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Gold ends the week at 1543.50, just off today’s high; up $57 from last Friday’s close.
Jul 8th, 2011 15:06 by News
The Scariest Jobs Chart Ever Is Now Scarier Than Ever
Jul 8th, 2011 15:00 by News

July 8 (BusinessInsider) — After that miserable jobs report, the pace of the recovery looks as horrible as ever.

This chart measures the percentage of jobs lost during various recessions, and the pace of recovery. As you can see, this recession saw WAY more aggressive job cutting than in the past, and the recovery has been anemic.

[source]

Central banks pull most gold in a decade from BIS
Jul 8th, 2011 14:53 by News

July 7 (Financial Times) — Central banks have pulled 635 tonnes of gold from the Bank for International Settlements in the past year, the largest withdrawal in more than a decade.

The move, disclosed in the BIS’s annual report, marks a sharp reversal from the previous year when central banks added to deposits of gold at the so-called “bank for central banks” rather than lending it directly to the private sector amid growing concerns over counterparty risk.

[source]

America Needs a Grand Bargain, But All It’s Getting Is a Mini Deal
Jul 8th, 2011 13:54 by News

July 8 (PIMCO) — As the August 2nd debt ceiling deadline looms ever closer, President Barack Obama has asked congressional leaders to work through the weekend. The hope is for agreement on a “grand bargain” that avoids disorderly disruptions to government payment obligations and creates, quoting the president’s remarks of yesterday, “an environment in which we can grow the economy and make sure that more and more people are being put back to work”. The likelihood is that the disruptions will indeed be avoided but, unfortunately, only through a “mini deal”.

…Let us therefore hope that, if it indeed materialises, the mini-deal is only a means to a grand bargain down the road. It would be a tragedy if, instead, it were an end in itself.

[source]

PG View: Sadly, ad-hoc mini-deals seem to be the best that our Representatives can muster, as political gamesmanship ahead of the 2012 elections takes precedence over truly solving our countries debt addition. It is therefore likely that we will be stuck in this economic morass for some time to come.

Housing prices: No rebound in sight
Jul 8th, 2011 12:26 by News

July 8 (HousingWire) — Housing prices are likely to keep falling the rest of this year, and probably won’t show much improvement next year either, according to a survey of economists.

A CNN Money exclusive survey of 27 economists showed the battered housing market is facing myriad problems and won’t turn around anytime soon.

[source]

More Than 25 Million Americans Are Unemployed Or Can’t Find Full Time Work
Jul 8th, 2011 12:20 by News

by Jacob Goldstein
July 8 (NPR) — The U.S. economy added only 18,000 jobs last month, according to this morning’s jobs report. This is not nearly enough to keep up with population growth, much lower than economists were expecting and way down from the pace of job growth earlier this year.

The unemployment rate rose to 9.2 percent. A more inclusive measure, known as broader unemployment, rose to 16.2 percent. That’s more than 25 million people.

[source]

Fears Italian banks may fail stress tests
Jul 8th, 2011 12:07 by News

July 8 (Guardian) — Italian banks on Friday bore the brunt of concerns about the financial health of Europe’s banking sector before official results of stress tests due on 15 July.

The UK’s major banks – including bailed-out Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group – are among 91 in Europe to have been subjected to the crisis scenarios drawn up by the European Banking Authority.

While the UK’s banks are expected to pass the health check, Italian bank shares slumped amid concern they might need new capital and that the country may be dragged into the eurozone crisis.

[source]

The Daily Market Report
Jul 8th, 2011 11:41 by PG

Grim Employment Data Raises Expectations of QE3…and Gold

Gold extended gains to new two-week highs in the wake of today’s terrible nonfarm payrolls report for June. There were just 18,000 jobs added to the economy last month on expectations of 90,000. The unemployment rate edged higher to 9.2%, while the broader U6 measure of un/under-employment jumped to 16.2%. Negative back-month revisions to both May and April added insult to injury, prompting a sell-off in stocks and a sharp drop in US yields.

The rise in Treasuries and gold is in part associated with continued safe-haven demand, as anemic economic growth translates into higher unemployment — with the overhanging threat of default if a resolution to the debt ceiling crisis fails to materialize over the next several weeks. However — and perhaps more significantly — today’s grim jobs data have increased speculation that the Fed will eventually cave to the economic realities and launch QE3 sooner rather than later. At least a serious hint about the prospects for a QE3 could come as soon as the 09-Aug FOMC policy statement, or perhaps Chairman Bernanke will wait until the economic policy symposium in Jackson Hole the last weekend of August. At any rate, based on today’s news, I put the odds of QE3 between now and year-end at 3/5.

Truth be told, we always figured that something would have to be done to fill the demand void for US paper left by the Fed when QE2 concluded at the end of June. I think the Fed was overly-optimistic in assuming that approximately $300 bln in QE-lite reinvestments over the next year would be sufficient to keep rates low and encourage business investment and job creation. Here’s the problem though, in announcing the end of QE2, Bernanke acknowledged the risks of ongoing balance sheet expansion. Now the Fed doesn’t really need to explain anything to anyone, but if Bernanke back-tracks and says further asset purchases are suddenly necessary once again — that the economic risks outweigh the risks associated with more QE — the Fed’s credibility is likely to be further eroded.

As we’ve seen in Europe recently, when central banks and other governing bodies flail about trying to resolve crises, credibility is called into question and bad things happen to markets. Invariable more paper — in the form of debt and fiat currency — gets issued to paper-over the crisis de jour. In such circumstances, hard assets such as gold tend to fair very well as they are the classic hedge against the seemingly unending blizzard of paper. If the Fed reverts to more aggressive quantitative easing in yet another effort to reinvigorate the flagging US economy, we could be facing the blizzard of the century.

India’s Gold, Silver Imports Surge 200% to $17.7 Billion in Q2; Chinese Bullion Demand Surging Further
Jul 8th, 2011 09:56 by News

July 8 (GoldCore) — While all the focus will be on the US jobs market today, the more important long term factor of robust global and massive Asian demand should continue to support gold around the $1,500/oz level and silver around the $36/oz level.

Bloomberg reports this morning that gold and silver imports into India, the world’s largest importers of bullion, rose 200% to $17.7 billion in the 2nd Quarter of 2011 (April-June).

[source]

US wholesale sales -0.2% in May, below market expectations of +0.2%; inventories +1.8%.
Jul 8th, 2011 08:23 by News
Morning Snapshot
Jul 8th, 2011 07:12 by News

Flight to quality has pushed gold to new 2-week highs in the wake of terrible employment data. The US economy added just 18k jobs in June, well below market expectations, which were running around +90k. Adding insult to injury; May’s weak print of +54k was more than halved to just +25k. April was revised lower as well from +232k to +217k.

The unemployment rate rose to 9.2%, while the broader U6 number jumped to 16.2%. The labor force participation rate fell to a new 25-year low of 64.1%. Average hourly earnings decreased by 1¢ to $22.99.

US stocks tumbled following the jobs report, as did yields on US Treasuries amid a resurgence in QE3 expectations. And the latter is good for gold.

• US nonfarm payrolls +18k in Jun, well below market expectations. Jobless rate edges higher to 9.2%.
• Canadian employment +28.4k in Jun, above market expectations; unemployment rate 7.4%.
• US Monster.com employment index +3 points to 146 in Jun, +4.0% y/y and at the highest level since Oct-08
• UK June PPI: Input prices +17.0% y/y (nsa), above expectations; output prices +5.7% y/y (nsa), near expectations.
• German trade surplus €14.8 bln in May, up from €9.9 bln in May-10. Exports rebounded 4.3% m/m, vs -5.6% m/m in Apr. Imports +3.7% m/m.
• Japan May current account +Y594 bln surplus, but still -51% y/y on disruptions from earthquake/tsunami.

US nonfarm payrolls +18k in Jun, well below market expectations. Jobless rate edges higher to 9.2%.
Jul 8th, 2011 06:35 by News

July 8 (BLS) — Nonfarm payroll employment was essentially unchanged in June (+18,000), and the unemployment rate was little changed at 9.2 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Employment in most major private-sector industries changed little over the month. Government employment continued to trend down.

[source]

Gold easier at 1526.14 (-3.76). Silver 36.26 (-0.16). Oil steady. Dollar firm. Stocks called slightly higher. Trsys mostly lower.
Jul 8th, 2011 06:14 by News

June NFP at 8:30ET.

Gold futures waver as concerns ease
Jul 7th, 2011 12:18 by News

By Myra P. Saefong
July 7 (MarketWatch) — Gold futures edged between small gains and losses Thursday after a two-session win, as upbeat U.S. economic data and comments from the European Central Bank president about Europe’s debt crisis eased investors’ concern, limiting growth for the precious metal.

Gold for August delivery added $1.50 to $1,530.70 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract tallied a gain of nearly $47 an ounce over the past two trading sessions.

“Gold is consolidative, but generally well bid within its range,“ said Peter Grant, senior metals analyst at USAGold-Centennial Precious Metals Inc.

“The continually unfolding European sovereign-debt crisis, today’s ECB suspension of Portugal’s rating requirement, is likely to limit the upside in the euro and keep a bid under gold as an appealing hedge.”

[source]

What will replace the dollar as global currency?
Jul 7th, 2011 12:03 by News

July 7 (MarketWatch)
by Matthew Lynn

But it tells us something else as well. The role of money in the global economy is one of the big themes of this decade. Gold is on the up. The euro is falling apart. And, perhaps most importantly of all, the dollar is in long-term decline.

Measured over a decade, the trend is clear enough. Go back to 2001, and the proportion of central bank reserves held in dollars was 71%. It only goes down a bit every year. But over time, that starts to add up. Once the dollar drops below 50% of central bank holdings, we can officially declare that its days as the reserve currency are done. It looks like that will happen some time between 2015 and 2020 — but it could well be sooner.

But if it is a commodity-based currency unit — and that would be this columnist’s bet — then the one big call you need to make for the next decade is to keep buying raw materials even when they do look over-priced. Either way, the euro looks finished, and the dollar is heading for a more minor role in the world economy.

[source]

JK Comment: There has been much talk of late of the “re-monetization” of gold….essentially a discussion of the return of gold’s timeless (though somewhat forgotten) role as money. Lynn paints an interesting picture of the future of the global currency system, and the dollar’s role within it, offering distinct markers to gauge the pace of the greenback’s decline in relevance. As this future unfolds, it becomes easier and easier to understand why so many gold owners treat their ownership less as an investment and more as savings in an alternative currency – one (the only one) that cannot be printed and debased….and one that looks to be definitively ascending in importance (and price), rather than declining. For them, the answer to the question, “Do I hold my savings in dollars, or in gold” is a simple and obvious one.

Pimco’s El-Erian gives “low probability” of QE3
Jul 7th, 2011 11:23 by News

July 7 (Reuters) — Pimco chief Mohamed El-Erian on Thursday put low odds on a third round of U.S. monetary stimulus unless there is a “major further deterioration” in the U.S. economic outlook.

“We would assign a low probability (at) this stage to QE3 given the general recognition that the forward-looking cost-benefit analysis has shifted away from the potential benefits and towards greater costs and risk,” El-Erian, co-chief investment officer of Pimco, said in a live blogging question and answer session on Reuters.com.

…In the event no agreement [on a US debt ceiling hike] is reached between the White House and the Republican-controlled Congress, El-Erian pointed to the safety of gold.

“The likely consequences for markets would include a simultaneous sell off in equities, bonds and the currency. Gold would most likely benefit from the flight to quality,” he wrote.

[source]

PRECIOUS METALS: Gold Edges Higher In Asia; ECB Meeting Eyed
Jul 7th, 2011 09:32 by News

July 7 (The Wall Street Journal) — Precious metals edged higher in Asia as investors turned to investment alternatives such as gold ahead of an interest-rate policy meeting of the European Central Bank later in the trading day, as concerns about euro-zone debt refused to fade.

Spot gold, which opened a touch lower in the Asian session, was underpinned by its safe-haven appeal amid concerns about long-term trends in currency valuations. The yellow metal has gained around 3% since it hit a low of $1,486.50 a troy ounce on July 1.

At 0533 GMT, gold is at $1,533/oz, up $3.60 from its New York close.

“Gold’s buoyancy is largely attributable to the resurgence of contagion risks within the euro zone,” USAGOLD-Centennial Precious Metals Inc.’s resident economist Peter Grant said in a commentary.

[source]

Gold futures close at a two-week high: Gold tallies two-session win of nearly $47; silver also rallies
Jul 7th, 2011 09:28 by News

By Myra P. Saefong and Sarah Turner
July 6 (MarketWatch) — Gold futures closed at their highest level in two weeks Wednesday, with global-debt troubles helping it tally a two-session win of nearly $47 an ounce.

Gold for August delivery closed up $16.50, or 1.1%, at $1,529.20 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract, which earlier touched a high of $1,534.50, marked its highest close since June 22.

…“The persistent debt problems in both Europe and the U.S. are a big part of gold’s gains this week,” said Peter Grant, senior metals analyst at USAGold-Centennial Precious Metals Inc.

“It’s quickly becoming a question of credibility,” he said. “As the troika flails about trying to mitigate the Greek crisis without creating a default, they erode market confidence. That waning confidence in the troika has resulted in contagion to Portugal in the wake of yesterday’s downgrade.”

[source]

Morning Snapshot
Jul 7th, 2011 08:05 by News

Gold is consolidating as better than expected jobs data lift US stocks. June ADP data came in much better than expected, offsetting to some degree last month’s much worse than expected print. Modestly lower than expected initial jobless claims for last week further bolstered hopes that there will be a positive surprise tomorrow when June nonfarm payrolls data are released. Market consensus stands at +90k, although today’s ADP print in particular should elicit some higher whispers.

The BoE held steady on rates, while the ECB hiked by another 25bp. Both were widely expected, but ECB chief Trichet seems to be taking a more neutral stance in the presser, which has weighed on the euro; not to mention the continual unfolding of the European sovereign debt crisis. The corresponding firmness in the dollar is providing a bit of a counterbalance to the safe haven bid in gold.

• US initial jobless claims -14k to 418k in the week ended 02-Jul, below market expectations of 420k.
• US ADP private payrolls surged 157k in Jun, well above market expectations, vs negatively revised 36k in May.
• ECB hiked refi rate by 25 bp to 1.50%, as expected.
• BoE left repo rate unchanged at 0.5%, as expected.
• German industrial production +1.2% m/m in May, above market expectations, vs negatively revised -0.8% m/m in Apr.
• UK manufacturing rebounded +1.8% m/m in May, vs negatively revised -1.6% m/m in Apr.
• Swiss Jun CPI -0.2% m/m, 0.6% y/y, just below market expectations. Core rose to 0.3% y/y.
• Japan core machinery orders rebounded +3.0% m/m SA in May; foreign orders extend dip.

US initial jobless claims -14k to 418k in the week ended 02-Jul, below market expectations of 420k.
Jul 7th, 2011 06:58 by News
US ADP private payrolls surged 157k in Jun, well above market expectations, vs negatively revised 36k in May.
Jul 7th, 2011 06:22 by News
ECB hiked refi rate by 25 bp to 1.50%, as expected. BoE left repo rate unchanged at 0.5%, as expected.
Jul 7th, 2011 06:18 by News
Gold steady at 1529.10 (+1.25). Silver 36.08 (+0.15). Oil up. Dollar firm. Stocks called higher. Trsys mostly lower.
Jul 7th, 2011 06:16 by News
The Daily Market Report
Jul 6th, 2011 12:00 by PG

Resurgence of Contagion Worries Lift Gold

Gold pushed through important short-term resistance at 1520.28 this morning, putting the yellow metal back above its 20- and 50-day moving averages. This week’s gains come in the wake of last week’s picture-perfect bounce from just in front of the 100-day moving average. While gold remains range bound, it continues to show remarkable resilience at a time of year when the market frequently experiences seasonal softness. If nothing else, the retracement back into the upper half the range reinforces the reaction low from early-May at 1462.25 as formidable support.

Gold’s buoyancy is largely attributable to the resurgence of contagion risks within the eurozone. As the EU/IMF/ECB continues to flail about trying to concoct a resolution to Greece’s second bailout dilemma, the market’s confidence in the troika is eroding. The absence of a cohesive plan for Greece has made it pretty obvious that the troika has no real plan for Portugal either, or any other distressed sovereign for that matter. Spurred by Moody’s downgrade of Portugal to junk status, yields are Portuguese sovereign debt have risen by more than 450 bps in less than 24-hours.


Source: Business Insider

As Joe Weisenthall of Business Insider points out: This is “a really mammoth collapse in confidence for a country that’s already been bailed out!” In fact, Portugal just finalized a €78 bln bailout 2-months ago; which drives home my point about waning confidence not just in the debt-ridden countries themselves, but in the European and international agencies seeking to save them. In fact, The Economist offered further illustration in an article yesterday entitled Spot the Pattern. The chart of 10-year Greek yields presented very clearly shows that the market has been increasingly less assuaged with every step European leaders take to avert disaster.

Interestingly, some of those European leaders have chosen to lash out at the rating agencies, even as Bloomberg reports that Ireland may too get downgraded to junk status despite a substantial bailout. There have been suggestions the Europe suspend sovereign debt ratings until the crisis is resolved, or that they do their own ratings. The ECB has already said that they would cherry-pick the most favorable ratings on distressed periphery debt. While there is plenty to fault about the rating agencies in the wake of the 2008 crisis, this all strikes me as quite desperate: If you don’t like the message…kill the messenger.

The next, worse financial crisis: Ten reasons we are doomed to repeat 2008
Jul 6th, 2011 11:12 by News

July 6 (MarketWatch) — The last financial crisis isn’t over, but we might as well start getting ready for the next one.

Sorry to be gloomy, but there it is.

Why? Here are 10 reasons.

[source]

PG View: I think the most troubling of the 10 reasons is #6; which notes that Wall Street’s derivatives exposure has actually increased over the past 3-years by a whopping 35% from $183 trillion just before the Lehman collapse to $248 trillion today.

Ireland May Be Next to Face Junk After Portugal
Jul 6th, 2011 10:29 by News

July 6 (Bloomberg) — Ireland’s credit rating may be cut to junk by Moody’s Investors Service after Portugal yesterday lost its investment grade rating, according to analysts.

Moody, which slashed Portugal to Ba2 from Baa1, in April lowered Ireland’s credit rating to the lowest investment grade Baa3 and left country’s outlook on negative.

[source]

PG View: Contagion risks re-exert themselves as faith in EU/IMF/ECB troika’s ability to find a solution to Europe’s sovereign debt crisis wanes.

New York Fed re-monetized $2.910 billion in Treasury coupons in the first QE2.5 operation since QE2 ended last week.
Jul 6th, 2011 09:25 by News
Moment of truth for the eurozone
Jul 6th, 2011 09:10 by News

By Martin Wolf
July 5 (Financial Times) — The biggest question in any debt crisis is whether a credible path back to solvency can be found. For Greece, this now seems very unlikely. The same is true, to a lesser extent, for Ireland and Portugal. This raises three further questions. First, how big is any required restructuring? Second, who should bear the cost? Finally, is restructuring enough? If the answer to the last question is No, then one has to ask whether the currency union will last in its current form.

[source]

US ISM services index fell to 53.3 in Jun, below market expectations, vs 54.6 in May.
Jul 6th, 2011 09:02 by News
Morning Snapshot
Jul 6th, 2011 07:27 by News

Gold is firmer this morning amid heightened contagion concerns in Europe. With Greece’s second bailout still to be resolved, Portuguese yield spreads surged to record wides in the wake of yesterday’s downgrade. The yellow metal has now retraced more than half of the recent corrective retreat within the range and is trading back above its 20 and 50-day moving averages.

China acknowledged its local government debt problems following the warning from Moody’s that the magnitude of such debt is $540 bln larger than Beijing estimated just last week. Despite this new debt threat, the PBoC raised interest rates by 25bp today as efforts to curtail inflation continue. PBoC adviser Xia Bin said today’s rate move was “not enough,” suggesting that the tightening cycle that began late last year will continue.

President Obama has called party leaders to the White House on Thursday in the hopes of restarting stalled debt ceiling talks. The President rejected a proposed short-term deal that would have pushed the more substantive debt debate deeper into the campaign cycle, calling for a resolution within the next two-weeks.

The likelihood that China will continue to try and slow its economy, along with persistent debt woes in America and Europe have weighed on equities, increasing the appeal of gold as an alternative investment.

• Canada building permits surged 20.9% in May, well above market expectations of +4.5%, largely offsetting Apr surprise plunge of 21.5%.
• China hikes lending rate 25bp to 6.56%. Fifth hike of the cycle, which began in Oct-10.
• President Obama has rejected a short-term debt deal; calls leaders to White House on Thursday in hope of restarting stalled talks.
• Major Greek bond holders are meeting in Paris today to discuss debt rollover plans
• German May orders +1.8% m/m, well above market expectations, vs positively revised +2.9% in Apr.
• UK shop price inflation rose to a 2.9% y/y pace, a 22-month high, driven largely by a sharp 5.7% jump in food prices.
• Japan leading index rebounded to +3.6 m/m in May; further evidence of post quake/tsunami “V” recovery.


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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