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Posts tagged Gold price

Silver And Gold Prices For Decemeber 2010
Dec 6th
Yesterday I was fretting about the slow-down in SILVER PRICE and GOLD PRICE, but today they slapped all detractors About the time Comex opened in New York gold jumped straight up like a crazed armadillo. (Yes, an armadillo’s chief defense is to jump straight up, not a great defense in mid-road when a car is barrelling down on you.) Similes aside, gold leapt straight up and by 11:00 had reached that resistance at the last high close, $1,409. Then it pulled another armadillo and leapt to $1,415, and there it remaineth still. Comex closed earlier, when gold stood at a mere $1,405.40, up only $16.90. Wild as a march hare.
The SILVER PRICE actually out-armadilloed GOLD PRICE. At 8:00 a.m. EST it stood just under 2860c, then about 8:30 leapt straight into the air and never stopped until it hit 2930c. It backed off a bit, traded sideways between 2925 and 2905c, then leapt again to 2940c. Comex rose 69.9c to 2924.1c.
Earlier this morning the GOLD/SILVER RATIO hit 48.05, mighty close to our 47.5 ratio. We will probably execute that trade early next week.
Yesterday’s cloud over silver and gold has not altogether dispelled. Yes, it split and the sunbeams streamed down, but it didn’t vanish. Both silver and gold manifest what might become double top formations. Today silver put in a higher closing high than the last top on 9 November, but barely the same intraday high. Gold’s intraday high at $1,415.35 fell shy of the 9 November $1,424 high, and the closing high didn’t quite match the previous $1,409.80. More >
Gold Today News
Nov 12th
World Bank president Robert Zoellick has called on bickering G20 nations to bring gold back into the global monetary system as an anchor to guide currency movements.
Ahead of a Group of 20 summit this week in Seoul, Zoellick said an updated gold standard could help retool the world economy at a time of serious tensions over currencies and US monetary policy. He said the world needed a new regime to succeed the “Bretton Woods II” system of floating currencies, which has been in place since the fixed-rate currency system linked to gold broke down in 1971.
The new system “is likely to need to involve the dollar, the euro, the yen, the pound and a renminbi (Chinese yuan) that moves towards internationalisation and then an open capital account”, he wrote in Monday’s Financial Times. “The system should also consider employing gold as an international reference point of market expectations about inflation, deflation and future currency values,” Zoellick said in a commentary piece.
“Although textbooks may view gold as the old money, markets are using gold as an alternative monetary asset today.”
The original Bretton Woods agreement laid out a US-led framework for stability in the world financial system after World War II, with the US dollar pegged to gold and controls in place to limit the flow of capital. The gold standard is believed to help guard against inflation but does not allow for the flexible monetary policy that many economists believe is essential in counteracting economic shocks. It was abandoned by US president Richard Nixon in 1971 as the dollar’s value plummeted relative to gold. Today, gold prices are again riding as investors seek a timeless hedge against the risks of inflation and US indebtedness.
Zoellick acknowledged that forging a new monetary agreement to govern the world economy would take time, two years after the West’s worst financial crisis since the 1930s. “But we need to begin,” he wrote.
The World Bank chief’s comments came amid worries of a new “currency war”, when countries jostle for trade advantage by massaging their exchange rates lower.
The United States has led accusations that China cheats in world trade by artificially weakening its currency. But Washington also stands accused of tolerating a weak dollar, roiling emerging markets whose own currencies are rising strongly, hurting their export competitiveness. The complaints have intensified since the Federal Reserve last week announced a $US600 billion shot of monetary stimulus – in effect printing money that other economies worry will flood their markets.
Zoellick also called on the G20, whose leaders meet in the South Korean capital on Thursday and Friday, to forge structural reforms, including more domestic demand in China and more debt-reduction in the United States. Major economies “should agree to forego currency intervention, except in rare circumstances agreed to by others”, he added. The G20 could work out tools to help emerging economies cope with the kinds of hot-money flows that are now driving up their currencies and creating fears of asset bubbles. And the G20 should “support growth by focusing on supply-side bottlenecks in developing countries”, such as infrastructure, agriculture and a lack of skilled labour, Zoellick said.
“Perhaps most importantly, this package could get governments ahead of problems instead of reacting to economic, political and social storms,” the World Bank president said.
He argued that the G20 faced a choice between “drive or drift”.
“How the G20 decides could determine whether multilateral co-operation can achieve a strong economic recovery,” Zoellick concluded.
Source: ninemsn
Gold Price For QEII?
Nov 2nd
There’s been a lot of jawboning about a bubble in Gold Prices lately. And yesterday, just ahead of the Federal Reserve’s much-anticipated statement on QEII, bullion prices sank. Judging from Thursday morning’s price action, you’d hardly think so.
Financial advisers often caution investors about the volatility of commodities. That advice certainly seemed prescient with respect to gold over the past two trading sessions. After a tension-filled week awaiting a Fed announcement outlining the scope of QE2II, metal prices broke $19 lower per ounce on Wednesday, bringing Spot Gold bullion down to the $1337 level.
With the second round of quantitative easing defined – more or less as anticipated, actually – traders and investors adjusted their positions. A lot of the recently long were tossed from the ranks yesterday, helped by traders anticipating further weakening in bullion. Speaking of open interest, speculative long interest at Comex had actually been waning well ahead of this week’s events. Net speculative length in Gold Futureshad been shrinking for a month. The total of money managers’ net exposure to gold, together with large and small non-institutional traders’ positions, fell by more than 26,500 futures contract equivalents, or 8%, after 10 weeks of constant building.
That, coupled with negative money flows in the SPDRs Gold Shares Trust (NYSE Arca: GLD) and some pullout from the trust’s vault assets, gave bearish traders ideas. In October, the trust’s Money Flow Index – a volume-weighted metric of capital commitment – peaked and began a precipitous fall even as share prices continued to rise for another two weeks.

GLD’s smart money saw the rise in share prices above the $132 level as overextension, given the depth of the pivot-point turnaround in July. The trust’s price, which mimics gold’s trajectory, peaked near $135 in mid-October, after a 30% overshoot. More >