Gold price plunges below psychological Bt18,000/baht weight level
Thailand’s domestic gold price nosedived below the psychological resistance
level of Bt18,000 per baht weight Friday (June 28).
Boonlert Siripatvanich, chief executive officer of Ausiris, said the decline
in the local gold price is in tandem with the global price movement which
plunged from US$1,200/ounce to its lowest at $1,180/ounce mainly due to
negative sentiment and diminishing investor interest in secured assets such
as the precious metal.
The gold price has dropped below the capital cost at $1,250-1,300/ounce and
most gold funds chose to buy bullion from smaller investors who cut losses
and sold their metal holdings at US$1,200-1,300/ounce, he said.
He added that the gold price trend remains volatile but the drop will be
less severe from the previous $40-50/ounce in one day to around $20/ounce.
The new technical supports are $1,180/ounce and $1,150/ounce respectively.
“The decline rate has overtaken the increase rate in the past month due to
investors’ confidence in the US economic revival, consequently investing in
other risk assets,” he said.
The Gold Traders Association adjusted the domestic gold price this morning
with the deepest plunge at Bt350/baht weight to Bt17,900/baht weight for
bullion and Bt18,300/baht weight for ornaments. (MCOT)
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Rice policy committee maintains rice pledge price at Bt15,000/tonne
The National Rice Policy Committee acted Monday to
maintain the pledge price of 100 percent paddy rice at Bt15,000 per tonne
until Sept 15, reversing its earlier decision to slash the pledge price from
Bt15,000 to Bt12,000.
Following the meeting, Deputy Prime Minister/Finance Minister Kittiratt Na
Ranong disclosed the committee’s decision in his capacity as chairman of the
committee.
The purchase limit per household must not exceed 500,000 baht, effective
until November 30. The committee resolution was submitted to the Cabinet for
consideration Tuesday, he said.
Regarding farmers who were given the reduced pledge rice price at Bt12,000
per tonne during June 30 to July 2 as set by the earlier meeting will be
compensated for the margin.
The committee insisted that the decision to set the price at Bt15,000 per
tonne will not affect the country’s fiscal and monetary discipline.
The government spent a budget of Bt345 billion for the rice pledging scheme
for the harvest season 2013/2014. The spending is within the budget
framework of the Bt500 billion maximum.
The committee agreed to increase channels to release rice in the
government’s stock effectively in the second half of this year including
government-to-government trade and selling rice to Thai and foreign
entrepreneurs.
It will be released through the Agricultural Futures Exchange of Thailand
(AFET). The government targets releasing about one million tonnes a month
and 5-6 million tonnes by this year with the budget of Bt72 billion.
So far, about four million tonnes were released and 17 million tonnes of
rice remain in government stocks.
The committee agreed to increase efficiency in rice cultivation to reduce
production cost and raise farmers’ income.
Regarding concerns over corruption, the meeting assigned a subcommittee at
the provincial level to strictly check the process and install CCTV
surveillance cameras at rice purchase spots and warehouses. (MCOT)
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Gov’t to conduct impact
assessment on water project
The government will conduct an environmental health impact assessment (EHIA)
for the mega water management project as ruled by the Administrative Court,
a senior official said.
Plodprasop Suraswadi, National Water and Flood Management Policy (NWFMP)
chairman, said the public hearings, including organizing exhibitions and
public forums on water, should take not more than two months.
Regarding the court’s order for the environmental surveys, he said the
national water committee will compile details and locations of all projects
including the construction of 18 dams and two floodways to be submitted to
the Natural Resources and Environmental Policy and Planning Office together
with the results of the environmental surveys.
The EHIAs will be done by consulting firms and academic institutions and
projects which are not feasible will be scrapped, he said, adding that
completion of the water management project will be slightly delayed.
He said loans for the Bt350 billion project will be done in accord with
legal procedures and there is no interest as long as borrowing has not
begun.
The Administrative Court on Thursday suspended the water management project
pending an EHIA - a verdict made less than a week after the government
announced four bid winners, including the controversial Korea Water
Resources Corporation (K-Water), for the heavily-criticized water project.
The court’s ruling was made following a lawsuit by the Anti-Global Warming
Association which charged the government with giving a green light to the
water management master plan without an EHIA.
Plodprasop said the prime minister would be asked to set up a legal
committee to decide if the government should appeal the court’s ruling.
(MCOT)
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Rice theft uncovered at 29 mills
Twenty-nine rice mills nationwide were found to have
defrauded the government’s subsidy scheme, National Police Chief Adul
Saengsingkaew said Friday (June 28).
He said a one-day simultaneous check of 2,071 rice mills and warehouses
throughout the country found unscrupulous transfers of rice from stockpiles
under the rice pledging program.
Police have yet to file legal charges, pending further investigation which
should take a few more days, he said.
Those involved in rice thefts will be charged with embezzling, he said.
Police personnel have joined officials of the finance and commerce
ministries in the all-out rice check. (MCOT)
Thai finance ministry lowers GDP growth for 2013.
Thailand’s forecast of the country’s economic growth for
this year has been trimmed from 4.8 percent to 4.5 percent, according to
Fiscal Policy Office director-general Somchai Sujjapongse.
He said economic recovery of Thailand’s trading partners - including China,
the US and Europe - is slow, compelling an adjustment of this year’s exports
from 9 to 5.5 percent.
Investment in the private sector will expand at only 5.7 percent, from the
original forecast of 9 percent while disappointing sales of agricultural
produce, especially rubber, will wreak havoc on household revenue growth.
Inflation, earlier predicted at 3 percent, will be only 2.5 percent thanks
to declining oil prices and commodity prices.
Thailand’s growth at 5.4 percent in Q1 and 4 percent in Q2 should be higher
than 4 percent in Q3 and Q4, Somchai said.
He said the Finance Ministry was confident that capital outflows will be
short term due to Thailand’s strong fundamentals and the government’s
economic stimulus projects.
The government is also emphasizing tourism promotion which resulted in an
arrival of 1.85 million tourists to the kingdom in May, or a 19.4 percent
increase, he said. (MCOT)
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