Gold News

Gold Investment Jumps as $1.3trn of Washington Promises Caps Dollar Rally, Puts a Floor Under Stocks

The Gold Price rose further from yesterday's 5-week low early Friday in London, bouncing together with world stock markets after Washington pumped more than $1.3 trillion into the US financial and economic systems.

The fresh flood of money – promised in a series of announcements – put a floor beneath Wall Street stocks, commodity prices and foreign currencies, sparking a rally in all asset classes bar government bonds.

"We've seen some pretty extraordinary monetary and fiscal policies getting proposed by the US and other governments," noted Philip Klapwijk, executive chairman of GFMS, at yesterday's launch of the highly-respected consultancy's latest Gold Investment analysis in Toronto.

"This all has the potential in time to spark some serious and maybe sustained inflation. Nor can we ignore the likelihood of Dollar weakness, perhaps even a Dollar bust, as US creditworthiness gets called into question."

GFMS believes Gold Prices could surge to new record highs above $1,000 an ounce between now and July 2009.

Credit Suisse analyst David Davis delays the surge until the last quarter of 2009, warning that "the Gold Price will be volatile" in the meantime.

Further ahead, "We maintain our long-standing view that the supply and demand fundamentals will remain intact for a long-term upswing," he writes in a note to clients.

Thursday saw the US Treasury rescue Bank of America for the second time, injecting a fresh $20 billion in return for preferred stock paying an 8% dividend.

The injection is not currently reported anywhere on the bank's "investor relations" website, which today reports a net loss of $1.8bn for the fourth quarter of 2008, plus a $15bn loss at Merrill Lynch – the failed investment bank bought by Bank of America in Sept.

Yesterday the US Treasury put a federal "backstop" worth $118bn behind the toxic assets bought together with the Thundering Herd in BoA's $50bn purchase.

The Democratic House of Representatives then announced $825bn in new stimulus packages, and also released the remaining $350bn of the previous, ineffective Wall Street bail-out program.

New York stocks rallied fast on the news, up more than 2.5% by the close and pulling Asian and then European shares 2% higher on Friday.

As today's US opening drew near, Gold stood nearly 3% higher. Both the US Dollar and Japanese Yen continued to retreat on the world's foreign exchange markets, meantime, losing ground to all other major currencies.

The Euro rose 2.2% against the Dollar from yesterday's one-week low, and the British Pound added almost 5% against the Yen after hitting its very worst level ever vs. the Japanese currency in late trade on Thursday.

Here in London today, the government was rumored to be preparing a "bad bank" to buy toxic assets off commercial institutions.

Britain's ailing banks have already swallowed £37 billion ($55bn) of state aid.

Looking ahead to Friday's key consumer price data – and looking beyond today's stock-market bounce – "US inflation is expected to turn negative today for the first time since 1955," notes Steven Barrow at Standard Bank in London.

"This 'deflation' might have been caused primarily by the slump in oil prices, but the negative connotations this will have for consumer confidence is bound to imply weak demand and more downward pressure in core prices in the future.

"The Fed, which has already pushed rates down just about as far as they can go, may well do more to try to avoid a deflationary trap. This could hurt the Dollar in the long haul, even if the greenback seems well set right now, given that the slide towards deflation is sparking even more risk aversion in the market."

Investors seeking safety in the securitized trust-fund structure of the SPDR ETF listed in New York yesterday grew their Gold ETF position by 0.6%, pushing the volume of gold held in commercial bank vaults to "back" their shares up to a new record above 795 tonnes.

Here at BullionVault, where private investors own fully allocated physical Gold Bullion outright – free from all balance-sheet and counter-party risk – total allocation has grown by 4% since the start of this month, now reaching more than 13.1 tonnes.

Users continue to choose Zurich as their preferred location for secure storage. The Swiss vault now holds for more than 75% of client gold property, against one-fifth in London and less than 2% in New York.

US clients hold almost 89% of their BullionVault gold in Switzerland.

Adrian Ash

Adrian Ash, BullionVault Gold News

Adrian Ash is director of research at BullionVault, the world-leading physical gold, silver and platinum market for private investors online. Formerly head of editorial at London's top publisher of private-investment advice, he was City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning from 2003 to 2008, and he has now been researching and writing daily analysis of precious metals and the wider financial markets for over 20 years. A frequent guest on BBC radio and television, Adrian is regularly quoted by the Financial Times, MarketWatch and many other respected news outlets, and his views from inside the bullion market have been sought by the Economist magazine, CNBC, Bloomberg, Germany's Handelsblatt and FAZ, plus Italy's Il Sole 24 Ore.

See the full archive of Adrian Ash articles on GoldNews.

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