Posted on 04/15/2013 6:41:57 AM PDT by Sub-Driver
Gold Rout Continues By CLEMENTINE WALLOP, BIMAN MUKHERJI and FRANCESCA FREEMAN
Gold continued to take a battering on the spot market Monday, shedding nearly another $100 per troy ounce after weaker than expected data on Chinese first quarter growth sparked a new wave of selling on concerns that China and India, the world's two biggest buyers, may slow purchases.
The price of gold slumped to $1,400 an ounce in what appears to be panic selling after Chinas first-quarter growth came in lower than expected. Other markets were also hit, with silver and other commodity prices and currencies like the Australian dollar are falling too. Photo: Bloomberg
Around midday in Europe, spot gold was down 5.2% at $1,404 a troy ounce, having earlier tumbled around $95, or 6.4%, to a two-year low at $1,385.88/oz. This follows Friday's rout, when the metal fell 5%, pushing it into bear-market territory.
Gold prices have plunged some 11%, or $170 an ounce, over the past week.
Worries are spreading that Asian buying, which has helped prop up gold prices for years, may be fading. China reported its economy unexpectedly slowed last quarter, spurring fears that Chinese consumers, faced with less cash, may stop purchases. In India, the largest gold industry group warned that the country is losing confidence in the metal because of the recent slide. Investors in Europe cashed out of the metal en masse amid concerns that U.S. stimulus may be cut short, and following news that Cyprus may sell a chunk of its gold reserves to fund part of its bailout package.
"The market saw gold going lower and everyone panicked," said Pradeep Unni, head of research at Richcomm Global Services, a Dubai-based commodity broker. "The most important factor for gold now is Indian and China demand."
(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
thank yu.
That bubble is about to pop also.
I doubt it. Over many years a gold boom starts, the people rush in buying like mad based upon the usual gold bug statements, then the rug is pulled. I know absolutely nothing about commodity markets but I think based upon history gold will go down to about $500 to $700 per ounce. Where it will remain stable for several years.
I have heard what you say. Can you refer us to some reputable written sources? Thanks.
Just google for it. It is public knowledge.
You found a 10/22?
Been looking for one for 3 months now, but I can’t find ammo either so.......
Massive withdrawal of capital. The reason there is no inflation is that the Feds are barely improving liquidity. Obama’s actions are scaring the markets. The Fed’s ZIRP is punishing the prudent and the wise and rewarding the frivolous and foolish, along with the politically connected criminal.
Doesn't show a connection between the two, but it does show why most people don't want a gold standard.
Perhaps he meant "exhauSt"? :-)
There's a lot of truth to that and vice versa.
Oil has historically sold for about 12 bbls/oz. of gold. We're returning to that figure. Investors looking for a quick return have driven gold higher than that average.
They're bailing now, as they should. Gold isn't an investment. It's a hedge against inflation. When it gets closer to $1000, I'm buying me some.
From AEI today:
Gold bugs shouldnt read this
James Pethokoukis | April 15, 2013, 11:33 am
MKMs Mike Darda makes a number of great points here:
1. With gold tumbling more than 25% from its 2011 high (into official bear market territory), the strategy of buying gold (instead of equities) since the initiation of QE has failed.
2. As we have pointed out in the past, if gold had simply followed the CPI over the last 100 years, the gold price would be just below $500/o z., meaning even after this pullback, the yellow metal could still be seriously extended.
3. In any event, gold and industrial commodity prices have de-linked from U.S. NGDP, inflation and inflation expectations over the last 12 years, meaning the most recent fall (and the previous run-up) likely do not have material implications for the U.S. business cycle.
4. Historically, industrial commodity prices have tended to fall at about a 1.7% per annum pace in real terms. Thus, the neo-Malthusian argument for a commodity price super cycle based on a population explosion and ever-increasing scarcity never made much sense to us. In the more intermediate term, however, the China leading indicators we track suggest slight downward bias for industrial commodity prices, an outlook we would continue to characterize as neutral.
Exactly. Velocity continues to collapse:
>> You found a 10/22?
Stumbled into the local Wally World one day looking for ammo, and they had one on the shelf. Just came in that morning. I felt like I had won the lottery.
I like it! It’s a lot of fun to pretend to shoot. :-)
Your lips to GOD’s ear...
lol
Sound good to me.
How does CPI (a very fungible figure) relate to gold prices?
Shouldn’t we be comparing gold vs. the buying power of the dollar? Gold looks pretty good on those graphs.
Gold looks good to you if that's what you care about I care about things I can reasonably expect to make a profit. So we know that gold's price rose. In fact, we even know today's gold future's prices are up and that means a lot of people expect to profit from an increased gold price today. We don't know what's happening next.
Torch's source stated the fact that gold's price was at the high end of a volatile range and many successful people in commerce (including myself) see that as a good time to sell.
Yes, that is the trillion dollar question.
I think we are in uncharted waters. There has never been a superpower hyperinflating before.
My theory: With unions dead(7% and falling) and so few people working(same size US workforce today as the US had in 1970?) there is nothing pushing prices up; remember “cost push inflation”? So the debt doesn’t matter, for now. If people get off their asses and go back to work then inflation will take off. Right now the slackers on public assistance are making just enough to get by and are happy with that, they are not really huge consumers.
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