Today’s AM fix was USD 1,699.50, EUR 1,289.26 and GBP 1,048.10 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,690.00, EUR 1,285.27 and GBP 1,043.21 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,690.00, EUR 1,285.27 and GBP 1,043.21 per ounce.
Gold closed up 0.22% or $3.80 to $1698.00. Silver closed with a marginal gain of 0.12% - up 4 cents to $32.21/oz.
Prices crept gradually higher in Asian trading prior to some retrenchment in early European trading.
U.K.
inflation held at the highest since May in November as higher food,
electricity and gas costs kept consumer-price growth above the Bank of
England’s target.
The fastest price rises were seen in the cost of fruit, bread and cereals, as well as in energy bills, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said. Inflation is now expected by many investors and economists to creep up further next year as further increases in electricity and gas prices take effect.
Many traders are on the sideline as trading slows down prior to Christmas. The focus remains on U.S. lawmakers attempts to cobble together a deal to avert the 'fiscal cliff'. There is optimism that a deal can be done to avert fiscal disaster.
The fastest price rises were seen in the cost of fruit, bread and cereals, as well as in energy bills, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said. Inflation is now expected by many investors and economists to creep up further next year as further increases in electricity and gas prices take effect.
Many traders are on the sideline as trading slows down prior to Christmas. The focus remains on U.S. lawmakers attempts to cobble together a deal to avert the 'fiscal cliff'. There is optimism that a deal can be done to avert fiscal disaster.
While
this may be the case in the short term - another short term political
panacea which fails to address the very poor deep rooted structural
fiscal challenges may lead to an even greater fiscal disaster in the
course of President Obama's second term.
The fundamentals which have led to another annual gain in 2012 (8% in dollar terms) remain in place.
Ultra loose monetary policies from the U.S. Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and other central banks will provide support, as currency debasement and rising inflation leads to continuing demand for bullion.
Ultra loose monetary policies from the U.S. Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and other central banks will provide support, as currency debasement and rising inflation leads to continuing demand for bullion.
These
fundamentals are leading to broad based global demand for gold - from
retail investors to institutions and pension funds. Japanese pension
funds are increasingly looking at gold according to an article in the
Wall Street Journal this morning.
Diversification
into gold is taking place in order to protect against sovereign risk,
debasement of currency risk and inflation risk.
In
March 2012, Okayama Metal & Machinery became the first Japanese
pension fund to make public purchases of gold, in a sign of dwindling
faith in paper currencies. Okayama manages pension funds for about 260
small and mid-sized companies in the Okayama area.
"By diversifying currencies, we aim to reduce risks associated with them," said Yoshi Kiguchi, the fund's chief investment officer. "Yields become stable if you put small amounts into as many types of holdings as possible."
"By diversifying currencies, we aim to reduce risks associated with them," said Yoshi Kiguchi, the fund's chief investment officer. "Yields become stable if you put small amounts into as many types of holdings as possible."
Of its 40 billion yen ($477 million) in assets, the fund has invested around ¥500 million-¥600 million in gold, he said.
Initially,
the fund aims to keep about 1.5% of its total assets of Y40bn ($500m)
in bullion-backed exchange traded funds, according to chief investment
officer Yoshisuke Kiguchi, who said he was diversifying into gold to
“escape sovereign risk”.
Other pension funds in Japan are following their lead according to the Wall Street Journal.
Japanese pension funds are diversifying into gold "largely to mitigate the damage from possible market shocks".
Japanese
pension funds invest mainly in domestic stocks and bonds. Until
recently, none have looked to gold or other physical assets.
For
example, Japan's Government Pension Investment Fund, the world's
largest public pension, held 64% of its assets in domestic bonds, 11% in
domestic stocks, 9.0% in international bonds, and 12% in international
stocks, as of end-September. The remainder were in short-term assets.
This strategy has produced meager returns at a time when bonds offer historically low yields and the stock market has stagnated.
Worse
yet, when crises have roiled the markets, big funds such as the GPIF
have seen red. The GPIF lost 7.6% in the 2008 fiscal year, when the
global financial crisis struck, and a less-painful 0.3% in the 2010
fiscal year, when the euro-zone debt crisis spooked markets.
Gold,
whose price movement isn't historically correlated with those of stocks
or bonds, can protect portfolios from being damaged too badly in times
of market stress, investment managers say. Low interest rates also
justify holding non-yielding gold in place of cash.
Mitsubishi
UFJ Trust and Banking Corporation said it has secured more than Y2
billion in investments from two pension funds for a gold fund it started
in March.
Gold
is also used as a hedge against inflation, which is becoming a bigger
concern as global central banks buy ever-more bonds, market watchers
say.
The
Bank of Japan has increased its purchases of Japanese government debt
from the market and is under political pressure to do more. Shinzo Abe,
Japan's next prime minister, has said he wants the central bank to
employ "unlimited easing measures" to achieve a 2% inflation target.
"Responding
to inflation is becoming one issue," said Hiroaki Nakaoka, sales
manager for SPDR ETF Japan at State Street Global Advisors (Japan) Co.
Higher
inflation could drive up interest rates and erode the value of the
Japanese government bonds in which pension funds have invested most of
their money.
In
some ways, Japanese pension funds are merely tracking a trend that has
already been seen in other developed markets, industry watchers say.
Gold's potential to offset inflation-linked losses has already prompted
some U.S. and European pension funds to buy small volumes. The Teacher
Retirement System of Texas pension trust fund, for example, held $235
million of SPDR Gold Shares GLD +0.19% out of its total investment net
value of $111.1 billion, as of end-August.
The
emergence of gold exchange-traded funds has enabled pension funds to
invest in gold without holding the physical product. Some funds restrict
themselves from investing in physical assets. The first ETF backed by
actual gold was introduced in Japan in June 2008.
ETFs
"opened the door" to investment in gold, said Tetsu Emori, chief fund
manager at Astmax Investment Management Inc., which manages ¥70 billion
in assets. Roughly 60% of its portfolio is invested in commodities, with
gold accounting for the largest portion.
In
March 2011, Mizuho Trust & Banking Co. started incorporating gold
in a package product for pension funds that invests in various assets,
including gold ETFs. Gold accounts for about 3% of the package. The
product has attracted ¥180 billion in investment from about 200 pension
funds.
The
vast majority of pension funds continue to shy away from gold, an
investment that offers no yield and, in the case of physical gold,
actually costs money to store.
But the potential for market turmoil and expectations of inflation could change that, industry experts say.
The global pension market is of a huge scale - with the Japanese pension market alone worth some $3.4 trillion.
Even a small allocation by pension funds internationally to gold would result in a significant new source of demand which could be a new fundamental factor which propels prices higher in the coming years.
Even a small allocation by pension funds internationally to gold would result in a significant new source of demand which could be a new fundamental factor which propels prices higher in the coming years.
Article Source: Goldseek