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Monday 21 October 2013

FINANCIAL CALAMITY AVOIDED OR THE WORSE IS YET TO COME??

- By Mr. Prithviraj Kothari, MD, RSBL (RiddiSiddhi Bullions Ltd.)


Gold was going gaga over the week. Usually, we don't see much trading, just a few hundred lots of gold futures, on an early Thursday morning in New York. But what we saw this Thursday came as a shock. A wave of buy orders worth over $2.3 billion gushed into the market.

While other commodities declined, gold prices rose on Thursday despite dollars drop.
In just 10 minutes gold prices rose 3 per cent. It created a rhythm for the next 12 hours of trade. In fact many traders and investors were baffled and bewildered as they have seen such inexplicable soaring prices and trade surges over the past two weeks and this time too there were no explanations.

Spot gold rallied to a session high of $1,324.06 per ounce , up more than 3 percent on the day.

Late on Wednesday, the U.S. Congress approved an 11th-hour deal to end a partial government shutdown and pull the world's biggest economy back from the brink of a debt default that could have threatened financial calamity.

The US government shutdown ended and the nations borrowing authority was extended as US President Barack Obama signed in to the deal.

It funds the government until January 15 and raises the debt limit until February 7 so there is the possibility of another manufactured crisis in Washington early next year.

The resolution reached in Congress avoiding US government default left investors sufficiently uncertain that US dollar fell, bond yields eased and gold and other precious metals jumped

Despite the US signing a deal for the debt ceiling and putting a halt to the shutdown, we saw an opposite reaction in the market. 

Gold held onto 3 percent gains throughout the session as the dollar tumbled on Thursday following the U.S. congressional deal to restart the government and avoid a federal debt default.

Now what compelled this behavior????

Investors and traders are concerned that this extension of the debt ceiling had only delayed another shutdown by a few months. In fact, in February, once again they predict another shutdown in Congress between republicans and Democrats. if this happens then we should await a worsened economic scenario and even higher gold prices. 

Moreover, gold once again caught the investors attention as the dollar slumped on ideas that the extension of the debt ceiling and economic damage done to economy as a result of the government shutdown may delay the Fed from tapering in December


The US debt deal is being taken as a positive factor for gold as it will last just a few months. Investors say that it's just a temporary solution which has raised uncertainty once again over the Fed's decision to taper its bond buying.

The two-week shutdown and acrimonious debate over raising the U.S. debt ceiling have knocked investor and business confidence, denting growth prospects for the world's largest economy.

Markets will now refocus on economic news and the timeline for the US Federal Reserve's tapering of its monetary stimulus bond-buying programme. The Fed surprised financial markets in September by opting to delay the start of stimulus reduction.

The Fed is committed to purchasing $85 billion in new debt per month in an open-ended programme (QE). Accommodative measures from the US central bank are supportive of gold because extra liquidity tends to debase the dollar and create future inflationary risks.
Meanwhile in the Asian markets too there were a few factors that soared gold prices.

China's Dagong ratings agency downgraded America to an ‘A -' rating from ‘A’ after the US Congress only avoided defaulting on its debt by a couple short hours.

The decision taken by Dagong has caused precious metal prices to soar, all gaining by around 2-3 percent and breaking away from the remaining commodities sector,

In India, gold was being sold at a hit record premium of $100 an ounce.  A shortage f supplies to me the festive demand has resulted in this high premium.  Due to the additional premiums, quoted gold prices in India are 8 percent higher than the current spot price of $1,261 an ounce Banks, the primary dealers of bullion, are currently importing the yellow metal chiefly for exporters, as under the so-called 80/20 principle, jewellery exporters get priority for supplies over domestic manufacturers. The principle, part of a package of measures announced in July aimed at cutting India’s current account deficit by reducing gold imports, states that 20 percent of all gold imported into India must be re-exported.

Following government clarifications, banks have begun to process fresh orders, but the rule will still inhibit imports.

But nonetheless, the demand supply gap is widening and affecting gold prices.

The trade range for gold this week is expected to be $1290-$1350 (an ounce) in the international markets and Rs.29000- Rs.32000 (per 10gm) in the domestic markets.



The primary purpose of this blog (Prithviraj Kothari - MD, RSBL |  Bullion market blog) is to educate the masses of the current happenings in the Bullion world.
- Previous blog -
"US Deal or No Deal"
http://riddisiddhibullionsltd.blogspot.in/2013/10/us-deal-or-no-deal.html

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