The gold price shot up to a 2-week high on Monday, before retreating again as the week wore on. Market watchers see possible further falls although they mostly consider the downside is limited.
Investors in gold have been having a nerve wracking ride of late with several false dawns promising a return to the high $900s - and even bringing out predictions from some analysts of a rapid return to the $1,000 level seen earlier in the year. But, with the US dollar showing signs of strength and oil moving up and down as well, gold has tended to follow the direction suggested by the strengths and weaknesses of these other key influences, rather than plough its own furrow on fundamentals alone.
Gold is primarily looked at by the broader investment market, rather than by the strong gold bug element, as providing a hedge against inflation and against major political turmoil and unrest. Recent statements by Ben Bernanke, the Chairman of Governors of the US Federal Reserve, have suggested that inflation could be becoming a problem and has hinted that the recent spate of cuts in US interest rates to help stimulate the economy may be at an end, and that interest rate rises may be on the horizon to clamp down on inflation due to higher food and commodity prices - not least oil.
This, in turn, has seen a strengthening of the value of the dollar against other currencies (although not a very certain one as occasional bouts of poor economic data tend to reverse the perceived sentiment) and at times when the dollar strengthens and oil falls back from its peaks, the gold price tends downwards.
That is undoubtedly what has occurred over the past few days with a briefly weak dollar and surging oil pulling gold back above the $900 level, only to see it tumble back to the $860s this morning amid fears that it could fall even lower.
But, consider the inflation scenario. The high food, metal commodity and oil prices are filtering through and it is not only the US which may be considering interest rate rises to try and combat inflationary trends, but also the European Central Bank and the Bank of England among others, which have also intimated they may be set on the interest rate rise route. This may mean, should this all come about, that the relative strength of the US dollar engendered by an interest rate increase in the US may be negated by similar, or bigger, interest rate rises elsewhere.
Be that as it may, there are still some fairly serious political tensions in the Middle East, the gold price is getting to a level where jewellery gold purchases may start rising again, world mine supply may well fall again this year, the US economy is still close to recession, inflation is beginning to strike hard in countries like China. All these should be pointers to gold price strength in the medium term.
As we have pointed out here before, investment interest in gold by the greater investment community is very much based on economic perceptions. The past week has seen the pessimists on the economic front take a breather perhaps, but it wouldn't take much in the way of adverse news to bring the doomsayers back and the gold price could then yo yo back up again as fast and as far as it has come down.
The northern hemisphere summer is here. Activity in the markets which drives stock and commodity prices is traditionally at a lower level at this time of year, but come August returning analysts, fund managers and individual investors will be taking a hard look at what they see ahead for the rest of the year and unless the economic situation has shown further improvement, which at this time looks to be increasingly unlikely, the factors which have driven the gold price upwards over the past few years could be back in force again.
Analysts specialising in the gold market seem almost unanimous that the second half of the year will see a rising gold price trend again (although there are some notable exceptions). In the meantime the downside risk is probably limited - but is certainly there - and probably the majority of gold investors will be hanging in for better times ahead. Analysts see good downside resistance in the $850s and $860s. Watch the US indicators. They, and the dollar, and oil, look to continue to set the gold price trend in the immediate future.
Thursday, June 12, 2008
See What People Are Saying About... Speculators Gone Wild
There's definitely no inventory shortage -- when it comes to Fast Money viewer opinions over the rampant speculation in commodities, particularly crude.
Rick from Florida puts it succinctly, "Why are 'gas' and 'distillate' inventories INCREASING while crude oil inventories are DECREASING over several weeks?"
Fast Money fan Shannon in North Carolina offers a regulatory suggestion to curtail the out-of-control speculation: "make a restriction that traders must maintain the capacity to take delivery and show proof of that."
And Miller Tabak strategist Tony Crescenzi's prediction on Tuesday's show of a possible 500-point rebound next week continues to be met with doubt. Fast Money viewer Frank reminds us that consumer buying power has all but been killed by high energy prices and so Q2 earnings "will not be rosy."
Rick from Florida puts it succinctly, "Why are 'gas' and 'distillate' inventories INCREASING while crude oil inventories are DECREASING over several weeks?"
Fast Money fan Shannon in North Carolina offers a regulatory suggestion to curtail the out-of-control speculation: "make a restriction that traders must maintain the capacity to take delivery and show proof of that."
And Miller Tabak strategist Tony Crescenzi's prediction on Tuesday's show of a possible 500-point rebound next week continues to be met with doubt. Fast Money viewer Frank reminds us that consumer buying power has all but been killed by high energy prices and so Q2 earnings "will not be rosy."
Gold tumbles as retail sales hike demand for dollar
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Gold futures on Thursday fell to their lowest level since early May, upended after stronger U.S. retail sales bolstered demand for the dollar and tarnished the precious metal's allure as another asset option and hedge against inflation.
"The market's roller-coaster pattern continued amid the high-noon standoff developing between the Fed and the U.S. dollar's morticians," said Jon Nadler, senior analyst, Kitco Bullion Dealers.
That view was also strengthened by comments from Philadelphia Federal Reserve President Charles Plosser, who told the CNBC television network Thursday morning, "We need to act pre-emptively." Read The Fed.
After sliding to a session low of $131.55 an ounce, gold for August delivery recovered slightly to end $10.90 lower at $872.00 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Another loser in Nymex metals dealings, July silver fell 70 cents to settle at $16.48 an ounce.
In electronic trade late Thursday on Globex, gold for August delivery fell $1.00 to $871.00 an ounce.
The Commerce Department reported an unexpected 1% rise in retail sales last month, marking the fastest increase in six months. Read Economic Report.
The dollar gained strength in the belief that a rebound in retail sales would back the case for the Federal Reserve to hike U.S. interest rates, with the dollar index (DXY:US Dollar Index Future - Spot Price
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"Soaring prices will continue to plague the Fed, and keep policy on hold at the June FOMC meeting with a renewed bias in the balance of risk toward higher inflation -- despite ongoing concerns about the economy," said analysts at Action Economics. The Federal Open Market Committee sets U.S. monetary policy and benchmark interest rates.
Metals investors largely bypassed a Labor Department report that initial jobless claims jumped by 25,000 last week to 384,000. See more.
Another report from the Labor Department indicated that prices of goods imported into the country climbed 2.3% in May, less than the 2.7% growth that analysts had been looking for. Read full story.
Bullion's sharp retreat stands in contrast to gains on Wednesday, with bullion prices on a volatile roller-coaster ride tracking the movements in crude-oil prices. Investors buy gold for its appeal as a hedge against oil-generated inflation but have tended to sell the precious metal when the price of crude moves lower.
On Thursday, crude futures climbed 36 cents to close at $136.74 a barrel on Nymex, after spending the bulk of the day on the decline.
"The market's roller-coaster pattern continued amid the high-noon standoff developing between the Fed and the U.S. dollar's morticians," said Jon Nadler, senior analyst, Kitco Bullion Dealers.
That view was also strengthened by comments from Philadelphia Federal Reserve President Charles Plosser, who told the CNBC television network Thursday morning, "We need to act pre-emptively." Read The Fed.
After sliding to a session low of $131.55 an ounce, gold for August delivery recovered slightly to end $10.90 lower at $872.00 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Another loser in Nymex metals dealings, July silver fell 70 cents to settle at $16.48 an ounce.
In electronic trade late Thursday on Globex, gold for August delivery fell $1.00 to $871.00 an ounce.
The Commerce Department reported an unexpected 1% rise in retail sales last month, marking the fastest increase in six months. Read Economic Report.
The dollar gained strength in the belief that a rebound in retail sales would back the case for the Federal Reserve to hike U.S. interest rates, with the dollar index (DXY:US Dollar Index Future - Spot Price
News, chart, profile, more
Last: 73.74+0.45+0.62%
10:40pm 06/12/2008
Delayed quote dataAdd to portfolio
Analyst
Create alertInsider
Discuss
Financials
Sponsored by:
DXY 73.74, +0.45, +0.6%) , which tracks the greenback against major currency rivals, gaining nearly 0.9% to 73.88. See Currencies.
"Soaring prices will continue to plague the Fed, and keep policy on hold at the June FOMC meeting with a renewed bias in the balance of risk toward higher inflation -- despite ongoing concerns about the economy," said analysts at Action Economics. The Federal Open Market Committee sets U.S. monetary policy and benchmark interest rates.
Metals investors largely bypassed a Labor Department report that initial jobless claims jumped by 25,000 last week to 384,000. See more.
Another report from the Labor Department indicated that prices of goods imported into the country climbed 2.3% in May, less than the 2.7% growth that analysts had been looking for. Read full story.
Bullion's sharp retreat stands in contrast to gains on Wednesday, with bullion prices on a volatile roller-coaster ride tracking the movements in crude-oil prices. Investors buy gold for its appeal as a hedge against oil-generated inflation but have tended to sell the precious metal when the price of crude moves lower.
On Thursday, crude futures climbed 36 cents to close at $136.74 a barrel on Nymex, after spending the bulk of the day on the decline.
Oil declines to $132 as greenback posts gains
Oil prices fell sharply yesterday as the dollar moved higher and forced crude to lose some of its appeal as a hedge against inflation.
Light, sweet crude for July delivery fell $4.38 to $132 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Given the volatile price moves of recent days, oil's decline was not seen as a sign of a changing trend. Prices have gone through several sharp swings over the past week, rising more than $16 last Thursday and Friday as the dollar weakened, falling more than $7 earlier this week as the greenback gained, and jumping back more than $5 on Wednesday as supplies and the dollar fell.
Analysts say oil is range trading, waiting for direction from a significant move in the dollar or change in supply and demand fundamentals.
Many analysts believe the market's overall sentiment remains bullish, and the new records are a real possibility in coming days. Oil reached its latest trading record of $139.12 on Friday.
"The price movement of crude has been ... dictated by what we've seen in the greenback," said Edward Meir, an analyst at an analyst at MF Global UK, in a research note.
Yesterday, the dollar gained ground after the Commerce Department said retail sales rose in May by the biggest amount in six months as 57 million tax rebate checks reached consumers. The 15-nation euro fell to $1.5409 from $1.5571 late Wednesday.
Investors who bought commodities such as oil to protect against inflation when the dollar was falling tend to sell when the greenback gains ground. Also, a stronger dollar makes oil more expensive to investors overseas.
The dollar's protracted decline has been a major factor behind the doubling of oil prices over the past year.
Recent statements by U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and U.S. President George W. Bush emphasising the importance of strengthening the dollar helped the U.S.
currency gain ground. But analysts believe more than words are needed to turn the tide; an actual interest rate increase is needed to send the dollar definitively higher, and oil prices down, said Stephen Schork, an analyst and trader in Villanova, Pennsylvania.
In other Nymex trading, July natural gas futures rose 14 cents to $12.80 per 1,000 cubic feet after the Energy Department said inventories rose last week by 80 billion cubic feet, at the low end of analyst estimates.
In London, July Brent crude fell $3.55 to $131.47 on the ICE Futures exchange.
Light, sweet crude for July delivery fell $4.38 to $132 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Given the volatile price moves of recent days, oil's decline was not seen as a sign of a changing trend. Prices have gone through several sharp swings over the past week, rising more than $16 last Thursday and Friday as the dollar weakened, falling more than $7 earlier this week as the greenback gained, and jumping back more than $5 on Wednesday as supplies and the dollar fell.
Analysts say oil is range trading, waiting for direction from a significant move in the dollar or change in supply and demand fundamentals.
Many analysts believe the market's overall sentiment remains bullish, and the new records are a real possibility in coming days. Oil reached its latest trading record of $139.12 on Friday.
"The price movement of crude has been ... dictated by what we've seen in the greenback," said Edward Meir, an analyst at an analyst at MF Global UK, in a research note.
Yesterday, the dollar gained ground after the Commerce Department said retail sales rose in May by the biggest amount in six months as 57 million tax rebate checks reached consumers. The 15-nation euro fell to $1.5409 from $1.5571 late Wednesday.
Investors who bought commodities such as oil to protect against inflation when the dollar was falling tend to sell when the greenback gains ground. Also, a stronger dollar makes oil more expensive to investors overseas.
The dollar's protracted decline has been a major factor behind the doubling of oil prices over the past year.
Recent statements by U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and U.S. President George W. Bush emphasising the importance of strengthening the dollar helped the U.S.
currency gain ground. But analysts believe more than words are needed to turn the tide; an actual interest rate increase is needed to send the dollar definitively higher, and oil prices down, said Stephen Schork, an analyst and trader in Villanova, Pennsylvania.
In other Nymex trading, July natural gas futures rose 14 cents to $12.80 per 1,000 cubic feet after the Energy Department said inventories rose last week by 80 billion cubic feet, at the low end of analyst estimates.
In London, July Brent crude fell $3.55 to $131.47 on the ICE Futures exchange.
Gulf shares advance on dollar gains
Dubai: Gulf shares advanced on speculation the dollar's gain to a three-month high against the yen will lower companies' costs and boost profits.
Abu Dhabi National Energy Co gained after the company's board approved a plan to sell convertible bonds. Qatar Islamic Bank rose to the highest in almost three years as Investor Daily Indonesia reported the bank may soon open a branch in the country. Kuwait Financing and Investment Co jumped on plans to increase capital and convert to an Islamic firm.
"The dollar's gain is good for the region's companies as it makes purchases, of raw materials and other products from non-dollar countries, cheaper," Karim Helmy, assistant vice president at Shuaa Securities, said from Abu Dhabi.
The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange General Index rose 0.4 per cent to 5,125.89. Qatar's Doha Securities Market Index added 0.5 per cent, bringing the six-day rally to 4.4 per cent. The Kuwait Stock Exchange Index advanced for a fifth day, increasing 0.3 per cent.
The dollar rose to 107.13 yen, the highest since late February, before trading at 106.77 yen at 5.15pm in Dubai. Against the euro, the US currency increased to $1.5510.
Abu Dhabi National Energy jumped 4.4 per cent to Dh4.02, its biggest one-day gain since April 30.
Bond sale
The state-controlled energy company, known as Taqa, said its board approved a plan to sell convertible bonds worth Dh4.15 billion ($1.13 billion).
Qatar Islamic Bank climbed 4.1 per cent to 165.9 riyals, its highest close since October 2005. The country's biggest Islamic bank may open its first office as early as next week, Investor Daily Indonesia reported, citing Alwi Shihab, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's envoy to the Middle East.
Kuwait Financing and Investment surged 3.5 per cent to 300 fils. The board of the commercial and personal-financing firm will meet today to discuss plans to increase its capital and convert to an Islamic financing company.
Saudi Arabia's Tadawul All Share Index fell 0.1 per cent. The Muscat Securities Market 30 Index rose 0.5 per cent, while the Bahrain All Share Index dropped 0.2 per cent. The Dubai Financial Market General Index declined 1.2 per cent.
Abu Dhabi National Energy Co gained after the company's board approved a plan to sell convertible bonds. Qatar Islamic Bank rose to the highest in almost three years as Investor Daily Indonesia reported the bank may soon open a branch in the country. Kuwait Financing and Investment Co jumped on plans to increase capital and convert to an Islamic firm.
"The dollar's gain is good for the region's companies as it makes purchases, of raw materials and other products from non-dollar countries, cheaper," Karim Helmy, assistant vice president at Shuaa Securities, said from Abu Dhabi.
The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange General Index rose 0.4 per cent to 5,125.89. Qatar's Doha Securities Market Index added 0.5 per cent, bringing the six-day rally to 4.4 per cent. The Kuwait Stock Exchange Index advanced for a fifth day, increasing 0.3 per cent.
The dollar rose to 107.13 yen, the highest since late February, before trading at 106.77 yen at 5.15pm in Dubai. Against the euro, the US currency increased to $1.5510.
Abu Dhabi National Energy jumped 4.4 per cent to Dh4.02, its biggest one-day gain since April 30.
Bond sale
The state-controlled energy company, known as Taqa, said its board approved a plan to sell convertible bonds worth Dh4.15 billion ($1.13 billion).
Qatar Islamic Bank climbed 4.1 per cent to 165.9 riyals, its highest close since October 2005. The country's biggest Islamic bank may open its first office as early as next week, Investor Daily Indonesia reported, citing Alwi Shihab, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's envoy to the Middle East.
Kuwait Financing and Investment surged 3.5 per cent to 300 fils. The board of the commercial and personal-financing firm will meet today to discuss plans to increase its capital and convert to an Islamic financing company.
Saudi Arabia's Tadawul All Share Index fell 0.1 per cent. The Muscat Securities Market 30 Index rose 0.5 per cent, while the Bahrain All Share Index dropped 0.2 per cent. The Dubai Financial Market General Index declined 1.2 per cent.
Fed, Dollar bears take away Gold's gains
Gold's midweek gains were undone in a hurry overnight as the roller-coaster pattern continued amid the standoff developing between the Fed and dollar bears.
Depressed by a surging (up .64 to 73.87 on the index) US dollar and a $3 slide in crude oil (to $133.50) the precious metal gave back all of yesterday's gains and fell to a low of $864 ahead of the New York opening this morning.
Strong anti-inflation rhetoric from the Fed's Mr. Plosser (he said "interest rates will have to rise) augmented expectations of US interest rate hikes and pushed their possible date of enactment closer to the present. Adding to the dollar's rise were reports expecting retail sales in the US to show a decent gain in the wake of stimulus cheques which were mailed to US taxpayers finding their way into store cash registers in lieu of bank savings accounts as some had expected.
New York spot trading opened with a $15 (1.72%) loss, quoted at $865 bid per ounce, as players reevaluate the possibility that this could be the week (or indeed, the day) during which gold breaks through the $863 low and heads towards the $850 critical support area.
We now look for this break to materialize shortly. The gain in retail sales (up 1% to the strongest level in six months) adds to the case being made for a hike in interest rates. Initial jobless claims moved higher, adding 25,000 individuals to those filing for benefits and import prices rose 2.3% due largely to oil values.
The US dollar broke through the 74 level shortly after the retail numbers hit the wires. Silver was off 50 cents to $16.38 while platinum lost $38 to $2005 and palladium fell $2 to $423 per ounce. Gold's losses widened to $21 and hit a low of $859.50 within five minutes of the retail figures' release. The markets are now pricing in a 125 basis point rate hike by this time next year.
Depressed by a surging (up .64 to 73.87 on the index) US dollar and a $3 slide in crude oil (to $133.50) the precious metal gave back all of yesterday's gains and fell to a low of $864 ahead of the New York opening this morning.
Strong anti-inflation rhetoric from the Fed's Mr. Plosser (he said "interest rates will have to rise) augmented expectations of US interest rate hikes and pushed their possible date of enactment closer to the present. Adding to the dollar's rise were reports expecting retail sales in the US to show a decent gain in the wake of stimulus cheques which were mailed to US taxpayers finding their way into store cash registers in lieu of bank savings accounts as some had expected.
New York spot trading opened with a $15 (1.72%) loss, quoted at $865 bid per ounce, as players reevaluate the possibility that this could be the week (or indeed, the day) during which gold breaks through the $863 low and heads towards the $850 critical support area.
We now look for this break to materialize shortly. The gain in retail sales (up 1% to the strongest level in six months) adds to the case being made for a hike in interest rates. Initial jobless claims moved higher, adding 25,000 individuals to those filing for benefits and import prices rose 2.3% due largely to oil values.
The US dollar broke through the 74 level shortly after the retail numbers hit the wires. Silver was off 50 cents to $16.38 while platinum lost $38 to $2005 and palladium fell $2 to $423 per ounce. Gold's losses widened to $21 and hit a low of $859.50 within five minutes of the retail figures' release. The markets are now pricing in a 125 basis point rate hike by this time next year.
Gold prices fall on rising dollar, demand to pick up
Gold futures and spot prices eased in Indian markets mirroring the international weakness in the metal. The 05 July Contract on Multi Commodity Exchange of India (MCX) fell by 1.02 percetn to 12,331 as against previous close of Rs 12458.
In global markets gold extended losses on Tuesday and dropped below $890 an ounce after the US dollar gained on expectations of a possible interest rate hike, reducing the metal's appeal as an alternative investment.
Gold declined to $889,80/890,70 an ounce from $894,00/896,00 late in New York on Monday. Jewellery makers were taking a wait and watch attitude in expectation of further fall in prices, dealers said.
The dollar hit a three-month high against the yen and rose against other currencies after Federal Reserve chairperson Ben Bernanke said the rise in oil prices added to inflation risks, stoking expectations for rate hikes this year.
Oil was up 68 cents at $135,02 a barrel on Tuesday, having settled $4.19 lower the previous day. US crude jumped to a record $139,12 on Friday in its biggest one-day gain ever.
Silver edged up to $17,07/17,14 an ounce from $17,06/17,16 late in New York on Monday, when it hit a high of $17,67 an ounce, its highest since May 27.
Gold futures for June delivery on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange fell $4,4 an ounce to $893,7.
The most active Tokyo platinum contract for April 2009 delivery on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange fell 48 yen per gram to 6 826 yen despite a weaker yen, under pressure from a weak cash market.
Spot platinum fell to $2 022/2 042 an ounce from $2 037,50/2 057,50 late in New York.
Palladium firmed to $424,00/429,00 an ounce from $422,00/427,00.
The benchmark August contract on MCX was trading at Rs 12335 down by 1.05 percent from previous close of Rs 12462.
In global markets gold extended losses on Tuesday and dropped below $890 an ounce after the US dollar gained on expectations of a possible interest rate hike, reducing the metal's appeal as an alternative investment.
Gold declined to $889,80/890,70 an ounce from $894,00/896,00 late in New York on Monday. Jewellery makers were taking a wait and watch attitude in expectation of further fall in prices, dealers said.
The dollar hit a three-month high against the yen and rose against other currencies after Federal Reserve chairperson Ben Bernanke said the rise in oil prices added to inflation risks, stoking expectations for rate hikes this year.
Oil was up 68 cents at $135,02 a barrel on Tuesday, having settled $4.19 lower the previous day. US crude jumped to a record $139,12 on Friday in its biggest one-day gain ever.
Silver edged up to $17,07/17,14 an ounce from $17,06/17,16 late in New York on Monday, when it hit a high of $17,67 an ounce, its highest since May 27.
Gold futures for June delivery on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange fell $4,4 an ounce to $893,7.
The most active Tokyo platinum contract for April 2009 delivery on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange fell 48 yen per gram to 6 826 yen despite a weaker yen, under pressure from a weak cash market.
Spot platinum fell to $2 022/2 042 an ounce from $2 037,50/2 057,50 late in New York.
Palladium firmed to $424,00/429,00 an ounce from $422,00/427,00.
The benchmark August contract on MCX was trading at Rs 12335 down by 1.05 percent from previous close of Rs 12462.
Gold trading gets a boost in China
SHANGHAI: Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE), China's only spot gold trading bourse, has got a golden boost after banking major HSBC begin tradin the bourse for the first time.
Besides HSBC, two other foreign banks including Standard Chartered Bank (China) Ltd. and the Bank of Nova Scotia (Guangzhou Branch) have received approval from Chinese government to trade gold on SGE.
Chinesse government has not paced any extra criteria on foreign banks such as trading volume or type when compared with other SGE members.
Official said the involvement of foreign banks could boost gold trading on the SGE. China's domestic gold market began opening up last June, when five foreign banks, HSBC, Standard Chartered, the Bank of Nova Scotia, UBS AG and Societe Generale, were granted preliminary approvals from the PBOC to become SGE members.
It has taken almost a year for HSBC to begin trading gold on the SGE after receiving preliminary approval from the PBOC. The lengthy assessment period was to ensure that the opening of the domestic gold market is in the nation's interests.
The increased participation of banks will expand market liquidity while making arbitrage between the domestic and international markets more common.
Foreign institutions are not yet allowed to trade on the gold futures market, which opened in January. However, as foreign institutions increase their standing in the domestic spot market, it will put added pressure on regulators to liberalize and open up other commodity markets to foreign participation as well.
Besides HSBC, two other foreign banks including Standard Chartered Bank (China) Ltd. and the Bank of Nova Scotia (Guangzhou Branch) have received approval from Chinese government to trade gold on SGE.
Chinesse government has not paced any extra criteria on foreign banks such as trading volume or type when compared with other SGE members.
Official said the involvement of foreign banks could boost gold trading on the SGE. China's domestic gold market began opening up last June, when five foreign banks, HSBC, Standard Chartered, the Bank of Nova Scotia, UBS AG and Societe Generale, were granted preliminary approvals from the PBOC to become SGE members.
It has taken almost a year for HSBC to begin trading gold on the SGE after receiving preliminary approval from the PBOC. The lengthy assessment period was to ensure that the opening of the domestic gold market is in the nation's interests.
The increased participation of banks will expand market liquidity while making arbitrage between the domestic and international markets more common.
Foreign institutions are not yet allowed to trade on the gold futures market, which opened in January. However, as foreign institutions increase their standing in the domestic spot market, it will put added pressure on regulators to liberalize and open up other commodity markets to foreign participation as well.
'Gold price will continue to rise'
Louis Goluboff, managing director of Emerald Capital Investment International, a newly launched financial consulting firm, talks about the influences and pressures weighing on the precious metals sector. His company's flagship fund, The Emerald Explorer Fund, focuses on mining and exploration primarily in the Canadian resources market. In this exclusive interview with The Gold Report, Goluboff tells us why he thinks the juniors are a good play and discusses a few of his favorite names.
TGR: How do you explain what's going on with gold?
LG: I think both the fundamentals as well as speculative investors were pushing the market up. A lot of hedge funds started to sell out of the high end of their valuations, so the gold price dropped down a little bit. But the fundamentals remain unchanged.
TGR: You're saying that both the fundamentals and the speculative side are strong for gold?
LG: That's right. But I'm mostly looking at the U. S. economy and what’s happened with the currency—the credit crisis and the Bear Stearns bailout. I don’t think that’s over—maybe you’ve hit a bit of a bottom with the bailout, but there's still a mortgage crisis in progress. This will keep weighing on the U.S. dollar and that's good for the gold price.
TGR: Why hasn't gold gone up? The Fed took another quarter point off the interest rates in late April and gold went down.
LG: Well, I think it's because of all the sales coming from the speculative side of the market. As those funds get squeezed, they’ve got to sell what’s liquid, and if gold is liquid, they sell it. That’s why a lot of the equities have also been underperforming this past year. The juniors have been hit hardest. The large caps have traded more in line with the price of gold.
TGR: What should an investor be doing with gold—hoarding it or selling it?
LG: Gold's recent pullbacks certainly provide good buying opportunities. I think you'd be well off to invest in gold at these prices. When gold goes up over $1000 and into the $1100 range, you might want to sell in the short term. Overall, I think the price of gold is going to continue to rise.
TGR: Do you care to speculate about how far it’s going to rise?
LG: I don’t think you’re going to see $2000 gold so fast, but it'll be back over $1000 by the end of the year.
TGR: You expect it to go above $1000 before the summer ends?
LG: I think you will see it back above $1000 in the early fall.
TGR: As gold drifts higher in the $900 range and into $1000, what does that mean for our equity plays— both the majors and the juniors?
LG: Right now there’s a lot of cash on the sidelines for a lot of funds. You’re going to start seeing some of that cash go back into market. As the price of gold goes back up, the seniors will be the first to benefit from that. Then some of the money will start going into the juniors. Some of these companies are trading at their 52-week lows despite the rise in commodities prices.
TGR: Will the seasonally lower prices of the metals influence that?
LG: The late summer and early fall are seasonally strong, but even if the price of the underlying commodities drifts down a little bit, I think that the equities will start to trade up with the rest of the equity markets as money starts to come back into play.
TGR: So, you're predicting that the market will start going up?
LG: Yes.
TGR: How do you think the juniors will do over the next six months?
LG: People will reconsider the juniors. There will be quite a bit of consolidation in the market this year and over the next couple of years as some of the seniors go looking for production. They will look to the juniors—let them do the hard work and then, as they get closer to production and defining resources, the seniors will build their own resource base by taking a position in a junior, doing a joint venture, or acquiring the company outright.
TGR: What guidelines do you use to determine which juniors make a safer investment?
LG: Investors have to keep in mind that when they’re investing in the junior mining sector or in any small cap for that matter, whether it is the tech sector or biotech or whatever, that these are very risky securities. It’s fine to have them as a piece of your portfolio, but you should be diversified regardless. So, I don’t think you could ever say that they’re “safe investments.”
TGR: What are your guidelines regarding countries or things to avoid?
LG: There are parts of Africa I won’t invest in and I tend to stay away from politically unstable countries like Venezuela. Where there's the risk of government appropriation of mining concessions, you really have to ask yourself whether it's worth getting involved in a play like that.
TGR: On the other hand, some investors say that when things look really bad, that’s the time to start investing.
LG: That can be a great philosophy and it's why I like the junior sector right now. When you get a lot of speculative buying the market gets too hot, generally that’s a good time to take some profits. When people get pessimistic and fearful, that can be a good time to make an investment. But you always have to balance the risks you’re taking with the rewards you’re hoping to get.
TGR: Are you looking for juniors that are pre- 43-101? How do you evaluate juniors even in stable countries?
LG: We really judge them on a case-by-case basis. We’ll look at private companies that are about to complete a 43-101. Generally you do like to see a 43-101, and you want to see them publicly traded.
TGR: Do you have any preference for the more unusual precious metals?
LG: I prefer gold and gold stocks. There’s been some difficulty on the base metal side, but I do like uranium, zinc, copper and nickel.
TGR: Uranium has really come way off of its highs.
LG: Uranium has gone into a difficult spot but people forget that the long-term contract price is what counts. If the long-term contract price starts to come down, that’s when you have to question what’s happening. A very small percentage of the actual volume of trades takes place at the spot price or on the market. Most of the purchasing by the utilities is done off the market in and around the long-term contract price. And the long-term contract price has remained pretty stable.
TGR: Would you advise an investor to be overweight or underweight with regard to precious and base metals?
LG: I’d definitely be overweight in the uranium sector, especially since a lot of investors have focused on the spot price and considering what’s happened in the junior market overall. I think there’s a real good opportunity here to be investing in junior uranium companies. Again, you have to be careful since juniors are risky, but I think there will be a lot of consolidation in that market. There's a real gap between supply and demand with the potential for supply disruptions.
TGR: Do you have any specific companies you could discuss for our readers?
LG: NFX Gold Inc. (NFX.V) is a perfect example of a junior exploration company in the gold sector that’s really been hurt by the downturn in the junior equity markets. You can find a real upside in stocks like NFX. Their 52-week high was at $1.25, and they’re down to $.45 today. The junior market revolves around finding potentially good deposits. NFX has a joint venture with Maximus at Larder Lake and their recent results point to a significant deposit three miles west of the old Kerr Addison Mine, which was an 11-million ounce producer.
That's not their only potential. They do have joint ventures with other companies, but certainly this is their most interesting. They have a 40,000-meter drill program going on right now in the area in a previously significant gold camp. It's in northern Ontario—a mining-friendly district. Sometimes half the battle is getting drills on the property and good people. There are a lot of good people in Larder Lake and the surrounding areas.
TGR: How do you explain what's going on with gold?
LG: I think both the fundamentals as well as speculative investors were pushing the market up. A lot of hedge funds started to sell out of the high end of their valuations, so the gold price dropped down a little bit. But the fundamentals remain unchanged.
TGR: You're saying that both the fundamentals and the speculative side are strong for gold?
LG: That's right. But I'm mostly looking at the U. S. economy and what’s happened with the currency—the credit crisis and the Bear Stearns bailout. I don’t think that’s over—maybe you’ve hit a bit of a bottom with the bailout, but there's still a mortgage crisis in progress. This will keep weighing on the U.S. dollar and that's good for the gold price.
TGR: Why hasn't gold gone up? The Fed took another quarter point off the interest rates in late April and gold went down.
LG: Well, I think it's because of all the sales coming from the speculative side of the market. As those funds get squeezed, they’ve got to sell what’s liquid, and if gold is liquid, they sell it. That’s why a lot of the equities have also been underperforming this past year. The juniors have been hit hardest. The large caps have traded more in line with the price of gold.
TGR: What should an investor be doing with gold—hoarding it or selling it?
LG: Gold's recent pullbacks certainly provide good buying opportunities. I think you'd be well off to invest in gold at these prices. When gold goes up over $1000 and into the $1100 range, you might want to sell in the short term. Overall, I think the price of gold is going to continue to rise.
TGR: Do you care to speculate about how far it’s going to rise?
LG: I don’t think you’re going to see $2000 gold so fast, but it'll be back over $1000 by the end of the year.
TGR: You expect it to go above $1000 before the summer ends?
LG: I think you will see it back above $1000 in the early fall.
TGR: As gold drifts higher in the $900 range and into $1000, what does that mean for our equity plays— both the majors and the juniors?
LG: Right now there’s a lot of cash on the sidelines for a lot of funds. You’re going to start seeing some of that cash go back into market. As the price of gold goes back up, the seniors will be the first to benefit from that. Then some of the money will start going into the juniors. Some of these companies are trading at their 52-week lows despite the rise in commodities prices.
TGR: Will the seasonally lower prices of the metals influence that?
LG: The late summer and early fall are seasonally strong, but even if the price of the underlying commodities drifts down a little bit, I think that the equities will start to trade up with the rest of the equity markets as money starts to come back into play.
TGR: So, you're predicting that the market will start going up?
LG: Yes.
TGR: How do you think the juniors will do over the next six months?
LG: People will reconsider the juniors. There will be quite a bit of consolidation in the market this year and over the next couple of years as some of the seniors go looking for production. They will look to the juniors—let them do the hard work and then, as they get closer to production and defining resources, the seniors will build their own resource base by taking a position in a junior, doing a joint venture, or acquiring the company outright.
TGR: What guidelines do you use to determine which juniors make a safer investment?
LG: Investors have to keep in mind that when they’re investing in the junior mining sector or in any small cap for that matter, whether it is the tech sector or biotech or whatever, that these are very risky securities. It’s fine to have them as a piece of your portfolio, but you should be diversified regardless. So, I don’t think you could ever say that they’re “safe investments.”
TGR: What are your guidelines regarding countries or things to avoid?
LG: There are parts of Africa I won’t invest in and I tend to stay away from politically unstable countries like Venezuela. Where there's the risk of government appropriation of mining concessions, you really have to ask yourself whether it's worth getting involved in a play like that.
TGR: On the other hand, some investors say that when things look really bad, that’s the time to start investing.
LG: That can be a great philosophy and it's why I like the junior sector right now. When you get a lot of speculative buying the market gets too hot, generally that’s a good time to take some profits. When people get pessimistic and fearful, that can be a good time to make an investment. But you always have to balance the risks you’re taking with the rewards you’re hoping to get.
TGR: Are you looking for juniors that are pre- 43-101? How do you evaluate juniors even in stable countries?
LG: We really judge them on a case-by-case basis. We’ll look at private companies that are about to complete a 43-101. Generally you do like to see a 43-101, and you want to see them publicly traded.
TGR: Do you have any preference for the more unusual precious metals?
LG: I prefer gold and gold stocks. There’s been some difficulty on the base metal side, but I do like uranium, zinc, copper and nickel.
TGR: Uranium has really come way off of its highs.
LG: Uranium has gone into a difficult spot but people forget that the long-term contract price is what counts. If the long-term contract price starts to come down, that’s when you have to question what’s happening. A very small percentage of the actual volume of trades takes place at the spot price or on the market. Most of the purchasing by the utilities is done off the market in and around the long-term contract price. And the long-term contract price has remained pretty stable.
TGR: Would you advise an investor to be overweight or underweight with regard to precious and base metals?
LG: I’d definitely be overweight in the uranium sector, especially since a lot of investors have focused on the spot price and considering what’s happened in the junior market overall. I think there’s a real good opportunity here to be investing in junior uranium companies. Again, you have to be careful since juniors are risky, but I think there will be a lot of consolidation in that market. There's a real gap between supply and demand with the potential for supply disruptions.
TGR: Do you have any specific companies you could discuss for our readers?
LG: NFX Gold Inc. (NFX.V) is a perfect example of a junior exploration company in the gold sector that’s really been hurt by the downturn in the junior equity markets. You can find a real upside in stocks like NFX. Their 52-week high was at $1.25, and they’re down to $.45 today. The junior market revolves around finding potentially good deposits. NFX has a joint venture with Maximus at Larder Lake and their recent results point to a significant deposit three miles west of the old Kerr Addison Mine, which was an 11-million ounce producer.
That's not their only potential. They do have joint ventures with other companies, but certainly this is their most interesting. They have a 40,000-meter drill program going on right now in the area in a previously significant gold camp. It's in northern Ontario—a mining-friendly district. Sometimes half the battle is getting drills on the property and good people. There are a lot of good people in Larder Lake and the surrounding areas.
Who sets global Crude Oil prices?
As Crude Oil is setting the global economy on fire and fears of recession, there is a frequent question people ask. Who sets the oil prices?
The answer generally comes: oil price is set by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), a permanent intergovernmental oil organization, created in 1960 by Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.
But the fact is that it is not OPEC that sets the global oil price. One of the most common misconceptions about OPEC is that the Organization is responsible for setting crude oil prices.
Although OPEC did in fact set crude oil prices from the early 1970s to the mid-1980s, this is no longer the case. It is true that OPEC's Member Countries do voluntary restrain their crude oil production in order to stabilize the oil market and avoid harmful and unnecessary price fluctuations, but this is not the same thing as setting prices.
In today's complex global markets, the price of crude oil is set by movements on the three major international petroleum exchanges, all of which have their own Web sites featuring information about oil prices.
They are the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX, http://www.nymex.com), the International Petroleum Exchange in London (IPE, http://www.ipe.uk.com) and the Singapore International Monetary Exchange (SIMEX, http://www.simex.com.sg).
OPEC does not control the oil market. OPEC Member Countries produce about 45 per cent of the world's crude oil and 18 per cent of its natural gas.
However, OPEC's oil exports represent about 55 per cent of the crude oil traded internationally. Therefore, OPEC can have a strong influence on the oil market, especially if it decides to reduce or increase its level of production.
The answer generally comes: oil price is set by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), a permanent intergovernmental oil organization, created in 1960 by Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela.
But the fact is that it is not OPEC that sets the global oil price. One of the most common misconceptions about OPEC is that the Organization is responsible for setting crude oil prices.
Although OPEC did in fact set crude oil prices from the early 1970s to the mid-1980s, this is no longer the case. It is true that OPEC's Member Countries do voluntary restrain their crude oil production in order to stabilize the oil market and avoid harmful and unnecessary price fluctuations, but this is not the same thing as setting prices.
In today's complex global markets, the price of crude oil is set by movements on the three major international petroleum exchanges, all of which have their own Web sites featuring information about oil prices.
They are the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX, http://www.nymex.com), the International Petroleum Exchange in London (IPE, http://www.ipe.uk.com) and the Singapore International Monetary Exchange (SIMEX, http://www.simex.com.sg).
OPEC does not control the oil market. OPEC Member Countries produce about 45 per cent of the world's crude oil and 18 per cent of its natural gas.
However, OPEC's oil exports represent about 55 per cent of the crude oil traded internationally. Therefore, OPEC can have a strong influence on the oil market, especially if it decides to reduce or increase its level of production.
How big is the global Gold investment market?
Gold is attracting growing interest from a small number of pension funds, some of whom may already be building their exposure to gold, usually as part of a basket of commodities. Why is gold attracting people? And why is it that people love to invest in gold?
Find out here why gold lures people:
Why do people invest in gold?
People around the world invest in gold for many different reasons. Many people view gold as a reliable source of value in times of trouble. Gold offers insurance against stock market failure and has proved to be a liquid, transportable asset for refugees needing to flee their countries. More and more people understand that by investing in gold, they are protecting themselves against a range of risks, such as weakness of the US dollar; unexpected inflation; and low returns on other assets. Some people simply want to own as asset they can trust, because it is real and holds its value over the long term.
Is gold really a good hedge against inflation?
There is substantial evidence to support the view that gold is a good long run hedge against inflation. In the short-run, the gold price may deviate from its long run inflation hedge value, and may take a number of years to revert to this constant. Gold is not a perfect hedge against inflation, but it is the only hedge that has been tried and tested over centuries that have seen currencies rise and fall.
Is gold a global currency?
Gold has retained its role as a monetary asset. Central banks around the world still hold around 12 per cent of their reserves in gold, and even private individuals can and do use gold to settle payments. However, gold is not “issued” by any particular government and is not beholden to any political regime. In this sense, it is a truly global, international currency, free of political or national association and liability.
Is gold a commodity?
Gold is used for different purposes, and these certainly include commodity uses. Industrial applications of gold account for about 10% of demand each year. Demand for gold as jewellery absorbs around 75% of the gold supplied to the market each year, with the balance made up by investment. Gold is certainly included in the leading tradable commodity indices. So for many practical purposes, gold is viewed as a commodity.
How can gold be both a currency and a commodity? Isn’t this a contradiction?
For most of history, currencies have been backed by commodities, or metals were used as money directly. Even today, when national currencies are no longer backed by real assets, gold maintains its value as an independent, international currency but at the same time is used as a commodity, and certainly viewed as a commodity, by many investors around the world. Gold’s ability to play this dual role successfully underpins its usefulness to investors.
Is gold a high risk or low risk investment?
In general, gold is considered a low risk investment because its price is typically not very volatile. The gold price tends not to fluctuate more than the world’s largest blue-chip stock market indices like the S&P 500. That is why many investors with low-risk profiles are attracted to gold. However, investors in high risk assets also find gold useful because they can use it to manage their risk.
What types of returns does gold offer investors?
Although very large investors can lend their gold out and receive a “gold” interest rate, in practice this yield is very low. So the main return on gold is capital gain or loss which is realised by selling some gold. This is no different from many other assets, including, for example, zero coupon bonds.
How big is the gold investment market?
In 2005, the overall gold market saw inflows of US$ 56 billion, of which nearly US$ 9 billion represented investment flows. Ultimately, the size of the gold investment market is some proportion of all the gold that has ever been mined. On this basis, gold represents around 4% of the market capitalisation of global bonds and equities.
How can I invest in gold?
There are many ways to invest in gold and these are explained fully on www.gold.org/value. How an individual chooses to invest in gold depends on the size of the investment, his/her reason for investing, and the purpose of the investment. People invest directly in bars and coins; through gold futures, options, warrants and certificates. They may also hold gold in metal accounts with their bank in just the same way they could have a foreign currency account. The most popular, fastest-growing form of gold investment is also the newest: gold traded in the form of a security on stock exchanges around the world, generally referred to as “gold ETFs”.
It is appropriate for pension funds to invest in gold?
Gold certainly merits the attention of pension funds who are seeking good portfolio diversifiers and wish to reduce the volatility of their returns, particularly in response to changes in International Accounting Standards and as part of a liability-matching strategy. Gold is attracting growing interest from a small number of pension funds, some of whom may already be building their exposure to gold, usually as part of a basket of commodities.
Find out here why gold lures people:
Why do people invest in gold?
People around the world invest in gold for many different reasons. Many people view gold as a reliable source of value in times of trouble. Gold offers insurance against stock market failure and has proved to be a liquid, transportable asset for refugees needing to flee their countries. More and more people understand that by investing in gold, they are protecting themselves against a range of risks, such as weakness of the US dollar; unexpected inflation; and low returns on other assets. Some people simply want to own as asset they can trust, because it is real and holds its value over the long term.
Is gold really a good hedge against inflation?
There is substantial evidence to support the view that gold is a good long run hedge against inflation. In the short-run, the gold price may deviate from its long run inflation hedge value, and may take a number of years to revert to this constant. Gold is not a perfect hedge against inflation, but it is the only hedge that has been tried and tested over centuries that have seen currencies rise and fall.
Is gold a global currency?
Gold has retained its role as a monetary asset. Central banks around the world still hold around 12 per cent of their reserves in gold, and even private individuals can and do use gold to settle payments. However, gold is not “issued” by any particular government and is not beholden to any political regime. In this sense, it is a truly global, international currency, free of political or national association and liability.
Is gold a commodity?
Gold is used for different purposes, and these certainly include commodity uses. Industrial applications of gold account for about 10% of demand each year. Demand for gold as jewellery absorbs around 75% of the gold supplied to the market each year, with the balance made up by investment. Gold is certainly included in the leading tradable commodity indices. So for many practical purposes, gold is viewed as a commodity.
How can gold be both a currency and a commodity? Isn’t this a contradiction?
For most of history, currencies have been backed by commodities, or metals were used as money directly. Even today, when national currencies are no longer backed by real assets, gold maintains its value as an independent, international currency but at the same time is used as a commodity, and certainly viewed as a commodity, by many investors around the world. Gold’s ability to play this dual role successfully underpins its usefulness to investors.
Is gold a high risk or low risk investment?
In general, gold is considered a low risk investment because its price is typically not very volatile. The gold price tends not to fluctuate more than the world’s largest blue-chip stock market indices like the S&P 500. That is why many investors with low-risk profiles are attracted to gold. However, investors in high risk assets also find gold useful because they can use it to manage their risk.
What types of returns does gold offer investors?
Although very large investors can lend their gold out and receive a “gold” interest rate, in practice this yield is very low. So the main return on gold is capital gain or loss which is realised by selling some gold. This is no different from many other assets, including, for example, zero coupon bonds.
How big is the gold investment market?
In 2005, the overall gold market saw inflows of US$ 56 billion, of which nearly US$ 9 billion represented investment flows. Ultimately, the size of the gold investment market is some proportion of all the gold that has ever been mined. On this basis, gold represents around 4% of the market capitalisation of global bonds and equities.
How can I invest in gold?
There are many ways to invest in gold and these are explained fully on www.gold.org/value. How an individual chooses to invest in gold depends on the size of the investment, his/her reason for investing, and the purpose of the investment. People invest directly in bars and coins; through gold futures, options, warrants and certificates. They may also hold gold in metal accounts with their bank in just the same way they could have a foreign currency account. The most popular, fastest-growing form of gold investment is also the newest: gold traded in the form of a security on stock exchanges around the world, generally referred to as “gold ETFs”.
It is appropriate for pension funds to invest in gold?
Gold certainly merits the attention of pension funds who are seeking good portfolio diversifiers and wish to reduce the volatility of their returns, particularly in response to changes in International Accounting Standards and as part of a liability-matching strategy. Gold is attracting growing interest from a small number of pension funds, some of whom may already be building their exposure to gold, usually as part of a basket of commodities.
Dollar rises, gold suffers
Gold’s sheen may a be a bit off this week due to the strengthening of dollar and fall in crude oil prices.
According to experts, the yellow metal will keep low profile this week.
Investment funds are also invariably shifting towards other asset classes including equity, currency and bonds.
Market analysts said the US Federal Reserve would either keep interest rates unchanged or revise them upwards.
Therefore, fundamentals continue to weaken in the valuable asset class.
The price of the yellow metal is expected to slump to $852 an ounce (oz) in London. But it is unlikely to provide any relief to the Indian consumers as the rupee is depreciating against the dollar.
Since the peak of below 40, the rupee has depreciated by about 7-8 per cent, while gold has fallen by above 13 per cent.
Gold had reached $1,033.90 on March 17, the highest-ever price, as the euro and crude oil set previous records.
Surprisingly, the domestic demand has hardly witnessed any major impact of the price rise or the fall because of auspicious days and seasonal buying on occasions like weddings and festivals.
This week, standard gold slumped by 4.65 per cent to Rs 12,205 per 10 grams, while pure gold nosedived by 4.67 per cent to Rs 12,260 per 10 grams in Mumbai. In London, the yellow metal fell by 4.50 per cent to $885.75 an ounce.
According to experts, the yellow metal will keep low profile this week.
Investment funds are also invariably shifting towards other asset classes including equity, currency and bonds.
Market analysts said the US Federal Reserve would either keep interest rates unchanged or revise them upwards.
Therefore, fundamentals continue to weaken in the valuable asset class.
The price of the yellow metal is expected to slump to $852 an ounce (oz) in London. But it is unlikely to provide any relief to the Indian consumers as the rupee is depreciating against the dollar.
Since the peak of below 40, the rupee has depreciated by about 7-8 per cent, while gold has fallen by above 13 per cent.
Gold had reached $1,033.90 on March 17, the highest-ever price, as the euro and crude oil set previous records.
Surprisingly, the domestic demand has hardly witnessed any major impact of the price rise or the fall because of auspicious days and seasonal buying on occasions like weddings and festivals.
This week, standard gold slumped by 4.65 per cent to Rs 12,205 per 10 grams, while pure gold nosedived by 4.67 per cent to Rs 12,260 per 10 grams in Mumbai. In London, the yellow metal fell by 4.50 per cent to $885.75 an ounce.
Gold Rush: When price is up, hunt for Gold is hot
When gold price is up, hunt for the precious metal surges. In the last few months, as global gold prices surged, here in California, there has been a gold rush going on.
The current high price of gold brings back memories of the Californian gold rush when hundreds of thousands of people flocked to the US state in search of the precious metal, according to the World Gold Council web site.
Quoting well known gold analyst Colleen Stanley Bare, the WGC site siad that panning for gold has become what is described as a "hot recreational activity".
Indeed, hovering at around $1,000 an ounce, gold prices have encouraged many people to set out in search of their own fortune just as they did in 1849.
The Californian gold rush began when James Marshall discovered gold at Sutter's Mill in Coloma, California. After news of his discovery spread around 300,000 people arrived in California from across the world to pan for gold in streams and riverbeds.
Brent Shock, who runs gold-panning tours in Jamestown, told the BBC that because of the high price of gold there is a "tremendous" amount of interest from people looking to follow in the footsteps of the so called forty-niners and take part in gold prospecting.
The current high price of gold brings back memories of the Californian gold rush when hundreds of thousands of people flocked to the US state in search of the precious metal, according to the World Gold Council web site.
Quoting well known gold analyst Colleen Stanley Bare, the WGC site siad that panning for gold has become what is described as a "hot recreational activity".
Indeed, hovering at around $1,000 an ounce, gold prices have encouraged many people to set out in search of their own fortune just as they did in 1849.
The Californian gold rush began when James Marshall discovered gold at Sutter's Mill in Coloma, California. After news of his discovery spread around 300,000 people arrived in California from across the world to pan for gold in streams and riverbeds.
Brent Shock, who runs gold-panning tours in Jamestown, told the BBC that because of the high price of gold there is a "tremendous" amount of interest from people looking to follow in the footsteps of the so called forty-niners and take part in gold prospecting.
Why oil prices shot up to extreme highs
By Gary Dorsch
After watching crude oil's parabolic rise – doubling from a year ago, to above $130 a barrel in May – central bankers who under-estimated the power and resiliency of the "crude oil vigilantes" are now praying for this apparent bubble to burst under its own weight, and at a moment's notice, writes Gary Dorsch of SirChartsALot.com...
In an interview with The Daily Telegraph in London, one of the world's biggest hedge fund traders, George Soros, said that although the weak US Dollar, depleting supplies from aging oil fields, government fuel subsidies, and record Chinese and Indian demand could explain the surge in energy prices, the crude oil market is also significantly inflated by speculation.
"Speculation is increasingly affecting the price, which has a parabolic shape, which is characteristic of bubbles," said Soros.
However, he also warned that the oil bubble won't burst until both the US and British economies slipped into recession, after which event, oil prices could fall dramatically.
"You can also anticipate that the [oil] bubble will eventually correct, but that is unlikely to happen before the recession actually reduces the demand. The rise in the price of oil and food is going to weigh and aggravate the recession."
It's dangerous to pick a top in a raging bull market, since bubbles can inflate more than anybody ever imagined. On May 20th, T.Boone Pickens – the legendary oil trader and investor – told CNBC he expected crude oil prices to keeping going up, even from here.
"I think we'll get to $150 this year," he reckoned. The next day, soon-to-be deposed Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert called for a US naval blockade of Iran. If that happens, crude oil could shoot to $200 per barrel.
Who is Inflating the Oil Bubble?
Chief culprit is the Federal Reserve, the US central bank. By slashing 325-basis points off the Fed funds rate – taking it to a negative 2% after adjusting for inflation and expanding the US broad money supply by 16.5% from a year ago in a desperate effort to stop the slide in the sinking US banking sector – the Fed encourages speculation in commodities by pushing down the Dollar.
That, in turn, pushes up the price of Dollar-denominated commodities such as crude oil, soy beans and Gold.
So far, the Fed's aggressive rate cuts haven't found any meaningful traction in the S&P Banking Index, which is still languishing at its March lows, some 40% lower from a year ago.
Banks continue to post hundreds of billions in losses from toxic sub-prime mortgage debt. But the Fed's single focus on rescuing the banking sector, with no regard for the inflationary consequences of its actions, has led to the emergence of the "crude oil vigilantes".
Much like the famed "bond market vigilantes" of the late '70s and early '80s – who sold US Treasuries hard, pushing up bond yields and forcing the Fed to raise its interest rates – these traders are now punishing central bankers who have too abusive with the world's money supply. The crude oil vigilantes merely swap bonds for oil prices.
In the past, a sharp slowdown in the US economy, the world's biggest oil guzzler, usually pushed the price of crude oil and other commodities lower. But the Fed was caught by complete surprise after crude oil prices doubled, even as America's economy slipped into a recession in the first quarter.
"The current oil price has no relation to market fundamentals," explained Saudi oil chief Ali al-Naimi on March 5th. "It is linked to tremendous speculation in crude oil futures. There are even those who buy futures and speculate that oil prices will reach $200 in 2013."
On April 28th, Opec chief Chakib Khelil observed that crude oil prices were climbing "even though supply is adequate, because the market is driven by the dollar's slide. Each time the Dollar falls 1%, the price of the barrel rises by $4, and of course vice versa.
"If for instance, the US Dollar would strengthen by 10%, it is probable that oil prices will fall by 40%."
But such simple logic has its limitations. China, India, Russia and the Middle East combined are now consuming more crude oil than the United States, burning 20.7 million barrels a day – some 4% from than a year ago, according to the IEA.
The emerging economies are picking-up the slack in the oil market, more than offsetting the 1.3% contraction in US oil demand forecast this year to 20.3 million barrels per day. Thus a mild recession in the Western economies and Japan might not weaken global demand for oil.
Oil Bubble: A Hedge for Much More Than the US Dollar
What's more, big oil exporters like Russia, Mexico and Opec itself are growing so fast economically that their need for energy within their own borders will limit how much they can sell abroad.
Internal oil demand in Saudi Arabia, Russia, Norway, Iran and the United Arab Emirates grew 6% last year, and their exports declined 3%. Mexico's oil output fell 9% in the first four months of 2008. If these trends continue, global crude exports could fall by 2.5 million barrels a day by the end of 2010, adding new strains to the global oil market.
Yet it was shocking to hear Minneapolis Fed chief Gary Stern on May 28th, refuting the linkage between the US Dollar's sharp decline and soaring energy prices, and denying any responsibility for the global Oil Bubble – also known as the "Oil Shock".
"I'd be careful about mistaking correlation and causation. Just because energy prices and the Dollar seem to move together, that doesn't mean that there's causation there. If you're thinking about energy prices, bear in mind that there's been some very significant changes in the global economy that have something to do with this.
"I would point to the very rapid growth in China and India in recent years, and places like that."
Crude oil speculators on the Nymex were buying "black gold" as a hedge against the US Dollar's slide against the Euro, the world's No.2 reserve currency. And perhaps traders in London – also picking up the mantle of "crude oil vigilantes" – have been buying North Sea Brent as a hedge against the British Pound's devaluation, too.
The Bank of England engineered the British Pound's sharp devaluation against the Euro by joining the Fed's rate cutting spree last November. Over the last 8 months, it's made three quarter-point rate cuts to 5.0%.
The European single currency – still paying less to cash savers, but with the European Central Bank (ECB) and its "anti inflation" rhetoric behind it – soared 17% to break above 80 pence per Euro. At the same time, North Sea Brent crude oil prices doubled to $130 per barrel.
Flipped the other way round, the British Pound buys around €1.25, down from €1.50 last summer, making European imports considerably more expensive. For Ivory Tower economists, the Euro's ascent against the British Pound and US Dollar – both of which closely tracked crude oil prices – was just a statistical coincidence.
But for crude oil speculators, the sharp devaluations of the Pound and US Dollar translated into enormous windfall profits in their brokerage accounts.
Whatever the truth of the Oil Bubble's beginning – and the part played by crude oil vigilantes in the London and New York markets – it's always good to have the basic fundamentals on your side when riding the waves of a strong bull market.
Oil production is shrinking in 54 of the world's top 60 oil producing nations, including Britain's North Sea fields – where output peaked in 1999, and has already plunged by half.
The UK began importing liquid gas for the first time in history in July 2005, and its North Sea oil reserve is dwindling at an 8.5% annual rate. Indeed, the curtain might fall on North Sea Brent by 2012 if enough isn't done to maintain development and exploration, according to the UK Offshore Oil Industry.
But political pressure on the Bank of England for more rate cuts could intensify after British housing prices dropped for the eighth straight month in May, down 2% from a year ago. The average selling time for UK homes has climbed to almost 10 weeks, compared to 5.8 weeks in May 2007. And a further slide in home prices could topple the UK's asset-based economy into recession, deepening losses for British banks.
Another round of BoE rate cuts could renew selling pressure on Sterling and buoy Brent crude prices, oil bubble or not. But currency devaluations do not fully account for crude oil's dramatic rise to $135 per barrel last week. "Peak Oil" theorists have an equally strong explanation, and Saudi Arabia's threat to ramp-up oil production by 2012 is sounding hollow.
Currency swings do magnify the volatility and price trends in the crude oil market, however, the same way the "Yen carry" trade magnifies swings in the global stock markets. The massive volatility in Gold Prices – a proxy for global faith in paper currencies – only adds to the pressure on central banks applied by crude oil vigilantes.
No market travels in a straight line forever, and shakeouts in the crude oil market are designed to wipe-off the speculative froth. However, a British and US economic recession would not necessarily burst the oil bubble, especially not if the net result is another sharp devaluation of the British Pound and US Dollar in the foreign exchange market, which would support high oil prices.
Oil Bubble: Subsidies Foil Supply & Demand in China
The basic laws of supply-and-demand don't work in an economy where the government intervenes with price controls. And in China, gasoline prices haven't gone up since last November, even though crude oil prices have gone up 35%.
Beijing controls gasoline prices to limit their effect on inflation, and it prevents refiners from passing on higher oil import costs to consumers. Without the price controls on energy distillates, Chinese inflation would already be in the double digits, threatening social unrest.
China Petroleum & Chemical (Sinopec) said its first-quarter net profit fell 69% from a year earlier due to surging crude oil costs. Sinopec imports about 80% of its total oil needs, and its refineries break even if oil import prices are $76 a barrel or lower.
To cover its losses, SNP received a government subsidy 4.9 billion Yuan ($700m) in the fourth quarter and 7.4bn Yuan ($1.1bn) for the first quarter of this year.
After watching crude oil's parabolic rise – doubling from a year ago, to above $130 a barrel in May – central bankers who under-estimated the power and resiliency of the "crude oil vigilantes" are now praying for this apparent bubble to burst under its own weight, and at a moment's notice, writes Gary Dorsch of SirChartsALot.com...
In an interview with The Daily Telegraph in London, one of the world's biggest hedge fund traders, George Soros, said that although the weak US Dollar, depleting supplies from aging oil fields, government fuel subsidies, and record Chinese and Indian demand could explain the surge in energy prices, the crude oil market is also significantly inflated by speculation.
"Speculation is increasingly affecting the price, which has a parabolic shape, which is characteristic of bubbles," said Soros.
However, he also warned that the oil bubble won't burst until both the US and British economies slipped into recession, after which event, oil prices could fall dramatically.
"You can also anticipate that the [oil] bubble will eventually correct, but that is unlikely to happen before the recession actually reduces the demand. The rise in the price of oil and food is going to weigh and aggravate the recession."
It's dangerous to pick a top in a raging bull market, since bubbles can inflate more than anybody ever imagined. On May 20th, T.Boone Pickens – the legendary oil trader and investor – told CNBC he expected crude oil prices to keeping going up, even from here.
"I think we'll get to $150 this year," he reckoned. The next day, soon-to-be deposed Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert called for a US naval blockade of Iran. If that happens, crude oil could shoot to $200 per barrel.
Who is Inflating the Oil Bubble?
Chief culprit is the Federal Reserve, the US central bank. By slashing 325-basis points off the Fed funds rate – taking it to a negative 2% after adjusting for inflation and expanding the US broad money supply by 16.5% from a year ago in a desperate effort to stop the slide in the sinking US banking sector – the Fed encourages speculation in commodities by pushing down the Dollar.
That, in turn, pushes up the price of Dollar-denominated commodities such as crude oil, soy beans and Gold.
So far, the Fed's aggressive rate cuts haven't found any meaningful traction in the S&P Banking Index, which is still languishing at its March lows, some 40% lower from a year ago.
Banks continue to post hundreds of billions in losses from toxic sub-prime mortgage debt. But the Fed's single focus on rescuing the banking sector, with no regard for the inflationary consequences of its actions, has led to the emergence of the "crude oil vigilantes".
Much like the famed "bond market vigilantes" of the late '70s and early '80s – who sold US Treasuries hard, pushing up bond yields and forcing the Fed to raise its interest rates – these traders are now punishing central bankers who have too abusive with the world's money supply. The crude oil vigilantes merely swap bonds for oil prices.
In the past, a sharp slowdown in the US economy, the world's biggest oil guzzler, usually pushed the price of crude oil and other commodities lower. But the Fed was caught by complete surprise after crude oil prices doubled, even as America's economy slipped into a recession in the first quarter.
"The current oil price has no relation to market fundamentals," explained Saudi oil chief Ali al-Naimi on March 5th. "It is linked to tremendous speculation in crude oil futures. There are even those who buy futures and speculate that oil prices will reach $200 in 2013."
On April 28th, Opec chief Chakib Khelil observed that crude oil prices were climbing "even though supply is adequate, because the market is driven by the dollar's slide. Each time the Dollar falls 1%, the price of the barrel rises by $4, and of course vice versa.
"If for instance, the US Dollar would strengthen by 10%, it is probable that oil prices will fall by 40%."
But such simple logic has its limitations. China, India, Russia and the Middle East combined are now consuming more crude oil than the United States, burning 20.7 million barrels a day – some 4% from than a year ago, according to the IEA.
The emerging economies are picking-up the slack in the oil market, more than offsetting the 1.3% contraction in US oil demand forecast this year to 20.3 million barrels per day. Thus a mild recession in the Western economies and Japan might not weaken global demand for oil.
Oil Bubble: A Hedge for Much More Than the US Dollar
What's more, big oil exporters like Russia, Mexico and Opec itself are growing so fast economically that their need for energy within their own borders will limit how much they can sell abroad.
Internal oil demand in Saudi Arabia, Russia, Norway, Iran and the United Arab Emirates grew 6% last year, and their exports declined 3%. Mexico's oil output fell 9% in the first four months of 2008. If these trends continue, global crude exports could fall by 2.5 million barrels a day by the end of 2010, adding new strains to the global oil market.
Yet it was shocking to hear Minneapolis Fed chief Gary Stern on May 28th, refuting the linkage between the US Dollar's sharp decline and soaring energy prices, and denying any responsibility for the global Oil Bubble – also known as the "Oil Shock".
"I'd be careful about mistaking correlation and causation. Just because energy prices and the Dollar seem to move together, that doesn't mean that there's causation there. If you're thinking about energy prices, bear in mind that there's been some very significant changes in the global economy that have something to do with this.
"I would point to the very rapid growth in China and India in recent years, and places like that."
Crude oil speculators on the Nymex were buying "black gold" as a hedge against the US Dollar's slide against the Euro, the world's No.2 reserve currency. And perhaps traders in London – also picking up the mantle of "crude oil vigilantes" – have been buying North Sea Brent as a hedge against the British Pound's devaluation, too.
The Bank of England engineered the British Pound's sharp devaluation against the Euro by joining the Fed's rate cutting spree last November. Over the last 8 months, it's made three quarter-point rate cuts to 5.0%.
The European single currency – still paying less to cash savers, but with the European Central Bank (ECB) and its "anti inflation" rhetoric behind it – soared 17% to break above 80 pence per Euro. At the same time, North Sea Brent crude oil prices doubled to $130 per barrel.
Flipped the other way round, the British Pound buys around €1.25, down from €1.50 last summer, making European imports considerably more expensive. For Ivory Tower economists, the Euro's ascent against the British Pound and US Dollar – both of which closely tracked crude oil prices – was just a statistical coincidence.
But for crude oil speculators, the sharp devaluations of the Pound and US Dollar translated into enormous windfall profits in their brokerage accounts.
Whatever the truth of the Oil Bubble's beginning – and the part played by crude oil vigilantes in the London and New York markets – it's always good to have the basic fundamentals on your side when riding the waves of a strong bull market.
Oil production is shrinking in 54 of the world's top 60 oil producing nations, including Britain's North Sea fields – where output peaked in 1999, and has already plunged by half.
The UK began importing liquid gas for the first time in history in July 2005, and its North Sea oil reserve is dwindling at an 8.5% annual rate. Indeed, the curtain might fall on North Sea Brent by 2012 if enough isn't done to maintain development and exploration, according to the UK Offshore Oil Industry.
But political pressure on the Bank of England for more rate cuts could intensify after British housing prices dropped for the eighth straight month in May, down 2% from a year ago. The average selling time for UK homes has climbed to almost 10 weeks, compared to 5.8 weeks in May 2007. And a further slide in home prices could topple the UK's asset-based economy into recession, deepening losses for British banks.
Another round of BoE rate cuts could renew selling pressure on Sterling and buoy Brent crude prices, oil bubble or not. But currency devaluations do not fully account for crude oil's dramatic rise to $135 per barrel last week. "Peak Oil" theorists have an equally strong explanation, and Saudi Arabia's threat to ramp-up oil production by 2012 is sounding hollow.
Currency swings do magnify the volatility and price trends in the crude oil market, however, the same way the "Yen carry" trade magnifies swings in the global stock markets. The massive volatility in Gold Prices – a proxy for global faith in paper currencies – only adds to the pressure on central banks applied by crude oil vigilantes.
No market travels in a straight line forever, and shakeouts in the crude oil market are designed to wipe-off the speculative froth. However, a British and US economic recession would not necessarily burst the oil bubble, especially not if the net result is another sharp devaluation of the British Pound and US Dollar in the foreign exchange market, which would support high oil prices.
Oil Bubble: Subsidies Foil Supply & Demand in China
The basic laws of supply-and-demand don't work in an economy where the government intervenes with price controls. And in China, gasoline prices haven't gone up since last November, even though crude oil prices have gone up 35%.
Beijing controls gasoline prices to limit their effect on inflation, and it prevents refiners from passing on higher oil import costs to consumers. Without the price controls on energy distillates, Chinese inflation would already be in the double digits, threatening social unrest.
China Petroleum & Chemical (Sinopec) said its first-quarter net profit fell 69% from a year earlier due to surging crude oil costs. Sinopec imports about 80% of its total oil needs, and its refineries break even if oil import prices are $76 a barrel or lower.
To cover its losses, SNP received a government subsidy 4.9 billion Yuan ($700m) in the fourth quarter and 7.4bn Yuan ($1.1bn) for the first quarter of this year.
Monday, May 12, 2008
Gold ends lower, as traders eye dollar, crude moves
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Gold futures closed lower Monday, pressured by some strength in the U.S. dollar and a retreat in oil prices, but the precious metal held its ground above the $880-an-ounce level after gaining more than 3% last week.
"Gold is watching while the dollar weakens ... and is battling to find direction," said Julian Phillips, an analyst at GoldForecaster.com. The market has not responded well to the recent record oil prices and to Monday's weaker dollar, he said in emailed comments.
— Julian Phillips, GoldForecaster.com
"We are headed into the quiet season for gold [May to the end of August] but at any moment, reports of another systemic fracture in the financial system could liven it up as happened last year when the sub-prime crisis emerged from the shadows," Phillips said.
Gold for June delivery closed at $884.90 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange, down 90 cents for the session. It climbed as high as $888.80.
For the moment, gold remains capped by trend-line resistance at the $890 mark, said James Moore, analyst at TheBullionDesk.com.
"Given the metal's reaction to pockets of dollar strength, it seems gold will find it tough to rally significantly," Moore said in a research note.
On the currency markets Monday, the dollar rose against some of its currency rivals in the aftermath of a weekend Wall Street Journal report that U.S. officials are attempting to put a floor under the greenback.
A shift in language in the statement that followed last month's meeting of Group of Seven finance ministers and central bankers highlighted concerns over excess volatility in currency markets.
This was interpreted at the time as meaning European officials were worried about the weak dollar's impact on euro-zone exporters. An unnamed U.S. Treasury official, however, said the change was pushed by Washington as part of an international effort to halt the dollar's slide, according to the Journal. See Currencies.
In energy trading, crude-oil futures fell, retreating after their record-breaking run in which they rallied more than 8% last week. Crude for June delivery closed down $1.73 at $124.23 a barrel in New York. See Futures Movers.
Bullish factors stay in place
The weakness in gold prices follows last week's gain of 3.2%, or $27.80.
"Many of the factors that have supported the bull market for the precious metals remain in place," according to analysts from Natixis Commodity Markets Ltd.
"Inflationary pressures associated in part with the dramatic rise in commodity prices are continuing; uncertainty in the financial markets as the sub-prime crisis continues to unravel remains an issue," they said in a second-quarter metals review issued Monday.
And another supportive factor is the "increasing acceptance of commodities as an asset class," they said.
All of these have been contributing to gold's price climb, but "these positive fundamentals do not necessarily justify a straight progression for precious metals prices," they said.
Natixis expects prices for gold to average $875 in 2008. That suggests that it may have already seek a peak for the year, when prices briefly exceeded $1,000 per ounce, the analysts said.
In other metals trading Monday, July silver futures tacked on 32 cents to end at $17.23 an ounce and July copper added 3 cents to finish at $3.75 a pound. July platinum tacked on $21.50 to close at $2,123.30 an ounce and June palladium added $2.95 to close at $446.80 an ounce.
Natixis expects silver prices to shadow, but slightly under perform gold. It predicts that silver prices will average $16.50 for this year, which "implies slightly weaker prices as the year progresses," they said.
"Gold is watching while the dollar weakens ... and is battling to find direction," said Julian Phillips, an analyst at GoldForecaster.com. The market has not responded well to the recent record oil prices and to Monday's weaker dollar, he said in emailed comments.
— Julian Phillips, GoldForecaster.com
"We are headed into the quiet season for gold [May to the end of August] but at any moment, reports of another systemic fracture in the financial system could liven it up as happened last year when the sub-prime crisis emerged from the shadows," Phillips said.
Gold for June delivery closed at $884.90 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange, down 90 cents for the session. It climbed as high as $888.80.
For the moment, gold remains capped by trend-line resistance at the $890 mark, said James Moore, analyst at TheBullionDesk.com.
"Given the metal's reaction to pockets of dollar strength, it seems gold will find it tough to rally significantly," Moore said in a research note.
On the currency markets Monday, the dollar rose against some of its currency rivals in the aftermath of a weekend Wall Street Journal report that U.S. officials are attempting to put a floor under the greenback.
A shift in language in the statement that followed last month's meeting of Group of Seven finance ministers and central bankers highlighted concerns over excess volatility in currency markets.
This was interpreted at the time as meaning European officials were worried about the weak dollar's impact on euro-zone exporters. An unnamed U.S. Treasury official, however, said the change was pushed by Washington as part of an international effort to halt the dollar's slide, according to the Journal. See Currencies.
In energy trading, crude-oil futures fell, retreating after their record-breaking run in which they rallied more than 8% last week. Crude for June delivery closed down $1.73 at $124.23 a barrel in New York. See Futures Movers.
Bullish factors stay in place
The weakness in gold prices follows last week's gain of 3.2%, or $27.80.
"Many of the factors that have supported the bull market for the precious metals remain in place," according to analysts from Natixis Commodity Markets Ltd.
"Inflationary pressures associated in part with the dramatic rise in commodity prices are continuing; uncertainty in the financial markets as the sub-prime crisis continues to unravel remains an issue," they said in a second-quarter metals review issued Monday.
And another supportive factor is the "increasing acceptance of commodities as an asset class," they said.
All of these have been contributing to gold's price climb, but "these positive fundamentals do not necessarily justify a straight progression for precious metals prices," they said.
Natixis expects prices for gold to average $875 in 2008. That suggests that it may have already seek a peak for the year, when prices briefly exceeded $1,000 per ounce, the analysts said.
In other metals trading Monday, July silver futures tacked on 32 cents to end at $17.23 an ounce and July copper added 3 cents to finish at $3.75 a pound. July platinum tacked on $21.50 to close at $2,123.30 an ounce and June palladium added $2.95 to close at $446.80 an ounce.
Natixis expects silver prices to shadow, but slightly under perform gold. It predicts that silver prices will average $16.50 for this year, which "implies slightly weaker prices as the year progresses," they said.
Gold Slips as "Sea Change" Spied in Forex Market, Inflation for UK Factories Hits 23%
THE SPOT PRICE OF GOLD slipped $10 early in London on Monday, trading below $890 per ounce as world stock markets ticked higher and government bonds sold off.
The Euro picked up 1.5¢ against the Dollar from last week's two-month beneath $1.5300.
Crude oil slipped 0.5% from a new overnight record above $126 per barrel.
"Although financial markets are more optimistic about the outcome of the credit crisis," notes Walter de Wet in his latest Gold Market note for Standard Bank in Johannesburg, "current concerns are rising inflationary pressures and higher interest rates."
This week both Ben Bernanke of the US Federal Reserve and Jean-Claude Trichet of the European Central Bank will speak on the economic outlook, notes de Wet – and "the market will want their thoughts on the inflation/growth trade-off."
This week also brings a slew of global inflation data, with producer-price and consumer price data due from both the United States and Europe between now and Thursday.
Today China said its cost of living rose at a near 12-year record last month. Food prices rose by more than one-fifth from April '07.
Here in the United Kingdom, manufacturers suffered a 23.1% rise in input prices last month according to the Office for National Statistics, the sharpest producer-price inflation on record.
"The consumer slowdown will mean that retailers will be forced to absorb the bulk of these cost increases in their margins," reckons Paul Dales at Capital Economics in London.
Corn and wheat prices continued to rise in early trade Monday after wet, cold weather in the America mid-west delayed planting yet again at the weekend.
In the New South Wales region of Australia, in contrast, some 48% of the state is now in drought, meaning that the "winter crop may yet again be savaged" according to NSW's minister for primary industries.
"Although the outlook for the Gold Price is looking up again," says today's Gold Market note from Mitsui in London, "it is important to note that since the middle of March, this market has been trending downwards.
"The trend line comes in at $895 on the spot Gold Price. Look for a clear and confirmed break of this level to point to higher prices."
The latest Gold futures data, released Friday evening, showed the total number of contracts outstanding growing by 1.6% in the week-to-Tuesday, reaching a seven-week high.
But open interest still remains almost 25% below January's record high.
Over on the currency markets, "there is kind of a sea change taking place at the moment," believes Mitul Kotecha at Calyon investment bank in London. The net-position of forex speculators has turned bearish on the Euro – and bullish on the US Dollar – for the first time in two and a half years.
"It's probably the early sign of perhaps a more sustained turnaround," reckons Kotecha, repeating the new consensus that the Federal Reserve's much-signaled pause in cutting US interest rates will put a floor beneath the Dollar.
The broad Dollar Index has now gained 3.7% from its record low of March 17th – the day that Gold hit its new record high of $1,032 per ounce. Gold also hit record highs vs. the Euro, British Pound, and the Canadian and Australian Dollars that day, too.
Now the Fed is expected to keep interest rates on hold for the time being, rather than slashing them further. But this apparently pro-Dollar stance leaves the rate of interest for US cash savers at half the rate of US consumer inflation.
Real interest rates, after accounting for current growth in the cost of living, stand at minus 2%.
"It certainly wouldn't be wise for someone to take all of their money out of the stock market and put it in foreign currencies," believes Jeff Dobyns, manager for Raymond James Financial Services in Brentwood and Nashville, speaking to the Tennessean.com this weekend.
"It's probably too late in the game. Now might be a good time to sell. Whenever anyone says it's off the charts, that's a good indication it's getting ready to change."
In the stock market Monday, however, MBIA – the bond insurance giant that lost 87% of its value since May 2007 – reported its third quarterly loss on the run for the Jan. to March period, running a net loss of $2.4 billion.
Here in London, losses by the UK's three largest banks will reduce their combined tax payments for last year by £2.5 billion ($4.9bn) according to the Financial Times.
That's more than 5% of the corporation tax receipts forecast for 2007-08.
"In the US, the credit turmoil has led to a 13.6% in corporate tax receipts," the FT goes on.
The Euro picked up 1.5¢ against the Dollar from last week's two-month beneath $1.5300.
Crude oil slipped 0.5% from a new overnight record above $126 per barrel.
"Although financial markets are more optimistic about the outcome of the credit crisis," notes Walter de Wet in his latest Gold Market note for Standard Bank in Johannesburg, "current concerns are rising inflationary pressures and higher interest rates."
This week both Ben Bernanke of the US Federal Reserve and Jean-Claude Trichet of the European Central Bank will speak on the economic outlook, notes de Wet – and "the market will want their thoughts on the inflation/growth trade-off."
This week also brings a slew of global inflation data, with producer-price and consumer price data due from both the United States and Europe between now and Thursday.
Today China said its cost of living rose at a near 12-year record last month. Food prices rose by more than one-fifth from April '07.
Here in the United Kingdom, manufacturers suffered a 23.1% rise in input prices last month according to the Office for National Statistics, the sharpest producer-price inflation on record.
"The consumer slowdown will mean that retailers will be forced to absorb the bulk of these cost increases in their margins," reckons Paul Dales at Capital Economics in London.
Corn and wheat prices continued to rise in early trade Monday after wet, cold weather in the America mid-west delayed planting yet again at the weekend.
In the New South Wales region of Australia, in contrast, some 48% of the state is now in drought, meaning that the "winter crop may yet again be savaged" according to NSW's minister for primary industries.
"Although the outlook for the Gold Price is looking up again," says today's Gold Market note from Mitsui in London, "it is important to note that since the middle of March, this market has been trending downwards.
"The trend line comes in at $895 on the spot Gold Price. Look for a clear and confirmed break of this level to point to higher prices."
The latest Gold futures data, released Friday evening, showed the total number of contracts outstanding growing by 1.6% in the week-to-Tuesday, reaching a seven-week high.
But open interest still remains almost 25% below January's record high.
Over on the currency markets, "there is kind of a sea change taking place at the moment," believes Mitul Kotecha at Calyon investment bank in London. The net-position of forex speculators has turned bearish on the Euro – and bullish on the US Dollar – for the first time in two and a half years.
"It's probably the early sign of perhaps a more sustained turnaround," reckons Kotecha, repeating the new consensus that the Federal Reserve's much-signaled pause in cutting US interest rates will put a floor beneath the Dollar.
The broad Dollar Index has now gained 3.7% from its record low of March 17th – the day that Gold hit its new record high of $1,032 per ounce. Gold also hit record highs vs. the Euro, British Pound, and the Canadian and Australian Dollars that day, too.
Now the Fed is expected to keep interest rates on hold for the time being, rather than slashing them further. But this apparently pro-Dollar stance leaves the rate of interest for US cash savers at half the rate of US consumer inflation.
Real interest rates, after accounting for current growth in the cost of living, stand at minus 2%.
"It certainly wouldn't be wise for someone to take all of their money out of the stock market and put it in foreign currencies," believes Jeff Dobyns, manager for Raymond James Financial Services in Brentwood and Nashville, speaking to the Tennessean.com this weekend.
"It's probably too late in the game. Now might be a good time to sell. Whenever anyone says it's off the charts, that's a good indication it's getting ready to change."
In the stock market Monday, however, MBIA – the bond insurance giant that lost 87% of its value since May 2007 – reported its third quarterly loss on the run for the Jan. to March period, running a net loss of $2.4 billion.
Here in London, losses by the UK's three largest banks will reduce their combined tax payments for last year by £2.5 billion ($4.9bn) according to the Financial Times.
That's more than 5% of the corporation tax receipts forecast for 2007-08.
"In the US, the credit turmoil has led to a 13.6% in corporate tax receipts," the FT goes on.
Mining's Glittering Future
For investors looking to ride the growth of emerging economies, no sector has produced more spectacular results than once-sleepy mining and minerals. Boosted by soaring demand from China, India, and other fast-growing countries, commodities producers have racked up huge revenue and profit gains even as other companies have faltered in the wake of the credit crunch and slowing Western economies.
Topping the list of high-fliers are Rio Tinto (RTP), which ranks No. 7 on this year's European BusinessWeek 50, and its rival and would-be suitor, BHP Billiton (BHP), which ranks No. 24. Both have benefited mightily from a boom that has seen the price of base metals and minerals double or triple in the past 18 months. Shareholders have benefited as well: Rio Tinto shares are up 84% in the past 12 months, while BHP Billiton's are up 54%.
The surge of cash into both companies' coffers has allowed them to open new mines and acquire rivals. And last November it prompted the most audacious consolidation play of all: BHP proposed to acquire Rio Tinto for an eye-popping $142 billion in stock, which offer Rio swiftly rejected [BusinessWeek.com, 11/9/07]. Two months later, China's largest aluminum maker, Chinalco, and Pittsburgh-based Alcoa (AA) raised the ante by plunking down $14 billion for a 12% stake in Rio [BusinessWeek.com, 2/01/08]. The value of BHP's offer has now risen to $160 billion, but Rio continues to resist it.
Commodities Bubble? Despite such gigantic valuations -- and the drama of a drawn-out takeover bid -- analysts see still more potential. Charles Cooper, mining analyst at London's Evolution Securities, figures both BHP and Rio have strong growth prospects, particularly in their core iron ore businesses. Iron prices are expected to increase an additional 40% to 60% this year alone, and BHP and Rio together control almost 40% of the world's production.
There's also room for their share prices to appreciate. Jeremy Gray, mining analyst at Credit Suisse (CS), reminded investors in a recent research note that the cost of lead -- up 200% since January, 2007 -- has risen at twice the rate of BHP's share price over the same period. "Mining equities have underperformed and a catch-up appears imminent," Gray says.
To be sure, some observers worry about a commodities bubble. If Western financial volatility and economic weakness spread to emerging economies, demand for raw materials could slacken just as BHP and Rio bring new mines online. Thanks to such increases in capacity, the supply of raw materials inevitably will catch up with demand at some point. But one surprising factor that could keep prices high well into 2010 is a global shortage of equipment, transportation capacity, and qualified engineers to oversee new projects.
Fighting Over Their Companies' Futures The protracted mating dance between BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto also could be a distraction to management. Rio continues to spurn the offer, but market-watchers expect BHP may sweeten the deal with a cash component. Complicating matters is the fact that the hostile bid has led to public animosity between Rio CEO Tom Albanese and his BHP counterpart, Marius Kloppers.
With so much at stake, it's no wonder Albanese and Kloppers have turned the fight over their companies' futures into a personal competition. Buoyed by strong demand from emerging markets, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto are at the forefront of the mining sector's 21st century gold rush. And that has earned them, once again, a place in the European BW 50.
Topping the list of high-fliers are Rio Tinto (RTP), which ranks No. 7 on this year's European BusinessWeek 50, and its rival and would-be suitor, BHP Billiton (BHP), which ranks No. 24. Both have benefited mightily from a boom that has seen the price of base metals and minerals double or triple in the past 18 months. Shareholders have benefited as well: Rio Tinto shares are up 84% in the past 12 months, while BHP Billiton's are up 54%.
The surge of cash into both companies' coffers has allowed them to open new mines and acquire rivals. And last November it prompted the most audacious consolidation play of all: BHP proposed to acquire Rio Tinto for an eye-popping $142 billion in stock, which offer Rio swiftly rejected [BusinessWeek.com, 11/9/07]. Two months later, China's largest aluminum maker, Chinalco, and Pittsburgh-based Alcoa (AA) raised the ante by plunking down $14 billion for a 12% stake in Rio [BusinessWeek.com, 2/01/08]. The value of BHP's offer has now risen to $160 billion, but Rio continues to resist it.
Commodities Bubble? Despite such gigantic valuations -- and the drama of a drawn-out takeover bid -- analysts see still more potential. Charles Cooper, mining analyst at London's Evolution Securities, figures both BHP and Rio have strong growth prospects, particularly in their core iron ore businesses. Iron prices are expected to increase an additional 40% to 60% this year alone, and BHP and Rio together control almost 40% of the world's production.
There's also room for their share prices to appreciate. Jeremy Gray, mining analyst at Credit Suisse (CS), reminded investors in a recent research note that the cost of lead -- up 200% since January, 2007 -- has risen at twice the rate of BHP's share price over the same period. "Mining equities have underperformed and a catch-up appears imminent," Gray says.
To be sure, some observers worry about a commodities bubble. If Western financial volatility and economic weakness spread to emerging economies, demand for raw materials could slacken just as BHP and Rio bring new mines online. Thanks to such increases in capacity, the supply of raw materials inevitably will catch up with demand at some point. But one surprising factor that could keep prices high well into 2010 is a global shortage of equipment, transportation capacity, and qualified engineers to oversee new projects.
Fighting Over Their Companies' Futures The protracted mating dance between BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto also could be a distraction to management. Rio continues to spurn the offer, but market-watchers expect BHP may sweeten the deal with a cash component. Complicating matters is the fact that the hostile bid has led to public animosity between Rio CEO Tom Albanese and his BHP counterpart, Marius Kloppers.
With so much at stake, it's no wonder Albanese and Kloppers have turned the fight over their companies' futures into a personal competition. Buoyed by strong demand from emerging markets, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto are at the forefront of the mining sector's 21st century gold rush. And that has earned them, once again, a place in the European BW 50.
Power demands pushing metal prices up
WASHINGTON, May 12 (UPI) -- A global increase in energy demands have triggered price jumps in metals, as power shortages from Chile to South Africa have limited production, analysts say.
The power it takes to run an aluminum smelter in China could supply 2 million people with enough power for a year, The Washington Post reported Sunday.
Power shortages have contributed to price increases in platinum, aluminum, and copper, up 24, 21 and 26 percent this year respectively, the report said.
"There will be a sustained level of risk from power shortages in the commodities markets," Michael Lewis, the head of commodities research at Deutsche Bank told the Post.
"We are pricing bigger supply losses as a result," he said.
The demand for metals may have waned in the United States, where consumer spending is down, but emerging markets are keeping global demand intact, analysts said.
"To allow China and India to have a middle class, we need to go back to the drawing board and boost investments in power infrastructure, " Francisco Blanch, a commodities researcher at Merrill Lynch said.
"And if this doesn't happen, we're going to see even more brown-outs," Blanch said.
The power it takes to run an aluminum smelter in China could supply 2 million people with enough power for a year, The Washington Post reported Sunday.
Power shortages have contributed to price increases in platinum, aluminum, and copper, up 24, 21 and 26 percent this year respectively, the report said.
"There will be a sustained level of risk from power shortages in the commodities markets," Michael Lewis, the head of commodities research at Deutsche Bank told the Post.
"We are pricing bigger supply losses as a result," he said.
The demand for metals may have waned in the United States, where consumer spending is down, but emerging markets are keeping global demand intact, analysts said.
"To allow China and India to have a middle class, we need to go back to the drawing board and boost investments in power infrastructure, " Francisco Blanch, a commodities researcher at Merrill Lynch said.
"And if this doesn't happen, we're going to see even more brown-outs," Blanch said.
Dollar Bulls Gain Control as Euro May Be Near Peak
(Bloomberg) -- For the first time since December 2005, futures traders are turning bullish on the dollar.
The difference in the number of wagers by hedge funds and other large speculators on a gain in the greenback versus the euro, known as net longs, was 21,315 on April 29, figures from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in Washington show. There were net-short positions in each of the previous 123 weeks. At the same time, traders have stepped up their purchases of options that profit from the dollar's appreciation.
The measures are making long-suffering proponents of the dollar optimistic that this time the currency's rally may hold, especially if the Federal Reserve's Open Market Committee refrains from additional interest-rate cuts. The Dollar Index traded on ICE Futures in New York, which tracks the currency against six trading partners, is up 3.7 percent from an all-time low of 70.698 set on March 17.
``There is kind of a sea change taking place at the moment,'' said Mitul Kotecha, head of foreign-exchange research in London at investment bank Calyon, whose forecasts on the euro-dollar exchange rate in the first quarter were more accurate than those of the two biggest currency traders. ``It's probably the early sign of perhaps a more sustained turnaround.''
The Dollar Index fell 0.1 percent to 73.006 by 10:19 a.m. in London. The dollar has appreciated 3.3 percent to $1.5493 since dropping to $1.6019 per euro on April 22, the lowest since the European currency's debut in 1999. The dollar will strengthen by the end of the year to $1.50, according to the median estimate of 40 strategists surveyed by Bloomberg News.
Gaining Traction
The dollar's rebound gained traction last month after the Open Market Committee said ``substantial'' rate cuts since September would help foster growth. U.S. employers also eliminated fewer jobs in April than forecast by economists.
Meanwhile, a slide in business confidence in Germany and France, which account for about half the euro-region economy, renewed speculation the European Central Bank will reduce rates this year. An end to lower rates in the U.S. and the possibility of cuts in Europe raises the appeal of dollar-denominated assets.
``The recent shift to a neutral FOMC stance and from a very hawkish European Central Bank stance, together with U.S. data pointing to a stagnation rather than a deep contraction, have already contributed to the dollar's rally,'' said Marc Chandler, global head of currency strategy in New York at Brown Brothers Harriman Inc. Chandler said he expects the dollar to reach $1.44 per euro by year-end.
Rate Futures
Interest-rate futures on the Chicago Board of Trade show an 84 percent chance the Fed will keep its target unchanged at 2 percent when policy makers next meet on June 25, with the balance of the odds calling for a quarter-percentage point cut.
The ECB will lower its 4 percent main refinancing rate to 3.75 percent by the end of September and 3.50 percent by year- end, according to the median estimate of 31 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.
As declining home sales and mortgage losses curbed economic growth, investor sentiment grew so negative on the dollar that even longtime pessimists such as Jim Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings, say the U.S. currency is due to rebound.
``I expect a nice rally in the American dollar because so many have been bearish on the American dollar, including me,'' he said on May 8 in Singapore. Rogers, who co-founded the Quantum fund with George Soros in the 1970s and correctly predicted the start of the commodities boom in 1999, cited the benefit of surging prices for U.S. agricultural products.
Contrarian Indicator
Futures can be viewed as a contrarian indicator because traders often rush to reduce positions when momentum in a currency shifts. The last time net longs were this high, in December 2005, the dollar was nearing the end of a one-year, 13 percent rally versus the euro. It weakened 11 percent in 2006 and depreciated by the same amount in 2007.
``It is more likely than not that reasons for speculators returning to selling the dollar will be greater than reasons for them to sell the euro,'' said Derek Halpenny, head of global- currency research in London at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd., who expects the euro to reach a record high within three months. ``I see risk that the ECB doesn't do anything this year and expect the Fed will ease again in 2008.''
Between May 2005 and the end of that year, futures traders were net long the dollar versus the euro 73 percent of the time. The U.S. currency gained 7.9 percent in that period.
Call Options
Net-short positions versus all currencies fell to $10 billion in the week ended April 29, from $22 billion in the prior period, according to CFTC data tracked by Morgan Stanley. Speculators had net-long bets on the dollar versus the pound and the euro. Hedge funds and other large speculators were net-short the euro for a second week in the period ended May 6.
In another bullish signal for the dollar, demand for one- month options that grant the right to sell the euro is greater than for those allowing for purchases. The so-called risk- reversal rate had a 0.44 percentage point premium for euro puts relative to calls on May 9.
As recently as March, demand for call options was greater than put options. On Jan. 28, the premium for euro calls reached 0.495 percentage point, the highest since April 2007.
``We may very well have seen the bottom in the dollar,'' said Stephen Jen, the global head of currency research at Morgan Stanley in London, who forecasts the dollar will rise to $1.40 per euro by year-end. ``The dollar has regained some traction lately. Against the euro, the U.S. dollar is around 25 percent undervalued.''
The difference in the number of wagers by hedge funds and other large speculators on a gain in the greenback versus the euro, known as net longs, was 21,315 on April 29, figures from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in Washington show. There were net-short positions in each of the previous 123 weeks. At the same time, traders have stepped up their purchases of options that profit from the dollar's appreciation.
The measures are making long-suffering proponents of the dollar optimistic that this time the currency's rally may hold, especially if the Federal Reserve's Open Market Committee refrains from additional interest-rate cuts. The Dollar Index traded on ICE Futures in New York, which tracks the currency against six trading partners, is up 3.7 percent from an all-time low of 70.698 set on March 17.
``There is kind of a sea change taking place at the moment,'' said Mitul Kotecha, head of foreign-exchange research in London at investment bank Calyon, whose forecasts on the euro-dollar exchange rate in the first quarter were more accurate than those of the two biggest currency traders. ``It's probably the early sign of perhaps a more sustained turnaround.''
The Dollar Index fell 0.1 percent to 73.006 by 10:19 a.m. in London. The dollar has appreciated 3.3 percent to $1.5493 since dropping to $1.6019 per euro on April 22, the lowest since the European currency's debut in 1999. The dollar will strengthen by the end of the year to $1.50, according to the median estimate of 40 strategists surveyed by Bloomberg News.
Gaining Traction
The dollar's rebound gained traction last month after the Open Market Committee said ``substantial'' rate cuts since September would help foster growth. U.S. employers also eliminated fewer jobs in April than forecast by economists.
Meanwhile, a slide in business confidence in Germany and France, which account for about half the euro-region economy, renewed speculation the European Central Bank will reduce rates this year. An end to lower rates in the U.S. and the possibility of cuts in Europe raises the appeal of dollar-denominated assets.
``The recent shift to a neutral FOMC stance and from a very hawkish European Central Bank stance, together with U.S. data pointing to a stagnation rather than a deep contraction, have already contributed to the dollar's rally,'' said Marc Chandler, global head of currency strategy in New York at Brown Brothers Harriman Inc. Chandler said he expects the dollar to reach $1.44 per euro by year-end.
Rate Futures
Interest-rate futures on the Chicago Board of Trade show an 84 percent chance the Fed will keep its target unchanged at 2 percent when policy makers next meet on June 25, with the balance of the odds calling for a quarter-percentage point cut.
The ECB will lower its 4 percent main refinancing rate to 3.75 percent by the end of September and 3.50 percent by year- end, according to the median estimate of 31 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.
As declining home sales and mortgage losses curbed economic growth, investor sentiment grew so negative on the dollar that even longtime pessimists such as Jim Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings, say the U.S. currency is due to rebound.
``I expect a nice rally in the American dollar because so many have been bearish on the American dollar, including me,'' he said on May 8 in Singapore. Rogers, who co-founded the Quantum fund with George Soros in the 1970s and correctly predicted the start of the commodities boom in 1999, cited the benefit of surging prices for U.S. agricultural products.
Contrarian Indicator
Futures can be viewed as a contrarian indicator because traders often rush to reduce positions when momentum in a currency shifts. The last time net longs were this high, in December 2005, the dollar was nearing the end of a one-year, 13 percent rally versus the euro. It weakened 11 percent in 2006 and depreciated by the same amount in 2007.
``It is more likely than not that reasons for speculators returning to selling the dollar will be greater than reasons for them to sell the euro,'' said Derek Halpenny, head of global- currency research in London at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd., who expects the euro to reach a record high within three months. ``I see risk that the ECB doesn't do anything this year and expect the Fed will ease again in 2008.''
Between May 2005 and the end of that year, futures traders were net long the dollar versus the euro 73 percent of the time. The U.S. currency gained 7.9 percent in that period.
Call Options
Net-short positions versus all currencies fell to $10 billion in the week ended April 29, from $22 billion in the prior period, according to CFTC data tracked by Morgan Stanley. Speculators had net-long bets on the dollar versus the pound and the euro. Hedge funds and other large speculators were net-short the euro for a second week in the period ended May 6.
In another bullish signal for the dollar, demand for one- month options that grant the right to sell the euro is greater than for those allowing for purchases. The so-called risk- reversal rate had a 0.44 percentage point premium for euro puts relative to calls on May 9.
As recently as March, demand for call options was greater than put options. On Jan. 28, the premium for euro calls reached 0.495 percentage point, the highest since April 2007.
``We may very well have seen the bottom in the dollar,'' said Stephen Jen, the global head of currency research at Morgan Stanley in London, who forecasts the dollar will rise to $1.40 per euro by year-end. ``The dollar has regained some traction lately. Against the euro, the U.S. dollar is around 25 percent undervalued.''
Platinum hits 2-week high
SINGAPORE: Platinum jumped to its best level in more than two weeks on Friday on speculative buying ahead of the launch of new platinum exchange-traded notes, while gold held near a one-week high on firm euro and record high oil.
The two ETNs -- UBS E-Tracs Long Platinum ETN and UBS E-Tracs Short Platinum ETN -- will start trading soon on the NYSE Arca platform, according to CNBC television and NYSE Euronext exchange data.
Dealers also reported platinum purchases in Japan, Europe and the United States as auto makers stocked up for their second-quarter requirements, but the metal was still more than $200 below a lifetime high of $2,290 an ounce hit on March 4.
Spot platinum rose as high as $2,043 an ounce, its highest since April 18, up from $2,008.50/2,028.50 late in New York on Thursday. "Automobile makers start to buy, therefore the price will increase rapidly. By the end of May, the price may be $2,100," said Yukuji Sonoda, precious metals analyst at Daiichi Commodities in Tokyo.
But jewellery makers weren't buying because of the high prices, using recycled metal instead to meet demand, said Sonoda. Platinum's major industrial use is in catalysts, particularly in diesel catalysts, as it helps cleanse environmentally damaging fumes from motor exhausts. It is also used in jewellery.
The benchmark platinum contract for April 2009 delivery on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange rose 187 yen per gram higher at 6,590 yen. Gold hit a high of $884.55 an ounce, not far from Thursday's one-week high of high at $885.25 an ounce, before dipping to $883.80/884.80 an ounce, still up from $881.40/882.60 an ounce late in New York. "The euro has reversed after finding some support around the 1.5821 region.
That provides some support for gold," said Adrian Koh, an analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore. "Higher oil prices and the platinum news are also supportive. So basically, it's a string of good news for gold." The euro edged up to $1.5414 after rebounding from a two-month low on reduced expectations for European Central Bank rate cuts. Oil spiked to another record near $125 a barrel on Friday on fund buying.
In the physical market, steady purchases from jewellers in Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam pushed up premiums for gold bars to 80 US cents an ounce to the spot London prices in Singapore, from 75 cents last week India, the world's largest gold consumer, was active an buyer earlier this week ahead of Akshaya Tritiya, a festival when many Hindus buy gold with the belief it will give them lasting prosperity Gold futures for June delivery on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange added $2.8 an ounce to $884.9 an ounce.
The two ETNs -- UBS E-Tracs Long Platinum ETN and UBS E-Tracs Short Platinum ETN -- will start trading soon on the NYSE Arca platform, according to CNBC television and NYSE Euronext exchange data.
Dealers also reported platinum purchases in Japan, Europe and the United States as auto makers stocked up for their second-quarter requirements, but the metal was still more than $200 below a lifetime high of $2,290 an ounce hit on March 4.
Spot platinum rose as high as $2,043 an ounce, its highest since April 18, up from $2,008.50/2,028.50 late in New York on Thursday. "Automobile makers start to buy, therefore the price will increase rapidly. By the end of May, the price may be $2,100," said Yukuji Sonoda, precious metals analyst at Daiichi Commodities in Tokyo.
But jewellery makers weren't buying because of the high prices, using recycled metal instead to meet demand, said Sonoda. Platinum's major industrial use is in catalysts, particularly in diesel catalysts, as it helps cleanse environmentally damaging fumes from motor exhausts. It is also used in jewellery.
The benchmark platinum contract for April 2009 delivery on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange rose 187 yen per gram higher at 6,590 yen. Gold hit a high of $884.55 an ounce, not far from Thursday's one-week high of high at $885.25 an ounce, before dipping to $883.80/884.80 an ounce, still up from $881.40/882.60 an ounce late in New York. "The euro has reversed after finding some support around the 1.5821 region.
That provides some support for gold," said Adrian Koh, an analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore. "Higher oil prices and the platinum news are also supportive. So basically, it's a string of good news for gold." The euro edged up to $1.5414 after rebounding from a two-month low on reduced expectations for European Central Bank rate cuts. Oil spiked to another record near $125 a barrel on Friday on fund buying.
In the physical market, steady purchases from jewellers in Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam pushed up premiums for gold bars to 80 US cents an ounce to the spot London prices in Singapore, from 75 cents last week India, the world's largest gold consumer, was active an buyer earlier this week ahead of Akshaya Tritiya, a festival when many Hindus buy gold with the belief it will give them lasting prosperity Gold futures for June delivery on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange added $2.8 an ounce to $884.9 an ounce.
Gold demand low as prices remain firm
India's gold demand remained low on Monday as prices remained firm, prompting buyers to wait for a fall, dealers said.
"The demand has come down after good sales during Akshaya Tritiya," said Dipen Mandelia, director of Ahmedabad-based LKS Bullion Import and Export Pvt Ltd.
Akshaya Tritiya, an auspicious festival for buying gold, ended on Thursday.
Domestic gold prices erased early losses and moved higher in afternoon trade.
People are cautious of high prices and they are keeping themselves away from the market, said Ashwin Choksi of Mumbai-based Jamnadas M. Choksi Jewellers.
Some people are now shifting to diamond jewellery as prices are comparatively stable there, he said.
"The demand has come down after good sales during Akshaya Tritiya," said Dipen Mandelia, director of Ahmedabad-based LKS Bullion Import and Export Pvt Ltd.
Akshaya Tritiya, an auspicious festival for buying gold, ended on Thursday.
Domestic gold prices erased early losses and moved higher in afternoon trade.
People are cautious of high prices and they are keeping themselves away from the market, said Ashwin Choksi of Mumbai-based Jamnadas M. Choksi Jewellers.
Some people are now shifting to diamond jewellery as prices are comparatively stable there, he said.
Gold bounces back on global cues
old prices bounced back on the bullion market here on Monday on renewed demand from stockists on the back of higher global advices.
Silver also inched up on mild demand from industrial users.
Some of the investors might have shifted to equity market for early gains, traders said.
Standard gold (99.5 purity) shot up by Rs 75 per 10 grams to Rs 11,995 from the last weekend's level of Rs 11,920. Pure gold (99.9 purity) also rose by a similar margin to Rs 12,055 from Rs 11,980.
Silver ready (.999 finess) moved up by Rs 30 per kilo to Rs 23,415 from Rs 23,385.
In the London market, gold was fixed higher in the morning at USD 882.50 per ounce as against USD 876.00 per ounce.
Silver also inched up on mild demand from industrial users.
Some of the investors might have shifted to equity market for early gains, traders said.
Standard gold (99.5 purity) shot up by Rs 75 per 10 grams to Rs 11,995 from the last weekend's level of Rs 11,920. Pure gold (99.9 purity) also rose by a similar margin to Rs 12,055 from Rs 11,980.
Silver ready (.999 finess) moved up by Rs 30 per kilo to Rs 23,415 from Rs 23,385.
In the London market, gold was fixed higher in the morning at USD 882.50 per ounce as against USD 876.00 per ounce.
Will India ban futures trading in Gold?
NEW DELHI: Less a than week after the Indian government banned futures trading in commodities like rubber, chana, soya oil and potato, a section of bullion traders are pressing for a similar ban on gold futures.
On Sunday, the All India Sarafa Association, an umbrella body for bullion traders, sent a memorandum to India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Finance Minister P Chidambaram asking for an immediate ban on futures trading in gold and silver.
According to the Assoication President Sheel Chand Jain, gold prices are going up and up these days becuase of futures trading, and the speculative trading undertaken by commodity players.
"The gold market in India has become unstable thanks to sudden rise and fall in the prices of yellow metal. In fact, the price flutuation in bullion prices, many times in a day, has created instability in the minds of consumers and adversely affected the bullion trade in India," Jain said.
Therefore, he said just as the government banned futures trading in agri commodities like rubber and soya oil, it is high time the government acted fast to ban forward trading in gold and silver.
Jain pointed out that India is the largest consumer of gold in the world, and futures trading has not helped the common man. "Gold prices have been volatile becuase of futures trading. People in India are genuine buyers of gold. But they are left high and dry these days because of the high prices of gold," he said.
Jain said the Association will meet Finance Minister Chidambaram to request him to ban futures trading in gold.
On Sunday, the All India Sarafa Association, an umbrella body for bullion traders, sent a memorandum to India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and Finance Minister P Chidambaram asking for an immediate ban on futures trading in gold and silver.
According to the Assoication President Sheel Chand Jain, gold prices are going up and up these days becuase of futures trading, and the speculative trading undertaken by commodity players.
"The gold market in India has become unstable thanks to sudden rise and fall in the prices of yellow metal. In fact, the price flutuation in bullion prices, many times in a day, has created instability in the minds of consumers and adversely affected the bullion trade in India," Jain said.
Therefore, he said just as the government banned futures trading in agri commodities like rubber and soya oil, it is high time the government acted fast to ban forward trading in gold and silver.
Jain pointed out that India is the largest consumer of gold in the world, and futures trading has not helped the common man. "Gold prices have been volatile becuase of futures trading. People in India are genuine buyers of gold. But they are left high and dry these days because of the high prices of gold," he said.
Jain said the Association will meet Finance Minister Chidambaram to request him to ban futures trading in gold.
Gold rises above $882 as dollar falls
NEW YORK: Continuing its upward journey, gold rose to $882.10 a troy ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange on Thursday.
June gold raised $10.90 to settle at $ 882.10 as the US dollar fell and the euro gained.
As gold was closing, the euro was up to $1.5411 from $1.5396 yesterday. At the same time, the ICE Futures US dollar index was down 0.13 per cent.
July silver rose 17.5 cents to $16.87 an ounce. July platinum raised $73.30, or nearly 4 per cent, to settle at $2042.30 an ounce while June palladium gained $10.15, or more than 2 per cent, to close at $435.90. The most-active July copper contract fell 4.65c to settle at $3.7875 a pound, hurt by technical sales.
June gold raised $10.90 to settle at $ 882.10 as the US dollar fell and the euro gained.
As gold was closing, the euro was up to $1.5411 from $1.5396 yesterday. At the same time, the ICE Futures US dollar index was down 0.13 per cent.
July silver rose 17.5 cents to $16.87 an ounce. July platinum raised $73.30, or nearly 4 per cent, to settle at $2042.30 an ounce while June palladium gained $10.15, or more than 2 per cent, to close at $435.90. The most-active July copper contract fell 4.65c to settle at $3.7875 a pound, hurt by technical sales.
Gold falls below $ 872 on sturdy dollar
NEW YORK: Gold prices fell Wednesday after a three-day winning streak as the dollar rebounded against the euro.
Gold futures for June delivery dropped $6.50, or 0.7%, to $871.20 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The price gained 3.1% in the previous three sessions.
Silver futures for July delivery declined 16.5 cents, or 1%, to $16.695 an ounce. The price gained 0.6% in the past week and 22% in the past 12 months.
Silver will average $15.76 this year and $12.80 in 2009, UBS said today in a quarterly report. Futures averaged $13.47 in 2007.
The dollar rose on speculation the Federal Reserve may raise interest rates to curb inflation. Gold has climbed 26% in the past year, reaching a record $1033.90 an ounce on March 17, after sliding borrowing costs sent the dollar to an all-time low against the euro.
The dollar rose as much as 1.1% today against the euro after dropping 0.7% in the previous two sessions. The Fed cut interest rates 3.25 percentage points to 2% from September to April. The euro hit $1.6019 on April 22, the highest ever. The currency traded as low as $1.5366 today.
Gold rallied 31% last year when consumer prices rose 4.1%, the most since 1990. Crude-oil futures climbed to a record for a third time this week, touching $123.56 a barrel.
Gold futures for June delivery dropped $6.50, or 0.7%, to $871.20 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The price gained 3.1% in the previous three sessions.
Silver futures for July delivery declined 16.5 cents, or 1%, to $16.695 an ounce. The price gained 0.6% in the past week and 22% in the past 12 months.
Silver will average $15.76 this year and $12.80 in 2009, UBS said today in a quarterly report. Futures averaged $13.47 in 2007.
The dollar rose on speculation the Federal Reserve may raise interest rates to curb inflation. Gold has climbed 26% in the past year, reaching a record $1033.90 an ounce on March 17, after sliding borrowing costs sent the dollar to an all-time low against the euro.
The dollar rose as much as 1.1% today against the euro after dropping 0.7% in the previous two sessions. The Fed cut interest rates 3.25 percentage points to 2% from September to April. The euro hit $1.6019 on April 22, the highest ever. The currency traded as low as $1.5366 today.
Gold rallied 31% last year when consumer prices rose 4.1%, the most since 1990. Crude-oil futures climbed to a record for a third time this week, touching $123.56 a barrel.
Gold rises to Rs 11,820 on buying spree
Gold rose to Rs 11,820 per 10 gram mainly on heavy buying by stockists and jewellery fabricators prior to Akshayatrithiya here at the bullion market on Wednesday.
Precious metal prices surged further by Rs 150 again on firming trend in overseas markets.
Standard gold and ornaments rose by Rs 150 each to Rs 11,820 and Rs 11,670 per 10 gram respectively. Sovereign held unchanged at Rs 9875 per piece of eight gram.
Silver also rose further on brisk buying by funds. Silver ready rose further by Rs 320 to Rs 22,620 per kg and weekly-based delivery by Rs 500 to Rs 22,450 per kg.
Silver coins, on the other hand, continued to be asked at previous levels of Rs 26,600 for buying and Rs 26,700 for selling of 100 pieces.
The buying activity picked up on reports that the gold rose in Asia for a fourth day as crude oil traded near 122 dollar a barrel, boosting the appeal of the precious metal as a hedge against inflation.
Gold has gained 5.2 per cent this year in overseas markets, while oil soared 27 per cent. Bullion for immediate delivery gained 5.03 dollar to 881.43 dollar an ounce. The domestic bullion market normally take guidance from global markets.
Precious metal prices surged further by Rs 150 again on firming trend in overseas markets.
Standard gold and ornaments rose by Rs 150 each to Rs 11,820 and Rs 11,670 per 10 gram respectively. Sovereign held unchanged at Rs 9875 per piece of eight gram.
Silver also rose further on brisk buying by funds. Silver ready rose further by Rs 320 to Rs 22,620 per kg and weekly-based delivery by Rs 500 to Rs 22,450 per kg.
Silver coins, on the other hand, continued to be asked at previous levels of Rs 26,600 for buying and Rs 26,700 for selling of 100 pieces.
The buying activity picked up on reports that the gold rose in Asia for a fourth day as crude oil traded near 122 dollar a barrel, boosting the appeal of the precious metal as a hedge against inflation.
Gold has gained 5.2 per cent this year in overseas markets, while oil soared 27 per cent. Bullion for immediate delivery gained 5.03 dollar to 881.43 dollar an ounce. The domestic bullion market normally take guidance from global markets.
IMF approves sale of 403.3 tons of gold reserves
WASHINGTON: The IMF on Tuesday approved the sale of 403.3 tons of gold reserves as part of a financial overhaul that will allow the Fund to generate revenues from a variety of sources.
IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said "With this decisive endorsement, the Fund's members have once again demonstrated their support for reforming key components of the institution's framework, including its financial structure".
The sale, amounting to some 12 percent of the IMF's gold reserves, could yield around 11 billion dollars.
This would help finance a reorganization of the institution as it seeks to survive a downturn in lending to troubled countries, its main income source.
As more and more developing countries began rejecting financial aid, the IMF is trying to find new ways that can provide steady sources of income to it. The institution faces a budget shortfall of some 140 million dollars for the fiscal year 2008 that ends on April 30.
IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said "With this decisive endorsement, the Fund's members have once again demonstrated their support for reforming key components of the institution's framework, including its financial structure".
The sale, amounting to some 12 percent of the IMF's gold reserves, could yield around 11 billion dollars.
This would help finance a reorganization of the institution as it seeks to survive a downturn in lending to troubled countries, its main income source.
As more and more developing countries began rejecting financial aid, the IMF is trying to find new ways that can provide steady sources of income to it. The institution faces a budget shortfall of some 140 million dollars for the fiscal year 2008 that ends on April 30.
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Gold futures fall sharply on dollar, oil
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Gold futures fell sharply Tuesday, as strength in the U.S. dollar and declining oil prices pressured investment demand for the precious metal. Gold for June delivery dropped $18.70 to end at $876.80 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
"Anticipation about the Fed meeting's eventual results turned into apprehension that the massive slide in rates seen since September will not only come to an end shortly, but will likely be partially reversed after a period of no action," said Jon Nadler, senior analyst at Kitco Bullion Dealers.
The Federal Reserve's interest-rate meeting begins Tuesday afternoon. The statement will be released on Wednesday at 2:15 p.m. Est. See The Fed.
Most economists expect a quarter-percentage point cut from the central bank. The rate cut would bring the Fed's target for overnight interest rates to 2%, the lowest level since December 2004.
Many economists said they wouldn't be surprised if the Fed paused at this meeting. Some want the Fed to pause to signal that it is prepared to get tough about inflation.
"I think the main driver today is the pricing in of the next Fed rate cut and the strength in the dollar," said Zachary Oxman, a senior trader at Wisdom Financial.
"It is quite possible that the Fed has cut to the point where credit will be loosening, which would signal a renewal for the U.S. economic growth cycle," Oxman said. "If this is the case, watch for a rotation out of gold and flight-to-quality trades and back to the stock market."
The dollar held onto most of its gains Tuesday. The dollar index, which tracks the performance of the greenback against a basket of other major currencies, gained 0.3% to 72.83
"Gold is again under pressure with the dollar continuing to strengthen and oil continuing to sell off, but caution remains the predominant theme ahead of the Federal Reserve's interest rate decision," said Mark O'Byrne, executive director of Gold and Silver Investments Ltd., in a research note.
Crude-oil futures fell sharply, as strength in the U.S. dollar and news that BP's Forties pipeline will restart operation within days pressured energy prices.
"Anticipation about the Fed meeting's eventual results turned into apprehension that the massive slide in rates seen since September will not only come to an end shortly, but will likely be partially reversed after a period of no action," said Jon Nadler, senior analyst at Kitco Bullion Dealers.
The Federal Reserve's interest-rate meeting begins Tuesday afternoon. The statement will be released on Wednesday at 2:15 p.m. Est. See The Fed.
Most economists expect a quarter-percentage point cut from the central bank. The rate cut would bring the Fed's target for overnight interest rates to 2%, the lowest level since December 2004.
Many economists said they wouldn't be surprised if the Fed paused at this meeting. Some want the Fed to pause to signal that it is prepared to get tough about inflation.
"I think the main driver today is the pricing in of the next Fed rate cut and the strength in the dollar," said Zachary Oxman, a senior trader at Wisdom Financial.
"It is quite possible that the Fed has cut to the point where credit will be loosening, which would signal a renewal for the U.S. economic growth cycle," Oxman said. "If this is the case, watch for a rotation out of gold and flight-to-quality trades and back to the stock market."
The dollar held onto most of its gains Tuesday. The dollar index, which tracks the performance of the greenback against a basket of other major currencies, gained 0.3% to 72.83
"Gold is again under pressure with the dollar continuing to strengthen and oil continuing to sell off, but caution remains the predominant theme ahead of the Federal Reserve's interest rate decision," said Mark O'Byrne, executive director of Gold and Silver Investments Ltd., in a research note.
Crude-oil futures fell sharply, as strength in the U.S. dollar and news that BP's Forties pipeline will restart operation within days pressured energy prices.
Gold, Silver Futures Decline on Dollar, Interest-Rate Outlook
(Bloomberg) -- Gold fell to a four-week low as the dollar climbed against the euro, eroding the appeal of precious metals and commodities as alternative investments. Silver also declined.
The dollar rose as much as 0.7 percent versus the euro on speculation the Federal Reserve will signal that it's close to pausing after six interest-rate reductions. Before today, gold and commodities gained more than 30 percent in the past 12 months, while the dollar slumped 13 percent against the euro.
``If, as we suspect, the Federal Reserve stands pat on rates, or signals that it is done for the time being, we could see the dollar strengthen, and lead to another bout of profit- talking in commodities,'' Edward Meir, an analyst at MF Global Ltd., said in a report.
Gold futures for June delivery fell $14, or 1.6 percent, to $881.50 an ounce at 9:29 a.m. on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The price earlier touched $878.60, the lowest for a most-active contract since April 1.
The Fed reduced borrowing costs by 3 percentage points to 2.25 percent from Sept. 18 to March 18. Gold reached a record $1,033.90 an ounce on March 17.
The U.S. currency headed for its first monthly advance this year against the euro as traders increased bets the Fed will stop lowering borrowing costs after a quarter-percentage point reduction tomorrow.
Silver futures for July delivery declined 46.3 cents, or 2.7 percent, to $16.66 an ounce. Before today, the price gained 26 percent in the past 12 months.
The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 commodities dropped as much as 1.3 percent.
The dollar rose as much as 0.7 percent versus the euro on speculation the Federal Reserve will signal that it's close to pausing after six interest-rate reductions. Before today, gold and commodities gained more than 30 percent in the past 12 months, while the dollar slumped 13 percent against the euro.
``If, as we suspect, the Federal Reserve stands pat on rates, or signals that it is done for the time being, we could see the dollar strengthen, and lead to another bout of profit- talking in commodities,'' Edward Meir, an analyst at MF Global Ltd., said in a report.
Gold futures for June delivery fell $14, or 1.6 percent, to $881.50 an ounce at 9:29 a.m. on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The price earlier touched $878.60, the lowest for a most-active contract since April 1.
The Fed reduced borrowing costs by 3 percentage points to 2.25 percent from Sept. 18 to March 18. Gold reached a record $1,033.90 an ounce on March 17.
The U.S. currency headed for its first monthly advance this year against the euro as traders increased bets the Fed will stop lowering borrowing costs after a quarter-percentage point reduction tomorrow.
Silver futures for July delivery declined 46.3 cents, or 2.7 percent, to $16.66 an ounce. Before today, the price gained 26 percent in the past 12 months.
The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 commodities dropped as much as 1.3 percent.
US STOCKS-Market wavers as drugs weigh, Fed looms
(Reuters) - U.S. stocks ended little changed on Tuesday as setbacks for two drugs weighed down the pharmaceutical sector, offsetting the relief from a retreat in record high crude oil prices.
Trading volume was scant as investors turned cautious with the Federal Reserve's two-day meeting under way. Policy makers are expected to trim interest rates and signal an end to a series of deep cuts started in September.
The prospect of steady rates helped support the dollar and contributed to a 2.5 percent drop in oil prices from a record high. Crude's decline sparked a rally in airlines, but dragged on energy-related shares.
Merck & Co Inc (MRK.N: Quote, Profile, Research) shares fell more than 10 percent a day after the company said U.S. regulators rejected a new cholesterol drug, prompting brokerages to cut price targets on the stock.
Further dragging on the drug sector, biotechnology companies Genentech Inc (DNA.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Biogen Idec Inc (BIIB.O: Quote, Profile, Research) said a study of one of its cancer treatments failed to show the drug was also effective for treating lupus. [ID:nWNAS0367]
"Pharmaceuticals used to be the traditional recession play, but it seems they have so many negative stories, they can't get out of their own way," said Mark Schlarbaum, head trader at Global Capital Management in Conshohocken, Pennsylvania.
If the drug companies could overcome that trend, Schlarbaum said they would attract some interest because "they're all cheap. It's hard to say where is the relatively safe trade in this environment."
The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was down 39.81 points, or 0.31 percent, at 12,831.94. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index .SPX was down 5.43 points, or 0.39 percent, at 1,390.94. The Nasdaq Composite Index .IXIC was up 1.70 points, or 0.07 percent, at 2,426.10.
About 1.23 billion shares changed hands on the NYSE, well below last year's estimated daily average of roughly 1.90 billion, while on Nasdaq, about 1.75 billion shares traded, below last year's daily average of 2.17 billion.
Merck shares slid 10.4 percent to $37.14 on the New York Stock Exchange, while Genentech (DNA.N: Quote, Profile, Research) dropped 7.2 percent to $67.93. On the Nasdaq, Biogen Idec shares declined 5.2 percent to $61.33.
The American Stock Exchange pharmaceutical index .DRG was down 1 percent.
June crude CLM8 dropped $3.12 to settle at $115.63 a barrel -- sharply below Monday's record near $120 a barrel.
Shares of Northwest Airlines (NWA.N: Quote, Profile, Research) surged 22.8 percent to $9.36 and Delta Air Lines jumped 14.6 percent to $8.24. High fuel costs have pummeled airline shares and have even grounded some carriers.
Shares of Schlumberger Ltd (SLB.N: Quote, Profile, Research), an oilfield services firm, slid 3 percent to $99.26. Oil and gas producer Apache Corp (APA.N: Quote, Profile, Research) dropped 3.8 percent to $132.68 on the NYSE.
It wasn't all gloom in the oil patch. Goldman Sachs upgraded the integrated oil sector to "attractive" from "neutral," saying risk/reward was most favorable for the "super majors" such as ConocoPhillips (COP.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Chevron Corp (CVX.N: Quote, Profile, Research).
Chevron shares rose 2.4 percent to $94.74, supporting both the Dow and the S&P. ConocoPhillips stock gained 1.2 percent to $85.45.
The latest economic data increased investors' fears of recession.
Consumer confidence hit a five-year low in April as Americans faced the worst jobs outlook since late 2004, with expectations that inflation would accelerate to a pace last seen in the early 1980s, according to the Conference Board, a private research group. That outlook worries Wall Street because consumer spending accounts for two-thirds of U.S. economic activity.
Adding to the worry list: U.S. home foreclosure filings surged in the first quarter of the year, real estate data firm RealtyTrac said. And in a separate report, the Standard & Poor's/Case Shiller home price index showed prices of existing U.S. single family homes fell further in February.
Trading volume was scant as investors turned cautious with the Federal Reserve's two-day meeting under way. Policy makers are expected to trim interest rates and signal an end to a series of deep cuts started in September.
The prospect of steady rates helped support the dollar and contributed to a 2.5 percent drop in oil prices from a record high. Crude's decline sparked a rally in airlines, but dragged on energy-related shares.
Merck & Co Inc (MRK.N: Quote, Profile, Research) shares fell more than 10 percent a day after the company said U.S. regulators rejected a new cholesterol drug, prompting brokerages to cut price targets on the stock.
Further dragging on the drug sector, biotechnology companies Genentech Inc (DNA.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Biogen Idec Inc (BIIB.O: Quote, Profile, Research) said a study of one of its cancer treatments failed to show the drug was also effective for treating lupus. [ID:nWNAS0367]
"Pharmaceuticals used to be the traditional recession play, but it seems they have so many negative stories, they can't get out of their own way," said Mark Schlarbaum, head trader at Global Capital Management in Conshohocken, Pennsylvania.
If the drug companies could overcome that trend, Schlarbaum said they would attract some interest because "they're all cheap. It's hard to say where is the relatively safe trade in this environment."
The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was down 39.81 points, or 0.31 percent, at 12,831.94. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index .SPX was down 5.43 points, or 0.39 percent, at 1,390.94. The Nasdaq Composite Index .IXIC was up 1.70 points, or 0.07 percent, at 2,426.10.
About 1.23 billion shares changed hands on the NYSE, well below last year's estimated daily average of roughly 1.90 billion, while on Nasdaq, about 1.75 billion shares traded, below last year's daily average of 2.17 billion.
Merck shares slid 10.4 percent to $37.14 on the New York Stock Exchange, while Genentech (DNA.N: Quote, Profile, Research) dropped 7.2 percent to $67.93. On the Nasdaq, Biogen Idec shares declined 5.2 percent to $61.33.
The American Stock Exchange pharmaceutical index .DRG was down 1 percent.
June crude CLM8 dropped $3.12 to settle at $115.63 a barrel -- sharply below Monday's record near $120 a barrel.
Shares of Northwest Airlines (NWA.N: Quote, Profile, Research) surged 22.8 percent to $9.36 and Delta Air Lines jumped 14.6 percent to $8.24. High fuel costs have pummeled airline shares and have even grounded some carriers.
Shares of Schlumberger Ltd (SLB.N: Quote, Profile, Research), an oilfield services firm, slid 3 percent to $99.26. Oil and gas producer Apache Corp (APA.N: Quote, Profile, Research) dropped 3.8 percent to $132.68 on the NYSE.
It wasn't all gloom in the oil patch. Goldman Sachs upgraded the integrated oil sector to "attractive" from "neutral," saying risk/reward was most favorable for the "super majors" such as ConocoPhillips (COP.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Chevron Corp (CVX.N: Quote, Profile, Research).
Chevron shares rose 2.4 percent to $94.74, supporting both the Dow and the S&P. ConocoPhillips stock gained 1.2 percent to $85.45.
The latest economic data increased investors' fears of recession.
Consumer confidence hit a five-year low in April as Americans faced the worst jobs outlook since late 2004, with expectations that inflation would accelerate to a pace last seen in the early 1980s, according to the Conference Board, a private research group. That outlook worries Wall Street because consumer spending accounts for two-thirds of U.S. economic activity.
Adding to the worry list: U.S. home foreclosure filings surged in the first quarter of the year, real estate data firm RealtyTrac said. And in a separate report, the Standard & Poor's/Case Shiller home price index showed prices of existing U.S. single family homes fell further in February.
Oil Falls More Than $3 as BP Restarts Pipeline, Dollar Rises
Crude oil fell more than $3 a barrel, the biggest decline in four weeks, after BP Plc restarted a North Sea oil pipeline and the dollar strengthened, reducing the appeal of commodities to investors.
``The Forties Pipeline System is back in operation,'' Richard Grant, a BP spokesman in Aberdeen, Scotland, said today. The pipeline closed April 27 during a two-day strike at the Grangemouth refinery, which supplies the network with power. The dollar rose to a three-week high against the euro.
``The reopening of the Forties Pipeline is taking fear out of the market,'' said Rick Mueller, director of oil practice at Energy Security Analysis Inc. in Wakefield, Massachusetts. ``The dollar is rising as well, which is taking some of the financial pressure out of commodity markets.''
Crude oil for June delivery dropped $3.12, or 2.6 percent, to settle at $115.63 a barrel at 2:58 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the lowest close since April 17. It was the biggest one-day decline since March 31. Futures surged to a record $119.93 a barrel yesterday. Prices are 74 percent higher than a year ago.
Prices closed above the Bloomberg Trender support line today, as they have since April 7, indicating crude oil will probably extend gains. The Trender is a technical study that signals a price's direction based on the speed and variance of past changes.
Brent crude for June settlement fell $3.31, or 2.8 percent, to settle at $113.43 a barrel on London's ICE Futures Europe exchange. It was also the biggest drop since March 31 and the lowest close since April 17. The contract touched a record $117.56 on April 25.
`Buying-With-Abandon'
``For the first time in weeks we have some bearish factors in the forefront,'' said Peter Beutel, president of energy consultant Cameron Hanover Inc. in New Canaan, Connecticut. ``We are finally seeing a stop to the buying-with-abandon.''
Shutting the Forties link forced 70 North Sea fields to halt production of oil and gas. Plans are in place to begin increasing offshore production today and the pipeline will return to full capacity in ``several days,'' Joanne McDonald, a spokeswoman for BP, said earlier.
Record oil prices pushed oil-company profits higher. BP, Europe's second-biggest oil company, posted a 63 percent jump in first-quarter net income to $7.62 billion. Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe's biggest oil producer, said profit rose 25 percent to $9.08 billion.
Futures contracts on the Chicago Board of Trade show an 82 percent chance the Fed will trim its target for overnight lending between banks by 0.25 percentage point to 2 percent tomorrow. The European Central Bank has not cut rates because of rising inflation, which has led to the dollar falling against the euro.
Commodity Records
Oil has risen 42 percent and the dollar has dropped 12 percent against the euro since the Federal Reserve began lowering interest rates on Sept. 18. Gold, corn, soybeans and rice also rose to records this year as the dollar dropped.
The UBS Bloomberg Constant Maturity Commodity Index, which tracks 26 raw materials, fell 1.8 percent to 1485.937 today, the lowest since April 11. The index is up 33 percent from a year ago.
An Energy Department report tomorrow will probably show that U.S. crude-oil supplies advanced 950,000 barrels in the week ended April 25 from 316.1 million barrels, according to the median of responses from 12 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News.
``The dollar's strength and news that the Forties pipeline will be up and running in a couple days are moving us lower,'' said Gene McGillian, an analyst at TFS Energy LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. ``There won't be a major retracement in the near term because of supply disruptions, specifically in Nigeria.''
Exxon Strike
A senior Nigerian oil workers' union continued its strike against a unit of Exxon Mobil Corp. for a sixth day, halting 860,000 barrels a day. Olusola George-Olumoroti, chairman of the branch of the Petroleum & Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria, or Pengassan, said the union will meet today with Exxon, government officials and the head of the state-owned oil company.
The strike, combined with a one-week spree of militant attacks against four crude-oil pipelines operated by a Royal Dutch Shell Plc venture, has cut Nigerian oil output by about 50 percent, allowing Angola to overtake it as Africa's biggest oil producer. Violence by militants in the Niger River Delta has cut Nigeria's oil output since the start of 2006.
``Exxon's problems will probably be temporary but that's not the case with Shell,'' McGillian said. ``The situation in the delta has been a bullish factor in the market for two years now and there are no signs that it will end any time soon.''
President George W. Bush dismissed calls by Congress to stop oil purchases for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve at a press conference today at the White House. A group of 14 Senate Republicans earlier asked Bush to stop filling the reserve to ease price pressures, matching a similar request previously made by Democrats in the House.
``The Forties Pipeline System is back in operation,'' Richard Grant, a BP spokesman in Aberdeen, Scotland, said today. The pipeline closed April 27 during a two-day strike at the Grangemouth refinery, which supplies the network with power. The dollar rose to a three-week high against the euro.
``The reopening of the Forties Pipeline is taking fear out of the market,'' said Rick Mueller, director of oil practice at Energy Security Analysis Inc. in Wakefield, Massachusetts. ``The dollar is rising as well, which is taking some of the financial pressure out of commodity markets.''
Crude oil for June delivery dropped $3.12, or 2.6 percent, to settle at $115.63 a barrel at 2:58 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the lowest close since April 17. It was the biggest one-day decline since March 31. Futures surged to a record $119.93 a barrel yesterday. Prices are 74 percent higher than a year ago.
Prices closed above the Bloomberg Trender support line today, as they have since April 7, indicating crude oil will probably extend gains. The Trender is a technical study that signals a price's direction based on the speed and variance of past changes.
Brent crude for June settlement fell $3.31, or 2.8 percent, to settle at $113.43 a barrel on London's ICE Futures Europe exchange. It was also the biggest drop since March 31 and the lowest close since April 17. The contract touched a record $117.56 on April 25.
`Buying-With-Abandon'
``For the first time in weeks we have some bearish factors in the forefront,'' said Peter Beutel, president of energy consultant Cameron Hanover Inc. in New Canaan, Connecticut. ``We are finally seeing a stop to the buying-with-abandon.''
Shutting the Forties link forced 70 North Sea fields to halt production of oil and gas. Plans are in place to begin increasing offshore production today and the pipeline will return to full capacity in ``several days,'' Joanne McDonald, a spokeswoman for BP, said earlier.
Record oil prices pushed oil-company profits higher. BP, Europe's second-biggest oil company, posted a 63 percent jump in first-quarter net income to $7.62 billion. Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe's biggest oil producer, said profit rose 25 percent to $9.08 billion.
Futures contracts on the Chicago Board of Trade show an 82 percent chance the Fed will trim its target for overnight lending between banks by 0.25 percentage point to 2 percent tomorrow. The European Central Bank has not cut rates because of rising inflation, which has led to the dollar falling against the euro.
Commodity Records
Oil has risen 42 percent and the dollar has dropped 12 percent against the euro since the Federal Reserve began lowering interest rates on Sept. 18. Gold, corn, soybeans and rice also rose to records this year as the dollar dropped.
The UBS Bloomberg Constant Maturity Commodity Index, which tracks 26 raw materials, fell 1.8 percent to 1485.937 today, the lowest since April 11. The index is up 33 percent from a year ago.
An Energy Department report tomorrow will probably show that U.S. crude-oil supplies advanced 950,000 barrels in the week ended April 25 from 316.1 million barrels, according to the median of responses from 12 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News.
``The dollar's strength and news that the Forties pipeline will be up and running in a couple days are moving us lower,'' said Gene McGillian, an analyst at TFS Energy LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. ``There won't be a major retracement in the near term because of supply disruptions, specifically in Nigeria.''
Exxon Strike
A senior Nigerian oil workers' union continued its strike against a unit of Exxon Mobil Corp. for a sixth day, halting 860,000 barrels a day. Olusola George-Olumoroti, chairman of the branch of the Petroleum & Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria, or Pengassan, said the union will meet today with Exxon, government officials and the head of the state-owned oil company.
The strike, combined with a one-week spree of militant attacks against four crude-oil pipelines operated by a Royal Dutch Shell Plc venture, has cut Nigerian oil output by about 50 percent, allowing Angola to overtake it as Africa's biggest oil producer. Violence by militants in the Niger River Delta has cut Nigeria's oil output since the start of 2006.
``Exxon's problems will probably be temporary but that's not the case with Shell,'' McGillian said. ``The situation in the delta has been a bullish factor in the market for two years now and there are no signs that it will end any time soon.''
President George W. Bush dismissed calls by Congress to stop oil purchases for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve at a press conference today at the White House. A group of 14 Senate Republicans earlier asked Bush to stop filling the reserve to ease price pressures, matching a similar request previously made by Democrats in the House.
Dollar Rises to Three-Week High on Bets Fed Will Signal Pause
(Bloomberg) -- The dollar strengthened to a three- week high against the euro on speculation the Federal Reserve will signal that it's done lowering interest rates.
The currency is headed for its first monthly advance against the euro this year, and also gained versus the Norwegian krone and pound today, as interest-rate futures show the Fed may reduce borrowing costs tomorrow and then pause. The pound was poised for its biggest monthly drop against the dollar in 2008 as mortgage approvals in the U.K. plunged last month.
``If the Fed is not at the end of the easing cycle, it's near the end,'' said Jeff Gladstein, global head of currency trading at AIG Financial Products in Wilton, Connecticut. ``I don't think the dollar will strengthen aggressively by any stretch, but I do think it's trying to bottom.''
The dollar rose 0.6 percent to $1.5563 per euro at 4:25 p.m. in New York, from $1.5657 yesterday. It touched $1.5541, the strongest level since April 3. The yen increased 0.1 percent to 104.04 against the dollar, from 104.19 yesterday. It advanced 0.7 percent to 161.93 versus the euro, after touching 161.12, the strongest since April 16.
The U.S. currency has risen 4.3 percent against the yen and 1.4 percent versus the euro this month. The dollar fell to $1.6019 against the euro on April 22, the lowest level since the European currency debuted in 1999. The euro is up 2.7 percent versus the yen in April.
Futures on the Chicago Board of Trade show an 82 percent chance the Fed will cut the target rate for overnight lending by a quarter-percentage point to 2 percent tomorrow and odds of 71 percent that the rate will be held at that level in June.
New Zealand Dollar
New Zealand's dollar weakened against most of the major currencies after a government report showed the annual trade deficit unexpectedly widened in March. The kiwi declined 1.4 percent to 77.49 U.S. cents after touching 77.27, the lowest level since Jan. 28.
The yen rose against all of the major currencies on speculation investors reduced carry trades in which they get funds in a country with low borrowing costs and purchase assets where returns are higher.
Higher-yielding assets were less attractive before the Fed's decision on interest rates tomorrow and the release of economic reports on gross domestic product and payrolls later this week, according to Shaun Osborne, chief currency strategist at TD Securities Inc. in Toronto.
``There is perhaps still a little more value in the safe havens,'' said Osborne. ``The markets are perhaps worried about equities fading again in May if we get weak GDP and payrolls.''
Yen's Advance
Japan's currency increased 1.5 percent to 80.71 versus the New Zealand dollar and 1.2 percent to 61.01 against Brazil's real. Japan's target lending rate of 0.5 percent compares with 11.75 percent in Brazil and 8.25 percent in New Zealand.
The British pound dropped 1 percent to $1.9694 and was down 0.8 percent for the month as the Bank of England reported that mortgage approvals in the U.K. fell in March to the lowest level in at least nine years.
Australia's dollar dropped 0.5 percent to 93.46 U.S. cents after the New York-based Conference Board's Australian index of leading economic indicators fell in February for a third month.
The euro was under pressure as the Bloomberg purchasing managers index showed today that European retail sales dropped the most in more than four years in April. Another report showed French consumer confidence dropped this month to a record low as accelerating inflation squeezed incomes.
Slowdown `Spreading'
``The slowdown in the U.S. is spreading to other countries,'' said Michael Malpede, a senior currency analyst in Chicago at Man Global Research. ``The dollar, which has been on its knees, is in a short-term bottoming process.''
Investors should sell the euro against the dollar over the next several weeks because two-year German bunds have lost some of their yield advantage over comparable-maturity Treasuries, said Citigroup Inc., one of the 10 biggest currency traders. The yield difference, or spread, between the two securities has decreased to 1.46 percentage points, from 1.85 on March 31, which was the most since the euro was launched.
European Central Bank policy makers have held the main refinancing rate at a six-year high of 4 percent since June to contain inflation. The U.S. central bank has cut its fed funds target 3 percentage points to 2.25 percent since September.
``The weak economic data looks increasingly out of the step with the ECB's hawkish stance,'' said Todd Elmer, currency strategist at Citigroup Global Markets Inc. in New York. ``It's a more benign environment for the U.S. dollar.''
The Conference Board's index of U.S. consumer confidence dropped to 62.3 this month, the lowest level since March 2003, from a revised 65.9 in March, the New-York-based research group reported today.
The currency is headed for its first monthly advance against the euro this year, and also gained versus the Norwegian krone and pound today, as interest-rate futures show the Fed may reduce borrowing costs tomorrow and then pause. The pound was poised for its biggest monthly drop against the dollar in 2008 as mortgage approvals in the U.K. plunged last month.
``If the Fed is not at the end of the easing cycle, it's near the end,'' said Jeff Gladstein, global head of currency trading at AIG Financial Products in Wilton, Connecticut. ``I don't think the dollar will strengthen aggressively by any stretch, but I do think it's trying to bottom.''
The dollar rose 0.6 percent to $1.5563 per euro at 4:25 p.m. in New York, from $1.5657 yesterday. It touched $1.5541, the strongest level since April 3. The yen increased 0.1 percent to 104.04 against the dollar, from 104.19 yesterday. It advanced 0.7 percent to 161.93 versus the euro, after touching 161.12, the strongest since April 16.
The U.S. currency has risen 4.3 percent against the yen and 1.4 percent versus the euro this month. The dollar fell to $1.6019 against the euro on April 22, the lowest level since the European currency debuted in 1999. The euro is up 2.7 percent versus the yen in April.
Futures on the Chicago Board of Trade show an 82 percent chance the Fed will cut the target rate for overnight lending by a quarter-percentage point to 2 percent tomorrow and odds of 71 percent that the rate will be held at that level in June.
New Zealand Dollar
New Zealand's dollar weakened against most of the major currencies after a government report showed the annual trade deficit unexpectedly widened in March. The kiwi declined 1.4 percent to 77.49 U.S. cents after touching 77.27, the lowest level since Jan. 28.
The yen rose against all of the major currencies on speculation investors reduced carry trades in which they get funds in a country with low borrowing costs and purchase assets where returns are higher.
Higher-yielding assets were less attractive before the Fed's decision on interest rates tomorrow and the release of economic reports on gross domestic product and payrolls later this week, according to Shaun Osborne, chief currency strategist at TD Securities Inc. in Toronto.
``There is perhaps still a little more value in the safe havens,'' said Osborne. ``The markets are perhaps worried about equities fading again in May if we get weak GDP and payrolls.''
Yen's Advance
Japan's currency increased 1.5 percent to 80.71 versus the New Zealand dollar and 1.2 percent to 61.01 against Brazil's real. Japan's target lending rate of 0.5 percent compares with 11.75 percent in Brazil and 8.25 percent in New Zealand.
The British pound dropped 1 percent to $1.9694 and was down 0.8 percent for the month as the Bank of England reported that mortgage approvals in the U.K. fell in March to the lowest level in at least nine years.
Australia's dollar dropped 0.5 percent to 93.46 U.S. cents after the New York-based Conference Board's Australian index of leading economic indicators fell in February for a third month.
The euro was under pressure as the Bloomberg purchasing managers index showed today that European retail sales dropped the most in more than four years in April. Another report showed French consumer confidence dropped this month to a record low as accelerating inflation squeezed incomes.
Slowdown `Spreading'
``The slowdown in the U.S. is spreading to other countries,'' said Michael Malpede, a senior currency analyst in Chicago at Man Global Research. ``The dollar, which has been on its knees, is in a short-term bottoming process.''
Investors should sell the euro against the dollar over the next several weeks because two-year German bunds have lost some of their yield advantage over comparable-maturity Treasuries, said Citigroup Inc., one of the 10 biggest currency traders. The yield difference, or spread, between the two securities has decreased to 1.46 percentage points, from 1.85 on March 31, which was the most since the euro was launched.
European Central Bank policy makers have held the main refinancing rate at a six-year high of 4 percent since June to contain inflation. The U.S. central bank has cut its fed funds target 3 percentage points to 2.25 percent since September.
``The weak economic data looks increasingly out of the step with the ECB's hawkish stance,'' said Todd Elmer, currency strategist at Citigroup Global Markets Inc. in New York. ``It's a more benign environment for the U.S. dollar.''
The Conference Board's index of U.S. consumer confidence dropped to 62.3 this month, the lowest level since March 2003, from a revised 65.9 in March, the New-York-based research group reported today.
Gold firm amid record oil but caution reigns
London: Gold drifted higher on Monday as oil roared to a record high near $120 a barrel but investors remained cautious ahead of this week's meeting of the US Federal Reserve on interest rates.
Bullion rose as high as $894.25 an ounce and was quoted at $890.40/$891.10 at 1408 GMT, against $886.90/$888.30 in New York late on Friday.
Gold was supported by strong oil prices, but analysts said bullion's upward movement was not as impressive as it was last month when soaring oil and a record low dollar propelled gold to a lifetime high of $1,030.80 on March 17.
"Sentiment towards gold is not nearly as bullish as it was, not least because the outlook for the dollar is considerably less bearish," said Tom Kendall, metals strategist at Mitsubishi Corporation.
"If we get more positive US data this week that surprises on the upside, or if the tone of the statement following the Fed meeting gives people confidence that it has come to the end of its interest rate easing cycle, then it would not be surprising to see gold pushed lower."
The metal has fallen 13 per cent since then and has been struggling to regain $900. It hit a three-week low of $877.60 on Friday before a surging oil market lifted gold's appeal as a hedge against inflation.
Oil hit a new record near $120 a barrel, boosted by a string of bullish factors that include big disruptions to Nigeria's output and a UK refinery strike.
"I do expect gold to drift around $900 for a little while, until we really see another strong shift in sentiment. Even the spike in oil is failing to really fire up the gold market," said Daniel Hynes, metals strategist at Merrill Lynch.
"After such a good run, a lot of people took the opportunity to liquidate, but the general trend would be for rising prices in the medium- to long-term," he said.
Gold futures for June delivery on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange rose $3.30 an ounce to $893.00 an ounce.
In other metals, platinum rose to $1,958/$1,968 an ounce from $1,944/$1,964 late on Friday and silver gained to $16.91/$16.97 an ounce from $16.83/16.89. But spot palladium fell $3 to $432.50/$438.50 an ounce.
Bullion rose as high as $894.25 an ounce and was quoted at $890.40/$891.10 at 1408 GMT, against $886.90/$888.30 in New York late on Friday.
Gold was supported by strong oil prices, but analysts said bullion's upward movement was not as impressive as it was last month when soaring oil and a record low dollar propelled gold to a lifetime high of $1,030.80 on March 17.
"Sentiment towards gold is not nearly as bullish as it was, not least because the outlook for the dollar is considerably less bearish," said Tom Kendall, metals strategist at Mitsubishi Corporation.
"If we get more positive US data this week that surprises on the upside, or if the tone of the statement following the Fed meeting gives people confidence that it has come to the end of its interest rate easing cycle, then it would not be surprising to see gold pushed lower."
The metal has fallen 13 per cent since then and has been struggling to regain $900. It hit a three-week low of $877.60 on Friday before a surging oil market lifted gold's appeal as a hedge against inflation.
Oil hit a new record near $120 a barrel, boosted by a string of bullish factors that include big disruptions to Nigeria's output and a UK refinery strike.
"I do expect gold to drift around $900 for a little while, until we really see another strong shift in sentiment. Even the spike in oil is failing to really fire up the gold market," said Daniel Hynes, metals strategist at Merrill Lynch.
"After such a good run, a lot of people took the opportunity to liquidate, but the general trend would be for rising prices in the medium- to long-term," he said.
Gold futures for June delivery on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange rose $3.30 an ounce to $893.00 an ounce.
In other metals, platinum rose to $1,958/$1,968 an ounce from $1,944/$1,964 late on Friday and silver gained to $16.91/$16.97 an ounce from $16.83/16.89. But spot palladium fell $3 to $432.50/$438.50 an ounce.
Oil hits $120 on supply concerns
London: Oil hit another record near $120 a barrel on Monday, boosted by a string of bullish factors that included big disruptions to Nigeria's output and a UK refinery strike, highlighting anxieties over threats to supply.
Prices retreated from early peaks as the dollar gained versus the euro, reflecting some expectations that the US Federal Reserve may not cut interest rates this week. US light crude for June delivery was up 37 cents at $118.89 a barrel by 1534 GMT, after a record high of $119.93. Prices are up almost 25 per cent since the start of the year.
London Brent crude was up 43 cents at $116.77.
"Continued attacks in Nigeria and refinery closures in Scotland ... may see the US target $121-$122 this week, with longer-term charts all pointing to $130 or higher," said Ben Coleman, senior commodities trader at TradIndex.
Crude prices have surged more than five-fold since 2002 as global supplies struggle to keep pace with rising demand in emerging economies, such as China.
Years of underinvestment in new oil production means the market could struggle to keep pace with booming China demand. The finely-balanced supply-demand outlook has made prices sensitive to any supply disruptions.
ExxonMobil has had to shut nearly all of its Nigerian oil production, totalling around 770,000 barrels per day, due to a strike.
Prices retreated from early peaks as the dollar gained versus the euro, reflecting some expectations that the US Federal Reserve may not cut interest rates this week. US light crude for June delivery was up 37 cents at $118.89 a barrel by 1534 GMT, after a record high of $119.93. Prices are up almost 25 per cent since the start of the year.
London Brent crude was up 43 cents at $116.77.
"Continued attacks in Nigeria and refinery closures in Scotland ... may see the US target $121-$122 this week, with longer-term charts all pointing to $130 or higher," said Ben Coleman, senior commodities trader at TradIndex.
Crude prices have surged more than five-fold since 2002 as global supplies struggle to keep pace with rising demand in emerging economies, such as China.
Years of underinvestment in new oil production means the market could struggle to keep pace with booming China demand. The finely-balanced supply-demand outlook has made prices sensitive to any supply disruptions.
ExxonMobil has had to shut nearly all of its Nigerian oil production, totalling around 770,000 barrels per day, due to a strike.
Spot gold rises; futures, global markets dull
MUMBAI: Gold prices rose by Rs 15 to Rs 11,780 per 10 grams on the bullion market due to demand created during marriage season. But global markets remained weak. Gold fell by $6.11 to $887.14 an ounce in London.
Futures for June delivery dropped $6.40 to $889.10 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange and silver fell 15.5 cents to 16.875.
In local market, standard gold and ornaments remained in demand and gained Rs 15 each at Rs 11,780 and Rs 11,630 per 10 grams respectively. Sovereign, however, hovered around previous level at Rs 9,850 per piece of eight gram in limited deals.
Gold futures in India also showed a weak trend. Gold for June 5 delivery at Multi-Commodity Exchange of India opened at 11650, went to a high of 11655 before closing at 11588, a drop of 0.64 percent over previous close.
Futures for June delivery dropped $6.40 to $889.10 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange and silver fell 15.5 cents to 16.875.
In local market, standard gold and ornaments remained in demand and gained Rs 15 each at Rs 11,780 and Rs 11,630 per 10 grams respectively. Sovereign, however, hovered around previous level at Rs 9,850 per piece of eight gram in limited deals.
Gold futures in India also showed a weak trend. Gold for June 5 delivery at Multi-Commodity Exchange of India opened at 11650, went to a high of 11655 before closing at 11588, a drop of 0.64 percent over previous close.
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