Gold has followed the now familiar trading pattern of gains in Asia followed by weakness in Europe. While gold has fallen and is weaker in most currencies gold remains higher in euro terms due to euro weakness on the concern of a Greek default. Spot gold bounced back in Asian trading Monday as investors snatched up bargains after a 2% dip the previous session. The Greek debt debacle is still supporting the price as a deal remains elusive. There continue to be concerns of a “Lehman moment” but markets remain fairly sanguine of a positive outcome despite the continual risk of a Greek default. Gold remains an essential diversification as central banks keep money loose with record low interest rates and Asian powerhouses China and India still drive demand. Silver has also fallen this morning. Barclays Capital, who have been quite bearish on silver in recent years, say that they are “expecting prices to rise in the next few sessions, along with gold, pegging silver's next resistance level at $35.70/oz and support near $33/oz.”
From Goldcore:
Gold’s London AM fix this morning was USD 1,717.00, EUR 1,315.31, and GBP 1,090.85 per ounce.
Friday's AM fix was USD 1759.50, EUR 1,335.48, and GBP 1,110.66 per ounce.
Gold has followed the now familiar trading pattern of gains in Asia followed by weakness in Europe. While gold has fallen and is weaker in most currencies gold remains higher in euro terms due to euro weakness on the concern of a Greek default.
Cross Currency Table – (Bloomberg)
Spot gold bounced back in Asian trading Monday as investors snatched up bargains after a 2% dip the previous session. The Greek debt debacle is still supporting the price as a deal remains elusive.
There continues to be concerns of a “Lehman moment” but markets remain fairly sanguine of a positive outcome despite the continual risk of a Greek default.
At 11.00 GMT German industrial orders will be published for market watchers. The US jobs data surprise released Friday boosted equities but bullion recorded its largest daily fall in a month.
XAU-EUR Exchange Rate – 30 Days (Bloomberg)
Gold remains an essential diversification as central banks keep money loose with record low interest rates and Asian powerhouses China and India still drive demand.
Silver has also fallen this morning. Barclays Capital, who have been quite bearish on silver in recent years, say that they are “expecting prices to rise in the next few sessions, along with gold, pegging silver's next resistance level at $35.70/oz and support near $33/oz.”
NEWSWIRE
(Bloomberg) -- Gold holdings in exchange-traded products backed by the precious metal expanded for a fourth day on Feb. 3 to 2,385.664 metric tons, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The assets are within 0.3 percent of a Dec. 13 record.
(Bloomberg) -- Hedge-fund managers and other large speculators increased their net-long position in New York gold futures in the week ended Jan. 31, according to U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data.
Speculative long positions, or bets prices will rise, outnumbered short positions by 171,359 contracts on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, the Washington-based commission said in its Commitments of Traders report. Net-long positions rose by 29,136 contracts, or 20 percent, from a week earlier.
Miners, producers, jewelers and other commercial users were net-short 209,862 contracts, an increase of 30,094 contracts, or 17 percent, from the previous week.
(Bloomberg) -- Zimbabwe’s mining ministry has raised license fees by as much as 5,000 percent, the state-controlled Sunday Mail said, citing a government decree.
Registration of diamond mining licenses, known as claims, will rise to $5 million from $1 million, while an application for a platinum mining license has increased to $500,000 from $200, the Harare-based Sunday Mail said on its website. Should the application be successful, the license to operate a platinum mine will climb to $2.5 million from $500, the Sunday Mail added.
The increase in fees, published by the government, has been criticized by both small-scale and large-scale miners, the Sunday Mail said.
Zimbabwe has the world’s second-largest platinum reserves after neighboring South Africa.
(Bloomberg) -- Nationalization of platinum assets, a 50 percent windfall tax and a reduction in royalty taxes were recommended by a study ordered by South Africa’s ruling African National Congress, City Press reported, citing the report.
The windfall tax of up to 50 percent should be imposed on superprofits, which the report defined as a return on investment of 22 percent, in return for investment in infrastructure and a reduction in the overall tax rate, the Johannesburg-based newspaper said. Royalty taxes should be cut to 1 percent from 4 percent and platinum, regarded as South Africa’s sovereign resource, should be nationalized through “targeted interventions,” according to the study, City Press said.
(Bloomberg) -- Sudan is expected to earn $2.5 billion from gold exports this year, President Umar al-Bashir said at a Cabinet meeting today in Khartoum, the capital.
The increased income from the metal will help offset the decline in revenue from oil exports following the secession of South Sudan last year, Bashir said.
(Bloomberg) -- Harmony Gold Mining Co. Chief Executive Officer Graham Briggs said gold may average $1,850 an ounce in the company’s fiscal year through June 30 and could rise to $2,000 around the end of calendar 2012.
(Reuters) - Harmony Gold, South Africa's third-largest bullion miner, cut its full-year production target by 13 percent on Monday, as safety stoppages threatened to crimp a surge in profit from record gold prices.
Harmony, which more than doubled its second quarter earnings compared with the first quarter as it reaped the benefits of a weak rand and a sky-high gold price, said shutdowns because of fatalities could take some lustre off its future output.
South Africa's government has been clamping down on miners to cut their accident rates, leading to lower output. Mines are usually shut down for several days at a time following a fatality.
(Reuters Global Gold Forum) - Bullion prices may be slightly down at heel today but HSBC's outlook is sharpening the bull's horns: "Two by products of the global financial crisis are declines in investor confidence and eroding trust in the financial system and government policies. The climate is conducive to investors to re-establish and build long positions in the bullion market."
Reuters graphic/Vincent Flasseur
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SILVER
Silver is trading at $33.40/oz, €25.61/oz and £21.21/oz.
PLATINUM GROUP METALS
Platinum is trading at $1,606.25/oz, palladium at $691/oz and rhodium at $1,400/oz.
NEWS
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Gold May Extend Gains From Two-Month High on Europe Debt Concern
(MarketWatch)
Gold, silver futures fall in Asian trading
(Reuters)
Gold rebounds after heavy loss; Asia rushes to buy
(The Economic Times)
Asia Gold price drop prompts buying; seasonal lull caps interest
(CNN)
States seek currencies made of silver and gold
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