Silver May Advance to $20 as Dollar Drops, Bank of America Says

Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Silver may jump to $20 an ounce next year supported by a weaker dollar and increased industrial and investment demand, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch, which dubbed the metal “the golden child.”
Silver, which traded today at $16.28 an ounce, has doubled from last year’s low as the U.S. currency dropped and central banks cut interest rates, Michael Widmer and other strategists wrote in a report received yesterday. “Looking forward, exchange rates are set to support silver,” the report said.

Gold falls as dollar extends gains after release of consumer confidence data

Oct. 27

Gold futures on the COMEX Division of the New York Mercantile Exchange dropped to a new three-week low on Tuesday as U.S. dollar continued to recover after the release of a worse-than-expected low consumer confidence data. Silver and platinum both dropped.
    The most active gold contract for December delivery dropped 7.40 U.S. dollars, or 0.7 percent, to finish at 1,035.40 dollars an ounce. It touched as low as 1,032.90, the weakest level since Oct.6.
    The U.S. consumers' confidence fell unexpectedly in October. The Consumer Confidence Index, released by the Conference Board, sank to its second-lowest reading of 47.7 since May. This is well below economists' expectations of 53.1.
    This discouraging data fueled dollar's appeal of safe-haven in view of economy turmoil. By the end of gold floor trading time, the dollar index, a gauge measuring the greenback's value against a basket of major currencies, rose 0.275 to 76.47, a new peak in two weeks. The concerns that the dollar's rally might erode gold's demand of hedge pressured the precious metal to extend declines.
    December silver was down 55.5 cents to 16.54 dollars per ounce. January platinum lost 26.80 dollars to 1,319 dollars an ounce.     

TECHNICALS:Update Gold and Oil

Coutesy of SPVTrading



Peter Schiff: Market Update


Gold declines sharply as dollar soars

Gold futures on the COMEX Division of the New York Mercantile Exchange closed much lower and touched a 3-week low on Monday as U.S. dollar strongly recovered from its 14-month low. Silver and platinum both dropped.     The most active gold contract for December delivery dropped 13.60 U.S. dollars, or 1.3 percent, to finish at 1,042.80 dollars an ounce. It tumbled to as low as 1,041.10 dollars shortly before pit trading closed. That is also the weakest level since Oct. 7. 

Silver continues northward march; gold heads south

 Silver continued forward march on the bullion market here today due to sustained demand from industrial users amid higher New York advices.

Gold, however, moved down owing to lack of local buying interest.

In New York, gold futures fell on Friday as a rebounding dollar curbed its investment appeal.

December silver rose by 17.8 cents to $17.723 an ounce.

However, December gold futures ended down by $2.20 to $1,056.40 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.

China 2008 Net Gold Imports 112 Tons

October 22, 2009 06:20 ET (10:20 GMT)

HONG KONG (Dow Jones)--China imported 112 metric tons of gold in 2008, an executive at China Minsheng Banking Corp. (600016.SH) said Thursday.

A rise in net imports was driven by 176% growth in investment demand for the yellow metal, which hit 68 tons, and 21% growth in jewelry demand to 326 tons, said Lila Lu, the Beijing-based head of precious metals at China Minsheng Bank.

Record gold prices could turn Indian buyers onto silver

Current indicators suggest demand for gold in India is of late being driven by investment sentiment, where price is a factor
Author: Lewa Pardomuan (Reuters)
Posted:  Thursday , 22 Oct 2009


HONG KONG (Reuters) - 
 Record high gold prices above $1,000 an ounce may encourage more Indian buyers to turn to much cheaper silver, a senior trade official from the world's top bullion consuming country said on Thursday.
"Even today the rural Indian invests more into silver than gold. Higher prices of gold imply even the lower middle class population shifting to silver more compared to gold," said Anjani Sinha, president of the Indian Bullion Market Association, which represents about 10,000 jewellers.
While silver has seen a much sharper price rise in the last 12 months, gaining 86% versus a 45% gain for gold, at $17.67 an ounce it is still nearly a fifth below its record high of March last year.
In contrast gold's latest rally has driven it well past the March 2008 high to a record just above $1,070 an ounce.

Jim Rogers on CCTV 22 Oct 2009

Gold rises above $1,060 on gains in euro, oil

NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) - Gold prices clawed back above $1,060 an ounce Wednesday as oil rallied and the euro rose above $1.50 for the first time in 14 months.
The metal continued to take heart from a steadily falling dollar. Investors were turning to gold as the depreciation of global currencies threatened the value of paper assets.
Weak physical demand among jewelers and exchange-traded funds has put gold at the mercy of the currency markets, traders said.

Silver Futures Show Markets Are Acting Strangely

October 21, 2009

One need look no further than the Silver futures to see just how strange the markets are right now.
October Bank Report - 2 US Banks are short 38,375 Silver Contracts. This is 29.1% of all Commercial Short Positions (91,723). Total Contracts: 131,801. Why does this matter?

US gold futures end higher as dollar weakens

NEW YORK, Oct 19 (Reuters) - U.S. gold futures ended higher
on Monday as a weaker dollar boosted bullion's appeal as a
hedge against the weakening value of paper assets due to
currency depreciation.

TECHNICALS: Weekend Update Gold and Oil


Gold and Oil both look bullish.
Video by SPVTrading

Gold bricks filled with tungsten

By: Rob Kirby

Earlier this week, I wrote about possible “incongruities” in the gold bar registry of GLD. Specifically, here is what has happened to the GLD bar list which is published each Friday at approximately 4:30 pm EST. An alert reader I communicate with [who shall remain anonymous] has been documenting the length of the published GLD bar list:

  • on Friday, Sept. 25 – the list was 1,381 pages long
  • on Friday, Oct. 2 – the list was 208 pages long
  • on Friday, Oct. 9 – the list was 195 pages long
  • then, on Wednesday, Oct. 14 – after questions were being raised about the strange machinations with the bar list in chat rooms on the internet – the list was back up to 855 pages long

Something TRULY stinks here. No explanation has been offered for the DRAMATIC swings in this list. Where gold is concerned nothing happens by accident.


Gold, Silver Pare Losses To End Near Steady

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Gold futures pared losses to end marginally higher Friday as participants bought back previously sold positions and saw recently lower prices as a bargain.

December gold rose 90 cents to settle at $1,051.50 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.

James Turk on where gold is headed



James Turk is the CEO and founder of Goldmoney.com
Airtime: Fri. Oct. 9 2009 | 12:10 PM ET

Robert Fisk on the Gulf 'ditching the dollar' in oil trade

VIDEO : Silver Tip - TheUrbanSurvivalistS & VisionVictory Interview

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Gold will hit $2,000 an ounce within decade, says Jim Rogers

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Gold prices, which just reached a new record high above $1,060 an ounce Thursday, will top $2,000 in a decade, according to Jim Rogers, a famed investor known for his bullish calls on commodities.

Rogers, speaking Thursday at the sidelines in a conference held by ETF Securities in New York, said gold prices will keep rising as a protection against a weaker U.S. dollar.

The dollar "is a terribly flawed" currency, he said. "Foreign debts are increasing rapidly every year, and I don't think Washington seems to care."

Rogers, chairman of Rogers Holdings, said prices of other commodities, such as oil, copper, and sugar, will continue to rise in the long term as the world will face more demand but shrinking supplies.


Gold slips, dollar rises

US currency gets a boost from Fed chief's interest rate remarks

Gold fell below US$1,050 an ounce yesterday, snapping a rally of three straight days of record highs.

GOLD, silver and other precious metals, which have been riding high lately, slid back in price on Friday.

This was partly due to a stronger United States dollar. Also, some investors sold metals to lock in gains racked up in the recent surge.

The US dollar got a lift from comments by Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke, who said the central bank was ready to raise interest rates.

'When the economic outlook has improved sufficiently, we will be prepared to tighten,' he said in Washington on Thursday.

Gold fell below US$1,050 an ounce yesterday, snapping a rally of three straight days of record highs. Gold is up about 19per cent so far this year.

Silver retreated from a 14-month high at US$17.92 an ounce on Thursday, as it tracked dollar and gold prices. Platinum inched down slightly to about US$1,336 an ounce.

Buy Gold!

Two days ago, the price of gold broke out to a new high and we are delighted with this result. As you will recall, we were expecting an upward breakout in gold and it looks as though its price will now surge over the following months. It is noteworthy that since the breakout occurred, gold has managed to stay above the previous high. The longer the price of gold stays above US$1,030, the greater the probability that the yellow metal will stage a spectacular rally until spring next year.

It is our contention that this breakout is the real deal and the pathetic action of the US Dollar Index supports our view. Rather than rally, the American currency has embarked on another southbound journey and this is extremely bullish for gold. Furthermore, the recent zoom in silver and the precious metals mining stocks is additional evidence that this breakout is not a head fake. Figure 1 highlights the recent breakout in gold. As you will observe, gold's bull-market has been punctuated by lengthy consolidations and this is the third time gold has broken out towards the end of the third calendar quarter.

Figure 1: Gold is about to shine!

(Click on image to enlarge)
Source: www.stockcharts.com

If history is any guide and the trend consistency is intact, this rally will continue until spring next year and we could see a 40-50% advance! Should this rally materialise, the mining stocks will go ballistic and silver will rocket above its previous bull-market high.

In light of the recent breakout, we suggest that you hold on to your positions in the precious metals sector and add more capital.

The long wait is finally over and precious metals bulls are about to get rewarded! We plan to hold on to our positions for several months and will consider booking profits when we see an epic blow-off early next year.


The demise of the dollar and the rise of gold


In a graphic illustration of the new world order, Arab states have launched secret moves with China, Russia and France to stop using the US currency for oil trading

In the most profound financial change in recent Middle East history, Gulf Arabs are planning – along with China, Russia, Japan and France – to end dollar dealings for oil, moving instead to a basket of currencies including the Japanese yen and Chinese yuan, the euro, gold and a new, unified currency planned for nations in the Gulf Co-operation Council, including Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait and Qatar.

Secret meetings have already been held by finance ministers and central bank governors in Russia, China, Japan and Brazil to work on the scheme, which will mean that oil will no longer be priced in dollars.

The plans, confirmed to The Independent by both Gulf Arab and Chinese banking sources in Hong Kong, may help to explain the sudden rise in gold prices, but it also augurs an extraordinary transition from dollar markets within nine years.

VIDEO : Oil Dealers to Ditch US Dollar for buying Barrels

Investors may take shine to silver after gold high

OLD-SILVER/INVESTMENT (ANALYSIS)

* Silver may attract investors as gold ratio nears lows

* Platinum could get investment boost from U.S. ETF

By Lewa Pardomuan

SINGAPORE, Oct 7 (Reuters) - With gold at last piercing a new high, investors may next turn their attention to silver, which now looks overdue for a rally even as it and other metals remain constrained by a halting global industrial recovery.

Often dubbed bullion's bridesmaid, silver is now trading at near its lowest ratio to gold in a year, slipping to around the equivalent of 59 units per ounce of gold, just above September's low and down more than a quarter from the peak in late 2008.

For a graphic on gold to silver ratio, click on the link: http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/109/CMD_GLDSVR1009.gif

Signs are emerging of investors seeking an alternative to gold -- which hit a lifetime high of $1,048.20 an ounce on Wednesday, surpassing the previous record in March 2008 -- as a hedge against inflation and a falling dollar.

India's HDFC Bank , a large seller of gold in the world's top consumer of the metal, is looking at offering silver bars for sale in some cities because of interest from investors, a bank executive said on Wednesday. [ID:nBOM360686]

"If it does move higher, you'd expect silver to outperform. The last time gold hit its high, silver was trading at $20. It's got a lot of catching up to do," said Mark Hewlett, a commodity analyst at Cornhill Capital in London.

Silver was little changed at $17.44 on Wednesday, moving closer to a 13-month peak of $17.63 in the middle of September but nearly 19 percent below its its record high of $21.24 from March 17, 2008, the same time gold last peaked.

Unlike gold, investment into the world's largest silver-backed exchange-traded fund, the iShares Silver Trust , has flatlined for the past three months, while gold inflows have boosted ETF holdings to near record highs. Silver holdings were unchanged at 8,594.22 tonnes.

But like gold, silver has also witnessed a surge in speculative long investment on the Comex futures exchange.

For a graphic on ETF versus futures holdings click: http://graphics.thomsonreuters.com/109/CMD_SLVRSPD1009.gif

For details on silver holdings by the ETF, click on: http://us.ishares.com/product_info/fund/overview/SLV.htm

Physical trading was muted in Hong Kong, with silver bars offered at a discount of 10 to 20 U.S. cents to the spot London prices, barely changed from last week.

"Physical demand for gold will definitely slow down because of the high prices. Platinum is still expensive, so probably people would like to buy silver because it's cheaper," said a physical dealer in Hong Kong.

"But I still have doubts because most investors see silver as an industrial metal," he added.

PLATINUM: INDUSTRIAL WOES, INVESTMENT FLOWS

Industrial applications accounted for half of global demand for silver last year, followed by jewellery and photography, while implied net investment demand made up a mere 5.6 percent, according to the Silver Institute.

Platinum, which is also used in jewellery, has been hit hardest by falling demand from automakers, as the industry suffered heavly during the economic meltdown. Autocatalysts accounted for around half of global consumption last year.

Platinum rose 1.33 percent to $1,331 an ounce on Wednesday -- still 42 percent below last year's all time high -- but it too may be due for a repricing.

"If the expectation is that gold rallies from here, platinum may have a U.S. ETF in the near future which will bring a lot of investment demand which could mop up the excess supply left by poor car sales," said Hewlett of Cornhill Capital.

"This could see it out-perform silver as the silver ETF is already alive and kicking."

While gains in other precious metals may be overdue, analysts were agreed that, ultimately, there was no substitute for gold.

"It's difficult to see to reasons to sell it, given we're seeing a continuation in the weakening of the U.S. dollar," said Darren Heathcote, head of trading at Investec Australia. (Editing by Jonathan Leff)

Gold surges, hits new all-time high of $1,045

NEW YORK — Gold prices surged to a new high Tuesday as investors sought a safe harbor from a falling dollar and inflation.

Gold for December delivery rose to as high as $1,045 an ounce, surpassing a previous intraday high of $1,033.90 logged in March 2008, just days after Bear Stearns Cos. collapsed.

Gold also had a record high closing price, finishing the day at $1,039.70 an ounce, up $21.90, or 2.2 percent. Some analysts see gold rising to $1,100 in the coming days.

Gold's advance was stoked by a tumbling dollar, which hit a 14-month low against the Australian currency after Australia became the first major country to raise interest rates since the onset of the financial crisis.

The move signals that Australia believes its economy is strengthening enough to withstand a slight increase in borrowing costs, and made the Australian currency a higher-yielding and thus more attractive investment to fund managers versus the U.S. dollar.

The Federal Reserve has said it plans to keep U.S. interest rates at a record low of near zero for some time as one of several tools it's using to shore up the U.S. economy.

Adding to the dollar's woes Tuesday was a report in a British newspaper that Arab states, along with China, Russia, Japan and France, were in talks to move away from using the dollar for oil trading. Several countries denied that such talks were occurring, however there has been much discussion recently about the dollar's role as the world's reserve currency eventually fading.

"People are very nervous about the decline of the dollar," said William Rhind, head of sales and marketing at ETFS Marketing LLC, the U.S. arm of ETF Securities. Gold is used as a hedge against inflation, which can be triggered by a falling dollar.

The dollar has weakened considerably this year amid low interest rates and massive government spending designed to spur the economy, which in turn has been a boon to commodity prices. Commodities are priced in U.S. dollars, so a weak greenback makes them more attractive to foreign investors.

Most analysts say the dollar has further to fall, which should support higher commodity prices for the foreseeable future.

"I think the case for gold is pretty bulletproof right now," said Joe Foster, portfolio manager of the Van Eck International Investors Gold Fund. "Given that we're at new highs now, I think the next target the market will be looking at is $1,100."

Darin Newsom, a senior analyst at DTN in Omaha, Nebraska, cautions that gold might not be able to continue to climb at such a fervid pace.

"Who's going to say that looks like a value to me?" he asked. "You usually don't buy high ... but we'll see if it can continue to draw the money in."

Though it was the highest close for gold on record, the price is still a long way off from an inflation-adjusted peak of about $2,200 set in January 1980, when prices hit $850 an ounce, according to the World Gold Council, an industry trade group.

Other metals rallied along with gold on Tuesday. December silver spiked 76 cents, or 4.6 percent, to $17.2950 an ounce — its highest close in nearly a month. October platinum rose $23.50 to $1,318.10 an ounce.

Among industrial metals, December copper futures rose 5.75 cents, or 2.1 percent, to $2.7845 a pound.

The sharp rise in gold and other commodities drove shares of material companies higher, helping to lift the broader stock market. The Dow Jones industrials rose 132 points, bringing its two-day advance to 244 points. All the major stock indicators rose at least 1.4 percent.

Oil prices also benefited from the weak dollar. Light, sweet crude rose 47 cents to settle at $70.88 a barrel.

In other Nymex trading, heating oil rose 2.26 cents to $1.8142 a gallon and gasoline rose 1.88 cents to settle at $1.7727 a gallon.

Natural gas for November delivery lost 10.7 cents to settle at $4.88 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Grain prices surged on the Chicago Board of Trade. December corn futures soared nearly 5 percent, gaining 16.75 cents to $3.5825 a bushel.

December wheat futures jumped 17.5 cents, or 4 percent, to $4.6025 a bushel, and November soybeans rose 25 cents, or 2.8 percent, to $9.10 a bushel.

Among soft commodities, cocoa prices retreated after hitting a new contract high on Monday. The December contract lost $29 to $3,211 a ton. Sugar prices also fell, while cotton and coffee prices rose.

NY Gold Seen Up $10, Silver Up 46 Cents

December gold futures are expected to open floor trading in New York around $10 an ounce higher Tuesday, based on electronic activity ahead of the pit session at the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. December silver is expected to be up 46 cents an ounce.

Spot gold was stronger in overseas trading due to the dollar trading to a one-week low against the euro, traders and analysts said.

At 7:58 a.m. EDT, spot gold was trading up $9.25 to $1,026.90.

The euro is up to $1.4729 from $1.4651 late Monday afternoon. In screen trading ahead of the pit open, the December S&P 500 futures are up 10.30 points to 1,046.70. November crude oil is up $1.03 to $71.44 a barrel in overnight activity.

In New York Monday, gold futures closed sharply higher when gains inspired mostly by a weak U.S. dollar triggered chart-based buying that accelerated the move. December gold rose $13.50 to $1,017.80 an ounce, while December silver gained 30.5 cents to $16.535.

Comex gold warehouse stocks were down 859 ounces at 9,296,472 ounces Monday, while silver stocks were down 127,140 ounces at 115,213,799 ounces.

Gold's Bullish Consolidation

In other commodities, gold has been consolidating around the 1000 level recently, threatening to take out the all-time high of 1,033 from early last year. If it holds the 1000 area and pushes through to new highs, the bull trend will continue, with a target in the 1300 area from the inverse head and shoulders pattern formed since early last year. A breakout in gold should also send silver much higher, with silver needing to more than triple to reach its all-time high. Adjusted for inflation, the all-time highs for both metals is much, much higher.

Since we posted that a week ago, gold has dipped below 990 4 times intraday, including Friday, only to close above that mark each time. Friday's reversal off the morning dip and close above $1000 is very bullish action, and could portend a push to take out the all-time high.

Since Monday's close, the Dow has lost over 300 points, but gold has actually moved higher by over $10, even as the U.S. dollar has moved higher.

As long as the 1000 area holds, the gold action continues to look like a bullish consolidation. Traders can go long in the 1000 area with a well-defined risk using a stop below recent support (mid-980's intraday and 990 closing basis have been the recent support areas in December futures), giving a good risk/reward trading opportunity.

Rich Dad - Silver is the best hedge against inflation


Robert Kiyosaki is an investor, businessman, self-help author, motivational speaker and inventor. Kiyosaki is best known for his Rich Dad, Poor Dad series of motivational books and other material. He has written 15 books which have combined sales of over 26 million copies

Best way to profit when silver upstages gold

Jim Rogers thinks it’s historically undervalued

While prices of gold don’t necessarily affect silver prices or vice versa, history has demonstrated that when gold rises or falls, silver usually follows suit.

This time around, silver has failed to match the gains that gold posted in recent months, spawning a widespread believe that silver is poised for a bull run. Such factors as a decline in supply and a weakening U.S. dollar have buttressed that bullish belief. And so has the fact that China’s government is strongly encouraging that country’s residents to buy the white metal.

With Beijing’s plan to inject $587 billion (four trillion yuan) into China’s economy, and a growing desire to diversify away from the U.S. dollar as its key reserve currency, the Asian giant could increase its reliance on such precious metals as gold and silver – especially if global inflation takes hold.

China’s central bank “could use gold, silver or even a basket of commodities” to diversify away from the dollar, said Money Morning Contributing Editor Peter Krauth, a recognized expert in metals, mining and energy stocks. “It’s impossible to know how they’d go about it.”

This wouldn’t be the first time that silver played an important economic and transactional role in Mainland China. Nearly 2,500 years ago, the Red Dragon was the first to use silver as money. While China invented paper money in the ninth century, silver made its way back several dynasties later as legal tender until the government again prohibited its ownership in 1935.

Now, 75 years later – in the wake of the worst economic downturn since World War II – China has reversed its stance on silver.

In July, state-run China Central Television (CCTV) began a campaign that pushes the purchase of silver bullion as investment opportunity. Analysts say silver has been undervalued in the last few years, and is a good investment for individual investors, according to CCTV.

“The investment threshold [for silver] is not high, and is more suitable for the general public,” said Want Chunli, GM of Beijing’s Caibai Shopping Mall, the first to offer silver as an investment opportunity. “Silver is much cheaper than gold.”

Silver’s investment potential is best measured by the silver-gold ratio, or the price of gold divided by the price of silver. Over the past five years, the ratio has held fairly steady, requiring 55 ounces of silver to buy an ounce of gold. Earlier this year, as gold increased at a faster rate than silver, the ratio skyrocketed to 70 to 1. It has since corrected to around 60.

Money Morning’s Krauth says that when this relative price ratio does correct, it tends to overshoot.

“I see it going to 50 at least,” Krauth said. “With gold at $1,000, that means silver could trade to $20 or even higher, which is another 20% from [the current price].”

Silver closed last Friday at $16.06, while gold closed at $991.10 – implying a silver-to-gold ratio of 61.71.

Krauth sees China returning to an asset-backed currency and says ownership of silver could help the average citizen, even if its central bank is unable to diversify out of the U.S. dollar fast enough.

The more Chinese citizens who own silver, “the stronger the country will be in the eventuality that the world establishes a new world reserve currency backed by (most likely) precious metal(s).”

China’s middle class is estimated at 300 million – roughly equal to the entire U.S. population. And that consumer group in China is growing. As those incomes continue to rise, so, too, will the demand for silver.

China’s use for silver goes beyond jewelry or as a safeguard against inflation. Thanks to the antibacterial properties of silver ions, the white metal is used for everything from socks to wash machines, to name a few.

Silver supply is falling

The world once had 2.2 billion ounces of silver above ground, but that figure has plummeted 86% to the current 300 million ounces, according to Addison Wiggin, a best-selling author and an executive publisher at Agora Financial LLC, which, like Money Morning, is part of the Agora Inc. group of companies.

However, above-ground silver accounts for only 25% of the silver produced today, says Money Morning’s Krauth. The other three-quarters is actually a byproduct of such mined base metals as iron, nickel or lead.

When the financial markets nearly collapsed last fall, base-metals producers weren't’t spared. As demand forecasts were cut, they quickly throttled back on production, expansion and exploration.

“More has to come from mine production, which can only grow so fast,” Krauth said. “The fact that base-metals producers have cut back a lot hurts silver production because it’s a byproduct of base-metal mining.”

Once the recovery begins – and it’s already under way in China – supplies will be hard to come by as demand for base metals returns, resulting in higher prices for silver.

Gold’s “lap dog”

The price of gold doesn't’t necessarily affect the price of silver, but when other economic factors such as the U.S. dollar falter, prices traditionally rise at the same pace. But when the global financial crisis took hold last year, the silver-to-gold ratio shot up to 84.

Much like a “nervous little lapdog,” the price of silver follows gold closely, Krauth says.

Since its mid-July low of $12.46 an ounce, silver has rebounded roughly 30% to current levels. But if gold supplies run short, silver may have even more room to run.

When gold hit its all-time high of $1,033.90 per ounce in March 2008, silver prices soared as high as $20.92. But when gold hit its 18-month high earlier this month, silver stayed in check.

“Silver has lagged the rise in gold prices since 2000,” said Money Morning Contributing Editor Martin Hutchinson, a former investment banker with more than 25 years’ experience in the global financial markets. “If gold really takes off and the big money finds there isn’t enough of it, there should be spillover into silver.”

Famed commodities investor Jim Rogers also noted the lag in silver and gold’s prices.

“I’m looking at all commodities, but some commodity prices are very depressed,” Rogers told China International Business. “Silver is 70% or so below its historical highs, coffee is 70% or so, as is sugar, while gold is only 10% off its all time high.”

Making the investment

While buying physical silver is an option for investors, the simplest way to get in, Krauth says, is via the iShares Silver Trust (NYSE: SLV, Stock Forum) exchange-traded fund (ETF). In the three years since its inception, SLV has accumulated $3.91 billion in assets, and the share price – which is the equivalent to one ounce of silver – is up more than 50% this year.

During last fall’s market crash, SLV’s holdings remained nearly flat, around 220 million silver ounces. Since then, it has grown a further 22% to about 280 million ounces.

“That’s a testament to investor commitment,” Krauth said.

Hutchinson calls SLV “quite a good vehicle” over the big silver miners – such as Coeur d’Alene Mines Corp. (NYSE: CDE, Stock Forum).

Coeur d’Alene has a large silver deposit in Bolivia. But Hutchinson characterizes Bolivia as a country that he “wouldn’t touch,” thanks chiefly to the Venezuela-like nationalization of the country’s other commodities, including oil and natural gas.

World gold demand dips 9 percent

World gold demand fell 9 percent in the second quarter to 719.5 tonnes as rising prices and the impact of the global recession curbed jewellery consumption, the World Gold Council said on Wednesday.

However, a sharp rise in identifiable investment demand to 222.4 tonnes from 151.9 tonnes a year earlier limited the decline, with demand for gold-backed exchange-traded funds rising sharply year-on-year.

"The global economic downturn has certainly had a major impact on the purchasing power of gold consumers, as have high local prices and dollar volatility," said WGC chief executive Aram Shishmanian.

However, he added: "Investment demand in particular witnessed a strong quarter, and we believe this indicates a growing recognition of gold as an important and independent asset class."

ETF inflows slipped to 56.7 tonnes in the second quarter from a record 465.10 tonnes in the first three months of the year, but were still well ahead of last year's second-quarter inflows of just 4 tonnes.

Net retail investment -- which covers small investment products such as bars and coins -- climbed 12 percent year-on-year to 165.7 tonnes.

Jewellery demand fell 22 percent year-on-year in the second quarter to 404.1 tonnes from 517.8 tonnes previously. Demand from India, traditionally the world's biggest gold consumer, slid 31 percent to 88.0 tonnes from 175.1 tonnes.

"The local gold price hovered at near record highs during the quarter, and the domestic economy remained under pressure from the global recession," the WGC noted in its report.

However, China, the second largest consumer last year, reported a 6 percent rise in jewellery sales to 72.5 tonnes, with sales in Greater China -- which includes Hong Kong and Taiwan -- up 9 percent to 9,964 tonnes.

On the supply side, central banks turned into net purchasers of gold, the WGC said, with 14 tonnes of gold bought by the official sector in the quarter, against net sales of 69 tonnes in the same quarter last year.

Net sales in the first half of the year totalled 38.7 tonnes, it said, the lowest level since the first half of 1997.

"Central banks outside the Central Bank Gold Agreement have been net purchasers since the second half of 2006 and gross purchases of almost 30 tonnes were recorded by central banks outside the CBGA during Q2 2009," the WGC said.

"Although confidentiality issues prevents a detailed dissection of the numbers, it is worth noting that these purchases comprise modest net additions in a number of countries, rather than large purchases by just one or two countries."

Elsewhere scrap supply eased to 334 tonnes in the second quarter from a record 566 tonnes in the first quarter, but was up 21 percent from last year's 276 tonnes.

Overall world gold supply was up 14 percent year-on-year to 927 tonnes from 812 tonnes, the WGC said.

US gold ends down on dollar rise, risk aversion

 NEW YORK, Oct 1 (Reuters) - Gold futures ended lower on
Thursday, holding just above $1,000 an ounce, as a resurgent
dollar in flight-to-quality trade dampened bullion's appeal as a
hedge against a falling U.S. currency.
 For the latest detailed report, click on [GOL/].
 GOLD
 * December gold futures GCZ9 settled down $8.60 at $1,000.70
an ounce on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile
Exchange.
 * Ranged from $998.80 to $1,011.10 -- the highest price since
Sept. 24.
 * Gold futures were weighed down by a stronger dollar, after a
key U.S. manufacturing index for September came in lower than
expected. [USD/]
 * Open interest had been rising in the gold futures market in
September, and geopolitical problems made precious metals more
appealing to people who don't like uncertainties - George Gero,
vice president of RBC Capital Markets Global Futures.
 * The United States told Iran at the highest level talks in
three decades it must take concrete steps to prove it is not
seeking nuclear arms, and France demanded Tehran open a newly
declared site to U.N. inspectors within a few weeks.
 * If tensions continue to rise between Iran and the Western
world regarding Iran's nuclear program and oil prices remain firm
as a result, gold prices could also be supported - James Steel,
chief commodities analyst at HSBC.
 * Weak physical demand from key gold-consuming countries also
hurt buying sentiment.
 * Global recession and a high price this year have knocked
down demand for gold in Turkey, one of the top consumers of
bullion, which is now heading for the lowest ever recorded annual
import levels. [ID:nL1626956]
 * The world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, the
SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), said its holdings stood at 1,095.327 tonnes
as of Sept. 30, up 1.22 tonnes from the previous business day.
XAUEXT-NYS-TT
 * Gold-to-oil ratio at 14.17, down from the previous session's
14.29.
 * COMEX estimated 1 p.m. volume at 104,540 lots.
 * Spot gold XAU= was at $1,001.05 at 2:35 p.m. EDT (1835
GMT) versus $1,006.70, which was the previous session's late New
York quote.
 * London afternoon gold fix XAUFIX= was at $1,004.75.
 SILVER
 * December silver SIZ9 ended down 21.8 cents, or 1.3
percent, at $16.440 an ounce on weak investment demand.
 * Ranged from $16.405 to $16.785.
 * COMEX estimated 1 p.m. volume at 29,081 lots.
 * Spot silver XAG= was at $16.45, versus its previous finish
of 16.59 an ounce.
 * London silver fix XAGFIX= at $16.55 an ounce.
 PLATINUM
 * January platinum PLF0 finished down $13.60 at $1,289.30 an
ounce, tracking gold's weakness.
 * Spot platinum XPT= was at $1,277.50, compared with its
previous finish of $1,295.50.
 PALLADIUM
 * December palladium PAZ9 closed down $6.25, or 2.1 percent,
at $292.95 an ounce, down with platinum.
 * Spot palladium XPD= was at $288, against its previous
close of $293.50.
                     Close  Change   Pct     2008    YTD
                                     Chg   Close   % Chg
US gold GCZ9 1000.70 -8.6 -0.9 884.3 13.2
US silver SIZ9 16.440 -0.218 -1.3 11.295 45.6
US platinum PLF0 1289.30 -13.60 -1.0 941.50 36.9
US palladium PAZ9 292.95 -6.25 -2.1 188.70 55.2
Prices at 2:35 p.m. EDT (1835 GMT)
Gold XAU= 1000.95 -5.75 -0.6 878.20 14.0
Silver XAG= 16.46 -0.13 -0.8 11.30 45.7
Platinum XPT= 1277.50 -18.00 -1.4 924.50 38.2
Palladium XPD= 288.00 -5.500 -1.9 184.50 56.1
Gold Fix XAUFIX= 1004.75 -1.00 -0.1 836.50 20.1
Silver Fix XAGFIX= 16.55 10.00 0.6 14.76 12.1
Platinum Fix XPTFIX= 1292.00 2.00 0.2 1529 -15.5
Palladium FixXPDFIX= 293.00 2.00 0.7 365.0 -19.7
(Reporting by Frank Tang; editing by Jim Marshall)






Expect Gold to Reach $3,000

As the gold price continues its steady climb higher and the U.S. dollar remains immersed in a downtrend, it is worth considering the importance of these macro trends. The headlines with respect to the ongoing depreciation of the U.S. dollar relative to the gold price and other global currencies have been recurring for a number of years. However, in recent months the number of stories has increased as the dollar has made 52-week lows versus a number of currencies and as the gold price, measured in U.S. dollars, has climbed near all-time highs.

What does the weak dollar really mean to an investor? We often read about large, disturbing macro trends, yet rarely think about the micro implications. What does it matter if the budget deficit is $800 billion, or 6.5% of GDP, versus the current estimate of $1.6 trillion, or 13% of GDP? Admittedly, the ramifications over short intervals of time are difficult to discern. This is one of the ways that policymakers sell programs such as stimulus checks or “cash for clunkers.” These programs are all about political posturing and creating the appearance of forging a solution. And while they deliver some semblance of short-term relief to a recession-battered public, crudely put, they are analogous to abetting drug addiction. Give the addict a quick fix and he’s momentarily liberated from his torment and sickness. The real solution, withholding the drug, requires a more painful short-term outcome but gives the addict a chance at recovery and renewal.

The innate desire to want short-term fixes is heightened by the ease with which the fixes are offered. Faced with brief, two-year congressional election cycles, politicians govern in order to keep their jobs, rather than to promote the long-term good of the people, however politically unpopular. Hence it is nearly impossible for the hard, but correct policy route to be taken. With respect to the declining dollar, the correct route is for consumers to pay down their debt and bolster their assets through savings, but the price of this is short-term pain. Saving leads to lower retail sales, which leads to lower economic growth, which leads to higher short-term unemployment - the unavoidable consequence of taking the correct route to solve the public and private spending excesses of this decade. Instead, policymakers are providing more incentives to consume, such as the “cash for clunkers” program, which compounds the declining dollar problem by driving both consumers and the federal government deeper into debt, even if consumers do save a few bucks on a new car. The patient cannot be cured by the same ailment that made him sick in the first place. Easy money is not the cure for a disease contracted by easy money.

With consumers burdened with debt and unable to muster more spending, the federal government has stepped in to fill the void. Keynesian deficit spending is in full force. But just as the creditworthiness of an individual declines as his balance sheet deteriorates, the same is true of sovereign governments. Think of a nation’s currency as the barometer of that country’s fiscal health. The persistent dollar depreciation we are witnessing is a vote of no-confidence on both America’s current financial health, and the outlook for its balance sheet going forward.

This past week, World Bank President Robert Zoellick provoked controversy with his comments on the economic policies of the United States and the U.S. dollar. Zoellick stated that the U.S. dollar is at risk of losing its role as the global reserve currency as both the euro and Chinese renminbi achieve greater prominence in global markets. He questioned whether the United States would be able to resolve its debt problems without resorting to inflation.

The concern of Mr. Zoellick, shared by world leaders, is that in order to manage the debt load America is incurring through large and growing deficits, the Federal Reserve, in conjunction with the executive and legislative branches, must resort to inflating away its debt problems. By making dollars cheaper, it becomes easier to pay off future debts. This insidious, hidden tax on savers robs hard-working Americans.

Ernest Hemingway famously penned that, “the first panacea for a mismanaged nation is inflation of the currency; the second is war. Both bring a temporary prosperity; both bring a permanent ruin.”

Inflation is a decline in the value of money caused by an increase in the money supply. As the supply of paper money increases – without a commensurate increase in production – the excess demand manifested by a greater money supply causes the price of goods and services to rise. More currency chasing fewer goods will eventually lead to price inflation. If the money supply is growing faster than GDP then prices will necessarily move upward. Business decisions become more difficult to make without stable money, hence investment often declines. Inflation can distort the economy and can lead to hoarding out of concern that purchases must be made now because prices will be higher in the future.

The U.S. dollar has lost 89% of its purchasing power over the past 59 years. The $10,000 life insurance policy held by the World War II veteran on his return home represented a significant amount of money in the 1940s. Now, that policy would barely cover the cost of a burial plot and funeral for a war hero. But the material decline in purchasing power is in no way a given, and the precedent for stable prices has a longer history than the era of inflation we have endured for three generations. From 1800 to 1929, the value of the dollar was stable – there was essentially no change in consumer prices for 130 years. It is ironic that the beginning of the inflation tidal wave started shortly after the creation of the Federal Reserve Bank in 1913, an entity designed to preserve price stability.

The acceleration of money supply growth following the collapse of the technology boom - and the cheap money and liberal credit that sprang from it - created the housing bubble that is chiefly responsible for the magnitude of today’s frozen credit markets. A similar misallocation of resources is occurring now and, as always, there will be consequences. In spite of the deflationary headwinds emanating from excess capacity utilization and a low velocity of money, inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon, just as Milton Friedman penned many years ago. Public sector deficit spending combined with a Federal Reserve that has implemented quantitative easing, or money-printing, alongside an unprecedented loose monetary policy will accelerate the decline in the purchasing power of the dollar. Nearly $19 trillion in U.S. public funds were pledged to save the global financial system. While a great deal of this total will be undrawn or repaid, a significant amount will not be.

Formerly, under gold-based monetary systems, inflation occurred when governments melted down or mixed other metals into the coinage, thereby diluting the gold content. Goods and services would require a greater amount of coins as money was debased. Inflation is a form of currency debasement. But how can the individual investor protect herself against inflation? One solution is to exchange inflation-sensitive assets like cash and bonds for hard assets like gold and real estate. As inflation rises, the level of real interest rates decline. Consequently, the opportunity cost of holding a sterile asset that pays no rate of interest declines. Gold acts as a store of value in such an economic climate, and has the advantage of fungibility, portability and ease of conversion into cash that other hard assets like real estate lack. Those analysts and market commentators who talk of a bubble in gold simply ignore the fact that its inflation-adjusted 1980 high is nearly $2,300 per ounce, a number 120% higher than the current price of just under $990 per ounce.

In such an environment of currency instability, the gold price and gold mining equities tend to preserve wealth. Larry Summers, former Secretary of the Treasury and current Chief Economic Advisor to President Obama, and Robert Barsky wrote an academic paper in 1998 titled Gibson's Paradox and the Gold Standard. Their research led them to conclude that price action in the gold price is driven by the reciprocal of the real rate of return from the global capital markets. Demand for gold and, accordingly, the gold price are dependent on what alternative rate of return is available in other asset classes. A low-return environment in traditional asset classes such as equities and bonds will create increased demand for gold. The relatively small size of the gold bullion market and the gold equity market, combined with the magnitude of potential demand, creates a situation wherein explosive price gains are a possibility. Per Summers and Barsky's research, the recent investment climate characterized by tepid long-term returns in stocks and bonds, combined with the prospect of continued monetary inflation to combat the credit crisis, strengthens the case for increasing an investor’s exposure to the gold price and gold equities in spite of the risk associated with short-term oscillations.

Jim Sinclair Interview on King World News - 09-25-09




Legendary Jim Sinclair known as Mr. Gold for his remarkably accurate timing regarding the gold bull market of the 70s is the Founder of jsmineset.com and Chairman of Tanzanian Royalty Exploration. In this interview James discusses inflation, deflation, hyperinflation, the U.S. Dollar, gold, silver, social unrest, the Federal Reserve, commercial banks incorrectly positioned on the COT, fraudulent bank balance sheets, the equity market, future opportunity, gold and silver shares and much more. King World News thanks Jim for being so gracious with his time.