-- Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2012 | | Disqus
| Close | Gain/Loss |
Gold | $1711.30 | +$1.30 |
Silver | $33.42 | +$0.47 |
XAU | 167.82 | +2.53% |
HUI | 447.98 | +2.56% |
GDM | 1310.09 | +2.72% |
JSE Gold | 2233.48 | +1.67 |
USD | 79.89 | -0.17 |
Euro | 130.66 | +0.63 |
Yen | 120.17 | -1.02 |
Oil | $86.77 | +$0.98 |
10-Year | 1.697% | +0.048 |
T-Bond | 149.4375 | -0.9375 |
Dow | 13245.45 | -0.02% |
Nasdaq | 3013.81 | -0.28% |
S&P | 1428.48 | +0.04% |
The Metals:
Gold gained $8.94 to $1718.94 at about 9:45AM EST before it fell back to $1707.55 in the next hour of trade, but it then rose to a new session high of $1723.20 following today’s fed announcement and ended with a gain of 0.08%. Silver climbed $0.43 to $33.38 before it fell back near unchanged in late morning trade, but it then surged to as high $33.78 in afternoon trade and ended with a gain of 1.43%.
Euro gold fell to about €1310, platinum lost $7.50 to $1627.50, and copper climbed a couple of cents to about $3.69.
Gold and silver equities rose over 1.5% at the open before they halved those gains by midmorning, but they then rose to new highs following the fed announcement and ended with almost 3% gains.
The Economy:
Report | For | Reading | Expected | Previous |
Import Prices | Nov | -0.9% | - | 0.3% |
Import Prices ex-oil | Nov | -0.2% | - | 0.4% |
Export Prices | Nov | -0.7% | - | 0.0% |
Export Prices ex-ag. | Nov | -0.7% | - | 0.2% |
Treasury Budget | Nov | -$172.1B | -$172.0B | -$137.3B |
MBA Reports Recent Drop in Mortgage Rates LoanSafe
Federal Reserve lowers growth forecast Yahoo
Fed now sides with unemployed MarketWatch
Fed to buy more bonds, sets jobless threshold MarketWatch
Fed ramps up stimulus in new approach to support growth Reuters
Fed Boosts QE With $45 Billion in Monthly Treasury Purchases Bloomberg
Tomorrow brings Initial Jobless Claims, Retail Sales, PPI, and Business Inventories.
The Markets:
Charts Courtesy of http://finance.yahoo.com/
Oil remained higher after the Energy Information Administration reported that crude inventories rose 800,000 barrels, gasoline inventories rose 5.0 million barrels, and distillates rose 3.0 million barrels.
The U.S. dollar index and treasuries extended lower after today’s fed announcement.
The Dow, Nasdaq, and S&P initially climbed to new session highs following the fed’s announcement, but they then fell back off in late trade and ended near unchanged after Bernanke’s Q&A session.
Among the big names making news in the market today were JPMorgan, Avon, Costco, Berkshire Hathaway, Wal-Mart, and HSBC.
The Commentary:
“Gold is thus far responding to news coming out of the FOMC meeting as could have been expected. It is moving higher as traders build in a more inflationary scenario due to the addition (not at all unexpected by now) of a $45 billion/month Treasury purchase program by the Fed to replace the expired Operation Twist.
Again, this is old news as most pundits were already anticipating exactly this amount for the last few weeks now. My guess is that the FOMC was afraid of disappointing the markets with anything lower as the last thing they want heading into the end of the year is a disappearing equity market, which is exactly what they would have gotten had they done anything less than $40 billion.
With the $40 billion in MBS buying from QE3 and this $45 billion in what amounts to QE4, the Fed has now committed to $85 billion/month worth of dollar creation out of thin air for the foreseeable future. Annualized that comes out to $1.02 TRILLION in magic money. Any wonder why the Dollar is dropping today? The only marvel is that the thing has not disappeared into the abyss already. Were it not for the fact that the Japanese are planning on adulterating their Yen into the nether regions and that the Southern Euro Zone is a basket case, the Dollar would have already dropped through 76 on the charts on its way to the all-time low.
Either way, what we are getting in the way of cheers for a further continuation of this monetary madness from our Central Bank reminds me of a scene from the old Sci-Fi "Logan's Run". In that mid-seventies movie, there is a scene in which all those whose time is up and whose palm red light is flashing (meaning that they are scheduled for ascension) cheer as their bodies float upwards into the termination zone where they explode and fizzle away into nothingness.
It sure seems to me like Wall Street is cheering while the collective red lights of the palms of the US citizenry are blinking. Make no mistake about it - it is the average citizen who is going to pay the price of this folly in banking madness as the hedge fund crowd will now have a green light to further plow money into "risk assets". That means higher prices lie ahead as the Dollar is further eroded by its keepers.
The only thing that really matters however to our monetary lords is that the equities market will continue to take the path of least resistance and that means higher. Don't forget the level of the US stock markets are now national security issues to our central planners meaning that they will not permit bear markets, ever, even if it means creating trillions in funny money and making it almost impossible for seniors and those living on fixed income investments to earn a decent rate of return on their life's savings. What the Fed believes it can do, and thus far one would have to agree that it has, is to permanently prevent BEAR MARKETS in equities. Mourn for what is left of "free market capitalism". It no longer exists having died in 2008 when the monetary madness sprang into being.
Yes, welcome to the investing generation, forced by the Fed to shove its money into the stock market even if there are some who do not want anything at all risky and seek only conservative investments. Finding such investment vehicles in such an environment is a challenge to all but those who have the good fortune to be able to qualify for products offered only to those whose wealth meets a certain criteria. The rest of them are screwed. Love those high yields on one year CD's at the bank? Glad to hear it because that is all you are going to get for at least another full year and beyond!
The only thing keeping the commodity sector as a whole from powering sharply higher is the unpleasant fact that the economy is stagnant and going nowhere in a hurry. The moribund employment situation and small business fears over the future are preventing it from gaining any significant traction. All the while a rapacious central government continues to swallow up more and more capital in order to sustain itself. Just today the news was reported that the Federal Budget deficit for the month of November was an amazing $172.11 BILION. Try annualizing that and you come up with a number over $2 TRILLION. No worries though; everything is just fine as Ben and da boyz have spiked the punch bowl once again.
I have a big question for Bernanke and company - today they came out and stated that they have a target rate of 6.5% UNEMPLOYMENT that will give them a reason to change course on the interest rate front. Here is the question:
Does that mean if the size of the labor force continues to shrink, bringing the unemployment rate lower without necessarily translating to any true gains in the overall employment picture, that the Fed will raise interest rates if the unemployment number magically drops to 6.5%? What data are they going to use? Keep in mind that the labor force here in the US continues to shrink as more and more people simply have given up looking for a job. You get enough of this long enough and before long, the unemployment rate magically moves lower.
The other thing that Bernanke and company stated was that they had a target inflation rate of being below 2.5% for "one to two years ahead" to maintain the current near zero interest rate policy. Which numbers are they going to use (we all know the answer to this already), the doctored and useless government's CPI or something more realistic with an actual connection to reality?
In my opinion everyone on that FOMC Committee should be unceremonially canned with the exception of Richmond Fed Governor Lacker who is in opposition to this idiocy of endless money creation. As I have stated many times before, if creating lasting prosperity was as easy as printing money into existence out of thin air, other nations, kingdoms or empires would have figured it out years before we did. History however has a way of clarifying such things and its verdict will be devastating to this band of elitists at the Fed.
Back to gold - the metal moved up on the news but could not clear resistance at the 50 day moving average near $1728. Until it does, rallies will be sold. If it can power through that level, some of the funds who had been shorting the market will cover. There will also be new money flows coming in from the momentum crowd that will let the market make a run at $1740. It will have to take that out before it can test $1760.
Downside support should be firm now in gold since the Fed is basically attempting to foster an inflationary environment and stave off the deflationary fallout from the excessive debt levels that still plague this economy.
As we enter further into the holiday period, look for liquidity at the Comex to begin shrinking as players square positions and take off for the holidays. We might get some pretty wild price swings as a result. Just be forewarned.
Next year promises to be interesting to say the least with over $1 TRILLION in freshly minted money looking for a home.
The mining shares are doing the same thing they did way back when the first round of QE was introduced in late 2008 - they are outperforming the metal to the upside. The HUI is currently up more than 3% as I type these comments having cleared not only resistance at 440, but also at 450. It has improved its poor chart by so doing but has yet to clear a big batch of overhead selling resistance that will come in near 461 - 464. It will take a weekly push through that level to confirm a solid bottom. For now, it appears that the floor is in with the most likely outcome moving forward being a range trade unless we get some more nervous shorts seeking to cover in the mining sector.
One last chart I will leave you with - if you think the Fed is debauching our own Dollar by design, you are of course correct. As bad as that it, is apparently is nothing compared to what the Japanese are doing to their currency. Take a look at this chart of Gold priced in Yen terms. It is closing in on a lifetime high. Kiss Japan goodbye - its aging population and failure to honestly address its fiscal excesses have taken their inevitable toll on its currency. The standard of living for the poor citizenry there will continue to decline, as of course will that of the average US citizen here. I will caution the readers with a bit of history - in such environments DEMAGOGUES always arise and find a captive audience more than ready to accept their rantings.”- Dan Norcini, More at http://www.traderdannorcini.blogspot.com/
GATA Posts:
But how could the government ever indict its own market-rigging agents?
In India, 'investment in gold is like social security'
Gold mining CEOs told to fix slump as investors prove restless
SS boots Liberty Dollars off eBay but no prosecution of HSBC money launderers
James Turk: Why everyone should have a precious metals portfolio
The Statistics:
As of close of business: 12/11/2012
Gold Warehouse Stocks: | 11,459,040.175 | +38,805.05 |
Silver Warehouse Stocks: | 146,895,684.911 | -28,690.50 |
Global Gold ETF Holdings
[WGC Sponsored ETF’s]
| Product name | Total Tonnes | Total Ounces | Total Value |
New York Stock Exchange Arca (NYSE Arca) AND Singapore Exchange (SGX) AND Tokyo Stock Exchange (TSE) AND Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKEx) | SPDR® Gold Shares | 1351.423 | 43,449,600 | US$74,557m |
London Stock Exchange (LSE) AND NYSE Euronext Paris AND Borsa Italiana AND Frankfurter Wertpapierbörse (Deutsche Börse - Xetra) | Gold Bullion Securities | 139.93 | 4,498,818 | US$7,708m |
London Stock Exchange (LSE) AND NYSE Euronext Paris AND Borsa Italiana AND Frankfurter Wertpapierbörse (Deutsche Börse - Xetra) AND NYSE Euronext Amsterdam | ETFS Physical Gold | 159.59 | 5,130,845 | US$8,367m |
Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) | Gold Bullion Securities | 11.16 | 358,789 | US$615m |
Johannesburg Securities Exchange (JSE) | New Gold Debentures | 42.45 | 1,364,715 | US$2,214m |
Note: Change in Total Tonnes from yesterday’s data: SPDR subtracted 1.923 tonnes.
COMEX Gold Trust (IAU) Total Tonnes in Trust: 215.94: No change from yesterday’s data.
Silver Trust (SLV) Total Tonnes in Trust: 9,829.15: No change from yesterday’s data.
The Miners:
Tanzanian Royalty’s (TRX) access agreement, Aurizon’s (AZK) exploration results, and Seabridge’s (SA) drill program were among the big stories in the gold and silver mining industry making headlines today.
WINNERS
1. Seabridge | SA +9.11% $17.60 |
2. AuRico | AUQ +6.67% $8.32 |
3. Comstock | LODE+6.17% $2.41 |
LOSERS
1. Northern Dynasty | NAK -2.00% $3.43 |
2. Banro | BAA -1.86% $3.16 |
3. Timmins | TGD -1.55% $3.17 |
Winners & Losers tracks NYSE and AMEX listed gold and silver mining stocks that trade over $1.
Please see Yahoo’s Mining/Metals News Wire for all of today’s mining news.
- Chris Mullen, Gold Seeker Report
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-- Posted Wednesday, 12 December 2012 | Digg This Article | Source: GoldSeek.com