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31 Jul 2010
Once again Europe has come to the rescue of gold, which has been witnessing a steady slide during the past few weeks. With Italy and Greece plunging into crisis again,
the uncertainty looming over Europe has added to the fear among
investors and gold prices are set to cash in on this panic with more
demand from safe haven buying.
Gold for December delivery was down 2.1 per cent this week at $1,166.60
an ounce on the Comex in New York. The metal has dropped 7.9 per cent
since climbing to a record $1,266.50 on June 21. Prices on July 28
slipped to a 12- week low of $1,159.30 as holdings in the SPDR Gold
Trust, the biggest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, dropped the most in
more than two years. Physical demand for gold from India, China and the
wider Asian region was very visible as prices declined this week.
Spot gold added as much as $5.85, or 0.5%, to $1,169.45 an ounce in London and was at $1,167.15 on Friday.
Two major developments in Italy and Greece will definitely help gold in
the coming days. On Friday, Italian parliament approved an austerity
package worth more than $32bn, aimed at cutting the country’s budget
deficit and reassuring financial markets.
Sponsored by the government of Silvio Berlusconi, the prime minister,
the package passed by a vote 321 to 270 votes, with four abstentions.
The cuts aim to bring Italy’s budget deficit under three per cent by
2010 from 5.3 per cent in 2009.
Italy’s largest union staged strikes over the measures, as did
magistrates, doctors and diplomats. The austerity package has won praise
from European Union officials and the International Monetary Fund
(IMF). Following this, there have been crisis talks in Italy as Silvio
Berlusconi split from his once most powerful ally, prompting speculation
the government could fall.
Senior colleagues gathered to discuss the consequences of the final
showdown between the premier and Gianfranco Fini after months of
conflict. The pair co-founded the ruling People of Freedom party. But
now it has issued a document, censuring Fini for open dissent.
Berlusconi’s government was in danger of collapse after open warfare
broke out between the Italian prime minister and his most senior party
colleague. The dispute with Gianfranco Fini, the co-founder of the
governing People of Freedom party, follows a string of corruption and
sex scandals.
To add to this European fire, more fuel was added from Greece also. In
Greece, truck drivers defied an emergency government order Thursday to
end their strike and return to work.
The country’s 33,000 licensed truck drivers walked out on Monday in
protest over the government’s plans to slash the price of new trucking
licenses, a key provision in a multibillion-dollar plan worked out with
the European Union and the International Monetary Fund to help Greece
avoid defaulting on its debt.
Greece had also the closure of almost a dozen consulates in Europe and
South Africa due to the economic crisis that has hit the country hard
this year. The decision was taken as part of government efforts to slash
the state budget deficit, currently reaching 13.6 percent of the GDP,
to less than three percent by 2014 and restore the national economy.
The financial rescue package, which was agreed to in early May, will
require years of painful belt-tightening in Greece. In return, the
nation’s European partners and the IMF agreed to provide $146 billion in
loans over the next three years, intended to help Greece avoid a
default.
The situation is spreading panic in Europe once again and global gold
market is upbeat over increased demand from safe haven buying.
Source: Commodity Online