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Showing posts with label euro zone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label euro zone. Show all posts

Sunday 11 January 2015

LOTS OFTHINGS TO SMILE ABOUT FOR PRECIOUS METALS


                                                                                                      - By Mr. Prithviraj Kothari, MD, RSBL





Though we did see some trading in precious metals on Jan 1st and 2nd, it was the week from 5th-9th Jan that was actually considered the first volatile trading week of 2015.

The main news doing the rounds for the week was from US- minutes of the recent FOMC meeting and the non-farms payroll report.

Apart from the macro reports there were the following financial reports that were out in the week.
  • US non-manufacturing PMI, factory orders and trade balance monthly reports.
  • Europe, MPC rate
  • The EU flash CPI
  • Unemployment report,
  • GB’s manufacturing PMI
  • Germany retail sales
  • The French trade balance.
  • In China, CPI and trade balance
  • And several economic reports from Canada and Australia.

But of all the above mentioned reports, the most influential for gold was the unemployment report.


Gold was seen to have a positive start for the week as it firmed above $1200 an ounce on Tuesday hitting a near three-week high, as tumbling global equities and concerns over Greece's future in the euro zone prompted investors to seek safety in the metal.

The uncertainty behind the euro zone is once again tempting investors to run after gold as a safe haven asset. This risk off sentiment in the markets may help bullion be stable at its recent upswing.

Adding to this we also saw that holding in the world’s largest gold-backed exchange traded fund- the SPDR Gold trust, rose 0.25 per cent to 710.81 tonnes on Monday, though still near a six-year low. But this rise did reflect improving investor sentiments towards gold.

Bullion traded in a ranged manner for most part of the week while volatility was high on Friday. The Greenback jumped on likely positive economic reports from the US coming week whereas speculation increased that Fed might talk about raising interest rates as also anticipated from its monetary policy minutes report due next week and likely putting weight on Bullion.

We have always seen that precious metal markets and the equities markets are inversely related. This week too, we saw precious metals rising while equity market and commodity bellwethers including copper and oil hit fresh multi-year lows. After a disappointing end to 2014 gold is beginning to build a base above $1,200 an ounce – the metal advanced 1.2% to $1,223 an ounce in late trade Friday, the highest since December 11.

Gold's gains since hitting four-year lows early November now top 7% and is made more remarkable by the fact that the advance has come despite a rampant dollar which hit a 12-year high against major currencies yesterday and a Friday jobs report that confirmed that the US economic recovery remains on track.

Though the market players were a lot dependent on the non-farm payrolls report, it did not show much after effect on gold.

The gold price wobbled briefly but was ultimately unaffected by a non-farm payrolls report that, while mostly positive, was not potent enough to shift the Federal Reserve’s rate-rise timeline.

Total non-farm payroll employment rose by 252,000 in December, which beat the 241,000 forecast, while the unemployment rate declined to 5.6 percent, the US Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today.

Additionally, the change in total non-farm payroll employment for October was revised to 261,000 from 243,000 and the change for November was revised to 353,000 from 321,000.
The forthcoming labor reports are expected to create added significance as there are expectations that the Federal Reserve in on the verge of raising interest rates. The current market consensus is that rates will rise in mid-2015 although this is a moving target that will be dictated by jobs and inflation data.

As said earlier, too gold is one such commodity which takes price direction from macro developments rather than its own demand-supply wherein we feel downside risks for the commodity may stay in the near future




- Previous blog - "An Impressive start For Gold In 2015 But A Dull End"
http://riddisiddhibullionsltd.blogspot.in/2015/01/an-impressive-start-for-gold-in-2105.html

Monday 24 November 2014

LOTS IN BASKET FOR GOLD IN THIS WEEK


by Mr. Prithviraj Kothari, MD, RSBL



The week was volatile for gold. Gold acted weak on Monday but later picked momentum by the end of the week, ultimately closing the week higher and notching a third straight week of gains.

On Monday, gold prices ended slightly lower and pulled back from the positive gains witnessed last Friday. A stronger US dollar weakened the gold and silver markets. But later in the week gold managed to rise above $1200 even though the dollar gained. 

George Gero, vice president with RBC Capital Markets Global Futures, said gold attracted some buying when it rebounded over $1,200. Few other news that moved the market:
  • China: In order to fuel the slow moving Chinese economy,  China’s central bank reduced its interest rate. Chinese economic data in the past has been disappointing. This move by the China central bank comes as a bullish factor for gold. 
  • European Central bank: The statement released by ECB president Mario Draghi made it very clear that the ECB will use all means within the ECB’s mandate to return the EU to its inflation target, including implementing quantitative easing and this he said will happen soon. 
  • Gold Buying:  European and Russian central banks were looking to acquire more gold.The Dutch Central Bank says it has recently shipped 122.5 tons of gold worth around 4 billion Euros ($5 billion) from safekeeping in New York back to its headquarters in Amsterdam. With this move the Dutch Central Bank has joined the bandwagon along with other banks that are keeping a larger share of their gold supply in their own country. This boosts demand for gold and gives a positive outlook for the yellow metal. 
Gold futures climbed to a two-week high topping $1,200 an ounce after Russia added to reserves, fueling speculation that a rebound in demand for bars, coins and jewellery will help stem this year’s drop.

The gold market has a lot in basket to be seen in the next week. 
  • There is a major meeting of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries, inflation data out of the euro zone, and a major holiday in the U.S. to keep volatility high.
  • Swiss Referendum- The market may also see some last-minute positioning ahead of the Nov. 30 Swiss gold referendum. Traders are also already discussing next week’s Swiss referendum which would require the Swiss National Bank to hold 20% of its assets in gold. A Swiss poll on Wednesday showed the majority of voters were not in favour of the measure. This news was credited in part with weakness in the gold market Wednesday. This can be a game-changer worldwide. If the Swiss franc stops falling and starts rising because of this then more people will understand that a strong currency is good not a weak currency.
  • November Germany IFO business climate 
  • The November U.S. consumer confidence index 
  • the October U.S. Core PCE price index and personal spending 
  • the Euro zone private sector loans, 
  • the October Japan inflation data, 
  • Later in the week, analysts said they’ll watch to see what euro zone inflation data shows. Inflation has remained tame, which doesn't support gold, analysts said, and euro zone inflation has been particularly soft.

TRADE RANGE

METAL
INTERNATIONAL
DOMESTIC
GOLD
$1180-$1215 per ounce
Rs.26,250-Rs.27,000  per 10gm
SILVER
$16.00- $17.50 per ounce
Rs.35,000- Rs.39,000 per kg


The primary purpose of this article by Mr. Prithviraj Kothari is to educate the masses of the current happenings in the Bullion world.
- Previous blog -
"The Dollar Is Being Watched Closely" - http://riddisiddhibullionsltd.blogspot.in/2014/11/the-dollar-is-being-watched-closely.html
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