• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Dollar strength presses gold down toward $920

Mon Jun 22, 2009 4:14pm EDT

Related News

Stocks

   

NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) - Gold hit its lowest level since mid May on Monday, breaking below $920 per ounce as the dollar lengthened broad gains with investors looking to a Federal Reserve meeting for clues about U.S. economic health.

Hot Stocks

The dollar gained as investors sought a safe haven .DXY amid concern about the euro zone economy and jitters ahead of Fed's rate setting meeting. The Fed jitters were seen supporting gold at lower levels.

The dollar's influence was reflected in a strong correlation with the spot gold price of negative 0.8, also seen as a sign of increasingly risk-averse behavior.

"The correlation with the dollar is up sharply in recent weeks," said Dan Smith, analyst at Standard Chartered. "We think the dollar is going to weaken and provide support for gold."

In early June, a weakening dollar and increasing demand for gold-backed funds helped bullion hit a three-month high of $989.80 an ounce. But the dollar has strengthened, dampening hedge buying in the gold market.

Spot gold fell 1.3 percent to $922 at 3:25 p.m. EDT. Earlier, it hit a one-month low at $917.90, sharply down from $933.80 quoted late on Friday in New York.

U.S. August futures settled down $15.20, or 1.6 percent, at $921 an ounce on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.

A 3.8 percent drop of U.S. crude oil futures to below $67 per barrel also dented bullion's appeal as an inflation hedge.

The Fed is not expected to adjust monetary policy at its two-day meeting starting on Tuesday, but investors will watch its statement for clues on the economic outlook and progress of its debt buyback program.

Investors also got bearish signals when the World Bank cut its 2009 growth forecasts for most economies and described the global outlook as "unusually uncertain."

INVESTMENT TAILS OFF

Silver followed gold lower, falling to $13.73 from $14.19 late on Friday in New York. Platinum was at 1159.50 per ounce, while palladium stood at 231.50.

Stronger economic indicators and lower-than-expected inflation data have prompted investment funds to unwind some long gold futures positions.

A weekly report by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed noncommercial net long U.S. gold futures positions fell 7.5 percent to 175,543 lots in the week to June 16 from 189,674 lots the week before.

The world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, the SPDR Gold Trust, said its holdings stood at 1,132.15 tonnes as of June 19, unchanged since June 5.

In trading news, the chief executive of CME Group Inc (CME.O) told Reuters in an interview that the largest U.S. commodities exchange plans to boost investments in its COMEX gold futures trading operations, as the unit has been under-developed prior to CME's acquisition.

In the mining sector, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled for silver and gold producer Coeur d'Alene Mines Corp (CDE.N) by upholding a government permit allowing the company's Alaska gold mine to deposit rock waste into a lake on federal land.

(Additional reporting by Nick Vinocur in London; Editing by David Gregorio)



More from Reuters

A security personnel stands guard near oil pipelines at Tawke oil field near Dahuk, 400 km (245 miles) north of Baghdad May 9, 2009. REUTERS/Azad Lashkari

Now or never for Big Oil

The pressure's on for oil giants looking to secure rare access to cheap Middle East reserves as Iraq gears up to auction off some of the world's largest untapped oilfields.  Full Article 

A glass of tap water is served at a restaurant in New York June 10, 2009 REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

G7 glass half empty

Recovering from a punishing global recession has forced the world's richest nations to pay dearly, prompting subdued growth prospects and delayed sighs of relief.   Full Article