Gold Jumps to Month-High as "Tough
Talking" Central Banks Fail to Act Against Inflation in US, Europe and
London; Oil Gains, Finance Stocks Plunge
-- Posted Thursday, 26 June 2008 |
London Gold Market
Report
from Adrian Ash
THE SPOT PRICE OF
GOLD jumped
ahead of the Wall Street opening on Thursday after the Federal Reserve left
US interest rates some 2.0% below the rate of inflation.
Breaking $908 per ounce, Gold rose above last week's closing level as
crude oil bounced and the US Dollar fell hard on the currency markets.
The London Gold Fix had earlier recorded its best level since
Monday morning at $892.50.
"Given gold's sensitivity to
inflation and the monetary response to inflation," says James Steel,
metals analyst at banking giant HSBC, "we believe the Fed's statement
is bullish for Gold Prices.
"While accepting the
uncertainty surrounding inflation, the Fed has yet to raise rates."
Despite the Fed's continued "tough talk", the Dollar fell
this morning to a one-month low vs. the British Pound at $1.9840 after the
's chief central banker, Mervyn King, also hinted at interest-rate rises
ahead.
"Although inflation is rising now [at a 16-year
record], we will ensure it falls back to target," he promised a
parliamentary committee in London.
Yet the Bank of England has actually cut interest
rates three times since Dec., however, hoping to defend the fast-falling
housing market.
The currency also slipped today to a 13-session
low vs. the Euro at $1.5725 on news that growth in the Eurozone money
supply hit 10.4% in May.
Founded 10 years ago – and only
today closing public tenders to construct its long-awaited premises in
Frankfurt,
– the European Central Bank has quietly abandoned its money-supply
target of 4.5% per year.
The latest surge in European credit
growth was led by a jump of more than one-fifth in new issues of short-term
debt.
"This news will do little to dilute the ECB's concern
over inflationary pressures," believes Howard Archer at the Global
Insight research consultancy in London. "It reinforces the belief
that the ECB will press ahead with a rate rise from 4.0% to 4.25% when it
meets next Thursday."
But not waiting for Europe's central bankers to defend the value of
money, however, investors bid the Gold Price in Euros back above €570
per ounce to stand almost 19% higher from this time last year.
The Dax index of German equities meantime fell 1.9% to stand almost
one-sixth lower from June 2007.
Fortis, the Dutch-Belgian bank,
led a sharp drop in European financial stocks by saying it wants to raise
€8.8 billion ($13.8bn) to shore up its balance sheet.
"A gloomy report from Albert Edwards, global strategist at
Société Générale, said that equity markets
could lose 70% of their value from the peaks of October last year,"
adds the Financial Times.
"If that prediction were to be
realized, the FTSE100 [in London] would fall to around
3,000."
On the data front, meantime, consumer prices in
Saxony rose 3.4% in the year to June, the
German state's statistics office said today. In Hesse, the official inflation rate rose to 3.8%
annually, driven by a 61% jump in fuel prices.
"Energy
costs make up one-third of the cost of Gold production," notes John
Ing of broking and research firm Maison Placements in Toronto, .
Whilst favoring Agnico-Eagle Mines and Kinross Gold Corp. for their
current mine development work, "Gold Prices need to go higher to help
justify the huge capital expenditures needed," Ing tells the Globe & Mail newspaper.
"Everybody calls prices going up 'inflation'," agrees
Martin Murenbeeld, head of economics at the $2.9bn Dundee Wealth Management
group. "But a lot of the prices going up are supply and demand
signals."
"The US Federal Reserve...can just jawbone
and hope food & energy doesn't work itself through the labor-force wage
structure."
Wage inflation is already rising fast in 's
mining industry, reports the latest Commodities Weekly from Standard Bank in Johannesburg.
The bank's precious metals team cite the "notable"
supply-side event of Anglo Platinum – the world's No.1 platinum miner
– giving its workers "a wage top-up to cope with the recent rise
in South African inflation, now running at more than 10% per year.
"With inflation in South Africa in 2008 likely to be above the
negotiated increase of 2007 for many mine workers, 2009 negotiations are
likely to be tough," Standard Bank adds, "as labor unions are
seeking maximum wage hikes in an environment where costs for miners are
rising fast."
In South Africa today – where more than
200 people died in mine-working accidents in 2007 – the world's No.4
gold miner Gold Fields closed a shaft at the crucial Kloof site after two
workers died following a tremor.
That brings the number of
deaths at Gold Fields' local operations to 21 so far this year. The company
didn't say how much production will be lost due to the closure.
The latest US Geological Survey says that 2007 saw South Africa overtaken
by Australia as the world's No.1 gold producing nation.
Previous
research from the GFMS consultancy based in London had put China in first
place.
South African gold output has more than halved in the
last decade; Australian output fell 7% in the year to June; the investment
manager of Zijin Mining – China's largest gold miner – has said
that sharp growth in Chinese Gold mining could see its entire reserves
depleted by 2014.
Adrian Ash
Formerly City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning
in London and head of editorial at the UK's leading financial advisory for
private investors, Adrian Ash is the editor of Gold News
and head of research at BullionVault – where you can Buy Gold Today
vaulted in Zurich on $3 spreads and 0.8% dealing
fees.
(c) BullionVault
2008
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