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Gold, Silver Looking Up; Goldman Sees ‘Significant Value Opportunity’
Jan 10th, 2012 12:41 by News

Barrons (Jan 9) — Such a fall has narrowed “the disconnect between gold’s price and its fundamental picture,” Goldman Sachs’ (GS) head of commodity research said Monday at a global strategy conference. Jeffrey Currie told analysts meeting in London that the recent drop in the yellow metal’s price after a lofty build-up presents a “significant value opportunity” for investors, according to a Dow Jones Newswires report.

Gold is not only cheaper to store when interest rates are low but is also an attractive alternative to traditional bank savings, he said. However, as broad markets slumped in late 2011, gold holdings were sold in order to generate cash.

“The world demanded dollars more than it demanded gold,” said Currie. “But what happens when that demand reverses?” he added.

With U.S. real interest rates and inflation expected to remain low in 2012, gold should be supported in the year ahead, Currie predicted.

“Our view on gold is determined by our view on the rates cycle,” he noted. “We will continue to be long on gold until we can see an absolute turn in the rate cycle, which we don’t see happening any time soon.”

[Source]

2012 – The Year of Living Dangerously
Jan 10th, 2012 12:07 by News

10-Jan (USAGOLD) — Now that we have officially entered the new year, we have two articles of interest to offer. The first is written by our own resident economist, Peter Grant: The Homeric Choice: Scylla, Charybdls and Gold. The second is a lengthier treatment of what might evolve in the new year by James Quinn, titled 2012 – The Year of Living Life Dangerously — an analysis which revisits the accurate portrayal of what’s to come in William Strauss and Neil Howe’s, The Fourth Turning. As we turn the corner on a new year, it might be good to recalibrate from a golden perspective.

Our continued best wishes.

The number of JOLTS job openings in Nov was 3.2 million, unchanged from Oct; hires rate 3.2%, separations rate 3.0% little changed from Oct.
Jan 10th, 2012 10:40 by News
Operation Twist: New York Fed purchases $1.390 billion in TIPS with a maturity range of 01/15/2018 – 02/15/2041.
Jan 10th, 2012 10:28 by News
US wholesale sales +0.6% in Nov, in-line with expectations; inventories +0.1%, below expectations of +0.6%.
Jan 10th, 2012 09:46 by News
Hungary Sells Target Amount of Bills as Yield Hits 2009 High
Jan 10th, 2012 09:45 by News

10-Jan (Bloomberg) — Hungary sold its target amount of debt at an auction at the highest cost in 2 1/2 years as the country’s chief negotiator traveled to Washington to meet with the International Monetary Fund on a bailout.

The government sold 45 billion forint ($183 million) in three-month Treasury bills as the average yield rose to 7.98 percent, the highest for that maturity since August 2009. Tamas Fellegi, the minister leading foreign aid talks, started discussions with the IMF in Washington yesterday, state news service MTI reported, citing a statement from the country’s embassy there.

The forint fell to a record low against the euro last week after the IMF and the European Union broke off talks with Hungary after Prime Minister Viktor Orban refused to withdraw new central bank regulations the institutions objected to. Markets rebounded after Orban said he is ready to accept “any kind” of credit line that strengthens the country’s market financing.

[source]

PG View: Yields above 7% generally signal trouble.

Portugal Lowers Economic Outlook
Jan 10th, 2012 08:59 by News

10-Jan (The Wall Street Journal) — Portugal’s central bank Tuesday sharply lowered its economic outlook for 2012, citing a worse-than-expected drop in internal demand, and warned the government may have to undertake more austerity to meet deficit targets this year.

In its winter report, the Bank of Portugal said it now expects the economy to contract 3.1% this year. Its fall forecast called for a 2.2% contraction.

The bank also revised its 2011 forecast, saying the economy likely shrank 1.6% last year, not quite as much as the 1.9% previously expected. The bank said the economy should recover in 2013, growing some 0.3%.

The bank expects internal demand to decline 6.5% this year, with public consumption decreasing more than expected. Earlier it had expected demand to fall 4.8%.

Portugal’s expanding public sector is seen as the biggest reason the country’s deficit has ballooned in recent years, forcing the country to seek a bailout last year.

[source]

Lagarde to Meet Merkel as Debt Pressure Rises
Jan 10th, 2012 08:51 by News

10-Jan (Bloomberg) — German Chancellor Angela Merkel and International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde will meet in Berlin tonight as pressure grows to complete a Greek debt swap needed to put a rescue plan in place.

The deal, hammered out by European Union leaders, Greek officials and the nation’s creditors on Oct. 26, called for bondholders to accept a 50 percent cut in the face value of their Greek debt, with a goal of reducing Greece’s borrowings to 120 percent of gross domestic product by 2020.

More than two months after the accord was announced, creditors and authorities still need to agree on the coupon and maturity of the new bonds to determine the total losses investors would suffer.

[source]

PG View: Really? More than 2-months after (what was it?) the third(?) rescue of Greece, there’s still no real plan in place?

Soros Says Europe’s Debt Woes ‘More Serious’ Than 2008 Crisis
Jan 10th, 2012 08:15 by News

09-Jan (Bloomberg) — Billionaire investor George Soros said Europe’s sovereign-debt woes are “more serious” than the financial crisis of 2008 and that the world faces the prospect of a “vicious circle” of deflation.

“We have a more dangerous situation now than in 2008,” Soros, 81, said in response to a question at an event in the southern Indian city of Bangalore today. “The crisis in Europe is more serious than the crash of 2008.”

Leaders in the euro region have struggled to solve the debt crisis that is now in its third year and which has clouded the outlook for the global economy. The European Central Bank has provided unprecedented cash injections to try to avert a credit crunch, while Greece, Ireland and Portugal have already been forced into bailouts.

[source]

Fitch May Downgrade Italy, Not France This Year
Jan 10th, 2012 08:13 by News

10-Jan (CNBC) — Fitch Ratings does not expect to cut France’s triple-A credit rating this year, while countries under review such as Italy or Spain could be downgraded by one or two notches, the agency’s EMEA ratings head said on Tuesday.

Fitch put Belgium, Spain, Slovenia, Italy, Ireland and Cyprus on negative watch late last year, with a conclusion expected by March. France has a negative rating outlook from Fitch, which normally means that it could be downgraded within two years.

[source]

PG View: I don’t think I would call that “good news.” More like “not quite as bad news.”

Morning Snapshot
Jan 10th, 2012 07:45 by News


10-Jan (USAGOLD) — Gold is up smartly, flirting once again with the 200-day moving average (1635.86 today) and the high from 2-weeks ago at 1641.65. A breach of the latter — an a decisive close above the former — would be encouraging technical events.

The yellow metal is being bolstered by improved risk appetite, which took a little of the recent shine off the dollar. The euro has edged higher on word that at least Fitch has no plans to downgrade France in 2012. European sovereign debt spreads narrowed and stocks gained. Some better then expected UK data helped the cause, as did some soft Chinese trade data. Both exports and imports slowed in Dec, increasing the likelihood of further PBoC accommodations.

• US calendar has wholesale sales (expectations +0.6%), inventories and JOLTS job openings at 15:00GMT.
• Canada housing starts+200.2k in Dec, above market expectations of 186.0k, vs 185.6k in Nov.
• UK BRC Retail Sales (same store) +2.2% y/y in Dec, well above market expectations of +0.3%, vs -1.6% in Nov; All stores +5.1%, vs 0.7% in Nov.
• UK RICS House Price (Balance) unexpectedly ticked higher to -16 in Dec, on expectations of -20, vs -17 in Nov.
• China export growth slowed to +13.4% y/y in Dec, vs +13.8% in Nov.
• China imports slowed to +11.8% y/y, vs +22.1% in Nov.
• China trade surplus widened to $16.5 bln in Dec, vs $14.5 bln in Nov.

Gold higher at 1638.90 (+27.25). Silver 30.17 (+1.21). Dollar retreats. Euro better. Stocks called higher. Treasuries mostly lower.
Jan 10th, 2012 07:33 by News
U.S. Consumer Credit Rises by Most in Decade
Jan 9th, 2012 16:13 by News

09-Jan (Bloomberg) — Consumer borrowing (CICRTOT) in the U.S. surged in November by the most in 10 years, showing households are optimistic enough to take on debt and banks are willing to lend.

Credit increased by $20.4 billion, the biggest jump since November 2001, to $2.48 trillion, Federal Reserve figures showed today in Washington. The advance was almost twice as big as the highest forecast of 31 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

Increasing borrowing signals a drop in unemployment (USURTOT) is giving households the courage to take advantage of holiday discounts, buy cars and finance higher education. At the same time, dependence on credit means the job market has yet to improve enough to provide the incomes needed to sustain consumer purchases, which account for about 70 percent of the economy.

[source]

PG View: Wow! That’s a big miss; +$20.4 billion on expectations of +$7.0 bln. Can this all be attributable to revived confidence? I find myself wondering if some consumers are running up their credit cards on rising expectations that everyone with a Fannie/Freddie mortgage is going to get refi-ed for free this year.

Germany issues debt with negative yield
Jan 9th, 2012 11:46 by News

09-Jan (Financial Times) — Germany issued debt on Monday for the first time with a negative yield, meaning that investors were in effect paying Berlin for the privilege of lending it money.

A €4bn auction of six-month bills drew a negative yield of 0.0122 per cent in a sign of Germany’s haven status amid the eurozone debt crisis.

But demand for the debt was down with the so-called bid-to-cover ratio dropping to 1.8 times from 3.8 times at the previous auction a month ago.

[source]

PG View: It is any surprise that demand is down in an environment where investors have to pay the government for them to use their money, because of the perception of safety. Of course this has been the case in real terms (factoring inflation) for some time now, and seems unlikely to change any time soon. As long as real interest rates are negative — and certainly with negative nominal rates — the dominant long-term uptrend in gold remains protected.

Operation Twist: New York Fed sells $8.740 billion in Treasury coupons with a maturity range of 04/15/2012 – 09/30/2012.
Jan 9th, 2012 11:11 by News
Bank Deposits at ECB Hit New High, Seen Climbing
Jan 9th, 2012 11:09 by News

09-Jan (CNBC) — Commercial banks’ overnight deposits at the European Central Bank hit a new record high of 464 billion euros, data showed on Monday, and traders said they could hit half a trillion euros by next week.

High deposits indicate banks prefer the safety of the central bank for their funds to higher rates they could get by lending to each other.

Banks are awash with cash after taking an unprecedented 489 billion euros in the ECB’s first-ever three-year liquidity operation late last month, and are mulling what to do with the money in the longer term.

[source]

Gold steady at 1617.50 (+0.27). Silver 28.91 (+0.172). Dollar easier. Euro sets new 15-mo lows. Stocks called better. Treasuries mixed.
Jan 9th, 2012 07:34 by News
The Daily Market Report
Jan 6th, 2012 13:22 by News

The Homeric Choice: Scylla, Charybdis and Gold


06-Jan (USAGOLD) — Gold winds down the first week of the new year more than 3% higher than the closing price of 2011. The yellow metal continues to trade in close proximity of the 200-day moving average (1633.00) and a definitive close above this level is still awaited to bolster bullish sentiment. The high from 2-weeks ago at 1641.65 is an important level to watch as well.

Renewed euro weakness was a central theme of the past week, and despite the corresponding dollar strength, gold has displayed impressive resilience. A decent German bund auction failed to allay worries about upcoming periphery debt sales. A point that may have been driven home when the French saw their borrowing costs rise this week amid persistent rumors of an impending downgrade. Spain and Italy will attempt to sell bonds next week and global investors will be eying demand closely. They’ll also be watching to see if the ECB steps in to cover and absence of “real” demand; primarily as an indication of the central bank’s relentless creep toward full-on quantitative measures.

The marked retreat in the euro, particularly against the dollar and yen, suggests the market isn’t terribly optimistic. There continues to be strong interest in dollar swaps and parking of funds in the ECB’s overnight facility, suggestive of ongoing stresses in the European banking system, or perhaps preparation for a black swan event. Deposits in the ECB overnight facility hit a new record high of €455.3 bln last night.

Black swans by their very definition are difficult to predict, but clearly what everyone remains worried about is the EU fracturing. If Greece for example were to exit the EMU — as they again threatened to do last week — it might well stop at Greece, but then again it might not. There are many respected economists and analysts that maintain that the monetary union can’t possibly hold together in its current form. Many banks and corporations have taken proactive steps to shield themselves against this possibility. Building a cash buffer — accumulating both euros and dollars — is a piece of that reality. It is also widely believed that the EFSF/ESM is a very flimsy firebreak between Greece and the rest of the periphery.

What policymakers in the eurozone (and elsewhere for that matter) are desperate to prevent is a disorderly breakup. If some event were to trigger such a disorderly breakup, the global repercussions would make what happened in 2008/2009 look like a walk in the park by comparison. For the same reason, the ECB would almost assuredly move aggressively to prevent such a catastrophe. I’ve always believed that the Germans need to be scared just enough to squelch their fears about inflation. If that point is reached, the ECB will follow the QE path blazed by the BoJ, Fed and BoE before it. As for the rule of law; sometimes its just easier to ask forgiveness than permission.

It is these twin fears that are underpinning the gold market: The fear that the whole system could still come crashing down around our ears, as it nearly did just a couple of short years ago. And the fear that the central banks will do whatever it takes to prevent that from happening. Truly we are between Scylla and Charybdis.

The central banks are trying to sail exactly between the two beasts, hoping to stay just out of reach of both. It’s not an easy task though, as measures taken by one central bank have negative implications on others seeking to save their own bacon. One slight over or under reaction could trigger a string of events that may well hurdle the fleet into the maw of one of those monsters.


As the legend goes, Odysseus chose to confront Scylla (a six-headed monster) and risk losing a handful of sailors, rather than to risk the loss of his entire ship to Charybdis (a whirlpool). It is my belief that most central banks view systemic risks, austerity and deflationary depression as that whirlpool. That would make expansive monetary policy and inflation Scylla in this analogy — the lesser of two evils. The Fed’s move toward inflation targeting is a pretty clear indication of where our own central bank stands on this issue.

By the 8th century BC, when Homer is thought to have written the Odyssey, gold already had a long history of being used as money. And the striking of gold coins would commence just a century or so later. So when you think about how best to protect your wealth from stormy seas and sea monsters, choose something that has withstood the test of time. Choose gold.

Operation Twist: New York Fed purchases $4.933 billion in Treasury coupons with a maturity range of 01/31/2018 – 11/15/2019.
Jan 6th, 2012 10:25 by News
Morning Snapshot
Jan 6th, 2012 10:20 by News

06-Jan (USAGOLD) — Gold has been rather choppy today, pushing to a new 2-week high in early NY trading following a better than expected nonfarm payrolls report, but then reversing course and falling to fresh intraday lows as the euro came under renewed selling pressure. The EUR-USD rate fell to new 16-month lows below 1.2700 and the corresponding rise in the dollar tempered enthusiasm for gold.

While the 200,000 increase in nonfarm payrolls and the drop in the unemployment rate to 8.5% was seen as broadly encouraging, the shrinking labor force and a return to the 28-year low of 64% in the participation rate leaves investors feeling skeptical. Also, it is the persistent uncertainty regarding Europe that sits like a lead weight on market sentiment. If Europe, doesn’t pull itself out of the fire and at least back into the frying pan, there is a broad consensus that markets beyond the Continent will pay a price as well.

• Labor force -50k in Dec. Participation rate ties 28-yr low of 64% set in Jun. Hourly earnings +0.2%. Workweek ticks higher to 34.4.
• Canada employment +17.5k in Dec, in-line with market expectations, unemployment rate ticks higher to 7.5%.
• US nonfarm payrolls +200k in Dec, above market expectations of +150k, but at the whisper. Unemployment rate drops to 8.5%.
• Switzerland CPI -0.2% m/m in Dec; -0.7% y/y.
• Eurozone economic confidence slips to 93.3 in Dec, vs upward revised 93.8 in Nov.
• Eurozone consumer confidence confirmed at -21.2 in Dec.
• Eurozone industrial confidence steady at -7.1 in Dec; services weaker at -2.1.
• Eurozone business climate improves to -0.31 in Dec, vs positive revised -0.42 in Nov.
• Eurozone retail sales -0.8% m/m in Nov, below market expectations of -0.4%, vs negative revised 0.1% in Oct; -2.5% y/y, vs negative revised -0.7% y/y in Oct.
• Germany manufacturing orders -4.8% m/m in Nov, well below market expectations of -1.6%, vs negative revised 5.0% gain in Oct; -4.3% y/y.

Some Perspective on Jobs Data
Jan 6th, 2012 08:38 by News

06-Jan (Chart of the Day) — Today, the Labor Department reported that nonfarm payrolls (jobs) increased by 200,000 in December. For some perspective, today’s chart illustrates the percent increase in the number of jobs for every decade since the 1940s (the data goes back to 1939). Today’s chart illustrates that up until this millennium, the number of jobs at the end of a decade has always been at least 20% greater than 10 years prior. During the last decade (2000s), not only was that 20% plus growth not achieved, the decade actually ended with less jobs than when it began. This negative job growth is particularly noteworthy due to the fact that the US population had increased by 10% during the same time frame. Two years into the current decade (see gray column), today’s chart illustrates that job growth is positive. If job growth during the current decade were to increase at the same pace as what occurred during the first two years, the decade would end with a 10% gain in jobs (see gray dot). This is certainly better than the decade just passed, however, it is well off the 20% plus pace of decades past.

[source]

Fed Nears Adoption of Inflation Target
Jan 6th, 2012 08:04 by News

06-Jan (Bloomberg) — Federal Reserve officials are nearing agreement on adopting an inflation goal as Chairman Ben S. Bernanke extends his push for improving transparency and communications with the public.

“We are very close to having inflation targeting in the U.S.,” James Bullard, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, said in a radio interview yesterday on Bloomberg Surveillance hosted by Tom Keene and Ken Prewitt. “We are getting closer to being able to make a committee-wide statement about these longer-term policy goal issues.”

[source]

US nonfarm payrolls +200k in Dec, above market expectations of +150k, but at the whisper. Unemployment rate drops to 8.5%.
Jan 6th, 2012 07:36 by News

06-Jan (USAGOLD) — Labor force -50k in Dec. Participation rate ties 28-yr low of 64% set last June. Hourly earnings +0.2%. Workweek ticks higher to 34.4.

Gold steady at 1622.03 (+1.38). Silver 39.342 (+0.117). Dollar better. Euro defensive. Stocks called higher. Treasuries steady to lower.
Jan 6th, 2012 07:23 by News
Operation Twist: New York Fed sells $1.350 billion in TIPS with a maturity range of 04/15/2012 – 04/15/2014.
Jan 5th, 2012 10:18 by News
Morning Snapshot
Jan 5th, 2012 09:46 by News


05-Jan (USAGOLD) — A more risk averse tone today has gold under modest pressure, but downticks below $1600 have been tentative thus far. In fact, the yellow metal is showing good resilience in the face of renewed dollar strength.

Better than expected US jobs data has been offset by heightened concerns in Europe. Today’s French bond auction didn’t go as well as hoped and borrowing costs rose, as did the OAT-Bund spread, amid persistent rumors of an impending French downgrade. The market is also looking forward nervously to next week’s Spanish and Italian debt auctions, with yields on 10-year BTPs continuing to probe above the troubling 7% level. European financial shares, and in particular Italian financials (most notably UniCredit) are getting shellacked today.

The euro has come under more intense selling pressure, trading with a 1.27 handle against the dollar for the first time since September 2010. EUR-JPY set a fresh 10-year low at 98.48.

Our sources in Europe have made note of robust demand for gold coins and rising premiums. Our call volume from Europe has increased notably of late as well. While European banks are accumulating cash (both euros and dollars) as a buffer against persistent uncertainty, European citizens it would seem are growing increasingly suspicious of “cash”. They are instead turning to a reliable and liquid store of value that knows no nationality.

• US ISM non-manufacturing index rose to 52.6 in Dec, below market expectations of 53.0, vs 52.0 in Nov.
• Canada Ivey PMI rose to 63.5 (sa) in Dec, well above market expectations of 58.0, vs 59.9 in Nov.
• US initial jobless claims -15k to 372k in the week ended 31-Dec, below market expectations of 375k, vs upward revised 387k in previous week.
• US ADP employment survey +325k in Dec, well above market expectations of +175k, vs +204k in Nov.
• Germany retail sales unexpectedly fall -0.9% m/m in Nov, on expectations of +0.2%, vs negative revised -0.2% in Oct; 0.8% y/y.
• UK CIPS Services PMI better at 54.0 in Dec, vs 52.1 in Nov.
• Eurozone PPI +0.2% m/m in Nov, y/y pace moderates to 5.3% from 5.5% in Oct.
• Eurozone industrial orders (sa) +1.6% m/m in Oct, below market expectations of +2.5%, vs -6.4% in Sep; 1.8% y/y.

US ISM non-manufacturing index rose to 52.6 in Dec, below market expectations of 53.0, vs 52.0 in Nov.
Jan 5th, 2012 09:15 by News
Concerns over European debt crisis resurface amid bank shares drop, lukewarm French bond sale
Jan 5th, 2012 09:15 by News

05-Jan (Washington Post) — The specter of Europe’s debt crisis returned Thursday after a brief respite, as bank stocks fell sharply on worries about losses on government debt and a French bond auction drew lackluster demand from investors.

Financial stocks slumped across Europe as it became clear banks would have troubled raising billions in new capital in coming months. In Italy, trading in UniCredit shares was halted after they lost a quarter of their value since yesterday morning, when the bank admitted it had to offer huge discounts to new investors to attract capital.

The banks need the money to cover potential losses on government debt, whose value has plummeted across most of Europe in recent months on fear of defaults. Many countries in the region have to roll over billions in debt in coming months, putting huge focus on their bond auctions.

[source]

French Borrowing Costs Rise at Auction as AAA Rating Faces Threat of Cut
Jan 5th, 2012 08:18 by News

France sold 7.96 billion euros ($10.2 billion) of debt, with borrowing costs rising in its first bond auction of the year as credit companies threaten to cut the nation’s AAA rating.

The government sold 4.02 billion euros of benchmark 10-year bonds at an average yield of 3.29 percent, from 3.18 percent on Dec. 1. France, which also auctioned 2023, 2035 and 2041 securities, had aimed to sell a maximum of 8 billion euros. French 30-year bonds pared their declines.

…France has the biggest debt burden of the six top-rated euro nations, at 85 percent of gross domestic product. The extra yield investors demand to hold French 10-year bonds instead of benchmark German bunds rose to 204 basis points on Nov. 17, the most since 1990, as concern deepened Europe’s debt crisis was spreading. While the gap was 145 basis points at 12:24 p.m. Paris today, it compares with a premium of 44 basis points for AAA rated Finland and 37 basis points for the Netherlands.

[source]

PG View: The EUR-USD fell to new 15-month lows, probing below 1.2800. The real test will be the Spanish and Italian auctions next week. Italian 10-year bonds are already back above the troubling 7% level as Italian financial shares get hammered, led by UniCredit.

US initial jobless claims -15k to 372k in the week ended 31-Dec, below market expectations of 375k, vs upward revised 387k in previous week.
Jan 5th, 2012 07:34 by News


Author key: MK - Michael J. Kosares; GC - George Cooper; PG - Peter A. Grant; JK - Jonathan Kosares; RS - Randal Strauss. [see also 12 yrs of Discussion Archives]


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