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The John Brimelow Report
Chinese wonders M. East horrors
Monday, September 06, 2004
Indian ex-duty premiums: AM $6.98, PM $6.95, with world gold at $401.55 and $401.70. High: lavish for legal imports. The rupee weakened slightly today, with selling pressure partially attributed on Reuters to "gold-related (dollar) buying by a foreign bank" a virtually unprecedented comment which suggests trade is indeed active.
TOCOM gold was completely overshadowed by platinum, which fell a further $10 during Japanese hours on a dollar volume twice that of gold. Gold itself only traded the equivalent of 11,197 Comex lots, 30% below Friday; the active contract closed down 4 yen, but world gold edged up $1.25 above Friday’s NY close. (On Friday Comex was estimated to have traded 88,000 contracts.)
Friday’s story was really not the magnitude of the gold sell-off, but the ferocity of effort mounted to achieve it. According to the Comex estimates, 38,000 contracts traded in the final reporting period of just over an hour (the exchange closed just after 12 noon). Only one day last week traded decisively more. Pretty startling for a short session before a long weekend closing a Convention-blockaded week.
In essence, the Bears (whatever their motive) burned off a great deal of energy without much to show for it. This is not a surprise considering the physical market situation. US-centric, technically oriented analysts are naturally more apprehensive.
The LBMA Shanghai Gold conference is producing strange and wondrous sights. Between Barrick’s Sokalsky suggesting to Reuters that gold should see the "mid to high $400s" by the end of this year (e.g. within 17 weeks!), Newmont’s Pierre Lassonde, in his charmingly collegial way, saying they expect more gold company hedge-precipitated bankruptcies, and GFMS predicting a tripling of Chinese gold consumption in five years and talking of the Chinese having a "traditional frenzy for gold products" (not very visible this past decade, alas) the battered gold veteran starts wondering if he has stepped through the Looking Glass, or into a Time machine.
A Time Machine might seem most appropriate to those who remember the uglinesses of the 1970s. On a bloody Labor day for the U.S.M.C. it is timely to consider how the situation laid out in
http://www.exile.ru/2004-September-13/war_nerd.html
is going to be resolved.
JB