Archive - Aug 26, 2011 - Story
Western Speculators Sell Gold; Asia And West Buy Bullion - Coin and Bar Supply Increasingly Tight
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2011 06:58 -0500Gold is set to finish the week lower as it is 3.7% lower so far on the week. This will embolden the momentum traders on the COMEX. There is also the risk of another margin increase from the CME. Although it is hard to know how they could justify this as gold’s leverage is now in line with most commodities and less than that on US Treasuries. The correction was primarily due to the Shanghai and COMEX margin increases. Profit taking and short selling also took place due to gold’s short term very overbought status. Sharps Pixley’s respected Ross Norman noted that the furious nature of the selling could be motivated by Jackson Hole: "I have never been a fan of conspiracy theories but I do wonder about the manner and timing of the sell-off. Much of the selling was conducted through the London p.m. fixing (when New York was active) which is a favored route for official (central bank) selling rather than being finessed into the market as a fund might prefer. It was, if you like, a statement - and quite a handy and effective one just in advance of the Jackson Hole meeting." Our conversations with people in the industry and our own experience makes us confident that this is a paper driven sell off drive primarily by speculative, leverage interests on Wall Street.
Frontrunning: August 26
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2011 06:47 -0500- Bernanke: A Chance To Talk About Fiscal Policy? (Hilsenrath)
- Bernanke seen stopping short of pledge for QE3 (Reuters)
- Fed Policymaker Says QE is ‘Most Potent Weapon’ (FT)
- El-Erian: Bernanke Must not Push QE3 at Jackson Hole (FT)
- Bernanke Scholar Advises Bernanke Fed Chief to Be Bold on Policy (Bloomberg)
- Bailout for Greece Falters Over Demand for Collateral (WSJ)
- Japan’s Kan Resigns as Party Leader (WSJ)
- European shorting ban extended (FT)
Today's Economic Data Docket - GDP And Jackson Hole
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2011 06:30 -0500While all eyes will be on Bernanke at around 10 am, the first GDP revision will be quite a stressful number too should it come below 1% as many (but not the Wall Street consensus) predict. Elsewhere, millions of East Coasters will be feverishly hitting F5 on weather.com to see how much closer they are with insurance company busting destiny.
Previewing Bernanke's Speech And Final Thoughts From Citi's Steven Englander And Other Analysts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2011 06:19 -0500Below, for those who are still undecided we present RanSquawk's preview of what to expect, or as the case may be, not expect, from the Chairman in about 3 hours, when the embargo on his speech is lifted. Also attached is the final summary of Citi's Steven Englander of what the Chairman's thoughts would mean for the dollar, as well as various third party takes on implications for gold and other general asset prices. The consensus, as noted yesterday, is one of no immediate escalation in the push for QE3 as the stock plunge has been contained for the time being - a factor that has always been the primary catalyst for Fed decisionmaking. Granted should the S&P drop to around 1,000, everything will change. In terms of catalysts, the next FOMC meeting will be September 20, so at best silence from the Fed today will mean the market is on its own for 4 weeks, with an ugly NFP number inbetween. In other words, the next month is shaping up for yet more abnormal volatility, "as usual" for 2011.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 26/08/11
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 08/26/2011 05:26 -0500A snapshot of the European Morning Briefing covering Stocks, Bonds, FX, etc.
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