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STI vs GOLD price
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globevestor
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26-Sep-2007 23:41
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In the next 10 years, hard assets will outperform paper assets because rate of production of hard assets is much lower than speed of 'printing machines'(aka central banks) |
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mirage
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26-Sep-2007 23:24
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Gold for December delivery fell $4.70 at $734.10 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
"More participants are hoping for a somewhat more substantial corrective dip in order to feel more comfortable with the near-term prospects in the metal," said Jon Nadler, metals analyst at Kitco Bullion Dealers, in emailed comments.
"Several advisors have recommended selling profitable positions at these levels and either plowing them into other metals or simply standing by for a renewed buying opportunity," Nadler said.
On Tuesday, gold finished down 50 cents at $738.80 an ounce after hitting an intraday low of $729.20.
"For now it seems that gold is more comfortable consolidating rather than pushing to fresh highs," said James Moore, metals analyst at TheBullionDesk.com, in a research note.
"Traders will continue to monitor both oil and the dollar, with further signs of dollar weakness likely to be positive for gold," he said.
Dollar rebounds
On the currency markets, the dollar took a breather from its recent drop Wednesday, gaining on its major counterparts as stock prices rose on news of a tentative deal ending a two-day United Auto Workers strike against General Motors Corp. The Dollar Index, which tracks the performance of the greenback against a basket of currencies, rose 0.2% at 78.515.
Currency markets largely shrugged off dismal data released by the Commerce Department revealing that durable goods plunged 4.9% last month, the biggest monthly decline in orders for big-ticket items since January. See Economic Report.
Also on Nymex Wednesday, other metals prices gained. December silver rose 6 cents at $13.680 an ounce, October platinum rose $2 at $1,351.40 an ounce and December palladium gained 5 cents at $343 an ounce.
December copper was flat at $3.6350 a pound.
Elsewhere on the commodity markets, crude oil for November delivery fell 26 cents at $79.27 a barrel on Nymex. See Futures Movers.
Inventories and indexes
Gold warehouse inventories rose by 194 troy ounces to stand at 6.9 million troy ounces as of late Tuesday, according to data compiled by Nymex. Silver supplies fell by 10,299 troy ounces to stand at 133.9 million troy ounces, and copper supplies were unchanged at 20,115 short tons.
Indexes tracking mining and metals stocks fell Wednesday. The Philadelphia Gold and Silver Index (XAU:
phlx gold silver index capital-weight
Last: 164.77-3.13-1.86%
10:56am 09/26/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: XAU164.77, -3.13, -1.9%) dropped 1.3% at 165.73 points. The CBOE Gold Index (GOX:
CBOE Gold Index
Last: 165.62-2.88-1.71%
11:16am 09/26/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: GOX165.62, -2.88, -1.7%) fell 2% at 165.18 points and the Amex Gold Bugs Index (HUI:
amex gold bugs index equal-$ weight
Last: 382.99-8.48-2.17%
11:16am 09/26/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: HUI382.99, -8.48, -2.2%) fell 2.4% at 382.04 points. As for sector exchange-traded funds, the StreetTracks Gold Trust ETF (GLD:
streetTRACKS Gold Shares ETF
Last: 72.10-0.23-0.32%
10:56am 09/26/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: GLD72.10, -0.23, -0.3%) fell 0.5% at $71.98, the iShares Silver Trust ETF (SLV:
ishares silver trust ishares
Last: 133.50-0.17-0.13%
10:56am 09/26/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: SLV133.50, -0.17, -0.1%) dropped 0.3% at $133.24 and the Market Vectors-Gold Miners ETF (GDX:
market vectors etf tr gold miner etf
Last: 43.84-0.75-1.68%
10:56am 09/26/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: GDX43.84, -0.75, -1.7%) fell 2% at $43.71. Newmont Mining warns on costs, dwindling reserves
Shares of Newmont Mining Corp. (NEM:
Newmont Mining Corporation
Last: 45.11-2.58-5.41%
10:56am 09/26/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: NEM45.11, -2.58, -5.4%) tumbled 4.3% at $45.61 on Wednesday after the company said that costs applicable to sales for this year could top the gold producer's previous outlook of $375 to $400 per ounce. In a securities filing that contained information from an investor presentation, the gold mining company also said it may have trouble finding new reserves to make up for levels it is mining since its mines are getting older, with the best quality ores already tapped.
"The large-scale, mature and low grade nature of its gold deposits may limit its ability to replace, net of depletion, its proven and probable gold reserves in 2007," it said.
Polya Lesova is a MarketWatch reporter based in New York.
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mirage
Veteran |
06-Sep-2007 17:23
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/09/05/bcnchina105.xml Is China quietly dumping US Treasuries?By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard Last Updated: 12:25am BST 06/09/2007
A sharp drop in foreign holdings of US Treasury bonds over the last five weeks has raised concerns that China is quietly withdrawing its funds from the United States, leaving the dollar increasingly vulnerable. Data released by the New York Federal Reserve shows that foreign central banks have cut their stash of US Treasuries by $48bn since late July, with falls of $32bn in the last two weeks alone. "This comes as a big surprise and it is definitely worrying," said Hans Redeker, currency chief at BNP Paribas. "We won't know if China is behind this until the Treasury releases its TIC data in November, but what it does show is that world central banks are in a hurry to get out of the US. They don't seem to be switching into other currencies, so it is possible they are moving into gold instead. Gold is now gaining momentum across all currencies and has broken through resistance at 500 euros," he said. While the greenback has been resilient over recent weeks - even regaining something of a 'safe-haven' role as banks scrambled to buy the currency to cover dollar debts - most experts believe that America's $850bn current account deficit will eventually cause the dollar to resume its relentless slide. David Powell, an economist at IDEAglobal in New York, pointed the finger at Beijing as the main suspect in the sudden bond flight this summer. In a client note entitled "Has China started to dump US Treasuries?", he said the sales appear to coincide with early moves by Beijing to launch its new $300bn sovereign wealth fund. The scheme is part of the government's plan to diversify it $1,340bn reserves from bonds (mostly in the US) to a broader portfolio of investments and a better yield. If so, the switch comes at a very delicate time, just as tempers flair on both sides of the Pacific over China's policy of holding down yuan by currency intervention. A bill in Congress calls for punitive tariff sanctions of 27.5pc against Chinese imports, and there has been a growing outcry over contaminated pet food and lead-tainted toys. Two top advisers to the Chinese government gave strong hints in August that Beijing should use its estimated $900bn holdings of US Treasuries and agency bonds as a "bargaining chip", words taken as an implicit threat to trigger as US bond crash if provoked. The Chinese government has since put out an official statement clarifying that it has no intention in taking such an irresponsible step, which would in any case backfire by devaluing China's remaining holding. Mr Powell said the switch out of Treasuires was a purely commercial decision. "If if turns out that the Chinese are behind this, it is merely an attempt to increase returns on investment. It has nothing to do with settling protectionist scores," he said. Any evidence that China was pulling out would risk setting off an unstoppable stampede, which is why such a policy would never be announced. It holds the world's biggest pool of resrves, followed by Japan. Robin Bhar, a metals analyst at UBS, said there was little evidence yet that Asian central banks were switching heavily into gold. Most of the recent buying of gold has been on the COMEX futures markets, the playground of hedge funds. Central banks tend to buy their bullion in London at the AM and PM fixings, leaving a footprint that is visible to experts. They seem to have been largely absent from the market so far.
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mirage
Veteran |
24-Aug-2007 00:55
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Quotes: SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- Renewed investor interest and weakness in the U.S. dollar helped futures prices for the precious metal head higher for a second day Thursday. Gold for December delivery climbed $1.10 at $669.80 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange. On Wednesday, gold futures rose $2.50 to close at $668.70 an ounce. Read more.
Besides Wednesday's "news regarding record jewelry demand in India and internationally, and record bullion demand and holding in the StreetTracks Gold ETF, there is also positive gold news in the form of ... gold de-hedging, which hit a new high," said Mark O'Byrne, director of GoldandSilverInvestments.com.
Precious metals consultancy GFMS reported in a study complied for Societe Generale issued Tuesday that "de-hedging reached a record high in the second quarter as a wave of buybacks led to a provisional 5.2 million-ounce cut" from gold producers' hedge books.
When gold companies continue to reduce gold hedges, it's a sign that they wish to take advantage of rising bullion prices, explained O'Byrne, in emailed commentary. Gold hedging has been "very negative for the gold mining industry and for the gold price in recent years, helping as it did to suppress the gold price."
For now, "however, traders are reported to remain nervous over the credit market turmoil, capping gold gains as trade is cautious," said analysts at Action Economics, in a research note.
In the backdrop Thursday, the dollar weakened against both the euro and British pound "as sentiment remained mixed that a worldwide credit crunch could still trigger an interest rate rise in the euro zone, while holding rates steady in England," said O'Byrne. See Currencies.
Traders also assessed news that first-time claims for state unemployment benefits fell slightly in the latest week, breaking three weeks of gains and continuing to signal a healthy U.S. labor market.
Initial claims for the week ended Aug. 18 fell by 2,000 to stand at 322,000, the lowest level since Aug. 4, the Labor Department reported. See Economic Report.
Some weakness in the U.S. stock market also provided support for gold. U.S. traders locked in some recent gains, even as Bank of America Corp.'s $2 billion vote of confidence in Countrywide Financial Corp. eased worries about the survival of the country's biggest mortgage leader. See Market Snapshot.
Most other metals prices were higher Thursday, with September copper leading the way, up 1.5% at $3.26 a pound. September silver gained 11.5 cents to $11.68 an ounce and December palladium was up $1.25 at $329 an ounce.
But October platinum fell by $8.40 to $1,240.20 an ounce.
Inventories and indexes
Gold warehouse inventories were unchanged at 7.09 million troy ounces as of late Wednesday and silver supplies fell by 446,259 troy ounces to stand at 134.4 million troy ounces, according to Nymex data. Copper supplies rose 152 short tons at 20,912.
Indexes tracking mining and metals stocks fell after climbing over the past three sessions.
The Philadelphia Gold and Silver Index (XAU:
XAU
Sponsored by: XAU, , ) declined by 1.1% to stand at 136.15 points. The CBOE Gold Index (GOX:
GOX
Sponsored by: GOX, , ) was at 136.57 points, down 0.8%, and the Amex Gold Bugs Index (HUI:
HUI
Sponsored by: HUI, , ) lost 0.7% to 318.90 points. As for sector exchange-traded funds, the StreetTracks Gold Trust ETF (GLD:
Polya Lesova is a MarketWatch reporter based in New York.GLD
Sponsored by: GLD, , ) was nearly flat at $65.38. The iShares Silver Trust ETF (SLV:
SLV
Sponsored by: SLV, , ) rose 0.4% to $116.19, while the Market Vectors-Gold Miners ETF (GDX:
GDX
Sponsored by: GDX, , ) shed 0.8% to $36.58. |
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mirage
Veteran |
17-Aug-2007 09:03
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QUOTES: GOLD price is down 3%, down US$21.70 to US$ 658 an ounce. When stock is down, is good to invest some in GOLD? Any views, in terms of percentage what amount should we invest in GOLD. NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Gold futures tumbled 3% Thursday in a broad commodities sell-off, coming under heavy pressure amid a global stock rout fuelled by deepening troubles in the credit and subprime markets. "You're facing a serious and under-appreciated global liquidity crisis," Zachary Oxman, senior trader at Wisdom Financial, said in emailed comments.
"This is a serious problem and it's time for the powers that be to recognize the size and scope of this issue and step in -- an epidemic," Oxman said. "Right now, parties are all running for the door to get any and all the cash that they possibly can on their books to cover calls and redemptions."
Gold for December delivery tumbled $21.70, or 3%, to close at $658 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Other metals futures also declined sharply, with silver selling off 8%, copper dropping 7% and palladium dropping 6%. Energy futures also tumbled. See Futures Movers.
"You are seeing a global liquidation of all markets regardless of market trend," Oxman said. "Gold, crude, grains, softs, everything is getting hit and will continue to do so until the market is able to purge this sub-prime nightmare that we are living in right now."
Metals stocks decline
On Wall Street, U.S. stocks staged a dramatic reversal in the final hour of trade, helping the Dow industrials to recover from a 340 point deficit to finish slightly lower. The Dow Jones Industrial Average ($INDU:
Dow Jones Industrial Average
Last: 12,845.78-15.69-0.12%
4:48pm 08/16/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: $INDU12,845.78, -15.69, -0.1%) closed down 15.69 points, or 0.1%, at 12,845.78 points. See Market Snapshot. Stocks worldwide dropped, with losses from Korea to Turkey to Britain, in the wake of the unfolding credit-market downturn, started by problems in the U.S. subprime mortgage market.
"Gold's slide into negative territory took an a new and decidedly ominous dimension on Thursday, as price support after price support gave way in the wake of mounting massive liquidations from all quarters," Jon Nadler, analyst at Kitco Bullion Dealers, said in emailed comments.
"A wide range of commodities were being badly sideswiped in the frenzied quest to raise cash in order to mitigate stock losses by individual and institutional investors alike," Nadler said. "This was a very ugly day across the board."
By the time metals trading closed in mid-afternoon, U.S. stocks were still suffering sharp losses.
"All commodity markets are down on follow-through from the equities [markets]," Nedoss said Charles Nedoss, analyst at the Peak Trading Group. Also, technical selling is driving prices down, he said.
"Some of the safe-haven buying is going into Treasurys," Nedoss said. "People are [also] buying dollars in safe-haven type buying," he said.
Indexes tracking mining and metals stocks closed with sharp losses. Read more.
The Philadelphia Gold and Silver Index (XAU:
phlx gold silver index capital-weight
Last: 125.64-6.81-5.14%
4:49pm 08/16/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: XAU125.64, -6.81, -5.1%) declined 4.6% at 126.40 points. The CBOE Gold Index (GOX:
CBOE Gold Index
Last: 126.30-6.76-5.08%
5:17pm 08/16/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: GOX126.30, -6.76, -5.1%) tumbled 5.1% at 126.30 points and the Amex Gold Bugs Index (HUI:
amex gold bugs index equal-$ weight
Last: 300.14-16.19-5.12%
4:45pm 08/16/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: HUI300.14, -16.19, -5.1%) shed 5.1% at 300.14 points. As for sector exchange-traded funds, the StreetTracks Gold Trust ETF (GLD:
streetTRACKS Gold Shares ETF
Last: 64.68-1.45-2.19%
8:11pm 08/16/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: GLD64.68, -1.45, -2.2%) shed 2.2% at $64.68. The iShares Silver Trust ETF (SLV:
ishares silver trust ishares
Last: 117.80-6.05-4.88%
8:00pm 08/16/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: SLV117.80, -6.05, -4.9%) tumbled 4.9% at $117.80 and the Market Vectors-Gold Miners ETF (GDX:
market vectors etf tr gold miner etf
Last: 34.65-1.80-4.94%
8:11pm 08/16/2007 Delayed quote data Sponsored by: GDX34.65, -1.80, -4.9%) dropped 5.4% at $34.49. Other metals also tumble
Also on Nymex Thursday, October platinum fell $41.50, or nearly 3%, at $1,230 an ounce.
September silver tumbled $1.06, or 8%, to close at $11.495 an ounce. September palladium dropped $22.65, or 6%, at $327.85 an ounce.
September copper fell 24.20 cents, or 7%, at $3.09 a pound.
With worldwide stocks sharply lower, "the initial thought is slowing industrial demand," Nedoss said about the decline in copper prices. "Crude oil is telling you the same thing."
The yen surged to a 13-month high against its rivals Thursday, while the dollar made gains against the euro and British pound in response to continued turmoil in the credit markets.
The Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of the world's major currencies, edged down 0.1% at 81.745. See Currencies.
Gold warehouse inventories fell 46,655 troy ounces to stand at 7.08 million troy ounces as of late Wednesday, according to Nymex data. Silver supplies rose 251,304 troy ounces to stand at 134.3 million troy ounces, while copper supplies fell 97 short tons to stand at 21,244 short tons. Polya Lesova is a MarketWatch reporter based in New York. |
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