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Gold: New Global High vs. Top 10 Currencies |
by Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Friday, 6 November 2009
The official bid for
gold, let alone private-sector demand, looks likely to hold strong...
GOLD
didn't only break new Dollar highs this week.
Jumping to 8-month highs
against the Euro, Swiss Franc and Canadian Dollar, it also took out
fresh records versus the Indian Rupee and Chinese Yuan.
And more critically still,
gold broke new ground against the world's major currencies en masse.
Critically as in critical.
Buying 200 tonnes of metal
from the IMF, the Reserve Bank of India sent gold to new highs in terms
of all the money that counts.
Friday's news that
America's job-loss recovery is worsening then confirmed the new record,
peeping just above the previous hit set in Feb. of this year.
Weighted against the
world's top 10 currencies by GDP, the price of gold broke its previous
high on Wednesday this week. Shown as a percentage change since Jan.
2000 above,
BullionVault's Global Gold Index does indeed lag the Dollar price
(244% vs. 289% to date), but it's clearly beaten all other asset classes
so far this decade.
And given what India's move
says about Dollar diversification (that a lump of metal yielding zero
and trading at all-time record highs also beats holding Euros, Yen,
Yuan, Sterling, Reals, Loonies, Roubles and Pesos...), gold's return to
central-bank bids might be a long way from finished.
Ten years ago, nobody
wanted it. Least of all those central banks in Europe holding the most
but about to launch a new currency – one lacking any
sovereign-government backing, let alone a link to
gold bullion.
By the time they stopped
selling gold amid the financial crisis wrought by their last flirtation
with record-low returns to cash, the rising powers of China, India and
Russia – moving from fifth, ninth and twelfth to 4th, 8th and 10th in
terms of global GDP respectively – had already begun hoarding metal
themselves.
Now the US, Japan and
Europe are holding rates at fresh record lows as near to zero as damn
it. The official bid for gold, let alone private-sector demand, looks
likely to hold strong from here.
Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Gold price
chart, no delay |
Gold in 2009 |