Gold Starts Week
Higher, Deal on Fiscal Cliff "Could Be Agreed Within Weeks"
BullionVault from
Ben Traynor
SPOT MARKET gold bullion prices hovered close to $1725 an ounce during this morning's
London trading, holding gains made overnight in Asia, as stocks and commodities
also recovered some ground lost last week, after news that a deal may be
achieved in time to avoid so-called fiscal cliff of US tax rises and spending
cuts currently scheduled for the start of 2013.
Silver bullion rallied back above $32.70 an ounce, recovering Friday's losses,
while US Treasury bond prices fell along with the Dollar.
"[Silver] is still respecting its long term
uptrend, [but] momentum has been very uninspiring," says the latest
technical analysis from bullion bank Scotiabank.
Congressional leaders and the White House should be
able to agree a deal to avoid the fiscal cliff "within several
weeks", US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Friday.
Negotiations last week produced agreement that reforms
are needed to the US tax code and to so-called 'entitlement' programs, press
reports say.
"If the parties in the US reach agreement, that
would remove uncertainty and gold's safe haven status," reckons Ole
Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank.
"But the low interest rate environment is not
going to go away."
The so-called speculative net long position of
Comex gold futures and options traders – measured as the difference between 'bullish'
and 'bearish' contracts – rose in the week ended last Tuesday, having fallen
for the previous four weeks running, weekly data published Friday by the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission show.
"The positive reaction apparent in these numbers
was largely due to the successful re-election of President Obama," says
Marc Ground, commodities strategist at Standard Bank.
"Participants were emboldened by the belief that
an Obama win would ensure that the Fed will continue with its accommodative
stance. Strong physical demand also helped sustain the upward momentum."
The volume of gold bullion held by exchange traded funds tracked by Reuters rose to a new
record last Friday, at just under 2346 tonnes. Holdings in the world's
largest gold ETF SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) also rose to a new all-time high, ending
last week at 1342.6 tonnes.
Net speculative length among silver futures traders
also rose last week, like gold breaking a four-week losing run.
"However, the 116.5 tonne increase of the past
week appeared even more insipid than was the case for gold," says Standard
Bank's Ground, "given that silver has seen 1,287.3 tonnes liquidated the
previous four weeks."
For commodities as a whole, Friday's CFTC data show a
six straight decline in net long positioning among managed money, the longest
run of weekly falls since 2008, Bloomberg
reports.
"I am not bullish on commodities," says
Martin Murenbeeld, chief economist at Canadian wealth management firm
DundeeWealth.
"I don't think we are going to see improvement in
the world economy for some time as there are too many problems."
On the currency markets the Euro rallied against the
Dollar, making up most of the ground it lost last Friday.
The Yen meantime fell to its lowest level against the
Dollar in seven months this morning, ahead of tomorrow's Bank of Japan interest
rate decision, following the decision by Japan's prime minister Friday to call
a general election for December 16.
The leader of the opposition Liberal Democrat Party,
which is ahead in the polls, has called for the BoJ to print "unlimited
Yen" and set interest rates below zero if necessary.
"Continued talk and questions over potential
changes for the BoJ has weighed on the Yen," says Audrey Childe-Freeman,
head of foreign exchange strategy at BMO Capital Markets.
"It's most unlikely the BoJ will make major
changes this meeting, but the trend seems to be changing."
Over in Europe, Bundesbank president Jens Weidmann
told an audience at Euro Finance Week in Frankfurt that giving the European
Central Bank supervisory powers over financial institutions could create a
conflict of interest with monetary policy.
"Both areas must therefore be strictly
separated," said Weidmann.
"This separation is doable, but difficult –
difficult from an organizational viewpoint and difficult from a legal
viewpoint."
Editor
of Gold News, the analysis and
investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was
formerly editor of the Fleet
Street Letter, the UK's longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge
economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist
interest in monetary economics. Ben writes and presents BullionVault's weekly
gold market summary on YouTube
and can be found on Google+
(c)
BullionVault 2012
Please Note: This
article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best
place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk.
Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events –
and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.
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