Tue, Oct 7 2008, 13:10 GMT
by Adrian Ash
GOLD BULLION PRICES rose further in London on Tuesday,
touching $888 an ounce and unwinding last week's action entirely as world stock
markets rallied from their new record sell-off.
Rumors starting late in New York ran from Tokyo to London, claiming that the US
Fed and other big central banks are set to slash global interest rates in joint
action.
"If this doesn't come to fruition we could be a whole world of
trouble," says the chief dealer at I.G. Markets in London.
The "silent run" meantime continued on troubled banks – enabled by
internet cash transfers and encouraged by Competitive Bail-Outs in Europe –
with shares in RBS, one of the world's 10 largest banks, losing half their
value from last week's close on rumors it's seeking emergency aid from the UK
government.
Trying to revive its slowing economy, the Reserve Bank of Australia today
slashed its target interest rate by a surprise 1%, helping the ASX share index
reverse an early 3% fall.
India's central bank cut its rate by 0.5% in Mumbai. As recently as July it hiked
the cost of money to fight inflation – then at a 13-year high.
The US Federal Reserve, meantime, may start making unsecured loans for the
first time in its history, says a report in the Financial Times,
buying "commercial paper" – issued by banks to fund business and
consumer loans – directly.
Iceland today nationalized the failing Landsbanki, the tiny country's
second-largest bank, and entered talks to secure an emergency $5.4 billion loan
from Russia.
"With oil prices collapsing and international banks being routed,"
said the chief of Libya's National Oil Corp. – calling for an emergency meeting
of the Opec oil cartel – "it's better to keep our oil underground."
Crude oil managed its first bounce today bounced to $89 per barrel after losing
Gold today recorded a London Fix of $881.75 an
ounce, more than 5.4% above Monday morning and almost one-fifth above this time
in 2007.
The S&P index of US stocks has lost almost one-third of its value since
then.
European stock markets bounced meantime, adding 1% in London after yesterday's
21-year record plunge. Germany's Dax index, however, recovered just 13 points
of the 1,034 lost since the start of Sept.
German factory orders slumped 7.6% in August from the same month last year.
Six-month British gilt yields sank below 3.0% as large investors piled into
government paper. Borrowing 6-month gilts overnight, in contrast, now costs
4.58% annualized.
"There's still a massive lack of confidence in [the interbank lending]
market," says Jan Misch, a money-market trader at Landesbank
Baden-Wuerttemberg in Stuttgart, Germany.
"The more we talk about it, the more it becomes a self- fulfilling
prophecy. Sentiment hasn't improved much and rates remain at elevated
levels."
Today the Bank of England auctioned £40 billion ($70bn) of short-term money in
exchange for a much-widened range of collateral, now including
"AAA-rated" securities backed by corporate and consumer loans, as
well as commercial paper.
"The weekly extended collateral repos will continue until at least Tuesday
18 November," says the Old Lady.
The Gold
Price in British Pounds meantime came within a whisker of setting new
all-time highs above £510 per ounce, rising more than 3.6%.
European investors also saw Gold leap towards the record high it set back in
March, adding 2.9% to €655 an ounce.
Converted into old German Deutsche Marks, gold today recorded only its 32nd
ever morning London Gold Fix
above DM 40,000 per kilo.
Eleven of those have come since Feb. this year.
Published on Tue, Oct 7 2008, 13:11 GMT
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