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Peter Brimelow
Dec. 6, 2010, 3:27 a.m. EST
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Are China letters canaries in coal mine?
First Take "?
Stocks look at stimulus beyond jobs report
By Peter Brimelow, MarketWatch
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) "â? A good week for gold "â? especially because China finally seems to be chiming in.
On Friday, gold for February delivery Gold 100 Oz (Comex) Commodities Exchange Centre /quotes/comstock/21e!f:gc\g11 (GCG11 1,416, +9.30, +0.66%) finished at $1,406.20, only $3.10 below the November 9th record close, having risen $42.20 or 2.94% on the week. The gold shares responded with enthusiasm, with ARCA GOLD BUGS /quotes/comstock/10t!hui.x (HUI 581.56, +17.03, +3.02%) leaping nearly 8%. In recent years, gold shares have not always conformed bullion's action. When it happens, it's generally regarded as bullish.
Significantly, this was not just a move in U.S. dollars. In fact, gold in sterling, euros, and yen hit record highs during the week.
Of course, the week also saw plenty of alarming economic and financial news from both Europe and America, all tending to cast doubt on the commitment of the European Central Bank and the Fed to the integrity of their respective currencies.
Australia's usually very sober webzine The Privateer was even moved to make a joke:
"On Sunday, December 5, the venerable CBS "?current affairs' program 60 Minutes will be airing an interview with Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke. We suggest a suitable intro would be the helicopter scene in "?Apocalypse Now' - complete with the full sound track."?
That's a reference to Bernanke's famous graphic endorsement of inflationary policies. Read more on Bernanke's remarks on additional easing.
However, the news that most excited the gold bugs came not from the Atlantic basin but from China, and may not yet have been fully appreciated by the market. The head of the Shanghai Gold Exchange told a conference there that Chinese imports of gold for 2010 through October were 209.7 tonnes, compared to 45 tonnes for the whole of 2009.
This is a bombshell "â? and not just because China has never disclosed its gold imports before. One of the correspondents on Bill Murphy's LeMetropoleCafe website said that he had "always been skeptical of the Chinese demand story in world gold-price formation, on the grounds that Chinese production growth has kept pace with reported consumption "â? and a 45-tonne import number for 2009 vindicates this stance"?
"But 209 tonnes in 10 months is a horse of a different color"?It means China might actually be capable of getting into India's league as an importer."?
(India, of course, has long been the world's largest importer of gold by a wide margin.)
Veteran gold observer Jeff Christian of CPM Group told the Wall Street Journal:
"Everybody in the gold market knew there was a surge in investment demand, but they didn't know it was China."?
Standard Bank offered some calculations on Friday concluding that investment demand for gold in China "may be as high as 180 tonnes in 2010 "â? a rise of 70% year over year."?
What's happening? The Shanghai official attributed the surge to inflation fears amongst the Chinese public. These are not going to be assuaged anytime soon. ( See Dec. 2 column.)
Not to be upstaged, according to LeMetropoleCafé, an official of the Bombay Bullion Association on Friday suggested Indian imports this year might be 700 tonnes, 46% above last year. A strong rupee this week apparently enabled the Indians to keep buying from overseas "â? UBS reported on Thursday above-average sales to India.
The bugs argue that because of this Chinese and Indian news, gold is in a radically different posture than it was around the end of 2008. Then, western buying motivated by the financial crisis was met by heavy selling from traditional importing markets. Now, in contrast, the importers are buying.
As a LeMetropoleCafé correspondent remarked on Friday, gold seems to have met a Perfect (bullish) Storm.
Peter Brimelow has been an editor at Barron's, Fortune and Forbes and is the author of "The Wall Street Gurus: How You Can Profit From Investment Newsletters."
A disappointing jobs report fails to disappoint investors, who are still looking at central banks to continue playing Santa.
4:01 p.m. Dec. 3, 2010
"Peter Brimelow: Is gold in a perfect (bullish) storm? http://on.mktw.net/dUccaD" 4:00 a.m. EST, Dec. 6, 2010 from MKTWBrimelow
"Peter Brimelow: Are China letters canaries in coal mine? http://on.mktw.net/fN5YCz" 2:39 a.m. EST, Dec. 2, 2010 from MKTWBrimelow
"Peter Brimelow: Ruff Times is top performer http://on.mktw.net/hgtJpq" 10:54 a.m. EST, Nov. 29, 2010 from MKTWBrimelow
"Peter Brimelow: Coming competing currency devaluations http://on.mktw.net/h4vNe6" 5:24 a.m. EST, Nov. 25, 2010 from MKTWBrimelow
"Peter Brimelow: Gold bug plays with stocks, real estate http://on.mktw.net/cGh8tm" 2:58 a.m. EST, Nov. 22, 2010 from MKTWBrimelow
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