Re: conservative POG $8000 p/oz ?
in response to
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posted on
Feb 13, 2011 07:23PM
Keep in mind, the opinions on this site are for the most part speculation and are not necessarily the opinions of the company WITHOUT PREJUDICE
Driving home from my boys hockey today I was listening to a financial talk show "World Financial Report" with Howard Seigel. Pretty interesting! One of his topics was China & their ever increasing demand for gold. Here's a clip from one of his topics/comments
China may increase gold reserves beyond 'Fort Knox' level – Hale
CAPE TOWN (miningweekly.com) – China’s central bank is being advised to increase its gold holdings nearly tenfold to a level greater than the world’s biggest bullion depository, the US’s "Fort Knox". Global economist David Hale, who addressed the packed Mining Indaba in Cape Town attended by a record 5 700 people, says that China’s gold reserves are currently at 1 050 t – only $30-billion to $40-billion compared with the country’s total assets of $2,8-trillion. Various officials in China have proposed the central bank should increase its gold reserves to 10 000 t, which would give China larger gold reserves than Fort Knox. “This would be a huge development for the gold market,” he says, with global mining output of gold only at 2 500 t a year. “China will probably start to buy gold in the near future, but they won’t report it for two or three years,” Hale says. When China announced new gold reserves from 600 t to 1 050 t in April 2009, purchsing had been done in the preceding years.. “The odds very much favour China making, over five years, very large gold purchases, and this in turn makes me bullish on the gold price,” he adds. In addition to the central bank purchases of gold, preliminary data suggests that the Chinese private sector has bought 300 t of gold in the last year, compared with zero three to four years ago. Given the rising Chinese incomes and inflation, Chinese private demand for gold could increase in the next few years to the historical levels of India, which for many years has been the world’s largest private buyer of gold.
By: Martin Creamer
9th February 2011
“China offers the prospect of very healthy demand for gold and this could over the next couple of years set the stage for further major gains in the price of gold.”:
BOW2U