Category: Gold


A Mad Rush as Gold Bugs Get the Boot

[gold]
Interesting article from the WSJ about how HSBC PLC owner of one of the biggest vaults in the U.S. is telling it’s clients to remove their gold from its vaults.

Fleets of armored trucks piled with gold bars and coins have been streaming out of midtown Manhattan in one unexpected consequence of the gold craze.

Amid gold’s rise — it has gained 32% this year and reached a record on Monday — investors have been loading up on bullion and coins. One big problem now is where to store it. The solution from HSBC, owner of one of the biggest vaults in the U.S.: somewhere else.

HSBC has told retail clients to remove their small holdings from its fortress beneath its tower on New York City’s Fifth Avenue. The bank has decided retail customers aren’t profitable enough and is demanding those clients remove their gold to make room for more lucrative institutional customers.

Source: WSJ

Gold Bulls Set New Target For Rally: $1,300 an Ounce

Another good Gold article from WSJ.

Gold prices could rise to as high as $1,300 an ounce in the near-term as inflation concerns and the likelihood of continuing dollar weakness draws buyers.

Gold set a record Wednesday, building on this month’s rally.

The nearby November contract rose $12.10 to $1,114, after setting an intraday record of $1,117.60 on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. Most-active December gold also rose $12.10, to $1,114.60. Spot gold hit $1,118.70.

The November gold contract has risen nearly 7.2% this month and is up 26% for the year.

The dollar is likely to remain weak as long as U.S. interest rates remain low, making gold an attractive alternative to paper currency.

Source: WSJ

Gold Runs Back Toward $1,000 an Ounce

gold

On Tuesday, gold settled at $983.20 a troy ounce, up 0.5%, and is now just 2% shy of its all-time high of $1,003.20 scored in March 2008.

Among the main drivers is the decline in the U.S. dollar — a result, many analysts say, of a conviction that the global economy is on the path to recovery, thanks to central banks’ stimulus efforts. Dollar-denominated commodities like gold typically rise when the dollar falls, as producers ask for higher prices and consumers outside the U.S. buy more. While the dollar has dropped 9% since mid-April, gold has gained 13%.

Also fueling the rally has been the fear that the Federal Reserve and others won’t be able to control inflation once those stimulus efforts kick in. Hard assets like gold are seen as a good hedge against rising prices as they tend to retain their value.

The rally has caught many in the market off guard. Gold has averaged $910 this year, surpassing analysts’ forecast of $881, as calculated by the London Bullion Market Association.

HSBC in May raised its 2009 gold forecast by $50 to $875 an ounce; French investment bank Natixis recently said it expected gold to average $885 this year.

Source: WSJ

WSJ: Banks Show Midas Touch With Their Bets on Bullion

gold bullion of 1,000, 500, 250 and 50 grams

Gold is proving to be some banks’ silver lining.

Precious-metals trading is typically a small part of banking operations, especially compared to their larger bond and equity desks. But as writedowns, withering trading volumes and limited deal flow have become the norm, any glimmer of revenue helps.

“Throughout my 14-year career in gold, I have never been busier,” UBS AG’s global metals strategist John Reade said on a conference call Friday with clients. He said he’d been “nearly overwhelmed” by inquiries from clients looking to gain exposure to gold.

UBS, HSBC Holdings PLC, and Scotiabank in Canada are among a handful of financial institutions that have maintained a significant bullion business, physically handling gold bars kept behind vaults. Most banks have scaled back or abandoned this line of work, because gold prices were so depressed during the 1980s and 1990s.

While many banks have left the bullion business, others, such as UBS, HSBC and Scotiabank, have recently profited from trading in precious metals. Here, gold bullion of 1,000, 500, 250 and 50 grams.

Banks generally make money selling bullion bars and related financial instruments, while also collecting a small fee for housing actual bullion bars for other investors.

Over the last four months gold has risen nearly 32%, though it fell last week, closing Friday at $929.80 per troy ounce.

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Newsweek: Cash In A Mattress? No, Gold In The Closet

With prices setting new records, the worried wealthy are piling up ingots in home safes. NEWSWEEK goes shopping for precious metal.

By Lisa Miller

A hundred-ounce gold bar, when you hold it in your hand, is surprisingly small and even more surprisingly heavy. It’s somewhat longer and fatter than a Hershey bar, but it weighs six-plus pounds—as much as your old calculus textbook. Its color is unforgettable. Pure gold is gold. It’s not like your wedding ring or your grandmother’s bracelet. It’s a deep, dense yellow, the way the ocean is deep blue, and it sparkles. You can understand at last why the Bible says the streets of heaven are paved with it.

On the day I held the gold bar in my hand, it was worth nearly $100,000. My companion—an established, accomplished, affluent businessman of retirement age—had bought it as a hedge against the sinking Dow and his fear that Obama’s stimulus package will inevitably trigger wild inflation. We had picked it up in the basement of an HSBC bank branch in midtown Manhattan. When I handed it back to him, he put it in his briefcase. We went upstairs, past guards, through metal doors. Out on the street, we said goodbye and I watched him go, a tall, thin man carrying a $100,000 briefcase. He doesn’t want me to tell you his name—or, really, anything about him—because he’s keeping the gold in a safe in his basement. His friends, he says, are doing the same thing. “There is an increase in the number of wise, reasonable, well-read, well-intentioned people who are buying some gold and putting it aside,” says Dennis Gartman, editor of The Gartman Letter, a daily analysis of financial news.

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WSJ: Bearish Big Investors Catch Gold Bug

[Gold Futures]

Large investors, including some who anticipated troubles for the housing and financial sectors, have been buying gold, concerned that moves by governments to shovel money at problem areas could cripple leading currencies.

Firms such as Eton Park Capital Management LP, Greenlight Capital Inc., Hayman Advisors LP and Paulson & Co. have been ramping up gold exposure in recent months, according to investors in the funds. Blue Ridge Capital Holdings LLC and Highfields Capital Management LP also have been recent buyers, according to public filings about their year-end holdings. Those two firms couldn’t be reached for comment Sunday.

Some of these funds have become among the largest holders of gold exchange-traded funds, such as the SPDR Gold Shares ETF, while also buying gold futures contracts, swaps and even physical bars of the yellow metal.

For years, gold fans often were fast-moving traders and so-called gold bugs, a crowd of bears ever-convinced that the underpinnings of global economies and markets were set to crumble and inflation about to soar. Gold has disappointed some investors because it hasn’t been a home-run investment despite recent financial ills.

The recent purchases of gold by the hedge-fund investors, some of whom have top records, suggests they are coming to share deep worries about the health of global economies and how ongoing problems are being addressed.

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Live from the Ultra High Relief ceremony at the Philadelphia Mint

2009uhrobverse1PHILADELPHIA – United States Mint Director Edmund C. Moy was on hand at the Philadelphia Mint for a ribbon cutting to commemorate the public release of the 2009 Ultra High Relief (UHR) Double Eagle gold coin. About 40 people were in attendance including several members of the Mint’s executive staff from Washington.

Director Moy opened the exhibit to the public which consisted of three display cases similar to those seen in the Mint booth at the ANA show in Baltimore this July. The first two display cases contained test UHR strikes at various tonnages, two plaster sculptures of the obverse and reverse of the UHR design:

700_1094

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Video of the new Ultra High Relief gold coin

2009 Ultra High Relief Gold Double Eagle Coin

2009 Ultra High Relief Gold Double Eagle Coin


Experts commend the new 2009 Ultra High Relief Gold Coin. Watch the video!

Mint sets price on ultra high relief gold double eagle

2009uhrobverse1A post on the Mint News Blog provides collectors with the price for the 2009 Ultra High Relief Gold Double Eagle.

The new pricing methodology is based primarily on the London Fix weekly average (average of the London Fix prices covering the previous Thursday a.m. Fix through the Wednesday a.m. Fix) platinum and gold prices, which reflect the market value of the platinum and gold bullion that these products contain.

As required by law, the prices of these products also must be sufficient to recover all other costs incurred by the United States Mint, such as the cost of minting, marketing, and distributing such products (including labor, materials, dies, use of machinery, and promotional and overhead expenses).

This pricing methodology will allow the United States Mint to change the prices of these products as often as weekly so they better reflect the costs of platinum and gold on the open markets.

Provided the average price of gold remains between $850 and $899.99, the price of the coin will be $1,239.00.

Where to find the best deals in gold bullion

This piece by Jeff Clark, editor, BIG GOLD (courtesy of Daily Wealth) is worthy of a read.

As long-time readers of Casey Research know, I believe owning real, physical gold is rule No. 1 when it comes to protecting your family’s finances from a potential dollar crisis.

And if you’ve tried to buy gold in the past few months, you know many investors are coming around to this line of thinking. The premiums folks have to pay now to own physical gold have shot up to historic highs… with the Royal Canadian Mint reporting being “busier than we’ve ever been.” Coins are still hard to find, and premiums remain unusually high.

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