Post 2008 gold prices have sky rocketed and this made gold an investors favourite. Following the 2008 crisis, investors turned to gold as a hedge against inflation that was expected to rise as a result from central banks effort to stabilise the economy through bond purchases. But 2013 has been considered one of the worst years for bullions as it turned tabled for all precious metals.
Now with the US economy in the recovery mode and with inflation being more or less tame, many investors have disowned and abandoned gold and shifted to equities.
By the end of 2013 we see that god prices have tumbled 26 per cent over the uncertainty that the Federal Reserve will start to cut its monthly bind buying program which has even strengthened the dollar. Global demand for the precious metal fell 21 percent in the third quarter as investors continued to dump holdings through exchange-traded funds and central banks slowed purchases, the World Gold Council said.
After Janet Yellen's statement released last week, many believe that the uncertainty over Fed bond buying program has been lifted. Janet Yellen — the likely next Fed chair — said last week that she would press forward with the bank’s ultra-easy monetary policy until officials were confident a durable economic recovery was in place that could sustain job creation. Gold witnessed selling pressure immediately after the minutes of the latest meeting of the Fed raised supposition that the central bank could taper its bond buying program, as soon as December
Gold declined this week and it enters the sharpest weekly drop in more than two months as gold prices plunged on Friday. Spot gold was up 0.1% to $1,242.91 an during the trading hours, after hitting a fresh four-and-a-half-month low of $1,236.29 in the previous session
Furthermore, gold prices remained under pressure after data that showed that US consumer prices last month rose at the slowest pace in four years. This clearly indicates that inflation has been contained and when inflation is tame who would buy gold.
Summing it up, the week was not so good for gold because:
1. The Fed’s massive bond-buying programme has burnished gold’s appeal as a hedge against inflation
2. Solid US data over the past few weeks was hurting bullion prices as it could bolster the case for curbing stimulus soon.
Holdings of SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, fell 3.6 tonnes to their lowest since early 2009 at 856.71 tonnes on Thursday. Outflows have totalled 450 tonnes this year
Earlier this month the European Central Bank announced a surprise interest rate cut which put more pressure on gold. It also drove up the value of the dollar versus the euro and made investors loos its faith in gold as a store of value
Moreover, what cane as a surprise package was the announcement coming in From China stating that they have taken a step further in liberalizing the gold market. Swap trading on the Shanghai based China Foreign Exchange Trade system has been started by interbank gold.
Bullion has slumped 26 percent this year to $1,245.45 an ounce in London, reaching $1,236.88 yesterday, the lowest since July 9. The declines are another blow in what's been an awful year for gold bulls
Virtually it was the same scenario for other precious metals as we saw platinum struggling and silver trying to keep up.
Silver, like gold, is still a sell into rallies.
Gold support is at $1,238 and $1,227. Resistance is at $1,253 and $1,272. Silver support is at $19.50 and $18.85, resistance is at $20.37 and $20.65.
The primary purpose of this blog (Prithviraj Kothari's view on Bullion Markets- MD,RSBL (Riddisiddhi Bullions Ltd.)) is to educate the masses of the current happenings in the Bullion world.
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