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Tuesday 14 February 2012

Gold Rates

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Symbol Last High Low
AUDUSD 1.06827 1.07319 1.06620
EURGBP 0.83748 0.83979 0.83607
EURUSD 1.31457 1.32148 1.31259
GBPJPY 123.012 123.064 121.809
GBPUSD 1.56948 1.57689 1.56588
USDCAD 0.99886 1.00258 0.99778
USDCHF 0.91854 0.92018 0.91417
USDJPY 78.372 78.456 77.501
XAGUSD 33.54 33.83 33.32
XAUUSD 1,720.24 1,727.47 1,711.97




Tuesday 24 May 2011

PRECIOUS-Gold firms to 2-week high as euro debt worries linger inShare1 Share this digg Email Print SINGAPORE | Mon May 23, 2011 8:47pm EDT


May 24 (Reuters) - Gold rose to its highest level in almost two weeks on Tuesday on worries that Europe's debt crisis was spreading, sending euro-denominated bullion to a record above 1,081 euros an ounce.

FUNDAMENTALS
* Spot gold added $1.24 an ounce to $1,517.29 an ounce by 0032 GMT, having hit an intraday high at $1,517.74 an ounce, its strongest since May 11. Bullion was still below a lifetime high around $1,575 an ounce struck in early May.
* Euro-denominated gold hit a record at 1,081.43 an ounce.
* Silver was unchanged at $35.04 an ounce, below a record at $49.51 an ounce hit in April.
* Holdings of the largest gold-backed exchange traded fund, New York's SPDR Gold Trust , rose 0.63 percent, while that of the largest silver-backed ETF, New York's iShares Silver Trust , dropped 0.15 percent from Friday to Monday.

MARKET NEWS
* Japan's Nikkei share average dipped on Tuesday on ongoing worries about the euro zone's sovereign debt crisis and after U.S. shares slipped to a one-month low overnight. The benchmark Nikkei fell 0.3 percent to 9,436.48.
* The British pound fell 0.3 percent in early Tuesday trade to an eight-week low versus the dollar as the U.S. currency was bought back broadly on worries about the euro zone's debt crisis. The euro also slipped about 0.25 percent to $1.4012 , edging closer to a two-month trough of $1.3968 hit on Monday.

DATA EVENTS (GMT)
0600 Germany GDP detailed yy Q1
0800 Germany Ifo business climate May 2011
0800 Germany Ifo current conditions May 2011
0800 Germany Ifo expectations May 2011
1145 U.S. ICSC chain stores yy Weekly
1400 U.S. New home sales chg mm Apr
1400 U.S. New home sales-units mm Apr
Precious metals prices 0032 GMT Metal             Last    Change  Pct chg  YTD pct chg  Turnover Spot Gold        1517.29    1.24   +0.08      6.89 Spot Silver        35.04    0.00   +0.00     13.55 Spot Platinum    1754.24    5.89   +0.34     -0.75 Spot Palladium    730.00    2.01   +0.28     -8.69 TOCOM Gold       4003.00   19.00   +0.48      7.35        31337 TOCOM Platinum   4677.00   2.00   +0.04     -0.40         3937 TOCOM Silver       92.20    0.90  +0.99     13.83          558 TOCOM Palladium  1926.00   1.00   +0.05     -8.15          116 Euro/Dollar       1.4033 Dollar/Yen         81.90 TOCOM prices in yen per gram. Spot prices in per ounce. (Reporting by Lewa Pardomuan; Editing by Michael Urquhart)

Selling Gold Reserves To Pay Off Sovereign Debt Is Unwise – WGC

(Kitco News) - Renewed worries about Eurozone sovereign debt has inspired discussions that nations at risk of defaulting should consider selling some of their gold or other assets as part of bailout packages to stabilize their economies.

This idea arose when some German politicians suggested a few weeks ago that Portugal should sell some of its gold reserves as part of a financial aid package for the beleaguered nation. Portugal eventually received aid without having to pledge any gold, but the notion for countries to sell metal reserves or other assets continues to reverberate.

After all, gold prices are just off nominal all-time records and selling reserves would be one way to pay down mounting debt levels.  But to do so would  not solve the problem and could leave countries in a worse shape than before, said George Milling-Stanley, managing director, government affairs, for the World Gold Council. As part of its mission, the council works with central banks and other policymakers regarding the role of gold in risk management.

“It’s like selling your house to pay down your debt. You can do that, but where would you live?” he said.

Of all the troubled southern-tier European countries, Portugal has the greatest percentage share held in gold of total foreign reserves. According to the most recent calculation of world gold holdings, Portugal has 81% of its total foreign reserves in gold, at 382.5 metric tons. That figure is calculated by the World Gold Council using International Monetary Fund's International Financial Statistics.

By tonnage, Italy has the most reserves of the PIIGS, at 2,451.8 tons, which is 69.2% of its reserves, and is the fourth-largest holder of gold globally, behind the U.S., the IMF and Germany. Greece has 111.5 tons of gold, which is 79.3% of its reserves and Ireland has 6 tons, which is 13.3% of its reserves.

Milling-Stanley pointed out that when looking at the official gold holdings of a particular country, it’s the central bank that usually owns the gold, not the government itself, and most central banks are independent of the government. That means it’s not an automatic decision governments can make to sell metal.

The idea of using gold reserves to payment has come up in the past for other situations and many times the idea pits government against central bank. There are a few examples, he said.

“Back when the German government … wanted to sell or revaluate their gold to pay for reunification, the Bundesbank said you’re not using the gold to do that. It caused a holy row that eventually calmed down,” he said.

The question to use gold to pay down debt specifically is unclear for the European Union, Milling-Stanley said. “This is just memory, but I think there’s been a fuss about selling assets to pay down debt,” he said.

He said Belgium and the Netherlands wanted to do sales before the European Monetary Union was set up. At the time, even before the European Central Bank was established, there was a lot of discussion among the European authorities about selling gold assets to pay off debt.

“I don’t know the strict legal definition – it could be legal but there could be restraint,” he said, adding that those who do know the legality of such a situation have stayed mum.

Milling-Stanley said one issue that European countries would have to deal with when taking into consideration any gold sales is the Central Bank Gold Agreement, which limits how much gold they can sell annually. “Even though European banks have not sold anything near the ceiling, it’s still there,” he said.

WHERE WOULD PROCEEDS GO?

Even if a country’s central bank sold gold, there’s no guarantee who would get the profits, he said. It wouldn’t automatically go to the government. Since the gold belongs to the central bank, they could very well keep it.

The Eurozone’s debt obligations have been at the forefront of discussion, but there’s been some talk that perhaps the U.S., with its significant reserves of gold, should sell some of its assets. Mary Miller, assistant secretary of the Treasury for Financial Markets, wrote in a post on the U.S. Treasury website that “this idea is not a viable option.”

Miller said that this idea has been rejected by Treasury Secretaries and U.S. Presidents of both political parties for many years. Miller referred specifically to selling gold to postpone raising the debt limit, but pointed out the folly to sell assets to raise short-term cash needs.

“A ‘fire sale’ of financial assets would be damaging to the economy, taxpayers, and financial markets. It would harm the interests of taxpayers, and would undermine confidence in the United States. Nor would such sales postpone reaching the debt limit for a meaningful amount of time. Congress would still need to raise the debt limit,” Miller wrote in a posting dated May 6.
(For the full essay, see: http://www.treasury.gov/connect/blog/Pages/Federal-Asset-Sales-Cannot-Avoid-Need-for-Increase-in-Debt-Limit.aspx)

At most, she said, considering the U.S. borrows $125 billion per month, assets sold would only buy a limited amount of time.

According to WGC data, the U.S. possesses the most gold globally in terms of percentage of foreign reserves and tonnage. Nearly seventy-five percent of its reserves are in gold, and it has 8,133.5 tons of gold.

“If we sold all of our gold, that would be $375 billion. So we’d run out of money in August and we’d have no asset to borrow against. It’s just a drop in the bucket. The problem is the debts are in the trillions. The basic point is it’s not a smart thing to do,” he said.

Furthermore, while other countries can diversify their total foreign reserve holdings with such assets like U.S. Treasury bonds and notes or U.S. dollars, obviously the U.S. cannot, which is one reason why the U.S. has high reserves in gold.

Does a sale of assets make sense at any time? Milling-Stanley said there are ways to use gold to help in fixing debt problems.

“What they (countries with debt problems) need to look at is a long-term, major structural reforms needed. Look at long-term structural reforms, then come up with the idea to not sell, but to use it as collateral to borrow from, but only once you get the reforms in place,” he said.

If the country used its gold as collateral without fixing the structural issues, then using the gold as collateral would just compound the problems, he said.

NOT DIFFICULT TO SELL GOLD

Right now, central banks are buying gold, not selling it. If a central bank and the country’s government came up with a plan to sell gold, it would not be difficult to do. But discretion would be paramount because the last thing a central bank would want is to have prices fall just as they were selling. He gave the example of Switzerland’s sale of 1,300 tons of gold in 2000-2005 as a proper way to sell, versus Britain’s gold sales which took place between 1999-2002. The advance notice of the sale drove down prices.

Most banks have a relationship with bullion banks so the sales can be handled quietly. But in the case of the U.K., an auction was held “so all the fund managers picked them off,” he said.

The Swiss sales were done quietly. “The Swiss sought out their in-house expertise – they sold 1,300 tons which is not small - but did it with maximum profit where they were buying and selling all the time so you couldn’t pick them off. They did it over a couple of years,” he said.
By Debbie Carlson of Kitco News dcarlson@kitco.com

Friday 20 May 2011

PRECIOUS-Gold regains strength on bargain hunting,silver steadies Fri May 20, 2011 12:43am GMT


SINGAPORE, May 20 (Reuters) - Gold regained strength on bargain hunting on
Friday, while silver steadied after discouraging U.S. housing and factory data
weighed on commodities in the previous session.

FUNDAMENTALS
* Spot gold added $2.91 an ounce to $1,494.51 by 0025 GMT -- well
below a lifetime high around $1,575 an ounce struck in early May.
* Silver barely moved, standing at 35.14 an ounce. The metal hit a
record at $49.51 an ounce in April.
* Investors forsook gold exchange traded funds in the first quarter in
favour of coins and bars, the World Gold Council said, with buying of physical
investment products helping lift overall bullion demand by 11 percent.
[ID:nLDE74H1FE]
* Commodities fell back on Thursday, a day after posting the biggest gains
since March, as economic worries weighed on oil prices and profit-taking
snapped a sharp rally in grains.

MARKET NEWS
* Japan's Nikkei was flat on Friday, as worries about a recovery in the U.S.
economy lingered, while investors stayed on the sidelines before the Japanese
central bank's policy meeting decision is released.
* The dollar slid on Thursday as weak U.S. economic data affirmed
expectations the Federal Reserve will keep monetary policy ultra-loose for a
while, keeping interest rates for the greenback very low compared with
higher yielding currencies.

DATA EVENTS (GMT)
0000 Japan BOJ rate decision May 2011
1130 India M3 Money Supply 40664
1430 U.S. ECRI Index Weekly

Precious metals prices 0025 GMT
Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Turnover
Spot Gold 1494.51 2.91 +0.20 5.29
Spot Silver 35.14 0.19 +0.54 13.87
Spot Platinum 1764.99 2.49 +0.14 -0.14
Spot Palladium 722.80 -1.20 -0.17 -9.59
TOCOM Gold 3938.00 6.00 +0.15 5.60 23537
TOCOM Platinum 4698.00 -15.00 -0.32 0.04 4509
TOCOM Silver 92.20 0.30 +0.33 13.83 700
TOCOM Palladium 1913.00 -14.00 -0.73 -8.77 149
Euro/Dollar 1.4297
Dollar/Yen 81.72

TOCOM prices in yen per gram. Spot prices in $ per ounce.


(Reporting by Lewa Pardomuan; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)



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Wednesday 4 May 2011

China’s ‘Hawkish’ Central Bank May Tighten Even as Economic Growth Cools


China’s central bank said taming inflation is its top priority, signaling that more tightening is possible even after a manufacturing survey showed that growth may be moderating in Asia’s biggest economy.

“Stabilizing prices and managing inflation expectations are critical,” the People’s Bank of China said in a first- quarter monetary policy report published yesterday. Bank reserve requirements have no “absolute ceiling,” the report said, restating Governor Zhou Xiaochuan’s comment on April 16.

The Shanghai Composite Index fell 2.1 percent as of 2:35 p.m. local time, set for the biggest decline in two months, on concern that tightening will cut profits and growth. The central bank may boost lenders’ reserve requirements this month, the China Securities Journal said on its front page today. Separately, the Shanghai Securities News said officials may expand controls on the property market to more cities.

“The PBOC kept a fairly hawkish tone toward inflation,” said Glenn Maguire, chief Asia economist at Societe Generale SA in Hong Kong. Officials will add to tightening, managing the “pace and intensity” of measures more carefully and perhaps relying more on gains in the yuan, he said.

A manufacturing index slid in April from March after increases in bank reserve requirements and interest rates and faster gains in the yuan.

The central bank has raised lending and deposit rates four times since mid-October. The yuan has strengthened above 6.5 per dollar for the first time since 1993, and reserve requirements for the biggest banks stand at a record 20.5 percent excluding any extra limits for individual lenders not publicly announced.
Faster Inflation

Premier Wen Jiabao’s government aims to cool the fastest inflation since 2008 and rein in property prices without undermining the expansion.

Consumer prices may rise at a slower pace in the second half, the Securities Journal reported today, citing Yi Gang, a deputy governor at the central bank.

Economic growth and employment are at “reasonable” levels, the central bank said in yesterday’s report. Officials will increase exchange-rate flexibility, control liquidity in the financial system, and use interest rates to manage inflation expectations, it said.

Inflation was an annual 5.4 percent in March, exceeding the government’s full-year target of 4 percent for a third month. Unilever, the world’s second-largest consumer-goods maker, said March 31 that it was among companies to have postponed price increases at the government’s request.
Commodity Costs

“Given the loose monetary policies of major economies and gradual recovery of the global economy, commodity prices keep climbing and global inflation expectations are rising significantly,” the People’s Bank of China said. “China is seeing increasing pressure from imported inflation.”

Zhang Liqun, a senior researcher at the State Council’s Development Research Center, said May 1 that the manufacturing data showed an increased likelihood that growth will slow. China’s gross domestic product expanded 9.7 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier and the World Bank last week forecast a full-year expansion of 9.3 percent.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said yesterday that it will help global economies if China allows its “substantially undervalued” currency to strengthen.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Panckhurst at ppanckhurst@bloomberg.net

Ben Bernanke’s Lone Positive Legacy: A Return To The Gold Standard


I’ll make two predictions with utter confidence. The first is that one day Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will be ridden out of town on a rail, joining Arthur Burns in that special circle of hell reserved for monetary debauchers. The second is that in the aftermath of our pending inflationary disaster we will see the gold standard return.

The Federal Reserve long ago lost control of inflation, now ravaging several sectors of our economy. This is obvious to every economist not a member of Bernanke’s Greek chorus, singing lyrics provided by the gnomes in the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Their modern re-interpretation of the dance of the seven veils uses statistical “adjustments” instead of scarves, but these keep the evidence of inflation as hidden as Salome’s charms. My favorite fudge has to be the “hedonic quality adjustment.” What are you going to believe, the government’s regression coefficient estimates or your own lying eyes?

What Bernanke made clear now that he launched his own reality TV show is that his primary mission is no longer ensuring a stable currency, or even pursuing the illusory goal of full employment. Rather, Helicopter Ben will make his last stand managing inflationary expectations. As long as he maintains the illusion of monetary stability the Fed’s printing presses can run flat out. What could please his masters more, who get to spend this fresh dough before it floods into the economy to dilute ours?


Reading from the playbook of successful defense attorneys the game is on to Deny, Deny, Deny! All evidence of inflation is explained as transitory. High food prices? It’s the weather. Gasoline? Blame speculators or oil industry profits. Ben knows he can get away with this dodge for at least two or three more quarters. After that? Don’t you worry; if inflation ever raises its ugly head Ben the Beneficent will rise up and smite it immediately!

Do you have a friend that is a high function alcoholic? “Back off, I can handle it! I’m doing fine at work. Things at home have never been better. What’s the big deal; it’s just a few traffic tickets. If my drinking becomes a problem I can stop any time.” After he wraps his car around a tree, loses his job, and his wife leaves him you’ll be there to check him into rehab. But his life will never be the same.

Nor will our economy after the triple whammy of double digit unemployment, double digit inflation, and an uncontrollable budget deficit comes down on our heads. That’s why I think the gold standard will make a comeback. It’s too bad the country has to be dragged through so much avoidable misery, but perhaps that’s the only way we can put a stake through the heart of fiat currency.

Don’t be melodramatic; we survived the seventies without restoring the gold standard didn’t we? Sure. But last time Washington went on an inflationary binge the world was a simpler place, and we sat firmly atop it. There was no Euro. China was the world’s largest penal colony barely able to feed itself, not a manufacturing giant and our biggest creditor. The evil empire threatened. Fax machines were the latest thing in international communications. World financial markets were neither integrated nor interconnected by broadband. And citizens got their news from three government regulated TV networks.

Paul Volcker had a far more manageable problem dumped in his lap than will Bernanke’s successor, who will be confronted by genuine challenges to the U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency. And therein lies the opportunity for gold.

Faced with the alternative of ceding monetary supremacy to the Chinese the gold standard will be the only politically palatable option. In addition, all those gold cranks the liberal media spent decades portraying as fools are going to look pretty smart when gold hits $2,000 an ounce. With enough think tanks in Washington rehabilitating gold as a respectable monetary anchor and ratings agencies threatening to reduce T-bills to junk bond status, hard money will have its day in court.

And it will win because the gold standard makes but one promise, and that is to stabilize the value of money. At that task it has never failed, unlike every fiat currency in history. Gold makes no false promises to cure unemployment, direct credit to the unworthy, juice a slack economy, boost exports, deliver stealth tax hikes, erode unfunded liabilities, or all the other things that fiat currency advocates promise. A gold peg merely sets immutable ground rules for exchange and leaves us alone to work out the rest. By taking the distorting levers away from Washington elites a hard money standard grounds the economy on our own productive efforts and not the whims of bureaucrats. And productivity is a playing field on which America has always done its best.

Laugh at the gold standard if you’d like, but don’t count on laughing last. When Bernanke’s funny money takes its inevitable fall, gold will still beckon.

Bill Frezza is a writer and venture capitalist living in Boston. He can be reached at bill@vereverus.com.

PRECIOUS-COMEX silver extends losses; iShares holdings dip


Tue May 3, 2011 9:03pm EDT

SINGAPORE, May 4 (Reuters) - COMEX silver dipped 3 percent
on Wednesday, extending losses from the previous session after
CME raised margins for the third time in a week, and holdings in
the iShares Silver Trust dropped to a 7-week low.

FUNDAMENTALS
* Spot gold edged down 0.4 percent to $1,534.75 an
ounce by 0033 GMT, headed for its third consecutive day of
decline.
* U.S. gold futures GCcv1 inched down 0.3 percent to
$1,535.50.
* COMEX silver SIcv1 fell as much as 5 percent to $40.47
an ounce, its lowest in nearly three weeks, before paring some
losses to $41.28, down 3 percent from the previous close.
* Spot silver shed 1 percent to $41.25.
* On Tuesday, a near 10 percent slide in COMEX silver led a
commodity sell-off, knocking the 19-commodity Reuters-Jefferies
CRB index down 0.9 percent, its sharpest daily loss in
more than two weeks.
* Further dampening sentiment in precious metals, latest
U.S. data showed factory orders surged in March, a fifth
straight monthly increase, indicating a healthy manufacturing
sector well placed to support economic recovery. [ID:nN03300045]
* Holdings in the iShares Silver Trust , the world's
largest silver-backed exchange-traded fund, slipped 1 percent
from the previous session to a seven-week low of 10,909.06
tonnes by May 3.
* For the top stories on metals and other news, click
, or

MARKET NEWS
* The dollar hovered above a near three-year low against a
basket of currencies on Wednesday, as the euro held firm against
the greenback on expectations of further rate hikes by the
European Central Bank.
* U.S. stocks fell on Tuesday as investors questioned the
sustainability of the rally in light of fresh worries about
earnings growth in the coming quarters.

DATA/EVENTS
0758 EZ Markit Services PMI Apr 2011
1400 U.S. ISM N-Mfg PMI Apr
1400 U.S. ISM N-Mfg Bus Act Apr

PRICES
Precious metals prices 0033 GMT
Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Volume
Spot Gold 1534.75 -5.63 -0.37 8.12
Spot Silver 41.25 -0.39 -0.94 33.67
Spot Platinum 1849.49 -3.82 -0.21 4.64
Spot Palladium 771.22 -12.47 -1.59 -3.54
TOCOM Gold 4072.00 -15.00 -0.37 9.20 22271
TOCOM Platinum 4904.00 41.00 +0.84 4.43 3055
TOCOM Silver 118.70 1.30 +1.11 46.54 1953
TOCOM Palladium 2030.00 -17.00 -0.83 -3.20 197
COMEX GOLD JUN1 1535.50 -4.90 -0.32 8.03 2351
COMEX SILVER JUL1 41.28 -1.31 -3.06 33.42 3789
Euro/Dollar 1.4825
Dollar/Yen 81.01
TOCOM prices in yen per gram. Spot prices in $ per ounce.
COMEX gold and silver contracts show the most active months

(Reporting by Rujun Shen; Editing by Michael Urquhart)

Silver Slumps on Higher Margins; Gold Drops on Report of Soros Fund Sales By Kim Kyoungwha - May 4, 2011 1:51 PM GMT+0700


Silver futures dropped, heading for the biggest three-day fall since March 2008, as an increase in margin requirements on the Comex in New York drove investors away. Gold also fell after a report that Soros Fund Management LLC may have cut holdings.

Silver for July delivery slumped as much as 5 percent to $40.465 per ounce, after losing 7.6 percent yesterday and 5.2 percent on May 2. The metal was at $41.175 at 2:01 p.m. in Singapore, taking losses over the three days to 16 percent. Immediate-delivery gold fell 0.2 percent to $1,533.28 an ounce, also lower for a third session.

CME Group Ltd., Comex’s owner, said this week that the minimum amount of cash that must be deposited when borrowing from brokers to trade silver futures will rise to $16,200 per contract at the close of business yesterday, from $14,513. A year ago, the margin was $4,250.

“Silver is often the lead indicator for changes in trends, or at least for corrections,” David Wilson, an analyst at Societe Generale SA, wrote in a note. After futures rallied to a record $50.35 an ounce in January 1980, prices dropped 78 percent in four months.

Soros Fund Management, the $28 billion hedge fund run by Keith Anderson, has sold much of its gold and silver holdings, the Wall Street Journal reported today, citing unidentified people. Many of the sales took place over the past month as there was a reduced risk of deflation, according to the report.

From the start of this year to the end of April, silver futures rallied 57 percent, peaking at $49.845 on April 25. The metal was the best performer in that period among the 24 raw materials tracked by the Standard & Poor’s GSCI Index.
‘Opportunistic Buyers’

“A reversal of 20 percent or more, returning the metal to levels in the mid-$30s, would not surprise us at all,” Edel Tully, a London-based analyst at UBS AG, wrote in a report. “Only then would we be opportunistic buyers.”

Demand for silver and gold has been supported by the growing prospect of currency debasement and accelerating inflation. The dollar fell 7.5 percent against a basket of six major currencies this year, sliding to its lowest level since 2008.

Silver assets held in exchange-traded products fell 1.1 percent to 15,169.80 metric tons yesterday, while gold holdings stood little changed at 2,069.78 tons, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Gold for June delivery in New York declined as much as 0.6 percent to $1,531.20 an ounce, after losing 1.1 percent yesterday. Futures reached a record $1,577.40 on May 2.
Gold to Silver Ratio

Gold was “dragged lower by another sharp drop in silver,” Mark Pervan, head of commodity research at ANZ Banking Group Ltd., wrote in a note. “Although silver is a smaller market and prone to choppy trading, it still had a bearish impact.”

UBS’s Tully said the gold-to-silver ratio may return to 40 this month after a decline to 31.7135 on April 28, the lowest level since 1980. An ounce of gold bought 37.15 ounces of silver today.

“We remain significantly more friendly to gold than to silver,” she said. “We find it very likely that investors, happy with their silver gains this year, will accelerate their profit-taking.”

Palladium for immediate delivery lost 0.8 percent to $767.75 an ounce, while platinum fell 0.7 percent to $1,841.50 an ounce.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kyoungwha Kim in Singapore at kkim19@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Poole at jpoole4@bloomberg.net

Friday 29 April 2011

Gold Rises to Record; Silver Heads for Biggest Monthly Advance Since 1983 By Pham-Duy Nguyen - Apr 29, 2011 9:45 PM GMT+0700

Gold futures rose to a record for the third straight day on bets that the dollar will extend a slump, enhancing the allure of the metal as an alternative asset. Silver headed for the biggest monthly gain in 28 years.
The greenback headed for the fifth consecutive monthly decline against a basket of six major currencies. The Federal Reserve signaled this week that borrowing costs will remain at a record low for an extended period. Gold headed for the biggest monthly gain since November 2009.
“The dollar will continue to lose ground for the foreseeable future, so it only makes sense to be invested in precious metals,” said Matthew Zeman, a strategist at Kingsview Financial in Chicago.
Gold futures for June delivery rose $12.80, or 0.8 percent, to $1,544 an ounce at 10:41 a.m. on the Comex in New York. Earlier, the price reached a record $1,545.90. The metal has gained more than 7 percent this month.
Gold for immediate delivery climbed as much as 0.6 percent to an all-time high of $1,544.90.
Assets in the SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest exchange-traded fund backed by gold, have expanded 1.5 percent this month, heading for the biggest gain since August.
“The sinking dollar is driving people to the gold market,” said Lim Han Jo, a Seoul-based trader at Tongyang Futures Co.
The Fed has kept its benchmark lending rate at zero percent to 0.25 percent since December 2008 to stimulate the economy.

‘Free Money’

“The free-money party is going to continue, and that’s going to drive gold higher,” Zeman of Kingsview said.
Silver futures for July delivery rose $1.139, or 2.4 percent, to $48.68 an ounce. This month, the metal is up 28 percent, poised for the biggest gain since January 1983.
The minimum amount of cash that traders must deposit for speculative positions in silver futures will rise 13 percent to $14,513 per contract after the close of business today, CME Group Inc., the Comex parent, said yesterday. Margins were $4,250 a year ago.
“Silver’s run is related to the rise in gold,” said Michael Cuggino, who helps manage about $12 billion at Permanent Portfolio Funds in San Francisco. “There’s a lot of speculation in silver. Anytime you’ve had a run like silver, you’re going to get a correction.”
Before today, gold rose 31 percent in the past year, and silver more than doubled.
To contact the reporter on this story: Pham-Duy Nguyen in New York at pnguyen@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Steve Stroth at sstroth@bloomberg.net.

PRECIOUS-Silver, gold near record; dollar wallows at 3-year low Fri Apr 29, 2011 12:40am GMT


SINGAPORE, April 29 (Reuters) - Silver and gold were within sight of
historic highs on Friday and could resume an uptrend as the dollar held near
three-year lows against a basket of currencies on the Federal Reserve's
intention to keep interest rates near zero.

FUNDAMENTALS
* Silver barely moved, standing at 48.28 an ounce by 0017 GMT, having
rallied to a record at $49.51 an ounce on Thursday.
* Spot gold added 75 cents to $1,535.70 an ounce after hitting a
lifetime high around $1,538 an ounce in the previous session.
* Soaring prices hurt the bottom line of certain manufacturers, including
photography company Eastman Kodak , which said on Thursday a hike in raw
material costs, particularly silver, led to a decrease in its film business
revenue. [ID:nN28229826]
* The dollar wallowed at three-year lows against a basket of currencies
early in Asia on Friday and remained on track for its biggest weekly fall in 14
weeks, though selling pressure eased as bears were already very short.

MARKET NEWS
* Tokyo stocks climbed 1.6 percent on Thursday to their highest since last's
month earthquake, helped by better-than-expected domestic earnings and
strength in U.S. shares after the Federal Reserve pledged to
hold short-term rates near zero.
* U.S. crude oil futures rose on Thursday to hit a 31-month high settlement
after a volatile trading session that saw a weak dollar attract investors
seeking alternative assets.

DATA EVENTS (GMT)
1230 U.S. Personal income mm Oct
1355 U.S. U.Mich conditions final Apr
1355 U.S. U.Mich expectation final Apr
1355 U.S. U.Mich sentiment final Apr
1430 U.S. ECRI index Weekly
:: U.S. Dallas Fed PCE Mar

Precious metals prices 0017 GMT
Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Turnover
Spot Gold 1535.70 0.75 +0.05 8.19
Spot Silver 48.28 -0.13 -0.27 56.45
Spot Platinum 1836.74 1.64 +0.09 3.92
Spot Palladium 782.00 10.77 +1.40 -2.19
TOCOM Gold 4030.00 1.00 +0.02 8.07 17566
TOCOM Platinum 4847.00 31.00 +0.64 3.22 1717
TOCOM Silver 126.10 -0.30 -0.24 55.68 1879
TOCOM Palladium 2021.00 5.00 +0.25 -3.62 154
Euro/Dollar 1.4839
Dollar/Yen 81.57
TOCOM prices in yen per gram. Spot prices in $ per ounce.


(Reporting by Lewa Pardomuan; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)



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