Gold and Silver • Ben Davies – There Is A New Buyer Entering The Gold Market
KING WORLD NEWS INTERVIEW WITH BEN DAVIES
Ben Davies – There Is A New Buyer Entering The Gold Market
http://www.kingworldnews.com/kingworldn … avies.html
Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Sun Nov 18, 2012 6:39 pm
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Gold and Silver • KING WORLD NEWS INTERVIEW WITH BEN DAVIES
KING WORLD NEWS INTERVIEW WITH BEN DAVIES
http://www.kingworldnews.com/kingworldn … avies.html
Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Mon Aug 20, 2012 1:29 pm
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Gold and Silver • Ben Davies – There Is A Massive Buyer In The Gold Market
Ben Davies – There Is A Massive Buyer In The Gold Market
http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/ … arket.html
Today rising star Ben Davies told King World News that there is a massive buyer in the gold market, and they have been steadily increasing the price level of their bids. So with investors around the world wondering which way gold and silver will break after the long consolidation, today Ben Davies writes exclusively for King World News to answer to that question. This is an absolutely incredible piece that is a must read for all KWN readers globally.
There is a great deal of critical information in this piece. As an example, Davies addressed this key development in the gold market: “We want to state there has been a strong buyer in the gold market these past few months. Also we want to reiterate the buyer in the room is Asian and has been stepping up their buy order, 1545, 1575 now 1600?” Below is the entire piece Ben Davies wrote exclusively for KWN.
August 9 (King World News) – The Precious metals market is trend ready. Gold, on our short and long-term trend indices, is primed for a substantial move. This could be up or down. We will examine both possibilities and which direction we believe has a greater probability of being realised.
Silver is likewise primed (See chart below).
Our model is ‘Trend Ready’ when it is below 1.50 on our indices. (Ignore the short-term horizon given here on charts, it’s just to provide some graphical representation, but it’s applicable over this bull market and others.) The convergence of both long and short is a plus but not a prerequisite for a powerful trend. The question remains: which way will the trend ignite?
Well, we actually don’t care as we will allocate less or more depending on when we get the buy or sell signal that affirms the beginning of the trend. We may have a few false breaks up or down, as is evident by recent price action.
However, the evidence points to an upside break for both gold and silver, which is not dissimilar to our Silver – The Coming Bullet – August 2010 ‘Trend Ready’ state. Although we will edge towards holding perhaps more silver as the old silver ratio looks divergent from ISM data (Purchasing Managers Business Survey), and emerging equity indices, which we believe have begun to perform well, as they respond to worldwide efforts to re-stimulate.
We want to state there has been a strong buyer in the gold market these past few months. Also we want to reiterate the buyer in the room is Asian and has been stepping up their buy order, 1545, 1575 now 1600?. It is reminiscent to me of the very same buyer(s) who soaked up US 10 year bonds at 4.85% in June 2004 when the Fed didn’t cut rates from 1% to 0.75% as was widely expected. By end of 2004 rates were at 4.25% but 10 year yields had rallied back to 4.00%.
This time front-end rates in the US will not be rising (fiscal cliff aside), and with 10 year yields at 1.68% and having topped out in our opinion, we do see a cessation of Asian bond buying and a switch to gold and other currencies by our Asian counterparts. It is the end of the vendor-financing relationship.
Although it may not seem like it, the strong hands are buying from the weak hands. A recent FT article written with the usual alacrity at gold ownership is likely a useful signal on sentiment. It is clear most have grown weary of gold resuming its uptrend, but gold has performed as expected. It reacted to a mini-gold rush when sentiment was too frothy in the short term, but we have now shaken out the speculators.
Speculator positions in the paper precious-metals market are very light. In fact, for the market to get traction to the downside we would need to see a net short position in the CFTC data. Now this seems a low probability in light of recent and potentially future macro-fundamentals. Also it is clear that individuals have purchased more physical and steered away from ETFs, a trend we have noted at KWN many times before in interviews. This is good to see as it leaves the paper market less room to manoeuvre. If you speak to GATA you will understand the dynamics better.
What do we know today? And what are the markets beginning to discount now? As our macro research partners, Variant Perception, recently pointed out, the world is currently experiencing a broad-based slowdown and coincident economic data continues to weaken, but growth should start to turn up towards the end of 2012. From Variant Perception:
“Given the weakness in the global economy, central banks are in the midst of a coordinated easing cycle. In our client meetings in the past six months, the consensus view is that rate cuts and unconventional policy will be ineffective. Clients argued that even if monetary policy is extremely loose, monetary policy is useless if the transmission mechanism is broken.
While the transmission mechanism is certainly severely impaired in certain parts of the developed world it is not globally and universally broken. Easing in emerging markets as well as unconventional easing in developed markets will still have an impact on the global economy and asset prices.
Every single central bank that can cut rates has done so, and the major central banks are expanding their balance sheets. Emerging central banks had already begun easing going into the current slowdown, but they have now intensified their monetary policy response with China, South Korea and South Africa joining in. In the developed world, the RBA in Australia and the ECB have also further reduced interest rates.”
Central bank easing cycles typically lead the business cycle and changes in asset prices by nine months. We expect a strong upturn in late 2012 in economic activity and asset prices not least based on global liquidity conditions.
Source: Variant Perception
“The global monetary policy backdrop is increasingly loose as not only emerging central banks are cutting interest rates, but developed central banks that are near the zero bound are resorting to increasingly creative and less orthodox ways to stimulate the economy.”
Recent posturing by central bankers aside, one thing is for sure: monetary conditions are loose. Either Draghi is a genius or an idiot. One minute he stands ready to do whatever it takes to maintain the euro – which inferred no conditionality on bailouts – and then in next breath he calls for conditionality.
So again he is either as hopeless or helpless as the finance ministers of the eurozone – take your pick. But we suspect he is playing a canny game. He will force euro integration through conditionality and fire up the ESM, prime the ELAs, and ensure the substitute bailout of German TARGET2 balances remains viable.
Meanwhile, Japan lurches further into indebtedness, and the Japanese MoF (Ministry of Finance) and ‘rentier’ government fight to hold onto power, but time is truly running out. When they fully monetise their bond market the game will be up there too. Furthermore, with JGBs rolling over along with other rate markets, Japan’s funding issues are about to become very real. In a world of failing currencies, gold will remain the ultimate protector of your purchasing power.
Additionally, the VP Business Cycle Financing Index (chart above), points to a higher ISM in the next 6 to 9 months, which as the graph below highlights will lead to a narrowing of the gold/silver ratio, with silver outperforming (the ratio is inverted to provide clarity on changes). As the ISM rises, the gold/silver ratio will fall from near 60, where it is now, to 45 and more.
Finally, if growth picks up moderately due to über amounts of global stimulus, as Variant Perception suggests, this will be very positive for gold and silver just as it was in the previous decade. It will not be true (final) demand that will drive GDP in the next few years, but demand for credit, as it has been before.
In a coming interview with KWN I will discuss why mining costs are actually supportive for gold, despite recent comments by some analysts to the contrary, as well as potential developments in Asia and Europe.”
©The interviews with MEP Nigel Farage, Peter Schiff, John Embry, Egon von Greyerz and James Turk are available now. Also, be sure to listen to last week’s line-up of other KWN interviews which include Dr. Stephen Leeb, John Hathaway, Art Cashin ($612 billion UBS), Gerald Celente, and Don Coxe ($538 billion BMO) by CLICKING HERE.
http://www.kingworldnews.com/kingworldn … dcast.html
Eric King
KingWorldNews.com
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Ben Davies – There Is A Massive Buyer In The Gold Market
Today rising star Ben Davies told King World News that there is a massive buyer in the gold market, and they have been steadily increasing the price level of their bids. So with investors around the world wondering which way gold and silver will break after the long consolidation, today Ben Davies writes exclusively for King World News to answer to that question. This is an absolutely incredible piece that is a must read for all KWN readers globally.
Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Sat Aug 11, 2012 4:17 am
View full post on opinions.caduceusx.com
Gold and Silver • Ben Davies – The Gold & Silver Liquidation is Over
Ben Davies – The Gold & Silver Liquidation is Over
http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/ … _Over.html
With continued uncertainty in markets around the world, today Ben Davies, CEO of Hinde Capital wrote the following piece exclusively for King World News. Davies believes the gold and silver liquidation is over: “I humbly believe the seller is done. For one week there has been several but mainly one entity selling Comex gold futures, as well as some physical to liquidate on the open and closes. This suggest to us it was a CTA commodity type fund. They use volume areas of the day to transact.”
“The sell-off in gold is reminiscent of the 2008 deleveraging process but it is more similar in dynamics to 2012 when a notable fund manager had to sell his gold/ ETF holdings. There were buyers of course, seller and buyer volumes must match. But the need to sell overwhelmed the need to buy.
When you have redemptions time is against you to liquidate, so it becomes a case of sell at any price as time becomes finite. Gold buyers picked up some bargains then and they will now.
Before FOMC minutes two nights ago the seller was back at the close. And then the FOMC minutes changed the dynamic of market with the mention by some members that QE would be back if they saw renewed economic weakness. This is the association for us all of why the market stopped going down but in truth the seller was done.
Like the December experience, once the seller is done, the market will snap back. We run intraday correlations just to observe if markets are starting to fibrillate against each other. We could see that risk assets were diverging and SPX was no longer moving with a 1.0 correlation with gold and silver. We took this as a positive sign that the precious metals were decoupling from risk assets.
The seller was being soaked up by multiple buyers. But all week we saw no significant Asian buying until two nights ago when the market went straight up yesterday on the open of the Asian morning.
We run a myriad of indicators to assess trends and where we are in trend. We also use 5 indicators for sentiment and created a weighted index – one of the indicators has never been this low EVER in 12 years — a level I had never seen.
Based on even past but not quite as bearish readings the next 3 months have been some of the highest returns in gold market of the magnitude of 15-20%. So we can potentially expect an even greater magnitude. In all currencies but particularly in sterling terms I particularly would like to be long gold now.
We are currently writing a report on the UK that demonstrates the fiscal position will soon not be tolerated by the markets. A fiscal crisis could spell a currency crisis. People are walking EYES WIDE SHUT in this country. Spain is irretrievable and the exposure of UK banks to Europe is still too high.
We are surprised there is not more widespread withdrawal of money from banks in Europe as, after all, money in circulation is but a small percentage of demand deposits – so availability of physical money is a real issue should depositors rationally choose to withdraw money and place under the mattress.
In gold, in USD, we need to see gold create value above 1600 to 25 for a few weeks and then we will continue to migrate on a bullish trend higher. There is an ever-present systemic risk growing in Europe, plus severe doubts about JPM to contain their issues – so a coordinated effort by central banks to backstop the global economy draws nearer.
This eventuality would see gold trade much higher than the low 1600s in the next few weeks. Any fund manager worth his salt knows the first loss number presented by JPM is not the last but what will final tally be and what risk to the financial system? By observing credit markets and positioning we can see it is not pretty. Others are taking the other side of this risk. If it stinks, it can get really foul. Well, it really stinks.
I would add that gold volatility across volatility term structure has risen – I suspect there are short gamma positions in the gold market that in this scenario act like a short position on gold. If we look at other markets – credit indices and equity volatility — we can see there is risk of higher volatility. This will drive up gold volatility and heighten positioning risk in market.”
Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Fri May 18, 2012 11:32 pm
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