Saturday, May 14, 2011

Exco Resources gold production at White Dam continues to exceed expectations


production at White Dam continues to exceed expectations


Exco

Resources (ASX: EXS) is enjoying some very healthy margins in gold
production at the 75% owned White Dam project in South Australia, as
operating costs remain under $500 an ounce as spot gold sits above $1400
an ounce.
During

January and February the project produced 19,378 gold ounces, with the
net cash flows attributable to Exco around $12 million.
This production level
puts the joint venture on target for above 100,000 gold ounces in 2011.
The differentiating
factor between this project and many others, is that Exco has achieved a
very profitable life of project average sale price of A$1,368 per
ounce, which the company said is 30% above budget.
Exco's 75% share of production to date is
51,858 ounces.
Another

major benefit for Exco is the potential to extend the life of the
operation, with the joint venture partners commencing a further $500,000
near mine exploration program.
Resource

modelling analysis of White Dam has led to the completion of an updated
resource estimate containing:
-
Depleted to end of 5.99 million tonnes at 1.00 grams per tonne (g/t)
gold for 192,899 ounces September 2010, cut off 0.3g/t gold; or
-
Un-depleted 7.82 million tonnes at 1.02g/t gold for 257,567 ounces, cut
off 0.3g/t gold.
Ordinary

Kriging completed the resource estimate

Gold futures dip on global cues

Gold futures dip on global cues



Press Trust of India / New Delhi May 12, 2011, 18:02 IST

Tracking a weakening global trend, gold prices dipped by Rs 171 to Rs 22,024 per 10 grams in futures trade today as speculators off-loaded their positions.

Trading sentiments turned bearish as gold fell in London after strengthening dollar reduced the demand for the precious ****ls and some investors sold the ****l to cover losses in other assets.

At the Multi Commodity Exchange, gold for delivery in August dipped by Rs 171, or 0.77% to Rs 22,024 per 10 grams, with a business turnover of four lots.

Similarly, the ****l for delivery in June fell by Rs 161, or 0.73% to Rs 21,760 per 10 grams, with a business volume of a single lot.

Market analysts said apart from falling trend overseas, heavy off-loading of positions by speculators mainly pulled down gold futures prices.

Meanwhile, the yellow ****l fell by $11.17 to $1,490.03 an ounce in London.

Gold and silver plunging again in European trade



Gold and silver plunging again in European trade

Gold and silver prices were initially hit by continuing strength in the dollar, but the downward momentum caused by this in precious ****ls prices continued to take prices lower in morning trade.


Yesterday, gold struggled to keep its head above the $1500 level, and this morning, in Europe, trading saw it crash around $23 at the time of writing - down from around $1505 to $1482 - a fall of 1.5% in a couple of hours. Silver fared even worse. once again showing its far stronger volatility, with a fall of some 9% over a similar time period.
The initial stimulus for the plunge was dollar strength against the Euro, but although this mitigated somewhat as trading progressed, the initial fall below the $1500 mark appears to have stimulated programmed selling down to a resistance level seen at around $1480. No doubt the gold and silver bears will have another shot at extending the fall when the U.S. markets open - those who have been holding short positions in silver in particular had been looking at enormous book losses and will be taking the chance to unwind some of these positions.
There will also doubtless be ongoing comments that the gold bubble has burst flowing from those who have been pushing the viewpoint that the rising gold price is unjustified for the past ten years. However the price drivers that took gold up to over $1570 only a few days ago are all still with us. It may well be that the rapid rise to that level - and even more so silver's shoot-up to almost hit $50 - was overdone and this could be a perhaps justified correction. The bulls will say that this presents a great buying opportunity for precious ****ls investors, while the bears will continue to say prices are due for a major fall. This observer reckons the former may be the better path to follow, but there could be further falls in the meantime

Thursday Edition: May 14, 2011

Thursday Edition


Preparing for a Market Crash
By: Rick Ackerman, Rick's Picks
We told subscribers to short the S&P futures yesterday, and although we’d ordinarily use a tight trailing stop because the trade flouts a 26-month uptrend, this time we intend to loosen up and let our profits run. For if the so far puny blip in the US dollar has caused commodities to plunge, and for stocks, finally, to give way, imagine what will happen if the dollar really takes off, causing a cosmic-sized carry-trade unwind as swift and lethal as a cobra strike.

Gold and Silver's Daily Review
By: Julian D. W. Phillips, Gold/Silver Forecaster - Global Watch
The dollar continues to strengthen, not the euro to weaken, because the dollar is rising against all currencies. This is distorting the picture of virtually all markets. Even the oil price is acting like a currency, with it falling as the dollar strengthens. The implications of the dollar’s moves are huge. In Asia the dollar gold price fell $15 and the silver price $2 just ahead of London’s opening. The bulk of this was adjustments to the dollar’s moves with the gold price off less than ½% in the euro at €1,050. The gold price Fixed this morning in London at $1,488.25 and in the euro at €1.050.50.

Gold Selling "Not Outpacing Buying" as Commodities Slide, Gold-Reserve Advocate Tipped for ECB Presidency
By: Ben Traynor, BullionVault
THE WHOLESALE-MARKET gold price continued to fall on Thursday morning in London – hitting a 1-week low of $1480 per ounce – as world stock and commodity markets took another tumble. Silver fell to $32.50 per ounce at the London Fix, nearly $7 down from Wednesday and 33% below the 31-year high of $48.70 set on April 28.

Gold a Bubble? Steve Forbes, Billionaire Media Magnate, Predicts New Gold Standard Within 5 Years
By: GoldCore
Gold and silver’s recovery in recent days proved to be temporary and further falls were seen yesterday (sharply in silver) prior to a tentative recovery overnight and then more falls again this morning. The euro has stabilized after recent sharp falls and euro gold at €1,050/oz remains comfortably above €1,000/oz after a period of correction and consolidation. Euro gold looks like it is set to break above record highs of €1,072/oz (12/28/10) and target €1,100/oz as the European debt crisis deepens.

Gold Price Volatility Opens Opportunities
By: The Gold Report and Peter Grandich
Why has the price of gold punched through every barrier to a record high of $1,500/oz.? The market's rigged, according to Peter Grandich, editor of The Grandich Letter. In this exclusive interview with The Gold Report, Grandich explores if it's time to unload silver and transition out of gold.

Why Gold ? Why Now ? The case for investing in gold today

Why Gold ? Why Now ? The case for investing in gold today


IF YOU'RE LOOKING
to store wealth in something both rare and secure, you will find nothing to match gold today.

Gold tends to reward cautious savers in times of financial stress. Why? Because it is both hard to destroy and tightly supplied.


In short, gold is the very opposite of debt.


Gold doesn't corrode or tarnish, and it's relatively useless to industry. That's why almost all of gold's entire supply over the last 4,000 years remains unused today. It exists as either jewelry or gold bullion, both of which act to store wealth and value.


The entire stock of gold ever mined now stands near 160,000 tonnes. But gold is so dense that, if formed into a single a cube, the world's entire holding would have an edge barely 22 yards in length. It wouldn't even cover a tennis court

Gold vs. Paper-Money Inflation
New gold is being found and mined today at the rate of some 2,600 tonnes per annum.
That's a modest increase of 1.6% per year to the above-ground supply. And critically for the value of gold, this annual growth-rate lies beyond the power of politicians or investment banks to increase.

The supply of Euros, in contrast - the most hawkishly-managed major world currency today - is now expanding at 11.5% per year.


Thanks to its tight supply, gold grew its purchasing power more than nine times over during the 1970s - the last worldwide surge in inflation. In terms of business assets gold rose 23 times over by the start of 1980 as measured against the Dow Jones Industrial Average.


During the financial collapse of the 1930s - but this time amid a deflation caused by mass US bank failures - gold bought 17 times as many financial assets as it did before the Great Crash of 1929.


Now debt defaults and inflation are working together to force a fresh crisis in the value of money today. Gold has already risen three-fold against the New York stock market since early 2000. It's recently turned higher in terms of residential and commercial real estate values, too.


Time to Buy Gold?
Gold doesn't care whether a financial collapse destroys the value of money (inflation) or the value of debt (deflation). Its unique characteristics - indestructibility and tight supply - mean its owners can thrive amid either.
But that doesn't make gold a "forever" investment. Gold will always lose value during stable periods of strong economic growth.

Over the twenty years to 2000, for example, gold lost 95% of its value in terms of US real estate. As a proportion of world investment portfolios, gold fell from around 2% to effectively zero.


The trend in gold prices finally turned higher at the start of this decade, just as Gordon Brown - now the British prime minister - sold half the UK's national gold reserves at less than $300 an ounce.


Since then gold has trebled and more. But this gain remains small in the context of previous gold trends. It's also been limited by Western governments persuading cash-savers that "core" inflation in the cost of living is running at 2% per year or below.


These official CPI figures exclude the cost of housing, mortgages, taxes, fuel and saving for retirement. But this trick cannot go un-noticed forever.



New Investment in Gold
Global investment in gold will continue to grow if the world's major currencies - gold's main competition as a store of value - plunge into the inflationary spiral that many economists fear. The over-supply of Dollars, Euros and Yen looks set to keep pushing gold prices higher until there's a dramatic change in monetary policy.
That's what finally killed gold's last inflation-led surge. At the start of the 1980s, the Federal Reserve pushed US interest rates up to 18%, restoring the world's confidence in its currency's value and worth.

Could America survive such strong medicine now? Would Ben Bernanke even dare risk it?

If you think the world's central bankers are about to set interest rates far above the real rate of inflation, you should steer well clear of gold. But if you fear for your savings - and you want to start investing in gold - you can start here, for free, today

Gold Prices Fall, Silver Tumbles 8% - 15 May 2011


Gold Prices Fall, Silver Tumbles 8% - 12 May 2011



GOLD PRICES rose almost $10 to $1526.50 in Asia on Wednesday, but then fell back off for most of the rest of trade in London and New York. Gold Prices ended near their early afternoon low of $1495.63 with a loss of 1.05%.
Euro Gold Prices remained at about €1056.
Silver Prices surged almost a Dollar to as high as $39.493 before falling back off. Silver Prices ended near their early afternoon low of $35.132 with a loss of 8%.
Gold Mining and silver equities fell throughout most of trade and ended with about 4% losses.
Platinum lost $19 to $1773.50, and copper dropped 9 cents to about $3.94.
Oil drifted lower after the Energy Information Administration reported that crude inventories rose 3.8 million barrels, gasoline inventories rose 1.3 million barrels, and distillates fell 800,000 barrels.
The US Dollar rose against major currencies, while the Euro fell on increased concerns over sovereign debt problems in Greece and Portugal.
US Treasuries remained higher after today’s $24 billion 10-year note auction sold at a high yield of 3.21% with a bid to cover of 3.00.
The Dow, Nasdaq, and S&P fell on poor earnings reports and a renewed downturn in commodities.
Among the big names making news in the market today were Disney, Toyota, HSBC, AIG, Macy’s, and Intel.
Thursday at 8:30am EST brings Initial Jobless Claims for 7 May, expected at 423,000, PPI for April expected at 0.5%, Core PPI expected at 0.2%, and Retail Sales for April expected at 0.6%. Excluding autos, sales are expected at 0.5%. At 10am is the Business Inventories report for March, expected at 0.9%.
Buy Gold and Silver Bullion direct with BullionVault...
Chris Mullen, 12 May '11
Chris Mullen is chief content manager of the GoldSeek family of websites, a leading source of gold news, comment and mining-stock data for private and institutional investors

Gold Diversification Doubted As Commodity Slump Continues, Euro Falls On Appointment Of New ECB Chief - 15 May 2011


Gold Diversification Doubted As Commodity Slump Continues, Euro Falls On Appointment Of New ECB Chief - 12 May 2011


Spot Gold prices rose for the second day running in London on Tuesday, reclaiming half of last week's 7% drop from the all-time Dollar high as world stock markets rallied again with commodity prices.
The Euro Spot Gold Price surpassed last week's peak, trading at €34,028 per kilo after the Standard & Poor's ratings agency downgraded Greek sovereign debt to the same level as Belarus.
Tuesday morning's London Gold Fix was set less than 2% below late December's all-time Euro high.
"With the resurfacing of Eurozone sovereign debt concerns, we expect to see continued appetite for gold and silver," says Leon Westgate, London-based commodities strategist at Standard Bank.
"Given the recent sell-off, expect to see a return of investor as well as physical buying in search of value."
Short-term, the Greek downgrade "may provide a slight headwind for precious ****ls", according to one Spot Gold dealer in London. But longer-term, "the same factors behind the Euro slip also favor gold and silver."
An analyst from ratings agency Fitch told Reuters today that his agency is "actively reviewing" its rating for Greece.
Yields on Greek government debt fell slightly on Tuesday – down from 15.7% to 15.4% – as rumors circulated that Athens could receive another bailout.
Newspaper Kathimerini reported that the International Monetary Fund is lining up an aid package worth €80-100 billion, though it did not cite sources for the story.
Forecasting weak economic growth for years to come, the S&P ratings agency warns that Athens' creditors "could eventually" face 50% cut to their bondholdings "to restore Greece's debt burden to a sustainable level."
"Gold looks quite comfortable at $1500, and would profit from any escalation in concerns over Greece's debt sustainability," says Edel Tully, precious ****ls strategist at UBS in London.
However, "volumes are very light [in precious ****ls markets] and as such the potential for exaggerated price moves is quite high."
Giant gold holder the SPDR Gold Trust – a physically-backed exchange-traded fund (ETF) that tracks the gold price – saw shareholder sales cut its holdings of physical Gold Bullion to a one-year low on Monday.
Down at 1202 tonnes, the $60 billion trust has shed 9% of its physical bullion since the peak of June 2010.
"We have seen a couple of [ETF] outflows over the last few days and this might have dragged the Gold Price down a little," reckons Commerzbank analyst Daniel Briesemann.
"The decrease we've seen over the last week isn't related to anything specific on gold."
Meanwhile on Tuesday, latest figures showed that China's trade surplus was $11.4 billion in April, nearly four times bigger than analysts had forecast.
China's exports grew 29.9% year-on-year, while import growth was 21.8%.
"This number will likely add to the pressure from Washington for Beijing to allow faster currency appreciation," said Brian Jackson, Hong Kong-based senior strategist at Royal Bank of Canada.
"But more importantly [the data] should persuade Chinese policy-makers that a stronger yuan can be tolerated by the economy and is warranted as part of their efforts to curb price pressures."
Chinese vice premier Wang Qishan is currently in Washington D.C. for the annual Strategic and Economic Dialogue between China and the US, and the latest trade data "will likely provide a touch more ammunition for the US in the talks," believes Alistair Thornton, economist with HIS Global Insight in Beijing.
Now holding Dollar interest rates at zero for 25 months running, the US will instead "argue that more needs to be done with the [Chinese] currency and interest rates," says Thornton.
Buying Gold today...? Cut out the middleman to slash your costs and get the utmost safety using world No.1 online, BullionVault...
Ben Traynor, 10 May '11
Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK's longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics.
Please Note: All articles published here are to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it. Please review our Terms & Conditions for accessing Gold News, RSS links are shown there.

Gold News until 14/05/2011


Gold News until 12/05/2011



12 May '11 — Gold Diversification Doubted As Commodity Slump Continues, Euro Falls On Appointment Of New ECB Chief Ben Traynor
12 May '11 — Gold Prices Fall, Silver Tumbles 8% Chris Mullen
11 May '11 — Price to Buy Gold Hits 1-Week High, Silver Regains 1/3rd of 30% Plunge, as Europe "Rearranges Deckchairs" on Titantic Greek Debt Ben Traynor
11 May '11 — Gold and Silver Prices Gain, US Dollar Closes Lower Chris Mullen
10 May '11 — Spot Gold Nears New Euro High as S&P Cuts Greece Again, Warns of 50% Bondholder Loss Ben Traynor
10 May '11 — Gold Holds Steady, Silver and Commodities Rebound Chris Mullen
09 May '11 — Gold Prices Rise in Euro as Rising Dollar Hits Commodity Rally, Silver Holds 26% Down Ben Traynor
07 May '11 — Gold Prices Drop 4.6% from Record Weekly Close, Crude Oil Loses 15%, Silver Drops 26% Chris Mullen
06 May '11 — Commodities "Panic" Subsides, Indians Rush to Buy Gold, Chinese Buy Silver on 31% "Dip" Adrian Ash
06 May '11 — Gold Hits $1477, Mining Stocks Lose 4% Chris Mullen
05 May '11 — Spot Gold Rallies, Silver Extends 24-Year Record Plunge, as Weak ECB and Bank of England Rates "Favor Precious ****ls" Adrian Ash
05 May '11 — Gold and Silver Prices Fall, Dollar Hits 3 Year Low Chris Mullen
04 May '11 — Silver Prices Sink into Bear Market, "Gold Favored" as Mexico Leads Central-Bank Accumulation Adrian Ash
04 May '11 — Gold Drops Slightly, Silver loses 2.9%, Mining Equities Fall Chris Mullen
03 May '11 — Gold Prices Hit New London High, Silver Drops 10.5% Ahead of Comex Margin Hike, "Frenzy" of Festive Indian Gold Buying Adrian Ash
28 Apr '11 — Case for Gold Investing "Remains the Same" as US Inflation Jump, Fed Sticks at Zero Adrian Ash
27 Apr '11 — Gold Up, Silver Down in "Subdued" London Trade as Dollar Falls Ahead of Fed Rate Announcement Adrian Ash
26 Apr '11 — Gold & Silver Investment Merely "Routine Speculation" at Record-High Prices as US & Irish Debt Quality Openly Challenged Adrian Ash
22 Apr '11 — Gold Ends Easter Week 1% Higher, Silver Jumps 8% Chris Mullen
21 Apr '11 — Gold Slips in Everything But Fast-Weakening Dollar, Physical Hoarding Accelerates as "Wall of Money" Needed by Govts & Banks Adrian Ash

Global Price



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Saudi Riyal per Ounce

Gold History


Gold has been known and used by artisans since the Chalcolithic. Gold artifacts in the Balkans appear from the 4th millennium BC, such as that found in the Varna Necropolis. Gold artifacts such as the golden hats and the Nebra disk appeared in Central Europe from the 2nd millennium BC Bronze Age




Egyptian hieroglyphs from as early as 2600 BC describe gold, which king Tushratta of the Mitanni claimed was "more plentiful than dirt" in Egypt.[32] Egypt and especially Nubia had the resources to make them major gold-producing areas for much of history. The earliest known map is known as the Turin Papyrus Map and shows the plan of a gold mine in Nubia together with indications of the local geology. The primitive working methods are described by Strabo and included fire-setting. Large mines also were present across the Red Sea in what is now Saudi Arabia.
The legend of the golden fleece may refer to the use of fleeces to trap gold dust from placer deposits in the ancient world. Gold is mentioned frequently in the Old Testament, starting with Genesis 2:11 (at Havilah) and is included with the gifts of the magi in the first chapters of Matthew New Testament. The Book of Revelation 21:21 describes the city of New Jerusalem as having streets "made of pure gold, clear as crystal". The south-east corner of the Black Sea was famed for its gold. Exploitation is said to date from the time of Midas, and this gold was important in the establishment of what is probably the world's earliest coinage in Lydia around 610 BC.[33] From the 6th or 5th century BC, the Chu (state) circulated the Ying Yuan, one kind of square gold coin.

In Roman ****llurgy, new methods for extracting gold on a large scale were developed by introducing hydraulic mining methods, especially in Hispania from 25 BC onwards and in Dacia from 150 AD onwards. One of their largest mines was at Las Medulas in Le?n (Spain), where seven long aqueducts enabled them to sluice most of a large alluvial deposit. The mines at Ro?ia Montan? in Transylvania were also very large, and until very recently, still mined by opencast methods. They also exploited smaller deposits in Britain, such as placer and hard-rock deposits at Dolaucothi. The various methods they used are well described by Pliny the Elder in his encyclopedia Naturalis Historia written towards the end of the first century AD.


The Mali Empire in Africa was famed throughout the old world for its large amounts of gold. Mansa Musa, ruler of the empire (1312–1337) became famous throughout the old world for his great hajj to Mecca in 1324. When he passed through Cairo in July 1324, he was reportedly accompanied by a camel train that included thousands of people and nearly a hundred camels. He gave away so much gold that it depressed the price in Egypt for over a decade


The European exploration of the Americas was fueled in no small part by reports of the gold ornaments displayed in great profusion by Native American peoples, especially in Central America, Peru, Ecuador and Colombia. The Aztecs regarded gold as literally the product of the gods, calling it "god excrement" (teocuitlatl in Nahuatl).[36] Although the price of some platinum group ****ls can be much higher, gold has long been considered the most desirable of precious ****ls, and its value has been used as the standard for many currencies (known as the gold standard) in history. Gold has been used as a symbol for purity, value, royalty, and particularly roles that combine these properties. Gold as a sign of wealth and prestige was made fun of by Thomas More in his treatise Utopia. On that imaginary island, gold is so abundant that it is used to make chains for slaves, tableware and lavatory-seats. When ambassadors from other countries arrive, dressed in ostentatious gold jewels and badges, the Utopians mistake them for menial servants, paying homage instead to the most modestly dressed of their party.


There is an age-old tradition of biting gold to test its authenticity. Although this is certainly not a professional way of examining gold, the bite test should score the gold because gold is a soft ****l, as indicated by its score on the Mohs' scale of mineral hardness. The purer the gold the easier it should be to mark it. Painted lead can cheat this test because lead is softer than gold (and may invite a small risk of lead poisoning if sufficient lead is absorbed by the biting).


Gold in antiquity was relatively easy to obtain geologically; however, 75% of all gold ever produced has been extracted since 1910.[37] It has been estimated that all gold ever refined would form a single cube 20 m (66 ft) on a side (equivalent to 8000 m3).[37]


One main goal of the alchemists was to produce gold from other substances, such as lead — presumably by the interaction with a mythical substance called the philosopher's stone. Although they never succeeded in this attempt, the alchemists promoted an interest in what can be done with substances, and this laid a foundation for today's chemistry. Their symbol for gold was the circle with a point at its center (?), which was also the astrological symbol and the ancient Chinese character for the Sun. For modern creation of artificial gold by neutron capture, see gold synthesis.


During the 19th century, gold rushes occurred whenever large gold deposits were discovered. The first documented discovery of gold in the United States was at the Reed Gold Mine near Georgeville, North Carolina in 1803.[38] The first major gold strike in the United States occurred in a small north Georgia town called Dahlonega.[39] Further gold rushes occurred in California, Colorado, the Black Hills, Otago, Australia, Witwatersrand, and the Klondike.


Because of its historically high value, much of the gold mined throughout history is still in circulation in one form or another