Morning Snapshot
Jul 19th, 2012 11:12 by News
19-Jul (USAGOLD) — Gold is well bid today, underpinned by heightened Mideast tensions and a corresponding rise in oil prices. Additionally, another round of disappointing US economic data has once again revived hopes of additional Fed measures to support the languishing economy. Nonetheless, the yellow metal continues to struggle ahead of $1600.
Initial jobless claims, existing home sales, LEI and the Philly Fed index all missed expectations, prompting at least Goldman Sachs (but likely others) to revise their GDP forecast lower once again. Amid continued Fed opaqueness on the prospect of QE3, even the slightest hint of a weaker economy reinvigorates the QE3 crowd; essentially turning a negative into a positive, in the sense that bad data can cause stocks to rise as expectations of Fed action is heightened. Today’s data where significantly more than a ‘slight hint’…
Probes above the 20- and 50-day moving averages this week are somewhat encouraging to the technical picture, but a convincing move back above $1600 is likely needed to prompt short-covering. More significant resistance is marked by the early-July highs at 1623.54/1624.64, which corresponds closely with the 100-day moving average.
• US Philly Fed index improved to -12.9 in Jul, but was below expectations of -8.0, vs -16.6 in Jun.
• US leading indicators -0.3% in Jun, on expectations of -0.1%, vs upward revised +0.4% in May.
• US existing home sales tumbled 5.4% to 4.37 mln in Jun, below market expectations of 4.62 mln, vs upward revised 4.62 mln in May.
• US initial jobless claims +34k to 386k for the week ended 14-Jul, above expectations of 365k, vs upward revised 352k in the previous week.
• Canada wholesale trade +0.9% in May, on expectations of +0.2%, vs +1.2% in Apr.
• Switzerland trade balance CHF2.25 bln in Jun, vs CHF2.52 bln in May.
• Eurozone current account (sa) €10.9 bln in May, vs upward revised €5.5 bln in Apr.
• Italy industrial orders (sa) +1.7% m/m in May, vs positive revised -1.8% in Apr; -9.4% y/y.
• UK retail sales +0.1% m/m in Jun, vs positive revised +1.5% in May; 1.6% y/y, down from negative revised 2.1% y/y in May.
• Japan All-Industry Index (sa) -0.3% m/m in May, vs +0.1% in Apr.
• Japan Leading Index (revised) -0.4% in May, vs +0.3% previously. Coincident index (revised) unchanged at -1.2%.
• Hong Kong unemployment rate (sa) steady at 3.2% in Jun.
The Daily Market Report
Jul 18th, 2012 11:32 by News
Gold Consolidates Amid Reluctance on More QE
18-Jul (USAGOLD) — Gold fell again and then rebounded after Fed chairman Bernanke regurgitated yesterday’s Senate testimony before the House Financial Services Committee today. During questioning, Bernanke reiterated that, “It is certainly possible that we will take additional action if we conclude we’re not making progress toward higher levels of employment.” However, hints of additional Fed accommodations remain quite opaque as Bernanke seems rather dedicated to the notion that Congress needs to act to rectify the fiscal train-wreck that is coming, rather than simply relying on the Fed to bailout the Federal government.
Now the Federal Reserve is not supposed to be a political body, but Bernanke seems to be playing a little politics nonetheless. Surely he must know that Congress isn’t going to do anything meaningful on the fiscal side before the November elections. And unless one party or the other takes control of both chambers of Congress and the Presidency, nothing meaningful is likely to be done even after the election. Treasury Secretary Geithner also made note of this political disfunction in the US, warning that the impending fiscal cliff and the drag resulting from the European crisis are likely to have a devastating impact on the US economy.
As for Europe, the IMF further escalated pressure on the ECB to act because the “euro area crisis has reached a new and critical stage.” After negatively revising its growth projections yesterday, the IMF is now expressing heightened concern about deflation in Europe and is encouraging the ECB to both cut rates and embark on the quantitative easing path blazed by the BoJ, Fed and BoE.
While über-accommodative monetary policies have done little to relieve global debt crises, the latest IMF urgings to do more of the same are reflective of just how limited a toolbox the central banks have at this juncture. Yet, given the reluctance of politicians around the world to inflict fiscal pain on their constituents — for fear that said constituents will oust them at the next opportunity — the central banks will likely be forced to act ultimately. When that happens, or perhaps more accurately when the market acknowledges this is the likely outcome, gold will resume its long-term uptrend.
The New Depression: The Breakdown of the Paper Money Economy
Jul 17th, 2012 15:10 by MK
by Richard Duncan
“When we broke the link between money and gold, this removed all constraints on credit creation. This explosion of credit created the world we live in, but it now seems that credit cannot expand any further because the private sector is incapable of repaying the debt it has already, and if credit begins to contract, there’s a very real danger that we will collapse into a new Great Depression. . .If this credit bubble pops, the depression could be so severe that I don’t think our civilization could survive it.”
Link
Sprott Sees Record Gold Price in 2012 on Debt Weight
Jul 12th, 2012 14:07 by News
July 12 (MoneyNews) — Gold will climb to a record by year’s end as the global economy slows from the weight of too much debt, says Eric Sprott, the founder and chairman of Canadian fund manager Sprott Inc.
“I just can’t imagine the demand for gold is going down,” he said in a July 9 interview at Bloomberg’s Toronto office. “I don’t personally see a solution to the problem that we’re in, the financial leveraging issue that we all have where everybody wants to shed debt and there’s no buyers.”
The metal “should go to new highs before yearend, that would be my guess,” said Sprott, 67. “Gold has blown away every financial market in the world since 2000, let’s not forget that.”
[Source]
Erskine Bowles: ‘We Are Going Over the Fiscal Cliff’
Jul 12th, 2012 13:36 by News
July 12 (ABC News) — “I think if I had to tell you the probability, I’d say the chances are we are going over the fiscal cliff,” Bowles said. “I hate to say it, but I think that’s probably right.”
Bowles, whom Obama appointed, along with Simpson, to create a bipartisan debt-reduction plan, said today that because debt reduction was “politically painful” and “really tough,” it was not likely Congress and the president would make the tough choices to reform entitlements, cut spending and simplify the tax code, as the Bowles-Simpson plan suggests.
“I think that if we don’t get these politicians to come together we face the most predictable economic crisis in history,” Bowles said during this morning’s interview in Sun Valley, Idaho. “I think it’s absolutely clear that the fiscal path we are on is not sustainable, and for me, the best analogy is these deficits are like a cancer, and over time they will destroy the country from within.”
Bowles said that “every nickel” the country brings in each year only paid for interest on the debt and mandatory spending on entitlement programs, such as Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security.
“What that means is every single dollar we spent last year on these two wars, national defense, homeland security education infrastructure, high value-added research, every dollar was borrowed and half of it was borrowed from foreign countries,” he said. “That is crazy. Crazy! It’s a formula for failure in any organization.”
[Source]
Fed officials warn of looming crisis for economy
Jul 11th, 2012 12:49 by News
July 11 (AP) — Fed officials warn of looming crisis for economy, discuss steps to boost growth
Most Federal Reserve policymakers agreed last month that they might need to take more action to support growth if the U.S. economy loses momentum.
Minutes of their June meeting released Wednesday show that Fed officials signaled their concern that the struggling U.S. economy could worsen if Congress fails to avert tax hikes and across-the-board spending cuts that kick in at the end of the year. They also expressed worries that Europe’s debt crisis will weigh on U.S. growth.
Members said the economy should continue to grow moderately. But the Fed lowered its growth forecast at the meeting after seeing the U.S. job market weaken and consumer spending slow. It also said it doesn’t expect the unemployment rate to fall much further this year.
Many economists predict the Fed will hold off for one more meeting and give the job market a little longer to show improvement. If it doesn’t, the Fed will likely announce the program at its Sept. 12-13 meeting.
[Source]
JK Comment: Looks like more QE is coming, and with a early September proposed announcement, that’s just in time to aid in the typical seasonal strength in the gold price.
Gold Falls to Settle at $1,579 on Market Jitters
Jul 10th, 2012 13:59 by News
July 10 (CNBC) — Gold futures fell to settle at $1,579 an ounce after news of missing client funds from another U.S. futures brokerage prompted commodity investors to lessen positions. The selling erased early gains that occurred amid optimism for a European Union aid package for Spain.
Bullion weakened after PFGBest late on Monday told customers their accounts had been frozen. A U.S. industry body said about $220 million in customer funds were not in the brokerage’s bank accounts.
“With the 100 billion euro being made available to Spanish banks, gold should not be lower,” said George Nickas, commodities broker at INTL FCStone. “If Jefferies is doing an orderly liquidation, you have to believe that there have to be some concerns about ‘Do I let the positions go? You’ve got a higher degree of emotions now in a quiet market,” Nickas said.
[Source]