Russia holds rate, keeps eye on impact of last rate hike

By Central Bank News
    Russia’s central bank held its benchmark refinancing rate steady in October, as expected, saying inflation expectations had eased following its recent rate hike, certain food prices had dropped and there were few upward price pressures from demand.
    The Bank of Russia, which surprised markets by raising rates in September to the current 8.25 percent, said it would continue to keep track of inflation risks and “the consequences of the monetary tightening for the Russian economy” – a statement that indicates the bank is aware that its relatively high interest rates are dampening economic growth.
    The central bank’s statement is less hawkish than last month when it warned that higher food prices were spreading to other segments of consumer prices.
    The central bank also pointed out that the pace of inflation declined in October and early November though it still but remained above the Bank of Russia’s target of 5-6 percent inflation.
    Consumer prices eased to an annual rate of 6.5 percent in October from 6.6 percent in September and the central bank said inflation was estimated at a 6.4 percent rate by Nov. 6, with a stabilization of food prices, the key driver of inflation in recent months.
    It added that the core inflation rate was 5.8 percent in October.
     “Taking into account its influence on economic agents’ expectations, the recent growth in inflation rate remains an important source of inflation risks. Nevertheless, the deceleration of certain food prices growth and the September 2012 hike in the interest rates on the Bank of Russia monetary policy instruments could contribute to the moderation of inflation expectations,” the bank said in a statement after a meeting of its board of directors.
    High inflation has marked Russia’s economy for many years and in the first half of this year it dropped to the 3-4 percent range. But then in June it started accelerating again due to higher grain prices from bad global harvests, prompting the government to sound the alarm and the central bank to raise rates to reinforce its determination to keep inflation under control.
    The central bank said indicators showed that there was a certain slowdown in economic activity in September, with investment growth continuing to decelerate while consumer demand and industrial production growth was largely unchanged. Economic confidence, however, remains positive and credit expansion robust and output remains close to its potential level.
    “Banking credit growth continued to show certain signs of the stabilization. However, the risks of a significant economic slowdown stemming from somewhat tighter monetary conditions are considered minor,” the Bank of Russia said.
    In the second quarter, Russia’s Gross Domestic Product grew by only 0.1 percent from the first quarter, down from a quarterly rise of 0.6 percent, for an annual growth rate of 4.0 percent.

         www.CentralBankNews.info

   

Gold Headed for Weekly Gain “Despite Dollar Strength” as Survey Shows Most Traders Bullish on Gold

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Friday 9 November 2012, 07:45 EST

SPOT PRICES in the wholesale gold bullion market traded above $1730 an ounce Friday morning in London, having earlier touched a two-week high, while stocks fell and the Dollar and US Treasury bonds gained, with analysts suggesting weak growth and monetary policy are likely to persist.

Silver bullion traded close to $32.30 an ounce for most of this morning, 4.3% up on the week, while oil and copper prices ticked lower.

“Precious metals continue to push higher, with the rest of the complex being led by gold,” says Marc Ground, commodities strategist at Standard Bank.

“In spite of Dollar strength, the market appears to continue to take comfort from Obama’s re-election and the implied support this gives to continued monetary accommodation from the Fed.”

Heading into the weekend, gold bullion looks set to record its first weekly gain since the start of October, having risen more than 3% since the start of the week.

“Renewed inflows into gold ETFs are responsible for the increase in price,” says a note from Commerzbank, “having totaled 10.5 tonnes in the past three days alone.”

Gold’s 1.7% jump on Tuesday could have been caused by a gold purchase made by the Soros Fund, Standard Bank’s Yuichi Ikemizu writes in his daily ‘Bruce Report’ today, citing a rumor circulating among New York traders.

Gold traders are at their most bullish since August 24, according to newswire Bloomberg, which reports that 25 of 33 analysts polled say they expect gold bullion to rise next week. Friday August 24 saw the first of five consecutive weekly gains for spot gold.

Here in Europe, the European Central Bank is “by and large, done” with assisting Greece, ECB president Mario Draghi told a press conference Thursday.

“On Greece, we certainly cannot do monetary financing,” Draghi said, though he added that the ECB did agree a part of Greek debt restructuring back in February that it will forego profits on holdings of Greek debt bought under its Securities Markets Programme.

“What happens is that these profits naturally accrue to the central banks that are members of the Eurosystem…[who may then] transfer these profits to the governments and then it is up to the governments to decide whether they want to re-use these profits for Greece. And the governments actually committed themselves to do so at that time.”

“Markets continue to trade on a weak note given lingering [US] fiscal cliff concerns and worries about whether Greece will get the funding it needs to meet debt payments” says Nick Verdi, Singapore-based currency strategist at Barclays.

Draghi also answered a series of questions on whether he would like to see Spain request a bailout by saying it is up to the Spanish government and not the ECB. The ECB’s sovereign bond buying program, Outright Monetary Transactions, requires a government to have agreed to an adjustment program before the ECB will buy its bonds in the secondary market.

Benchmark yields on 10-Year Spanish government bonds touch a one-month high this morning, a day after Spain auctioned longer-term bonds for the first time in 18 months, according to newswire Reuters.

“The five-year sale was awful,” said one trader, citing a wide discrepancy between the highest yield accepted for the bond and the average yield.

Spain has over €100 billion of debt due to mature next year.

The ECB voted to leave its key interest rate on hold at 0.75% Thursday.

“We have penciled in an interest-rate cut in December,” says Howard Archer, economist at research firm IHS Global Insight.

The Euro fell to a one-month low against the Dollar Friday, while Euro gold prices traded within 2% of last month’s all-time high.

Elsewhere in Europe, German inflation held steady at 2% last month, according to figures published this morning.

Over in China, industrial production grew by 9.6% in the year to October, official figures published Friday show, up on the previous month and a stronger acceleration that most analysts forecast.

Retails sales growth was also stronger-than-expect last month at 14.5% year-on-year – up from 14.2% in September.

“The domestic economy is evolving in a good direction,” China’s central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan said Thursday, ahead of the release of the above data.

“The key question for investors,” says Bank of America Merrill Lynch economist Lu Ting, “is whether China’s economic growth has truly bottomed out. Based on October data… the answer is firmly yes.”

China’s consumer price index meantime shows inflation fell to 1.7% last month, down from 1.9% a month earlier.

“The October CPI confirms that inflation is currently not a main concern for the government,” says Nomura analyst Zhang Zhiwei.

“Policy easing will likely continue in Q4 to support a growth recovery.”

Chinese gold bullion demand is expected to hit 860 tonnes this year, a 1% increase on 2011, according to Philip Klapwijk, global head of metals analytics at consultancy Thomson Reuters GFMS.

“China will overtake India [this year],” Klapwijk told the online Reuters Global Gold Forum Thursday, “both in overall demand terms and as the world’s largest jewelry market.”

Ben Traynor
BullionVault

Gold value calculator   |   Buy gold online at live prices

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics. Ben writes and presents BullionVault’s weekly gold market summary on YouTube and can be found on Google+

(c) BullionVault 2012

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

 

Pound Advances against the Euro on BOE Decision

By TraderVox.com

Tradervox.com (Dublin) – The UK currency has advanced against the euroarea currency after the Bank of England decided to refrain from extending asset-buying program and left the interest rates at the lowest level. The pound improved against the dollar after declining yesterday. The improved after the Bank of England MPC decided to keep key interest rate at 0.5 percent.

According to Ian Stannard, who is the head of foreign-exchange strategy in London at Morgan Stanley, stated that the market expectations for asset-purchases were suppressed hence further easing would not have had a profound impact on the economy. He, however, indicated that there is a high possibility of more easing next year.

The pound, which has increased by 1.5 percent this year, advanced yesterday after England’s 10-year gilt advanced by 0.01 percentage points. The currency advanced by 0.2 percent against the euro to trade at 79.74 pence per euro at 12:12 yesterday. The pound had reached its strongest of 79.69 earlier in the day, which was last registered in October 1. The sterling was little changed against the dollar, exchanging at $1.5975. It had earlier dropped to its lowest since October 23 of $1.5930.

According to Alan Clarke, a London-based economist at Scotiabank Europe Plc, the decision to refrain from QE is quite priced in because is a consensus view of the MPC. Kit Juckes, the Head of Forex research in London at Societe Generale SA, also noted that the policy makers have been “pretty outspoken” in stating that the QE will make no changes to the economy for now.

The UK currency is headed for another weekly drop against the dollar, as investors forecast that UK trade deficit narrowed in September. The pound opened the day still down at $1.5982 in London today. This is a 0.2 weekly drop. The pound was trading 79.80 pence per euro today, after appreciating yesterday to 79.61.

Disclaimer
Tradervox.com is not giving advice nor is qualified or licensed to provide financial advice. You must seek guidance from your personal advisors before acting on this information. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. Opinions expressed at Tradervox.com are those of the individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Tradervox.com or its management. 

Article provided by TraderVox.com
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Market Trends for 9.11.12

Source: ForexYard

printprofile

Hey Everyone,

Below are some market trends for today.

Good luck!

-Dan

Gold- May see a downward correction today
• Support- 1715.30
• Resistance- 1746.60

Silver- May see a downward correction today
• Support- 31.67
• Resistance- 32.62

EUR/USD- May see a downward correction today
• Support- 1.2720
• Resistance- 1.2804

DAX 30- May see upward movement today
• Support- 7158.15
• Resistance- 7275.74

Read more forex news on our forex blog

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

Market Review 9.11.12

Source: ForexYard

printprofile

The euro remained within reach of a two-month low against the US dollar and a one-month low vs. the Japanese yen during overnight trading, as concerns regarding the economies in Spain and Greece boosted safe-haven assets.

After falling more than 50 pips during afternoon trading yesterday, the USD/JPY was able to stage a minor upward correction during the Asian session. The pair is currently trading around the 79.50 level, down from yesterday’s peak of 79.93.

Crude oil and gold spent most of the overnight session range trading, as investors continue to wait for news regarding the US “fiscal cliff” and a potential Spanish bailout.

Main News for Today

US Prelim UoM Consumer Sentiment- 14:55 GMT

• Today’s news is forecasted to come in at 82.6
• Should the indicator come in above 82.6, investor confidence in the US economic recovery could receive a boost, which may help the USD recoup some of its losses against the yen before markets close for the weekend

Read more forex news on our forex blog

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

Central Bank News Link List – Nov 9, 2012: China to keep current monetary policy in 2013

By Central Bank News
Here’s today’s Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.)

Central Bank News Link List – Nov 9, 2012: Fed’s Bullard sees twist end, open to more QE3

By Central Bank News

Here’s today’s Central Bank News link list, click through if you missed the previous link list. The list comprises news about central banks that is not covered by Central Bank News. The list is updated during the day with the latest developments so readers don’t miss any important news.

APRA Spins Another Yarn On Australian Banks

By MoneyMorning.com.au

With all the evidence showing the overseas banking system is on the edge of collapse, Australia’s banking regulator (APRA) insists on spinning the yarn that Australian banks are just fine, so don’t worry about anything.

Today’s Australian reports:


‘Australia’s biggest banks would survive a global economic disaster that included a disorderly resolution in Europe, a double-dip recession in the US and slump in Chinese growth, under a new scenario modelled by the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority.’

That’s great news. Let’s look at the stress test and the modelling. We wish you could. But you can’t. The only analysis anyone can do of the banking stress test is to read the transcript of John Laker’s (APRA chairman) speech to the AB+F Randstad Leaders Lecture.


The transcript runs to 12 pages. But there’s no real analysis. All you’ll get from the speech is what they tell you…nothing else. APRA refuses to answer any questions regarding the stress tests.

All we know is the ‘key macroeconomic parameters’ used in the stress test. These were:

  • A 5% drop in GDP in the first year of a crisis
  • A rise in unemployment to a peak of 12%
  • A peak to trough fall in house prices of 35%
  • A fall in commercial property prices of 40%

According to APRA’s stress test the Australian banks would have made big losses but they would not collapse.

The ‘key macroeconomic parameters’ are great. But they’re also useless. What mainstream economists forget is that an economy is comprised of individuals…and each individual acts in a way that isn’t always predictable.

Sorry APRA – People are Independent Thinkers

Even the most sheepish of people will react in ways you can’t always predict. You can’t put human behaviour in a spreadsheet and accurately predict the future.

For instance, APRA won’t reveal if they’ve taken into account the probability that investors will withdraw savings from banks during a banking or financial crisis.

APRA also won’t reveal the level of savings withdrawals that would create problems for the banking sector. We know that if savers try to withdraw 100% of savings, the banking system would collapse…but what about 50%, 30% or 10% of savings? At which point would this create problems for banks?

Well, we already know the answer. Australian banks only have about 4% of savers’ money in cash or cash-like instruments. In other words, if all savers demand more than 4% of their savings in cash, the Aussie banks would need to borrow money from the central bank.

So imagine what will happen when the real financial crisis hits. Try withdrawing more than a few thousand dollars from a bank branch now…they’ll look at you like you’re a criminal… ‘What do you want the money for? Why do you need it?’

When the real financial crisis hits, Australian banks will limit withdrawals. Just as US banks did in the north east during Superstorm Sandy.

Yet APRA refuses to reveal any details of its banking stress tests. All you’ll ever know is what APRA chooses to tell you. And not surprisingly, the mainstream press gladly accepts this, repeats the ‘good news’ and moves on.

Anyone who thinks the Australian paper money and banking system can survive while it collapses the world over is seriously deluded.

APRA can chirp as much as it likes about the safety of Australian banks. But you only have to look at the state of the banking system overseas to see that the Australian banking industry (if you pardon the pun) is living on borrowed time.

Cheers,
Kris

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report:
Retire Rich, Happy and Free From Money Worries

Daily Reckoning:
The Superannuation Gravy Train

Money Morning:
Tell the RBA to Shove It…Invest Without Taking Big Risks

Pursuit of Happiness:
How Are You Wasting Your Valuable Time?

Australian Small-Cap Investigator:
How to Make Money From Small-Cap Stocks


APRA Spins Another Yarn On Australian Banks

Why Central Banks Are the Single Biggest Cause of Financial Stress

By MoneyMorning.com.au

The bankers have created a whole new language in recent years…

Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility. Commercial Paper Funding Facility.

Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility.

Money Market Investor Funding Facility.

Quantitative Easing (QE). Operation Twist. Debt Ceiling.

PIIGS (Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece, and Spain).

European Financial Stability Fund (EFSF). European Financial Stabilisation Mechanism (EFSM). European Stability Mechanism (ESM). Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT).

And now you’ve got a new one: Fiscal Cliff.


This latest one caused the US market to fall 2.4% on Wednesday, and 1.2% on Thursday. That’s bad news for investors.

But that’s only the half of it. The most important thing to understand is that each of these programs and problems have one common cause…

Have you ever heard the phrase, ‘a pig in lipstick’?

It’s simply a way to describe a shallow attempt to disguise something. In other words, despite the application of lipstick, it’s still pretty obvious that it’s a pig.

All the programs and supposed problems we’ve listed above are the lipstick. They’re designed to disguise the single biggest problem facing the world economy – central banking.

That brings us to another phrase you’ve probably heard, ‘all roads lead to Rome’.

You can take any of those programs and problems we’ve listed above and draw a direct line back to central banking.

(By the way, you can find a full list of the acronyms and abbreviations for the European Sovereign Debt Crisis – ESDC? – here.)

Every single problem facing national economies today is due to central banking and the destruction of money.

That’s where it all begins.

Why Central Banks are the Real Cause of the Money Crisis

We won’t go into a history lesson, but you just need to think about it simply. When a nation has a central bank, that bank retains control over the supply of money. It sets the standards which the retail banks follow.

And most importantly, the central bank acts as the ‘lender of last resort’ to the retail banks.

This enables the retail banks to create new money and lend as much as they think they can get away with. This creates boom and bust conditions that result in the economic mess and alphabet soup we’ve listed above.

If central banks and legal tender laws didn’t exist, you would have a competing money system. Most – but not all – of that system would be backed by gold and/or silver.

In addition, consumers and businesses would transact with real gold and silver bars and coins. The presence of gold and silver would force discipline among the competing money systems.

If a consumer accepted a non-gold or non-silver method of payment they would need to be convinced that the money was the equivalent value to precious metals.

But when you have a single, central bank-created and approved currency, you don’t have a choice. One five dollar note is the same as any other five dollar note.

And so, you don’t have a choice. The central bank forces you to use the central bank’s money. Knowing you don’t have a choice, the central and retail banks can abuse their power, and there’s nothing you can do to stop them.

All you can do is use their system for your benefit and then get yourself and your wealth out of their system as quickly as you can. The best way to do that is to put as much of your wealth as you can into real money. By that we mean gold and silver.

You need to realise that the banking system is broken. Look at the list at the top of this letter. Look at the acronym and abbreviation list that we linked to.

If that doesn’t tell you there’s a problem with the current banking system, then nothing will.

Trouble-Free Gold

Now compare those lists to the list of problems caused by gold…or the list of programs needed to bail out the gold market [crickets].

That’s right, there isn’t a list. Sure, mainstream economists claim that the Gold Standard caused the Great Depression. Yet anyone with even a basic understanding of the Great Depression will understand that it was the manipulation of the Gold Standard by central banks that caused the disruption.

Cheers,
Kris

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report:
Retire Rich, Happy and Free From Money Worries

Daily Reckoning:
The Superannuation Gravy Train

Money Morning:
Tell the RBA to Shove It…Invest Without Taking Big Risks

Pursuit of Happiness:
How Are You Wasting Your Valuable Time?

Australian Small-Cap Investigator:
How to Make Money From Small-Cap Stocks


Why Central Banks Are the Single Biggest Cause of Financial Stress

This Trifecta Means You Should Be Following the Gold Story

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Gold is back in play.

There’s a veritable trifecta of forces that make gold the most interesting speculation/story for the rest of the year. With Obama’s re-election in the US, all attention now turns to the looming ‘fiscal cliff’. America’s credit rating – and the dollar – are on the line. You saw this clearly when the price of gold spiked as soon as the election results were confirmed.


But let’s not forget Europe. Mario Draghi says the European Central Bank is ‘done’ providing aid to Greece. There are strikes in the streets against austerity. The euro is at a two-month low against the dollar.

Meanwhile in China, the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China is underway. Changes in the nation’s growth model are being revealed. No changes in one-party rule are expected. And will the Chinese say anything about the dollar or their official gold holdings?

All of these issues were discussed – with investment ideas and recommendations attached – at the recent Gold Symposium in Sydney. I’m happy to announce those proceedings were recorded. You can access them exclusively on-line and watch them at your leisure by ordering today.

Both days of the Gold Symposium were recorded. The package deal includes all 12 key note presentations. Here is a sample of what you’ll find:


The Future of the International Monetary System: Paper, Gold or Chaos?
Jim Rickards, Partner JAC Capital Advisors New York

A View From the Inside: Understanding the Entire Gold Market James Gardiner, Physical Bullion Manager, MKS Capital

Gold Begins to Shine Again David Evans, Founder & Managing Director, GoldNerds Pty Limited

We Need the Gold Standard Urgently! And Why I am Not a Gold Bug Keith Weiner, President Gold Standard Institute USA

Boundless Absurdity Thy Name is Bureaucracy Richard Karn, Managing Editor, The Emerging Trends Report

There are also over 260 minutes of company presentations recorded. These are Australian gold companies making their case to Aussie punters. I didn’t watch many of them, as I arrived at the Gold Symposium late after my trip South Africa. And you should not take this as an implied endorsement of any of them. But here is a list of just some of the companies that presented at this year’s show:

Silver Lake Resources – ASX: SLR
Gold Road Resources – ASX: GOR
Kentor Gold Limited – ASX: KGL
Global Geoscience Limited – ASX: GSC
Southern Cross Goldfields Limited – ASX: SXG
KBL Mining Limited – ASX: KBL
Australian Mines Ltd – ASX: AUZ
Cerro Resources – ASX: CJO
Troy Resources Limited – ASX: TRY
Cortona Resources Limited – ASX: CRC
Mungana Goldmines Limited – ASX: MUX
HillGold Anomaly – ASX: GOA
End Gold Limited – ASX: HEG
Northern Star Resources Limited – ASX: NST

And that’s just the list from day one!

As always, you should do your own research. But if you’re looking for a comprehensive overview of the whole gold story, a review of the Aussie gold industry, and some company presentations, this is as good a place to start as any. You can order both days of the Gold Symposium here.

In the interests of full disclosure, I should point out that Port Phillip Publishing gets 50% of any sale. We don’t do deals like this very often. But I’ve participated in the Gold Symposium for four years in a row now, and believe it’s a great resource for Australian investors.

If you attended the event, you can claim a discounted price of just $55 for your complete video record. If you did not attend, it will cost you $137.50 to access the on-line files. There is a 3% fee for credit card transactions which will bring your total to $141.63.

This is important: on page three of the payment process, make sure you enter the words ‘PPPGold’ into the VIP code box.

After you’ve placed your order, you’ll get a confirmation e-mail for your order. It may take up to one business day before you receive the link to your videos. Each order is cross-checked by hand against a list of attendees.

That means if you order over the weekend, you will most likely receive your link to the videos on Monday. If you pay by EFT, your link will be e-mailed once your payment has been confirmed.

The video archive also includes a lively and wide ranging panel discussion. Yours truly is there, giving my presentation on how gold will perform in a deflationary collapse. Dr Alex Cowie’s presentation does not appear in the archive, but I’m checking to see if I can provide a transcript separately.

As I said, I don’t endorse or recommend all the companies that presented at the Gold Symposium. I generally rely on Alex for most of my research. But this is a good place to do some one-stop shopping if you’re new to the gold story and wondering where to start. You can order now here.

Dan Denning
Publisher, Money Morning

From the Archives…

More Bad News for the Asian Century
2-11-2012 – Kris Sayce

Is the Asian Century Already Kaput?
1-11-2012 – Kris Sayce

Has the Australian Dollar’s Luck Just Run Out?
31-10-2012 – Murray Dawes

How the Aussie Dollar is Caught Up in Big Bankers’ Games
30-10-2012 – Callum Newman

Does Excessive Government Spending Make You the World’s Best Treasurer?
29-10-2012 – Kris Sayce


This Trifecta Means You Should Be Following the Gold Story