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http://www.commodityonline.com India, Gulf demand to put gold in $870 range: GFMS 2009-06-09 15:00:00
LONDON: Global metals and bullion consultancy GFMS says gold price is currently staying at higher levels thanks to the physical buying of the yellow metal by India and the Middle East countries. GFMS predicted that gold prices will come down to the $800-plus levels soon.
“Currently as I see it, gold price will remain (come down) around at $870-880. Gold price can not stay in the $900-$1000 range for long,” GFMS chief executive Paul Walker told reporters at a news conference in Tokyo.
The latest GFMS prediction gives gold a lower price band as the consultancy had said in April that the yellow metal price would re-attain the $1000 mark in the coming months and even break the $1,100 barrier.
Walker said that sustained disinvestment will not push gold prices below $870-880. “What will help gold to remain in high price is the amount of physical buying out of India and the Middle East,” he pointed out.
Walker said gold was at an "interesting juncture" saying he does not see the yellow metal prices to remain in the current $900-$1,000 range for a long period of time.
“But certainly, gold will be up to higher levels by 2010 thanks to strong macroeconomic fundamentals and inflation worries,” Walker added.
Gold price was running at a high of $990 per ounce as the global markets closed last weekend. On Tuesday, gold prices showed signs of recovery in Asian trade after the dollar took a break from its rally, improving the precious metal's appeal as a currency hedge.
Gold was seen trading at $949.95 per ounce at 11.00 a.m Singapore time, down 0.01 per cent from New York's notional close of $950.05.
In April, GFMS had predicted in its global Gold Survey that gold will re-attain the $1000 mark in the coming months and even break the $1,100 barrier.
Here is what the GFMS survey said in April:
Philip Klapwijk, Chairman of GFMS at the London launch of the report said: “Gold price may have pulled back a fair bit from the February highs but that was largely just the market’s reaction to jewellery demand crumbling and scrap booming. It’s far from game over for investors and it will be that crowd which sets the price alight”.
The report singles out the fiscal and monetary policies currently being enacted, especially by the US administration, as the root cause of gold’s potential, through their ability to generate inflationary pressures.
GFMS also expect central banks to be reluctant to raise interest rates whilst the prospects for economic growth are shaky and that the solidity of the US dollar has to be called into question, chiefly as a result of doubts over others’ desire or ability to continue financing an explosion in US government debt.
Strength in investment will certainly be needed to overcome weakness in the fundamentals, with Klapwijk adding, “so far this year, we’ve seen times when major fabricating countries like Turkey have been exporting bullion because jewellery demand had collapsed and scrap was so strong. There’s no way that’s sustainable even in the medium term and I’d argue that’s the main reason the rally this year failed in the $980s”.
The consultancy, however, cautioned that it may well not be a straight line rally as a summer lull or the need for inflationary pressures to build could mean sub-$900 prices in the short term. The Gold Survey details a similar complex path last year as heavy net investment and record prices highs in the first quarter, on the back of surging oil prices, a weak dollar and financial turmoil such as the collapse of Bear Stearns, was followed by periods of heavy selling through into the fourth quarter.
Much of this was ascribed to the general sell off in commodities as economic growth foundered, a turnaround in the dollar and, towards the end of this phase, funds being obliged to sell in order to cover losses elsewhere, to meet margin calls and so forth. In the final four months, GFMS noted a ground swell in investment in physical gold, reflecting distrust in financial institutions, especially after the collapse of Lehman Brothers, and a more general desire for wealth preservation, with this buying centred on western Europe and North America.
This desire for investment in physical form was illustrated in the 40% rise in official coin minting - the only area of fabrication to register an increase in 2008 according to Gold Survey 2009. In contrast, jewellery demand fell by just over 10% in response to high and volatile prices and the slowdown in economic growth. The year was far from uniform, however, with Klapwijk adding, “jewellery demand came back in force in the late summer as prices sank through the $800 mark, and even more so as we headed for $700. And if that buying hadn’t appeared, we could have easily seen far lower prices than was the case”.
Demand in other quarters was seen as mixed. Electronics offtake, for example, withered as the economic crisis developed and de-hedging by producers fell sharply in the second half, after a surprisingly buoyant first half. Klapwijk noted, “it’s a concern for the stability of prices that we’re entering a period in which for the first time in many years de-hedging will be running at trivial levels, although that’s only a function of the much reduced hedge book. We’re still seeing very limited interest in strategic hedging”.
Actual mine production was reported to have continued its declining trend, with notable losses seen in South Africa and Indonesia. The scale of the drop came as something of a surprise but of far greater importance to the price was the surge in scrap to a record high. Much was driven by high prices in the developing world, especially the Middle East and in particular Turkey, although distress selling as a product of the economic crisis featured as a reason behind high levels of recycling in the industrialised world.
A good part of the overall increase in scrap, however, was neutralised by the marked drop in net official sector sales. This was said to be chiefly the result of low levels of selling by the Central Bank Gold Agreement countries, although net buying by countries outside this grouping also featured, particularly in the fourth quarter.
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