Gold Holds Below €1000 But "Risk Trade" Revived by Greek Downgrade, Spanish Bank Warning
Commodities / Gold and Silver 2010 Jun 15, 2010 - 08:30 AM GMTBy: Adrian_Ash
THE  PRICE OF WHOLESALE BULLION for Dollar investor  wanting to buy gold early Tuesday edged up to $1226 an ounce as stocks, commodities and currencies  were also little changed.
  
  Asian stock markets ended the day flat. European equities crept higher as the  Euro ticked towards Monday's two-week high just below $1.23.
Crude oil held just above $75 per barrel, and silver prices crept back towards Monday's new June highs at $18.58 an ounce.
Gold priced in Euros held below €1000 an  ounce (€32,000 per kilo).
  
  "A lot of the risk trade has abated with a rally in the Euro," said a  Chicago futures trader to Bloomberg on Monday – a "difficult session"  according to one London gold  dealer.
  
  "That's the biggest reason to sell gold."
  
  Gold recovered half of yesterday's earlier losses, however, after a further  downgrade of Greek government bonds by Moody's Investor Services – a decision  called "both surprising and unfortunate" by European commissioner  Olli Rehn today.
  
  The decision means Citibank and Barclays Capital will remove some of Athens'  debt from their investment-grade government bond indices, forcing a sale of perhaps  €20 billion worth by index-tracking fund managers.
  
  Previously needing to raise €53 billion this year, Athens can now call upon the  joint EU-International Monetary Fund rescue package, currently priced at  €110bn.
  
  "If the Spanish state has difficulty in financing itself outside Spain,  then the difficulties will be even greater for those in the private  sector," said Spanish bank BBVA's chairman Francisco Gonzalez on Monday. 
  
  Deutsche Bank notes that Eurozone banks must raise €700 billion over the next  three years, just to repay maturing debt and interest payments.
  
  "It's not easy to say why the Euro has spiked back up recently,"  writes Steven Barrow, chief currency strategist at Standard Bank in London.
  
  "Most likely it is for no real reason other than the market is very  short."
  
  Comparing the single currency union with the United States, "The Eurozone  is a lot closer to the edge [of a double dip recession] given the significant  fiscal restraints.
  
  "So...the Euro should peel away to parity over the long haul."
  
  Across in the US, however, "The economic reports for May are rolling  in," says The Atlantic magazine,  "and so far they're pretty ugly.
  
  "The economy [has] seemed to take a step back."
  
  New data today showed US import price inflation slowing sharply as the Dollar  rose on the currency market in May.
  
  UK retail-price inflation rose at the fastest quarterly pace in 19 years, while  Germany's ZEW economic sentiment survey showed a marked down-turn.
  
  "The challenge for gold is to replicate the heightened ETF demand  that occurred in the second half of May," says Edel Tully, chief metals  strategist at Swiss bank UBS's London office.
  
  "On the scrap-supply front, metal is visible, but this supply source is  not at extreme levels. Jewelry demand from India and other regional hubs in  Asia is also sedate."
  
  Western gold  ETF holdings "rose for the twelfth consecutive week" in the five  trading days to last Tuesday, notes the VM Group consultancy in its weekly  investment update.
In the leveraged US gold  futures market, "Comex net longs rose for the second consecutive  week."
  
  Even so, "A lot of average Americans are eager to sell...[rather than]  clamoring to buy gold,"  says the San Francisco Chronicle.
  
  "Bubbles never blow up without the American investor class being  overexposed to the item that's in the bubble," reckons Nick Zaharias, a  hedge-fund consultant quoted by the paper.
  
  He currently holds 30% of his family's assets in gold.
  
"If gold were near a peak, people would be buying, not selling gold at  house parties," he says.
By Adrian Ash 
  BullionVault.com 
Gold price chart, no delay | Free Report: 5 Myths of the Gold Market 
Formerly City  correspondent for The Daily Reckoning in London and a regular contributor to MoneyWeek magazine, Adrian Ash is the editor of Gold News  and head of research at www.BullionVault.com , giving you direct access to investment gold, vaulted in Zurich , on $3 spreads and 0.8% dealing fees. 
(c) BullionVault 2010
Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.
© 2005-2022 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.
	

  