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London Gold Market Report
THE SPOT
PRICE to buy gold traded in a tight
range around $1520 an ounce Friday morning London time – 0.5% above its
one-month low – having fallen in Asian trading, while stocks gained
after comments from China's premier that inflation in that country is under
control.
Spot oil prices dipped Thursday after
the International Energy Agency said it will release 60 million barrels of
oil from strategic reserves.
Going into the weekend, the Dollar gold
price was headed for a 1.3% loss for the week Friday lunchtime.
The Sterling price to buy gold,
meantime, slid to £947 per ounce Friday morning – slightly below
last week's close – following a hectic day Thursday which saw it plunge
1.8% from its record high.
The silver price slid to
$34.68 – a 3.3% drop on the week.
"We are bullish on gold while the
metal holds above $1504," says technical analysts
at bullion bank Scotia Mocatta.
If the price to buy gold falls
below $1500, however, it could slip as far as $1463 they warn.
"Our long term view on gold remains
unchanged," says Walter de Wet, commodities strategist at Standard Bank.
"We believe gold will continue to
push higher in 2011."
China's manufacturing sector has barely
grown in June, according to HSBC's purchasing managers' index, prompting
fears that China – the world's second largest gold
bullion market – is heading for an economic "hard
landing".
HSBC's PMI – which is published
roughly a week ahead of the official PMI – fell to 50.1 for June, down
from 52 in May. A figure of 50 or above shows growth, while below 50 shows
contraction.
"Demand is cooling due to the
effects of tightening measures and slackness in external markets," said Qu Hongbin, HSBC's chief
economist for China.
"The good news is that inflationary
pressures started to ease meaningfully in June," following May's rise in
consumer price inflation to 5.5%.
"China has made capping price rises
the priority of macroeconomic regulation," writes China's premier Wen Jiabao in Friday's Financial Times.
"The overall price level is within
a controllable range and is expected to drop steadily. The output of grain,
of which there is now an abundant supply, has increased for seven years in a
row."
"Inflation may peak in June or
July," agrees Hua Zhongwei,
Beijing-based analyst at Huachuang
Securities.
"But there are many underlying
factors that could push up prices such as labor cost and agricultural product
inflation."
China's largest farming company,
Heilongjiang Beidahuang, last week signed a joint
venture with Cresud of Argentina to farm soybeans.
The company also plans to spend $1.5 billion leasing farms in Argentina's Rio
Negro province, on which it will grow a range of crops, including wheat and
corn.
China also expects to import a record 2
million tons of corn from the US this year, according to Ding Shengjun, senior researcher at China's Academy of State
Administration of Grain.
"Importing the corn from the US is
a practical way to stabilize the domestic price," says Ding.
Chinese demand to buy gold,
meantime, will continue rise as a result of ongoing inflation
fears, according to Zhang Bingnan, secretary
general of the China Gold Association.
"Enthusiasm for gold as an
investment will get stronger," says Zhang, adding that gold
investment demand "will keep doubling in the next two
years."
Here in Europe, the EU announced Friday
that it has agreed a deal to provide fresh financial aid to Greece –
subject to the Greek parliament passing €78 billion worth of austerity
measures.
"This is an important decision that
says once again we will do everything to stabilize the Euro overall,"
said German chancellor Angela Merkel.
The deal will involve "a voluntary
rollover of bonds so that it will not create a credit event," said Olli Rehn, European commissioner for economic affairs.
"Foreign banks will struggle to
justify rolling existing holdings unless the rate at which they can do so is
economically viable," warns Mark Schofield, global head of interest rate
strategy at Citi.
Rates that are "potentially
attractive to investors, are not sustainable for Greece and would, if locked
in, lead very quickly to insolvency".
Ben Traynor
You
can receive
your first gram of Gold free by opening an account with Bullion Vault : Click here.
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