Inflation Gets Gold Booming

April 5, 2009 · Posted in Gold Bullion News · Comment 

NEW YORK - Purchasing gold continues to be a priority for diversified investors as a portfolio protection strategy against resurgent U.S. inflation as the Federal Reserve amps up the printing press to stimulate the economy out of the current recession.

Although a gold rally due to hyperinflation panic is not likely as the Fed has the ability to pull in money supply when the economy stabilizes, the current bull run of gold may not necessarily be a one-way street.

"This Fed is not an inflation biased... but a measured, well reasoned, rational central bank that knows that it has injected a huge sum of permanent bank reserve into the system, and that it will remove them eventually," said Dennis Gartman, independent investor and publisher of the Gartman Letter.

As evidence, a closely scrutinized marker of inflation expectations in the government bond market also shows that the expectations for long term inflation are on the rise.

"There are just not a lot of alternatives for global investors. You will see more and more investors moving into gold as a safe haven, and you will see more institutions putting money into commodities indexes," said Brian Hicks, a portfolio manager at Texas-based U.S. Global Investors, which manages over $2 billion fund assets.

Recently gold has become steadily tied in with the U.S. Treasuries market, which is generally thought to be a safe haven investment, and Treasuries prices indicated that investors need more time to come to terms with the long-range implications of the Federal Reserves actions.

Gold Values Holding Firm Against Non US Currencies

November 30, 2008 · Posted in Gold Bullion News · Comment 

New York- As a global economic crisis grows deeper, gold has not only held steady in US dollar terms but also increased in value against non U.S. currencies, and a strong buying market despite higher prices seems to signal that the precious metal may rally further.

A jump to safety amid economic termoil has bolstered the US dollar, which hurt dollar-denominated gold and made bullion more expensive when priced against other currencies. On Wednesday, gold traded at around $800 per ounce, about 20 percent lower than its all-time high $1,030 in March, driven by the dollar resurgence in the wake of plummeting crude oil prices and a worldwide recession.
The massive US Government market stimulus plan by the to help keep the economy afloat would lead to a lessened dollar value and higher inflation, which should bode well for gold in the long term, analysts said.

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