PRECIOUS-Gold inches up, but off 6-wk high; eyes stocks, dollar

Fri Jul 24, 2009 2:23am EDT

 * Gold set for weekly gain of around 1 percent
 * SPDR holdings XAUEXT-NYS-TT unchanged
 * Broad commodity gains on risk appetite help bullion
 By Chikako Mogi
 TOKYO, July 24 (Reuters) - Gold prices inched up on Friday
but were off a six-week high hit the previous day, with investors
eyeing the dollar and stocks for direction as growing recovery
hopes fuel inflation concerns and boost bullion's appeal as a
hedge.
 Gold may also benefit from broad strength in commodities as
investor risk appetite grows with the rally in equities markets.
 Traders said activity was subdued and that they were also
looking at oil prices and how overseas markets develop later in
the day to determine whether gold can advance towards $960
levels, which they said was the near-term resistance level.
 "Risk appetite seems to have picked up quite a bit as seen in
rising stock markets," said Adrian Koh, an analyst at Phillip
Futures in Singapore.
 "If we are looking at gold from a commodities point of view
(including oil), then an increase in risk appetite could also
support gold prices, as people would tend to buy riskier assets
such as commodities," he said.
 But if investors view gold as a safe-haven, then a rise in
risk appetite would weigh on gold.
 "But I guess the former is predominant for now," he said.
 Spot gold XAU= edged up 0.2 percent to $948.90 per ounce as
of 0607 GMT, compared with New York's notional close of $947.15
per ounce on Thursday.
 At current levels, gold is set for a weekly rise of a little
over 1 percent, after hitting a six-week high of $957.10 on
Thursday.
 U.S. gold futures for August delivery GCQ9 slipped 0.6
percent to $949.20 per ounce in thin volume, compared with
Thursday's settlement of $954.80 an ounce on the COMEX division
of the New York Mercantile Exchange.
 Gold futures ended above $950 an ounce on Thursday as U.S.
existing home sales rose for a third straight month in June and
prices hit their highest level since October, fuelling hopes that
the housing sector is finally recovering and will help improve
the broader economy. [ID:nN23398724]
 Japan's Nikkei share average .N225 rose 1.6 percent,
following a rally in U.S. stocks which surged on Thursday,
driving the Dow industrials above the key 9,000 mark for the
first time since January. [.N] [.T]
 Oil prices CLc1 edged down on Friday, pulling back from a
nearly 3 percent surge to a three-week high in the previous day
on positive U.S. corporate earnings. [O/R]
 The dollar was off a seven-week low versus a basket of
currencies .DXY marked earlier this week, helped by upbeat U.S.
earnings and housing data. [USD/]
 Holdings at the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded
fund, the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), were unchanged from the previous
business day at 1,086.61 tonnes. [GOL/SPDR]
 Holdings have declined 47.42 tonnes or 4.2 percent since
hitting a record of 1,134.03 tonnes on June 1.
 For a graphic on SPDR holdings, click on:
here
 A new U.S. silver-backed exchange-traded fund rekindled
expectations that a similar U.S. platinum ETF -- if it clears
regulatory hurdles -- could boost precious metals prices across
the board.
  Precious metals prices at 0554 GMT
 Metal             Last    Change  Pct chg  YTD pct chg  Turnover
 Spot Gold         949.10    1.95   +0.21      7.83
 Spot Silver        13.67   -0.03   -0.22     20.76
 Spot Platinum    1175.00    1.00   +0.09     26.07
 Spot Palladium    255.00   -0.50   -0.20     38.21
 TOCOM Gold       2902.00    0.00   +0.00     12.79        27295
 TOCOM Platinum   3586.00    9.00   +0.25     35.22        10086
 TOCOM Silver      415.20   -3.40   -0.81     30.03          187
 TOCOM Palladium   785.00    1.00   +0.13     42.73          403
 Euro/Dollar       1.4180
 Dollar/Yen         94.78
 TOCOM prices in yen per gram, except TOCOM silver which is
priced in yen per 10 grams. Spot prices in $ per ounce.
 (Additional reporting by Risa Maeda; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)






































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