Sentiment “Less Bullish” Towards Gold as Goldman Sachs Says “Go Short Gold”

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Wednesday 10 April 2013, 07:30 EST

AFTER touching a one-week high yesterday, gold drifted lower Wednesday, ending London’s
morning trading around $1580 an ounce, more-or-less where it started the week, while stocks
gained and government bond prices fell.

Gold in Sterling was also trading in line with last week’s close at around £1032 an ounce, while
gold in Euros fell to €1206 an ounce, just under 1% down on the week so far, as the Euro touched a
one-month high against the Dollar following news that Ireland and Portugal may get more time to
repay bailout funds.

Dealers in India meantime reported slow buying Wednesday, while the world’s biggest gold
exchange traded fund, SPDR Gold Trust (ticker: GLD), continued to see outflows Tuesday. The
volume of gold bullion backing GLD shares ended yesterday at a new 21-month low of just over
1200 tonnes.

“Sentiment amongst some investors has become less bullish for gold,” says this month’s Metal
Matters from bullion bank Scotia Mocatta.

“Rising equity prices to new record highs have increased the opportunity cost of holding gold as an
investment and that has caused some rotation out of bullion and into other asset classes. With some
financial institutions also seeing the gold price as in a bubble and marking down their forecasts, it is
not surprising that sentiment amongst some investors has turned less bullish.”

Analysts at US investment bank Goldman Sachs today cut their 12-month gold price forecast from
$1550 to $1390 per ounce, and advised clients to sell gold short using futures contracts.

Deutsche Bank and UBS both cut their average gold price forecasts yesterday, to $1637 and
$1740 respectively. So far this year gold has averaged just over $1626 per ounce, based on
afternoon London Fix prices.

President Obama is due to unveil his 2014 budget later today, with the White House saying he has
come “more than halfway towards the Republicans” in an effort to secure a deal.

Obama’s budget is expected to ask for $580 billion of new tax revenues over the coming decade,
including a minimum tax on those earning more than $1 million a year – the so-called Buffett Rule
– which is opposed by Republicans.

Obama is also expected to announce a change in the way inflation is measured when calculating
payments under programs such as Social Security, adopting the so-called chain-weighted consumer
price index, which has tended to be slightly lower than the standard CPI.

Whereas the standard CPI measures the changes in prices of a predetermined basket of goods and
services, the chain-weighted measure allows the basket to change to reflect changes in consumer
buying habits, in particular substitution out of goods and services that have risen in price.

The Federal Open Market Committee meantime is due to publish the minutes of its latest policy
meeting later today.

Over in Europe, Ireland and Portugal could get an extra seven years to repay their bailout loans,
according to draft proposals drawn up by the so-called troika of the European Commission,
European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund, Reuters reports.

Support for granting Portugal more time however is likely to depend on its government plugging a
€1.3 billion budget gap that arose after earlier proposed savings were deemed illegal, the newswire
adds.

China, the world’s second-biggest gold buying nation last year, recorded an $884 million trade
deficit in March, official figures published Wednesday show. Year-on-year export growth fell to
10%, down from nearly 22% a month earlier, while imports rose by 14% from a year earlier.

“A depreciating Yen has weakened the competitiveness of Chinese products in Japan,” says Zheng
Yuesheng, spokesman for China’s customs administration.

The Yen traded close to four-year highs against the Dollar Wednesday, just below the ¥100 mark,
while gold in Yen was also near its highest level in over 30 years.

The Bank of Japan last week promised to aggressively boost its monetary stimulus program as part
of an effort to raise the rate of inflation in Japan.

Elsewhere in Asia, South Korea has raised its alert level to “vital threat” following signs that North
Korea is preparing for a missile test.

Ben Traynor
BullionVault

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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 can be found on Google+

(c) BullionVault 2013

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