Gold
Gold and silver prices reached new record highs of
$1,430.95/oz and 30 year highs of $30.68/oz respectively
yesterday. It is important to remember that these are nominal
highs of more than 30 years ago. Adjusted for inflation, the
record highs are $2,300/oz and $130/oz (see silver charts below).
Gold also reached new record nominal highs in sterling, euros and
most major currencies yesterday on growing concerns about
currency debasement.
Gold is currently trading at $1,395.56/oz, €1,053.81/oz and
£885.73/oz.
Silver
Silver is currently trading $29.02/oz, €21.92/oz and
£18.42/oz.
World silver production. Click on the image to view full
size
Silver continues to play catch up with gold which is resulting
in the gold to silver ratio continuing to fall. The gold/silver
ratio is now at 48.1 (1 ounce of gold will buy 48.1 ounces of
silver) and the ratio looks set to target 40 which is the price
seen in 1998 when Warren Buffett was accumulating silver.
Gold (orange), Silver (yellow) and Gold/ Silver Ratio (white)
- 40 Years. Click on the image to view full size
The gold/silver ratio at 48.1 is sustainable as in gold and
silver's last bull market in the 1970s, the gold to silver ratio
was between 18 and 48 and averaged around 30. In the last 40
years a very significant amount of silver has been consumed in
consumer and industrial applications. Gold's consumption is tiny
in comparison and this would suggest that the very high
gold/silver ratio of the 1990s and up until recently may have
been a historical anomaly. Smart money realises this and is
positioning accordingly.
Silver - 1971 to Today (Weekly). Click on the image to view
full size
Silver remains undervalued vis-a-vis gold and remains a
contrarian play with little or no media coverage, scepticism and
continued bearish forecasts and few retail investors having any
allocation to silver whatsoever.
Most Wall Street banks have been bearish on silver throughout
the bull market including last year. They remain so (see News
below) with only Bank of America bullish, saying that they expect
silver to average $37.5/oz by 2013.
Silver reached a weekly closing nominal high of $49.45/oz
briefly in 1980 (see chart above) when just one billionaire
family, the Hunt Brothers (one of a handful of billionaires in
the 1970s) attempted to corner the silver market causing the
price to surge (in conjunction with many investors seeking to
hedge themselves from the stagflation of the 1970s). Today there
are hundreds of billionaires and hedge funds throughout the world
- some of whom may be tempted to squeeze the large concentrated
short positions of JP Morgan in particular. JP Morgan is now
facing lawsuits and being sued for manipulation and suppression
of silver prices. The internet campaign of Max Keiser to 'Buy
silver and Crash JP Morgan' has gone viral and is now being
picked up in the mainstream media.
From a technical point of view, a close above yesterday's
highs at $30.68/oz could see silver quickly rise to challenge the
resistance of the record quarterly nominal high at $32.20 per
ounce seen on New Year's Eve 1979 - 12/31/79 (See Chart
below).
Silver - 1971 to Today (Quarterly). Click on the image to view
full size
Platinum Group Metals
Platinum is currently trading at $1,682.75/oz, palladium at
$733.00/oz and rhodium at $2,225/oz.
News
(Reuters) -- REUTERS FACTBOX-Precious metals price
forecasts.
The price of gold, which hit a record high on Tuesday above
$1,425 an ounce, is expected to remain well supported next year
as investors favour the metal as a safe store of value amid
instability in the financial markets. Silver prices are also
expected to extend their recent rally to 30-year highs on gold's
coat-tails, though analysts warn the metal is more prone to
volatility. Platinum and palladium are also expected to benefit
from recovering economic growth. Gold was bid at just above
$1,425 an ounce midmorning on Tuesday, while silver was near
$30.40 an ounce, platinum was just above $1,720 an ounce and
palladium was near $760 an ounce. Below are recent price
forecasts for gold , silver , platinum and palladium . Please
note dates given are those of the reports in which the forecasts
appeared, which may differ from the dates on which they were
made.
MORGAN STANLEY (DEC 5)
Morgan Stanley said it expects gold prices to average $1,203
an ounce in 2010, rising to $1,315 an ounce next year before
easing back to $1,250 an ounce in 2011. It expects silver prices
to average $18 an ounce this year and $20 an ounce in 2011 and
2012. The bank also said it sees platinum rising from $1,622 this
year to $1,624 in 2011 and $1,783 in 2012. "Gold, despite
hovering at record highs, is likely to edge higher on sovereign
concern and growing inflation anxiety, particularly in the
(emerging markets)," it said in a note.
GOLDMAN SACHS (DEC 1)
Goldman Sachs said in a research report it expects the gold
rally to continue in 2011, with prices averaging $1,575 an ounce
next year. The bank says it sees gold at $1,480 an ounce, $1,565
an ounce and $1,690 an ounce in three, six and 12 months
respectively. "While we are introducing a 2012 average gold price
forecast of $1,700 an ounce, we think it is prudent for gold
investors to begin to prepare for gold prices to peak in 2012,"
it said in the report.
SOCIETE GENERALE (NOV 30)
Societe Generale expects gold prices to average $1,225 an
ounce this year, rising to $1,485 an ounce in 2011 and easing off
to $1,400 an ounce in 2012. The bank said it sees silver at
$20.10 an ounce, $29.50 an ounce and $30 an ounce respectively in
the same years. "The gold price should reach fresh all time highs
in 2011 driven by mounting inflation fears fuelled by super lax
U.S. and euro zone monetary policies," it said.
BNP PARIBAS (NOV 30)
BNP Paribas raised its 2011 gold forecast to $1,500 an ounce
from $1,245 previously, and said the metal was likely to average
$1,600 an ounce in 2012. The precious metal is likely to average
$1,365 an ounce in the final quarter of 2010, rising to $1,415 in
the first three months of 2011 and $1,500 in the second quarter.
In the third quarter, it sees gold at $1,515 an ounce.
"Investment demand is rebounding with euro zone motivated safe
haven flows, the official sector continues to be an active buyer
of gold, while demand from the jewellery sector entered its
seasonally strong quarter in October," it said.
BARCLAYS CAPITAL (NOV 29)
Barcap said it expects gold to average $1,380 an ounce in the
fourth quarter of 2010, rising to $1,410 an ounce in the first
three months of next year, $1,450 in the second quarter of 2011
and $1,490 in the third quarter. In 2010 as a whole, it sees gold
averaging $1,228 an ounce, rising to $1,445 an ounce next year
and $1,300 in 2012. "We maintain a positive view across the
complex given the gold-favourable backdrop of low interest rates,
concerns about currency instability and sovereign debt set to
drive prices into uncharted territory," the bank said.
BANK OF AMERICA-MERRILL LYNCH (NOV 11)
Boa-ML expects gold prices to average $1,233 an ounce in 2010,
and silver to average $19.91. Next year, the bank sees gold at
$1,425 an ounce and silver at $29.50. "Excess liquidity provided
through QE2 is... positive for precious metals, which is one
reason we have lifted our silver price forecast and anticipate
the metal to average $37.5/oz by 2013," it said. "Gold also looks
to be supported."
(Wall Street Journal) -- The U.S. Mint said it is delaying the
sale of 2010 "America the Beautiful" five-ounce silver coins due
to concerns about the high prices and premiums that were to be
charged for the bullion coins by its network of authorized
purchasers. A memo was sent to authorized purchasers at the end
of the first day of sale on Monday. "No orders were processed,"
said U.S. Mint spokesman said Michael White.
(Bloomberg) -- The U.S. Mint delayed the sale of a five-ounce
silver coin because of premiums charged by authorized sellers,
the Wall Street Journal reported, citing U.S. Mint spokesman
Michael White. A seller had priced a five-coin set at $1,395,
$130 above the market value of the silver content, according to
the Journal. The 2010 America the Beautiful five-ounce coin went
on sale on Dec. 6 and "no orders were processed," White said, the
Journal reported.
(Bloomberg) -- Gold demand is "very strong," fueled by jewelry
purchases, Asia's economic growth and investors, according to
Aram Shishmanian, the chief executive officer of the World Gold
Council. The growth in Asia is "absolutely changing" the gold
market, Shishmanian said today in an interview on CNBC, citing
India and China. Demand also is coming from central banks that
are committed to buying in a "very measured way," Shishmanian
said. Investors are "driving the price" of gold, he said. The
London-based council doesn't see any indications of a slowdown in
momentum for the precious metal, which reached a record $1,432.50
a pound today in New York, he said. With the continued
sovereign-debt crises and devaluation of the U.S. dollar,
investors are looking for a haven, Shishmanian said. The outlook
for supply is "really restricted," Shishmanian said. Few mining
opportunities are being discovered, and supply is "pretty
static," he said. Before today, gold gained 29 percent this year,
heading for a 10th straight annual gain.
(Financial Times) -- Commodity prices soared yesterday, with
gold reaching a new nominal record high, as investors snapped up
hard assets on fears of weakening paper currencies.