Market Trends 21.12.12

Source: ForexYard

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Hey Everyone,

Below are some market trends for today.

Good luck!

-Dan

Gold- May see upward movement today
Support- 1634.30
Resistance- 1668.60

Silver- May see upward movement today
Support- 29.48
Resistance- 30.31

Crude Oil- May see upward movement today
Support- 88.33
Resistance-90.20

Dax 30- May see downward movement today
Support- 7578.54
Resistance- 7700.00

EUR/USD May see upward movement today
Support- 1.3145
Resistance- 1. 3285

Read more forex news on our forex blog

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

Market Review 21.12.12

Source: ForexYard

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The euro fell more than 50 pips against the US dollar in overnight trading last night, as a renewed deadlock in US “fiscal cliff” negotiations led to risk aversion in the marketplace. The EUR/USD is currently trading just above 1.3200.

The USD/JPY also fell close to 50 pips due to concerns regarding the “fiscal cliff”. The pair, which had traded as low as 83.90 during the early morning session, has since bounced back to its current level of 84.05.

The price of crude oil fell by more than $1 a barrel during the Asian session, eventually trading as low as $88.94. The commodity saw a slight upward correction at the beginning of the European session and is currently trading around the $89.35 level.

Main News for Today

US Core Durable Goods Orders- 13:30 GMT
• The indicator is forecasted to come in at -0.2%, significantly lower than last month’s 1.8%
• A worse than expected figure today could result in losses for the dollar before markets close for the weekend

Read more forex news on our forex blog

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

Central Bank News Link List – Dec. 21, 2012: Currency war looms as central banks talk forex

By www.CentralBankNews.info Here’s today’s Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news

Gold and Silver Head for 4th Straight Weekly Drop But “Indian and Chinese Demand Jumps” as Prices Come Down

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Friday 21 December 2012, 07:45 EST

WHOLESALE gold bullion prices hovered around $1650 an ounce Friday morning in London, having earlier hit fresh four-month lows, while stocks edged lower and US Treasuries gained despite little evident progress in Washington to avoid the so-called fiscal cliff.

Silver traded either side of $30 an ounce meantime, having yesterday dipped below that level for the first time since August, while oil prices dipped slightly and copper ticked higher.

“Precious metals continued to stall overnight,” says a note from refiner MKS.

“Sentiment has clearly…as a result of a number of key support levels being tested or coming into play…[although] gold did not decline any further overnight buoyed by physical bids from both Europe and Asia…there is still a strong drive by the speculative side of the market to short and is evident by the heavy selling into rallies on Comex.”

Heading into the weekend, gold looked set for its biggest weekly loss since June by Friday lunchtime in London, and its fourth in a row, with gold trading 2.7% below last Friday afternoon’s London Fix price.

Earlier in the day, gold and silver hit four-month lows, extending yesterday’s losses that followed news of an upward revision to US GDP growth for the third quarter.

Silver meantime looked set for its biggest weekly drop since September 2011, down 7.7% on the week.

Gold in Sterling is below where it started 2012, trading as low as £1006 an ounce this morning, while gold in Euros is also below where it was by the first week of January, despite setting a new all-time high as recently as October.

Over in Asia however, “China and especially Indian demand has jumped,” said a senior Swiss logistics executive, speaking to BullionVault late Thursday.

Indian importers, he said, after shipping relatively low volumes of gold and silver bullion around Diwali – typically the busiest season for the world’s #1 consumers – are using the drop in prices to help wholesalers replenish their stockpiles, slowly run down over 2012.

The Chinese New Year falls in 2013 on 10 February. “This feels like the jump in demand we got in 2010/2011,” our Swiss contact says, pointing to the supply-chain problems of January last year, when strong Chinese demand met New Year holidays at the leading Swiss suppliers.

Indian gold demand improved Friday, newswire Reuters reports, while the Shanghai Gold Exchange had one of its busiest days of 2012 in terms of volumes traded.

In Washington meantime there was no House of Representatives vote on speaker John Boehner’s so-called ‘Plan B’ for dealing with the US deficit and thus avoiding the so-called fiscal cliff of tax cut expiries and spending cuts, worth around $600 billion, currently due to begin at the end of this month.

“The House did not take up the tax measure today because it did not have sufficient support from our members to pass,” said Boehner last night.

“Now it is up to the president to work with Senator [Harry] Reid [Democrat Senate majority leader] on legislation to avert the fiscal cliff.”

Boehner’s proposal included allowing tax cuts to expire for anyone earning more than $1 million a year. Obama, who initially called for the cuts to expire for anyone earning more than $250,000, has said he wants the threshold to be at $400,000.

In the UK meantime, third quarter GDP growth was revised lower this morning, from 1.0% over the three months to end September to 0.9%.

UK public sector net borrowing meantime was  £17.5 billion in November, 7.4% up from a year earlier, official figures published Friday show.

“The disappointing November public finance data fuel mounting expectations that at least one of the credit rating agencies will strip the UK of its triple A rating in 2013,” Howard Archer, economist at research firm IHS Global Insight, told the Financial Times this morning.

Brazil added 14.7 tonnes to its gold bullion reserves last month, the third month running it has bought gold, data published Thursday by the International Monetary Fund show. Brazil’s gold reserves now stand at 67.2 tonnes, double their level back in August.

Belarus, Russia and South Korea  were also among those countries that added gold to official reserves last month, the IMF data show, while Iraq’s gold reserves quadrupled to over 31 tonnes between August and October.

“The central banks in emerging economies have thus been continuing their policy of diversifying their currency reserves,” says today’s commodities note from Commerzbank.

“In our view this trend is likely to continue next year, meaning that central banks will play a considerable part in the price increase we envisage in 2013.”

Ben Traynor
BullionVault

Gold value calculator   |   Buy gold online at live prices

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics. Ben writes and presents BullionVault’s weekly gold market summary on YouTube and can be found on Google+

(c) BullionVault 2012

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

 

2012’s Top 5 Oil & Gas Plays

By OilPrice.com

2012 has been a stellar year for oil and gas. From East Africa to North America, new technology, major new discoveries, an unparalleled appetite for exploration and a metamorphosing perception of risk have changed the playing field.

We’re looking at potential rather than existing production, and here are our Top 5 picks for this year:

Turkana County, Kenya

We have to start with Kenya, the biggest success story of the year.

In March, the UK’s Tullow Oil and Canada’s Africa Oil Corp. discovered 100 meters of oil in the Ngamia-1 well. The euphoria was in part because this discovery was made on the very first try in the very first well. Stocks shot up to record highs as a result.

The euphoria has not abated. In late November, the same duo made another find of 30 meters of oil in the nearby Twiga-1 well.

September also saw Kenya strike 53 meters of natural gas in its first-ever offshore find in the Mbawa-1 well, off the coast of Malindi. US-based Apache Corp. owns 50% the well in a consortium with a handful of other companies. They’re still digging, hoping that going deeper will reveal the oil.

The bigger picture, however, is that only the surface has been scratched in terms of exploration. The East Africa Rift is believed to hold over 70 billion barrels of untapped crude oil, while offshore Kenya, Tanzania and Mozambique have a joint estimated 250 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. There may be offshore oil, too. The oil discoveries in Kenya so far have been confined to one massive basin, and there are six more.

In addition to the size of the prize here, Kenya is favorable for other reasons as well: It offers relative political stability in the midst of a rather restless Africa; it offers attractive fiscal terms; it offers easy access to export markets; and it has an appetite for infrastructure that is hard to beat.

While 2013 may see some changes in the regulatory environment that could be less favorable, as for 2012, Kenya remains THE number one East African play in terms of potential. Next year will give us a better idea of commercial viability.

Bakken, North Dakota

The Bakken shale play has placed North Dakota ahead of Alaska, making it the number two oil producer in the US for 2012, after Texas. Because of Bakken, the US has increased oil production this year to a level it hasn’t seen in almost a decade and a half. In one month alone this year, North Dakota issued 370 drilling permits.

Stretching from Eastern Montana to Western North Dakota and across parts of Saskatchewa and Manitoba in the Williston Basin, the Bakken Shale Play could yield some 4.3 billion barrels of oil, according to the US Geological Survey. That’s the modest estimate. Continental Resources—one of the major Bakken players—estimates as much as 40 billion barrels.

The clincher is that much of the vast Bakken Petroleum System has not even been tapped. So far, drilling has primarily targeted the Middle Bakken and the upper Three Forks Zones. The Three Forks Zones have not been fully tapped, and the Upper Bakken Shale hasn’t really been tapped at all.

Eagle Ford, South Texas

Eagle Ford is potentially the next Bakken. It’s one of the most ACTIVE plays in the US right now. And what the majors and juniors are playing with is 7,500 in total acreage, five producing wells, two more wells being drilled, and the potential for 100 wells. This year, oil production has increased to some 300,000 bpd (as of August).

Natural gas is also a major Eagle Ford offering. Last year, it produced 914 million cubic feet of natural gas, though that has dropped slightly for this year.

So far, drilling seems to have had even better results than in Bakken. And there is a great deal of confidence and optimism. Enough so that Marathon Oil is planning to shift its primary focus from Bakken to Eagle Ford and spend one-third of its operating budget there. Right now Marathon is producing around 40,000 net barrels of oil equivalent (boe) per day and plans to more than double this next year. It’s already doubled production this year (and, incidentally, seen its profits jump 11% in the first quarter).

The biggest producer is EOG Resources (NYSE:EOG), putting out about 110,000 boe/day and holding reserves of around 1.6 billion boe.

Analysts think Eagle Ford could end up out-producing the Permian Basin in west Texas—and soon.

Mediterranean Plays

The Levant Basin in the Mediterranean has an estimated 122 trillion cubic feet of recoverable natural gas, and around 1.7 billion barrels of recoverable oil. And the area has seen a flurry of activity recently.

Between 25 and 33 billion cubic feet of this gas is in Israeli waters. The rest is carved up between Greek-held Northern Cyprus (which is a bit problematic), Syria and Lebanon.

Of course, along with this potential comes some uncomfortable geopolitics; on one hand among Israel, Lebanon and Syria; on the other hand between Israel, Turkey and the Greek Cypriots.

The first new natural gas field in the region is expected to begin full-scale production this year, with two additional fields coming on-line over the next six years.

Specifically, we’re talking about:

• The discovery to two offshore natural gas fields in northern Israel (Leviathan and Tamar) with an estimated 25 trillion cubic feet (about 100 years year of gas for Israeli domestic use)

• Estimates that Israel has a potential 1.9 billion barrels of untapped oil

• About 5-6 tcf of natural gas in the Aphrodite field claimed by Greek-held Northern Cyprus (just west of Israel’s Leviathan field)

Exploitation will be a bit expensive, though. Israel’s offshore fields are located 100 kilometers from the coast and in 6,000 feet of water. The natural gas is some 5,000 feet under the sea bed.

Offshore Tanzania & Mozambique

Tanzania has become a gas sensation in a very short time, with recent offshore discoveries of some 33 trillion cubic feet.

Sweetening the deal, we have political stability and low security risk, relatively speaking, as well as an existing 70-million-cubic-feet/day capacity for natural gas processing. More gas infrastructure is in the works.

Next door, Mozambique’s 130 trillion cubic feet of gas in its offshore Rovuma Basin is eye candy for foreign investors, and officials believe there is double this amount still waiting to be discovered. It’s not as attractive as Tanzania for one reason: There is no infrastructure.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/The-Top-5-Oil-Gas-Plays-for-2012.html

By. Jen Alic of Oilprice.com the No. 1 source for oil prices

 

Euro Sees Gains amid Hopes for US Budget Resolution

Source: ForexYard

Risk taking in the marketplace, largely due to hopes that US budget negotiations would soon be resolved and the “fiscal cliff” of tax increases and spending cuts would be avoided, helped higher yielding assets, including the euro, gain during mid-day trading yesterday. Today, in addition to any developments in the ongoing budget negotiations, traders will want to note the result of the US Durable Goods and Core Durable Goods Orders figures, set to be released at 13:30 GMT. With both indicators forecasted to come in below last month’s results, the dollar could extend its recent losses before markets close for the weekend.

Economic News

USD – US Durable Goods Data Set to Impact Dollar Today

Hopes that the budget negotiations between US Congressional leaders and President Obama would soon be resolved caused the US dollar to fall against its riskier currency rivals yesterday. The USD/CHF fell more than 50 pips to trade as low as 0.9083 during the first part of the day. That being said, the greenback was able to see a slight upward correction following better than expected US home sales and manufacturing data, and was trading at 0.9115 by the afternoon session. Against the safe-haven JPY, the dollar was able to gain more than 40 pips over the course of the day, and was trading at 84.25 by the beginning of the US session.

Turning to today, dollar traders will want to pay attention to the US Durable Goods and Core Durable Goods figures, both scheduled to be released at 13:30 GMT. With both indicators forecasted to come in below last month’s figures, the dollar could take losses before markets close for the weekend. In addition, any positive developments in the negotiations to avoid the upcoming “fiscal cliff” of tax increases and spending cuts in the US may encourage risk taking, which would lead to bearish movement for the greenback.

EUR – Euro Reverses Gains Following Positive US News

While the euro was bullish against both the US dollar and yen for most of the European session yesterday, better than expected US home sales and manufacturing data turned the currency bearish during afternoon trading. The EUR/USD, which had gained close to 85 pips to trade as high as 1.3293, fell back to 1.3240 after the US data was released. Against the yen, the euro gained over 100 pips during the first part of the day, eventually peaking at 112.14, before dropping back to 111.61 by the beginning of the US session.

Turning to today, US “fiscal cliff” news is likely to have a significant impact on the euro. While budget negotiations between US Congressional leaders and President Obama appeared to be deadlocked earlier in the week, hopes of an impending deal yesterday led to the euro’s temporary uptrend. Any positive developments today are likely to lead to risk taking among investors, which could boost the euro before markets close for the weekend.

Gold – Gold Tumbles Following Positive US News

The price of gold tumbled close to $30 an ounce during the mid-day session yesterday to eventually reach the $1642 level, its lowest level in three-months. Analysts attributed the precious metal’s bearish movement to positive news out of the US, which led to doubts that the Fed will initiate additional monetary easing measures in the near future.

Today, gold traders will want to continue monitoring news out of the US, particularly the Core Durable Goods Orders figure at 13:30 GMT. The indicator is forecasted to come in at -0.2%, well below last month’s 1.8%. If the indicator comes in at or below the expected level, gold prices may be able to rebound during afternoon trading.

Crude Oil – US Data may lead to Losses for Oil Today

Concerns regarding the upcoming US “fiscal cliff” of tax increases and spending cuts, set to take place at the beginning of the year if budget negotiations remain deadlocked, caused the price of crude oil to fall some $0.65 a barrel during mid-day trading yesterday. That being said, positive US GDP, housing and manufacturing data later in the day helped the commodity recoup most of its losses. By the beginning of the US session, oil was trading at $89.85.

As markets get ready to close for the weekend, oil traders will want to pay attention to a batch of US news set to be released at 13:30 GMT. Any better than expected results could lead to speculations that demand in the world’s largest oil consuming country will go up, which could help oil extend its gains during afternoon trading.

Technical News

EUR/USD

The Williams Percent Range on the weekly chart has crossed over into overbought territory, indicating that a downward correction could take place in the coming days. This theory is supported by the Slow Stochastic on the daily chart, which has formed a bearish cross. Opening short positions may be the wise choice for this pair.

GBP/USD

While the Relative Strength Index on the weekly chart is approaching the overbought zone, most other long-term technical indicators place this pair in neutral territory, making a defined trend difficult to predict. Traders may want to take a wait and see approach, as a clearer picture is likely to present itself in the near future.

USD/JPY

The Relative Strength Index on the weekly chart is in overbought territory, indicating that a downward correction could take place in the near future. This theory is supported by the Slow Stochastic on the same chart, which has formed a bearish cross. Opening short positions may be the wise choice for this pair.

USD/CHF

The Bollinger Bands on the weekly chart are narrowing, indicating that a price shift could occur in the coming days. Furthermore, the Williams Percent Range on the same chart is in oversold territory, indicating that the price shift could be bullish. Opening long positions may be the best choice for this pair.

The Wild Card

EUR/GBP

The Slow Stochastic on the daily chart has formed a bearish cross, indicating that a downward correction could take place in the near future. Additionally, the Williams Percent Range on the same chart has crossed over into overbought territory. Forex traders may want to open short positions for this pair today.

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

 

Four Ways to Protect Your Wealth Against a Falling Australian Dollar

By MoneyMorning.com.au

wealth protection when the Australian dollar falls


‘If the worst thing that people say is that we got the economics right again but fell short on the politics, I say, well so be it.’

[Raspberry]


‘At the end of the day I don’t care about the political outcomes, I care about the economic outcomes.’

[Raspberry]


‘It’s not because the government is spending too much, it’s because we didn’t collect the revenues we expected to collect.’

[Double raspberry]

Those are the words of Australian federal treasurer, Wayne Swan.

He was breaking the news that the Australian budget wouldn’t return to a surplus this financial year…just as we told you it wouldn’t.

The question is, just what does this mean for you as an investor? We’ll share our view on that in today’s Money Morning…

First off, let’s get one thing straight. No Aussie treasurer cares about economics…because they don’t understand economics. All they care about is politics…the politics of taking and spending other people’s money (OPM).

But we love Mr Swan’s comment that it’s not because the government is spending too much, but rather because it didn’t swipe enough tax dollars.

We’re sure bailiffs and debt collectors hear similar excuses every day, ‘It’s not that we borrowed too much, it’s that we didn’t earn enough.’

Clown.

The fact is we warned this would happen. The government always had the ‘at-least-we’re-not-as-bad-as-Europe/US/Japan’ argument.

So it was only a matter of time the fabled surplus would disappear.

But you know our view. We never cheered for the government to return to surplus. Not that we want a deficit either. We’d prefer it if the government just left people alone and stopped taxing so much.

Remember, it actually doesn’t matter whether the government runs a deficit or a surplus. They both mean the same thing. It means diverting cash from private sector investment to public sector waste.

Instead of individuals having more cash in their pocket to save, invest or spend, the government gets the cash, which it wastes on buying votes.

That’s the same regardless of whether the government taxes or borrows.

(We’ll leave that thought there, as we’re encroaching on the topics we cover over at Pursuit of Happiness.)

But what’s the implication of this for investors and markets?

Why the Aussie Dollar isn’t as Good as it Seems

For a start, this could (notice the emphasis on could) mean the end of the Australian dollar’s dream run. As you can see on the chart below, the Australian dollar has mostly traded above USD$1 since early 2011:


Click here to enlarge

Source: Google Finance

But considering everything going on in Europe and the US – fiscal cliffs and Greek bailouts – the Aussie dollar hasn’t had a major sustained gain since it climbed over 20% in 2010.

That tells us that far from being a ‘new reserve currency’, the Aussie dollar is hanging on for dear life.

A lower Aussie dollar would have a bigger impact for you than you may think. The obvious things are that imported goods will be more expensive and overseas holidays will cost more.

But it will impact your investments too.

If it costs you to import goods, it will cost Australian businesses more as well.

Now, it won’t be all bad news because Australian companies can use derivatives contracts to hedge their foreign exchange exposure. If they manage these contracts well it can protect the business against adverse price moves.

Trouble is it doesn’t always mean you’ll get the benefit. That’s because firms are still working in a competitive market. If companies can get away with raising prices even though input costs are lower, they’ll do it.

And we don’t have a problem with that…that’s how the market works.

But that’s not much of a consolation for you.

Fortunately, there is a way to hedge your Aussie dollar exposure without using complex derivatives. For a start, most complex derivatives contracts used by big firms have a minimum exposure that stretches into the millions.

Protecting Your Wealth Against a Falling Australian Dollar is Easy

A better option is to use a group of securities that trade on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX). These ‘shares’ give you exposure to rising and falling currencies without having to trade complex investments.

These ‘shares’ are a type of exchange traded fund (ETF) that trades on the ASX. The best thing about these ETFs is that you buy and sell them just like a share. You don’t to take out complex options, forward or futures contracts.

At the moment a firm called BetaShares has three currency ETFs:

British Pound ETF [ASX: POU]

Euro ETF [ASX: EEU]

US Dollar ETF [ASX: USD]

If the British pound goes up against the Aussie dollar then the value of your British pound ETF will go up too. If the British pound falls then your British pound ETF will go down.

(In the interests of disclosure, your editor has invested in the British Pound ETF to protect the value of our spending money before a planned holiday there in a couple of years.)

Protecting your investments against a falling Aussie dollar is a subject our old pal Greg Canavan wrote about several months ago. He’s given his readers advice on how best to do this.

There are other ways to guard your investments too. One that we’re sure our technical trading guru, Murray Dawes, will like is the BetaShares Australian Equities Bear Hedge Fund [ASX: BEAR].

As you can guess, this ETF rises as the market falls. Of course, in recent weeks the BEAR ETF has fallen as the Australian stock market has gone up.

And as we’ve written in recent months, we’re betting on the stock market going up in 2013…that’s why we’ve got more buy recommendations in Australian Small-Cap Investigator than we’ve had in over two years.

But we also know the market is still as fragile as heck. So adding some hedging strategies to your portfolio (or at the very least being aware they exist) makes a lot of sense.

That’s especially important considering the recent rapid rise in Aussie stocks.

Cheers,
Kris

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: The Fuse is Lit

Daily Reckoning:
The Great Monetary Devolution Away from the Gold Standard

Money Morning:
Australian Stocks: Still the Best Wealth Builder in Town

Pursuit of Happiness:
Gun Control: Did Obama Shed Tears for These Kids?

Australian Small-Cap Investigator:
Why Invest In Small-Cap Stocks? And Why Now?

Gold’s Price Woes Won’t Last: We’re Heading Back to $1,800

By MoneyMorning.com.au

gold price in consolidation phase

Ugh.

Monday was another one of ‘those days’. Gold was hit for $40 – over 2%.

The bulk of the losses (as they always seem to) came during New York trading. The hard selling began quite gently – but punctually – shortly before 10am, with gold just below $1,700.

It got aggressive after the mid-morning latte at about 11.20am and, in just over two hours, the gold price was taken from about $1,693 to $1,660.

Then it was time for a pastrami sandwich.

‘Those days’ are becoming a little too frequent for my liking. We’ve had about five of them since the beginning of November. Somebody doesn’t like gold …

Something’s Got to Give

I am surprised to see gold under so much selling pressure. I had expected the opposite.

I’m not entirely sure what’s driving it. Perhaps there is some unwinding of the long-gold/short-euro trade. This is where people bet that gold will rise against the euro. This trade is no longer tempting given the relative calm that has fallen on the area – for now.

Whatever the reason, this selling pressure has not come at a good time, technically at least. We are now in an intermediate-term downtrend.

I’d like to share a chart with you that I have been working off in recent weeks. It shows the gold price since 2008. Let me try and explain the various things I have drawn on it.

gold price chart since 2008
Click here to enlarge

Here’s the close-up view:

gold price chart since 2008 closer look
Click here to enlarge

Underneath the gold price, I have drawn a red trend line off gold’s 2008 lows. Gold is sitting just on the trend line now, ‘on support’. I would not like to see this trend line breached, as that would indicate that a near four-year trend is broken.

The green line is the 144-day moving average – the average price of gold for the previous 144 days. For some reason this worked beautifully in the 2009-11 period catching gold’s lows, as indicated by the lilac arrows. Since late 2011, it has stopped working.

Of late, gold has shown a tendency to make ‘spike lows’. I have pointed these out these with the red circles. I am hoping this week’s action is typical of this. If it is, we should see a rebound in the gold price.

The blue and amber areas indicate the range which has bound gold over the last 15 months, as it has gone through this consolidation phase.

Three times it has tried to get above $1,800 – the blue area. Three times it has failed. Three times it has tried to test $1,520 – the amber area. Three times it has held. Sooner or later, one of the two has to give.

I would say the chances are fairly high for a reversal here and now. If gold continues this downward trend, there should be some support around $1,600. Who knows, we may have to re-test $1,520 again – trends do build momentum, particularly given that so much trading is now by computer programme – but I’m not betting on it. And I’m certainly not selling any of my gold.

Gold Still A Good Long Term Bet

For gold to go through $1,520, we’re either going to need the world’s monetary and financial woes to be suddenly fixed (nah); or there really is a gold price conspiracy to impoverish gold investors (hmm); or there’s some kind of 2008 liquidity event (doubt it).

Five times since early November large amount of gold have been dumped on the market. This is not the action of a disciplined seller trying to get the highest price for his or her gold.

Rather, it is the action of, off the top of my head, somebody who has just had a margin call. Or maybe somebody who is trying to get the gold price down, so he/she can buy and go long, or cover their shorts.

We’re still in consolidation mode, folks, after that 2008-2011 run from $700 to $1,920. It looks like we stay in consolidation mode for a while longer, with patience and resolve continuing to be tested.

Dominic Frisby
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This is an edited version of an article that originally appeared in MoneyWeek

Why A Eurozone Breakup Is Now More Likely Than Ever

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Eurozone break up

 To the complete shock of several analysts, the Eurozone managed to make it through 2012 without breaking up. However, 2013 is another story.

Now that Italy’s Prime Minister Mario Monti has resigned, there’s a good chance that Italy will be in the forefront of a new Eurozone crisis.

That means 2013 doesn’t look to be a good year for the euro, either-especially with new Italian elections likely to take place in February.

Of course, the EU establishment hopes that Monti can remain in office, but with four very different candidates now jockeying for position, Italy is one of the continent’s great question marks.

Here’s Why…

The leading candidates in this crucial contest include:

  •  Silvio Berlusconi, leading the remnants of his former rightist coalition,
  • Monti himself, currently in negotiations with several centrist parties,
  • Luigi Bersani, leading the left-wing Democrats, currently regarded as most likely to win
  • And comedian Beppe Grillo, whose Five Star Movement is leftist and anti-authoritarian.

Of these four, only Monti and Bersani would represent the continuation of the status quo.

Meanwhile, the return of Berlusconi, whom the establishment forced out in 2011, would be a nightmare for the euro. That goes for the ascension of Grillo as well.

In the balance of this pivotal contest could be the fate of the Eurozone itself.

At the extreme, Berlusconi or Grillo (or a coalition between the two) would almost certainly take Italy out of the euro, since Italy is capable of surviving independently. After all, its current account deficit is only 1.4% of GDP.

What’s more, any move toward independence by these two would allow Italy to throw off the EU-imposed ‘austerity’ policies that have inevitably proved both unpopular and recession-causing.

At the other end of the spectrum, a Monti government (if one could be formed) would continue austerity and allow the euro to survive – at least until some other country such as France or Spain blew it up.

In the same vein, Bersani would attempt to keep Italy in the euro but would reject public spending cuts and demand even more handouts.

Judging by what Greece has been allowed to get away with, this might well work for a time, but one has to have real sympathy with the German, Finnish, Dutch and Estonian taxpayers who will be made to pay for all this.

 2013 Eurozone Forecast: There’s More To It Than Italy

And there’s the sleeper problem, France. Even if Italy doesn’t blow up the eurozone there’s a good chance France will.

Don’t be fooled by those bond yields, either. French 10-year government bonds currently yield only 1.97%, far below the 5-6% yields of equivalent Spanish and Italian government bonds – but that only proves that bond dealers can’t recognize a crisis until it hits them in the face.

In 2006, after all, they were trading Greek bonds at less than 0.5% yield above German bonds. So much for rational markets.

What’s also worrisome are the disappearing French millionaires. They are leaving the country in droves because of President Francois Hollande’s ridiculous new tax policies.

It started when Bernard Arnault, France’s richest man, made headlines when he renounced his French citizenship for Belgium in October.

However, this flight of wealth is not limited to the hyper-rich like Arnault. Last week it was revealed that French film star Gerard Depardieu had also moved to Belgium.

Since Depardieu is a chevalier of the Legion d’honneur and of the Ordre national de Merite, it’s not as if he doesn’t have substantial ties to his homeland.

Anecdotally, many other wealthy Frenchmen, less well-known than Arnault and Depardieu, are making the same decision. It is tough to live in a country which not only taxes your income at 75%, but then adds an annual wealth tax of up to 2% on your capital.

Meanwhile, France currently has a budget deficit of only 4.5% of GDP, but that will go up, especially as the country is expected by the Economist team of forecasters to have only 0.1% economic growth in 2012 and none at all in 2013 – and given the exit of millionaires, the latter estimate is almost certainly too optimistic.

A Myriad of Reasons the End Is Near

If you want other reasons why the eurozone might break up in 2013, there is a laundry list of reasons why the end is near.

You can try Greece (even the Germans may someday get fed up of exorbitant Greek bailout demands.) Then there’s Spain, which is pretty rickety but no more than that, provided its richest province, Catalonia, doesn’t try to secede.

Or Cyprus, which is bust, but most likely to get a bailout from the Russian Mafia who dominate its economy. Or there’s Portugal, which everyone’s forgotten about and is trying manfully to solve its problems, but is expected to suffer 3% declines in GDP both this year and next – EU-imposed austerity is yet again proving very painful.

Then there’s Slovenia, which ought to be rich and solvent, but through mismanagement has managed not to be solvent. And Ireland, which has got part way to solving its problems but isn’t out of the woods yet.

You get the picture.

What’s more, Germany has an election in September/October 2013.

Currently the Germans appear docile, likely to re-elect Angela Merkel, or possibly her Social Democrat opponents, who are committed to the euro and bailouts.

But if the road between now and then has been too rocky, even German voters may decide giving the government a blank cheque for four more years of bailouts isn’t too smart.

In that case, they will doubtless find a German equivalent of Beppe Grillo and throw the EU into even more confusion.

It’s possible that the eurozone will survive in its current form until next December. But I wouldn’t put much money on it.

 Martin Hutchinson

Contributing Editor, Money Morning 

 Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in Money Morning (USA)

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Mexico to Privatize State Oil Company Pemex?

By OilPrice.com

Big potential changes south of the border. Mexican President-elect Enrique Pena Nieto has announced that he wants increased private investment in the nation’s energy industry.

Will this include Mexican state oil company Petroleos Mexicanos, more familiarly known as Pemex?

The question is significant for the U.S.

Mexico is, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, now America’s second largest source of imports. Of the United States’ total crude oil imports averaging 9,033 thousand barrels per day (tbpd), Mexico provides 1,319 tbpd, exceeded only by Canada with 2,666 tbpd.

No, says Pena Nieto. Speaking to reporters in Ottawa last month, Nieto said, “I have publicly talked about Mexico’s need to open ourselves up to the participation of the private sector in the energy sector, however this doesn’t mean privatizing state run companies. I hope that this will happen with investments in Pemex but we can’t postpone the benefits that Mexicans deserve to get through energy development.”

Following a lunch with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Pena Nieto told reporters, ” Clearly, if we evaluate Mexico’s energy potential, it will require more infrastructure development and investment for exploration and exploitation of this important resource, and eventually, for refining.”

The upside for Mexicans? The country’s constitution stipulates that the nationn’s oil and gas in Mexico belongs to the Mexican people, and Pemex is the only company allowed to develop it.

On a national scale this leaves Mexico without energy captains of industry or private oil companies, but bereft of foreign investment, technology and expertise.

And the sad reality is that Pemex oil production is in decline , from 2006 Pemex’s average daily oil output was 3.3 million barrels per day, but in 2011, just 2.54 million bpd.

On the plus side, last month Pemex announced the discovery of a field 16 miles from Villahermosa, Tabasco, that may contain reserves of 500 million barrels of crude oil. In any case, Pena Nieto is moving quickly to reorganize Pemex . Pena Nieto has appointed energy secretary Joaquín Coldwell, president of the National Executive Committee of the PRI to replace current Pemex president Jordy Herrera. Pena Nieto is pressing forward on reforming the country’s energy sector, in order to attract foreign investment. Mexican energy analysts believe that foreign capital could be crucial to reviving Pemex’s declining oil output, sharing the profit on private projects for exploration and production in deep waters as well as allowing foreign private capital to participate in the new business of developing new unconventional shale gas and shale oil reserves.

But Pena Nieto’s efforts to open Mexico’s closed energy sector still face an uphill struggle, as any real energy reform would require Constitutional changes, which have stymied previous governmental efforts.

Still change is in the air, as Nieto and leaders of Mexico’s three largest political parties have agreed to work toward allowing competition into some of Pemex’s operations, as well as revising mining royalty agreements. Nieto signed a document stating that Mexico will make “the necessary reforms to create a competitive environment in the economic processes of refining, petrochemical, and transportation of hydrocarbons.”

As Mexico is currently the world’s No. 7 oil producer, the implications of Nieto’s efforts are significant.

But U.S. oil companies operating in the Gulf of Mexico might have competition for Pemex assets. Four months ago China’s State-owned China National Offshore Oil Corp. proposed buying Canada’s Nexen Inc. (NYSE:NXY), paying roughly $15.1 billion for Nexen Inc.’s common and preferred shares for Nexen’s worldwide operations including the North Sea, Colombia and the Gulf of Mexico. The Gulf of Mexico concessions from the U.S. government are the potential deal breaker for CNOOC, so, should other operations there arise, then America’s oil companies can likely expect some eastern competition.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Mexico-to-Privatize-State-Oil-Company-Pemex.html

By. John C.K. Daly of Oilprice.com – the No.1 source for oil prices