PRECIOUS-Gold steady above $950/oz, ETF up 0.92 tonnes

Mon Aug 24, 2009 1:46am EDT

 * Off one-week high of $957.65 as more data awaited
 * SPDR holdings XAUEXT-NYS-TT mark first rise since July
 By Risa Maeda
 TOKYO, Aug 24 (Reuters) - Gold was steady above $950 an ounce
on Monday with light buying encouraged by extended gains in oil
and equities markets, although it was off a one-week high near
$960 the previous session.
 But there was no strong follow-through buying as investors
mostly sat on the sidelines before U.S. data on housing and
consumer sentiment later this week.
 Short-term money inflows into commodities, including gold,
and other risky assets had helped prop up the precious metal on
Friday after a strong U.S. housing sales report and upbeat
comments from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke.
 Spot gold XAU= was at $953.35 an ounce at 0530 GMT, little
changed from the notional New York close of $952.65.
 "Gold is being underpinned by buying from speculators, with
the euro's recovery above $1.43 and a rally in oil to the
year-to-date high levels increasing their risk tolerance," said
Shuji Sugata, manager at Mitsubishi Corp Futures & Securities'
research team.
 "But such buying is not sustainable. They stop buying when
gold rises towards $960, which looks like an initial resistance,"
he said.
 U.S. gold futures for December delivery GCZ9 were also
almost flat at $954.80 per ounce, compared to $954.70 on the
COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. On Friday,
the contract rose $13, or 1.4 percent.
 Non-commercial net long positions in New York gold futures
contracts fell to 177,530 lots in the week ended on Aug. 18, down
6.6 percent from 190,086 lots, a weekly report by the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission showed. [ID:nN21581702]
 Bullion rose 0.8 percent last week and hit a one-week high of
$957.65 on Friday. The dollar's recent fall against the euro has
boosted the metal's appeal as a hedge against the falling U.S.
currency.
 "Gold maintains its traditional role as an asset to avoid
risks like, for example, a weak dollar, inflation and volatility
in equity markets. Apart from that, gold has also attracted
demand from those seeking short-term capital gains like those in
other commodities," Sugata said.
 Partly reflecting such short-term money inflows, the holdings
of the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), the world's largest gold-backed
exchange-traded fund, rose 0.92 tonnes on Friday, marking the
first rise since July 16.
 Its holdings stood at 1,066.41 tonnes on Friday, up from
1,065.49 tonnes the previous day. [GOL/SPDR]
 It was the biggest one-day increase since June 1, when the
holdings rose by 15.27 tonnes to a record of 1,134.03 tonnes.
 For a graphic on SPDR holdings, click on:
 here
 Spot platinum XPT= rose 0.5 percent to $1,257 per ounce,
with investors taking mostly in stride news on Sunday that South
Africa's miners' union has suspended an indefinite strike set to
start on Monday at the world's No.2 platinum producer, Impala
Platinum. [ID:nLN232817]
 Precious metals prices at 0530 GMT
 Metal             Last    Change  Pct chg  YTD pct chg  Turnover
 Spot Gold         953.30    0.65   +0.07      8.31
 Spot Silver        14.30    0.15   +1.06     26.33
 Spot Platinum    1256.00    5.00   +0.40     34.76
 Spot Palladium    281.00    2.50   +0.90     52.30
 TOCOM Gold       2914.00   74.00   +2.61     13.25         37699
 TOCOM Platinum   3828.00  116.00   +3.13     44.34         11037
 TOCOM Silver      436.50   19.10   +4.58     36.71           184
 TOCOM Palladium   867.00   43.00   +5.22     57.64           362
 Euro/Dollar       1.4321
 Dollar/Yen         94.79
 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 Chikako Mogi; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)






































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