EU Debt Contamination Deepens In Greece, Portugal And Ireland - Gold Just 2% From Record Nominal High

Submitted by Tyler Durden
05/30/2011 08:00 -0400
21 comments

From Gold Core

Gold and silver are flat in US dollars but higher in euros this morning. Trade is thin with the UK and US markets closed for spring holidays. Gold and silver were 1.75% and 8% higher last week and the precious metals and especially gold appear to be on solid footing due to the continuing debt crisis in Europe and concerns about a slowdown in the US and global economy.


Cross Currency Rates

Despite gold being only some 2% away from the record nominal highs seen at the end of April ($1,563.70/oz), sentiment remains lackluster at best with little or no coverage of gold in the international financial press and media over the weekend.


Gold Bullion in US Dollars – 60 Days (Daily)

Speculative sentiment remains highly muted with the investment public not participating in the gold market. Indeed, the majority of the public’s only experience of the gold market is when they have imprudently sold their gold jewellery to the thousands of new cash for gold merchants seen globally.

There are a tiny minority of more risk averse individuals and people who understand the importance of gold as a form of financial protection who continue to allocate funds to gold.

In the last two weeks we have experienced a lot of sell orders and the ratio of sell to buy orders has been the highest since our foundation in 2003. Value buyers emerged last week but much of the buying was by existing clients adding to their holdings.

The threat of sovereign default and contagion increases by the day.

Greece is facing the threat of further severe austerity measures and a plan for unprecedented outside intervention including in the collection of tax and wholesale privatization of Greek state assets. The severity of the plan and the fact that it would in effect spell the end of Greek sovereignty and a forced move towards a European fiscal union may lead to its rejection by opposition Greek parties who may seek a fairer alternative.


Portugal Government 10 Year Note – 2 Years (Daily)

Greece is just one of the sovereign debt crisis facing the Eurozone. Portugal and Ireland are bracing for debt crisis contagion to reach their shores and in both countries the crisis is deepening.

Portuguese bonds have come under heavy selling pressure again this morning with 10 year bonds rising to 9.822% and two-year note yields were 21 basis points higher at 11.53% this morning. The spread or yield difference between German 10-year bunds and Portuguese securities of a similar maturity widened to a record over 678 basis points in London this morning. This is the highest since Bloomberg began collecting the data in 1997.


Ireland Government Bond – 10 Year (Daily)

In Ireland, Transport Minister Leo Varadkar sparked alarm and confusion over the weekend when he said the government may need further funding from the European Union and IMF next year as Ireland will be shut out of bond markets for 2012 and possibly even in 2013.

Irish 10 year bond yields surged over 11% last week and remain over 11% at 11.07% this morning.

Punitive “bail outsâ€