Wednesday, 26 November 2014

French Political Leader Wants Gold Back In France


France could be next on the list of countries that wants to take its gold back, if the leader of a far-right political party has her way.
Tuesday, Marine Le Pen, leader of the Front National party of France, who is also the front runner to potentially be France’s new president, penned an open letter, in French, to Christian Noyer, governor of the Bank of France, requesting that the country’s gold holdings be repatriated back to France.
L’institution monétaire que vous dirigez a pour mission historique d’être la banque centrale dépositaire des réserves monétaires nationales et notamment des réserves d’or. Selon notre vision stratégique et souveraine, celles-ci n’appartiennent ni à l’Etat, ni à la Banque de France mais bien au peuple français et de surcroît servent de garantie ultime à la dette publique et à notre monnaie, [The monetary institution that you lead has historically served as the reserve central bank for France’s monetary and gold reserves. In our strategic and sovereign vision, these do not belong to the state, nor the Bank of France, but to the French people, which serve as the ultimate guarantee of public debt and our money],” she wrote.
Image courtesy of www.marinelepen.fr: Political leader Marine Le Pen, wrote to the governor of the Bank of France Christian Noyer requesting that the central bank repatriate its gold reserves back to France.
Not only does Le Pen want to see the gold back in France but she also recommended that the central bank take advantage of the recent price drop and buy more gold, boosting reserves by another 20%. She also recommends that the central bank never sell its gold reserves.
Finally, Le Pen also asked that an independent body be allowed to audit the country’s current holdings of 2,435 metric tons.
“Aussi, en fonction de la situation que nous découvrirons, je vous exhorte à procéder :
– Au rapatriement urgent sur le sol français de la totalité de nos réserves d’or se trouvant à l’étranger.
– A l’interruption immédiate de tout programme de cession d’or.
– A l’inverse, à une réallocation progressive d’une partie significative des réserves de devises au bilan de la Banque de France par l’achat d’or, lors de chaque baisse significative du cours de l’once (recommandation 20%)
 [Also, depending on our findings, I would advise you to;
– Urgently repatriate all our gold reserves that are located abroad.
– Cease all gold sales programs
– Inversely, progressively reallocate foreign exchange reserves  to the Bank of France by purchasing gold during substantial price drops per ounce (20% recommendation)], she wrote.
Tout comme vos héroïques prédécesseurs de la Banque de France en 1939 et 1940 avaient organisé l’évacuation de l’or français, vous vous devez d’entreprendre cette vaste opération de sécurisation du trésor national, acte patriotique qui sera reconnu le moment venu par l’opinion publique [Like your heroic predecessors from the Bank of France in 1939 and 1940 who organized the evacuation of French gold, you should undertake the vast security operation of securing our national treasure, a patriotic act which would immediately recognized by the general public],” she wrote.
According to data from the International Monetary Fund, France has the fifth largest gold reserves in the world, making up 65.3% of its total foreign reserves.
A September poll, conducted by Ifop, showed strong support for Le Pen as a potential presidential candidate and could beat current president Francois Hollande in a “hypothetical” second-round runoff. Of course, France’s next presidential election won’t be held until 2017.
Le Pen’s request comes only a few days after Holland announced that it repatriated 122.5 metric tons of gold, worth about $5 billion dollars back to Amsterdam from the U.S.
The Netherlands currently holds 612.5 metric tons of gold, presenting about 54.1% of its total foreign reserves.
According to the central bank, 31% of its reserves are now held in Amsterdam and it maintains some gold reserves outside of the country with about 31% still in New York with the Federal Reserve;20% is with the Bank of Canada and 18% is with the Bank of England.
"In addition to a more balanced division of the gold reserves...this may also contribute to a positive confidence effect with the public,” the Dutch central bank said in a statement.
US Thanksgiving Holiday Schedule

Dear PennTrader,
Here is the Thanksgiving holiday schedule for US and Canadian markets.
US markets:
- closed on Thursday
- open as usual Friday morning, but closing early for the day... at 1 pm EST (10 am PST)
Canadian markets:
- normal hours on both Thursday and Friday
PennTrade:
- open on Thursday for Canadian online trading, but the phone desk is closed so please use email for questions
- open during market hours on Friday, but the phone desk is closed so please use email for questions
During this time of thanks, we are especially grateful to have you with us at PennTrade.
We wish you and yours a Happy Thanksgiving.

P.M. Kitco Metals Roundup: Gold Ends Steady-Weak in More Lackluster, Pre-Holiday Trading


Gold prices ended the U.S. day session steady to slightly lower in quiet, pre-holiday trading Wednesday. A dearth of bullish fundamental news recently and a bearish chart posture are keeping gold prices on the defensive. Some chart consolidation is also evident this week. February Comex gold was last up $0.40 at $1,198.20 an ounce. Spot gold was last down $3.10 at $1,198.50. March Comex silver last traded down $0.016 at $16.595 an ounce.
U.S. trading activity wound down as the day progressed Wednesday, ahead of the Thanksgiving holiday on Thursday. Typically, Friday finds one of the lightest-volume trading days of the year for U.S. markets.
A fairly heavy slate of U.S. economic data released Wednesday did not move the markets much, as U.S. traders had their minds on a Thanksgiving feast Thursday.
In overnight news, a European Central Bank official hinted the ECB could begin buying government bonds (quantitative easing) early in 2015.  The ECB vice president’s remarks were a bit disappointing to those market watchers who thought the ECB might make the move at its meeting on Dec. 4.
A German government 10-year bond auction Wednesday fetched a record low yield that averaged 0.74%. This underscores investors in Europe continue to be skittish about the European Union economy and are content to be safe with low-yielding German bonds.
The market place is looking ahead to Thursday’s OPEC meeting. Some believe the beleaguered oil cartel could reduce its overall daily oil production quota, or at least call for strict adherence to existing quotas, most of which are ignored by OPEC nations. Nymex crude oil futures are trading not far above the recent three-year low. This could be a “make-or-break meeting for OPEC—or at least its most important meeting in years. Saudi Arabia and Iran will be the key players at the OPEC meeting.
There was another report out Wednesday that said demand for physical gold in China and India continues to increase, most likely due to bargain hunters snapping up gold due to the recent price slide.
The London P.M. gold fix was $1,197.50 versus the previous London A.M. fixing of $1,195.75.
Technically, February gold futures prices closed near mid-range again today in quiet trading. Bears still have the overall near-term technical advantage. Prices are in a 4.5-month-old downtrend on the daily bar chart. However, the bulls are working on establishing a near-term uptrend from the November low. The gold bulls’ next upside near-term price breakout objective is to produce a close above solid technical resistance at $1,225.00. Bears' next near-term downside breakout price objective is closing prices below solid technical support at last week’s low of $1,174.70. First resistance is seen at this week’s high of $1,204.50 and then at last week’s high of $1,208.20. First support is seen at this week’s low of $1,190.00 and then at $1,186.70. Wyckoff’s Market Rating: 3.0
March silver futures prices closed nearer the session low in quiet trading. The silver bears still have the overall near-term technical advantage. Prices are in a four-month-old downtrend on the daily bar chart. However, the bulls are working on establishing a near-term price uptrend from the November low. Silver bulls’ next upside price breakout objective is closing prices above solid technical resistance at $17.00 an ounce. The next downside price breakout objective for the bears is closing prices below solid support at last week’s low of $15.93. First resistance is seen at this week’s high of $16.755 and then at $17.00. Next support is seen at this week’s low of $16.305 and then at $16.16. Wyckoff's Market Rating: 3.0.

On To Thanksgiving

Two currents were pushing gold prices around today.
The first, and most important for us in the long term is that a raft of data from the U.S. economy came in shaky at best. Consumer sentiment, housing and manufacturing declines sent red flags flying, raising concerns that the world's biggest economy is losing momentum in the final few months of 2014.
We will see soon how this translates to the early December numbers, which will include employment stats.
The second current we contended with today was the four-day Thanksgiving weekend in the United States (which includes New York!)
Traders and investors with any degree of seniority or security were headed for the airports, trains stations and highways by noon. Those types will not be back in their cockpits until Monday. Yes, there will be trading Friday, an abbreviated session on tap. But don’t expect any big moves unless one of those mysterious Asian trades pops up.
We look for the dollar to recover some strength next week. If the U.S. is just experiencing a speed bump, the dollar will re-start its assent.
During this holiday, in which the lucky and the diligent celebrate their bounty, let’s not forget those who need help.
Onward.
Happy Thanksgiving and …