Credit Suisse On Gold – Is It Different This Time ?

Gold Thailand

Gold Thailand (Photo credit: @Doug88888)

With the gold bull market in unwind, Credit Suisse says if history is any guide to the future there could be a long way to go DOWN.

Credit Suisse highlights that the multi-year gold bull s in the process of unwinding, and financial bubbles typically deflate more quickly than they inflate. Navigating episodes of rapid asset price deflation can be difficult for investors.

While past performance is no guarantee of future results (as the ubiquitous disclaimer reads) history may offer some clues. Given that the price of gold in USD was fixed until the end of the Bretton Woods system in 1973, there is only one period of recent history against which investors can compare the current price  trajectory – that of the late 1970s through to 1982. Plotting the evolution of the late 1970s bull market using the real gold price  (adjusted for U.S. CPI), and indexing the price to the point at which investors capitulated.

Then overlaying the current bull market, again rebasing price to the capitulation point and align the two curves. The result suggests that if history were to repeat,  there would be a lot more downside to come for the gold price. If history were to repeat, gold would be trading in the region of
US$710-725 per oz by July 2014. Credit Suisse stresses this is not their forecast (their current price deck has gold averaging $1,150 in Q3/14). However, Credit Suisse adds that the risks to their forecasts are skewed to the downside and that short covering rallies should be sold – in the unwind of the 1970s gold bull market there were two rallies between 11% and 15% that proved to be excellent opportunities to sell.


Gold Traders Split

English: Euro bank notes Türkçe: Euro banknotlar

English: Euro bank notes Türkçe: Euro banknotlar (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

old traders are split on whether bullion will plunge into its first bear market since 2008 as economies improve or rally as central banks buy more debt.

Twelve analysts surveyed by Bloomberg expect prices to rise next week and the same number were bearish. A further three were neutral. Gold slumped to a 10-month low of $1,540.29 an ounce yesterday and investors sold $9.7 billion from exchange-traded products since their holdings reached a record Dec. 20. Hedge funds cut bets on higher prices by 70 percent since October.

Gold’s 12-year bull rally is probably ending as the U.S. leads a global economic recovery, according to banks from Credit Suisse Group AG to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Commerzbank AG says it’s too early to call an end to the rally and Standard Bank Plc forecasts prices will climb this year as central-bank stimulus and record-low interest rates spur demand for a protection of wealth. The Bank of Japan said yesterday it will double monthly bond buying to bolster the economy.

“The main driver behind gold’s weakness this year has been the focus on global growth and that’s meant rotation out of defensive assets like gold,” said Joni Teves, an analyst at UBS AG in London. “There’s this weak sentiment and it’s been feeding on itself. Central banks continue to pursue exceptionally loose monetary policies and create a still supportive environment for gold.”

Gold Price

The metal fell 6.4 percent to $1,567.55 in London this year. A close at $1,520.18 would be a 20 percent drop from the peak reached in September 2011, the common definition of a bear market. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI gauge of 24 commodities dropped 2.8 percent this year, and the MSCI All-Country World Index (MXWD) of equities gained 4.3 percent. Treasuries are little changed, a Bank of America Corp. index shows.

Gold rose as much as 1.3 percent today after a Labor Department report showed U.S. employers hired fewer workers than forecast in March and a slump in the size of the labor forcepushed the jobless rate down to a four-year low of 7.6 percent.

Bullion retreated as Federal Reserve policy makers debated the pace of $85 billion of monthly asset purchases and as U.S. equities reached a record. U.S. economic growth will accelerate from the third quarter though mid-2014, according to the median of as many as 74 economist estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The International Monetary Fund is predicting global growth of 3.5 percent in 2013, from 3.2 percent in 2012.

‘Bubble Territory’

The metal is in “bubble territory” and will fall to $1,375 by the end of the year as a U.S. recovery leads to rising interest rates, Societe Generale SA said in an April 2 report. Credit Suisse cut its 2013 forecast by 9.2 percent to $1,580 two days ago and Goldman Sachs predicts prices will be at $1,600 in six months. Gold averaged a record $1,669 last year.

Hedge funds held a net-long position, or wager on price gains, of 60,126 futures and options by March 26, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading data show. The 39,631 contracts held three weeks earlier were the least since July 2007. The $8.5 billion taken out of commodity ETPs in the first quarter was led by investors selling $9.2 billion from gold products, BlackRock Inc. said yesterday. Gold holdings slid 7.4 percent this year to 2,437.4 metric tons, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

George Soros

Billionaire investor George Soros, who called bullion the “ultimate asset bubble” in 2010, cut his stake in the SPDR Gold Trust by 55 percent in the fourth quarter, filings showed in February.John Paulson, the largest investor in the biggest bullion ETP, kept his holding now valued at about $3.3 billion unchanged, his filing showed.

Gold will climb to an average of $1,800 in the fourth quarter on demand for an alternative currency and protection from Europe’s debt crisis, Commerzbank said in a March 21 report. Low real interest rates and global liquidity will remain dominant drivers, Standard Bank said in a report last month, forecasting prices as high as $1,780 in the third quarter.

The Fed said March 20 it would keep buying bonds so long as unemployment remains above 6.5 percent and the outlook for inflation is less than 2.5 percent. The BOJ will purchase 7.5 trillion yen ($78.6 billion) of bonds a month and double the monetary base in two years, it said yesterday. The European Central Bank kept interest rates at a record low yesterday.

Debt Crisis

Bullion reached a three-week high of $1,617.07 on March 21 as delays to Cyprus’s 10 billion-euro ($13 billion) bailout added to concern that Europe’s debt crisis may worsen. The 5.1 percent drop for gold priced in euros this year is less than the retreat for dollar-denominated metal and compares with a 2.6 percent gain for bullion priced in yen.

Falling prices may boost demand. UBS’s physical sales to India, last year’s biggest consumer, on April 3 were among the best in months, the bank said yesterday. While the U.S. Mint’s sales of American Eagle gold coins slipped the past two months, the 292,500 ounces sold in the first quarter was 39 percent more than a year earlier, data on its website show.

Demand from central banks may also support prices, according to Commerzbank. Nations added 534.6 tons to gold reserves last year, the most since 1964, the London-based World Gold Council estimates. They will buy 300 tons this year and the same amount in 2014, Barclays Plc predicts.

The plunge has pushed gold’s 14-day relative strength index to 28.4, below the level of 30 that indicates to some analysts who study technical charts that a rebound may be imminent. It fell into a bear market in June 2006 and August 2008, before as much as doubling to a record $1,921.15 in September 2011.

Gold’s drop this year compares with a 11 percent slide for silver, which entered a bear market this week. Soybeans, wheat and corn, which surged last year as drought in the U.S. parched fields, also fell into bear markets since November.

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Gold – AMP Predicts : The IMF Won’t Bailout Cyprus Account Holders – i.e. Russia

Gold

GC : NASDAQ : US$1,611.70
If Cyprus is Europe’s Lehman moment; Why isn’t gold higher?

The proposal to impose a levy on Cypriot bank depositors as a condition of the latest euro zone bailout package has elicited a bearish reaction across risk assets and put a bid under gold – up through the US$1,600 level for the first time in several weeks.

Credit Suisse does not believe the Cyprus bailout is likely to  morph into an existential crisis for the euro zone. Credit Suisse also does not expect any major announcements to emerge from this week’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting and do not expect the pace of stimulus to change – maintain the $85 billion monthly asset purchase pace for now. It is possible, however, that further comments about the Fed’s exit strategy from QE might be forthcoming.

Note that the FOMC’s Summary of Economic Projections will be updated and point out that recent U.S. data have tended to be stronger than expected. Gold, Credit Suisse thinks, will be vulnerable to renewed selling if the FOMC meaningfully changes its U.S. outlook for the better. Results of this week’s meeting will be released in three stages.

The FOMC policy statement will hit the wires today at about 12:30pm EDT. This will be followed by updated FOMC economic and fed funds rate projections at 2:00. Fed Chairman Bernanke will then hold a press briefing at 2:15. Is everyone getting bullish on the U.S. dollar?

Cyprus’s Four Options to Avoid

Banking Collapse

The only thing worse than Cyprus accepting the rotten bailout program that European policy makers agreed on late last week was Cyprus rejecting it. Yesterday, the parliament voted decisively against the terms of the bailout, with 36 members opposing it, the ruling party abstaining and not a single vote in favor.

Policy makers will have to come up with a new plan, and they had better hope the European Central Bank buys them enough time to do so before Cyprus’s financial system melts down.

A bank holiday was declared at least until tomorrow to prevent panicked savers from withdrawing their deposits from banks when they learned over the weekend that a levy may be imposed on deposits as part of a bailout program.

If depositors were worried about losing their savings before, they should be even more worried now. Last week, the ECB threatened to cut off emergency liquidity assistance to Cyprus’s two main banks in the absence of a bailout program. This would result in the immediate collapse of both banks, and they would default on their debt and most, if not all, of the 30 billion euros ($39 billion) in deposits they hold.

Faced with a bank run and the collapse of its largest financial institutions, Cyprus would only be able to rescue its banks and its economy by printing money and leaving the euro.

Capital Controls

Luckily, this needn’t happen. A much more likely outcome is that the ECB will first impose capital controls. The euro area is founded on the principle of freedom of goods, labor and capital, but Article 65 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union stipulates that capital controls are allowed when “justified on grounds of public policy or public security.” We have already seen capital controls this week in Cyprus, with the bank holiday and transfers frozen.

Once banks reopen — scheduled for tomorrow but probably postponed until next week — we can expect deposit flight from Cypriot banks. A bank run is no problem as long as the ECB continues to finance it by plugging the gap with continued emergency liquidity assistance. After parliament’s rejection of the bailout deal, the ECB announced yesterday that it would offer Cyprus liquidity within “existing rules,” a strong indication that it will back down from its earlier threat to take the punch bowl away and shut down emergency funding to banks.

Capital controls and the ECB’s emergency financing can buy time for Cyprus, but the tiny island will still need at least 17 billion euros in bailout funding. So far, the 10 billion euros that the International Monetary Fund, the European Union and the ECB offered in the original deal are still on the table, but Cyprus needs to find an additional 7 billion euros. There are four potential sources.

The best option would be for the government to accept that wealthy Russian depositors have already been well and truly scared off from Cypriot banks, given developments over the past few days, and impose a big enough levy on uninsured deposits to avoid having to tax insured deposits. The government remains stubbornly protective of the country’s status as a tax haven, so this option seems unlikely, though not impossible.

Cyprus could try to piece together 7 billion euros from other sources. The nation could force losses on unsecured senior bank bondholders, but for the two biggest banks this would generate less than 200 million euros in savings. Yesterday, Mario Mavrides, a member of parliament, admitted the government was considering raiding pension funds, as was done in Ireland to help finance its bailout program. This would bring in less than 500 million euros.

Gas Reserves

Cyprus could also discount the net present value of future revenue from gas reserves lying off its coast. These reserves are notoriously difficult to value, and delays in establishing the infrastructure to capture and transfer them are inevitable.

A third option would be for Cyprus to go back to the troika of lenders — the IMF, ECB and EU — for more money. It would probably reject such a request for the same reason it originally did: A 17 billion-euro bailout would cause Cyprus’s public debt burden to balloon to unsustainable levels, even more so now because gross domestic product is set to contract further, given deposit and capital flight.

The final option is for Cyprus to negotiate aid from Russia. Finance Minister Michael Sarris traveled to Moscow yesterday to meet with President Vladimir Putin. A plain vanilla loan from Russia could cause the troika to withdraw their support for Cyprus for the same reason the troika won’t offer the extra funds themselves: It would make Cyprus’ debt unsustainable. Russia could offer money in exchange for rights. There has been speculation that OAO Gazprom (GAZP) may offer to recapitalize Cyprus’s banks in exchange for ownership of gas fields and factories near and on the island. The EU has opposed Russia increasing its foothold in the region, but having botched the original bailout deal so appallingly, euro-area policy makers may have lost their right to have an opinion on this.

Cyprus’s path forward is highly uncertain, and even though the island is tiny, it stands to set an important precedent in the euro area. This goes not only for how policy makers structure the bailout, but also for how Cyprus responds to it. The government has surprised investors by being the first to stand up to the troika of lenders by rejecting the proposed bailout. I doubt it will be the last.

(Megan Greene is a Bloomberg View columnist and chief economist at Maverick Intelligence. She is also a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council. Follow her on Twitter at @economistmeg. The opinions expressed are her own.)

To contact the writer of this article: Megan Greene Megan Greene – the chief economist at Maverick Intelligence

Cyprus Is Right to Make the

Russians Pay

The Cypriot government’s plan to levy a 9.9-percent tax on uninsured deposits has met with a vitriolic response in Russia and the U.K., whose citizens and companies have favored Cyprus as an offshore haven for their money. Russian Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev deemed the move “confiscatory.” Billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov went so far as to call it an assault on “the foundations of Western civilization, the sanctity of private property.”

Actually, in the recent history of Western civilization, it’s common practice for uninsured depositors to suffer losses when a bank goes bust. In cases where the government must get involved, forcing losses on such creditors — who, after all, should have known they were taking a risk — is necessary to protect insured depositors and minimize the cost of that protection to taxpayers.

In the U.S., for example, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. frequently imposes losses when it steps in to take over insolvent banks. From 2007 through 2011, uninsured depositors at 32 banks suffered an average haircut of 67 percent, according to a recent paper by two FDIC economists. European countries, too, have bailed-in uninsured depositors. In 2011, for example, state administrators in Denmark forced depositors to share losses when they took over the insolvent Amagerbanken A/S.

As the editors of Bloomberg View have written, the disastrous part of Cyprus’s plan is the imposition of losses on insured deposits — that is, on balances of less than 100,000 euros. The breach of trust could lead people to question the value of insurance throughout the euro area. It’s also patently unfair. Insured depositors presumably accepted a lower interest rate in return for safety. Other creditors, by contrast, knowingly entrusted their money to banks with junk ratings.

It would be well within reason, and within historical precedent, for Cyprus to raise its full 5.8-billion-euro share of its bailout package by imposing much steeper losses on uninsured depositors and bondholders. Concerns that the move could destroy the island nation’s reputation as an offshore haven are misplaced. The damage is already done: Foreign depositors will start pulling cash as soon as the banks reopen. If the government doesn’t do the right thing now, the money will be gone.


The Gold Bear Roars

English: Crystaline Gold

English: Crystaline Gold (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Gold traders are the most bearish in more than a year on mounting speculation that improving economic growth from the U.S. to China will curb demand for this year’s worst-performing precious metal.

Twenty analysts surveyed by Bloomberg this week expect prices to fall next week, while 11 were bullish and three were neutral, making the proportion of bears the highest since Dec. 30, 2011. Hedge funds cut bets on higher prices by 56 percent since October and are approaching their least bullish stance on gold since August, government data show. The metal fell to a five-week low yesterday, and billionaire investors George Soros and Louis Moore Bacon reported reduced stakes in exchange-traded products backed by gold.

First-time jobless claims in the U.S. decreased more than estimated last week, while a Chinese government-backedsurvey showed manufacturing expanded in January. Growth will accelerate in the world’s two largest economies in coming quarters, according to more than 100 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Investors cut record bullion holdings in exchange-traded products this year and added to funds backed by other precious metals that are used more in industry.

“The global economic recovery is on track,” said Andrey Kryuchenkov, a commodity strategist in London at VTB Capital, a unit of Russia’s second-largest lender. “The persistently decent macro data is denying gold its usual safe-haven properties. You can get better returns elsewhere.”

Gold prices that rallied the past 12 years will probably peak in 2013, or already have, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Credit Suisse Group AG.

Gold Price

The metal fell 2 percent to $1,641.88 an ounce in London this year, reaching $1,637.95 yesterday, the lowest since Jan. 4. Gold climbed 7.1 percent last year in the longest annual rally in at least nine decades. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI gauge of 24 commodities is up 5 percent this year and the MSCI All- Country World Index of equities gained 4.8 percent. Treasuries lost 1.1 percent, a Bank of America Corp. index shows.

Gold’s drop compares with a 0.6 percent gain for silver this year. Platinum and palladium rose at least 9.4 percent on concern mine supply will fall as demand increases. An ounce of platinum bought as much as 1.054 ounces of gold yesterday, the most in 17 months, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Industrial usage accounts for about 10 percent of bullion consumption, compared with more than half for the other three metals.

Reduced Holdings

Gold ETP assets reached a record 2,632.5 metric tons on Dec. 20 as policy makers from the Federal Reserve to the Bank of Japan pledged more action to stimulate growth. Holdings are down 0.9 percent this year, while silver products rose 2.9 percent, platinum 9.9 percent and palladium 13 percent, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Soros Fund Management reduced its investment in the SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest fund backed by the metal, by 55 percent to 600,000 shares as of Dec. 31 from three months earlier, a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filing showed yesterday. Bacon’s Moore Capital Management LP sold its entire stake in the SPDR fund and lowered holdings in the Sprott Physical Gold Trust. Paulson & Co., the largest investor in SPDR, kept its stake at 21.8 million shares, a filing showed.

2011 Peak

Bullion is unlikely to return to its September 2011 high of $1,921.15 because of accelerating U.S. growth and contained inflation, Credit Suisse said in a Feb. 1 report. Goldman forecast in a Jan. 18 report that gold will climb to $1,825 in three months and peak this year.

U.S. economic growth will accelerate every quarter this year to a median 2.7 percent in the final three months, according to 87 estimates compiled by Bloomberg. China’s expansion will pick up to a median 8.3 percent in the third quarter from 8.1 percent in the first, according to 34 estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

Even as the recession in Europe deepened more than economists forecast last quarter and Japan’s economy shrank, the International Monetary Fund predicts global growth will climb to 3.5 percent this year from 3.2 percent in 2012.

“There’s a lack of imminent financial disasters at the moment,” said John Meyer, an analyst at SP Angel Corporate Finance LLP, a broker and adviser in London. “Investors are going for a more risk-on approach and that tends to lead them away from gold.”

Inflation

Gold generally earns returns only through price gains and some investors buy it as a hedge against inflation and currency declines. While consumer-price gains are below the Fed’s 2 percent target, inflation expectations measured by the break- even rate for five-year Treasury Inflation Protected Securities jumped 13 percent this year and reached a four-month high on Feb. 6.

Finance ministers from the Group of 20 gather this weekend in Moscow amid concern of a fresh “currency war” as countries weaken their exchange rates to make exports more competitive.

Buying also may pick up as China’s markets open after this week’s New Year holiday. China accounted for about 25 percent of consumer gold demand last year and narrowed the gap between top buyer India to the smallest ever, the London-based World Gold Council said yesterday. The group said consumption from both countries may rise at least 11 percent in 2013.

Central Banks

Central banks from Brazil to Russia are buying more gold to diversify from currency holdings. They added 534.6 tons to reserves last year, 17 percent more than in 2011 and the most since 1964, the council said in yesterday’s report. Those purchases helped stem the first annual drop in total demand in three years, as investment slid 9.8 percent and jewelry demand fell 3.2 percent.

Money managers held a net-long position of 86,926 futures and options in the week to Feb. 5, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. That was 5.9 percent more than the previous week, when wagers on gains were the lowest since Aug. 14.

Gold’s 8.3 percent slump since Oct. 4 took prices below the 200-day moving average, indicating to some who study technical charts that more declines may follow. Prices are down 1.3 percent in February, and a fifth straight monthly drop would be the worst run since 1997. Gold fell in March in six of the last nine years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.


Currency Wars

Great Depression Food Line

Great Depression Food Line (Photo credit: Kevin Burkett)

Yesterday, the G7 issued a statement about everyone’s favourite topic: Currency Wars.

The statement was seen as very weak and of no implication at all: “We, the G7 Ministers and Governors, reaffirm our longstanding commitment to market determined exchange rates and to consult closely in regard to actions in foreign exchange markets. We reaffirm that our fiscal and monetary policies have been and will remain oriented towards meeting our respective domestic objectives using domestic instruments, and that we will not target exchange rates. We are agreed that excessive volatility and disorderly movements in exchange rates can have adverse implications for economic and financial stability. We will continue to consult closely on exchange markets and cooperate as appropriate.” To compare what’s going on today with the “currency wars” of the 1930s may be wrong.

Economic historian, Niall Ferguson, recently highlighted in the Financial Times (via Credit Suisse), “Back in the 1930s, it was obvious who was waging a currency war. Before the Depression, most countries had been on the gold standard, which had fixed exchange rates in terms of the yellow metal. When Britain abandoned gold in September 1931, it unleashed a wave of competitive devaluations. Today, however, we live in a world of fiat money and mostly floating rates. The last vestige of the gold standard was swept away in August 1971, when
Richard Nixon suspended the convertibility of the dollar into gold. For one country to accuse another of waging a currency war in 2013 is therefore absurd. The war has been going on for more than 40 years and it is a war of all against all.”


Gold – Credit Suisse Review : The Peak Of Fear

English: The old logo of Credit Suisse.

English: The old logo of Credit Suisse. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Gold

(GC : NASDAQ : US$1669.10)
? Credit Suisse published a noteworthy comment on gold Friday, “The Beginning of the End of an Era”.

Credit Suisse notes the past five years have been among the most tumultuous ever seen in global financial markets, with the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008 unleashing a series of events without precedent since at least the 1930s. The financial underpinnings of the crisis, the potential consequences of the reflationary “fix”, along with the rolling financial issues in Europe, all contributed to an extraordinary flight to quality.

U.S. Treasuries and gold were among the clearest beneficiaries, with the precious metal enjoying a Renaissance period as its role as a financial asset was reappraised by central banks and investors. Given its historical role as a store of value, Credit Suisse says its not surprising that investor demand for gold increased substantially.

Now, however, with the acute phase of the crisis likely to be behind us, Credit Suisse believes the peak of the fear trade has now also passed. Despite the recent pullback in price, against any sensible benchmark gold still appears significantly overvalued relative to the long run historical experience. With global growth now improving and inflation expectations contained, Credit Suisse feels that downside risks are building for gold – it looks increasingly likely that the 2011 high will prove to have been the peak for the USD gold price in this cycle, and that the “beginning of the end” of the current golden era will come sooner than the Q3 which Credit Suisse had forecast in January.


FED announces new round of stimulus: What the analysts say


  • The Federal Reserve ramped up its stimulus to the economy on Wednesday, expressing disappointment with the pace of recovery in employment as contentious U.S. budget talks heighten uncertainty about the outlook.

    KEY POINTS:

    * The central bank replaced a more modest stimulus program due to expire at year-end with a fresh round of Treasury purchases that will increase its balance sheet. It committed to monthly purchases of $45 billion in Treasuries on top of the $40 billion per month in mortgage-backed bonds it started buying in September.

    * In a surprise move, the Fed also adopted numerical thresholds for policy, a step that had not been expected until early next year. In particular, the Fed said it will likely keep official rates near zero for as long as unemployment remains above 6.5 percent, inflation between one and two years ahead is projected to be no more than 2.5 percent, and long-term inflation expectations remain contained.

    * “The Committee remains concerned that, without sufficient policy accommodation, economic growth might not be strong enough to generate sustained improvement in labor market conditions,” the Fed said in a statement.

    COMMENTS:

    IRA JERSEY, INTEREST RATE STRATEGIST, CREDIT SUISSE, NEW YORK:

    “The (Chicago Fed President Charles) Evans rule was a little bit surprising this early. By having a relatively high unemployment threshold at 6.5%, it is really an unchanged policy stance. They are basically taking out the same amount of duration that they were in Twist, but they are buying less in the long-end than they had been before. They are buying less in 7s through bonds and buying some of the 5s, which they weren’t doing before. People also think that when the Fed does QE that the economy is going to get better, so it’s a steeper yield curve.”

    FRANK LESH, FUTURES ANALYST AND BROKER AT FUTUREPATH TRADING LLC IN CHICAGO:

    “There is not much change and not much surprise in this announcement. A lot of this is as expected. The next thing is to wait for someone real to talk here …we got that extra $45-billion.”

    ERIC STEIN, VICE PRESIDENT AND PORFOLIO MANAGER, EATON VANCE MANAGEMENT MANAGERS, BOSTON:

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    “It’s a very dovish statement. I’m surprised they went with the threshold language right now. I thought they would wait until next year. They will continue the mortgage buying program and they are going to continue the buying part of Operation Twist without the selling. That is what most people expected. But the surprise is they basically replaced the mid-2015 reference point for near-zero interest rates with a 6.5% threshold for unemployment. You do see longer-term Treasuries selling off because that’s somewhat inflationary. The dollar is weakening. Gold prices are up.”

    J.J. KINAHAN, CHIEF DERIVATIVES STRATEGIST, TD AMERITRADE, CHICAGO:

    “The Fed basically didn’t do anything that wasn’t ’built in’. I think it was a smart move for them because you don’t want to spook the market one way or another when the markets could easily get a jolt from any news regarding the fiscal cliff.”

    TOM PORCELLI, CHIEF U.S. ECONOMIST, RBC CAPITAL MARKETS, NEW YORK:

    “For the most part the Fed’s announcement was as expected. The more explicit target of its threshold and how long they will policy will stay easy until is what is different and what stands out the most.”

    BRAD BECHTEL, MANAGING DIRECTOR, FAROS TRADING, STAMFORD, CONNECTICUT:

    “The $45-billion number confirms what the market was looking for. It’s additional QE, which should be risk-positive. Yields are backing up a bit, which should be supportive for dollar-yen. It underpins the equity market and, to me, is a nice framework for a risk rally that I would expect to carry over into the first quarter. The fiscal cliff is obviously a concern but if we get through that, it should be risk-positive.”

    JOSEPH TREVISANI, CHIEF MARKET STRATEGIST, WORLDWIDE MARKETS, WOODCLIFF LAKE, NEW JERSEY:

    “In the Fed view the economy has deteriorated enough to warrant additional support measures. Considering the meager success of the past four years in fostering economic growth with asset purchases, the Fed finds itself in a policy box with no exit, unable to improve the economy but afraid to temper its stimulative policies for fear that the economy will collapse. This will have very little impact on the dollar as it is a continuation of current policies and has already been priced in.”

    MARKET REACTION:

    STOCKS: U.S. stock indexes added to gains
    BONDS:  U.S. bond prices declined, boosting yields
    FOREX:  The dollar was little changed against the euro


Central Banks Adding to Their Gold Reserves – Bloomberg

English: Clockwise from top-left: Federal Rese...

English: Clockwise from top-left: Federal Reserve, Bank of England, European Central Bank, Bank of Canada (Note: Uploaded for use on Wikinews) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Gold rose as central banks joined investors in adding to holdings and the euro strengthened against the dollar before regional leaders meet today. Silver traded near a five-week high.

Gold rallied 11 percent this year as investors and central banks bought bullion to diversify assets. Holdings in ETPs backed by bullion rose to a record 2,605.318 metric tons Wednesday , November 21, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Kazakhstan, Turkey and Russia boosted reserves in October, according to data on the International Monetary Fund’s website, joining Brazil, which raised holdings to the highest in more than 11 years.

“We think this is a positive signal for the market and expect moderate price gains in the days ahead,” Tobias Merath, head of commodities and alternative investments research at Credit Suisse AG’s private banking unit, wrote in a report today, referring to the central bank purchases. “The focus will be on events in Europe.” U.S. markets are closed for Thanksgiving.

Spot gold rose as much as 0.2 percent to $1,732.65 an ounce before trading at $1,729.47 at 9:18 a.m. in London. Gold for delivery in December rose 0.1 percent to $1,729.30 an ounce in electronic trading on the Comex in New York.

Gold also gained as the euro rose to a two-week high against the U.S. dollar before before leaders of the 27 European Union member nations gather today for budget talks. Finance ministers from the 17-nation currency bloc will resume talks on aid for Greece next week.

The U.S. Mint sold 67,000 ounces of gold coins so far in November, more than the 59,000 ounces for all of October, according to figures on the mint’s website. At that pace, total sales for the month would be 100,500 ounces, up 145 percent from a year earlier.

Silver was little changed at $33.34 an ounce, after gaining as much as 0.3 percent to $33.4525 in earlier trade. Platinum for immediate delivery gained gained 0.4 percent to $1,583.75 an ounce and palladium advanced 0.9 percent to $652.50 an ounce.

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Marc Faber : Presentation at London Bullion Market Assoiation Conference

Ben Bernanke, Vampire Chairman

Ben Bernanke, Vampire Chairman (Photo credit: DonkeyHotey)

Nov. 16, 2012

Being in Hong Kongthis year, the world’s premier event for the bullion industry also got lots of great insights from genuine Asian insiders – ICBC, Kotak Mahindra, the People’s Bank of China no less.”When the People’s Bank speaks it pays to listen,” as Tom Kendall of Credit Suisse put it in his conference summary.”Especially when it talks about gold.”

But the star of the show, at least by popular vote at Tuesday’s close, was Swiss ex-pat and long-time Asian resident, Marc Faber.

If you know his work, you can guess his theme – what doom and gloom mean for the boom in gold. Starting, of course, with the unintended consequences of constant government meddling.

“Continuous interventions by governments with fiscal and monetary measures, instead of smoothing the business cycle, have actually led to greater instability. The short-term fixes of the New-Keynesians have had a very negative impact, particularly in the United States.”

Faber’s big beef is with US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke. But “numerous Fed members make Mr. Bernanke look like a hawk,” he said. Nor does it matter who is running the White House. Because thanks to welfare and military budgets, “spending is out of control, tax is low, and most spending is mandatory.”

So Federal Reserve policy is inevitable, Faber went on, and while we haven’t yet got the negative interest rates demanded by Fed member Janet Yellen, we have got negative real interest rates. The US and the West had sub-inflation interest rates in the 1970s too, and we got a boom in commodity prices then as well. But with exchange controls now missing from the developed world, “One important point,” said Marc Faber:

“Ben Bernanke can drop as many Dollar bills as he likes into this room,” he told the LBMA conference in Hong Kong, “but what he doesn’t know is what we will do with them. His helicopter drop will not lead to an even increase in all prices. Sometimes it will be commodities, sometimes precious metals, collectibles, wages or financial assets. [More importantly], the doors to this room are not locked. And so money flows out and has an impact elsewhere – not in this room.”

That elsewhere has of course been emerging Asia, most notably China . But back home, these negative
interest rates are forcing people to speculate, to do something with the money, said Faber.

These rates artificially low, well below the 200-year average.

That’s doing horrible things to the United States’ domestic savings and thus capital
investment.”You don’t become rich by consuming. You need capital formation,” said Marc
Faber. Unlike investing in a factory to earn profits and repay your loan, “Consumer credit
is totally different. You spend it once, and you have merely advanced expenditure from the future.”

marc faber

Buillion Vault

So far, so typical for the doom-n-gloomster. Noting total US debt at 379% of GDP, “if we
included the unfunded liabilities then this chart would jump to the fifth floor of this hotel!”
said Faber, waving his red laser pointer at the ceiling. After the private sector “responded
rationally” to the runaway 20% credit growth of 20% by collapsing credit in 2007-2009, the
US government stepped in to take over – and “Government credit is the most unproductive
credit of all.”

In short, the easy money and bail-outs which got us here – from the Fed’s rescue of Goldman Sachs during the early ’80s Tequila Crisis in Mexican debt, through LTCM in the late ’90s and then the Tech Stock boom and bust – have had serious consequences. “Bubbles are a disaster from a social point of view,” said Faber. Looking at his charts of the generational shift in wealth, it would take a Fed voting member to disagree.

“Only at the Federal Reserve they don’t eat or drive!” exclaimed Faber as he turned on the
central bank’s inflation target, produced by “the Ministry of Truth, the Bureau of Labor
Studies. It is a complete fraud.” But even as the United States’ persistently mistaken policies
lead to the emerging powers side-stepping it (“We are in a new world. China’s exports to
commodity-producing countries – such as Australia and Brazil – are greater than its exports
to the United States. Exports from South Korea to commodity-exporting countries are
greater than its exports to the US and Europe combined!”), there will come a slowdown in commodity demand and leveling off in prices in time.

“I would rather be long precious metals than industrial commodities,” said Marc Faber.

Which was of course what most people at the LBMA conference wanted to hear. Less
welcome was his warning not to hold gold in the United States or even Switzerland.
Because “if gold is owned by a minority, then in a crisis the government will take it away.”
But even Faber said that some of his 25% personal allocation to precious metals is still in his
home country, rather than in Asia where he’s lived for almost 30 years.

Once the deflationary collapse finally arrives (the impossible question is knowing when, said
Faber), there will be great opportunities in real and productive assets. But until then, and as
for the Gold Price ahead, “Gold is not anywhere close to a bubble stage,” he concluded. And
every time he thinks about selling to take profit?

“I keep in my toilet a picture of Mr. Bernanke. And every time I think about selling my gold,
I look at it and I know better!”

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Platinum Surge – Update from Credit Suisse

English: Reverse of American Platinum Eagle 20...

English: Reverse of American Platinum Eagle 2010 Русский: Реверс платиновой монеты 10 долларов 2010 года (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Platinum (COMEX : US$1,626.75)

Finally. Platinum futures took a breather on a report that Lonmin workers in South Africa have accepted the company’s pay offer of a 22% wage increase and will return to work. Anglo American Platinum also confirmed that all of its Rustenburg operations have resumed, effective from Tuesday’s morning shift, the company said in a statement.

Prices in the past 30 trading days have climbed from under $1,500 per ounce to above $1,700 per ounce before a sudden drop today took prices below $1,620.

Shares of North American platinum and palladium producers had spiked in recent weeks after a six-week conflict in the mining sector, which claimed 45 lives. Stillwater Mining (SWC) and North American Palladium (PDL)  are the only two N.A.-based platinum/palladium producers, the ETFS Physical Platinum Shares (PPLT)  also give investors an ETF option.

In a note to clients, Credit Suisse said that save a short term rally in platinum prices due to the Lonmin strike, the price for platinum looks likely to be range bound at current levels until a supply response is seen.