The gold market is expected to open flat at begin of year 2010, based on overnight Globex trade. The dollar is weaker against most foreign currencies and the energy sector is trading higher. Speculative/ investment demand for gold bullion has slowed this month with gold prices down 6.3 percent for the month and down 9.7 percent from the peak at $1227.50. This also reflected in the stats from SPDR Gold Trust as the NAV has lost 3.873 billion dollars from the peak on December 2nd, an 8.8 percent drop. Gold has not been such a formidable investment for the month of December, even though record highs were posted on December 2nd. We have been guiding investors to hedge bullion holdings and/or ETF’s this month.

Rebounds in the gold market should be limited to the $1135 – 1151 level, if gold decisively settles above 1170, short call option hedges should be covered. Expect gold to trade toward the 1055 level and possibly as low as 995 in the first quarter. The long term underlying support for the gold market is global investor demand and central bank interest. Another round of weakness in the U.S. dollar in 2010 could lead central banks to the gold trough, replacing $ foreign reserves with the yellow metal.

Many Western countries hold 60% to 80% of their reserves in gold. Eastern countries have a very low gold to total foreign reserves ratio, with many concentrated in the U.S. Dollar. The demand trends for gold should continue with many wealthy countries in the East and in South America holding under 2 percent of their reserves in gold, including China. The chart pattern for gold is currently bearish as we approach the New Year, $125 off of the December highs and no bounce. Pullbacks towards the 1050.00- 1000.00 area should attract buying. The long term upside count for gold is 1332.00.

Gold Price Rebound After Hits Below USD 1,100















Due to USD become stronger gold price have drop to as low as USD 1,050 per ounce before a bounds back to USD 1,109. USD become stronger is just a temporary due to year end effect and this is a vary gold oppecunity to buy gold. China and India still buying gold so how come the price will drop more if they are still a lot of buyer.

I think at 1Q2010 gold will go up hits back USD1200 and if it really happen gold price is on rally again to hits USD 1,400 by year end 2010.




















Wish You All A Vary Happy Golden Christmas Holidays, All The Best In Investment.

Gold had fall and about to bottom


















Gold had fall and about to bottom as US dollar go higher but this only will last for above few week after that Gold price will up again due to fundamental US economic still weak. The big picture is not change, inflation, low interrest rates, more social programs, higher taxes, continued high unemployment, house defaults, bankruptcies, bank failures in the US. Once the short covering is over expect the USD to continue its downtrend.

Gold Price May Drop More

















Gold is directionless this morning, range-trading between $1,097 and $1,091, after a stronger US dollar weighed on precious metals in New York trade yesterday. Open interest on the February 2010 COMEX gold future decreased by 9,808 contracts yesterday—which also weighed on gold market sentiment. In spite of that however, the retracement in the gold price did appeared
to attract new ETF inflows. Of note, the SPDR Gold Trust ETF, the biggest gold-backed ETF, increased its gold investment holdings by 215,171oz . Gold support and resistance are at $1,083 and $1,110, respectively, today. Gold has remained strongly correlated to the US dollar this morning, with the rolling correlation (on a 5-day basis) between the spot gold price and trade-weighted US dollar increasing from -0.88 yesterday, to -0.94 this morning.

Yesterday US Q3:09 GDP and existing home sales data had impact on gold prices in NY trade, particularly the data had impacts significantly on the strength of the dollar.

Gold Price Is Going No Ways


















Today's gold low at $1,111.60 confirmed two similar lows last Friday and Saturday, painting a double bottom of sorts. Gold is sawing between $1,128 and $1,115, going neither forward nor backward. Who knows, we might have already seen the bottom in Friday's crisis. Till January we may be plagued with a sideways market talking out of both sides of its mouth (that's the English translation of "equivocal"). Right now we can only wait for breakout one way or the other: over $1,128 and then $1,142, or below $1,110. In between lies merely consolidation & marking time.

With gold close to $1,110, we have seen some physical buying return

Greece is struggling with its debt burden, reflected by Greece sovereign bond spreads having risen sharply in recent days. The euro may therefore continue to struggle. And so, we expect precious metals to struggle too.















Friday's US data was very positive — especially consumer confidence data. However, we also see the rise in US business inventory in October as positive. It is the first time since August 2008 that US businesses have increased their inventories. Once businesses start to re-stock, the recession seems destined to end. With gold close to $1,110, we have seen some physical buying return. However, given that we expect headwinds for the euro, we still prefer selling into rallies. We see support at $1,110 and resistance at $1,142.

Gold Price Likely To Rebound On Next Year January


















Due to USD value moving up gold price have drop from history high at above USD 1,220 per ounce. In its tumble since 2 December gold has already corrected most of its overbought-ness. However, the rally I was looking for Friday evening came overnight. Gold reached $1,142 but 8:00 a.m. Eastern then fell until noon and settled flatly around $1,115, where it languisheth still. At the Comex close (1:30 Eastern) gold registered $1,119.40, down $6.30.

Because it is trading lower in the aftermarket, and because gold's low close at $1,120 has now been violated and see a correction below $1,050. Rest of the year gold will edge sideways and higher. After 1 January the rally should resume and carry to a high sometime mid-February to mid-March.

What's driving gold's fall?

But what is driving the falls? Surely everyone can see the fundamentals behind gold? That may be, but short-term speculative capital does not care about long-term fundamentals. It is looking for quick gains and it appears to have driven gold into some kind of short-term, blow-off top.

As we head into year end, there are a lot of fund managers who will want to lock in their profits for the year. I'm afraid that means they will sell their gold – and anything else they own that has done well – at the slightest hint of a turn in the markets, because they will want to secure their gains (and their bonuses) on what will have been an excellent year. That's what we saw on Friday and why the market fell so hard, so fast.

In the short term, this does not bode well for any market – except one. It may be that we are finally seeing the end of the 'Great Reflation Trade', this astonishing rally out of the crash. For the large majority, locking in profits will mean locking in US dollars. And we have repeatedly said that it's the US dollar vs everything else. If it rises, stocks will fall, commodities will fall – even corporate bonds and UK house prices may start to fall.

Gold Price Drop Lower On Speculation Unemployment News In US

















The correction in the gold market continued with a USD 12 per ounce drop. Now in US bank and report is speculated that the US unemployment rate is better enough to sell gold and buy into share market. Due to this action gold price is drop fast but US share market did not bounds up strongly.

This may likely due to not mach investor follow or buy the US bank speculative on unemployment news. They know the big buyer China and India buying gold in November till now still did not get their gold yet. China and India is buying gold from US so this situation will cause investor to think that the quantity of gold stock in US it is right? By speculated the unemployment news, in US have cause some selling of gold scrap so this may help US to restore back some physical gold.

Gold price had drop below the level during the Dubai news roll out and I think the panic selling likely to continues till end of this week before a bounds up show in gold price. The buying momentum in Asia still strong and retail gold price in Malaysia still at RM150 per gram for 999 gold. I think after this speculation end gold price may bounds up to continues the rally to USD 1,300 per ounce lever so keep your gold and buy gold in ever dip in price.
Low interest rates remain an important driver of liquidity, and hence the gold price. The Fed funds futures market continues to price no rate hike before June next year, assigning a 70% probability to rates staying between 0 - 0.25% until April 2010. However, beyond April, the probability of rate hikes is growing, with the futures market assigning a 57% probability for rates to rise towards 0.5% and higher by June 2010. There is a growing belief that rates in the US will be higher, sooner. While we do not see this as immediately bearish, we believe higher rates will slow the pace at which gold has been rising.

In the futures market, we have seen a steady rise in gold’s speculative short positions. As of last week Tuesday, the noncommercial shorts stood at 106 tonnes on COMEX — the highest level since May this year. However, the shorts remain only a fraction of the longs. On non-commercial positions was 981 tonnes last week. Because of the rise in short positions, the net speculative long position has remained fairly flat, around 875 tonnes since the start of November.

Gold support at $1,142 and $1,136, resistance at $1,160 and $1,176.

Gold Price Bubble?

Gold’s near vertical rise to new records is starting to puzzle many investors who are trying to square arguments fuelling its rise with seemingly conflicting moves in risky assets like equities or inflation-protected securities. This is not the stuff of a traditional gold rally, some argue, and suggests momentum alone rather than any watertight rationale is driving gold’s recent surge.

The commonest answer to why gold has been rising has been that the dollar has been weakening, making the metal, which is sold in dollars, cheaper in other currencies and acting as a hedge for dollar investors. But the strong inverse correlation between the two is fairly recent. As little as six months ago it was not there. Even closer than that — in early October and early November — there were periods when the two failed to march in lockstep at all.

So there must be something else at work at well, given that spot gold hit another record high, above US$1,226 (RM4,168) an ounce, yesterday. That was not really a record high, of course. On an inflation-adjusted basis, it would need to get up to more than US$2,150 to match where it was at the London fixing on January 21, 1980. But the rise has still been remarkable, racking up a near 60 per cent gain in the past year. Michael Dicks, head of research and investment strategy at Barclays Wealth, reckons a lot of the demand for gold is down to confidence, to investors wanting something they can grasp onto in an era of uncertainty about the global economy.

“People feel more confident in tangible investments,” But why now? Gold was discarded along with just about everything else except cash in 2008 when the world was fearful of a financial meltdown. It lost 33 per cent in the quarter that Lehman Brothers went bust. And although there are signs of investors becoming more cautious — such as in the Reuters asset allocation polls for November — there is no sign of a sharp retreat from this year’s risk rally.

Indeed, world stocks as measured by MSCI hit a 14-month high yesterday, just as gold was hitting its new peak. In the past, gold has been widely used to combat inflation, so its current rise could be an argument for the devaluation of currencies as a result of authorities essentially printing money to pump liquidity into the system. “There is generally a lack of confidence in money in developed markets,” said Max King, strategist at Investec Asset Management.


There is little sign of any immediate inflation, however. The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development projects US inflation at 1.7 per cent next year then 1.3 per cent in 2011. It sees prices in the euro zone up 0.9 per cent then 0.7 per cent. There may be longer-term fears of inflation at work, but this has not been recorded as strongly in other hedging instruments. Demand for US Treasury inflation-protected securities, or TIPS, has risen but it is more of a normalisation from a near complete rout during the height of the crisis. Breakeven spreads on 10-year Treasuries suggest expectations of just over 2 per cent US inflation over that horizon.


Many point out that if you are looking for an inflation problem, it probably is not lurking in the big western economies but further afield in the fast-growing emerging world. Baseline forecasts by the International Monetary Fund have developed country inflation at large this year at a virtually non-existent 0.1 per cent — yet it sees 5.5 per cent inflation in the developing world.


But even this picture is hardly scary, looking ahead. While the IMF’s average estimate for major country inflation for the four-year period to 2014 should pick up slightly to 1.7 per cent, it sees emerging country inflation slowing to 4.2 per cent. These are not the figures of inflation nightmares and hoarding bullion. King’s Investec, meanwhile, puts the most recent rally down to the reversal of a decades-long selling of gold by developed economy central banks to net buying by emerging market authorities.


That is based at least in part of a desire to diversify away from the dollar and it is enough, according to Investec, to put a new floor on gold of around US$1,000 an ounce. But for central banks to continue buying at a rate that can drive the market from current levels, would not the dollar need to show some real signs of being ditched as a reserve currency? For all the concern about that, a precipitous move away from the dollar as a biggest world currency is still a low-probability event for many economists and policymakers around the globe.


All the reasons for gold’s rise are perfectly satisfactory but the fact that there are so many could suggest that at current prices all that is happening is momentum — buy it because it has been going up and others are doing so.

Bubble, anyone?

Gold Price Best Part Is Still Ahead

















China Central Bank still waitting the gold that buy during last November and India is still buying gold in this month. However China Central Bank is thinks that gold prices are currently too expensive so I think the gold price correction is near and I think by or before Christmas gold will hits highest before the correction likely to begin.

Malaysia Gold Price Bound Above RM130 per gram

















Gold price is going up strongly on yesterday western time and after the market close Asia market also open in high price. Gold is monstrously overbought, which argues against more upward motion, but overbought can remain overbought for quite some time.

How far or how long the price may hold no one will know, the market demand for gold is still high and the Gold buy from China and India for December is no yet deliver so the price may supported till end of this year is likely to happen.

Public Bank Gold Investment Account as at 02/12/09 9:45 AM


Selling PriceBuying Price
1 gramRM 133.7000RM 128.5200
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