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Today's AM fix was USD 1,580.00, EUR 1,287.06, and GBP
1,009.33 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,579.50, EUR 1,288.65 and GBP 1,012.57 per
ounce.
Silver is trading at $27.55/oz,
€22.51/oz and £17.54/oz. Platinum is
trading at $1,429.20/oz, palladium at $580.80/oz and rhodium at $1,190/oz.
Gold dropped $4.40 or 0.28% in New York yesterday and
closed at $1,577.70/oz. Gold investors in Asia bought on the dip pushing gold
over $1,580/oz to $1,584/oz,
then it dropped off and hovers at $1,580/oz at the
open of European trading.
 
World Gold Reserves (Bloomberg)
Gold has gained this morning after two straight days of
Bernanke testimony related slight losses and gold is testing resistance at
the 50-day moving average at $1,586/oz.
US economic data showed the job market is still slow
and the results of groundbreaking on new US homes rose in June at its fastest
pace in the last 3 years, which saw risk appetite increase.
Today US unemployment claims are at 1230 and existing
home sales at 1400.
Yesterday’s comments from German Chancellor
Angela Merkel sent the euro down and reignited Eurozone fears. "We have
not yet shaped the European project so that we can be sure that everything
will turn out well, we still have work to do," Merkel was quoted in a
media report as saying. Spanish bond yields are hovering near 7% again.
The German chancellor also reiterated her belief that
the euro will survive, saying she was "optimistic that we will
succeed."
UBS have warned of the risk of hyperinflation in the UK
and U.S.
China has proposed to broaden trading of precious
metals in its local market in order to help China become a "major gold
trading centre" (see News).
The Wall Street Journal was briefed about China's plans
by "a person involved with the matter." The paper reports that
"the move could increase liquidity and help Beijing gain stronger
pricing power for key commodities like gold".
China is the largest consumer and now the largest
producer of gold in the world and has aspirations to become a major gold
trading center on a par with London and New York. China is also the fifth
largest holder of gold reserves in the world after the U.S., Germany, France,
Italy (see table).
Chinese officials have spoken of China’s
aspirations to have gold reserves as large as the U.S. in order to help
position the yuan or renminbi
as a global reserve currency. Indeed, it would be only natural for China to
aspire to have their currency become the global reserve currency in the long
term.
In the longer term, being a major gold trading center
would make China a more powerful financial and economic player and indeed
could allow them to influence commodity and other important market prices.
Indeed, Reuters reported that becoming a major gold trading center
"would boost the country's clout in setting global prices".
The journal reports that “Beijing's tight grip
on commodities trading and rigid capital controls are among the obstacles in
the way.”
The move is also part of the broader financial reforms
that Beijing has launched in recent weeks, loosening some of the restrictions
on securities investment and allowing banks to price loans at cheaper rates
than in the past, that seek to grant market forces a bigger role in both the
economy and the capital market.
The moved proposed by market officials would expand
trading of precious metals from designated exchanges to the country's vast interbank
market, according to the person involved. The Shanghai Gold Exchange has
released draft rules for such interbank precious metals trading, which will
include spot, forward and swap contracts for the commodities, said the
person.
At the moment, producers, consumers and investors can
trade only spot and futures contracts in gold and silver on the Shanghai Gold
Exchange and the Shanghai Futures Exchange, respectively.
Due to limited membership on the two exchanges, many
investors, including banks, aren't able to directly trade the precious metals
on the exchanges.
The draft rules were jointly developed by the Shanghai
Gold Exchange, which is the world's biggest marketplace for spot gold
trading, and the China Foreign Exchange Trading System, a central bank
subsidiary that oversees onshore currency trading.
According to the draft rules, the authorities are
aiming to launch the interbank trading on Aug. 31, starting with gold
contracts, said the person.
That would make gold the first commodity to trade on
the interbank market.
The authorities will introduce a "market
maker" system for the planned precious metals trading—the first
time the system will be used to trade a commodity on the interbank
market—with transactions done on an over-the-counter basis as compared
to the exchange-based pricing mechanism.
Market makers are firms that stand ready to buy and
sell a product at a publicly quoted price to facilitate trade.
An over-the-counter market would allow investors, in
this case banks, to trade in large quantities that far exceed the Shanghai
Gold Exchange's current trading volumes, analysts said.
According to the draft rules, banks are allowed to use
the new precious metals contracts in the interbank market for proprietary
trading only.
The Shanghai Gold Exchange is inviting banks, mostly
members of the exchange, to submit applications to take part in the trading,
said the person, who expects most major and midsize banks to participate.
The move to let banks become market makers also shows
the authorities' desire to give such better-established and more
sophisticated institutions more power in setting prices for major
commodities, a common practice in developed markets, said Jiang Shu, senior precious metals analyst at Industrial Bank
Co.
Current restrictions and capital controls remain an
obstacle to China becoming major gold trading center and to the renminbi becoming an accepted global reserve currency.
The move by China to expand precious metals trading to
their growingly important and vast interbank market is important and another
step towards China becoming an economic power on the world stage and one that
will rival European nations and the U.S.
 
Cross Currency Table – (Bloomberg)
NEWSWIRE
(Bloomberg) -- Crop Surge Sends Soybeans to Record as U.S. Drought Intensifies
Crop prices surged, with soybeans rising to a record, as the worst U.S.
drought since 1956 scorched fields and raised chances of higher food prices.
Soybeans climbed as high as $16.445 a bushel today on
the Chicago Board of Trade, surpassing the previous peak of $16.3675 on July
3, 2008. Corn rallied to the highest since 2008, trading within 1 percent of
its all-time high, and wheat surged above $9 a bushel to the highest in
almost four years.
The U.S. has declared almost 1,300 counties in 29 states
as natural-disaster areas because of the drought. Corn and soybean fields are
in the worst shape since 1988, a year when drought slashed the U.S. corn
output by 31 percent, U.S. Department of Agriculture data show. The USDA cut
its estimate for this year’s corn harvest by 12 percent on July 11,
saying production may reach 12.97 billion bushels. The agency had projected
record output of 14.79 billion bushels in June.
“There is not going to be enough supply to go
around,” said Richard Feltes, the vice president
of research at R.J. O’Brien & Associates in Chicago. “The
U.S. drought is laying the groundwork for higher food inflation into
2013.”
(Bloomberg) -- Silver ETP Holdings Jump to Highest
Since May 2011
Holdings in exchange-traded products backed by silver jumped 141.09 metric
tons, or 0.8 percent, to 17,886.48 tons, data tracked by Bloomberg showed.
That’s the biggest gain since Jan. 19 and the highest level since May
4, 2011.
For breaking
news and commentary on financial markets and gold, follow us on Twitter.
NEWS
China Aims to Become Major Gold Trading Center
– Wall Street Journal
Gold edges up on weak dollar, still lacks direction
- Reuters
Reuters Poll: 2012 gold price forecasts cut further
but still bullish - Reuters
Gold last hope for Sudan to prevent economic
collapse – Financial Post
Deutsche Bank, HSBC Traders Investigated In Libor
Probe - Bloomberg
COMMENTARY
Brodsky On Gold, 'Credit Money', And Real Return
Investing – Zero Hedge
UBS: The Risk Of Hyperinflation Is Largest In The US
And The UK – Business Insider
Taylor: Faith in gold as the ultimate money
- Mineweb
Rule - The Physical Silver Market Is Getting
Dangerously Tight - King World News
Mark
O’Byrne
Goldcore
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