London Gold Market
Report
from
Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Gold Rises Again as UK Faces Credit
Downgrade, US Treasury Refuses to Discuss Banking Exit Plan
THE PRICE OF GOLD
in the wholesale spot market rose to new 7-week highs at the start of London
dealing on Thursday, touching $944 an ounce before slipping back as the US
Dollar bounced on the currency market, and crude oil fell together with world
stock markets.
Sony Corp., the Japanese electronics giant, said it will halve the number of
suppliers it uses, knocking 20% off last year's $5.3 billion purchasing costs.
Here in London, the UK
government's credit status was cut from "stable" to
"negative" by ratings agency Standard & Poor's, one month since
the finance ministry announced a deficit worth 12% of the country's annual
economy.
"The trend is your friend, so while we continue to achieve higher highs
and higher lows [in Gold Prices],
our bias will remain bullish," says the latest technical analysis from
precious metals dealer Scotia Mocatta.
"Our target is 966 but see resistance at 948 ahead of that level from a
well-defined channel drawn off of 866 and 880."
"Many factors are moving in sync for a higher Gold Price," agrees
Walter de Wet at Standard Bank, pegging technical support at $926 and
resistance at $944 an ounce.
World equities fell nearly 1% by lunchtime in London
on Thursday, with the UK's
top 100 shares unwinding the last two weeks of gains.
An early drop in the British Pound – sparked by S&P changing the UK
government's credit status – failed to boost Gold Prices in Sterling
however, leaving them unchanged across the last two sessions near £600 an
ounce.
For Eurozone investors now Ready to
Buy Gold, the price ticked lower from a 3-day high at €685.
"Didn't [Standard & Poor's] see the UK
budget when it came out? They are a bit late, aren't they?" asks Ian
Williams, CEO of London's Charteris, managers of the
best-performing gilt fund so far in 2009.
The threat of an S&P downgrade "won't change the way I invest,"
Williams told Bloomberg earlier. "I don't think in the real world it will
affect the ability of the UK
government to pay coupons on gilts.
"Unlike the Eurozone, they can print
money."
Earlier this month the Bank of England extended its Quantitative Easing program by two-thirds to £125 billion
($193bn) – growing its purchases of government debt in a bid to inject money
into the financial system.
Comparing today's US,
Swiss, Japanese and UK
'money printing' with the hyper-inflation of 1920s Germany,
the Bank of England was already set to buy "£300 billion per annum, 65% of
British government spending," as Martin Hutchinson has noted at Money Morning.
"Thus, while the United States is approaching and further overtaking
Weimar German policy (50% of government spending), Britain has already
overtaken it!"
Today saw longer-dated UK
bond prices fall on the S&P announcement, pushing the 30-year yield up
above 4.5%. But shorter-term government debt rose after an auction of five-year
gilts drew bids for 2.6 times the record £5 billion on offer.
New data from the Bank of England meantime showed private-bank lending
contracting in the UK
in April, down by almost £11.9 billion ($18.4bn).
"Things have unquestionably improved," says Alan Greenspan, former
Fed chief, in a new interview with Bloomberg.
"They've improved everywhere in the world. It's remarkable."
Yesterday the Federal Reserve released minutes from its latest policy meeting
that said the US
economy will likely contract by 1.3% to 2.0% in 2009, rather than the 0.5%
predicted before.
Unemployment is set to approach 10%, the Fed minutes say.
Today the Wall Street Journal reports that the US Treasury is lending an extra
$7 billion to GMAC, calling it "a step towards" the auto-financier a
quasi-government body.
GMAC has already borrowed $5 billion from the Troubled Asset Relief Program
(TARP) in exchange for five million shares in the company.
"Crises this severe don't burn themselves out. To fix them requires the
action of government," said US Treasury secretary Tim Geithner
to the Senate Banking Committee on Wednesday.
Asked when and how the government will withdraw the huge volume of credit it's
extended to private borrowers, "I'm not prepared to talk to that
today," said Geithner.
"We're not quite there yet."
Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Gold
price chart, no delay | Gold in 2009
Formerly City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in
London and head of editorial at the UK's leading financial advisory for private
investors, Adrian Ash is the editor
of Gold News and head of research
at BullionVault
– winner of the Queen's Award for Enterprise Innovation, 2009 – where you can Buy Gold Today vaulted in Zurich on $3 spreads
and 0.8% dealing fees.
(c) BullionVault 2009
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