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Wednesday, August 15, 2012

REVISITED: 2012 Gold Price Predictions: High $2202, Average $1832, Year-end $1981

How well are we doing?

2012 gold price  - Predictions

**Silver Prices Now Added Below**

The Mineweb gold price competition is now closed and readers have come up with their verdict - and the average price predicted for the year is very close to that of a number of top banks. [We have constructed a sortable Excel Worksheet for Mineweb's table below & added a Bullish Ranking category. If you wish a copy please ask us: bilrum @ knology (dot) net]


Author: Lawrence Williams
Posted:  Monday , 23 Jan 2012 

LONDON - 
We have had 101 entries for this year's Mineweb gold price competition and the full listing of these is set out in the table at the foot of this article.  As can be seen in general readers are expecting gold to hit new highs during the year but perhaps not managing as high a year-end price as the forecast peak might suggest.

To an extent one suspects that many of the predictions represent wishful thinking by gold investors, although if this is the case such thinking could, in all but a couple of cases, be considered pretty muted, although there is a marked consistency in expectations of a $2,000 figure being breached at some stage during the year with 78% of entrants predicting this to occur.  Mineweb readers as a whole have tended to be bullish on the gold price in the past, but, in the event their annual averages have tended to be not far off the mark and just as accurate, if not more so than the professional gold analyst entrants to the similar London Bullion Market Association competition each year.  For the record the relevant LBMA competition figures for this year are High: $2055, Low: $1433, Average: $1766 - they are not asked for a year-end figure.

Interestingly too, the predictions from many of the entries in both our own and the LBMA competitions suggests entrants may be looking for a repeat of the 2011 price pattern with the gold price surging to new highs during the year before falling back sharply before the year end.  This is actually counter to the trend of most prior years when the gold price peaks have been much later in the year, while weakness has mostly been seen in the summer.

 Overall though the average gold price forecast for the year by readers is remarkably similar to the early year predictions of a number of top banks who mostly seem to be coming out in the high $1700 - low $1800 range for the year's average gold price - and the banks are not exactly known for over bullish forecasting.

We do not think that the general price trends expected by entrants are particularly surprising given the state of the global economy.  China remains a price driver with continuing advertising pressures being put on its citizens to buy gold in campaigns by the big (state-controlled) banks while all the while there is the strong assumption that the Chinese government is adding surreptitiously to its own reserves which had been seen as very small in relation to the country's economy.  This does tend to underpin the price to an extent with falls in the West during the day often countered overnight in the eastern markets.

However, the U.S. remains the world's biggest economy and any perceived recovery there does tend to have a negative impact on gold buying sentiment - as does any sign of dollar ‘strength', although the latter is somewhat spurious given the American debt situation which just means the dollar is perhaps weakening less fast than the other currencies against which the dollar index is measured.  The green shoots of recovery in the U.S. economy too may be partly due to temporary fiscal stimuli, some of which were heavily reduced at the beginning of 2012 so it remains to be seen whether some of the gains by U.S. industry will continue as strongly this year.

The overall U.S. debt situation continues to be a worry for long term investors, many of whom still see gold as the ultimate safe haven, as of course does the European debt crisis which is currently in the spotlight, and will continue to remain so as feverish attempts are made to maintain the common currency within those 17 nations which subscribe to this - the Eurozone.  The likelihood of a break up of this remains strong with both Greek and Portuguese debt currently rated at ‘junk' status, and some much bigger economies - notably Italy and Spain - near the brink.  No-one really knows the full ramifications of a default by any of these countries on the hugely interconnected global banking sector, but if it occurs the fallout could be pretty horrific - perhaps far worse than the Lehmann collapse which battered the markets in 2008.

But it is not just the Eurozone countries which are at risk.  The U.K. too, although making perhaps a more concerted effort to roll back its debt (so far unsuccessfully) is a major world economy which is also at serious risk.  It does, unlike the individual Eurozone nations, but like the U.S., have the facility to print its own money and ultimately perhaps inflate its way towards mitigating its debt problems through devaluation of its currency, but the Eurozone imbroglio is making this more and more difficult with Europe being the U.K.'s major market and a downturn there impacting adversely on Britain's exports.  Already nine European nations have been downgraded by at least one of the major ratings agencies and it may not be long before others suffer the same fate, as could even Japan.  A Greek or Portuguese default could accelerate this process.

As noted above China has been the main driver of the global economy in the past few years with huge growth (by Western standards) but there are fears that this growth could be slowing as the country's export-driven economy (buoyed by a heavily controlled exchange rate) cannot be but adversely affected by the austerity programmes being put in place in the West.  True its domestic  economy is growing by leaps and bounds, but it could still take time before this can grow fast enough to counter the downturns elsewhere.

Gold should be a beneficiary in all the global uncertainty, but this does not necessarily mean there won't be setbacks in the progress of the price.  As was seen in 2008, gold can fall back sharply as a struggle for liquidity in the face of bank collapses means good assets are sold along with bad.  But as in late 2008/early 2009 gold may well bounce back far faster than other assets so the big money is likely to remain invested in gold as a possible wealth preserver.

In the U.S., election rhetoric from the more hard-money Republican Presidential candidates may also help raise gold's profile, so this could be another factor which could benefit the price overall.

So, be prepared for a bumpy ride in gold in the current year, and perhaps for several more years to come until some realistic end to the global financial crisis is seen.  Overall one would expect the price trend to remain upwards but as the Mineweb reader, and other, predictions suggest there could be some sharp falls along the way.

Table: Entries for the 2012 Mineweb gold price competition.

Name or Nickname    High      Low  Year end  Average
007robo
2150
1575
1855
1788
Aaron Vederoff
1989
1478
1946
1743
ALLGOLD
2400
1520
2100
1700
Alvaro Velasco
2175
1150
1320
1662
Andy Palan
2050
1550
1900
1750
apcklapka
2367
1607
2235
1998
Arrien Westhuis
2200
1495
2110
1895
Baron
2478
1578
2267
1988
Barry
1939
1549
1879
1780
Bill Rook
1885
1530
1720
1670
Bill Rummel
2180
1590
1834
1750
Bob Butalia
2128
1454
1973
1641
Bradley Vooren
2217
1517
1958
1718
Brimstone
2034
1534
1875
1734
Broncel
1910
1515
1712
1714
CIGA Doc
2512
1568
2246
2063
Clint O'Bullion
2115
1490
1890
1815
Colin Porter
2215
1589
2115
1990
Craig Stockill
1840
1080
1200
1640
David Fell
2460
1486
2360
1950
David Tretbar
2122
1371
1782
1674
Dennis
2412
1598
2274
1936
Dick Leonard
2700
1700
2700
2200
Divad
2020
1580
1810
1740
Doug Silver
1700
1300
1300
1550
Douglas Cundey
4210
1550
3700
2560
DR KOK
1850
1500
1700
1675
egarf
2131
1598
1996
1901
Erik Highwind
2777
1444
2333
1999
Euan Worthington
2237
1429
1673
1735
Fazuza
2145
1350
2145
1755
fitmike
2227
1478
2156
1843
Frank
2924
1599
2924
2261
FreeLance
2414
1570
2265
1980
FUBAR
2116
1365
2076
1748
G-Vision
2030
1536
1990
1779
Geoff Candy
2019
1460
1573
1840
Gold Bull
2212
1486
1812
1793
Gold Stock Bull
2350
1400
2200
1950
GoldenSing
2250
1522
2050
1700
Gorm
2875
1605
2388
1995
Graham Smith
2089
1525
1872
1710
graybeard063
2520
1598
2160
2010
GUY SMILEY
2398
1522
2222
1806
H.J. Clifford
1964
1574
1791
1822
Herb Duerr
2120
1430
1947
1778
Hilton Tarrant
1944
1765
1836
1854
Jerry
2450
1550
2000
1900
Jon Darcey
2223
1506
2103
1776
Jonathan Bell
1957
1547
1654
1682
Lawrence Williams
1985
1590
1875
1778
LOOKOUT
2400
1540
2100
1910
Maguana 6
1990
1500
1800
1758
Malcolm Hutton
2122
1611
1839
1839
Marcocruces
2375
1600
2250
2075
Maria Steyn
1985
1412
1638
1548
markk
2050
1400
1750
1830
Martin M
2125
1450
1950
1835
Matt
2100
1566
1925
1825
Matthew Grainger
2075
1275
1955
1750
Mike Booton
2115
1585
1720
1786
Mike Riegelman
2552
1520
2309
2062
Mluzar
2520
1595
2297
2089
Morne Kotze
1996
1589
1845
1745
mwhof
2013
1567
1877
1845
Neil Robinson
2113
1430
2038
1895
Nic Wilson
2045
1615
1924
1723
Obewon86
2241
1435
1849
1790
Ocnus
2013
1646
1996
1826
Palladium is safer
2040
1560
1995
1900
Pat Willis
2101
1520
1820
1810
Peter Weiss
1857
1412
1534
1670
petscho
2441
1486
1946
1921
Phil
2400
1500
2400
1800
Phillip Swanepoel
2280
1598
2130
1880
R. Christian
2148
1442
1890
1768
Richard M Palmer
2518
1590
2485
2075
Robert Blair
2120
1590
1920
1890
Robert Schafer
2312
1496
2198
1876
Robert Wallace
2250
1475
2010
1860
Ron Wimmer
2048
1590
1811
1730
Ross Norman
2100
1590
1940
1765
Ryan Bogenschneider
2122
1490
1876
1837
S.E. Hayden
2023
1520
1823
1738
Skagit Bob
2137
1373
1973
1873
Socrates
1906
1482
1794
1772
Stephen R Merriman
2430
1580
2300
1970
straightsix
2810
1560
2620
2010
Sunil Kumar Gupta
1785
1150
1550
1500
T. Kelly
1975
1450
1600
1750
Tazio 2012
2300
1550
2150
2050
Tim Dudley
2155
1566
2075
1850
Timot 78
2200
1430
2050
1891
Tom Hartanto Soendoro
1910
1100
1600
1605
Tony Low-Beer
1705
1195
1425
1485
Vern Rampton
2375
1590
2360
2115
Victor Gapare
2020
1300
1800
1600
William C Lee
2500
2000
2200
2200
Wilze
1880
1404
1735
1630
www.gold-invest.co.uk
1680
980
980
1350
Zee
2453
1598
2250
2025










Averages
2202.24
1499.1
1981.2
1832.3

Source

Here's how we compare in both Gold and Silver with the "experts" - BANKERS!


Gold Forecast
       Silver Hi: $50.00 Lo: $20.00 Average: $37.35. As with gold, we expect heightened price volatility for silver in 2012 – but more so, with investors seeing silver as a leveraged play on gold. This in part reflects heightened political and economic uncertainty which plays havoc with the commodities markets. We expect to see silver holding robust interest amongst the speculator community and gaining in respect amongst the investor community with a tightening market justifying prices well above the $20 level.

       However, slower global industrial output coupled with a firm US dollar in H1 2012 should provide a drag on runaway silver prices – although we see the possibility of a brief price spike based around difficult geopolitical concerns. Should economic conditions prove less difficult than feared in H2, then there are grounds for saying that silver could benefit as a recovery stock of sorts based upon its good industrial applications. So for silver its a case of heads or tails / we win really.
Silver Forecast
from BullandBear