Custom Search

Saturday, June 12, 2010


China Construction Bank (Asia) provides you with flexible and convenient way to invest in gold and to seize every golden investment opportunity.

Invest in London Paper Gold to Enjoy Peace-of-mind
The services currently provided by us are the trading of gold in the Loco-London gold market. All contracts shall be cash settled and no delivery of physical gold will be involved in each transaction and hence there are no safe keeping risks.


Diversified Trading Channel
You can buy and sell gold and keep abreast of the latest gold prices through our branches, phone banking and online banking services. Gold trading can be so flexible, easy and fast.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

London bullion market

The London bullion market is a wholesale over-the-counter market for the trading of gold and silver. Trading is conducted amongst members of the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA), loosely overseen by the Bank of England. Most of the members are major international banks or bullion dealers and refiners.
Contents [hide]
1 Gold trading
2 Market size
3 Account Types
3.1 Allocated Accounts
3.2 Unallocated Accounts
3.3 Unallocated Risks
4 Other London markets

Gold trading

Internationally, gold is traded primarily via over-the-counter (OTC) transactions with limited amounts trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) and Tokyo Commodity Exchange (TOCOM). These forward contracts are known as gold futures contracts. Spot gold is traded for settlement two business days following the trade date, with a business day defined as a day when both the New York and London markets are open for business. Unlike many commodity markets, the forward market for gold is driven by spot prices and interest rate differentials, similar to foreign exchange markets, rather than underlying supply and demand dynamics. This is because gold, like currencies, is borrowed and lent by central banks and in the interbank market. Because interest rates for gold tend to be lower than US domestic interest rates--it encourages gold borrowings so that central banks can earn interest on their large gold holdings--except in special circumstances the gold market tends to be in contango, i.e. the forward price of gold is higher than the spot price. Historically this has made it an attractive market for forward sales by gold producers and contributed to an active and relatively liquid derivatives market.
[edit]Market size

The bulk of global trading in gold and silver is conducted on the over-the-counter (OTC) market. London is by far the largest global centre for OTC transactions followed by New York, Zurich, and Tokyo. Exchange-based trading has grown in recent years with Comex in New York and Tocom in Tokyo generating most of the activity. Gold is also traded in forms of securities, such as exchange-traded funds (ETFs), on the London, New York, Johannesburg, and Australian stock exchanges.
Although the physical market for gold and silver is distributed globally, most wholesale OTC trades are cleared through London. The average daily volume of gold and silver cleared at the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) in November 2008 was 18.3 million ounces (worth $13.9 billion) and 107.6 million ounces (worth $1.1 billion) respectively. This means that an amount equal to the annual gold mine production was cleared at the LBMA every 4.4 days, and to the annual silver production every 6.2 days.[1]. Clearing data substantially understates the true amount of gold traded due to the netting of trades in the calculation of Clearing Statistics. Actual turnover is perhaps 4 [2] times greater than clearing turnover so that 2008 turnover is estimated as 2,134 tonnes [2].
Account Types

Allocated Accounts
Allocated Accounts are accounts held by dealers in clients’ names on which are maintained balances of uniquely identifiable bars, plates or ingots of metal ‘allocated’ to a specific customer and segregated from other metal held in the vault. The client has full title to this metal with the dealer holding it on the client’s behalf as custodian. To avoid any doubt, metal in an allocated account does not form part of a precious metal dealer’s assets. [3].
[edit]Unallocated Accounts
Unallocated Accounts represent the most popular way of trading, settling and holding gold, silver, platinum and palladium. Transactions may be settled by credits or debits to the account while the balance represents the indebtedness between the two parties. Credit balances on the account do not entitle the creditor to specific bars of gold or silver or plates or ingots of platinum or palladium but are backed by the general stock of the precious metal dealer with whom the account is held. The client in this scenario is an unsecured creditor. [3]
Unallocated Risks
The total quantity of unallocated gold is estimated to be 15,000 tonnes at the end of 2008[4] which supports the 2,134 tonnes on average of spot gold trade through London every day representing 14.2% of the pool. This compares to average daily turnover in UK equities of between 0.34% and 0.63% for the 12 months ending September 2009 [4]. While members of the LBMA provide no information on the backing for unallocated gold the improbably high turnover is suggestive they are operating a fractional reserve system where unallocated accounts are only partially backed by physical gold. Similarly to a bank run this makes LBMA unallocated gold accounts susceptible to loss if a sufficient number of market participants request delivery of physical bullion.
Other London markets

The London bullion market is distinct from the London Metal Exchange (LME). The latter is the futures exchange with the world's largest market in options, and futures contracts on base and other metals

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Money managers go for the gold

Gold is one of the more mysterious assets in the financial markets. It's volatile at times to the point of inducing vertigo and fans of the precious metal assert, somewhat contradictorily, its prowess as a hedge against both inflation and deflation.

Business

It's also been one of the best investments of the last several years, outlasting the equity bull market and performing well when so many assets have succumbed to big declines.

That's why it's become a key component among the strategies of the world's largest money managers even as it streaks to never before seen heights of roughly $1,250 an ounce hit last week.

"The outlook for gold is very, very strong," Evy Hambro, co-chief investment officer of BlackRock's natural resources equity team, said in a recent telephone interview from London.

BlackRock's assets under management totalled $3.36 trillion (2.33 trillion pound), as of March 31.

"Gold is certainly nowhere near as volatile as the moves we've seen in currencies," Hambro added. "Look at the euro!"

On Tuesday, spot gold shot up to a session high above $1,200 an ounce, though a bit off the record $1,248.95 per ounce set on May 14. Against the U.S. dollar, the euro is down 14.2 percent so far this year, while gold is up 9 percent for the same time period, Reuters data show.

Similar to hedge funds, money managers are further adopting gold exposure, by way of gold-linked equities and exchange-traded funds, into their asset allocation strategies despite gold's stomach-churning swoons.

FOLKS WITH THE MIDAS TOUCH

In fact, assets in the popular SPDR Gold Shares ETF on Tuesday hit a record $48.8 billion, according to State Street. This is partially due to the rise in the price of the underlying asset, but also reflects increased investment from ordinary investors looking for exposure to commodities.

Mom and pop investors have shown just that.

Commodity sector funds, with gold exchange-traded funds driving the interest, have attracted nearly $7 billion in net cash over the last four weeks, according to EPFR Global.

Mohamed El-Erian, who as co-chief investment officer helps oversee more than $1 trillion at Pimco, said his firm took some profits off the table last week in the SPDR Gold Shares, but emphasized gold exposure remains "very much" a part of the firm's asset allocation.

The proximate cause for money manager's giddiness over gold?

Festering inflationary pressures stemming from the extensive printing of money by the world's central banks to offset collapsing credit markets and avoid depression-like economies. World central banks have been opening the money spigots to buy securities in emergency measures, such as those the European Central Bank has recently undertaken to stabilise euro-zone government bond markets.

Moreover, the flight into gold reflects investors' concerns about the potential for paper currencies to depreciate because of central banks' looser lending policies. For example, the U.S. Federal Reserve's key policy interest rates are still at near zero percent -- which will lead to inflation.

A GOLDEN CURRENCY

While the dollar is seen by many as preferable to the euro or yen, the extent of U.S. indebtedness worries some who believe more problems face the United States in coming years.

All of this has led prominent hedge fund managers to gold.

"As an investor, I became very concerned about having my assets denominated in U.S. dollars," Paulson said in December during a luncheon presentation in New York. "So I looked for another currency in which to denominate my assets in. I feel that gold is the best currency."

Last fall, David Einhorn of Greenlight Capital also spoke along those lines at an investor conference: "Picking these currencies is like choosing my favourite dental procedure. And I decided holding gold is better than holding cash, especially now that both offer no yield."

Einhorn echoed the sentiment at Greenlight Capital Re's investment meeting last week, saying he still holds physical gold for "we tend to think of gold as a currency." He added: "I think there's going to be a lot of inflation."

Emphasizing the phenomenon of hedge funds' growing scepticism of the creditworthiness of countries, the European Union and the International Monetary Fund announced a nearly $1 trillion bailout for ailing member states to halt potential contagion from the spiraling deficits in the euro zone.

El-Erian put it this way in his latest letter to clients:

"Too many balance sheets deleveraged simultaneously, threatening a global depression and forcing governments to step in with their own balance sheets to arrest an increasingly disorderly process."

Saturday, May 29, 2010



Amitabha spielt auch eine wichtige Rolle im tibetischen Buddhismus Vajrayana und gilt dort als Urbuddha der
Lotusfamilie (Adibuddha).
Es gibt im tibetischen Buddhismus verschiedene Praktiken,
um Zugang zu dem Reinen
Land von Amitabha zu erlangen.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Gold price falls

KATHMANDU, DEC 11 - With the wedding month about to end, the price of gold has started falling after reaching a record high. Last Thursday, gold was traded at Rs 34,450 per tola, the price today fell to Rs 32,150 per tola.

Chairman of Nepal Gold and Silver Dealers’ Association said the gold price started falling as the US dollar started getting stabilized in the international market.

Shakya said, the price had gone up earlier this months partially because of the wedding season. End of the season also contributed to the fall in price, he said.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Welcome to Tom Coll Jewellery

In 1984, Tom Coll established Tom Coll Jewellery as a brand new retail jewellery business following his apprenticeship at the bench and an impressive early career served with some of the largest players in the world of gold, silver, diamonds and watches.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Gold Trading


First it confused a surge in gold-coin prices for a surge in the price of gold itself. Then it confused dealing in physical and paper Gold Futures , by ignoring the world's very largest, deepest and most heavily traded gold market.

How so? By the start of 2008, Gold Prices the world over had been steadily climbing for more than six years. A growing handful of people were already invested, with the very earliest gold buyers tripling their money and more since the turn of the decade.

Come July of last year – and driven by the sharp drop in prices from March's all-time dollar-highs above $1,000 an ounce – many of these existing gold owners, especially coin buyers, snapped up more gold as the world economy slowed and financial markets went into tailspin.

But the leading metals refineries weren't expecting a rush until the usual autumn-time spree. ( You can see the typical impact of India's October Gold Buying here... ). That caught the big gold-coin mints napping as well. So their clients – meaning your local coin shop – hit a genuine shortage of gold coins and bars thanks to this summer's frenzy.

Come August and Sept., the global meltdown in stocks sparked by the collapse of Lehman Bros. then sent in a flood of new buyers. And standing in long queues outside big-city coin shops, these new buyers proved a god-send for financial journalists needing bullish copy to file.

Gold was the only bull market running – and so a third wave of buyers cleared out what little inventory the coin-shops had left, sparking in turn a fresh wave of "Sold Out" signs worldwide.

First the US Mint and then even the Rand Refinery in South Africa – the world's biggest gold mint – were forced to suspend shipments, unable to keep up with demand. The big online gold dealers were all out emptied too, leaving would-be coin buyers stuck with nowhere to turn.

Even now, according to German-based giant Heraeus, furnaces worldwide are still booked solid to try and catch up. But with the stock market crash gathering pace yet again, demand from new buyers has only raced on again.

"Production [of one-ounce retail gold coins] has dramatically increased since the middle of the year," agrees Bernhard Schnellmann, director at fellow refinery Argor-Heraeus in Switzerland, but "we cannot cope with demand."

The result for Gold Coin prices? Still greater mark-ups and premiums than coin dealers usually charge. Even Krugerrand gold coins, typically the cheapest gold coins compared to the wholesale "spot" gold price, now carry a 10% or even 15% mark-up – two or three times the normal premium to their actual gold-content value – according to the Coin Dealer Newsletter .

On the other side of the trade, in fact, some gold-coin owners now looking to sell report being offered more than the spot price when they go back to their dealers...just so the dealer can secure new supplies, ready to sell on to new buyers for a still wider margin.

Exactly how much you pay for gold coins? That will depend on your dealer. But the disconnect from the "spot" price (or internationally recognized raw value of bullion) is clear to see.



Now, at the very same moment as gold-coin demand leapt in 2008, however, the "paper gold" market of futures and options was also hit by a shock – a shock rise in financing costs.

These two events were entirely related, of course, because both were sparked by the worldwide shutdown in lending. But unlike eager physical buyers looking to defend their savings with physical metal, all those hedge funds and other "large speculators" trading the Gold Price for three, six or 12 months in the future could no longer roll forward their bets. Because their brokers could no longer lend money to finance their trades.

The net effect? It depressed paper-gold prices – the unsettled price of future delivery – even as retail gold prices moved sharply higher. And that's why many respected gold analysts began talking about a "disconnect" between gold futures and physical metal – a disconnect that some people believe proves a conspiracy to keep Gold Prices down via the derivatives market.

Either way, "Gold is gold, paper is paper," as Alex Wallenwein of the Euro vs. Dollar & Gold Monitor writes, "and Comex gold [meaning the US Gold Futures market] is nothing but paper masquerading as gold.

"Simultaneously [it's] pretending to be the price-setting medium for actual gold in the world. Now, finally, it is in the process of being unmasked."

Even smart analysts trying to get a handle on the great gold disconnect missed the key point, however – the key point that sits in-between paper and coins – the huge global market in wholesale Gold Bullion Bars.



This wholesale, professional market in large 400-oz bars "accounted for nearly three-quarters of gold trading and 56% of silver trading" in 2008 as new research published by IFSL here in London showed earlier this week.

"Most of this activity was transacted through members of the LBMA ( London Bullion Market Association ). Daily reported net trading in gold on the LBMA averaged $20 billion in the first 11 months of 2008, up 45% on the same period last year. Daily trading in silver on the LBMA increased 32% to $2bn."

The actual volume of London's physical gold turnover, however, probably stands "three to five times the reported turnover," the consultancy notes, because transactions between LBMA members are netted out from the final, published, official data.

N.B: Not all the gold dealt and delivered through London's professional brokers actually wound up sitting inside London vaults. Such deals – made over the phone, and just as unique in price as retail-sized deals at your local coin-dealer's counter – are what's known as "loco London" but may very well be settled with delivery in overseas vaults.

Private investors enjoying access to live prices on wholesale London gold through our service here at BullionVault , for instance, consistently choose Zurich, Switzerland for their secure storage. ( The Swiss have a history of political neutrality and defending property rights, after all. Plus, they lack the huge trade and fiscal deficits which threaten "a run" on so many other Western economies. And secure storage in dedicated, professional Swiss vaults does only cost $4 per month, running down to 0.12% per year for larger investments... )

Of course, this huge wholesale gold market is most often the source of that gold which ends up minted as coins and sold by retail dealers across the world. It's also subject to the forward gold prices determined by futures and option trading. Because a sharp drop in, say, the 3-month gold future will necessarily dent the "spot" price of physical gold dealt today.

But the world's professional wholesale gold dealers – centered in London – really do form the daddy of gold bullion markets. London's gold dealers turned over something between $60 billion and $100 billion of gold in 2008...each and every day on average! Yes, that's peanuts next to stock, bond or forex markets. But any "analysis" of gold prices which jumps straight from coins to future surely misses the point.



The "truth" about gold prices today is that, whatever form it comes in – whether as coins, paper or digital contracts, or large wholesale bullion bars – the price it's worth is the price at which you and another willing party agree to deal.

So gold coin buyers on e-Bay no more represent the "true" price of gold anymore than a digital or paper contract traded for delivery 12 months from today – a contract that will most likely end with cash settlement, in fact, rather than delivery of any physical metal.

If you'd rather know the "real" price of gold as judged by the huge London gold market – a market worth upwards of $60bn per day – then check the price that London dealers are quoting for gold held as large 400-oz bars.

And if you want to deal at the very best prices, in the world's very deepest and most liquid gold market, then stop paying retail and start trading wholesale Gold Bullion instead.