By: Ben Traynor, BullionVault
-- Posted Friday, 14 December 2012 | | Source: GoldSeek.com
London Gold Market Report
SPOT MARKET gold
prices looked to be headed for a third weekly loss in a row Friday
lunchtime in London, after failing to break above $1700 an ounce, while
stocks and US Treasuries were little changed on the day, with no signs
of progress from Washington on the so-called fiscal cliff.
Silver
was also headed for a third losing week in a row, trading around $32.60
an ounce for most of this morning, as other commodity prices gained
slightly.
"A lack of activity has kept precious metals largely unchanged this morning," says today's commodities note from Standard Bank.
A
day earlier, gold dropped back below $1700 an ounce Thursday, despite
the US Federal Reserve committing to $45 billion a month in Treasury
purchases the day before.
"The
bulls were making the argument that the central bank would remain easy,
at least until 2015, helping provide an element of support for gold,"
says a note from Ed Meir, analyst at brokerage INTL FCStone.
"The
bears countered that there would not be any additional easing in the
pipeline between now and 2015, and also pointed out that the Fed did,
after all, outline specific targets at which point it would start
shrinking its bloated balance sheet...Thursday's action seems to have
supported the bearish stance."
"It
is perhaps a worrying sign that the latest installment of QE has had no
positive impact on gold prices at all," says a note from investment
bank Natixis.
"No
matter which side of the Fed argument one is on," says INTL FCStone's
Meir, "we suspect that much of Thursday’s selling was also triggered by
the fact that investors are becoming increasingly nervous about the lack
of progress emanating from the fiscal cliff talks."
President
Obama and Republican House of Representatives speaker John Boehner had
what statements from both parties called a "frank" meeting about the
so-called fiscal cliff Thursday, adding that "lines of communication
remain open" between the two.
No
agreement has been reached on deficit reduction measures. Unless
Congress passes new legislation, tax cut expiries and spending cuts
worth an estimated $600 billion are due to kick in starting at the end
of this month.
Barclays
Capital meantime has cut its gold price forecast for 2013. BarCap
forecasts gold will average $1815 an ounce next year, 2.4% down on the
previous projection, while the investment bank's forecast for silver is
unchanged at $32.50 an ounce.
"We
retain a positive view on the gold market," a note from BarCap says,
"but given gold's outperformance during risk on intervals and our
[foreign exchange] strategists' expectation for the Dollar to strengthen
beyond three months, we are revising down our forecast for 2013
modestly."
Over
in Europe, discussions on a common Eurozone budget and coordination of
economic reforms among Euro members were put back until June next year
Friday.
European Council president Herman van Rompuy issued a statement from
the European Union summit in Brussels saying he will "present possible
measures and a time-bound road map" at a summit in June next year.
Eurozone
inflation meantime fell to 2.2% last month, down from 2.5% in October,
according to official figures published this morning. US consumer
inflation data are due to be published at 08.30 EST.
Demand to buy gold in physical bullion form has seen a resurgence in recent weeks, according to Standard Bank's proprietary Gold Physical Flows Index.
Gold
importers in the world's biggest gold buying nation India continued to
stock up Friday, newswire Reuters reports, to ensure adequate supplies
for the wedding season.
"People
feel this is a good buying opportunity as prices could jump another
1000 Rupees [per 10 grams]," says Harshad Ajmera at JJ Gold House.
Activity
in China's manufacturing sector meantime looks set to expand at a
stronger pace this month compared to November, according to the
provisional 'flash' purchasing managers index published by HSBC Friday.
China's
silver market meantime is "expected to achieve even further growth in
coming years" on both the demand and supply side following a decade of
rapid expansion, according to a report produced by precious metals
consultancy Thomson Reuters GFMS and published by the Silver Institute Thursday.
"China
is now the world's second largest silver fabricator and is likely to
become the second largest producer, with its share of global demand and
supply standing at 17% and 14% respectively," the report says.
Ben Traynor
Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter,
the UK's longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics
graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist
interest in monetary economics. Ben writes and presents BullionVault's
weekly gold market summary on YouTube and can be found on Google+
(c) BullionVault 2012
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