Gold and What Moves it.
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Tracking all things that relate to and affect the price of gold.
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Marriage season gold demand in India swells

Marriage season gold demand in India swells | Gold and What Moves it. | Scoop.it

Indians made jewellery purchases worth $7.2 billion in the quarter ended September 2012, belying claims of a slowdown in the market.

 

by Shivom Seth:

 

MUMBAI (MINEWEB) -

 

"India's penchant for gold jewellery does not seem to be fading away any time soon, despite the fact that the Indian government seems intent on curbing sales of the precious metal.

 

"Despite constantly rising prices, the consumption of the yellow metal has been steady. With the wedding season in full swing in India, there is no slump in the sales of gold.

 

"With the rate of pure gold shooting up to $608.97 (Rs 33,300) per 10 gram for 22 karat gold, one would have rightly presumed that gold jewellery is well out of the reach of a majority of people.

 

"Not so. In the quarter ended September 2012, Indians made jewellery purchases worth $7.2 billion (Rs 395 billion). In contrast, gold exchange traded funds (ETFs) garnered just $91 million (Rs 5 billion) of inflows.

 

"The wedding season, which extends well into the new year, is expected to ensure even better sales for gold retailers. ..."

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The Golden Truth: The Gold Bull Stage 2: Here Come The Pensions

The Golden Truth: The Gold Bull Stage 2: Here Come The Pensions | Gold and What Moves it. | Scoop.it
Pension money invested in bullion is 'peanuts' at the moment...If 1 percent of their total assets shift to the metal, the gold market would explode. - Itsuo Toshima, advisor to Japanese pension funds (Bloomberg, link provided below)


I have maintained since 2002 that the precious metals and mining stock market would eventually erupt into bull market frenzy that would at least rival, and likely succeed, the bull market frenzy we saw in tech stocks. Part of what will fuel this frenzy is the enormous flow of institutional investor money, globally, that will eventually find its way into the precious metals and mining stock sector. Because the amount of potential capital from institutions from just a small increase in sector allocation - relative to the total size of the precious metals/mining stock sector - the price effect is potentially enormous.

There are a lot of solid fundamental reasons for this. But from a technical perspective, the total size by market capitalization of the gold, silver and publicly traded mining stocks combined is absolutely minuscule in relation to the total size of global investible institutional assets. To put this in perspective, the market cap of each of the top 15 stocks in the S&P 500 is individually larger than the total market of the entire publicly traded mining stock sector (1). Think about that for a minute. Apple has a bigger market cap than every single mining stock globally combined.

Hal's insight:

Dave makes some very interesting points.

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