Archive for April, 2009

Capital Gold Group Report: Sell Bonds and Buy Gold

April 29, 2009

SEEKING ALPHA.COM

April 28, 2009

After the Battle of Waterloo in 1815 when Britain, Austria and Germany beat Napoleon, the House of Rothschild made the equivalent of more than a billion dollars today by selling their gold and buying up bonds, precisely the reverse of the strategy they are probably employing now.

What happened in 1815 was that the Rothschilds had accumulated vast amounts of gold because they thought that with Napoleon back there would be a long war. The defeat of Napoleon therefore looked like a financial disaster for them as the price of gold would plummet without soldiers to pay.

But the patriarch Nathaniel Rothschild turned this strategic error to their advantage by swiftly buying up bonds – which had become depressed in price – and selling their gold. The gold price fell and bonds recovered sharply as the government no longer needed to keep issuing more of them to finance the war.

Buy gold, sell bonds

Now in modern markets, it is striking that exactly the reverse trade applies. Governments all over the world are about to flood the bond markets with paper to finance their bank bailouts and economic stimulus plans, and the final bill could amount to more than $6 trillion on some estimates and very much higher for a full derivatives rescue plan.

In effect the governments are about to need to raise the funds to fight another Napoleon. This massive new supply of bonds will depress the price of existing bonds, and indeed this is evident in the recent fall in 10-year bond prices and their rising yield.

Inflation of the money supply we also know to be a natural enemy of bonds which pay a fixed coupon and are thus extremely sensitive to any rise of inflation that will swiftly erode the coupon, and even make it negative in real terms. And we know governments all over the world have embarked on massive money creation. This can not be good news for bonds, although in the short term the brief return of deflation will help them.

Gold and inflation

On the other hand, inflation is the friend of gold because it has an almost fixed supply, and silver might well be better still as its supply is even tighter. Gold prices are also still relatively depressed compared to other commodity price movements over the past three decades, and silver is probably the most depressed commodity price of all.

Thus the modern Rothschilds might well be counselled to reverse their Waterloo bet and sell bonds and buy gold and silver. Timing is always a devil in financial markets – and the reversal of the recent bear market rally in stocks would give bonds another short lease of life – but getting the fundamentals right also works. That is how the Rothschilds made a billion after Waterloo.

Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold

Capital Gold Group Report: Chinese Authorities Confirm Big Boost in Gold Reserves – Investors Follow Suit

April 27, 2009

Source: CCTV.com

04-27-2009 09:00

Gold prices in China have been on the rise led largely by 3 straight days of gains in the price of gold futures in New York. And with Chinese authorities confirming a big boost in its reserves of gold, many think this precious metal is now a good option for investment.

Gold prices in China have been on the rise led largely by 3 straight days of gains in the price of gold futures in New York.
Gold prices in China have been on the rise led largely by
3 straight days of gains in the price of gold futures in New
York.

The cost of China’s investment gold bullion has increased by around 5 percent, because of the continued rise in international gold prices.

Li Xiaodong, Deputy GM of China Gold Group Marketing Co. said “The price for investment gold bullion is related to the gold price of the Shanghai Gold Exchange. So the price has risen from 201 yuan per gram to 211 yuan.”

Although the price is rising, investors are becoming increasingly enthusiastic about this investment channel, especially after the news that China has increased its gold reserves.

One consumer said “I heard China has increased its gold reserves, so I think there is still space for further price rises. I bought some gold for investment.”

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Capital Gold Group Report: CHINA ADMITS TO BUILDING UP STOCKPILE OF GOLD – $30.9 BILLION

April 24, 2009

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Alfred Cang and Tom Miles, Reuters Published: Friday, April 24, 2009


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SHANGHAI/BEIJING – China revealed on Friday that it had secretly raised its gold reserves by three-quarters since 2003, increasing its holdings to 1,054 tonnes – or a pot worth about US$30.9-billion – and confirming years of speculation it had been buying.

Hu Xiaolian, head of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, told Xinhua news agency in an interview that the country’s reserves had risen by 454 tonnes from 600 tonnes since 2003, when China last adjusted its state gold reserves figure.

The confirmation of its surreptitious stockpiling is likely to fuel market talk about Beijing’s ability to buy secretly and its ambitions for spending its nearly US$2-trillion pile of savings. And not just in gold: copper and other metals markets are booming thanks to China’s barely-visible hand.

Speculation has gathered speed over the last year, since the tumbling dollar has threatened to weaken China’s buying power – and give it yet more reason to diversify into gold, oil and metals.

Gold prices jumped on the news of Chinese buying and were up more than 1% on the day at US$912.05 an ounce at 0715 GMT. By a Reuters calculation, China’s holding of gold would be worth around US$30.9-billion at current prices.

That accounts for only about 1.6% of China’s total foreign exchange holdings and is little more than one-tenth of the value of the U.S. gold reserve, the world’s biggest. It also means gold has slipped as a share of China’s total reserves from about 2%, based on end-2003 prices.

Only six countries hold more than 1,000 tonnes, and China is ranked fifth, having leap-frogged Switzerland, Japan and the Netherlands with its announcement.

However, the International Monetary Fund and the SPDR Gold Trust exchange traded fund are even bigger, leaving China with the world’s seventh-biggest pot of gold.

Several gold market participants said they thought China had bought on the international market, helping to absorb hundreds of tonnes sold off by central banks and the International Monetary Fund in recent years.

“China has been buying via government channels from South Africa, Russia and South America,” said Ellison Chu, director of precious metals at Standard Bank in Hong Kong.

But Hu said the increase in China’s stocks was achieved by buying on the domestic market and from domestic producers.

China is the world’s largest gold producer and does not permit exports of gold ingots, only jewellery, leaving plentiful supplies for the domestic market.

China produced 282 tonnes of gold last year, meaning the state bought around one quarter of domestic production, assuming 454 tonnes increase in state purchases were spread out over the six years since China last reported a change in its holdings.

Despite the rumours, buying by the state was partially obscured by soaring demand for gold as an investment, especially after the bursting of the Shanghai stock market bubble last year.

Investment demand in China rose to 68.9 tonnes from 25.6 tonnes in 2007. But that was still less than one third of retail demand in India, where total bullion consumption topped 660 tonnes last year.

Hu said China recently reported the change in its gold holdings to the International Monetary Fund and would include the latest change in central bank reports and balance of payment statistics.

She did not say when China notified the IMF.

Although gold rose after Hu’s comments were published, the price move was not a huge one for the highly liquid market. Prices had jumped by US$13 in the space of an hour on Thursday.

Gold market participants said the news signalled likely further buying by China.

“The comments indicate that China will buy more gold as reserve to improve its foreign reserve portfolio. This is a trend,” said Yao Haiqiao, president of Longgold Asset Management.

Hou Huimin, vice general secretary of the China Gold Association, said China should build its reserves to 5,000 tonnes.

“It’s not a matter of a few hundred, or 1,000 tonnes. China should hold more because of its new international status, and because of the financial crisis,” he said.

“The financial crisis means the U.S. dollar value is changing fast, and it may retreat from being the international reserve currency. If that happens, whoever holds gold will be at an advantage.”

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Capital Gold Group Report: Gold hits 7-session high as global recession sparks ‘risk aversion’

April 23, 2009

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INTERNATIONAL–The price of physical gold held above a onGold trading - thmb.jpge-week high early Thursday in London, recording its best Gold Fix in seven sessions at US$894 an ounce as European stock markets flipped in and out of the red.

In New York, gold broke the US$900-mark, after data showed a big increase in claims for US unemployment benefits.

“It is risk aversion that is fuelling gold’s rally,” said one commodity analyst to India’s Economic Times today.

“The bias is on the upside,” agrees Kunal Shah at Nirmal Bang Commodities, also in Mumbai, “as economic uncertainties are creeping up giving rise to risk aversion.”

Yesterday the International Monetary Fund (IMF) confirmed its prediction of the worst global downturn since the 1930s, slashing its January forecast of 0.5% growth to a 1.3% contraction for 2009.

Today the gold price for Indian investors – the world’s hungriest buyers of physical metal – ended unchanged at INR14,413 on the MCX June contract.

British, Swiss and Canadian investors now ready to buy gold saw the price tick back from fresh 3-week highs.

Of 182 economies tracked by the IMF, some 72 are now expected to shrink this year, including 30 of the world’s 34 most developed nations.

“By any measure,” the IMF warns in its twice-annual World Economic Outlook, “this downturn represents by far the deepest global recession since the Great Depression.”

During the financial crisis to date, “Gold has been one of the few assets that has genuinely provided investors with diversification,” notes Natalie Dempster in her latest analysis for promotional-group the World Gold Council (WGC).

“There is no intrinsic reason why gold should perform badly during periods of deflation, like equities for example, which typically suffer profoundly as the earnings outlook collapses and/or the real debt burden of companies grows.

“Traditional assets like equities and bonds are a poor hedge against inflation,” says Dempster, pointing to the sharp risk that “when banks start to lend again and consumers start to spend, inflation will accelerate.

“By contrast, gold, and commodities in general, often perform at their best.”

In each of the nine years since 1971 when US consumer-price inflation has exceeded 5% year-on-year, the gold price averaged 31% annual gains on the WGC’s analysis.

“Commodities rose by 9% and bonds and equities were essentially unchanged.” . . . .

[There was a] dramatic bar and gold coin shortage of 2008, which forced retail premiums on even the most-heavily minted coins to 10% and above . . .

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Capital Gold Group Report: Gold Heading Above $2,000 by End of 2010 says Strategist

April 23, 2009

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CNBC.com | 22 Apr 2009 | 07:55 AM ET

The price of gold will spike above $2,000 an ounce before the end of 2010 because of rising inflation, currency devaluation and the risk of a massive debt-bust spurs buying of the precious metal, Philip Manduca, head of investment at ECU Group, told CNBC.

“I’ve forecast that gold will go beyond $2,000 before 2010 is out and I still believe that very much,” Manduca said.

“Based on risks of inflation, because it’s the only way we’re going to get out of the debt problem, currency debasement and devaluation, because it’s the only way we’re going to get out of the debt problem, and of course the potential for a massive debt bust,” he said.

Gold prices could fall in the next two or three months, back to the $750 to $850 level, Manduca said.

The dominant emotions of “greed and need” mean that gold could see some “speculative liquidation in what is a crowded trade.”

Manduca also said that many investors fear the IMF is going to raise money via gold sales and that could keep a lid on the gold price.

He recommends buying the dip if gold does fall to that level from its current mark above $885.

Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold

Capital Gold Group Report: ‘Deeper’ recession ahead says IMF

April 22, 2009

By Steve Schifferes

Economics reporter, BBC News

The global economy is set to decline by 1.3% in 2009, in the first global recession since World War II, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) says.

IMF Chief economist, Olivier Blanchard, says some countries face ‘serious balance of payment problems’

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In January, the IMF had predicted world output would increase by 0.5% in 2009.

It now projects that the UK will see its economy shrink by 4.1% in 2009, and by a further 0.4% in 2010.

But other major economies are predicted to shrink even more, with Germany declining by 5.6%, Japan by 6.2%, and Italy by 4.4% in 2009.

The prospects for the advanced economies are not much brighter in 2010, with an overall forecast of zero growth.

The IMF says this represents “by far the deepest post-World War II recession” with an actual decline in output in countries making up 75% of the world economy.

Currently, output is falling by an “unprecedented” 7.5% annual rate in the rich countries in the last quarter of 2008, and the IMF expects the same rate of decline in the first quarter of this year.

Only a recovery in developing and emerging market countries will propel the world economy back into positive growth in 2010, albeit at a relatively weak level of 1.9%.

The prospects for world trade are even gloomier, with the IMF now forecasting world trade volumes to decline by 11% in 2009, and barely grow at all in 2010.

After 60 years as the engine of world growth, the sharp fall in trade is now hitting many of the leading exporting nations, particularly in Asia.

Gloomy UK

The IMF says that “the recession is expected to be… quite severe in the United Kingdom, which is being hit by the end of the boom in real estate and financial services”.

ECONOMIC GROWTH FORECAST 2009

  • UK: -4.1%
  • US: -2.8%
  • Germany: -5.6%
  • France: -3.0%
  • Japan: -6.2% source: IMF
  • It is predicting that UK unemployment will rise to 9.2% by the end of 2010, compared to 6.7% at the moment.

    And it is warning that the UK budget deficit will rise to 11% of GDP, “reflecting mainly automatic stabilisers and asset-price related revenue shortfalls rather than discretionary stimulus”.

    The UK is also facing the cost of paying for the banking bail-outs, which the IMF estimated in an earlier report at 9.4% of GDP, or £130bn, after correcting an earlier figure of £200bn.

    Financial problems

    At the heart of the crisis is the continuing overhang of losses in the financial sector, which the IMF now estimates at $4tn, four times higher than it projected just one year ago.

    And it warns that the current outlook is “exceptionally uncertain, with risks still weighting on the downside.”

    It says the main risk is that “policies may be insufficient to arrest the negative feedback between deteriorating financial conditions and weakening economies in the face of limited public support for policy actions.”

    Among the risks are that rising household and corporate debt cause further falls in asset prices and losses by financial institutions.

    And it says that any recovery will be slower than in the past.

    There will be a smaller financial sector, with financing harder to come by than in the past, especially for developing countries, which will cramp their growth.

    And rich countries will face the burden of reducing their budget deficits which have soared during the crisis, at a time when their ageing populations means they will have lower tax revenues.

    In addition, households may be reluctant to resume their previous spending habits, as saving rates have risen sharply in the US and the UK.

    The IMF says it is important to take urgent action to shore up the banks, and to continue with short-term fiscal stimulus plans, in order to shorten the length of the recession.

    A selection of your comments may be published, displaying your name and location unless you state otherwise in the box below.

    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/business/8011907.stm

    Published: 2009/04/22 16:35:14 GMT

    © BBC MMIX

    Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold

    Capital Gold Group Report: Gold Is Manipulated…And You Should Buy it Anyway

    April 20, 2009

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    Posted by Jon Herring on 4/17/09

    The United States Bureau of Labor Statistics has an “inflation calculator” on their website. It allows you to enter an amount of money and a previous year and then tells you how much money you would need to have today to match the same buying power.

    Just for kicks, I put the year 1980 in the calculator to see what would come out. If you had $25 then, you would need $64.54 today to purchase the same goods and services. If you had $5,000 then, you would need $12,907 to have the same buying power today.

    So, what if you had $850 in 1980? How much would you need today to match the same buying power? The government tells us that number is $2,194. Perhaps you see where I am going with this.

    The previous all-time high in gold was $850 an ounce, reached in 1980. So, by the government’s own calculation (which many have shown to be biased to the downside), you would need about 160% more dollars today to match the same buying power you had in 1980.

    So how is it that gold – “the world’s greatest inflation hedge” – is roughly the same price today that it was in 1980, after 30 years of inflation? Keep in mind that gold only hit $850 for one day in 1980. The average price of gold that month was only $650. But the point is still valid.

    The biggest reason is… manipulation.

    It used to be that you didn’t speak about market manipulation in polite company. Everyone knows those conspiracies don’t exist. Who could do such a thing? We now know those sentiments are woefully naïve. There is now a deep and wide body of evidence that points to willful and ongoing, official and unofficial suppression of gold prices. Much of this evidence has been compiled and documented by the good folks at the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (www.gata.org).

    Why would politicians, central bankers, commercial banks and Wall Street institutions have any interest in suppressing the price of gold? That’s easy. Gold is like a burglar alarm. It serves notice that politicians are spending more than they take in. And it emits a screeching siren when central bankers inflate the money supply. Wall Street and commercial banks hate gold because it represents competition for your investment dollars and savings… and because they can’t make any money on it.

    A rapidly rising gold price signals to the masses that all is NOT right with our money and in the financial system. When the price of gold is going up, savers and investors begin to wonder why in the world they are holding dollars in the bank. There are some VERY powerful interests that would like to keep the price of gold in check.

    So, how do they do it?

    There are a number of ways the banking and political establishment have tried to keep a lid on gold. The first is simply the war of propaganda. Make gold savers out to be the lunatic fringe and denigrate gold itself. This is where the term “gold bug” came from. It was meant to be a disparaging term for people who believe in sound money and honest government. This is also where the talk of gold as a “barbarous relic” originated.

    But that argument falls on its face immediately. If gold is such an ancient “relic” and so unnecessary and un-useful in today’s world of modern finance, then why do central banks still insist on holding gold in their vaults? And why do these same banks use gold among themselves to settle final accounts?

    They do this because they don’t trust each other. They know that paper money is too easy to fabricate from nothing, while gold is rare and must be labored into existence. Despite what they say, central bankers know that gold is vitally important to the modern financial system and that there is no substitute for it.

    Other than the war of words, the banking and political establishment put pressure on gold in other ways as well. One of these is central bank “leasing” of gold. I put leasing in quotes because usually when you lease something out, you expect to get it back (more on that in a moment). For years, central banks have been “leasing” the gold in their vaults to “bullion banks,” operated by institutions such as Goldman, Citi, Morgan, HSBC, etc.

    And what a lucrative racket it has been. For years, the bullion banks received massive amounts of gold from official vaults at the “good buddy” interest rate of about 1% a year. They then sold this gold into the market and invested the proceeds. How much money could you have made in the ‘80s and ‘90s if you were able to borrow billions of dollars at 1% and reinvest those dollars at 5% risk-free… or even higher if you were willing to take on some risk? Let’s just say it was a pretty good deal, if you could get it.

    Not only has this provided a welcome source of cheap capital for the insider banks, but a near constant supply of gold to the market meant that there were always big sellers to keep pressure on the price.

    By no means is this the only way gold has been manipulated, but it is certainly one way. But for this to work in the bullion banks favor, the price of gold must fall or remain flat. Borrowing billions of dollars worth of gold at $300 an ounce and paying it back at $600 an ounce is a recipe for bankruptcy. So you can imagine the enormous incentive within the system to keep the price of gold from rising.

    But they have not succeeded. These gold leasing operations were running full tilt in the early part of this decade when gold was in the $200s and $300s. Gold is now three times higher than it was then. And these banks are on the hook for billions of dollars worth of gold.

    But remember, these are insiders. By now you know what that means. They have no intention to pay back the tons of gold they have borrowed. And the central banks have no intentions of calling these loans. To do so would require the bullion banks to buy gold at the market, paying prices several times higher than the price at which the gold was borrowed. This would instantly bankrupt these banks, though we know they would be insolvent anyway without taxpayer bailouts. Therefore, the central banks simply roll the “leases” over, again and again.

    So, back to the subject of manipulation. Why would you invest in a market that is so clearly manipulated? First, because it is the right thing to do to favor honest money over fraudulent money. But the other reason is that the establishment’s power to manipulate public opinion of gold and influence the market itself is becoming weaker and weaker, and will soon fail altogether.

    I was investing in gold and silver and precious metals equities when gold was $260 an ounce. The cries about manipulation of the market were as loud then as they are today. The manipulation was real. And yet, gold has risen 240% in that time. Gold stocks have soared even higher. Despite the best efforts of the establishment, gold has climbed steadily for eight straight years. And considering what is happening in the monetary realm, this trend shows no signs of abating.

    However the manipulation due to central bank leasing operations will most certainly abate. These banks do not have an unlimited amount of gold to sell into the market. And their appetite for doing so is clearly waning. Central banks around the world are now adding gold to their coffers rather than divesting.

    And despite propaganda efforts to the contrary, the public is gradually waking up to the fraudulent nature of the fiat-based monetary system and the shaky notion of holding unsound dollars in unsound banks.

    In the realm of world finance, gold is a tiny market. It won’t take a huge shift in sentiment to stir up a massive increase in demand… demand that could not be met by the world’s miners and would have to result in a sharp increase in prices. Sentiment has already turned. But not nearly to the degree it will when the specter of inflation returns.

    That day is coming. Got gold?

    To Your Success,
    Jon Herring

    Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold

    Capital Gold Group Report: Gold price could hit $1,500

    April 20, 2009

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    By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
    Last Updated: 12:11PM BST 20 Apr 2009

    The aggressive monetary policy of central banks around the world is playing havoc with the structure of the bullion market, creating a chronic shortage of gold that may soon push the metal to fresh records above $1,500 an ounce.

    Charles Gibson, a gold expert at Edison Investment Research, argues in a new report that negative real interest rates (below inflation) in the US and beyond has upset the “leasing” machinery in the gold industry and led to a sustained market squeeze.

    This is what occurred in the late 1970s, driving gold prices to $850 and ounce – roughly $1,560 in today’s terms. Gold finished last week at $870.

    Mr Gibson said the powerful dynamic could lead to a second leg of this gold bull market, even though the metal has already enjoyed a torrid run over the last eight years.

    In normal times, gold mining companies sell – or “hedge” – a chunk of their output in advance through bullion banks. These banks cover their positions by leasing gold from central banks. This bread-and-butter trade created excess supply of 500 tonnes each year until the start of this decade.

    Low real interest rates have caused the process to reverse, creating a shortfall of about 500 tonnes. The process accelerates as rates turn negative, leading to a scramble by market players to find physical gold.

    There are already reports that gold bars are becoming scarce, partly due to fears that futures contracts and other forms of paper gold may not prove reliable if there is a serious break-down in the global financial system. Pure metal — whether Krugerrands, Maple Leaf coins, or the “five tael biscuit” favoured by the Chinese – entail no counterparty risk.

    Mr Gibson says the Fed’s monetary blitz will end in another burst of inflation akin to the late 1970s. That is a disputed claim as deflationary forces tighten on the global economy. Some of the big global banks are already calling the start of a bear market. Rarely has the gold fraternity been so schizophrenic.

    Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold

    Capital Gold Group Report: LEADING STOCK MARKET STRATEGIST FORECASTS AFTERSHOCK TO OCTOBER GLOBAL FINANCIAL EARTHQUAKE

    April 16, 2009

    GOLD RALLY TO FOLLOW

    An except from Jon Nadler’s column on Kitco

    April 16, 2009

    The recent rally in American and Canadian equity markets is soon to give way to a gut-wrenching collapse that will push equities to shocking new lows, with gold prices reacting by rallying to new highs. After having correctly anticipated the timing and extent of the March 9th to April 3rd market rally, this is the latest dire warning from Heiko Seibel, a leading German stock market strategist. The Director of Research for Munich-based CM-Equity AG now believes that the U.S. benchmark S&P 500 Index will dramatically drop to an ultimate low of around 450 points in late June or in July. The odds favour him being proven right – that is if his talent for correctly anticipating market moves continues.

    “Within a few weeks, we will see the stock lows of our lifetimes,” he nonchalantly declares.

    Indeed, he was right on the money when he told BNW Business Newswire on March 2nd that the S&P 500 Index was about to reverse a pronounced downward trend. He suggested at the time that it would rally to a high of not much more than 850 points during April before it begins an orderly retreat that soon turns into a panic-stricken rout. The S&P 500 closed at 856.56 on April 9th – the culmination of a very impressive five-week gain of 26% over its March 09th low. However, this rebound cannot gloss over the fact that the bellwether index’s had lost 58% of its value by the time it ended its slide in early March. And now the S&P 500 is likely destined to trade in an uninspiring sideways pattern for the balance of the month, Seibel suggests.

    Seibel believes that a growing sense of economic optimism shared by many U.S. investors and the Obama Administration, alike, is completely misplaced. He suggests that the rally during March and early April (with the Dow Jones Industrial Average closing at 8,018 points on April 3rd after enjoying the best four-week run since 1933) is merely a false dawn. Soon enough investors will be seriously rattled yet again – this time by a devastating after-shock to October’s global financial earthquake. One that will see the S&P 500 Index nose-dive up to 40% before it hits rock bottom at around the 450 points level. This bleak scenario contrasts starkly to the S&P’s heady high of over 1,550 points in October of 2007.

    A proponent of quantitative analysis, Seibel says this pending nightmarish sell-off will cause plenty of already shell-shocked investors to relinquish their remaining equity holdings. However, investors in gold bullion and gold-backed Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) will likely be spared the widespread misery, Seibel believes.

    “When there is a total loss in confidence in the stock market, then gold will rally. Gold bullion is historically an inverse proxy to the stock market. So, it’s only logical that this will happen,” he says. “We should see a culmination of massive price weakness in stocks within weeks, which will cause gold to reverse its current trend to establish new highs beyond $1,000 early in the third quarter of this year – maybe even testing the $1,200 mark,” he adds.

    Interestingly, gold equities will not be immune to the market meltdown because investors will engage in “panic selling,” to preserve whatever capital they have left, he predicts. Meanwhile, the catalyst to the stock market’s final capitulation during the coming months will be a combination of the collapse of more landmark U.S. companies, a renewed banking crisis, and other forms of “major economic upheaval,” Seibel explains. . .

    Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold

    Capital Gold Group Report: GOLD DEMAND SET TO RISE AND SHINE

    April 16, 2009

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    Online Edition of India’s National Newspaper

    APRIL 15, 2009

    CHENNAI: Against the prevailing gloomy economic backdrop, gold remains the safest way to secure savings, according to World Gold Council Vice President, K. Shivaram. Even amid the equity market crash, gold has given more than 28 per cent returns in the recent period, which makes it the best investment option, he emphasizes.

    Slump is temporary

    With supply from the mines coming down, prices are expected to go up further, he predicts. Countries such as Russia and China are increasing their quantum of gold reserves as the dollar is increasingly volatile. Despite a reserve of 338 tonnes of gold, India needs to invest in more gold and show the way to the rest of the world, he avers.

    Attributing the recent slump in gold rates to the move by certain countries, in the wake of the decision taken at the G-20 summit, to sell one-eighth of International Monetary Fund’s gold holdings to bolster economies, Mr. Shivaram says the slump is temporary. He points out that the value of gold has never plummeted to unexpected levels.

    People in India have been making strategic investments in gold through periodic purchases. The awareness level of gold as an investment is high here.

    South India’s share

    India accounts for 24 per cent of the world’s gold demand, which is likely to grow. South India accounts for nearly 40 per cent of India’s gold purchases. The share is still higher during the season of Akshaya Tritiya, he told The Hindu.

    The festival, which has gained prominence after 2001, has given a fillip to many retailers. “In 2001, we observed that a couple of retail outlets were getting more than their share of business during this period, and the reason they cited was ‘Akshaya Tritiya.’ We did detailed research into the Hindu almanac and passed on the importance of the festival across all outlets to encourage people to buy gold.”

    The WGC also launched promotional initiatives to coincide with the festival.

    Charting the pattern of the growth of the business, he said major gold purchases were initially only for weddings.

    But soon festivals began providing people a reason to plan their investments by buying the yellow metal.

    With the economic slowdown evident across all sectors, the sale of gold too has witnessed a slight fall.

    “But the value of gold has not come down and the investors got incredibly high returns when other sectors felt the heat.”

    In India, over 74 per cent of customers prefer gold investment in the form of jewelery. The rest buy it in the form of coins or bullion.


    Capital Gold Group, gold group, gold, gold prices, gold news, gold coins, gold bullion, gold IRA, IRA gold