Gold
Set For Best Year Since 2010 As Stimulus Bets Increase
Gold
is poised to climb the most in two years as prospects for additional
economic stimulus by governments from the U.S. to China stoke demand
for the precious metal as a bet against inflation, a survey showed.
27
August, 2012
Bullion
for immediate delivery may reach $1,800 an ounce by the year-end,
extending gains this year to 15 percent, according to the median
forecast in the Bloomberg survey of 15 traders and analysts at a
conference in Hyderabad in South India on Aug. 25. That would be the
most since a 30 percent surge in 2010, data compiled by Bloomberg
show.
Gold
is set for a 12th year of gains as the European sovereign-debt crisis
boosts haven demand amid speculation of further policy easing by
central banks, including the U.S. Federal Reserve, which may be
considering a third round of so- called quantitative easing, or QE3.
Investment holdings have expanded to a record on demand for a hedge
against inflation.
“The
euro zone has been quiet of late, but that doesn’t mean the
problems have disappeared,” said Jeffrey Rhodes, global head of
precious metals at INTL FCStone Inc. (INTL), who expects gold to
rally to $1,975 by year-end. “The U.S. economy has been sluggish
and there is a growing belief that there is going to be QE3 soon.
This anticipation is driving the market.”
Fed
Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said last week there’s “scope for
further action” from the U.S. central bank. He is scheduled to
speak later this week at the Fed’s annual symposium in Jackson
Hole, Wyoming. China’s Premier Wen Jiabao has urged additional
steps to support exports and help meet economic targets as evidence
mounts the slowdown is deepening.
Europe
Strains
Gold
for immediate delivery rose as much as 0.4 percent to $1,676.90 an
ounce today, the highest since April 13, and was little changed at
$1,670.60 an ounce at 4:42 p.m. in Mumbai. Prices gained 3.4 percent
last week, the most since the week ended Jan. 27. Spot gold reached a
record $1,921.15 on Sept. 6.
“Europe’s
financial situation is straining at the seams and with no fix
forthcoming, demand for safe havens is likely to remain strong,”
said Bimal Das, director at ScotiaMocatta, the metals trading unit of
Bank of Nova Scotia.
The
European leaders are preparing for a critical month in the
three-year-old crisis that will involve the formulation of a European
Central Bank bond-buying plan, a progress report by Greece’s
international creditors and a looming German court decision on
bailout funding on Sept. 12.
“More
cash is coming into the market from investors,” said Philip
Klapwijk, the global head of metals analytics at Thomson Reuters GFMS
Ltd. “We expect there to be QE3 by September and gold will move
substantially higher. The ETF demand has picked up and will continue
to grow as prices rise.”
Soros,
Paulson
Holdings
in gold-backed exchange-traded products, or ETPs, rose 0.1 percent to
2,448.64 metric tons on Aug. 24, data tracked by Bloomberg show.
Billionaire investors George Soros and John Paulson increased their
stakes in the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), the biggest gold-backed ETP, in
the second quarter, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission filings
showed Aug. 14.
Central
banks will purchase close to 500 tons this year after becoming net
buyers in 2009, according to the producer- funded World Gold Council.
Central banks added 254.2 tons to their holdings in the first half,
according to the council, as countries from Russia to South Korea
added to reserves.
“There
is official interest in gold and central banks are buying, from
Russia to Korea,” said Jeremy East, global head of metals trading
at Standard Chartered Plc. “Central bank purchases are not driven
by price but by asset allocation.”
Losing
Steam
Gold
may “lose steam quickly” if the market is disappointed by a lack
of action to stimulate economies, Barclays Plc said in an e-mailed
report today. “For gold to extend its gains, it needs to continue
to draw wider investor support in light of the fragile physical
market,” analysts including Suki Cooper said in the report.
Gold
imports by India, the biggest buyer, may decline by 250 tons to 350
tons this year as record prices in rupees cut into demand, East said.
Consumption rose to a record 963.1 tons last year, driving bullion
imports to the highest ever at 958 tons, according to the gold
council.
“The
Indian currency has weakened and could weaken further, so demand may
not come in,” East said. The Indian rupee declined to a record of
57.3275 per dollar on June 22, making imports costlier.
Bullion
for October delivery gained as much as 0.5 percent to an all-time
high of 31,091 rupees ($559) per 10 grams on the Multi Commodity
Exchange of India Ltd. today. Prices have climbed 13 percent this
year.
GFMS
is owned by Thomson Reuters Corp. and Bloomberg competes with Thomson
Reuters in selling financial and legal information and trading
systems.
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