More money to be extorted from the Cypriot population
Cyprus
sell-off fears send gold price tumbling
Precious
metal slides below $1,500 an ounce for the first time since July 2011
– a 'make-or-break moment', analysts say
12
April, 2013
The
price of gold fell to its lowest level in more than 18 months on
Friday night amid fears that sales of the precious metal forced on
Cyprus by its desperate financial plight would lead to wholesale
dumping by hard-pressed countries in the coming months.
At
the end of a week dominated by the plight of the troubled
Mediterranean island, gold slid below $1500 an ounce for the first
time since July 2011 in anticipation that Cyprus would seek to raise
€400m (£340m) by offloading a chunk of its reserves.
Share
prices also fell on the major European bourses after the gathering of
EU finance ministers in Dublin made it clear that there would be no
increase to the €10bn earmarked for Cyprus – even though the
expected cost of the bailout has been raised by €6bn to €23bn.
A
Cyprus government spokesman said the increase would not lead to more
money being taken from savers in the country's banks.
Although
both Portugal and Ireland were granted an additional seven years to
pay back their loans as a reward for sticking to their austerity
programmes, help for Cyprus will be limited to extra investment from
Europe's structural fund.
A
spokesman for the German government said the contribution to Cyprus's
bailout would not change despite the deteriorating financial health
of the country, but Angela Merkel's government supported easier terms
for Portugal – which tabled fresh measures to save more than €1bn
from its budget – and Ireland.
Portugal's
prime minister, Pedro Passos Coelho, said tentative cuts had been
outlined. "We have already presented to our partners some
possibilities that will require further work next week when the
Troika visits Portugal," he said. "We have a [bailout]
agreement with our partners and we need to stick to it."
Most
major European stock markets saw falls of more than 1%, with weak
economic news from the US adding to the downward pressure on gold.
While
Cyprus's gold sale in itself is small, heavily indebted eurozone
nations such as Italy and Portugal could also find themselves under
increasing pressure to put their bullion reserves to work.
"If
Cyprus can break the gold market, then [there are] many reasons to be
worried, with Slovenia, Hungary, Portugal, Spain and Italy in line,"
Milko Markov, an investment analyst at SK Hart Management, said. "It
is a make-or-break moment for gold … if the market can't handle the
reallocation and Cyprus, then there is really a need for a bear
market."
David
Owen, chief European economist at investment bank Jefferies, said:
"As with Greece, we should not be under any illusion that we
have seen the last of the Troika warning about Cyprus's debt
dynamics. The draft EC report [that suggested another €6bn from
Cyprus] saw as a worst case scenario Cypriot GDP falling by around
15% in the next two years before output stabilises. However, Greek
GDP has now fallen for three years since its bailout, to date by
around 20%, with forward looking indicators still pointing down."
Figures
released on Friday showed that European industrial production rose by
0.4% in February, but analysts said the outlook remained bleak.
David
Brown, of New View Economics said: "Annual growth remains in
deep negative territory pulled down by severe recession forces
sweeping through the eurozone. ECB hopes that the eurozone economy
will pick up later this year are simply wishful thinking while a
large part of the eurozone economy is suffering such serious
austerity and economic sentiment remains so vulnerable."

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