Wed, Aug 20 2008, 13:33 GMT
by Adrian Ash
Gold Touches 4-Session High as Credit & Monetary Stimulus Hits UK, US and China
SPOT GOLD PRICES recovered one-half of an early 1.5% dip in London on Wednesday, trading $5 below Asia's four-session high of $818 per ounce as crude oil rose together with US stock futures.
The Euro dropped a cent to the Dollar and the British Pound slipped almost
1.5¢.
The Shanghai stock market closed more than 7% higher – its best one-day gain in
four months – on rumors of a post-Olympics stimulus package worth $58 billion.
"With developed market equity markets struggling to achieve consistent
gains," notes Manqoba Madinane for Standard Bank, "crude oil
volatility – coupled with currency market uncertainty – should focus investors'
attention on precious metal market developments."
Government bond yields held flat this morning, but "investment grade
credit spreads have widened," he adds.
In the US mortgage market – where loan applications fell 1.5% last week
according to new data from the MBA, down by one-third from mid-Aug. '07 – the
average 30-year loan now costs 2.8% above benchmark US Treasury bond yields.
"The spread had been about 1.8 percentage points," says Greg McBride,
senior analyst at BankRate.com, to MarketWatch.
"For at least the next few years, we're in a world of wider credit
spreads. Even once the credit crunch finally gets put to bed, that trend will
not reverse itself overnight."
Here in the United Kingdom, gross mortgage lending rose 5% last month from
June's record low, said the Council of Mortgage Lenders today.
Total credit creation, meantime, slowed by one-third from June's all-time
record of £51 billion ($95bn), but July still took the six-monthly average of
new private-sector debt to a fresh record – twice the level of three years ago.
The inflationary spurt came even as "labor demand
softened...investment intentions declined [and] there was a further pronounced
deceleration in construction and services output," according to today's Business
Conditions Survey from the Bank of England.
Across the Atlantic, "millions of Americans are already suffering"
from higher inflation and a slowing economy, says today's editorial in the New
York Times.
"We fear millions more will be hurt before this crisis ends. They cannot
wait until after the election for help."
The newspaper calls for Congress to fast-track $4 billion in state and city
grants to buy up empty homes, and also to "start crafting the next
stimulus bill" straight away, focusing on food stamps and infrastructure
projects "like repairing bridges and roads" instead of tax rebates.
The NY Times doesn't mention US interest rates, but the political
block against reversing the current 3.6% negative yield on cash savings remains
clear.
Back in the Gold Market,
meantime, "physical demand is robust," says Afshin Nabavi at Swiss
refining group MKS, speaking to Bloomberg today.
"We've not seen this level of demand for some time."
Patrick A. Heller, a US coin dealer, writes at Liberty Coin Service how the
current surge in private-investor demand means "premiums have jumped
significantly" as the Gold Price fell 20%
from mid-July.
"Both the American Eagle and South Africa Krugerrand premiums have jumped
about 2% relative to gold in just the past week. Canada one-ounce gold Maple
Leafs are up about 1%.
"Purchasers of such coins may have to wait three to five weeks before the
coins are available to fill their orders." (Prefer not to wait? Rather
not pay a premium? Want the same security enjoyed by the world's largest gold
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India gold demand has also leapt on the recent low prices. It accounted for 20%
of total world gold sales last year.
"Indian jewelers are paying gold importers more than double last month's
premiums," reports Reuters from New Delhi, "as they scramble to meet
a resurgence in demand stoked by...the approach of the Diwali festive season
[in late October]."
Dealers say the premium paid to India's gold importers have reached $1.80 per
kilo, up from 80-85 cents last month.
"Gold imports this month will be
close to 50 tonnes," reckons Harish Galipelli at local brokers Karvy
Comtrade.
One gold dealer interviewed by Reuters in Chennai says imports could rise even
further, overtaking last year's best monthly total of 79 tonnes.
Published on Wed, Aug 20 2008, 13:34 GMT
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