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    Gold to drop in Q1, far from retesting record high: Reuters poll

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - Gold prices will fall below $1,500 an ounce over the next three months and are unlikely to retest September's all-time highs until later 2012 at the earliest, according to a Reuters poll of 20 hedge fund managers, economists and traders.

    The bleak forecast, coming after gold has lost 11 percent of its value so far this month, is likely to fuel fears that bullion is close to ending its more than decade long bull run and entering a bear market.

    Almost half of respondents predicted bullion will fall to 1,450 an ounce in the first quarter next year, with three seeing prices as low as $1,400 an ounce.

    The forecasts come after a dismal performance last week when prices hit a 2 1/2 month low of $1,560 and gold lost its safe haven status.

    Selling was fuelled by a scramble by hedge funds for cash to meet client redemptions at the end of a difficult year and a run for cash by European banks seeking to raise capital.

    "What is surprising is that in an environment where headline risk news is bigger than ever, gold has actually fallen from its highs," said Christoph Eibl, CEO and founding partner of the Swiss commodity hedge fund Tiberius.

    "We believe that, in 2012, of all metals gold will be the worst performing," Eibl said.

    The market eked out small gains Friday to trade just under $1,600, but showed little sign of strength even after a small bout of short covering took other financial markets higher.

    The precious metal is now heading for its first quarterly loss for the fourth quarter after its second-worst rout since September 2008 when the global credit crunch was at its height.

    In another immediately bearish sign, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) figures released Friday showed that managed money in gold futures and options cut bullish bets for the second consecutive week.

    DOWNBEAT OUTLOOK

    The long-term outlook is no more upbeat either, with more than half of respondents predicting that gold is unlikely to stage another run to new all-time highs until at least the second half of 2012.

    Four said they don't expect a new record until at least 2014.

    A lack of immediate monetary easing or stimulus programs by central banks has prompted money managers to turn bearish on gold even though the precious metal is traditionally considered a safe haven in times of uncertainty.

    "To me, gold is not attractive right now because we don't see any inflation threats," said Jeffrey Sherman, commodities portfolio manager of DoubleLine Capital, a Los Angeles-based investment manager with $21 billion in assets.

    BREAK OUT

    Gold has increasingly moved in tandem with risky assets such as equities and industrial commodities. But gold broke ranks last week with a 7 percent decline, which dwarfed a 3 percent drop of the S&P 500.

    Bullion's plunge below its 200-day moving average, which it had held for nearly three years, prompted a prominent market watcher to call an end to gold's decade-long bull cycle.

    "We have the beginnings of a real bear market, and the death of a bull," said veteran trader Dennis Gartman, a long-time gold bull who completely exited his bullion investments last week.

    Since September, gold has underperformed commodities measured by the RJ/CRB index and the euro, while U.S. equities measured by the S&P 500 eked out a slight gain.

    (Additional reporting by Claire Milhench, Harpreet Bhal in London and Rujun Shen in Singapore; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter; Josephine Mason and Andrea Evans)

     
    • A PT always  •  Lugano, Switzerland  •  26 days ago
      To Reuters, Frank Tang:

      Today is 27 January 2012. Gold is climbing like a home-sick angel, currently, today at $1737.98! You, and all the rest of the gold-hating Keynesians are: SIMPLY WRONG! You have been wrong from the git-go and you will lose the bet, being wrong from now on! C'est la guerre!
    • steve  •  Kansas City, United States  •  2 mths ago
      They just want to shake out what's left of the speculators, so they can buy that cheap gold, because it's going to go through the roof in 2102 after the EU fails and crashes the global market. Can you really trust Reuters anymore for putting out this pathetic Fed propaganda?
    • unscathed  •  Chattanooga, United States  •  2 mths ago
      Troubled times are on the horizon. Invest in copper jacketed lead. My choice is 5.56x45mm. You can never go wrong in this investment. It promises to feed your family and defend you in the worst of times!
    • Eric  •  Fullerton, United States  •  2 mths ago
      The price of gold will will fluctuate based on global debt. Since global debt is at an all-time high, gold will remain at all-time high levels. And if the EU restructuring plan fails, then gold will most certainly reach new highs when it does. Treat gold as an insurance policy.
    • A voice in the crowd  •  Atlanta, United States  •  2 mths ago
      AH, GOLD! The feel of it, the look of it, the taste of it. Is there any thing more intoxicating? Is it time to melt it down and cast it in the form of a calf again yet? lol. If the love of money truly is the root of all evil, then Wall Street is a great place to get a look at the whole tree.
    • JasonA  •  2 mths ago
      Gold has literally doubled in value in three years. in 2009 it was around 800 and ounce... Find me ANY investment that has that kind of performance
    • Matt  •  Fayetteville, United States  •  2 mths ago
      As long as govts keep printing....gold will keep rising!
    • John  •  2 mths ago
      When the #$%$ hits the fan are you going to want gold or a gun and a loaf of bread?
    • OLD FOOL  •  Grand Junction, United States  •  2 mths ago
      DO ANYTHING - to get OUT of Wall Street Paper.....BUY houses - install SOLAR - if you must just hoard GOLD whatever.....(because: The money isn't CIRCULATING in AMERICA - the Chickens are coming home to ROOST)
    • Fukushima Prefecture  •  2 mths ago
      This is nothing more than the bull bucking to throw the weak hands off. We have seen these corrections over and over. The last one in 2008 took gold to below $800., and then it went on to rally to $1925.00., more than double. The bubble freaks always come out with a drop. Eggs, $1.89 a dozen. Got gold?
    • Bush's Fault  •  San Antonio, United States  •  2 mths ago
      When I was buying up all the silver I could get my hands on at $12-$16 an ounce, I was called a doomsday nutjob and stupid, now I am laughing all the way to the bank and these nasayers are all watching their precious dollars dwindle down into nothing. I'll keep buying my silver and gold and you people who don't agree just keep you wealth in toilet paper dollar bills and see who's laughing in the end. I've already turned a 200%+ profit on what I bought three years ago, how much you guys made off your IRA's, savings accounts and bonds? Nuff' said!!
    • Todd V  •  Chico, United States  •  2 mths ago
      India bought 90 tons a short time back, Guess the USA will be buying it back for less than what they paid for it.
    • whynot  •  2 mths ago
      Sounds like 20 hedge fund mgrs/traders want to get their hands on some cheaper gold. How to do it? Just pen an anonymous article saying gold will go down. Yea, that's a good plan, but people holding physical gold aren't that stupid. It's the people who don't have any gold that are stupid.
    • dan  •  San Jose, United States  •  2 mths ago
      I have lost my #$%$ in stocks and my 401k isnt worth what I put into it. I buy Gold on the dips, and if it drops, I will buy more!! at least I have shinny eagles and buffalo's to cry at...the paper is only good for #$%$ wipe.
    • jack  •  Surfside, United States  •  2 mths ago
      The masses are starting to realize that we are turning into a two tier Class system again. Everything in the news today, is just fallout from that fact....huge public debt, demonstrations in the cities against the corporate greed, The Public hating the very people they elected to office,Gold at record prices, 15% real unemployment, class warfare, old vs young, rich vs poor, Young college grads, working for minumum wage jobs, National deterioration of infastructure, tens of millions of undocumented workers sucking the social services dry, with explosive birth rates, and poverty!.America is going down, and all we care about is who will w!n the super bowl! We are like a species dieing out, because WE COULD NOT ADAPT!
    • Just Me, Richard  •  Knoxville, United States  •  2 mths ago
      Put it this way -- back in the 1980s and 90s [too far for most of you to recall] the big thing was REAL ESTATE. They weren't making any more of it, there was a housing/building boom going on, mineral rights, etc. People got rich buying up farms and sub dividing them. Prices went up as a result -- back in the 1960s you could get land in rural East Tennessee for a couple of hundred an acre; now that same land is around $2,000. So if you bought it cheap [and sold it], you made a profit. But now you're buying it at the HIGH END of the cycle; and you can't sell it. So the price goes down, and when you do sell, you LOSE money. Doesn't mean land is worthless, just that you bought it for too much and the market isn't going back up any time soon. It probably will -- but not soon. So you have your liquid assets tied up for God alone knows how long. The same with gold or anything else that is a "tangible" investment. As for that "sky is falling" mentality, there are a lot of people who bought 5 acres out in the boondocks who lost their land; so what makes you think you'll be able to hang onto your gold? Those 10 Maple Leaves might get a smuggler to get you into Mexico or Canada -- or dumped on the roadside dead.
    • Wuz up  •  2 mths ago
      What's better to buy gold in ounces or fractions?
    • Suzanne  •  Spokane, United States  •  2 mths ago
      the hedge funds and GS must be shorting gold next quarter. Buy it cheap, run it up and sell high, go short and then run it down and then buy it again.... only the mega hedge funds and GS know for sure whats gold is going to do next quarter.
    • mike  •  Boston, United States  •  2 mths ago
      im like totally bummed right now cause of the fall in gold prices all that waiting for nothing ugh!
    • Wuz up  •  2 mths ago
      Death of the Bull, he says!!
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