Showing posts with label WORLD NEWS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WORLD NEWS. Show all posts

Sunday, August 21, 2011

WHERE WILL HAVE REACHED THE GOLD PRICE?

gold price,today's gold price
               

               Gold is the most popular as an investment in all the precious metals. Investors generally buy gold as a hedge or harbor against economic, political, or social fiat currency crises. The gold market is subject to speculation as are other markets. During the current global financial crisis, suggest that gold behaves more like a currency than a commodity.
               The falling dollar has been pushing up the price of gold to new heights as also the political climate in the United States. Civil unrest in different parts of the world has also been a contributing factor to the meteoric rise of gold prices.
                Gold's strong start to the year continued in the second quarter of 2011 where total global gold demand measured 919.8 tones, worth US$44.5bn, with a broad-based support across all sectors and geographies. The two markets that stood out - once again - as major contributors to overall growth were India and China. These two markets accounted for 52% of global end-user investment and 55% of global jewellery demand. Year-on-year growth in total consumer demand was 38% in India and 25% in China, compared with a global growth rate of 7%. JewelLery demand of 442.5 tones was 6% higher year-on-year as a number of key markets posted solid growth. India, China and Turkey (which together account for over 50% of global jewellery demand) generated combined growth of 16% although this was countered by weakness in other markets, most notably those in the west. The US$ value measure of global gold jewellery demand grew by 34% year-on-year to reach US$21.4bn.  Gold is currently around 51% higher than it was a year. That seems like a really big move compared to the previous steady price rise over the last 10 years.
goldprice

              The chart that follows covers every situation in the last ten years where the price of gold year over year is anywhere near as high as it currently is.
               Many analysts have forecast that gold prices will eventually hit $3,000 an ounce, after hitting a record $1,800/ounce last week; economic experts at Kansas State University have warned that it is only a matter of time before the bubble bursts. The huge federal deficit and a deteriorating economy have made many investors fearful of the US economy entering a period of stagnation, driving stock prices downward, said Lloyd Thomas, an economics professor at Kansas State University.
















































9th Nov 2010 A.M.
$1416.25
9th Nov 2010 P.M.
$1421.00
7th Dec 2010 A.M.
$1426.00
2nd March 2011 P.M.
$1435.50
7th March 2011 A.M.
$1437.00
7th March 2011 P.M.
$1437.50
23rd March 2011 P.M.
$1439.50
24th March 2011 A.M.
$1441.25
24th March 2011 A.M.
$1447.00
6th April 2011 A.M.
$1457.00
6th April 2011 P.M.
$1461.50
8th April 2011 A.M.
$1470.50
15th April 2011 A.M.
$1472.50
15th April 2011 P.M.
$1476.75
18th April 2011 A.M.
$1484.50
18th April 2011 P.M.
$1493.00
19th April 2011 A.M.
$1495.00
20th April 2011 A.M.
$1505.00
21st April 2011 A.M.
$1507.00
28th April 2011 P.M.
$1535.50
3rd May 2011 A.M.
$1546.50
22nd June 2011 P.M.
$1552.50
11th July 2011 P.M.
$1555.50
12th July 2011 P.M.
$1555.50
13th July 2011 A.M.
$1571.50
13th July 2011 P.M.
$1579.00
14th July 2011 A.M.
$1592.50
18th July 2011 A.M.
$1598.25
18th July 2011 P.M.
$1599.00
19th July 2011 A.M.
$1602.00
25th July 2011 A.M.
$1618.50
27th July 2011 A.M.
$1621.00
27th July 2011 P.M.
$1625.00
29th July 2011 P.M.
$1628.50
2nd August 2011 P.M.
$1637.75
3rd August 2011 A.M.
$1667.50
3rd August 2011 P.M.
$1669.25
4th August 2011 P.M.
$1679.50
8th August 2011 A.M.
$1709.75
9th August 2011 A.M.
$1770.00
10th August 2011 P.M.
$1772.00
11th August 2011 A.M.
$1786.00
17th August 2011 A.M.
$1792.00
18th August 2011 A.M.
$1794.50
18th August 2011 P.M.
 $1824.00
19th August 2011 A.M.
 $1862.00




























                       The estimated major U.S. bank JP Morgan that the gold price will rise until the end of the year to $ 2,500 per troy ounce, or higher , followed by high volatility, the downgrading of the U.S. credit rating. “Before we have downgraded the price development at $ 1,800 per troy ounce appreciated.
There are main five factors which are affect gold price.
(1) The supply and demand factor is pivotal in determining the gold price. Many analysts argue there is            not enough gold being produced to satisfy rising demand. The above ground stock of gold is around 160,000 metric tons and grows about 2,400 tons a year, which is only 1.75 %, while demand keeps   expanding.
(2) The most popular reason to own gold is as a hedge against inflation. The theory is as paper currency loses value, gold will retain its purchasing power, making it a safe place to preserve one's wealth. Historically, gold has traded in opposition to the dollar. A stronger dollar makes dollar-backed commodities like gold more expensive to buy in other currencies, which weakens demand.
(3) Huge double-digit price movements in gold could mean that there are big buyers and sellers in the market like central banks. Central banks in general regard reserve allocation as an ongoing government policy. Although the governments consider fundamentals like dollar weakness and the sustainability of gold as money, they don’t trade gold; they buy it as an investment. They will buy gold when they feel ... gold reserves are too low when compared to its other holdings. Central banks tend to be price agnostic but are heavy buyers and sellers.
(4) Gold investing was reserved for gold bugs -- those who thought global wealth would be eradicated and gold would be the only currency left standing. However, as the financial crisis rocked global markets at the end of 2008, a trend started to develop of regular investors allocating a certain amount of their portfolio into gold. The recommended percentage is typically between 5%-20% depending on how aggressive the investor wants to be or just how much he/she needs to diversify against other assets. This shift was underscored by gold purchases from big name investors who had profited off of the subprime crisis by betting against mortgage-backed securities.
(5) Price manipulation is the most controversial theory that has circulated among gold bugs for 20 years. Some argue that gold prices have been illegally suppressed over the last two decades by central banks and governments. GATA or Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee is the biggest complainant. Central banks reportedly have 32,000 tons gold, with the International Monetary Fund accounting for2,800 tons. Under the Washington Agreement on Gold, its members can sell a maximum of 400 tons year, thereby restricting the amount of gold in the open market place.GATA argues that central banks in actuality have less than 15,000 tons of gold, and that the missing gold has been secretly sold or leased into the market to prevent gold prices from rising to their actual value. 
            

Thursday, August 18, 2011

IS AMERICAN ECONOMY SLIPPING IN THE RECESSION?


                  The recession was already the deepest since the Great Depression and, while it still pales in comparison, the data help explains why it is taking so long to shake off its legacy. Americans by a large majority believe the United States is on the wrong track and nearly half think the worst is yet to come in the economy, a Reuters/Ipsos poll said on Wednesday. The economic slowdown has become more visible over the last three weeks," said analyst Grace Lau of PacWest Financial Management in Phoenix. The Dow, which stood near 12,900 three months ago, closed down roughly 635 points at just under 10,810. The government's debt total is the accumulation of annual budget deficits the United States has compiled, almost uninterrupted, for more than a half-century. Uncle Sam routinely plugs the annual funding shortfalls by selling Treasury bonds — it borrows the money, and then pays interest on the bonds. Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid and military programs account for a rising proportion of government outlays. The federal debt has nearly tripled over the past 15 years.

                         
The United States public debt is the money borrowed by the federal government of the United States at any one time through the issue of securities by the Treasury and other federal government agencies.

 The gross public debt comprises two components:
    First,  Debt held by government accounts, also known as intergovernmental holdings, that is, Treasury securities held in accounts that are administered by the federal government, such as the Social Security Trust Fund.
Second,  Debt held by government accounts, also known as intergovernmental holdings, that is, Treasury securities held in accounts that are administered by the federal government, such as the Social Security Trust Fund.

                         The net public debt increases or decreases as a result of the annual unified budget deficit or surplus. The federal government budget deficit or surplus is the cash difference between government receipts and spending, ignoring intra-governmental transfers. However, there is certain spending (supplemental appropriations) that add to the gross debt but are excluded from the deficit. The deficit is presented on cash rather than an accruals basis, although the accrual deficit provides more information on the longer-term implications of the government's annual operations.

                         
Gross debt has increased by over $500 billion each year since fiscal year (FY) 2003, with increases of $1 trillion in FY2008, $1.9 trillion in FY2009, and $1.7 trillion in FY2010.[3] As of August 3, 2011, the gross debt was $14.34 trillion dollars, of which $9.78 trillion was held by the public and $4.56 trillion was intergovernmental holdings. The annual gross domestic product (GDP) to the end of June 2011 was $15.003 trillion (July 29, 2011 estimate), with gross debt at a ratio of 96% of GDP, and debt held by the public at 65% of GDP.

                          Together with the budget deficit, the political climate was one of the reasons given by Standard & Poor's to revise the outlook on the US  sovereign credit rating down to negative on April 18, 2011.Standard and Poor's downgraded the credit rating by one notch from AAA to AA+ on August 5, 2011, for the first time ever. The long-term outlook is negative and it could lower the rating further to AA within the next 2 years. OVER the past few days a spirited debate over the status of the American government, and in particular its ability to borrow, has rumbled around Washington. This debate was obviously triggered by S&P's announcement Monday morning that it was cutting its outlook on American government debt to "negative", signaling that there is a one in three chance of a downgrade in America's credit rating by 2013.


                         
The “Great Recession” was even greater than previously thought, and the U.S. economy has skated uncomfortably close to a new one this year. New data showed the 2007-2009 U.S. recession was much more severe than prior measures had found, with economic output declining a cumulative of 5.1% instead of 4.1%. The report also showed the current slowdown began earlier and has been deeper than previously thought, with growth in the first quarter advancing at only a 0.4% annual pace. The data indicated the economy began slowing in the fourth quarter of last year before high gasoline prices and supply chain disruptions from Japan’s earthquake had hit, suggesting the weakness is more fundamental and less temporary than economists had believed

                         
An issue in particular is a slowdown in consumer spending. One major source of weakness is consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy. Household purchases adjusted for inflation dropped in June for the third consecutive month -- the first such occurrence outside of a recession since 1959, Consumers are dealing with a labor market that’s gotten weaker, a hit to their wealth through declines in the stock market and just a lot of bad news and uncertainty. Gross domestic product shrank 5.1% from the fourth quarter of 2007 to the second quarter of 2009, compared with the previously reported 4.1% drop, the Commerce Department said last week. The second-worst contraction in the post-World War II era was a 3.7% decline in 1957-58.
                     
                         Growth in the second quarter slowed to a pace that has typically been followed by a contraction within a year. Household spending fell in June for the third straight month; never in the past five decades “Downside risks to the economic outlook have increased,” according to the Federal Open Market Committee statement after the Aug. 9 meeting. Consumer spending has “flattened out,” the labor market has deteriorated and the expansion is “considerably slower” than expected. Gross domestic product, adjusted for inflation, cooled to a 1.6 percent rate in the second quarter from a year earlier. About 70 percent of the time when the pace has fallen below 2 percent, a slump has followed within a year, according to data since World War II. “When growth slows to less than 2 percent on a year-to-year basis, the economy is simply unable to withstand a major shock or policy mistake." 

                         
On the economic front, productivity dropped 0.3% in the second quarter, according to the Labor Department, following a decline of 0.6% in the previous quarter. After the Feb announcement, the US stock markets slipped into red indicating that Fed is running out of ideas. However, at the end of the trading session, Dow saw a surge of 400 points. This was on account of buying stocks at lower levels. Gold prices hit a record US$1,779 an ounce in its biggest three-day rally since the depths of the financial crisis in late 2008. Though the stable rates may bring some relief to the investors, there are signs of the weakness in the US economy. In its announcement, Fed indicated that the economy has grown inconsiderably slower than the Fed had expected.  Economists believe that another round of quantitative easing was not done mainly due to higher inflation and marginal dip in unemployment rate. The Fed is in a predicament. It does not want to take any action that is not going to have a clear impact on the economy or financial markets. It does not have any monetary policy initiative to address the slowdown, thus raising concerns of a return to recession.

                         
The Outstanding Public Debt as of 15 Aug 2011 at 01:46:50 PM GMT is $ 14,602,354,507,213.91 and is the sum of all outstanding debt owed by the Federal Government. Nearly two-thirds is the public debt, which is owed to the people, businesses and foreign governments who bought Treasury bills, notes and bonds. The rest is owed by the government to itself, and is held as Government Account securities.  The estimated population of the United States is 311,124,035. So each citizen's share of this debt is $46,934.19. The National Debt has continued to increase an average of $3.95 billion per day since September 28, 2007.

                          
                        The American debt is the largest in the world. For foreign investors like China and Japan, the United States is such a large customer it is allowed to run a huge tab so it will keep buying exports.  The debt level is the debt as a percent of the total country's production, or GDP, which was $14.7 trillion in 2010. The debt nearly 100% of GDP. The U.S. also has a debt ceiling, which attempts to limit the debt. However, Congress usually raises the ceiling to prevent the negative consequences of a debt default.  The budget deficit is when the government spends more than it receives in revenue. In FY 2011 the deficit is projected to be $1.26 trillion, the difference between $3.83 trillion in spending and $2.57 trillion in revenue. Although this deficit huge, it is less than the $1.6 trillion deficit in FY 2010, and the $1.4 trillion deficit in FY 2009


The U.S., however, has been the beneficiary of two unusual factors.
--> The Social Security Trust Fund took in more revenue through payroll taxes leveraged on Baby Boomers than it needed.
--> Foreign countries increased their holdings of Treasury Bonds as a safe haven, also keeping interest rates low.
         
                         Of the total foreign holdings ($4.49 trillion), China owns $1.1 trillion and Japan owns $900 billion. The U.K. owns $300 billion, while Brazil, the oil exporting countries, Hong Kong, Russia and Canada own between $100-$280 billion each. The Bureau of International Settlements suspects that much of the holdings by Belgium, Caribbean Banking Centers and Luxembourg are fronts for more oil-exporting countries, or hedge funds that do not wish to be identified. (Source: Foreign Holding of U.S. Treasury Securities, April 2011; U.S. Treasury report”Petrodollars and Global Imbalances”, February 2006)

                         
Over the next 20 years, the Social Security funds must be paid back as the Baby Boomers retire. Since this money has been spent, resources need to be identified to repay this loan. That would mean higher taxes, since the high U.S. debt rules out further loans from other countries. Unfortunately, it's most likely that these benefits will be curtailed, either to retirees younger than 70, or to those who are high income and therefore theoretically don't need Social Security.

                         
Many of the foreign holders of U.S. debt are investing more in their own economies. Over time, diminished demand for U.S. Treasuries could increase interest rates, thus slowing the economy. Furthermore, anticipation of this lower demand puts downward pressure on the dollar. That's because dollars, and dollar-denominated Treasury Securities, may become less desirable, so their value declines. As the dollar declines, foreign holders get paid back in currency that is worth less, which further decreases demand.

                         
Discouraging economic data continued to show how weak U.S. economy is. The large Federal debt,  S&P downgraded the U.S. credit rating. The U.S. appears to be on the doorstep of a dreaded double-dip recession. The current US economy status...The US economy is plagued by an extraordinary array of growth-impairing imbalances: a record-high trade deficit, a record-high budget deficit, record-high household indebtedness, record-low national saving and asset price bubbles supporting record-high consumer spending.


The bottom line is that the entire negative factor is like driving with the emergency brake on, further slowing the US economy.





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