Gold touches 3-week lows

A woman is reflected on a mirror inside a gold jewellery shop in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad.

A woman is reflected on a mirror inside a gold jewellery shop in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad.

Published Dec 12, 2011

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Gold hit three-week lows on Monday, after a rise in the dollar prompted enough selling to push the bullion price through a key level of support, in spite of the persistent worry about the lack of a solution to the euro zone debt crisis.

Last week's summit of European Union leaders yielded a historic agreement on beefing up fiscal discipline in the 27-member bloc, but fell short of market expectations for a more drastic solution to the crisis.

This lack of confidence in Europe pushed investors into the relative safety of the US dollar, rather than gold, which has fallen by about 5 percent in the last week alone.

A stronger dollar often encourages non-US holders of gold to sell the metal to lock in a higher profit in their own currencies.

Spot gold was last quoted down 1.8 percent at $1,680.29 an ounce by 14:15 SA time, having dropped by as much as 2.0 percent earlier to a low at $1,676.29 after breaking through $1,680.00, a major support line.

“Three or four months ago, people were pretty sure gold would end the year close to $2,000 or at least have a pop there and now that is looking unlikely with funding stresses and money market stresses and the dash for cash,” Credit Agricole analyst Robin Bhar said.

“That is obviously dealing a blow to gold ... the next couple of days are going to be crucial technically for gold. Last week we were up at $1,760 and we have now lost $80 fairly quickly, that shows that rallies are difficult to sustain in this sort of environment.”

There is continued evidence of investor demand for gold, as highlighted by the rise in speculative holdings of gold futures, which last week rose by half a million ounces and by the swell in holdings of gold in exchange-traded fund products to record highs last week.

ETFS NEAR RECORD

In the last month, holdings at the largest gold-backed exchange-traded products have risen by nearly 1.2 million ounces, largely in response to concern over the slow progress in solving the euro zone debt crisis.

EU leaders agreed to lend up to 200 billion euros to the International Monetary Fund to help it aid euro zone strugglers, and to bring forward the permanent rescue fund European Stability Mechanism (ESM) by a year to mid-2012.

Those steps, together with a leveraged EFSF - the existing bailout fund - are intended to boost help for troubled euro zone countries, such as Italy and Spain, the bloc's third- and fourth-largest economies, as they muddle through their refinancing crunches.

Rising peripheral bond yields and a falling euro showed investors were unconvinced this would be enough to put an end to the two-year old crisis.

“People are still worried about the economy and euro zone debt crisis and gold remains under pressure,” said Peter Fung, head of dealing at Wing Fung Precious Metals in Hong Kong.

On this week's agenda, bond sales by Italy and Spain will attract much attention from investors. Yields are likely to rise again after the European Central Bank last week dashed hopes for further bond purchases.

Prices of platinum group metals also weakened. Spot palladium fell 2.8 percent to $664.72 and platinum fell 1.3 percent to $1,491.74 an ounce.

Northam Platinum, one of South Africa's smaller platinum producers, said on Monday it was enduring frequent safety stoppages at its only producing mine where surprise government inspections were taking place.

Demand for industrial metals will largely hinge on the growth in China, the world's second-largest economy and top consumer for many raw materials. Slower growth in China's exports and imports in November showed fresh evidence of faltering demand abroad and at home.

Silver, used in electronics, chemical and electrical applications, fell 2.9 percent to $31.28 an ounce. So far this month, the price has fallen by more than 4 percent, set for a second consecutive monthly decline. - Reuters

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