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Gold falls with equities as euro zone talks stuck

Gold and silver bars are pictured at the Austrian Gold and Silver Separating Plant 'Oegussa' in Vienna August 26, 2011. REUTERS/Lisi Niesner

Gold and silver bars are pictured at the Austrian Gold and Silver Separating Plant 'Oegussa' in Vienna August 26, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Lisi Niesner

NEW YORK | Wed Oct 19, 2011 3:49pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Gold fell for a third consecutive session on Wednesday, moving once again in tandem with riskier assets, as jittery investors sold on a lack of progress over euro zone debt talks and an uncertain U.S. economic outlook.

Bullion tracked Wall Street lower after French President Nicolas Sarkozy said plans to tackle Europe's debt crisis have stalled with Paris and Berlin at odds over how to increase the firepower of the region's bailout fund. Moody's downgrade on Spain's sovereign credit rating also weighed.

Disappointment over the Federal Reserve's beige book -- a survey of national business conditions, sent gold, stocks and commodities broadly lower. Gold slumped more than 2 percent in the last three sessions, having briefly broken its unusual positive correlation with riskier assets on the previous day.

"The general consensus is that there is little in the beige book that would fire up hopes of QE3, and coupled with the no real resolution in Europe, investors are liquidating their positions," said Frank McGhee, head precious metals trader of Integrated Brokerage Services LLC in Chicago.

Spot gold was down 0.9 percent at $1,642.99 an ounce by 2:45 p.m. EDT.

U.S. December gold futures settled down $5.80 at $1,647 an ounce. Trading volume was around half of its 30-day norm after higher-than-usual turnover during Tuesday's decline.

Spot silver was down 3 percent at $31.06 an ounce.

In afternoon trading, selling accelerated across asset classes after the Fed's beige book showed that the U.S. economic outlook grew dimmer in September, leading businesses to be wary of spending and of building up inventories ahead of the holiday sales season.

Gold's inflation-hedge appeal dimmed after a report earlier showed U.S. core consumer prices rose at their slowest pace in six months in September. Traders also cited worries that the U.S. futures regulator will pushed through its toughest measures to curtail speculation in commodities.

EU SUMMIT EYED

Bullion investors now look forward to possible details of plans to contain the nearly two-year-old euro zone debt crisis at a summit of European leaders on Sunday.

The backdrop of Greek police clashing with demonstrators as workers began their biggest strike in years in protest at cuts demanded of their country in return for help raised market nervousness.

"The traders for the most part want to hear what concrete action the European Union plans on taking to resolve its woes before they add to current positions," said Miguel Perez-Santalla, vice president at Heraeus Precious Metals Management.

"It looks like we are in wait-and-seek mode for now," he said.

Gold, traditionally a safe-haven investment, rebounded from its lows following September's near-11 percent decline, yet analysts said bullion's usual inverse correlation to riskier assets has eroded, making it less likely to act as a safe-haven in times of market turmoil.

Technical analysts said that a bearish double-top, based on the two recent highs formed in late August and early September would continue to weigh down on the metal's near-term outlook.

(Graphic: r.reuters.com/wak54s )

Palladium dropped 2.8 percent at $600.68 and platinum declined 1.1 percent at $1,510.74.

2:45 PM EDT LAST/ NET PCT LOW HIGH CURRENT

SETTLE CHNG CHNG VOL US Gold DEC 1647.00 -5.80 -0.4 1641.10 1666.90 103,756 US Silver DEC 31.277 -0.554 -1.7 31.020 32.150 45,944 US Plat JAN 1523.10 -17.60 -1.1 1514.30 1556.70 4,504 US Pall DEC 608.40 -11.50 -1.9 601.20 628.00 2,084

Gold 1642.99 -15.65 -0.9 1639.90 1664.89 Silver 31.060 -0.970 -3.0 31.020 32.120 Platinum 1510.74 -17.01 -1.1 1516.25 1552.50 Palladium 600.68 -17.18 -2.8 604.52 626.00

TOTAL MARKET VOLUME 30-D ATM VOLATILITY

CURRENT 30D AVG 250D AVG CURRENT CHG US Gold 109,315 206,185 201,533 29.33 0.00 US Silver 52,040 53,500 81,705 52.01 1.00 US Platinum 4,554 11,819 7,688 35.1 0.07 US Palladium 2,107 3,828 4,523

(Additional reporting by Pratima Desai and Amanda Cooper in London; Editing by Marguerita Choy)

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Comments (3)
RobertReeves wrote:
Make up your mind!
So Gold goes down when economic uncertainty lessens?
Funny because lately none of this had made sense.
Why on earth would anyone look to the dollar for safety?
Now I know the world is NUTZ!

Oct 19, 2011 11:00am EDT  --  Report as abuse
Venerability wrote:
These utterly silly headlines really have to stop!

Gold has traded WITH equities for several years now, as everyone actually in the sector knows.

And both Gold and equities have generally traded against Emperor Dollah, as everyone in world markets knows.

Sometimes there are lags. And sometimes there is Silly Season propaganda, like that coming from the Anointed Ones and their captive media right now.

Gold sometimes reacts as a Safe Haven or Fear sector. But the correct way to view it is as an inexorable Growth sector, a play on the emergence of a viable bourgeoisie, a consuming middle class, in the one-half of the planet that essentially has not had one before.

That one-half of the planet corresponds just about exactly to those countries and regions which have been Gold-centric and Gold-loving since the days of the cavemen: China, India, the rest of Asia, the Middle East, Africa, and Latin America.

Keep this in mind, and you will actually understand the Gold sector and be able to ignore the Noise.

Oct 19, 2011 11:05am EDT  --  Report as abuse
RobertReeves wrote:
Hey Wait a minute……….. Didnt you say earlier gold was down becasuse the eurozone maybe rushing a solution?
Now its down because the Eurozone is shacky???? Hey if you ask me Gold has more sellers than buyers thanks to the lazy weak Dow…. America get ready the DOW is about to CRASH! Don’t say you were not warned

Oct 19, 2011 6:44pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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