Gold buying up near $1200 levels: Jeff Nichols

Gold buying has intensified on the late-June/early July sell offs and capitalising on this fall were the Asian investors, jewelry manufacturers and possibly a few central banks, according to Jeffrey Nichols, Senior Economic Advisor to Rosland Capital.

India turns central banks into gold buyers

By Geena Paul
LONDON : Remember the impact of Reserve Bank of India’s decision to buy 200 tonnes of gold from International Monetary Fund (IMF) in November 2009 had on the price of yellow metal? That time gold prices soared to new heights because the world feared that India is shifting its foreign reserves to gold expecting the dollar to crash.

Gold holdings of central banks rising: IMF

Some potentially interesting central bank data came from the latest edition of the IMF’s International Financial Statistics. The Bank for International Settlements’ gold holdings, which include the bank’s own gold and also gold held on behalf of other clients, rose from a net 156t in December to 328t in January, says VM Group research for Fortis Bank Nederland – Metals Monthly April 2010.

Why gold price is on high pace?

By Julian D.W. Phillips
The piece we wrote on gold de-coupling from the $:€ exchange rate proved absolutely correct. The action of the last week has shown that as gold rose strongly in the € in the pound and is moving up in the $ alongside most currencies. More than that, market commentators are now mentioning this too. But this action involves far more than these two main currencies.

‘Gold can rally to 1170-1200 level before pulling back’

By Sol Palha
The dollar has rallied very strongly easily taking out the lower end of the targets we projected several months ago. It almost closed above 81 on a monthly basis. Had it done this, it would have made the outlook even more bullish. The dollar has gone on to put in series of new 9 month highs and thus by contrast one would have expected Gold and the other precious metals to do the opposite. However, this has not taken place.

Will India buy IMF gold again?

NEW DELHI : Will India do it again? That is the question being asked by investors and bullion market analysts now.

Gold in upward phase of long-term bull market

By Jeffrey Nichols
The snap-back in the U.S. dollar price of gold this past week to $1,100 an ounce may mark the beginning of a new upward phase in the metal’s long-term bull market. Importantly, gold found support near its early February 14-week low point of $1,045 after a two-month-long retreat. But until gold breaks above its December U.S. dollar-denominated all-time high of $1,227 many players in U.S. markets will remain skeptical of the bull market’s staying power.

Does Chinese Monetary Policy impact commodities?

By Dr. Jeffrey Lewis
The Chinese have emerged as the new economic superpower, and already investors are beginning to feel the impact of Chinese monetary policy on commodity prices.

IMF to sell remaining 191 tonnes of gold soon

WASHINGTON : Once again, gold sale by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is going to make waves in the bullion markets around the world. After selling 212 tonnes of gold to India, Sri Lanka and Mauritius in the last three months, IMF says it is all set to sell the remaining yellow metal soon.

Diversity of global gold market keeps 2009 demand above USD 100 bn: WGC

In 2009, dollar demand for gold remained above the USD 100 billion mark for the second year in succession against the backdrop of continued turbulence in financial and commodity markets. According to World Gold Council`s (WGC), this resilience in demand was achieved in the context of average gold prices 12% higher than those in 2008, at USD 972.35/oz.

George Soros invests in gold despite bubble talk

NEW YORK : Last month, billionaire global investor George Soros rattled the bullion world by predicting that gold is an ultimate asset bubble and there was no fundamental reason why the yellow metal price should keep on rising.

Gold price may rise to $1,124- $1,127 this week

By Dan Norcini
The reflation trade was back on in a big way today as both the commodity world and the equity world witnessed sizeable money flows coming their way. The Dollar’s weak display was enough to send the algorithms wildly to the buy side once again as the war between the inflationists and the deflationists saw the deflation camp in all out retreat during this particular skirmish. Copper, crude oil, soybeans and even lumber were all stronger today.

Central Banks, investors to keep gold demand strong

Gold built on last week’s gains and rose nearly 1% yesterday, closing at $1,099.50/oz and gold also rose in other major currencies. Gold has risen in Asian trading and again in early European trade and is currently trading at $1,113.20/oz and in euro and GBP terms €816/oz and £710/oz respectively. As expected the crisis in the Eurozone has seen gold surge in Euro terms to new record (nominal) highs over €817/oz – thus surpassing the previous record high seen in December 2009 at €813/oz.