www.silverdoctors.com
Gold climbed $5.70 or 0.34% in New York yesterday and closed at
$1,673.50/oz. Silver inched up to $31.86 in Asia, then it fell back to
$31.38, and then rose to a high of $31.91, but eased off in afternoon
trade and finished with a loss of 0.35%.
Gold rose to a new
record nominal high on the TOCOM at 0.156 million yen per ounce. The
resignation of Bank of Japan Governor, Shirakawa on March 19 is
pressuring the yen as is increased tensions in the Pacific between
China and Japan – Japan accused China of targeting a Japanese naval
vessel and helicopter.
Platinum and palladium edged off multi month highs today as profit taking set in after recent gains.
Those
who look through a rose coloured glass of mixed economic data see a
recovering global economy and this perspective and supply issues may
have helped propel palladium and platinum to outperform gold and silver
so far this year.
Platinum futures rose to their highest point in
nearly 17 weeks as output contracted at Anglo American Platinum Ltd.
(AMS), the world’s biggest producer.
Anglo American, said that
production fell just over 8%. “Supply challenges” will continue this
year, the company noted. Global platinum output fell 10% in 2012,
according to estimates by Johnson Matthey.
Gold has been trading
in a narrow range between $1,660/oz and $1,680/oz since the end of last
week. A break above $1,680/oz should see us quickly challenge $1,700/oz
and a break lower could lead to a testing of support at $1,650/oz.
Today
U.S. ISM non-manufacturing PMI reports at 1500 GMT, but investors await
the ECB meeting’s monetary policy decision on Thursday.
Physical buying in Asia is quiet ahead of the Chinese Lunar New Year which starts on Saturday.
Gold imports into mainland China from Hong Kong almost doubled to
new high in 2012 as Chinese people continue to play catch up in terms
of gold ownership. The Chinese were forbidden from owning gold for over
50 years.
Rising incomes, economic jitters and concerns about
currency debasement and inflation in the world’s second largest economy
led to increased demand in China which contributed to gold seeing
another year of gains.
The very poor performance of the Chinese
stock market in the last 10 years (see chart below) and concerns about
property bubbles are also leading Chinese investors and savers to
diversify into gold.
Mainland China imported a whopping 834,502 kilograms or 834.5 metric tons of gold, including scrap and coins in 2012.
This
compared with about 431,215 kilograms or 431.2 metric tons in 2011,
according to Bloomberg calculations based on data from the Census and
Statistics Department of the Hong Kong government.
Imports in December 2012 rose to a monthly record of 114,405 kilograms, according to data from the department today.
The
unrealised important fact is that the people of China were banned from
owning gold bullion by Chairman Mao in 1950. This prohibition continued
until 2003 and it means that the per capita consumption of over 1.3
billion people is rising from a very small base.
Since the market in China was liberalised, gold in yuan terms has risen by 259% while the stock market has performed poorly.
Even
after the significant increase in demand seen in recent years – Chinese
per capita gold ownership remains well below that of the levels seen in
India.
Culturally, India is known to have the greatest affinity
for gold in the world. China had a similar cultural affinity prior to
the “cultural revolution” and in time its levels of gold ownership will
likely rival those seen in India, Vietnam (see below) and other Asian
countries.
Chinese people experienced hyperinflation in 1949, within the
lifetime of many Chinese people living today. Therefore, like in
Germany, there is a greater awareness of what can befall a nation and a
people when a paper currency is debased.
Many market participants
and non gold and silver experts tend to focus on the daily fluctuations
and “noise” of the market and not see the “big picture” or major change
in the fundamental supply and demand situation in the gold and silver
bullion markets. This is particularly due to investment, store of
wealth and central bank demand from China and the rest of an
increasingly wealthy Asia.
The doubling in demand in 2012 is solely private demand and does not take into account official Chinese buying.
It
is worth noting that the People’s Bank of China’s gold reserves are
very small when compared to those of the U.S. and indebted European
nations. They are miniscule when compared with China’s massive foreign
exchange reserves of more than $3 trillion.
The People’s Bank of
China is almost certainly continuing to quietly accumulate gold bullion
reserves. As was the case previously, they will not announce their gold
bullion purchases to the market in order to ensure they accumulate
sizeable reserves at more competitive prices. They also do not wish to
create a run on the dollar – thereby devaluing their sizeable reserves.
Expect
an announcement from the PBOC, sometime in 2013 or 2104, that they have
doubled or even trebled their reserves to over 2,000 or 3,000 tonnes.
單係呢做數字...已經835噸..中國 對外講儲備得1035噸..搵鬼信
回覆刪除遲下唔聲唔聲.嚇你一驚..
回 honson,
回覆刪除外國人都估到啦 !
不過是戰略秘密 XD !