Eurozone stock markets jumped over 2% as gold prices dipped below $1260 per ounce – down over 4% in US Dollar terms from last Thursday’s 2-year high.
London’s FTSE100 index lagged Frankfurt and Paris, but rose 1.5% for its fifth daily gain in succession off last Thursday’s 4-month lows.
Gold priced in Sterling fell yet again as the Pound rose on the FX market, dropping over 10% from last Thursday’s sudden 3-year high at £938 to dip below £845 per ounce.
The last opinion poll taken before today’s voting began put the Leave vote at 48% with Remain at 52%.
Some 17% of voters, however, remain undecided according to a separate telephone poll published Wednesday.
Results are due to start around midnight London time, 2 hours after polls close, with a clear verdict by 5am Friday.
Today’s rise in Sterling was widely read as a growing bet on a strong Remain vote, with some commentators citing ‘exit polls’ privately run for London hedge funds.
“Whilst the referendum has had an influence on gold prices in the last two weeks,” reckons UK fund manager George Cheveley at investment bank Investec, “the effect has been small compared to the impact of US interest rate and US Dollar moves over the past few months.
“Negative real rates, the US election and Chinese debt levels are also worrying investors.”
Shanghai gold prices steadied overnight, edging higher from 2-week lows even as the Chinese Yuan rose on the FX market.
That reversed yesterday’s $3 per ounce discount on Chinese gold versus international prices to a $5 premium at the benchmark Shanghai Gold Price auction.
“[Bullish gold bets] have started to correct,” said a note from Canada-based bullion bank Scotia Mocatta, “but the net long fund position is still large, so further profit-taking may follow.
“ETF investors continue to buy and there have not been many redemptions – this suggests sentiment remains bullish.”
Investor demand for shares in gold ETF market-leader the SPDR Gold Trust (NYSEArca:GLD) expanded yet again on Wednesday, extending its growth 1.7% since prices hit 2-year Dollar highs a week ago to need 915 tonnes of bullion backing – the largest quantity since September 2013.
The leading silver ETF in contrast – the iShares Silver Trust (NYSEArca:SLV) – has shrunk by more than 200 tonnes since mid-June to 10,360 tonnes, its smallest size since start-April’s then 16-month high.