from Investor's Business Daily:
Gold and silver prices dipped Friday as the dollar strengthened
against global currencies on safe-haven buying that followed
disappointing U.S. consumer sentiment and purchasing managers data. An
economist warns a recession could lead to a meltdown in precious metals
despite all the bullishness from global stimulus programs.
Spot gold prices shed 0.23% to $1774 an ounce intraday. During the
quarter, it reached its highest price of 2012 and came within six
percentage points of its all-time nominal high from 12 months ago.
This month Prestige Economics of Austin, Texas, raised its 2012 price
target on the yellow metal to $1,684 an ounce from $1,649 per ounce. It
also raised its 2013 target to $1,900 from $1,750 an ounce.
"The introduction of the European Central Bank's Outright Monetary
Transactions (OMT) and the implementation of the Federal Reserve's
quantitative easing ad infinitum greatly improved the prospects that our
forecast of dollar weakness will come to fruition at a swift pace,"
Jason Schenker, president of Prestige wrote in his latest monthly
outlook released Friday. "The downside risks to gold prices have been
greatly reduced now that the Fed is on an endless buying spree of
mortgage-backed securities (MBS)."
Gold prices are rising on expectations that central banks pumping up
global money supply will spark inflation. The U.S. and European stimulus
programs led to a domino effect at central banks around the world.
Japan and China have started their quantitative easing. India and
Brazil lowered interest rates to spur growth. Singapore says it's ready
to take action if needed.
"We have a global currency war where everyone is trying to devalue
their currencies. In that case the only real currency is gold or
silver," said Matthew Tuttle of Tuttle Wealth Management in Stamford,
Conn. with about $100 million in assets.
Central banks in Russia, China, India and other countries are buying
gold to diversify their reserves. Political conflict, such as that
between China and Japan and in the Middle East, has also traditionally
been positive for gold.
Why Gold Could Lose Its Luster
The Fed's newly created trillions are parked in bond portfolios at
banks instead of being lent out as intended, says John Browne, senior
economic consultant to Euro Pacific Capital in Westport, Conn. The newly
printed money isn't fueling inflation as gold buyers expect. And if the
U.S. goes into a recession, gold investors may sell their gold to raise
cash and meet margin calls ignited by falling stock prices.
"In recessions, cash becomes increasingly scarce and real assets,
including commodities, fall in price," Browne wrote in a client note.
"As a commodity, gold should fall in price as recession becomes
manifest."
"The possibility is rising of a worldwide recession, which normally
tends to push down asset prices, particularly for stocks dependent on
corporate earnings," he added.
PowerShares DB US Dollar Index Bullish (UUP),
measuring the dollar against a basket of foreign currencies, rose
inched up 0.39% to 21.90 Friday. It shed 1.8% in September and fell 2.5%
for third quarter.
SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) shed 0.69% to 171.64 Friday. It climbed 4.5% in September and 10.6% for the quarter.
Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX) fell 0.20% to 53.68. GDX surged 12% in September and 20% in Q3.
Silver Prices
Spot silver prices fell 0.38% to $34.63 an ounce.
Schenker projects silver prices will average $31 an ounce in 2012 and $34.50 in 2013.
IShares Silver Trust (SLV) gave back 0.28% to 33.30 on Friday. It added 8.2% for the month and a robust 25% for the quarter.
Global X Silver Miners ETF (SIL) let up 0.14% to 24.93. SIL returned 16.3% in September and a whopping 34% in the third quarter.
Mutual funds specializing in gold and precious metals absorbed more
than 90% of the $1.6 billion that flowed into commodity sector funds
last week on fears that global stimulus programs will erode the value of
fiat currencies, according to EPFR Global.
Economic Releases
The Institute for Supply Management-Chicago said its business
barometer fell to 49.7 from 53 in August. Economists expected a reading
of 52.8. It dropped for the first time in three years, signaling
contraction. Readings below 50 mean contraction, and readings above it
mean expansion.
The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index
rose to 78.3 this month from 74.3 in August. Economists projected a
reading of 79.