Thursday, May 24, 2012

Gold, Silver Dip Against Strong Dollar

The price of gold and silver slipped on news of a U.S. dollar strengthened by profit taking and foreign financial turbulence. Gold for February delivery dropped $3.60 to $1,728.60 an ounce and silver fell $0.40 to $33.38 an ounce, although analysts believe the slide is not indicative of longer-term concerns. Disagreement among European Union (EU) nations about how to handle its financial crisis and an unwillingness of Greece to have its fiscal policy approved by EU advisors helped to boost the dollar’s profile, which in turn took a bite out of two commodities. For more on this continue reading the following article from TheStreet.

Gold prices closed slightly lower Monday as a stronger U.S. dollar and profit taking weighed on the metal.

Gold for April delivery ended down $1 to close at $1,734.40 an ounce at the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The gold price has traded as high as $1,742.80 and as low as $1,718.80 an ounce while the spot price was shedding $9, according to Kitco's gold index.

Silver prices lost 26 cents at $33.52 an ounce while the U.S. dollar index was rising 0.4% at $79.15.

"Technically and fundamentally nothing has changed the positive course of this market," says George Gero, senior vice president at RBC Capital Markets. "If we have a major pullback, we are likely to see more investors bargain hunt."

Gold was getting hit by profit taking as well as a stronger U.S. dollar. In the latest commitment of traders report, speculative short positions in the dollar decreased by more than 3,100 contracts, which means that some of the dollar's resilience in spite of the Federal Reserve's easy money policy is due to technical trading.

A weaker euro was also propping up the dollar as Greece rebelled against any European government oversight into how it runs its budget and austerity measures. Also, the yield on 10-year Portuguese bonds rose to more than 15%, igniting worries of another bailout.

European Union leaders were also embarking on another EU summit today to discuss fiscal consolidation and the possibility of letting the current bailout fund, EFSF, and the permanent bailout fund, ESM, operate together, a move which Germany opposes. Italy also raised 5.57 billion euros for 5-10 years at lower yields but to relatively tepid demand.

The gold market was also slightly disappointed that the People's Bank of China didn't take any steps to loosen monetary policy by lowering the amount of money banks have to hold in their reserves. However, after strong investor inflows last week, some kind of pause is normal.

"We are cautious of overstretched daily studies," says Barclays Capital, but "the absence of topping signals compels us to stick with the uptrend." Barclays thinks gold could rally towards the $1,760 area with the next target of $1,800. "Any pullback is expected to find buying interest near $1,645."

Stan Dash, vice president of applied technical analysis at TradeStation, says today's trading was not quite a stall. "You've got resistance at $1,767-$1,770 and support at $1,715-$1,718." Dash says if gold does start to stall, prices could consolidate more and gold might sink as low as $1,670 before bouncing higher. "That would not be a breakdown of the trend but a consolidation." Dash sees that kind of move happening between the next 5-10 sessions.

Gold is currently seeing strong investors flows. The SPDR Gold Shares(GLD) added 16 tons last week. Speculative long positions on the Comex increased by 6,100 contracts while short positions only dropped by 88, which means gold's strength didn't come from technical short covering.

"The data show investors are rebuilding long positions across the precious metals complex," says James Steel, analyst at HSBC. "We expect this to continue with a commensurately bullish impact on bullion prices."

Gold mining stocks were lower Monday. Kinross Gold was down 2.14% at $11.41 while Yamana Gold was relatively flat at $17.30.

Other gold stocks, Agnico-Eagle and Eldorado Gold were lower at $37.85 and $14.94, respectively.

 

 

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