"As recent entrants in the gold market watched paralyzed in fear as gold
tumbled by over $100 on the last FOMC day, on the idiotic notion that Ben
Bernanke will no longer ease (oh we will, only after Iran is glassified, and not
before Obama is confident he has the election down pat), resulting in pervasive
sell stop orders getting hit, others were buying. Which others? The same ones
whose only response to a downtick in the market is to proceed with more CTRL+P:
the central banks. FT
reports that the recent drop in gold has triggered large purchases of
bullion by central banks in recent weeks. "The buying activity highlights the
trend among central banks in emerging economies to buy gold, even as some
western investors are losing patience with the metal. Gold prices have dropped
13.8 per cent from a nominal record high of $1,920 a troy ounce reached in
September, and on Friday were trading at $1,655.60." Well, as we
said a few days ago, "In conclusion we wish to say - thank you
Chairman for the firesale in physical precious metals. We, and
certainly China, thank you from the bottom of our hearts." Once again, we were
more or less correct. And since past is prologue, we now expect any day to see a
headline from the PBOC informing the world that the bank has quietly added a few
hundred tons of the yellow metal since the last such public announcement in
2009: a catalyst which will quickly send it over recent record highs.
More on what was perfectly obvious to most except the propaganda pushers:
More on what was perfectly obvious to most except the propaganda pushers:
The Bank for International Settlements, which acts on behalf of central banks, has been buying significant quantities of gold on the international market amid falling prices, traders said.at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/retail-sells-central-banks-wave-gold-both-hands
According to several estimates, the BIS bought 4-6 tonnes of gold, worth roughly $250m-$300m at current prices, in the over-the-counter physical market last week, with purchases particularly strong at the end of the week. The total purchases over the past three or four weeks were likely to be as much as double that, the traders added.
In a note to clients this week, Credit Suisse referred to “aggressive central bank buying seen last Friday”..."
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