Gold has traded between $1,224 and $1,237 so far today as it prepares to post its best monthly performance in 4 years…as of 10:00 am Pacific, bullion is up $11 an ounce at $1,233…Silver has added 14 cents to $14.81…Copper is flat at $2.14…Copper stocks in the LME’s warehouses dipped below the 200,000 ton mark for the first time in over a year late last week, pointing to solid demand for the metal according to Commerzbank…Crude Oil is 98 cents higher at $33.76 while the U.S. Dollar Index is up one-tenth of a point at 98.27…
SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest Gold-backed exchange-traded fund, said its holdings rose 0.27% to 762.41 tonnes on Friday, the highest in about a year…Gold funds accumulated their largest inflows since 2009 while equity funds posted their longest run of outflows since 2008 last week, according to Bank of America Merill Lynch…
Hedge funds and money managers raised their bullish stances in COMEX Gold to a 1-year high in the week ending February 23, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data showed on Friday…they also increased their Silver net long stance to a 4-month high, though Silver has retraced sharply the last couple of weeks (updated charts in today’s Morning Musings)…
Citi’s strategy team has reiterated its positive view on Gold as an asset class…hoped-for coordinated policy stimulus is likely to be disappointing, the bank says, “thus we retain a bullish bias on defensive rates markets and Gold (upgraded) versus risk assets.”
Citi offers some caution, though, saying Gold has been supported by a weaker greenback but the dollar trend can be a “fickle friend”…the bank added, “Gold has also sniffed, through poor equity market trends, heightened risk in terms of global financial systemic risk. Such market fear can also be a fickle friend that one or two positive economic releases can turn around.”
Gold will be impacted either positively or negatively by a slew of U.S. economic reports due this week, highlighted by Friday’s February jobs numbers…
India Unveils New Tax Measures On Gold
Disappointing news out of India this morning…the government has reintroduced a local sales tax on Gold jewellery after a gap of 4 years, on top of an already record import duty, as officials attempt to further dampen official demand for the precious metal in the world’s 2nd biggest consumer…Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, presenting his 3rd budget today, announced an excise duty of 1% on Gold and diamond jewellery…a report from his ministry on Friday said Gold was under-taxed in the country, where the richest 20% account for roughly 80% of Gold purchases (what government ministry in today’s over-regulated world won’t think that something is under-taxed?)…
Jewellery sales in India fell in the last 2 months due to the price rally and as consumers delayed purchases in hopes for a cut in the import duty…this forced importers to offer steep discounts over global prices to clear inventory…but India’s Finance Minister surprised the market by not only maintaining that duty but introducing additional tax measures as well…expect a further pick-up in the country’s illegal Gold trade…
Oil Update
Crude Oil is coming off its best week since August 2015 despite some negative words last Tuesday from OPEC Secretary-General Abdullah al-Badri at a speech in Houston…today, the Saudi cabinet issued the following statement: “The kingdom (of Saudi Arabia) seeks to achieve stability in the Oil markets and will always remain in contact with all main producers in an attempt to limit volatility and it welcomes any cooperative action.”
A Reuters poll today has boosted market sentiment, indicating that OPEC pumped less crude this month than in January…
Saudi Arabia and several fellow OPEC members agreed with non-OPEC Russia this month on a tentative deal to freeze output at January levels in an attempt to prop up prices…meanwhile, the U.S. Oil-rig count fell by 13 to 400 in the latest week, according to Baker Hughes, maintaining a recent clip of sharp declines…the number of rigs drilling for Oil in the U.S. has plunged 75% since October 2014…it’s tough to slow a ship as large as U.S. shale, however…U.S. Crude Oil production is expected to fall just 1.1% this year and grow 1.7% in 2017, according to an analysis by Cantor Fitzgerald & Co. of 53 producers….
Watch Iraq
A key country to watch for potential supply disruptions in coming months is Iraq…in January, the country exported an average of 3.88 million barrels a day, including exports from Iraqi Kurdistan…this is 660,000 barrels a day more than it was exporting before the advance of ISIS across parts of the country in the summer of 2014, which saw the terrorist group secure around a third of Iraq’s territory…keep in mind that more than three-quarters of Iraq’s Oil is produced and exported from Basra and neighboring provinces in the south which lie more than 500 km from the fighting with ISIS…however, over the past year, due to Iraq’s budget crisis, almost nothing has been done to improve power and water infrastructure around Basra – this has led to growing protests and grievances amid new problems such as job losses and delayed salary payments…Iraqi officials are expecting this summer to be the most disruptive season of protests on record, and some fear it could potentially affect the region’s Oil exports…
In today’s Morning Musings…
1. A fresh CRB chart paints an interesting picture for commodities…
2. Updates on 9 Venture plays and 1 CSE stock…
3. What to make of Silver’s action the last 2 weeks?…
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