By: Ben Traynor, BullionVault
-- Posted Monday, 3 December 2012 | | Source: GoldSeek.com
London Gold Market Report
SPOT MARKET
gold prices fell back below $1715 an ounce Monday morning in London,
more-or-less in line with where they were two weeks ago after failing to
hold gains made during Asian trading.
"Gold
is still following its long term uptrend from 2008 lows," say technical
analysts at Scotiabank, "with support from the uptrend at $1632."
Silver
fell back to around $33.50 an ounce, also in line with last week's
close, while stocks edged higher and commodities were broadly flat.
Euro
gold prices meantime came close to one-month lows as the Euro rose to a
one-month high against the Dollar after comments from German chancellor
Angela Merkel that suggested more Greek debt might eventually be
written down.
Greece
revealed details Monday of the bond buyback program announced last
week, through which the government will buy back its bonds currently
trading at a discount to par value.
The
government has said it will spend up to €10 billion buying back its own
bonds, though it is only prepared to pay up to a maximum percentage of
the face value of the debt. Bondholders will compete to get the best
price for a given maturity, with Athens setting the minimum price range
(depending on bond maturity) at 30.2% to 38.1%, with the maximum range
at 32.2% to 40.1%.
"[The
prices are] higher than previously published or announced," says Spyros
Politis, chief executive of an Athens-based fund management firm that
holds Greek government debt.
"At
the moment it looks as if it will be successful, or if they miss the
target, they will miss it by a small margin. Anything that reduces the
overall debt burden is good."
Chancellor
Merkel meantime said over the weekend that a further write down of
Greek debt might be possible if Greece's budget moves into primary
surplus – meaning the government takes in more in revenues than it
spends before debt payments are taken into account.
"If
Greece one day can rely once again on its own revenue," Merkel told
German newspaper Bild am Sonntag, "without having to borrow, then we'll
have to look at this situation and make an evaluation."
"[This is] the end of denial," says ING Groep economist Carsten Brzeski.
"It's definitely a shift, but on the other hand, it's obvious [that a write down will be needed]."
Germany's
manufacturing sector saw improved conditions last month compared to a
month earlier, although output still appears to have declined, according
to purchasing managers index data published by Markit Monday.
Germany's manufacturing PMI rose from 46.0 in October to 46.2 last month, with a figure below 50 indicating sector contraction.
Manufacturing
in the Eurozone as a whole also continued to contract but at a slower
rate, last month according to PMI data, while it was a similar story for
the UK.
China's official November PMI meantime rose from 50.2 to 50.6. Similar data for the US are due to be published later today.
Negotiations
between Republicans and Democrats over how to avoid the so-called
fiscal cliff are set to continue this week, with both sides still in
disagreement.
"There's
no path to an agreement that does not involve Republicans acknowledging
that rates have to go up for the wealthiest Americans," US Treasury
secretary Timothy Geithner told CBS viewers Sunday.
"The
president is asking for $1.6 trillion worth of new revenue over 10
years," said Republican John Boehner, the House of Representatives
speaker.
"[This is] twice as much as he has been asking for in public."
In
New York, the so-called speculative net long position of gold futures
and options traders – measured as the difference between bullish and
bearish contracts held by noncommercial traders – rose for the third
week running in the week ended last Tuesday, Commodity Futures Trading
Commission data show.
Overall
open interest however fell from a week earlier, while the period does
not cover last Wednesday, which saw gold drop 1.5% in a few minutes.
"The
market remains sustained by the promise of continued monetary
accommodation," says Standard bank commodities strategist Marc Ground.
"The
Fed is not going to respond to stronger-than-expected data with tighter
policy immediately and, more importantly, the interest rate markets are
not going to expect the Fed to change course. If rates can't rise
materially on strong data the Dollar is unlikely to rise materially."
The
world's biggest gold exchange traded fund SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) saw
its bullion holdings rise to a new record on Friday at 1348.8 tonnes,
while November saw the largest monthly sales of gold investment coins by the US Mint since July 2010.
No comments:
Post a Comment