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MNeagle
16th May 2010, 01:05 PM
With Local Gold Inventories Depleted, Panicking German Dealers Stage Run On Krugerrands

Last week we noted that several prominent Austrian and German gold dealers had run out of inventory and were no longer transacting with a European population that has suddenly discovered gold religion. As a result, dealers are now focusing procurement efforst outside of Europe, with South Africa receiving the brunt of Europe's panic for physical precious metals. As the FT reports, "At the Rand refinery in South Africa, the phone has not stopped ringing this week." Just imagine what will happen when the gold bug goes airborne and jumps across the Atlantic...

More from the Financial Times:

Panicking German dealers and banks have been desperate to get their hands on krugerrands, the world's most popular gold coin.

"We have some extraordinary sales to German customers," says Deborah Thomson, the Rand treasurer. The refinery, which usually sells 2,000 coins to each customer at a time, says that last week it received an order from one German bank for 30,000 coins. Another bank requested 15,000 coins.

Frank Ziegler, head of precious metals at BayernLB, one of Germany's largest wholesale suppliers of gold, says: "People are buying krugerrands like crazy." The frenzy pushed gold prices to a nominal high of $1,248.95 a troy ounce yesterday while the euro price surged through €1,000 an ounce for the first time. Adjusted for inflation, however, gold prices are still a long way from their all-time high above $2,300 an ounce in 1980.

Although coins account for a small part of the market, they are one of the best indicators of investor sentiment towards the precious metal. And right now gold is in massive demand from investors who see it as the ultimate safe haven at a time of market turmoil and as one of the best hedges against a possible resurgence of inflation.

Other important factors are supporting prices: institutional investors are pouring billions into bullion-backed exchange traded funds; central banks have reversed 20 years of selling gold (and some, including the Chinese central bank, are buying it); and mine gold supply growth has stagnated.

In focus are also the big physical and otherwise gold ETFs which have recently received much notoriety over the likeilhood they are hollow ponzi scams which will shut down operations the second there is even a whiff of a gold run on their holdings.

There is no indication that Germans are ready to stop buying. Panicked by the possible inflationary implications of this week's €750bn eurozone bail-out, they have been snapping up gold coins and small bars at a faster rate than in the aftermath of the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy.

The European Central Bank says its government bond purchases will be "sterilised" by operations to remove inflation risks. But Martin Siegel, manager of Westgold, a dealer of gold in Frankfurt, says people "are not as dumb as economists. They believe there is going to be inflation and are buying gold to protect themselves"."

German investors are notoriously wary about inflation. While few are old enough to remember the hyperinflation that wrecked Germany during the Weimar Republic in the 1920s, the episode remains etched into the national psyche: newsreel from the period has been running on the news in recent days.

The appetite for coins has been so intense that shortages are developing. "In the European market there is a shortage of krugerrands," says Mr Ziegler. As a result, the premium paid for krugerrands in the secondary market has risen from about 2 per cent to 6-8 per cent.

The interest has not been confined to coins and bars. ETFs, which hold physical gold and issue shares to investors, have also seen large inflows.




Even if gold is indeed entering a bubble mania phase, the mania in PMs is far less exuberant than in stocks, with the stock market multiples larger than that of gold and silver, and with far greater retail and speculative participation. Should there be an unwind, we expect stock prices to drop more and faster than those of PM products.

h/t Slim Beleggen
http://www.zerohedge.com/article/local-gold-inventories-depleted-panicking-german-dealers-stage-run-krugerrands?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+zerohedge%2Ffeed+%28zero+hedg e+-+on+a+long+enough+timeline%2C+the+survival+rate+fo r+everyone+drops+to+zero%29

oldmansmith
16th May 2010, 03:06 PM
There is so much fiat out there that any significant percentage that moves into gold will blow it through the roof. And I'm thinking $1230 is a lot of cash....

gunDriller
16th May 2010, 06:36 PM
so, basically, in Europe, the price is not 1248 or 1235 - you have to add about 5%. $60.

Krugerrands are getting the premium because they're available, not because they're the preferred choice. they're the ONLY choice.

i think there is also a psychological aspect to it, where people who are not experienced with gold derive some confidence in their investment from the fact that everybody is buying it.

why aren't they buying Pamp Suisse one ounce bars if they want a one ounce product ? they're prettier than the Krugerrands and the margin (above spot) and the spread (buy-sell) is lower.

http://www.apmex.com/Product/11951/1_oz_9999_Fine_Gold_Bar___Pamp_Suisse_In_Assay_Car d.aspx

it seems like a perfect product for a European investor. Swiss made and it even comes with an assay card.