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Will he, won't he? Either way, gold says more QE is
coming in due course regardless...
SO HERE'S
a turn-up for the gold price.
Today saw gold priced in Dollars – and everything else – rising after disappointment over new
quantitative easing from the US Federal Reserve.
Maybe Ben Bernanke's much-awaited speech at
the annual Jackson Hole shindig for central bankers wasn't so disappointing
after all. Certainly the Wall Street
Journal seems to think that, and its own inhouse
"Fed wire" journalist Jon Hilsenrath
to boot! But if today's speech was a promise, it fell a long way short of
matching 2010's big event. Back then,
Bernanke made the imminent launch of QE2 plain. Whereas the financial media's
first-rush response today was headlined "Bernanke:
No more easing, for now".
So maybe the gold market's just got its mojo back. Or perhaps this week's
anticipation – the same anticipation we've seen for times this summer
– merely put the gold price on hold, as the buying already under way
took pause.
 
As you
can see, the gold price hit a classic bout of the doldrums in summer 2012.
And within that $100 trading range, you can see quanticipation
– the anticipation of quantitative easing – blowing a hot breeze
first this way and then that.
Starting in May, gold priced in Dollars has risen on any and every
"hint" of fresh money printing in the US, only to slip back when
the Fed then disappoints. "Will he? Won't he?" All financial
markets have been trying to guess the answer. But you can most clearly see it
in the price of gold – that most sensitive asset to monetary policy.
Because buying gold is always a vote of "no confidence" in central
banks. Selling it means you think the Fed has got on top of its job.
And today, post-Jackson Hole, gold has now done something it's failed to do
every time previous this summer. It rose despite Ben Bernanke's damp squib of
a speech. So perhaps the bullion market has finally shrugged its shoulders
and accepted that – whatever the Fed says – it will choose to
pull the big lever marked "More Money" sooner or later.
Market-timing be damned? Quanticipation might now
be driving the gold price regardless of Fed jaw-boning. The all-too typical
autumn rally in gold looks very much in train either way.
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