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Gold Hits 6-Month Low, Breaches "Lehman's Uptrend"…

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Published : December 30th, 2011
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The WHOLESALE MARKET gold price fell further on Thursday in London, hitting its lowest London Gold Fix since 8th July at $1537.50 per ounce – 19% below Sept's record high – on what dealers called "long liquidation" and "pressure" from the Eurozone debt crisis.

New laws in Japan were also blamed for forced sales during Asian trade, with bullion dealers obliged to report all physical transactions above ¥2 million ($25,600) to the tax authorities starting New Year's Day.

Physical gold bullion flows in Europe are "very light – unsurprisingly for this time of year," says Swiss refinery and finance group MKS.

"[A] few accounts [were seen] bailing out on the break of $1570" on Wednesday, MKS says, with "the rest of the move driven by illiquidity and forced sellers pushing themselves out as they push [the gold price] lower."

On a closing-price basis, "Support sits at the trendline off the October 2008 low, currently at $1543," says Russell Browne's technical analysis for Scotia Mocatta, pointing to the uptrend in the gold price starting with the collapse of Lehman Brothers 3 years ago.

That support level is "followed by the September [2011] low around $1533," reckons Browne.

The Euro sank 1.5¢ on Wednesday after new data showed the European Central Bank's balance-sheet swelling to €2.7 trillion last week on making the first of its "unlimited" three-year loan offers to commercial banks.


Thursday morning the single currency fell again to a 10-year low against the Japanese Yen.


"The market reaction is slightly incomprehensible," reckons economist Jens Kramer at Germany's NordLB in Hanover. "After that record liquidity injection it would follow that the balance sheet would swell."

European stock markets crept higher this morning after finishing yesterday lower, but in the banking sector "The main problem...is not a lack of liquidity, but a lack of trust," says Commerzbank's Christoph Rieger, head of fixed-income strategy in Frankfurt.
 
"There are no central bank tools that would force banks to extend credit lines among themselves."

"The interbank market remains broken," agrees Richard McGuire at Rabobank's London office, also speaking to Bloomberg.

"The amount of peripheral government debt banks hold raises questions about counterparty risks."

Pushing higher on its official "benchmark" level again on Thursday, the interbank lending rate known as LIBOR is now suffering the widest gap between the lowest and highest interest rates charged since the peak of the first financial crisis in March 2009.

After Wednesday's surprising low interest rate charged by investors to hold new short-term Italian debt, the yield demanded on a fresh €7 billion of 10-year bonds stayed high, just two basis points below the 7.00% level which analysts believe is "unsustainable".

"We maintain that a liquidity squeeze brought on by the ongoing debt problems in the Eurozone would be one of the greatest threats to commodities," says Marc Ground at Standard Bank today.

"Gold, along with the other precious metals, succumbed to the downward pressure from concerns over Eurozone liquidity."

"Risk-off conditions in the short term are putting pressure on the gold price," says another London dealer in a note, "but plenty of the insurance reasons to be long of gold remain in place – and look set to remain so in January."

Silver prices today flirted with 12-month lows beneath $26.80 per ounce, as base metals fell with agricultural commodity prices.

US crude oil held just shy of $100 per barrel as the US Navy warned Tehran it will "not tolerate" any disruption of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran has threatened in retaliation at new international sanctions.

Ten-year UK government bond yields slipped again below 2.00% – the record low breached for the first time ever last week.


 

 

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The London Gold Market Report is the daily market review from BullionVault, the world's largest physical gold and silver market for private investors. A full member of professional trade body the London Bullion Market Association, BullionVault publishes the LGMR every day that the market is open, bringing you insider comment and analysis from the very center of the world's $240 billion-a-day physical gold trade, and putting the latest gold price action into its wider financial and economic context. Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.
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Gold is the only thing that will survive the crisis, and Westerners are stupid because they allow the Chinese to change gold for paper dollars that have accumulated in the last 20 years. nobody is asking for what they are buying gold and not the things produced from the west and this will be the reason many crisis and disaster, because I would always rather have gold than any currency. I am originally from the Balkans, where there was change in 10 currencies in 50 years. there is no value in the paper and promises are made ​​to be broken
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Gold is the only thing that will survive the crisis, and Westerners are stupid because they allow the Chinese to change gold for paper dollars that have accumulated in the last 20 years. nobody is asking for what they are buying gold and not the things p  Read more
c4.carbon - 12/30/2011 at 8:05 AM GMT
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