Total Pageviews

Friday, August 19, 2011

Increase in Gold Investments


When it comes to making investments, more and more people are choosing to put their money in gold. This age-old commodity is proving to be increasingly popular within the modern-day investments arena, and here’s why…
Many novice investors have cottoned on to the fact the gold is the perfect choice for anyone who had relatively little experience in making financial investments. Unlike stock and shares, the nature of gold means that it is a far less volatile market. Of course, this also makes it far more difficult to make a profit within a short space of time, but is it a good way to gain a better understanding of financial trading.
Another reason for the rise in popularity of gold investments is the fact that it is now one of the most convenient forms of trading. Investors can buy and sell gold over the internet from the comfort of their own homes, via sites such as Bullion Vault. These sites can also offer trading in a number of different currencies, as well the ability to both store and insurance purchases. In addition, this online method of trading also allows investors to buy or sell their gold right around the clock – perfect for those who may also be working a full-time job.
Lastly, there is the fact that in order to see a profit on this investment, traders much simply follow the rule of buying at a low price, and selling when the value is much higher. Many online trading platforms also offer clearly displayed reports on the value of gold at any given time. For those who are new to this process, it couldn’t be easier.
With lower risks and higher convenience, it is little wonder than many of those with little experience with investments putting their money in gold. Whilst it might require a little patience, investing in gold certainly has a number of advantages.

Prices, investment products in focus at India gold meet


As gold rallies to consecutive record highs, price, imports and investment demand for bullion will top the agenda at a conference in India, the metal's biggest consumer, this week.
Attendees will not have far to look for evidence of India's long-standing worship of gold, as the conference takes place in Kovalam, just an hour away from a USD 22 billion treasure hoard found last month under a temple in Trivandrum.
Gold prices in India, which relies on imports for almost all its supplies, have climbed about 25% so far this year to peak at Rs 26,575 (USD 583) per 10 grams on Thursday, around USD 1,810 an ounce.
Spot gold is at USD 1,790 an ounce, near record highs above USD 1,813, spurred higher by investors looking for a safe haven as concerns over the health of economies in Europe and the United States hit currencies, stocks and bonds.
The 8th India International Gold Conference, organised by the Bombay Bullion Association, will look at global gold scrap supplies, bullion-based investment products, an outlook on the bullion market and industrial uses of silver, as well as detailed discussion of the domestic gold market.
"People will be looking at the kind of investment that could come in at record prices and new avenues that people might have to cover their risk in other markets," said Gnanasekar Thiagarajan, director at Commtrendz Research, a commodity broker based in Mumbai.
Conference attendees and participants, spanning state-run MMTC to Bank of Nova Scotia, will weigh the impact of record prices on imports to India.
Imports in India rose 34.9% in the first half of the year to 553 tonnes after a surge of 72% in 2010 to 959 tonnes and a whopping 38% rise in investment demand, as high prices curbed buying this year.
Local prices are up more than 41% on a year ago.
"People are thinking of almost double prices compared to last year," said Daman Prakash Rathod, director with Chennai-based gold wholesaler MNC Bullion.
But, he added, "in the coming months, strong seasonal impact will not allow any let up on the import front."
India's obsession with gold is nowhere more evident than in its wedding season, which runs from September to December, when jewellery and gilded gifts abound as brides traditionally carry their wealth while sons inherit land and fixed assets.
Rural consumers -- many of whom invest in gold as they live far from the facilities of a bank -- will be looking to monsoon rains expected to be only slightly below normal to give a good crop and so boost incomes and saving capacity.
Investment spur?
Traders say rising awareness among India's 1.2 billion population of the investment avenues in gold due to the large presence of commodity, stock brokers and mutual fund houses in smaller towns has supported buying to save.
"Globalisation of media and better reach to every nook and corner of India through mobile (phones), cable TV have made a dramatic difference to customer preference," said MNC's Rathod.
Investment in gold bars and coins rose eight percent in the quarter to March to 85.6 tonnes, with investment in exchange traded funds jumping 57% to 15.077 tonnes in February on a year ago -- small amounts but a significant shift.
Still, with foreign players not allowed in commodities markets in India, there are limits to liquidity, crimping participation from hedge players and others who want nimble trading.
The conference could see price forecasts from Scotia Mocatta, a unit of Canada-based Bank of Nova Scotia, State Bank of India, Religare Commodities, and GFMS, which was recently acquired by Thomson Reuters.
Industry participants will also be hoping the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), the country's central bank , will give approval for forward contracts in silver and loans for traders, along with an exchange traded fund for the metal.
"This facility should be there for flexibility in business operations. We are depriving (silver traders) of benefits and cashing in on lower prices. If we have these facilities for gold traders, then why not for silver?" said Mayank Khemka, managing director with Khemka Group of Companies, one of the speakers at the conference.
A forward contract is a non-standardized agreement between two parties to buy or sell an asset at a specified future time at a price agreed today. Khemka said they intend to take up the issue with the RBI in September.
Participants will be also watching how India's regional rival and neighbour China, which the World Gold Council says will overtake India this year in terms of gold consumption in the short-term, is coping with regulatory changes that allow more companies to deal in precious metal and what lessons traders back home can draw from them.

Debt crisis spurs gold rush

The precious metal is a safe haven for nervous investors


Gold prices slipped for the third consecutive day Aug. 15 after a run of record price growth spurred by global economic uncertainty. A dismal debt outlook for the eurozone and a crisis of faith in U.S. leaders to manage debt caused nervous investors - among them thousands of Czechs - to rush for gold, as it is considered a "safe-haven" investment at times when stocks and other securities are unpredictable.
The price of the precious metal reached historic highs Aug. 11, topping out at more than $1,800 (30,665 Kč/1,260 euros) per troy ounce (approximately 31 grams), after news that Standard & Poor's (S&P), one of the world's three major credit rating agencies, had dropped the U.S. credit rating from its sterling AAA to AA+, the first cut to the country's rating since 1917.
The Czech Mint struggled to keep up with requests for gold purchases in the first two weeks of August, with the dealer receiving hundreds of calls per day, according to management. Czech Mint Commercial Director Tomasz Surdy said gold sales were steady throughout most of the year, but increased 2,000 percent for coined and barred bullion in the first half of August. In just one week, the company sold 100 million Kč in gold. Czech gold dealer Soliter said demand among its Czech clients for investment in gold has doubled since the start of the year.


The Czech Mint struggled to keep up with requests for gold purchases in the first two weeks of August, with the dealer receiving hundreds of calls per day, according to management. Czech Mint Commercial Director Tomasz Surdy said gold sales were steady throughout most of the year, but increased 2,000 percent for coined and barred bullion in the first half of August. In just one week, the company sold 100 million Kč in gold. Czech gold dealer Soliter said demand among its Czech clients for investment in gold has doubled since the start of the year.
"The attraction of gold is that you can buy the bars and physically have them, while even if you have millions of Swiss francs, they're just sitting in your bank account," Surdy said of gold compared with other safe-haven commodities in troubled economic times. "Gold is something you can touch and show to friends and family. ... It's a physical thing."
Some analysts, however, warn that the rising prices had to be checked, and that this slip in prices may signal the burst of the gold bubble, which has inflated to "unsustainable levels."
Other gold spotters argue that the price could rise further after this slight correction that brought prices down 0.5 percent by mid-day Aug. 15 in Asian markets.
"Near term, a correction makes sense in relation to other safe havens," Hayden Atkins, an analyst with financial advisory company Macquarie, told Reuters Aug. 12. "That is what you would need for the gold price to go higher for people to be reflecting their concerns more in gold than in safe havens in general."
A small burst of confidence in equity markets and in the euro accounted for the slip in gold buying, but the larger trend of investor risk aversion will mean continued panic purchasing of safe-haven investments.
"I expect the price to continue rising," Surdy said. "It's related to the awful state of finances in the most developed countries and a lack of other alternatives that people consider reasonably safe."

Hugo Chavez to Bank of England: We Want Our Gold Back! Prices to Rise


Venezuela holds almost 60% of its physical gold reserves in the US, Canada, England and Switerland.  Now in an effort to diverisfy its holdings away from US and European financial institutions, Chavez wants to repatriate the precious metal.
“We’ve held 99 tons of gold at the Bank of England since 1980. I agree with bringing that home,” Chavez said yesterday on state television. “It’s a healthy decision.”1
Though many outside observers do not find this move unexpected. 
Venezuelans, may in fact, be afraid that much of their gold outside of the country may be at risk.  Chavez, in an effort to stop what he refers to as "illegal mining", has siezed the operations of many foreign private mining operations.  And if international arbirtation found that these siezures where carried out illegally, Venezuelian assets held abroad could be frozen.
"The government may be moving to repatriate reserves ahead of arbitration case rulings to avoid an “attachment risk” that could freeze international assets, Boris Segura, a New York- based strategist at Nomura Securities said in a research note."1
However this move could have unexpected consequences.  Venezuela already has some of the highest borrowing costs of any developed nation. Hording assets and limiting transparency is not going to do anything but raise those costs further.
It is no surprise to most who have seen the socialist president nationalize pretty much everything under the South American sun. Chavez says he plans to move a total 211 tons of Venezuelan gold held in other countries to Caracas.
The move follows a dispute between his government and foreign miners who say the rules limiting the amount of gold that can be exported from the South American nation hurt their efforts to secure financing and create jobs.
Toronto-listed Rusoro (RML.V), owned by Russia's Agapov family, is the only large gold miner operating in Venezuela. It produced 100,000 ounces last year.2
Analysts have said this move will most definitely make gold reserves swell quickly in the country.
"I have here the laws allowing the state to exploit gold and all related activities ... we are going to nationalize the gold and we are going to convert it, among other things, into international reserves because gold continues to increase in value," Chavez said.

Reasons Many People Buy Gold Jewelry from them for investment


Gold jewelry is composed of items such as necklaces, bracelets, rings, earrings, bracelets, and others that are highly appreciated by lovers of jewelry. The use of gold jewelry for many centuries. To date, no other material has been able to track the popularity of gold jewelry to overcome.
Those in the business of manufacture or sale of gold jewelry are able to make big profits. This is due to the constant demand for jewelry lovers to invest in these issues. What are the reasons for the gold items to enjoy great respect among the regular customers?
Traditional value and design
Gold is a material for jewelry manufacturers love to experiment. Traditional designs of gold jewelry in many countries have always been angry. At the same time, the gold with a design value are equally popular. Women in their teens are attracted to the styles of modern fashion and handmade jewelry in gold. As a result, gold jewelry is able to meet all expectations.
Major investment for the future
No matter how old an article of jewelry of gold, remains an important form of investment. At the time of economic crisis, can we expect from your investment in gold jewelry to pay appropriate compensation. This is one of the main reasons cited by people investing in gold jewelry.
Impressive maintaining good
Gold jewelry is probably less so over time. This quality of gold jewelry for its looks and its value is another reason to keep the buyers choose the elements of other materials. No chance of gold jewelry to dull, corrode or rust, and attractive, even after years. If you buy the jewelry today, you can easily move to the next generation.
Perfect Wedding Jewelry
When it comes to wedding jewelry, gold is the material that immediately springs to mind. In countries like India, gold jewelry is an integral part of weddings in different states. The marriage in Western countries also witnessed the presence of gold jewelry. Grace and nature of these shiny ornaments perfectly complements the mood of these events.
Association with other materials
Finally, gold jewelry designed by the combination of gold with many other materials is also popular among buyers. It is customary to your stylish designs using gold with diamonds, pearls, gemstones and pearls to make. There are a large class of purchasers of jewelry that I really admire these unconventional jewelry designs.
The sellers of gold jewelry to benefit from the sale of jewelry made in different styles in different parts of the world. The popularity of different styles of jewelry extends beyond geographical boundaries, increasing the number of fans of gold jewelry.

Gold Rallies to $1,800 Again!


leadimage
08/18/11 St. Louis, Missouri – At one point yesterday, it looked as though the dollar was about to get a root canal, as the euro (EUR) climbed back to 1.45, the Aussie dollar (AUD) $1.05 and so on… The currencies were rallying so much that gold climbed into the back seat and let the currencies drive for a while… But, this morning… Gold is back in the driver’s seat, with the currencies backing off their charge against the dollar.
The backing off came in the Asian session after some weak data from the region pushed Asian stocks lower, and took the “risk trading” off the table… The one piece of data that really shook up the region printed in Singapore, where overseas sales slumped for the first time in 3 months… Malaysia saw their economy grow at the slowest pace since 2009, but the real meat was the Singapore data. You see, Singapore depends on overseas demand; they don’t have an economy the size of China that can switch to a domestically demanding economy… This is a little disturbing, but not like having one’s credit rating downgraded, so… Let’s see what comes next here before we scream that the sky is falling.
The data, though, is really pushing down currencies, as they have now been handed over to the European session, which didn’t see any reason to prop them back up. So, our Tub Thumpin’ Thursday is starting off as a “Risk Off Day”… But, in recent days… Risk off affects currencies, commodities and equities… Not gold…
I’ve said this before, but it bears repeating… Gold is more than just a commodity… It’s real money! And… An excellent way to diversify an investment portfolio! As I tell audiences all the time… Gold has independent pricing mechanisms that the other assets you hold don’t. Gold smoothes the volatility in an investment portfolio especially in highly volatile times. Gold is not subject to any form of liquidity risk, and does not contain credit risk, and finally it has no liabilities attached to it!
Yesterday, we saw the color of the latest PPI (wholesale inflation) report here in the US. July’s PPI showed a 0.2% increase for the month, which didn’t erase June’s -0.4% print… But did get people talking about inflation again. But we won’t find inflation in today’s printing of CPI (consumer inflation)… That just won’t happen, folks… The hedonic adjustments department will make certain of that!
It will be a busy day for the data cupboard, as CPI will be joined at the printer by Weekly Initial Jobless Claims, Leading Indicators for July, the Philly Fed (manufacturing), and Existing Home Sales… None of it will be too revealing to us… I like to see what’s going on with Leading Indicators, as it is a forward looking report…
I had a reader ask me why I hadn’t commented on the riots going on in England… Well, that’s because I would really like to imagine them not happening… You see… For the last 3 years, whatever’s happened in England, ends up happening here about 6 months later… And while I’ve always known that back in the deep dark closet, that kind of social unrest could come to this country (because of austerity measures that will have to be taken in order to seriously change the course of this country’s finances), I’ve always hoped that a hoola-hoop could be invented to alleviate the whole mess…
I was sent another note by a reader that reminded me that the Rugby World Cup was being held in New Zealand, right now, and the forecasts for people coming to New Zealand to watch the games were understated… So… Kiwi (NZD) could very well see a short-term rise, based on the activity in New Zealand…
And I already told you how the Asian stock market dip caused the Aussie dollar to slide… Well, that holds true for the New Zealand dollar/kiwi too… There was a guy talking on the Bloomie TV this morning, saying that “investors should buy the Aussie dollar on any significant dips”… Hmmm… I don’t think today’s price slide would be considered as a “significant dip”, but a couple of weeks ago, when the Aussie dollar slid to $1.00… THAT was a significant dip!
So… The two central banks that keep coming back to the intervention table – the Swiss National Bank (SNB) and Bank of Japan (BOJ) – are being watched by the markets like a hawk… The SNB has lost so much money intervening… But I think the threat is enough to keep the markets from going “all in” on francs (CHF)… And the BOJ may very well pull the intervention card out of its hat if yen (JPY) gets below 76…
I see where Norway announced a HUGE oil discovery… There had been some recent talk that Norway’s oil fields were drying up… Well that talk can now be put to bed! And the country with the absolute best financial balance sheet will continue to remain at the top of that list!
We’re turning Japanese, yes, I really think so! Turning the page back to the ’90s when Japan cut interest rates to the bone and kept announcing budget stimulus, just plain stimulus, job packages, quantitative easing, and what did it get them? Nothing, absolutely nothing! Unless that is you’re talking about a government debt that has exploded…
And now here we are in the US we’ve gone down the stimulus road a couple of times now… We’ve cut interest rates to the bone… We’ve gone down the quantitative easing road a couple of times now, so what’s next? Ahhh, grasshopper… The US president announced yesterday that he will present a jobs package next month… So, as of next month, we will have gone down every road the Japanese went down…
And then there was this… As reported in The Wall Street Journal
Major websites such as MSN.com and Hulu.com have been tracking people’s online activities using powerful new methods that are almost impossible for computer users to detect, new research shows.
The new techniques, which are legal, reach beyond the traditional “cookie,” a small file that websites routinely install on users’ computers to help track their activities online. Hulu and MSN were installing files known as “supercookies,” which are capable of re-creating users’ profiles after people deleted regular cookies, according to researchers at Stanford University and University of California at Berkeley.
Many of the companies found to be using the new techniques say the tracking was inadvertent and they stopped it after being contacted by the researchers.
You know… The majority of Americans, like me, just want to be left alone, no big brother, no government prying into our personal lives… This privacy invasion by everyone is becoming a real problem…
To recap… The currencies enjoyed a strong performance yesterday, only to see the rug pulled out from under them by some weak Asian data… Malaysia’s GPD was weaker, and Singapore’s overseas sales slipped… These two ripples led to an Asian stock sell off and that was handed over to Europe, who kept the weakness going… Gold however, has taken its place now as THE safe haven currency, and has rallied this morning. It will be a busy day for the data cupboard today.


Read more: Gold Rallies to $1,800 Again! http://dailyreckoning.com/gold-rallies-to-1800-again/#ixzz1VPSKiBmS

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Prices drive increases in gold buying, jewelry sales


NEW YORK — For what is normally a sleepy month, there are so many customers at the Gold Standard, a New York company that buys jewelry, that it feels like Christmas in August. Uncle Ben’s Pawn Shop in Cleveland has never seen a rush like this.
Welcome to the new American gold rush. The price of gold is on a remarkable run, setting a record seemingly every other day. Stomach-churning volatility in the stock market this month has only made investors covet gold more.
Some want it as a safe investment for turbulent times. What worries some investors is that many others are buying simply because the price is rising and they want to make money fast.
“Is gold the next bubble?” asks Bill DiRocco, a golf company manager in Overland Park, Kan., who shifted 10 percent of his portfolio earlier this year into an investment fund that tracks the price of gold. He stopped buying because the price kept rising.
In October 2007, gold sold for about $740 an ounce. A little more than a year later, it rose above $1,000 for the first time. This past March, it began rocketing up. On Wednesday, it traded above $1,793 an ounce, just shy of last week’s record of $1,801.
Meanwhile, stocks, despite rising sharply in the last two and a half years, are only slightly higher in price than they were a decade ago. Since hitting a record high in October 2007, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index is down 23 percent.
Gold hits a sweet spot among the elements: It’s rare, but not too rare. It’s chemically stable; all the gold ever mined is still around. And it can be divided into small amounts without losing its properties.
Ultimately, though, gold is valuable because we all agree it is. It was used around the world as a currency for thousands of years, and then it gave value to paper currencies for a couple of hundred more.
Now, in a time of turmoil, from the credit downgrade and debate over raising the debt limit in the U.S. to the growing financial crisis in Europe to worries of slow growth across the globe, gold is dazzling investors.
Since the financial crisis in 2008, central banks around the world have bought gold as a hedge against their foreign currency holdings. Earlier this month, South Korea announced it had bought gold for the first time in more than 10 years.
Gold is “an effective hedge in a world where there is too much debt and uncertainty,” says Jim McDonald, chief investment strategist at Northern Trust, which owns $2.8 billion of gold in a gold fund.
The last time gold prices rose so precipitously was a few years after President Richard Nixon ended a decades-long fixed relationship between the value of the dollar and the value of gold.
In those days, the price of gold was fixed at about $35 an ounce. And many foreign currencies were pegged to the dollar. Gold gave the dollar its value, and the dollar gave everything else value.
Then the U.S. began running a trade deficit, and dollars piled up abroad. Central banks could redeem dollars for gold. But it was a poorly kept secret that the U.S. didn’t have enough gold to cash out every dollar in circulation.
To head off a rush, Nixon “closed the gold window,” essentially saying that confidence in the U.S. government, not gold, gives the dollar its value. Gold and the dollar began to rise and fall freely, and gold earned its place as protection against the falling dollar when confidence lags.
As inflation worsened later in the 1970s and dollars were worth less, the price of gold took off. Gold hit its high in 1980 — $850 an ounce, or more than $2,300 in today’s dollars.
This time is different because gold is rallying against all currencies, not just the dollar, says Jim Grant, editor of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer.
“Gold is the reciprocal of the world’s faith in the world’s central banks,” Grant says, and right now, “the world is in a pickle.”
Gold prices will probably keep rising until the U.S. and Europe get their finances in order, he says — and Grant doesn’t expect that to happen soon. He predicts inflation, low for the moment, will soar, further eroding the value of the dollar and leaving only gold as a good investment.
Cetin Ciner, a professor of finance at the University of North Carolina-Wilmington, disagrees. He thinks gold is near a peak and people who buy now are blindly chasing the rising price.
“I’m thinking of it as like the dot-com stocks,” Ciner says.
Both Ciner and Grant caution, however, that when it comes to gold prices, no one really knows. That’s because gold doesn’t have intrinsic value. It doesn’t offer an interest rate, like a bond, or represent a share of a company, like a stock. It is inherently speculative as an investment: You only make money if the price goes up.
Amy Robinette, who owns Gold Buying Girl, a network of 70 women in six states who throw parties for people to sell their gold jewelry, says her clients “don’t realize how much their gold is worth.” She gets a cut of the sales.
“Once they sell, it kind of creates a frenzy,” says Robinette, who quit a career as a personnel recruiter to start the business two years ago. “They either want to find more or tell their friends and their friends start selling.”
Sharlett Wilkinson Buckner, of Humble, Texas, recently took an old bracelet, ring and necklace to her local jeweler and walked out with $1,070.
“I couldn’t wait for my husband to come home,” she said. “I fanned my money in front of him and said, ‘Look what I got for my gold.’”
The next day, he sold an old gold necklace for $650.
If Peter Hug is right, this frenzy for gold is likely to continue. The director of the precious metals division for Montreal-based Kitco, one of the largest dealers of precious metals, says gold is no longer “just for the crazy people” — Henny Pennys expecting the sky to fall.
Hug says that until the U.S. tackles its debt and deficit problems, there’s no limit for the price of gold.
“As long as people are terrified that their purchasing power is going to be eroded, gold goes to $3,000 an ounce,” Hug says.
Whether or not prices climb that high, many people are deciding it’s as good a time as any to sell Grandma’s jewelry. Pawn shops and gold brokers report a surge of people cashing in their gold.
In the past two years, Tansky, who runs Uncle Ben’s and is president of the Ohio Pawnbrokers Association, says gold sales have doubled or tripled. That figure actually masks how hot gold is right now, he says, because others who would have come to his store have gone instead to unlicensed brokers that are trying to cash in.
“I saw a barber shop that had a sign, ‘We buy gold,'” he says. “A barber shop! Can you imagine?”

Chavez Orders $11 Billion of Gold Home as Metal Hits Record

Aug. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez ordered the central bank to repatriate $11 billion of gold reserves held in developed nations' institutions such as the Bank of England as the metal rises to record levels behind a weakening U.S. dollar.
Venezuela, which holds 211 tons of its 365 tons of gold reserves in U.S., European, Canadian and Swiss institutions, will progressively return the bars to the central bank's vault, Chavez said yesterday. JPMorgan Chase & Co., Barclays Plc, Standard Chartered Plc and the Bank of Nova Scotia also hold Venezuelan gold, the president said.
"We've held 99 tons of gold at the Bank of England since 1980. I agree with bringing that home," Chavez said yesterday on state television. "It's a healthy decision."
Chavez, whose government depends on oil for 95 percent of export revenue, is looking to diversify Venezuela's cash reserves from U.S. and European banks to include investments in emerging-markets including Brazil, China, India, Russia and South Africa, central bank President Nelson Merentes said yesterday. Chavez, whose nation is the world's 15th-largest holder of gold, is bringing back the reserves after a 26 percent rally in price this year.
Venezuela's reserves stood at $28.6 billion on Aug. 16. Venezuelan Finance Minister Jorge Giordani said that the weakening U.S. dollar, a near-default by the U.S. government and the European sovereign debt crisis threaten the country's savings and will be more secure at home and in "allied" countries.
Clouding Transparency
The central bank already has about $7 billion of gold in its vaults. Of the country's liquid reserves, which amount to about $6.3 billion, 59 percent are held in Switzerland, 18 percent in the U.K and 11.3 percent in the U.S., according to a government report.
The government may be moving to repatriate reserves ahead of arbitration case rulings to avoid an "attachment risk" that could freeze international assets, Boris Segura, a New York- based strategist at Nomura Securities said in a research note.
The repatriation and diversification of reserves may also cloud transparency of government holdings, which would be a negative for the country's credit, he said.
"We sense that Venezuelan debt prices already incorporate a sizeable 'lack of transparency' premium," Segura said. "However, looking at the possible geopolitical signals that these proposed policies communicate, we fear that Venezuelan bond prices may suffer."
In all, Venezuela has 365.8 metric tons of gold reserves, according to the World Gold Council.
Nationalization
Venezuela has the highest borrowing costs among major emerging-market countries. The extra yield investors demand to own Venezuelan government bonds instead of U.S. Treasuries was 1,186 basis points, or 11.86 percent yesterday, according to JPMorgan & Chase Co.'s EMBI+.
Chavez also said yesterday that he's preparing a decree to nationalize the gold industry to halt illegal mining and dedicate local production to building up reserves.
Of 17 arbitration cases pending against Venezuela in the World Bank's International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, at least three of them are over mining ventures, including Crystallex International Corp., a Canadian gold producer whose Las Cristinas mine was taken over by the government in February.
'Not Surprising'
Gold Reserve Inc., a Spokane, Washington-based mining company, is seeking $2.1 billion in damages after its Las Brisas gold and copper project was seized in May 2008.
"Today's announcement is not surprising," said Doug Belander, Gold Reserve president in an interview. "We believe that their objective all along was to take over the entire industry."
The South American country, in an effort to boost stalled production and take advantage of rising prices, last year relaxed restrictions on gold exports to allow some companies and joint ventures with the government to send as much as 50 percent of their output abroad.
Rusoro Mining Ltd., a Vancouver-based mining company, is the last publicly traded company operating in Venezuela. The company's stock fell 17 percent in trading yesterday to 12.5 Canadian cents, the lowest in almost a decade.
Venezuela produces 11 metric tons of gold a year, and illegal miners extract an additional 10 to 11 tons a year, Chavez said in May.
Venezuela's National Guard first seized control of the Las Cristinas mine, which has reserves of about 27 million ounces, in November 2001 from Canada's Vanessa Ventures.
Gold futures for December delivery rose $8.80, or 0.5 percent, to $1,793.80 an ounce on the Comex in New York yesterday. Prices touched a record $1,817.60 on Aug. 11.
"If there isn't enough room to store the gold in the central bank vaults I can lend you the basement of the Miraflores presidential palace," Chavez said.

Experts advise caution on gold-rush

Where prices will go isn’t easy to predict; there are schemes to accumulate for consumption, but weigh the details.

After touching Rs 25,815 per 10g last week, gold bounced back to over Rs 26,000 this week. Viral Shah, senior vice president at Geojit BNP Paribas, says it is difficult to take a call on which way it would go from here.

He says this is not the time to put a large amount in this asset class. "The rally in gold may not have ended, but one needs to be careful," Shah warns. He advises putting small amounts over a period of time to take advantage of different price levels. Shah expects a daily swing of Rs 350-Rs 450 per 10g.

GILT ADVICE

  • Avoid lump sum investment in gold at this level
  • Small investments can be made via gold fund of funds for the long term (4-5 years)
  • Short-term (1-2 years) investments should be done via debt instruments
  • Jewellers' gold accumulation schemes are illiquid
  • Can accumulate e-gold units for consumption, but you pay extra for delivery

Agrees Naveen Mathur, associate director, commodities and currencies, at Angel Broking: "We may see some opportunity of profit booking in the coming months and a correction. Therefore, putting a large amount may not be wise decision." Mathur sees support for gold at the $1,720 level (Rs 25,100 per 10g).

If you are looking to accumulate gold for consumption (marriage or gift), there are two ways. One is the gold accumulation schemes of jewellers. The Tata Group's Tanishq has been offering a Gold Harvest Scheme for the past eight years and recently released a new campaign. Others such as Pune-based PN Gadgil and local jewellers also offer this.

These schemes function like a bank recurring deposit, that allow you to save small amounts for different tenures. At the end of the term, you can buy gold jewellery worth the accumulated amount, inclusive of making charges. Say you have to pay Rs 1,000 for 12 months with Tanishq, you pay for 11 months and the jeweller pays the last instalment. You can invest as little as Rs 500 a month.

However, Sumeet Vaid of Freedom Financial Planners advises against the jewellers' scheme. The quantity you get at the end of the term depends on the price of gold on that day, he says, and you can't predict the future price. If you are cash-strapped, these schemes don't allow cash refund. Hence, this is an illiquid option to get locked into. And, many don't allow buying of coins.

This scheme returns eight to nine per cent, yearly. In comparison, ICICI Bank's recurring deposit offers 8.25 per cent for a year and HDFC Bank gives 7.25 per cent. These are also safer.

Next is National Spot Exchange's e-gold. You can ask for physical delivery, but you have to cough up a higher cost. Apart from the demat and brokerage cost, you need to pay Rs 200 for delivery, irrespective of the quantity and a depository charge of Rs 50 for every request. Experts say you can accumulate these units over time. But, you need to open a different demat account with a National Spot Exchange-licensed broker.

And, "you cannot invest in an asset class for near-term consumption," says Vaid. Anil Rego of Rights Horizon says if you have a longer-term horizon (four to five years), only then invest in gold, through a gold fund of funds for systematic investment. Though, the expense ratio here is slightly more than that of exchnage traded funds (25-30 basis points higher).

For anything less than three years, invest in fixed income instruments such as bank fixed deposits (earnings 8-10 per cent yearly), debt mutual funds (giving a little over seven per cent) and fixed maturity plans (nine per cent).

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

How to Play Parabolic Gold Prices With a $2,500-8,000 Target


Where could gold hit over the next few weeks to months? I see gold hitting the $2,000 easily - and probably a jump to $2,500-3,000 is quite likely over the next year.
Briefly, what is driving gold and what are a few equity market plays aside from ETFs tied to the physical price of gold?

A Few Driving Forces

Why do people have a love affair with gold? Gold is malleable and aesthetically pleasing metal to work with. These qualities work well in the jewelry market. India and China made up 63% of the demand in recent jewelry demand, and depending on the month, the overall jewelry market makes up half of the gold demand. Over the past few quarters, investment in gold has made up one-third of the gold demand.
Then you have other forces that can push gold up: risk of holding fiat currency or even bonds due to political problems ranging from squabbling leaders to unsustainable spending, inflationary pressures against the dollar such as quantitative easing (printing money to artificially stimulate the economy), and central banks buying gold to mitigate some of the risk of paper currency. There are other factors, but you get the point.
But the real fundamental driving force of gold? Fear. As various news releases add sensational flair to global problems, the fear drives people towards what has been called a 'safe haven'... gold.
Where can you put your money where it is safe? Bonds? The banks? Stocks? Property? All of these have shown weakness of late so people naturally turn to what they view as being a protection. But an emotionally-priced commodity can present dangers as well - which we will briefly touch on in the conclusion.

Gold Forecast Price Target

While I put a one year price target of $2,500-3,000, it is difficult to know with any surety. Analysts usually just play it safe and set their targets somewhat above current prices. But I think some added 'shock news' as we toy with another recession and the convoluted problems of the euro-zone, compounded by inflationary stimulus - will see the U.S. dollar-based price of gold go much higher over the next few months.
You can analyze a few of the fundamentals on which to value gold, but my target is largely based on the recent steep climb that is getting dangerously close to setting up a parabolic price move. Fear is the catalyst, and I think resistance will be met at $2,000 based on it being a round psychological number. After some churning when it breaks that - we could see another big run between $2,500 and $3,000. Some people actually forecast the price of gold as reaching $8,000 per ounce - a price that seems very excessive to me. Of course, these targets are simply opinions, and the viewpoints vary greatly.

Exchange Traded Gold Stocks

Some like to play the futures or ETFs linked to the price of gold, but at these high prices I like to play it differently. If gold were to go up $900 per ounce - this would boost prices by 50% of the metal. But depending on margins - the profitability of a company might double or triple, or more. The buy-out value of smaller companies also go up in no small way when gold prices make large jumps. I prefer to scour the equity markets when prices are getting high. Here are a couple ways to play:
If you like to play the bigger exchanges, then you may want to screen for gold stocks with diluted earnings growth over 15% for the last 12 months, with forward growth expectations more than 15% per year, and decent relative price strength. This would give you the stocks AngloGold Ashanti Limited (AU) and Randgold Resources (GOLD) - both of which are ADRs. Then you are also left with Minefinders Corp. (MFN) and IAMGOLD (IAG).
Of these four stocks, I would say that GOLD is the strongest on a price chart having broken out past the $100 resistance. AU has resistance at $51 and IAG is in a neutral zone having just bounced off $18.50.

OTC Gold Stocks

But why limit yourself to the big exchanges? Some over-the-counter stocks have high potential also, although they are infrequently covered by analysts. These are often suitable for only extremely small amounts of highly speculative 'play' capital. Most people should not play these illiquid stocks.
  • SMXMF.OB - Samex Mining Corp. Prices have recently shot past the $1.40 peak of 2007. Keep in mind that although you are gaining some leverage tied into gold prices, there are few fundamentals to trade on in a stock like this. With a market cap of 188.5 million, prices can make gigantic swings with little warning.
  • SGAE.OB - Siga Resources has ridiculously thin volume. They are starting up a test plant as soon as next month. Again, the risk on these low liquidity stocks is extreme and even a moderate amount of investing could create huge problems in price slippage.

Looking-Forward

One scary thought associated to the quick-paced move of gold is that parabolic moves often have nasty downsides. If investors begin unloading when prices rocket up to $2,500, or wherever it settles, how will central banks react? With the U.S. having 74.2% of its reserve in gold, Germany at 71.4%, Italy at 71.2%, and France at 66.2%, how will they take a panic drop, if that should occur? If they begin to broadly sell in the attempt to preserve necessary sovereign value - it could get very nasty.
While I hope none of this happens - the recent increase in volatility around the world creates an unsettling feeling in the pit of my stomach that a handful of Tums won't take away.