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31 Aug 2010
 Investors are accumulating enough bullion to fill Switzerland’s vaults twice over as gold’s most- accurate forecasters say the longest rally in at least nine decades has further to go no matter what the economy holds
Analysts raised their 2011 forecasts more than for any other precious 
metal the past two months, predicting a 10th annual advance, data 
compiled by Bloomberg show. The most widely held option on gold futures 
traded in New York is for $1,500 an ounce by December, or 18 percent 
more than the record $1,266.50 reached June 21. Holdings through 
bullion-backed exchange-traded products are already at more than 2,075 
metric tons, within 0.1 percent of the all-time high.
Investors are accumulating enough bullion to fill Switzerland’s vaults twice over as gold’s most- accurate forecasters say the longest rally in at least nine decades has further to go no matter what the economy holds
Analysts raised their 2011 forecasts more than for any other precious 
metal the past two months, predicting a 10th annual advance, data 
compiled by Bloomberg show. The most widely held option on gold futures 
traded in New York is for $1,500 an ounce by December, or 18 percent 
more than the record $1,266.50 reached June 21. Holdings through 
bullion-backed exchange-traded products are already at more than 2,075 
metric tons, within 0.1 percent of the all-time high. 
“Either a swift economic recovery or further dismal economic performance
should bring new buyers into the market,” said Eugen Weinberg, an 
analyst at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt who was the most accurate 
forecaster in the first quarter and expects the metal to rise as high as
$1,400 next year. “A stronger economy would create more jewelry demand.
If the economy stays weak or gets worse, then investors will be looking
for a safe haven.” 
Investors added to their gold holdings through ETPs for three 
consecutive weeks, reflecting demand for assets typically favored in 
times of financial stress. Two-year Treasury yields fell to a record low
of 0.4542 percent on Aug. 24 and the yen reached a 15-year high against
the dollar the same day. Pacific Investment Management Co., Deutsche 
Bank AG and Citigroup Inc. have announced or are offering funds or 
traded instruments designed to guard against sudden market declines. 
Swiss Reserves 
Buyers accumulated almost 278 tons of gold in 2010 across 10 ETPs 
tracked by Bloomberg, worth $10.4 billion at this year’s average price. 
Total holdings are almost twice Switzerland’s official reserves of 1,040
tons, data compiled by the World Gold Council show. ETP holdings 
reached a record 2,078 tons July 19, data compiled by Bloomberg show. 
One of the biggest buyers has been Soros Fund Management LLC, which 
oversees about $25 billion. George Soros, who made $1 billion breaking 
the Bank of England’s defense of the pound in 1992, described gold as 
“the ultimate asset bubble” at the World Economic Forum’s January 
meeting in Davos, Switzerland. Buying at the start of a bubble is 
“rational,” he said. 
Soros Fund Management sold 341,250 shares of the SPDR Gold Trust, the 
largest ETP backed by bullion, in the second quarter, according to an 
Aug. 16 Securities and Exchange Commission filing. That still left a 
holding of 5.24 million shares, equal to almost 16 tons. Soros declined 
to comment on the change, through a spokesman. 
Accurate Forecasters 
Gold may rise as high as $1,500 next year, 21 percent more than the 
$1,240 traded at 1:45 p.m. in London, according to the median in a 
Bloomberg survey of 29 analysts, traders and investors. Dan Brebner, an 
analyst at Deutsche Bank in London who is the most accurate forecaster 
so far this year, says the metal may reach $1,550. 
Bullion gained 13 percent since January, beating an 8.4 percent return 
on Treasuries, an 8 percent decline in the MSCI World Index of shares 
and the 10 percent slump in the S&P GSCI Total Return Index of 24 
raw materials. 
Investors are concerned the recovery is weakening. Sales of new U.S. 
homes fell to an all-time low in July, the Commerce Department said Aug.
25. The U.S. economy grew at a 1.6 percent annual rate in the second 
quarter, less than previously calculated, the department said Aug. 27. 
U.S. growth will slow to 2.8 percent next year, compared with 3 percent 
in 2010, according to the median of as many as 69 economists’ forecasts 
compiled by Bloomberg. 
‘Fear Another Crisis’ 
People “fear another crisis and so they will diversify into gold,” said 
Thorsten Proettel, an analyst at Landesbank Baden-Wurttemberg in 
Stuttgart, Germany, who was also the most- accurate forecaster in the 
first quarter. He expects gold to trade as high as $1,350 next year. 
Anne-Laure Tremblay, an analyst at BNP Paribas SA in London whose 
forecast was also the best in the period, is estimating a 2011 high of 
$1,370. 
Bullion’s four-fold rally since the end of 2000 has attracted fund 
managers Eric Mindich and John Paulson. Mindich’s $13 billion Eton Park 
Capital Management LP bought almost 6.58 million shares of the SPDR Gold
Trust in the second quarter, according to an Aug. 16 SEC filing. That’s
equal to about 20 tons of gold. Paulson & Co., managing $31 
billion, held 31.5 million shares in the SPDR Gold Trust, making it the 
largest investor, an Aug. 16 SEC filing shows. 
Astor Sells 
Astor Asset Management LLC, with about $570 million of assets, once had 
as much as 10 percent of its holdings in the SPDR Gold Trust, according 
to Bryan Novak, managing director of the Chicago-based company. The firm
sold the stake at the end of last year for a profit and now owns 
silver, copper and a multicommodity ETP. 
“We don’t believe we’re heading into a double-dip recession,” Novak 
said. “Gold carries some risk because a lot of people are piling into 
the trade.” 
A plunge in equities may spur investors to sell their gold holdings to 
raise cash, he said. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index dropped 14 
percent since this year’s peak on April 26. 
Investment demand of 1,901 tons last year exceeded jewelry consumption 
of 1,759 tons for the first time in three decades, according to 
London-based researcher GFMS Ltd. That trend continued into the second 
quarter, with total demand advancing 36 percent to 1,050.3 tons, the WGC
in London said Aug. 25. 
Newmont Mining 
Earnings at Newmont Mining Corp., the largest U.S. gold producer, may 
increase 47 percent to $1.93 billion in 2010, according to the mean 
estimate of seven analysts’ forecasts compiled by Bloomberg. The 
16-member Philadelphia Stock Exchange Gold and Silver Index advanced 8.7
percent since January. 
Bets on gold may pay off even if economic recoveries strengthen. World 
growth will be 4.6 percent this year, the most since 2007, the 
International Monetary Fund said July 7. China, the second-biggest 
bullion buyer after India, will expand 10 percent in 2010, compared with
9.1 percent last year, according to the median of 24 economists’ 
forecasts compiled by Bloomberg. 
Gold imports by India this year may total 600 tons to 625 tons, compared
with an estimated 480 tons to 485 tons last year, according to Anjani 
Sinha, chief executive officer of National Spot Exchange Ltd., the 
country’s biggest bourse for trading physical gold. 
While growth may curb investors’ appetite for gold to protect their 
wealth, it may also bolster purchases of jewelry, reviving demand that 
fell to a 21-year low in 2009, according to Jochen Hitzfeld, an analyst 
at UniCredit SpA in Munich and the best forecaster in the last three 
quarters. He’s predicting a 2011 high of $1,350. 
More Bullish 
Analysts are getting more bullish. Their median estimate for next year’s
average gold price climbed 6.2 percent since June 16 to $1,247.50, 
according to 17 forecasts compiled by Bloomberg. That compares with a 
2.6 percent gain in silver forecasts, 0.6 percent advance in platinum 
predictions and a 0.5 percent jump in their palladium outlook. 
Gold averaged $1,166.43 since January, heading for a ninth consecutive 
year of higher average prices. That’s the longest streak since at least 
1920. 
Options traders are also betting on prices rallying. The biggest 
position is in call options expiring in November 2010, giving traders 
the right to buy the metal at $1,500 by then. The next biggest position 
is the call option for $2,000 expiring in November 2011, data from the 
Comex exchange in New York show. 
“Investors’ interest is still growing and still hasn’t reached a 
reasonable part of their portfolio,” UniCredit’s Hitzfeld said. “Gold is
still an under-owned asset, that’s perfectly clear.” 
Source: Bloomberg