Sep 14

Price of Gold Weekly Recap – September 10-14, 2012

Monday Open: $1,725.80
Weekly High: $1,777.10
Weekly Low: $1,724.80
Friday Close: $1,770.50

This week followed a bullish trend for gold since about a month ago when Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke gave solid indication he would instate quantitative easing. Gold bugs have been waiting for further news on monetary policy, and this week revealed the Fed’s plan to the delight of gold investors. After the doldrums of summer, during which gold started to dip below its previous holdings, gold is finally seeing a tremendous upsurge.

Last week gold hit a six month high, and this week saw gold shoot up another $30 to close just a third of the way below the $1,800 mark, a long way from when gold was hovering around $1,550 in the earlier summer months. Many believe $1,800 is just around the corner, and that 2012 could set the next record for gold’s highest price by catapulting it above $2,000.

Monday opened a bit softly after Friday’s reports of unemployment data and Fed expectations, but hit a solid stride mid-week and jumped drastically on Thursday after Bernanke finally revealed the Fed’s newest financial policies. The entire week, and month in fact, had been building up to Bernanke’s Thursday afternoon address at the third quarter FOMC meeting.

On Thursday, the Fed revealed its plan to spend $40 million buying mortgage-backed dept until employment improved and inflation remained contained. After months of uncertainty, the Fed has shifted focus from price stability of the dollar to boosting employment statistics. Also, the Fed stated it would probably not raise interest rates (which are at historical lows) until 2015, and Operation Twist is a key part of the policy, which retains that the Fed will buy longer-term securities as shorter-term ones mature.

To sum up, this means that inflation could be on the near horizon, and even the possibility of a weaker dollar encourages people to flee to the safety net of gold. After Thursday’s news, the price of gold rose 2%. This is the third round of quantitative easing enacted by the Fed since the recession began in 2008.

“The Fed’s inflationary behavior should be bearish for the dollar in the long run and drive investors to seek protection via the gold market,” Jeffrey Sherman said, who is the commodities portfolio manager of DoubleLine Capital, a company with more than $40 billion in assets.

Historical trends and the time of the season make it very possible that gold could rise to even higher, unprecedented heights. Chief Executive of Newmont Mining Corp., the world’s second largest gold producer, Richard O’Brien told participants at the Denver Gold Forum that $2,000 was just around the corner.

In related news, the Republican party has been calling attention to the possibility of returning the U.S. to a gold standard in recent weeks.

Sep 01

Weekly Gold Price Recap – August 27-31, 2012

Monday Open: $1,674.70
Weekly High: $1,692.40
Weekly Low: $1,653.80
Friday Close: $1,691.60

The entire week was spent in anticipation of Fed Chairman Ben Bernake’s address on Friday, so there was not much movement for gold until then, but once Bernake gave his speech, gold shot straight up after his remarks implied that monetary easing was surely on the horizon. After a slow summer of waiting for the Fed to reveal some clue as to their fiscal intentions, finally Friday brought some relief for gold bugs banking on gold investments taking even higher turns than last year. The beginning of the week until Friday morning saw the price of gold hovering around $1,650, with a few dips from hesitant expectations regarding Friday, and a few small upturns from poor economic data, but once investors got the green light from Bernake, gold peaked at just over $1,690.

With the U.S. economy still in a shambles, Bernake spoke Friday at the Fed’s annual retreat in Jackson Hole, Wyoming and gave clear intentions of boosting the economy with some financial policy.  The Federal Reserve has the power to increase government bond buying, lower interest rates, print more paper money and other economic incentives to keep the economy rolling. When this happens, the economy may see an upturn, but it is at the expense of increased inflation. When inflation increases, the dollar weakens, and gold becomes more valuable as a safer investment.

Though Bernake didn’t explicitly state what moves he was going to make, he did admit that further policy has become necessary since unemployment is still so high and the state of the economy is still “far from satisfactory.”

The European Central Bank is still on the fringe of economic recovery, and ECB president Mario Draghi cancelled his appearance at the Fed’s Jackson Hole meeting due to a heavy workload, he said. The ECB Governing Council will hold a meeting next week to discuss measures that could bolster the euro. The economic upheaval in Europe continues, this week with Catalonia, a region of Spain, asking for a bailout from Madrid. Also, EU unemployment rose to 11.3% in July. Eurozone troubles could strengthen gold.