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Certainly one of the biggest stories of yesterday's market action is carrying
over to today; gold's breakout to new
record highs.
We spoke quite a bit about gold in yesterday's Twitter stream,
noting that gold's latest upsurge has come amidst a global tide of inflationary
worry and growing anti-fiat money sentiment. This is quite remarkable, as much
of gold's rise this decade was, previously, widely perceived as a "weak dollar
story".
Reuters
shares this quote from gold watcher and newsletter writer, Dennis Gartman:
"Gold's rise is not a dollar phenomenon but an "anti-currency" phenomenon
as money is flowing away from almost any and all currencies.".
Interestingly enough, today's coverage from the Financial Times seems to take
an opposing tack, quoting an analyst who noted the lagging performance of gold
in euro terms:
Eugen Weinberg of Commerzbank said: "The fact that the rally of gold prices
is mainly attributable to the weak US dollar at the moment is clear if we look
at the price of gold in euro terms. At €710 a troy ounce, this is still
10 per cent lower than the all-time peak recorded in February 2009."
However, Bloomberg's article coverage
of gold's new price highs yesterday cited inflation as a mounting global
concern, alongside quotes from analysts and investors who noted the metal
was acting as "a hedge against all currencies".
It's been a while since we covered the gold market in depth, but then a round
of all-time highs usually seems to get everyone's attention. For more on the
subject, please have a look at these previous gold commentaries in the related
articles section below.
Related articles and posts:
1. John
Paulson, hedge funds move into gold - Finance Trends.
2. Gold's place as a reserve currency -
Gillian Tett via Gata.org.
3. Gold
hits all-time highs (Jan. 2008 roundup) - Financial Sense.
4. The
Invisible Crash: book review - Financial Sense.
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