Australia’s
New Gold (and Silver) Rush
Jordan
Eliseo of ABC
Bullion and Peter McGuire of NG Farah are interviewed on
Australia’s Sky Business News about the reasons for the recent
decline in gold and silver prices and the surge in physical bullion
demand it has created.
Video
first broadcast on Friday 19th April.
Perth Mint Demand Highest Since Lehman Brothers – Refines Coins, Bars At Weekend
Gold in $US
Australia’s
Perth Mint, the largest refinery in Australia and one of the largest
in the world, said that demand has jumped to the highest level since
the Lehman crisis in 2008.
Demand
has been robust due to currency devaluation concerns and then the 15%
price fall led to a massive surge in demand as store of wealth buyers
leapt at the chance to acquire physical bullion at much cheaper
prices.
This
led to the Perth Mint which refines nearly all of the nation’s
bullion, having to stay open over the weekend to meet orders.
There’s
been strong interest, including from the U.S., with buyers confident
that the metal will rebound from the decline, Ron Currie, sales and
marketing director, told Bloomberg in a phone interview from Perth.
“We
haven’t seen levels like this since the 2008 global financial
crisis,” Currie said yesterday. “Compared to March sales, April
sales have doubled or tripled,” he said.
“We
worked all weekend to keep the factory running to make more stock and
that was only to fill orders,” Currie said from the facility
founded in 1899. “We’re being inundated with people buying
products.”
As
the Perth Mint’s Approved Dealer in the EU, GoldCore are seeing a
similar increase in demand – particularly for Perth Mint gold bars
and allocated bullion accounts.
Bullion
buyers who had been planning to buy coins and bars in the coming
months have brought forward their purchases due to the much cheaper
prices and concerns about rising premiums and difficulty in securing
supply.
“We’re
seeing people are coming into the market because the price has come
down, they think they can afford it now and expect that it will go up
again,” Currie said. “The U.S. has got the money to purchase
metal and is doing so as a hedge,” he said, referring to individual
investors. “It’s extremely busy for us in the U.S.”
http://maxkeiser.com/2013/04/30/perth-mint-demand-highest-since-lehman-brothers-refines-coins-bars-at-weekend/#more-66644
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