Search This Blog

May 6, 2011

Jim Sinclair says ‘relax', don't do it - don't sell your gold!

Jim Sinclair says 'relax', don't do it - don't sell your gold!

Some commentators now see gold - and silver - ripe for recovery with the suggestion that like the rise, the subsequent falls may have been too far too fast. Others disagree.

Author: Lawrence Williams
Posted:  Friday , 06 May 2011 

LONDON - 

The correction in the gold price and the sharp plunge in silver had been anticipated by a number of commentators, although the rapidity and depth of the sell-off may not have been expected, but it is interesting now that some of those who called the top are already suggesting that it may be time to move back in.


Notable among these is Peter Grandich of the well respected Grandich Letter who recommended selling gold and silver right at the top and is already telling readers to start climbing back in.  Grandich says: "After literally getting out within minutes of the top in silver and gold and then watching a decline I anticipated could take weeks or months happen in a matter of days, I believe it's time to go back in and buy back those positions.  I may be 10% too early but we have plenty of room given what we sidestepped.  So I'm now back in fully in gold and silver."

Looking at what has happened in the past week, gold has lost, from peak to current levels, just under $100 - a fall of around 6% which is not massive in the scheme of things.  Silver though has lost around 30% from its peak.  Momentum had carried it up far faster than was reasonable and at least one commentator had described the silver price surge, and subsequent fall back, as "an accident waiting to happen".  It had risen too far too fast and to an extent the euphoria so generated had probably been partly responsible for dragging gold up a little faster than expected, or warranted.

In a similar manner, silver's initial stumble, and then sharp plunge, may have also been a factor in gold losing its lustre. 

But the sell-off hasn't just been in precious metals.  Revived general doubts about global economic strength have run over into most commodities, with investors scrambling for what they see as a safe haven - but in this respect it has been the dollar they have turned to, rather than gold and there has been a recovery in the dollar index over the past day or so which has been another contributing factor in the precious metals' decline.

More sober analysis suggests, though, that the dollar is not worthy of a revival as long as the U.S. Fed keeps on pumping money out to the banks, and then supposedly to the U.S. economy as a whole - although there are serious doubts about how much of this government largesse is actually filtering down the line.  History tells us that money printing on this kind of scale eventually has to lead to inflation - indeed to severe inflation.  Perhaps the banks' sticky fingers have to an extent prevented this from happening so far with the government money finding its way to the investment community and boosting the stock markets rather than the economy as a whole.  - Another bubble waiting to burst?

Indeed all the factors which had led to the rise of gold - we'll leave silver out of it for the moment because it was speculative fervour largely responsible for that metal's over the top advance - are still with us, and at some stage the investment community will recognise this and move back into gold as the haven of preference.  Whether that will happen now - or later in the year, remains to be seen.

Long term gold proponent, Jim Sinclair, who has quite a following, advises gold holders to "relax".  He's looking for a major upturn in gold as soon as June and is still targeting $5,000 as a longer term objective.  This seems far-fetched - but then people would have said that about $1,000 gold, let alone $1500,  only two or three years ago.

As for silver, will we see another meteoric rise if gold does recover first.  Perhaps too many people got their fingers burnt in the recent rise for a similar surge to happen in the short to medium term, and there could still be ground here for further falls befor the price stabilises and starts to rise again.  Maybe a return to a gold:silver ratio of nearer 45:1 or higher (currently 42.5) may be on the cards before real progress starts to be made again here.

On the bearish side, however, there are those who suggest that the decline in gold and silver may not be done yet.  Technical analyst, Dr Nu Yu, points to a "Three Peaks and a Domed House" chart pattern - I guess this means something to the technical analysis community - suggesting a gold price fall of 17% to around $1290 by June, but offers no further projections beyond then.  His chart is shown below courtesy ofwww.munknee.com.

 

As with economists, so it is with gold analysts.  There are always drastically opposing views.



May 4, 2011

Glencore lists fraud, criminal case among IPO risks - Yahoo! Finance

Glencore lists fraud, criminal case among IPO risks

On Wednesday May 4, 2011, 1:23 pm

By Clara Ferreira-Marques and Quentin Webb

LONDON (Reuters) - Commodity trader Glencore, set to list this month in one of London's largest-ever offerings, has detailed its involvement in a Belgian criminal probe as it outlines risks to investors, including fraud and corruption.

Glencore said in a prospectus on Wednesday, ahead of its planned $11 billion listing, that its subsidiary Glencore Grain Rotterdam, a former employee and a current employee had been charged in a criminal case in Belgium.

Glencore said the criminal investigation was probing a public official, the European Commission's Directorate General for Agriculture and others for "violation of professional secrecy, corruption of an international civil servant and criminal conspiracy."

Glencore's unit and its current and former employees have been charged with having committed corruption in exchange for information on European export subsidies, it added.

The case was initiated in 2003, with co-operation from Dutch and French police, and covers facts dating from 1999 to 2003.

Commission agriculture spokesman Roger Waite confirmed that the EU executive expected a trial into alleged corruption by former agriculture department official Karel Brus.

Brus, a Dutch national, is accused of having passed confidential information relating to EU export subsidy application decisions to a French farming lobbyist between 1999 and 2003.

"As far as the Commission is concerned, we cannot comment further on an ongoing investigation," Waite said.

Glencore declined to comment on the case beyond details included in the prospectus. It says it is not involved in legal proceedings which could have a material impact on its profits.

Belgium's federal prosecutor confirmed on Wednesday that there is a criminal case against Glencore but declined to comment further. The case will be heard in Brussels on May 12.

The Commission, the European Union's executive arm, has become a civil party to the case, Glencore said.

FRAUD RISK

Glencore also listed in its prospectus over 30 other risks to the broader company, its marketing and trading operations.

The formerly publicity-averse trader and miner operates around the world and says its willingness to move into riskier countries in Eastern Europe, Central Africa and South America before rivals gives it a "first-mover advantage."

Companies typically outline a vast number of risks to future performance in the run-up to a listing, in order to satisfy requirements to provide a full picture for future investors.

Glencore, however, detailed more than many, with risks including declines in demand for commodities, geopolitical risk and the risk it may not be able to retain key employees.

It also raised the risk of fraud and corruption, "both internally and externally."

"Glencore's marketing operations are large in scale, which may make fraudulent or accidental transactions difficult to detect. In addition, some of Glencore's industrial activities are located in countries where corruption is generally understood to exist," the company said.

Glencore said it has internal controls, external due diligence and compliance policies.

(Additional reporting by Ben Deighton and Charlie Dunmore in Brussels; Editing by Alexander Smith and Mike Nesbit)

Mexican Central Bank buys almost 100t of gold (FT.com)

Golden future ahead. 

Sent from a wireless device.

Begin forwarded message:

 Mexican Central Bank buys almost 100t of gold (FT.com)

By Jack Farchy in LondonPublished: May 4 2011 11:35 | Last updated: May 4 2011

 

The central bank of Mexico bought nearly 100 tonnes of gold in February and March, the latest emerging market country to turn to bullion as a means of diversifying away from the faltering dollar.The purchase is one of the largest by a central bank in recent history. The gold, worth $4.6bn at current prices, is equivalent to about 3.5 per cent of annual mined output.- The central bank has not been publicly announced the move, but has reported it both on its own balance sheet, posted online, and to the International Monetary Fund's statistics on international reserves.Central banks became net buyers of gold last year after two decades of heavy selling, a dramatic reversal that has helped propel the price of bullion to a series of record highs.On Wednesday morning, gold was trading at $1,535 a troy ounce, down from the nominal record of $1,575.79 touched on Monday.Mexico follows other booming emerging market economies, including China, India and Russia, which have all made large additions to their gold reserves in recent years.Matthew Turner, precious metals strategist at Mitsubishi, the Japanese trading house, said the purchase "seems to confirm there's an appetite now among emerging economies with large forex reserves to add to their gold reserves. Gold is seen as one way in which to diversify away from the dollar- or euro-denominated assets."The dollar has plunged 10 per cent since January against the world's major currencies and is trading near an all-time low. Robert Zoellick, president of the World Bank, has suggested that gold should form part of a  new international monetary system.China announced in 2009 that it had bought 454 tonnes of gold over the previous six years; India bought 200 tonnes of gold directly from the International Monetary Fund in October 2009; and Russia has bought just less than 400 tonnes on the open market over the past five years.However Mexico's buying in February and March, which amounted to 93.3 tonnes of gold, is one of the most rapid programmes of accumulation on record. Apart from India's off-market purchase in 2009, the 78.5 tonnes bought in March is the largest monthly purchase by a central bank in at least a decade, according to data from the World Gold Council.The Bank of Mexico could not be reached for comment on Wednesday morning.

ShareThis

MasterMetals’ Tweets