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Muthukali

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Gold prices unchanged - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,361.56 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,700 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,200 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,800 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices unchanged from Saturday’s close.
 

Muthukali

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Vietnam, Indonesian coffee premium seen falling as futures climb

The premium buyers pay for coffee from Vietnam, the world’s largest grower of robusta beans, and Indonesia fell over the past week as futures climbed, according to Volcafe Ltd., owned by ED&F Man Holdings Ltd.

Vietnamese beans for August and September shipments were $40 a metric ton above the price on NYSE Liffe in London, down from $80 a ton a week earlier, Winterthur, Switzerland-based Volcafe said in a report e-mailed Friday. Indonesia coffee for the same period was down to $30 a ton from $70 a ton, it said. Robusta coffee has climbed 6.4 percent this week.

Prices paid to farmers in Vietnam climbed to VND43,000 ($2.06) a kilogram (2.2 pounds) this week, the trader said. Farmers had been waiting for that price to sell beans. Indonesian beans cost 19,000 rupiah ($2.01) to 20,200 rupiah a kilogram, it said, citing “good” buying by local roasters.

Bean arrivals at ports in Indonesia were 9,500 tons to 10,500 tons this week, according to Volcafe. That’s down from 12,750 tons to 13,500 tons last week, the trader said in a report e-mailed July 13.

“Ramadan started, and public life slowed,” Volcafe said. “Scattered rains were reported across some coffee growing regions, which reduced drying and arrivals.”

The crop in India will probably be 2 percent to 3 percent smaller than initial market estimates because of insufficient rains, according to the report. While Volcafe estimated in May a crop of 6 million bags in India for the 2012-13 season, the US Department of Agriculture sees production at 5.1 million bags. A bag of coffee weighs 60 kilograms (132 pounds).

“In Karnataka, the state with more than 50 percent of India’s coffee planted area, accumulated rainfall in the last six weeks has been half the normal levels,” Volcafe said. “In the world’s fourth largest robusta producer, these are not ideal conditions for the bean swelling stage.”
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices up 150 baht - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,558.64 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,900 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,400 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,000 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices went up 150 baht from yesterday’s close.

The buying prices yesterday closed at 23,407.04 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,750 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 24,250 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,850 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

Muthukali

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Oil Rises for Fourth Day on Stimulus Speculation

Oil rose for a fourth day on speculation that the European Central Bank and the U.S. Federal Reserve will ease monetary policy to boost economic growth and curb the debt crisis.

Prices gained 0.8 percent after ECB President Mario Draghi was said to be planning to hold talks with Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann on stimulus measures including bond purchases. ECB and Fed policy makers are scheduled to gather separately next week to discuss the economy.

“What’s underpinning the market is expectations that we are going to see some kind of action from the ECB and the Fed, and that seems to be why oil prices are firming up around $90,” said Gene McGillian, an analyst and broker at Tradition Energy in Stamford, Connecticut.

Oil for September delivery climbed 74 cents to settle at $90.13 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Prices have risen 16 percent since June 28 and fell 1.4 percent this week.

Brent crude for September settlement gained $1.21, or 1.2 percent, to end the session at a one-week high of $106.47 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange.

Having secured the backing of governments in Spain, France and Germany, Draghi is seeking to win over ECB policy makers for a multi-pronged approach to reduce bond yields in countries such as Spain and Italy, two central bank officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the talks are private.

ECB Expectations

“People are expecting the ECB to do something, and if they do, the market would get another bounce,” said Kyle Cooper, director of commodities research at IAF Advisors in Houston.

Draghi’s proposal involves Europe’s rescue funds buying government bonds on the primary market, flanked by ECB purchases on the secondary market to ensure transmission of its record low interest rates, the officials said.

Earlier today, futures rose after German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande said they will do “everything” necessary to protect the euro. The remark echoed a comment yesterday by Draghi, who said the ECB will do “whatever it takes” for the common currency to survive.

Germany and France are “bound by the deepest duty” to keep the 17-nation currency bloc intact, Merkel and Hollande said in a joint statement after they spoke by phone today.

“Merkel is saying that they are going to protect the euro and perhaps that’s perceived by the majority as a positive signal because it suggests Germany is going to do its part to bail out the weaker members,” said Sarah Emerson, managing director of Energy Security Analysis Inc. in Wakefield, Massachusetts.

Euro Protection

The ECB’s Governing Council is scheduled to meet Aug. 2 in Frankfurt and gauge the effect of its July decision to cut the benchmark interest rate to a record low of 0.75 percent. The Fed’s Federal Open Market Committee will consider the need for more stimulus at a two-day meeting that concludes Aug. 1.

Fed policy makers are studying options for further easing that could be deployed in case economic growth remains too feeble to produce a lasting decline in unemployment, Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said July 17.

Easing tools include further purchases of assets, such as mortgage-backed securities, reducing the interest rate that the Fed pays on reserves banks keep with the Fed, and altering its communications on the outlook for interest rates, he said.

The central bank bought a total of $2.3 trillion in bonds from December 2008 to June 2011 to stimulate the economy in two rounds of asset purchases known as quantitative easing.

Equities Rally

Oil also followed advances in stocks and other commodities. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose as much as 2.1 percent and the S&P’s GSCI Index of 24 commodities advanced as much as 1.2 percent.

Prices briefly erased gains after the Commerce Department reported U.S. gross domestic product rose at a 1.5 percent annual rate in the second quarter from a revised 2 percent gain in the prior quarter. It was the slowest pace of expansion since the third quarter of 2011. The median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg called for a 1.4 percent increase.

“I am not very impressed by the GDP number and it increases chances for the Fed’s monetary stimulus,” Cooper said. “Oil is moving in lockstep with equities.”

Oil may decline next week, a Bloomberg survey showed. Eighteen of 30 analysts, or 60 percent, forecast crude will decrease through Aug. 3. Nine respondents, or 30 percent, predicted that futures will increase and three said there will be little change in prices.

Electronic trading volume on the Nymex was 379,398 contracts as of 3:29 p.m. in New York. Volume totaled 378,604 contracts yesterday, 32 percent below the three-month average. Open interest was 1.4 million.

-- Editors: Margot Habiby, Bill Banker

To contact the reporter on this story: Moming Zhou in New York at [email protected]

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Bill Banker at [email protected]
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices unchanged - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,755.72 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 24,100 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,600 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,200 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices unchanged from Saturday’s close.
 

Muthukali

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Vietnam mulls ban on gold carried by travelers

Vietnam is set to ban travelers from bringing gold into and out of the country, only allowing a small amount of jewelry to pass through customs, a central bank draft circular says.

The ban will be applied to gold bars and gold material, news website VnExpress reported. Travelers are currently allowed to carry the precious metal as long as they declare their gold holdings to customs.

Travelers will still be allowed to bring jewelry, but if the amount exceeds 300 grams they will be required to inform customs officials and pay tax.

Immigrants from Vietnam who want to take their gold assets to another country will need approval from provincial authorities.

The draft circular comes after the State Bank of Vietnam tightened regulations over gold trading earlier this year and took over the production of gold bars.

The VnExpress report did not say when the circular is expected to take effect.
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices up 100 baht - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,846.68 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 24,200 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,700 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,300 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices went up 100 baht from yesterday’s close.

The buying prices yesterday closed at 23,755.72 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 24,100 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 24,600 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,200 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

Muthukali

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Korea Raises Gold Reserves Third Time Since June Last Year

The Bank of Korea, which has the world’s seventh-biggest foreign-exchange reserves, boosted gold holdings for the third time since June last year, joining central banks from Russia to Kazakhstan in buying bullion to diversify assets.

The bank bought 16 metric tons last month, increasing reserves to 70.4 tons, according to Lee Jung, head of the investment strategy team at the bank’s Reserve Investment Division. Holdings increased by $810 million to $2.98 billion, or the equivalent of 0.9 percent of total reserves, the bank said in a statement today.

Central banks are expanding stockpiles after gold rallied for 11 consecutive years as investors sought a hedge against everything from rising inflation to Europe’s debt crisis to slumping equities. Their purchases this year will probably exceed the 456 tons added in 2011, the World Gold Council estimates. Central banks and the International Monetary Fund are the largest bullion owners with 29,500 tons at the end of last year, or 17 percent of all mined metal, council data show.

“Central bank buying of gold is one of the pillars supporting prices and it will continue,” said Nick Trevethan, senior commodities strategist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. (ANZ) “Asian central banks have a way to go in terms of boosting their gold holdings. We see scope for further accumulation.”

Gold for immediate delivery gained 2.5 percent this year and traded at $1,602.05 an ounce at 3:13 p.m. in Seoul. Prices averaged $1,593.68 last month and reached a record $1,921.15 in September.

Korea Buys
The Bank of Korea bought 25 tons over a one-month period from June to July last year, the first purchases in more than a decade, and added a further 15 tons in November.

Kazakhstan plans to raise the amount of gold it holds as part of its international reserves to 15 percent from 12 percent. The country’s gold reserves increased 1.6 tons in June to 101.6 tons, according to data on the IMF website.

“We’ve already signed contracts for 22 tons,” Bisengaly Tadzhiyakov, deputy chairman of the central bank, said June 7. “The bank is ready to buy when suppliers are ready to sell.”

In Russia, Bank Rossii increased gold holdings to 29.5 million ounces (917.5 tons) in June, from 29.3 million ounces at the end of May, the central bank said in a statement on its website July 20. That would be the most since at least 1993, when IMF data tracking Russian figures begins.

Still, UBS AG estimates that central bank net purchases of gold were 116.2 tons for the first half of this year, about 38 percent lower than the same period last year, analyst Edel Tully said in a July 26 report, citing IMF data.

To contact the reporters on this story: Cynthia Kim in Seoul at [email protected]; Sungwoo Park in Seoul at [email protected]

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Paul Panckhurst at [email protected]; James Poole at [email protected]
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices down 250 baht- Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,407.04 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,750 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,250 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,850 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices went down 250 baht from Wednesday’s close.

The buying prices on Wednesday closed at 23,649.60 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 24,000 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 24,500 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,100 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

Muthukali

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Oil Rebounds From Lowest in Three Weeks Before U.S. Jobs Report

Oil rebounded from the lowest close in almost three weeks in New York before a report that may show hiring in the U.S. increased. A tropical storm formed southeast of production platforms in the Gulf of Mexico.

Futures rose as much as 0.5 percent, trimming a second weekly decline. Employers probably added 100,000 workers in July after an 80,000 gain June, according to a Bloomberg News survey ahead of government data today. Tropical Storm Ernesto may develop into a Category 1 hurricane by Aug. 6, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said. Oil fell 2 percent yesterday after the European Central Bank failed to assure investors it was ready to take immediate steps to support the economy.

“The jobs report will be critical and if it’s way under predictions, it’s going to be a clear trend that the U.S. jobs market is slowing,” said Anthony Nunan, a senior adviser for risk management at Mitsubishi Corp. (8058) in Tokyo. New York oil “is in congestion, in a sideways trading range,” he said.

Oil for September delivery increased as much as 42 cents to $87.55 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange and was at $87.42 at 12:08 p.m. Sydney time. The contract yesterday fell $1.78 to $87.13, the lowest close since July 13. Prices are 3 percent lower this week and down 12 percent this year.

Brent crude for September settlement gained 28 cents, or 0.3 percent, to $106.18 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. The European benchmark’s premium to West Texas Intermediate was at $18.75. It closed at $18.77 yesterday, the widest gap since May.

Tropical Storm
Oil in New York has technical resistance around $90 a barrel, along a downward-sloping trend line on the daily chart going back three months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Price advances the past two weeks have stalled near this line. Sell orders tend to be clustered near chart- resistance levels.

“Near term, market attention will next shift to the last of the week’s event risks, namely U.S. non-farm payrolls,” Mark Pervan, the head of commodity research at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. (ANZ) in Melbourne, said in a note today.

Ernesto, the fifth named weather system of the Atlantic season, developed east of the Lesser Antilles, prompting storm warnings for islands including St. Lucia, Martinique and Guadeloupe. Top winds rose to 50 miles per hour from 35 mph, according to a hurricane center advisory yesterday. It’s about 220 miles east of the islands and moving west at 22 mph.

Storm Track
It’s too early to say if the storm’s track will lead it into the Gulf of Mexico. The Gulf is home to 6.5 percent of U.S. natural gas output, 29 percent of oil production and 40 percent of refining capacity, according to the Energy Department. In June, Tropical Storm Debby’s threat to the Gulf pushed New York natural gas futures to a one-month high as about 35 percent of the region’s output was shut.

Analysts and traders surveyed by Bloomberg News were split over the direction of oil prices next week after central banks failed to bolster stimulus and Tropical Storm Ernesto developed. Thirteen of 33 forecasters, or 39 percent, estimated crude will drop through Aug. 10. Another 13 respondents predicted that futures will increase and seven said there will be little change.

To contact the reporters on this story: Ben Sharples in Melbourne at [email protected]; Ann Koh in Singapore at [email protected]

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Alexander Kwiatkowski at [email protected]
 

Muthukali

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Gold Pares Worst Weekly Performance in Six Before U.S. Jobs Data

Gold snapped a four-day decline, trimming its worst weekly performance in six, before data that may show employers in the U.S. didn’t hire enough workers to lower the jobless rate, boosting the chances of more stimulus.

Spot gold gained 0.2 percent to $1,591.20 an ounce at 9:55 a.m. in Singapore, after dropping 0.3 percent to the lowest level since July 25. Holdings in exchange-traded products expanded for a third day yesterday, climbing to a two-week high of 2,397.222 metric tons, data compiled by Bloomberg showed.

Bullion is 2 percent lower this week, the biggest such loss since the five days to June 22, after the Federal Reserve held off announcing further monetary easing and European Central Bank President Mario Draghi failed to make immediate efforts to stem the region’s debt crisis. December-delivery futures rose 0.2 percent to $1,593.90 an ounce on the Comex.

“If the payrolls number disappoints the market and is less than expected, gold prices are likely to trade higher on expectations of further monetary easing,” James Steel, an analyst at HSBC Securities (USA) Inc., wrote in a note. “Growing bullion demand from central banks is likely to help buoy gold prices.”

South Korea added to its holdings for the third time since June 2011, the Bank of Korea said yesterday, joining central banks from Russia to Kazakhstan in buying bullion to diversify reserves. The World Gold Council predicts central bank purchases will exceed the 456 tons added in 2011.

Payrolls Report
Unemployment in the U.S., which has been stuck above 8 percent since February 2009, was probably at 8.2 percent for a third month, economists forecast before data today. The Fed “will provide additional accommodation as needed to promote a stronger economic recovery and sustained improvement in labor market conditions,” it said after a two-day meeting this week. Cash gold almost doubled from December 2008 to June 2011 after the U.S. central bank bought $2.3 trillion of debt in two rounds of so-called quantitative easing.

In Europe, the ECB kept its benchmark interest rate on hold yesterday, as Draghi indicated the central bank intends to join forces with governments to buy bonds in sufficient quantities to ease the region’s crisis, even as Germany’s Bundesbank has reservations about the plan. Cash gold reached a six-week high of $1,629.35 on July 27 after Draghi pledged to do whatever it takes to preserve the euro.

Spot silver rose for the first time in four days, gaining as much as 0.4 percent to $27.2375 an ounce. It last traded at $27.215, down 1.9 percent this week for the worst such performance in six weeks. Cash platinum declined for a fourth day, dropping as much as 0.4 percent to $1,383.50 an ounce. It was last at $1,387.25 and was set for a fifth weekly slide. Palladium fell for a third day, retreating 0.2 percent to $569.75 an ounce, set for a weekly loss.

To contact the reporter on this story: Glenys Sim in Singapore at [email protected]

To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Poole at [email protected]
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices up 50 baht - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,558.64 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,900 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,400 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,000 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices went up 50 baht from Saturday’s close.

The buying prices on Saturday closed at 23,498.00 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,850 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 24,350 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 23,950 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

Muthukali

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Gold prices up 50 baht - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,604.12 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,950 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,450 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,050 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices went up 50 baht from yesterday’s close.

The buying prices yesterday closed at 23,558.64 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,900 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 24,400 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,000 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

LeMans2011

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Loyal
Thambi, you posts so much about GOLD, you probably have been following commodities. Any advise on whether to buy or not? And the rational?
 

neddy

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Rare earth metals: North Korea’s new trump card
2012-08-07 20:27 Text

Those who travel to North Korea regularly might have noticed that the last couple of years have brought significant improvement in the country’s economic situation. Newly built high-rise apartments, modern cars on the roads and improved infrastructure come as a surprise to visitors. It begs the question, where does Pyongyang get the money from?

The ambitious rocket and nuclear programs, which North Korea continues to pursue despite international condemnation, are expensive and harmful to its economy. International sanctions continue to bite the DPRK’s foreign trade and investment prospects. Regular floods and droughts, animal epidemics and other natural disasters hit the fragile economy even harder.

According to expert estimations, the DPRK should have ceased to exist in the mid-1990s, after the Communist bloc collapsed and Kim Il-sung died. But North Korea has fully recovered after the famine and even shows steady signs of economic growth.

Foreign critics looked everywhere with hope to unravel the mystery. After 2008 the stalled inter-Korean cooperation left North Korea without South Korean financial assistance. Western humanitarian aid has also been exhausted or reduced to a number of goods with little market value.

Although the volume of North Korea’s foreign trade is negligible, the domestic economic situation continues to improve. Pyongyang is routinely suspected of violating international sanctions by trading arms, smuggling drugs, counterfeiting U.S. dollars and other crimes.

These activities would be expected to refill the impoverished state with badly needed foreign exchange. However, anti-proliferation operations and bank account arrests have never disclosed anything criminal nor did they manage to answer the main question: where does the money come from?

In fact, North Korea is sitting on the goldmine. The northern side of the Korean peninsula is well known for its rocky terrain with 85 percent of the country composed of mountains. It hosts sizeable deposits of more than 200 different minerals, of which deposits of coal, iron ore, magnesite, gold ore, zinc ore, copper ore, limestone, molybdenum, and graphite are the largest and have the potential for the development of large-scale mines. :smile:

After China, North Korea’s magnesite reserves are the second largest in the world, and its tungsten deposits are almost the sixth-largest in the world. :smile:

Still the value of all these resources pales in comparison to prospects which promise the exploration and export of rare earth metals.

Rare earth metals are a group of 17 elements which are found in the earth’s crust. They are essential in the manufacture of high-tech products and in green technologies, such as wind turbines, solar panels or hybrid cars. Known as “the vitamins of high-tech industries,” REMs are minerals necessary for making everything that we use on a daily basis, like smartphones, LCDs, and notebook computers.

Some rare earth metals, such as cerium and neodymium, are crucial elements in semiconductors, cars, computers and other advanced technological areas. Other types of REMs can be used to build tanks and airplanes, missiles and lasers.

South Korea estimates the total value of the North’s mineral deposits at more than $6 trillion. Not surprisingly, despite high political and security tensions Seoul is showing a growing interest in developing REMs together with Pyongyang. In 2011, after receiving permission from the Ministry of Unification, officials from Korea Resources Corp. visited North Korea twice to study the condition of a graphite mine.

Together with their counterparts from the DPRK’s National Economic Cooperation Federation they had working-level talks at the Gaeseong Industrial Complex on jointly digging up REMs in North Korea. An analysis of samples obtained in North Korea showed that the type of rare earth metals could be useful for manufacturing LCD panels and optical lenses.

The joint report also revealed that there are large deposits of high-grade REMs in the western and eastern parts of North Korea, where prospecting work and mining have already begun.

It also reported that a number of the rare earth elements are being studied in scientific institutes, while some of the research findings have already been introduced in economic sectors. The North built a REM reprocessing plant in Hamhung in the 1990s but has been unable to put the plant into full operation due to power and supply bottlenecks.

Rare earth minerals are becoming increasingly expensive, as China, the world’s largest rare earth supplier, puts limits on its output and exports. In February China’s exports of rare earth metals exceeded the price of $1 million per ton, a nearly 900 percent increase in prices from the preceding year. China, which controls more than 95 percent of global production of rare earth metals, has an estimated 55 million tons in REM deposits.

North Korea has up to 20 million tons of REM deposits, but does not have the technology to explore its reserves or to produce goods for the high-tech industry. Nevertheless, in 2009 the DPRK’s exports of rare metals to China stood at $16 million, and as long as someone invests, exports will continue to expand.

This growing rise in REM prices and strong demand gives the young leader Kim Jong-un a good chance to improve the economic standing of North Korea without actually reforming its economy. Following the Gulf states’ and Russian example of catching the wind of rising oil prices in their sails, Pyongyang is likely to follow suit; becoming rich and powerful through the exploration and sale of natural resources.

The export of rare earth metals will replenish the state coffers; stimulate the loyalty of the elites to Kim Jong-un’s autocratic rule; and secure the growth of consumption among the ordinary people. Relations with South Korea, China and Japan are also likely to improve due to the large scale cooperation on exploring, processing and utilising REMs ― the mineral of the 21st century.

Pyongyang needs international assistance through joint projects to explore its mineral resources, and mainly its rare metal and rare earth minerals. North Korean and Chinese teams have been cooperating to explore mineral resources in the DPRK for many decades.

Seoul has recently expressed interest in working with Pyongyang on mining projects and technological innovations. Perhaps, Japan and Taiwan, who look for alternative REM supplies for their micro-processor and other cutting edge industries, might also decide to contribute to the development of this economically promising venture.

Paradoxically, the promise of Kim Jong-Il might soon come true and North Korea may become a “rich and prosperous state” ― rich in natural resources and empowered by nuclear technologies. In that case, North Korea might not even need to go through a painful and potentially destabilising economic reform.

Although the political regime will remain dictatorial, the idea of unification with the South by war or absorption will soon become meaningless. The purges of political elites and the mass starving of ordinary people in North Korea will cease. Gradually the level of prosperity in the two halves of the divided Korea will start equalising, opening more opportunities for greater exchange and cooperation.

By Leonid Petrov

Leonid Petrov is a lecturer at the University of Sydney’s Department of Korean Studies. ― Ed.

http://view.koreaherald.com/kh/view.php?ud=20120807001090&cpv=0
 
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Muthukali

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Oil Drops From Two-Month High In New York As U.S. Demand Slides

Oil slid from the highest close in more than two months as investors sold contracts on speculation that crude’s gain was excessive amid signs of weakening demand in the U.S, the world’s biggest consumer of the commodity.

Futures fell as much as 0.5 percent, dropping for the first time in four days. Oil’s gains stalled near the upper Bollinger Band, an indicator of technical resistance. Crude consumption declined 4 percent to 15.9 million barrels last week, the biggest percentage decrease in a month, data from the American Petroleum Institute showed. Gasoline usage was the lowest since February, according to the API figures.

“We’ll probably need to see further good news, further improvements in demand and the economic growth outlook for oil to move significantly higher,” said Ric Spooner, a chief market analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney. “We have seen a strong rally off the bottom of a few weeks ago.”

Oil for September delivery decreased as much as 47 cents to $93.20 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange and was at $93.42 at 12:20 p.m. Sydney time. It climbed 1.6 percent yesterday to $93.67, the highest settlement since May 15. The contract has rebounded 20 percent from its low this year of $77.69 on June 28. Prices are 5.5 percent lower since the start of the year.

Brent crude for September settlement fell 20 cents, or 0.2 percent, to $111.80 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. The European benchmark’s premium to West Texas Intermediate was at $18.39 from $18.33 yesterday.

Bollinger Band
Oil in New York has technical resistance along the upper Bollinger Band on the daily chart, about $94.96 a barrel today, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Futures yesterday halted their advance near this indicator. Sell orders tend to be clustered near chart-resistance levels.

U.S. gasoline demand last week was 3 percent less than a year ago, the 49th straight drop in that measure, according to MasterCard Inc. (MA)’s SpendingPulse report yesterday.

Crude inventories in the U.S. declined 5.4 million barrels last week, API data showed. An Energy Department report today may show supplies fell 1.6 million barrels, according to the median estimate of 10 analysts in a Bloomberg

News survey. Gasoline stockpiles rose 417,000 barrels last week, the API said. The Energy Department report may show they fell 1.75 million barrels, according to the Bloomberg survey.
The API collects stockpile information on a voluntary basis from operators of refineries, bulk terminals and pipelines. The government requires that reports be filed with the Energy Department for its weekly survey.

Hurricane Ernesto
Ernesto, the second hurricane of the Atlantic season, had top winds of 85 miles (140 kilometers) per hour, up from 65 mph earlier, and was about 65 miles east of Chetumal, Mexico, according to an advisory at 8 p.m. New York time yesterday. The storm is expected to enter the Bay of Campeche, the location of Mexico’s biggest oil fields, later today.

The U.S. Energy Department raised its 2012 crude-oil price projection for the first time since April as global fuel consumption was forecast to increase. WTI will average $93.90 a barrel this year, up 1.2 percent from the July forecast of $92.83, the department’s Energy Information Administration said in its monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook yesterday. The U.S. benchmark grade will average $90.25 in 2013, up 2 percent from last month’s estimate of $88.50.

Enbridge Energy Partners LP (EEP) started crude Line 14 that was shut previously following a leak in Wisconsin, a company statement distributed by Marketwire showed yesterday. The system carries Canadian crude to refineries in the U.S. Midwest.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ben Sharples in Melbourne at [email protected]

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Alexander Kwiatkowski at [email protected]
 

Muthukali

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Gold prices down 50 baht - Thailand

The Gold Traders Association this morning set the buying prices at 23,604.12 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 23,950 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices were set at 24,450 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,050 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The gold prices went down 50 baht from yesterday’s close.

The buying prices yesterday closed at 23,649.60 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments and 24,000 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.

The selling prices closed at 24,500 baht per baht-weight for gold ornaments, and 24,100 baht per baht-weight for gold bar.
 

Muthukali

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Oil Snaps Two Days of Losses Amid Speculation U.S. Supply Shrank

Oil snapped two days of losses in New York on speculation that inventories declined for a third week in the U.S., the world’s biggest crude consumer.

Futures were little changed before a government report forecast to show U.S. fuel and crude stockpiles fell last week as refiners operated near the highest rates in five years, a Bloomberg survey showed before data released by the Energy Department tomorrow. U.S. retail sales probably expanded by 0.3 percent last month, the first increase since March, a separate survey showed before a report today.

“Markets are reluctant to take things much beyond here in the absence of fresh news that further changes the balance of risks,” said Ric Spooner, a chief market analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney. “U.S. retail sales will be an interesting figure because it’ll provide an insight into whether the improvement that we saw in employment growth is in fact an indication of improving confidence levels.”

Oil for September delivery was 1 cent higher at $92.74 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 10:47 a.m. in Singapore after earlier climbing as much as 27 cents. It slid 0.2 percent yesterday to $92.73, the lowest close since Aug. 6. Prices are 6.1 percent lower since the start of the year.

Brent crude for September settlement, which expires Aug. 16, lost 25 cents to $113.35 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. The more actively traded October contract was down 32 cents to $111.40 a barrel. The European benchmark’s premium to West Texas Intermediate was at $20.59 after closing yesterday at $20.87, the widest since April 4.

U.S. Stockpiles
U.S. crude stockpiles probably fell 1.75 million barrels last week, according to the median estimate of seven analysts in a Bloomberg News survey before an Energy Department report tomorrow. The American Petroleum Institute will release separate inventory data today.

U.S. refiners may have operated their plants last week at 92.3 percent of capacity, down 0.3 percent, according to the survey. That’s still up from 89.1 percent a year earlier. Processing rates reached 93 percent in the week ending July 20, the highest in about five years.

Gasoline inventories probably slid 2.13 million barrels, or 1 percent, to 203.9 million in the week ended Aug. 10, the survey showed.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ben Sharples in Melbourne at [email protected]

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Alexander Kwiatkowski at [email protected]
 
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