China Gold Hoarding Turns More Traders Into Bulls: Commodities

China Gold Hoarding Turns More Traders Into Bulls: Commodities

Nicholas Larkin, ©2012 Bloomberg News

Friday, January 13, 2012

Jan. 13 (Bloomberg) — Gold traders are the most bullish in  two months after mainland China imported the most metal ever from Hong Kong and  investors bought U.S. bullion coins at the fastest pace in more than a  decade.

Eighteen of 23 surveyed by Bloomberg expect the metal to gain  next week, the highest proportion since Nov. 11. Mainland China imported almost  102.8 metric tons in November, valued at about $5.5 billion, trade data on Jan.  11 showed. The U.S. Mint said it sold 82,500 ounces of American Eagle gold coins  in the first 11 days of January. Full-month sales would reach 235,000 ounces at  that pace, the most since 1999.

Bullion rallied 7.3 percent since plunging to within 1  percentage point of a bear market on Dec. 29, on mounting concern that economic  growth is slowing and European leaders are failing to contain the region’s debt  crisis. Holdings in exchange-traded products backed by the metal are heading for  the biggest weekly expansion since mid-November and are within 2 percent of an  all-time high, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

“The thing that’s caught people’s minds is the massive  increase in Chinese buying,” said Ross Norman, chief executive officer of Sharps  Pixley Ltd., a brokerage handling physical bullion in London. “Gold has  demonstrated time and time again its ability to hold purchasing power. It looks  expensive and people talk about bubbles, but it’s not.”

World Index

Bullion rose 10 percent last year on the Comex in New York,  beating the 1.2 percent drop in the Standard & Poor’s GSCI Total Return  Index of 24 commodities and the 9.4 percent decline in the MSCI All-Country  World Index of equities. Treasuries returned 9.8 percent, a Bank of America  Corp. index shows.

The metal fell almost 19 percent from its record closing price  of $1,891.90 an ounce on Aug. 22 through Dec. 29, taking it below its 200-day  moving average for the first time since January 2009. Prices closed above the  moving average on Jan. 10 and traded at $1,653.60 by 4:37 p.m. in London  yesterday.

Holdings in bullion-backed ETPs reached 2,357.5 tons on Jan.  11, valued at $125.3 billion and exceeding the reserves of all but four central  banks.

China overtook India in the third quarter as the largest  gold-jewelry market, according to the World Gold Council. The gain in imports  from Hong Kong may be a sign the central bank is adding to reserves, according  to Sharps Pixley’s Norman. The People’s Bank of China last made known its gold  reserves of 1,054 tons more than two years ago.

Call Options

There were 8,002 call options traded on Jan. 11 giving holders  the right to buy the metal at $2,200 by July, and the six most widely held  holdings are for calls at 21 percent above prices today, Comex data show.  Options traders are making fewer bearish bets against the SPDR Gold Trust, the  biggest gold- backed ETP, than at any time in the past 20 months.

Gold is also benefitting from concern the euro zone will  tumble back into recession. Germany, the region’s biggest economy, shrank  “roughly” 0.25 percent in the fourth quarter from the third, the Federal  Statistics Office said Jan. 11. The euro region will contract 0.2 percent this  year, compared with growth of 1.6 percent in 2011, the median of 21 economist  estimates compiled by Bloomberg show.

The rebound in gold is being threatened by a strengthening  dollar, which rose to a 15-month high against six major currencies this week.  The 30-week correlation coefficient between the greenback and bullion is now at  -0.44, data compiled by Bloomberg show, with a figure of -1 meaning the two  always move in opposite directions.

Housing Stagnant

Global equities climbed this week to the highest level since  mid-November, and the U.S. Federal Reserve said Jan. 11 that the economy  improved last month across most of the country even as hiring was limited and  housing remained stagnant.

Gold was held back toward the end of last year because of  dollar strength and people having more confidence in the U.S. economy,” said  Carole Ferguson, an analyst at Fairfax IS in London. “If people feel the U.S.  economy will pull the whole world up a little bit, then you could see gold being  very flat to trading down.”

Hedge funds and other money managers have become less bullish,  cutting bets on higher prices by 56 percent since the beginning of August. They  reduced their net-long position to 110,594 futures and options in the week ended  Jan. 3, the lowest since January 2009, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission  data show. The last time the position was that low, prices climbed about 17  percent in the next four weeks.

Benchmark Contract

Ten of 22 traders and analysts surveyed by Bloomberg expect  copper to fall next week and three were neutral. The metal for delivery in three  months, the London Metal Exchange’s benchmark contract, declined 21 percent last  year and gained 5.1 percent this month to $7,989.50 a ton.

Raw sugar retreated 27 percent last year and was at 23.52  cents a pound on ICE Futures U.S. in New York, for a 0.9 percent advance this  month. Six of 11 people surveyed expect prices to gain next week.

Fourteen of 22 anticipate higher corn prices, while 15 of 24  said soybeans will advance. Corn fell 5.4 percent this month to $6.115 a bushel  after increasing 2.8 percent in 2011. Soybeans are down 2.5 percent this month  at $11.7775 a bushel after sliding 14 percent last year.

“You have a potential disturbance factor which is the euro  crisis,” said Bayram Dincer, an analyst at LGT Capital Management in Pfaeffikon,  Switzerland. “Investors are optimistic that the global growth rates are still  high enough to support demand and commodity prices.”

*T
Gold survey results: Bullish: 18 Bearish: 3 Hold: 2
Copper survey results: Bullish: 9 Bearish: 10 Hold: 3
Corn survey results: Bullish: 14 Bearish: 5 Hold: 3
Soybean survey results: Bullish: 15 Bearish: 5 Hold: 4
Raw sugar survey results: Bullish: 6 Bearish: 3 Hold: 2
White sugar survey results: Bullish: 5 Bearish: 3 Hold: 3
White sugar premium results: Widen: 4 Narrow: 5 Neutral: 2
*T

–With assistance from Agnieszka Troszkiewicz, Isis Almeida and Tony C.  Dreibus in London, Glenys Sim in Singapore, Jae Hur in Tokyo, Helen Sun in  Shanghai, Phoebe Sedgman in Melbourne, Ranjeetha Pakiam in Kuala Lumpur, Jeff  Wilson in Chicago and Joe Richter in New York. Editors: Stuart Wallace, Claudia  Carpenter

To contact the reporter on this story: Nicholas Larkin in London at nlarkin1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Claudia Carpenter at ccarpenter2@bloomberg.net.

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2012/01/13/bloomberg_articlesLXP3ZR1A1I4H01-LXP5F.DTL&ao=2#ixzz1jLeUjTQo

 


 

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