by more speculative buyers of ETFs. 


Cross Currency Table – (Bloomberg)

Their short-term view of generating a trading profit is in stark contrast to the views of long term investors and store of value buyers of gold and silver bullion, as evidenced by the massive wave of physical bullion buying that has been seen in the last month.

 

The smart money will again accumulate and dollar cost average into positions on the dip.

 

 

FREE Ebook: Guide to Buying Gold

 

NEWS
Gold rises, snapping 7-session losing streak – Market Watch

CME Halted Silver Trading 4 Times as Prices Slid 9% - Nasdaq

Gold Swings as Investors Weigh Stimulus Outlook Amid ETP Decline - Bloomberg

Silver and gold lurch higher after early dive - Reuters

COMMENTARY 
Markets are on a crazy, sugar-fuelled journey – The Telegraph

Paul Craig Roberts: No Bear Market in Gold
 - GoldSeek

The Last Investable Moment for Silver – SilverSeek

Barron’s gets suspicious about gold market manipulation – Barron’s

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