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Politics : Dutch Central Bank Sale Announcement Imminent? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bill Murphy who wrote (2998)1/10/1999 6:20:00 PM
From: Andrew  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 81906
 
Hi Bill. I'm shure you've seen this report, what do you think? They seem to be holding a lot more gold in reserves than previously stated according to this.

USAGOLD

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DAILY MARKET REPORT

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To Keep Abreast of Major Markets: DAY QUOTES or NIGHT QUOTES (20
Minute Delay)

1/8/99 Early Indications
Current
Change
Gold
291.00
-.60
Silver
5.23
nc
Euro*
1.1639 (MarCME)
- .11¢

* Due to the large number of requests, we have decided to put indicated opening
U.S. euro prices on the board. We will quote the change in cents, or fractions
thereof to avoid confusion.

MARKET UPDATE (1/8/99) Gold gave up some of yesterday's gains
after trading nearly a dollar higher near the open. The yellow seemed to
be accompanying most currencies, including the euro, to the downside
this morning. The U.S. Treasuries market fell precipitously after the jobs
report showed non-farm payrolls surging an unexpected 378,000.
Expectations were for a 212,000 gain. One of the factors not being
picked up by the stock market in this latest frenzy is that the Fed has
been quietly reversing its loose money policies. After a string of many
days adding to bank reserves, the Fed has recently opted to refrain from
open market operations. If the trend continues, it could signal a reversal
in the stock market.

As for gold as we mentioned yesterday short-covering was the dominant
feature in yesterday's market and there could be good reason to think
that short-covering will play a role in the future. Please read on. Reuters
reports that "they expected bullion to remain quiet in London after
jumping late in New York after European Central Bank vice-president
Christian Noyer said on Thursday the ECB did not plan to either buy or
sell gold to maintain it as a percentage of its overall reserves. The
comments saw short-covering by New York trade houses followed by
fund buying which pushed gold to around $292.00 but the yellow metal
slipped back in Asia on a firmer dollar."

What Reuters failed to report, though it was covered thoroughly in
continental Europe, could have major long term implications for the gold
market. The European Central, as part of its monthly accounting
procedure, published its current reserve levels in both foreign currency
and gold in the form of a press release which I reference as follows:

"The item gold and gold receivables forms part of the foreign
reserves of the Eurosystem. It consists of physical gold and
non-physical gold in the form of gold deposit accounts."

"According to the opening financial statement of the Eurosystem
on 1 January 1999, the most important single item on the asset side
of the Eurosystem's balance sheet was external assets. The net
position in foreign currency... amounted to EUR 227.4
billion,whereby assets of EUR 237.0 billion were opposed to
liabilities of EUR 9.6 billion. These figures refer to non-euro area
currencies, since euro area currency denominated foreign exchange
positions held on 31 December 1998 were transformed
automatically into domestic positions through the transition to
Stage Three... In addition, the stock of gold (asset item 1) of the
Eurosystem amounted to EUR 99.6 billion."

"The consolidated opening financial statement of the Eurosystem
reflects the initial valuation of the assets and liabilities of the
Eurosystem. According to the harmonised accounting rules for the
Eurosystem, gold, foreign exchange, security holdings and
financial instruments of the Eurosystem will be revalued at market
rates and prices at the end of each quarter."

Though it will take awhile for analysts, commentators, traders and
investors to sort out the full implications of this press release, there are
certain policy statements inferred in the financial statement that literally
jump off the page. Prior to this statement by ECB, few understood that
reserves would be presented as a consolidated balance sheet of all the
respective national central banks. This symbolically signals a uniformity
and centrality in the economic structure and policy making that comes as
a surprise. Prior to the release of this ECB statement, the best work I
had seen done on how reserves, particularly gold reserves were to be
handled, was published by the World Gold Council. In that they
assumed a gold allocation of 784 tons and said that that would be the
15% allocation frequently discussed. Now we find that because of the
consolidation, the ECB has upped the component to over 12,000 tons
and that it comprises 30.45% of a very large overall number. The Wall
Street Journal reported this morning a figure of 15% but this is incorrect,
and they totally missed what appears to be the most important aspect of
the ECB's action, i.e., they have included all national reserves in ECB
reserves including all the gold in Europe. Beyond the numbers, as I infer,
as investors we must also consider the implications of the sheer size of
this reserve and what message Europe is trying to deliver in presenting
their financial position in this way.

We will leave that for further consideration as the euro process moves
ahead. Suffice it to say, that this blows a hole in the theory that Europe
will be divided over gold and that the national central banks can
somehow undermine the gold price. Policy clearly resides with the
central bank and the central bank has been very clear about is opposition
to gold sales despite what those on the short of the market are telling us.
Though I doubt the mainstream press will give up on this idea in the
months and weeks ahead, my view is that is that the ECB announcement
is a very strong opening volley in the upcoming monetary wars and
perhaps yesterday's strong move was the first indication how
Euro-policies could affect the gold market. To put the matter in terms of
physics, the Europeans have converted the weak force to a strong force
binding those countries. We should not underestimate what that might
mean to our portfolios.

I would like to thank Goldfly at the USAGOLD FORUM! for helping
me source this report.

I am going to leave up Wednesday's report for the weekend for those
who missed it. Have a good weekend, fellow goldmeisters. We'll update
if anything significant happens. I encourage all to visit and participate at
the FORUM. I can only open the door with this report. To get a fuller
understanding, it accomplishes a great deal to share your ideas with
others -- both for your own intellectual growth and understanding of this
new world monetary system as well as the same for the people you
address. See you at the FORUM!



To: Bill Murphy who wrote (2998)1/11/1999 7:11:00 AM
From: ForYourEyesOnly  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 81906
 
Silver, After a Rough 1998,Shows Signs of Perking Up

By TERZAH EWING Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

(What do you think? Not quite a bull yet, is she?)

Since just after Christmas, the silver market has been visited by the ghost of rallies past. Since falling below $4.70 an ounce on Dec. 2, its second trip to that low level since prices spiked in February on news of Warren Buffett's interest in the market, silver has climbed fairly steadily. Last week it booked increases every day but Monday, with the largest a 12.3-cent jump on Wednesday at the New York Mercantile Exchange's Comex division. On Friday, the March contract rose 4.8 cents to settle at $5.288 an ounce, the nearest-month's highest close since Oct. 1. While that's still nowhere near last year's high of $7.28 an ounce, hit at the height of the buying frenzy spawned by the Omaha investor's purchases, the current increase's timing echoes the price's move ahead of Mr. Buffett's announcement last year. It's also well above the lows below $4 an ounce that the front-month futures contract saw in the early 1990s. Silver, unlike gold, base metals and other commodities, hasn't been anywhere near its historic lows recently.

That's not to say 1998 wasn't a rough year for the white metal. After the peak early in the year, silver prices slipped steeply, traded in a range, then slipped again. And it isn't certain the rally will continue. Rumors about Mr. Buffett shedding or adding to his large silver position constantly circulate on trading desks in New York and London. A spokeswoman for Berkshire Hathaway, Mr. Buffett's firm, referred inquiries about the position to the firm's written policy against discussing its investments.

Still, regardless of whether Mr. Buffett has bought more or sold, silver has held up well compared with gold's long slide and the disastrous performance of its base-metal cousins.

One of the reasons for the silver price's relative hardiness is its hybrid status as both a base and precious metal. That can be a double-edged sword: Neither group has been a bullish influence this year, with poor Asian demand pressuring down base-metals prices and the weight of central-bank sales and waning investor interest slicing into gold.

But because the prices for the two kinds of metals don't move up and down together, silver traders have two sets of factors to look at when deciding whether to make a bullish or bearish bet. "It's predominantly an industrial metal," says Jim Vail, who manages the Lexington Strategic Silver Fund, the only silver-stocks mutual fund in the U.S. David Rinehimer, director of futures research at Salomon Smith Barney, added Friday, "It's trading off its commodity fundamentals. The stock market is high and we've had good economic numbers today. I don't think that's a negative background for silver." However, silver also acts like a precious metal sometimes, which brings in the added factor of investment demand. Traders and analysts note that one positive influence on silver prices recently arose from the precious metals trade in India, a key demand center for both gold and silver.

The Indian government, citing gold's not-always-salutary influence on the country's foreign-exchange balance, early last week said it raised the customs duty on imports of the yellow metal to 400 rupees, or about $9.33, per 10 grams from 250 rupees, or $5.87. To the cost-conscious Indian investor interested in precious metals, the duty on gold makes silver look like a better value. That gives a boost to demand.

Another, more straightforward factor buoying silver is the level of Comex stockpiles of the metal, Mr.Rinehimer said. They now stand at about 76.9 million ounces, well below the year high of above 110 million ounces. And technical traders, who buy and sell commodities based on price trends rather than supply/demand factors, say historical charts have been working in silver's favor, helping propel the market higher as key price levels were breached. Some of the same traders caution that silver's rally may not last, particularly if the bullish technical signals turn
bearish and send the price back below $5.15 an ounce.

Meanwhile, gold, still trading in the doldrums between $285 and $300 an ounce, is scrambling to find some news to follow and doesn't look likely to benefit from a continued rally in silver. "There's a lot of noise in the market at the moment and we're trying to get beyond that to see what is really happening," says Kevin Crisp, vice president at J.P. Morgan in London. The gold market got some relatively positive news Thursday. European Central Bank officials said the institution, which has surpassed the U.S. Federal Reserve as the world's largest holder of gold, doesn't plan any sales of the metal "for the moment and for the foreseeable future." Central banks sales have exerted a persistent downward pressure on gold prices in the last two years, and the ECB, a new player, has been a wild card.

Mr. Crisp says the increase in recycled supplies due to such sales and bank leasing, coupled with the increased subjection of gold to market forces, has changed the texture of the gold market. "Really, gold is not a scarce commodity any longer," he says. "It lost a lot of its mystique as the market liberalized."