Spot Chart | <b>Gold</b> Scents: <b>CHART</b> OF THE DAY | News2Gold |
- <b>Gold</b> Scents: <b>CHART</b> OF THE DAY
- <b>CHART</b>: Iraq chaos lifts <b>gold</b> price - still cheap vs oil | MINING.com
- <b>Gold</b> price on insane surge after massive trade | MINING.com
<b>Gold</b> Scents: <b>CHART</b> OF THE DAY Posted: 26 Jun 2014 05:53 AM PDT |
<b>CHART</b>: Iraq chaos lifts <b>gold</b> price - still cheap vs oil | MINING.com Posted: 12 Jun 2014 04:23 PM PDT The gold price extended gains in after hours trade on Thursday as Iraq's descent into chaos prompted the return of safe haven buying. On the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold futures for August delivery reached $1,275.10 an ounce, up $14 from Wednesday's trading session and the highest since May 23. Gold and silver were standouts on a day when other metals were tanking. With the turmoil in Ukraine fading from the headlines, gold's status as a hard asset and storer of wealth in times of trouble lost some of its shine. But as Iraq spirals into all-out war and the US looks in danger of being pulled back into a conflict it has spent the last six years extricating itself from, gold is finding favour again. The situation in the Middle Eastern country has deteriorated at a remarkably fast pace. Yesterday Sunni militants from the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, seized the northern cities of Mosul and Tikrit, and now the capital Baghdad appears to be under threat as the Iraqi army falls to pieces. Already observers are talking about the possible break-up of the oil-rich country and regional players becoming involved as the Saudi Arabia-sponsored Sunni militias confront Iran-backed Shia-forces which dominate the current Iraqi government. Not surprisingly the oil price has been on a tear rising to $106 a barrel, the highest in eight months. Looking at the ratio between the gold price and the oil price which usually rise in tandem (rising oil prices pushes up inflation increasing demand for gold as a hedge), gold looks undervalued by comparison. Since 1970 the average ratio – how many barrels of oil can be bought with one ounce of gold – is 15 compared with just under 12 now, which suggests that gold is cheap compared to oil. The last time the ratio was at 12 was at the height of the global financial crisis in October-November 2008. Image of IED explosion al Anbar Province, Iraq by jamesdale10 |
<b>Gold</b> price on insane surge after massive trade | MINING.com Posted: 19 Jun 2014 10:39 AM PDT The gold price scaled $1,300 an ounce for the first time in more than a month, after comments by US Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen yesterday and a huge buyer lit a fire under traders. On the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold futures for August delivery – the most active contract – jumped to a day high of $1,322.00 an ounce, up $49.30 or nearly 4% from yesterday's close. After months of subdued trade on gold futures markets volumes surged on Thursday leaping past 210,000 contracts – double recent daily averages – by mid-afternoon. As the chart shows, after a steady climb throughout the morning, during lunchtime volumes suddenly spiked with more than 2.9 million ounces (90 tonnes) changing hands in three big chunks in the space of 15 minutes. Gold built on its gains from there to settle at $1,320.40, the the best one day performance for the metal since September last year. The chart looks almost like the inverse of the trading pattern on April 15 this year when exactly year to the day of 2013's $200 shocker another strange gold price plunge occurred. Gold's positive move started yesterday after Yellen, speaking at the latest meeting of the Fed's interest rate committee, said she was comfortable interest rates could stay low for a considerable period, which sent the dollar tumbling against the euro and pound sterling. Gold and the US dollar usually moves in the opposite directions and gold's perceived status as a hedge against inflation is also burnished when central banks flood markets with money. Monetary expansion, particularly since the financial crisis, has been a massive boon for the gold price. Gold was trading around $830 an ounce when previous chairman Ben Bernanke announced the first program of quantitative easing in November 2008. The QE program together with other stimulus measures saw the balance sheet of the Fed cross the $4 trillion mark in January, up 400% in seven years. The US has not been alone in printing money and together with the Bank of Japan, the European Central Bank and the Bank of England, more than $15 trillion of easy money is now sloshing around in the system. Earlier this month the ECB took the unprecedented step of moving rates into negative territory. Gold was also pushed higher through safe haven buying as the deteriorating situation in Iraq sends oil prices rising. Benchmark West Texas Intermediate traded higher again on Thursday to reach $106.70 a barrel. Looking at the ratio between the gold price and the oil price which usually rise in tandem (rising oil prices pushes up inflation increasing demand for gold as a hedge), gold looks undervalued by comparison. Since 1970 the average ratio – how many barrels of oil can be bought with one ounce of gold – is 15 compared with 12 now, which suggests that gold is cheap compared to oil. The last time the ratio was at 12 was at the height of the global financial crisis in October-November 2008. The price of gold slid close to 28% in 2013 – the worst annual performance since 1980 – in anticipation of an end to the ultra-loose monetary policy, but has enjoyed double digit gains in 2013. |
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