
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre |
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Gold soars
as speculators bet on inflation
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By George Trefgarne,
Economics Editor (Filed: 28/08/2003)
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Gold
soared to within a few dollars of its
highest price for seven years yesterday
as speculators gambled that inflation
- and not deflation - is now stalking
the world economy thanks to a recovery
and bulging government deficits.
The gold price shot up by $10.50 to
$371.50 an ounce, its highest level since
May and just below the seven-year high
of $378 reached in February.
The immediate trigger was the expiry
of options contracts in New York, but
nearly all the world's major central
banks are
locked in a battle to hold their currencies down to see off deflation,
or continuously falling prices. The US Federal Reserve continues to warn
of a possible "unwelcome fall" in inflation.
However, some investors are starting
to believe that central banks have gone
too far and may set off price rises on
the high street. Furthermore, governments
around the world have started to run
up massive deficits.
This week, the US Congressional Budget
Office warned that the American government
deficit could be as much as $401 billion
(£255 billion) this year. Higher
inflation could be good for the gold
price. Gold is unlikely to be devalued
as it does not depend on any central
bank or government for its value.
John Reade, an analyst at UBS, said: "The
market hit important technical levels
yesterday and could now rise further.
The investors we are talking to are now
looking through the short-term risk of
deflation and focusing on economic recovery
and reflation. I think people are losing
faith in the ability of politicians and
central bankers to keep inflation under
control."
Evey Hambro, who manages the Merrill
Lynch Gold & General Fund, said: "The
market has been like a pressure cooker
and the lid blew off today. It takes
place against a background of rising
government deficits. Unlike paper currencies,
you can't just run gold off the printing
press."
Central banks are the biggest holders
of gold and have a pact to limit their
sales. There are hopes that at the International
Monetary Fund meeting in Dubai later
this month the pact could be renewed
on stricter terms.
Source--money.telegraph.co.uk
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