Following the abrupt rally in the commodities market in the last months of 2010, the first weeks of 2011 saw a reversal and most of the commodities entered the red zone leading to some negative performances as there were some speculative concerns about China's future consumption rates, US dollar appreciation and also, some big individual investors and hedge funds were taking profits and changing holding in their portfolios. For these reasons gold and all other commodities with the exception of Crude Oil have so far experienced a negative trend (GSG -3.54% and GLD -3.81%).
In international economic news, The World Bank issued its first Yuan-denominated bond, raising $76 million (500 million Yuan) promoting the use of the Chinese currency in international markets. The World Bank's 500 million Yuan bond issue arrived when China's shareholding in the World Bank is about to increase, potentially making China the third-largest stakeholder in the lender after the United States and Japan. On the other side of the ocean there were some serious movements in the currency markets, Chile‘s central bank said it will buy $12 billion in the foreign-exchange market, joining other Latin American nations in a bid to offset the dollar’s decline. This resulted in bearish mood among investors and uncertainty, resulting in a peso decline of 4.6%, one of the steepest drops since June 198 when Augusto Pinochet’s Era was coming to an end.
At this point of time most of the international markets in the world are at their recent peaks, so investors will be conscious about potential correction. This may be inevitable due to the Euro-debt problems and also the FED's intervention with its $600 Billion Quantitative Easing 2 program, an attempt to stimulate the economy and lower record-high levels of unemployment. As a final note, in the coming week currency wars and threats to commodities can be expected to continue to play the market-driving role they have played recently and should be monitored closely.