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September 16, 2009
Editor's Comment: What you pay for gold often depends on the
"Gold Spot Price" so what exactly is the Gold Spot Price?
Terry Coxon explains...
Will the "Real Price" of
Gold Please Stand Up-
What is the definition of Spot Gold? London
Fix? Comex? etc.
By Terry Coxon, Editor,
Casey’s Gold & Resource Report
Gold is traded around the clock and in so many places and in so many
forms, ranging from the abstractions of futures contracts to the
solid tangibility of rings and bracelets, that it’s not clear what
the “real” price of gold is.
The question is more than a matter of
curiosity, since many retail coin and bullion shops quote selling
prices in terms of “spot plus X%” or “spot plus $Y.” When you talk
to a dealer about buying a gold coin or gold jewlry, what exactly
does he mean when he refers to “spot”?
Here are some of the prices that dealers refer to and that you may
see reported in the media.
London Gold fix
The five members of the London Gold Pool confer
twice daily to determine the a.m. and p.m. price for gold. These are
big players, so the fixings they announce have a quasi-official ring
to them. But the London fixings determine the price only for trades
that by pre-agreement are tied to the fixings. And each fixing has
significance only at the instant it’s made. Trading between fixings
runs on its own, independently of the preceding fix.
Comex spot Gold contract price
The Comex is the busiest market for trading
futures contracts in gold bullion. Each contract is for 100 ounces.
Prices during the day represent actual trades taking place in a
continuous, competitive auction. When, through the passage of time,
a given contract reaches its delivery month, it becomes known as the
“spot contract.” At that point, the party on the long side of the
contact is free to pay for the physical and demand delivery, and the
party on the short side of the contract is free to deliver the gold
and demand payment. The possibility of insisting on physical
delivery keeps the price on the spot contract tightly linked to the
price on large transactions of physical gold between dealers.
New York dealer Gold prices
If you visit
www.kitco.com, you’ll find quotes, updated every 30 seconds, for
the “New York Spot Price.” These reflect the bid and ask
prices quoted by wholesale dealers for spot delivery. Not
surprisingly, during Comex trading hours, they track the Comex price
for the spot contract.
And there are other sources of gold prices. For many coin shops,
A-mark Precious Metals, a bullion dealer in Santa Monica, is where
they go when they have too much or too little of a given item.
A-mark is their link to the wholesale market.
You can find the A-mark gold price at
www.amark.com.
None of these prices is “the” Gold Price. But they are all linked,
through supply and demand, because it’s so easy for gold to move
from one market to another. What your local coin shop does has an
effect on the wholesale dealer it trades with. And it has an effect
on the Comex price, because the wholesale dealer watches that price
from second to second and will buy or sell there to offset its
position in physical gold. And the readiness of arbitragers to trade
on small price differences assures that what happens on the Comex
will have an effect on the London market.
Some players and some markets are much bigger than others, but none
dominates. The price of gold doesn’t start at some central point and
then ripple out to other markets. Instead, all the prices are
determined together.
It’s an untidy situation. The practical implication of the
untidiness is that when a dealer gives you a quote as spot plus this
or spot minus that, you shouldn’t pay any attention to it, because
the quote doesn’t tell you what “spot” means to that dealer. It may
be, when you’re buying, that “spot” will mean the highest quoted
price the dealer can point to when it receives your order. And even
if a given dealer gives you an unambiguous statement as to how
“spot” would apply to your transaction, you wouldn’t be able to
compare with other dealers without finding out what “spot” means to
them.
How to Find the "Best" Gold Price
To find the best prices, step back from the
spot plus or minus formulas and compare the spreads quoted by
different dealers. (Spread= The difference between the Bid
and Ask Prices- i.e. how much will they pay for your gold and how
much will they sell it to you for?~ editor)
Ask each dealer you are considering doing
business with for both its bid and ask prices, without indicating
whether you are a buyer or a seller. The dealer that quotes the
lowest spread between bid and ask will probably give you the best
price when it’s time to place an actual trade.
For years, “gold bugs” have suspected that
the price of gold is being manipulated – by governments, central
banks, and their financial networks – and rumors on the Internet
abound. But is it true or not? Casey editor Doug Hornig has
left no stone unturned to get to the bottom of the matter.
Read his FREE report
Is the Gold Price Manipulated?
Video: Is this the Gold Move we've been waiting for?
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