COMMODITY MARKET INSIGHT
DATE: 12 FEB-2015
DON'T RUN AFTER GOLD LIKE USAIN BOLT
Gold
prices eased on Tuesday as a rise in the dollar offset the supportive impact of
concerns over Greece's future in the euro zone and fears over escalating
violence in Ukraine, which hurt risk appetite. Jeffrey Lacker, a top U.S.
Federal Reserve official, told reporters on Tuesday that the central bank
should raise interest rates in June. European Commission President Jean-Claude
Juncker told Greece not to expect the euro zone to bow to Tsipras' demands in a
growing confrontation that has rattled financial markets and prompted U.S. and
Canadian pleas for calm and compromise. On the main physical markets for gold,
premiums over spot prices on the Shanghai Gold Exchange contracted slightly
ahead of next week's Lunar New Year holiday, MKS said in a note on Tuesday, but
remained between $2.50-3.50, showing demand has emerged at lower levels.
Bullion
counter can witness range bound movement with negative bias tracking weak
international markets. Gold can move in range of 26500-26800 and silver can
move in range of 37000-38000 in MCX. On domestic bourses weak local currency
can support the prices. Gold futures on Wednesday marked their lowest close in
about a month as some investors lost interest in the metal on the back of a
stronger U.S. dollar. Investors awaited the outcome of a meeting of euro zone
finance ministers on Greece's debt obligations to help gauge the next move for
financial markets. Euro zone finance ministers met in Brussels on Wednesday to
decide Greece's financial fate. Uncertainty over Greece has provided some
support for gold in recent days as investors seek out safer bets. Investors
ignored the geopolitical headwinds regarding Greece's bailout negotiations and
broader worries that the global economy is being buffeted by deflation. We
expect gold prices are likely to trade negative on the back of US interest rate
outlook.
Silver
was down 0.6 percent at $16.91 an ounce. Greece and its euro zone partners
engaged in brinkmanship on Monday, with leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras
insisting his country would not extend its reform-linked bailout and Germany
saying it would get no more money without such a programme. European Commission
President Jean-Claude Juncker warned Greeks not to expect the euro zone to bow
to Tsipras' demands in a growing confrontation which spooked financial markets
and prompted U.S. and Canadian pleas for calm and compromise. We expect Silver
prices are likely to trade negative on the back of US interest rate outlook.
Crude
oil prices fell for the first time in four sessions on Tuesday after the
International Energy Agency (IEA) warned that ample supplies will raise global
inventories before investment cuts begin to significantly dent production. Oil
stockpiles in member countries of the Paris-based Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) may approach a record 2.83 billion barrels
by mid-2015, said the IEA, advisor on energy policy to a group of Western
nations. The IEA also predicted that demand for oil from the Organization of
the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) will hold at 29.4 million barrels per
day (bpd) this year, and said U.S. shale oil output growth will pause before regaining
momentum. The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) added to the bearish
sentiment in its report on Tuesday that kept its 2015 and 2016 domestic oil
production expectations virtually unchanged from the previous month. U.S. crude
stocks rose 1.6 million barrels to 413.7 million last week, industry group the
American Petroleum Institute (API) said late Tuesday.
Crude
oil may open move with negative bias in range of 3020-3150 in near term. Oil
tumbled for the second day in a row, with the U.S. benchmark slipping back
below $50 a barrel, after a government report showed U.S. crude stockpiles
reached a new record high. Oil prices have shown signs of stability in the past
two weeks after plunging to nearly six-year lows last month amid a global supply
glut. News of oil companies cutting back on investment and a reduction in
drilling activity are setting the stage for a slowdown in oil-output growth,
especially in the U.S., in the second half of the year, analysts and market
experts say. Optimism that the glut could ease has supported prices. U.S. crude
stockpiles rose by a slightly bigger-than-expected 4.9 million barrels to 417.9
million barrels in the week ended Feb. 6, according to the EIA. Natural gas may
continue its short covering as today EIA inventory data will give further
direction to the prices. Overall its prices can hover in range of 170-180 in
MCX. We expect crude oil prices likely to remain volatile on concerns that
falling U.S. oil rig counts may rein in a market glut
Copper
fell on Tuesday as worries over China's economic growth and the outlook for
demand resurfaced, though losses were limited by supply disruptions. China's
annual consumer inflation hit a five-year low in January, underscoring persistent
economic weakness after the country's trade performance slumped in January. The
data adds pressure on policymakers to support growth, though China's central
bank said it will fine-tune policy to head off a slowdown but avoid
overstimulating the economy. Data on Monday showed China's imports tumbled 19.9
percent in January, far worse than expected. However, copper has lost 11
percent of its value this year after a 14 percent drop last year, leading some
analysts to say that the bad news is probably priced in for now. Chile's
Collahuasi mine, meanwhile, will operate at less than half capacity until
Friday at least because of maintenance work. We expect base metal prices to
trade mixed on the back of short term shortage and long term surplus is likely
to keep base metal prices mixed. Base metals may trade sideways with weak bias
as investors will eye US advance retail sales and euro zone industrial
production data for further direction. Copper may trade in range of 347-355
while Lead may move in range of 111-113. Aluminum may move in range of 112-114.
Nickel may move in range of 910-932 in MCX. Zinc may move in range of 131-133.
Copper steadied on Wednesday as some investors bet that a floor had been
reached after heavy losses, while tin touched a fresh 2-1/2 year low on worries
about weak demand. European stocks and the euro fell as euro zone meetings on
the Greek debt crisis threatened to give rise to confusion rather than clarity.
Gains were capped as physical demand in top metals consumer China was still
soft and sentiment bearish ahead of the Chinese New Year. Everybody is just
waiting for after the Lunar new year holidays to see how demand will do.



Good and well researched report, it helped me a lot in my MCX trading events..thanks#
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