Gold Rises to Six-Month High as Weak Dollar Spurs Metal Demand By Nicholas Larkin and Halia Pavliva
Sept. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Gold jumped to a six-month high, reaching $999.50 an ounce, on speculation that a weak dollar will boost demand for precious metals as an alternative investment. Silver surged to the highest price in 13 months.
Gold has gained 4.6 percent in the first three days of September, the biggest three-day rally since March. The euro has rallied 13.5 percent against the U.S. currency in the past six months. Gold tends to rise when the dollar drops.
“The dollar is going to be the main driver for gold strengthening for the rest of the year,” said David Barclay, a metals analyst at Standard Chartered Plc in London.
Gold futures for December delivery advanced $19.20, or 2 percent, to $997.70 an ounce at 1:30 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Comex division, after earlier gaining as much as 2.1 percent to the highest price since Feb. 23.
“Gold looks poised to make a real run at the $1,000 mark,” Miguel Perez-Santalla, a Heraeus Precious Metals Management sales vice president in New York, said in a note to clients.
In London, bullion for immediate delivery climbed $16.43, or 1.7 percent, to $994.93 an ounce. Spot prices last topped $1,000 on Feb. 20, and reached a record $1,032.70 in March 2008.
Trending Higher
“The next trending step higher is under way” for gold, SEB AB analysts in Stockholm said today in a report. The metal may rise to $1,112, according to the report.
Silver for December delivery jumped 92.5 cents, or 6 percent, to $16.29 an ounce in New York, after reaching $16.31, the highest price since Aug. 7, 2008. In London, silver for immediate delivery climbed 6 percent to $16.29.
“Gold prices continue to surge higher as safe-haven buying pushes prices,” Suki Cooper, a Barclays Capital analyst in London, said in a report.
Gold rose to $983 in the London afternoon “fixing,” the price used by some mining companies to sell their output, from $982.50 in the morning fixing.
Before today, gold futures climbed 11 percent this year as the U.S. Dollar Index, a six-currency gauge of the greenback’s value, slipped 3.6 percent. The MSCI World Index of developed- country equities jumped as much as 0.7 percent today after yesterday falling to the lowest level in almost two weeks.
Market Risks
“Investors are still worried about a potential correction in the stock market,” London-based broker ODL Securities Ltd. wrote today in a report.
The European Central Bank left interest rates at a record low 1 percent today and signaled no quick withdrawal of emergency stimulus measures. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet, at a press conference in Frankfurt, said the euro region’s recovery will be “rather uneven.”
A private report showed U.S. service industries shrank at a slower pace in August than forecast, adding to signs that an economic recovery is emerging. Yet U.S. unemployment continues to rise, and research firm Retail Metrics said sales at U.S. retailers probably dropped 3.4 percent last month at stores open at least a year, a sign of weak consumer spending.
More U.S. workers filed first-time claims for jobless benefits last week than forecast, government figures show, indicating companies remain focused on curbing costs. Initial unemployment claims declined to 570,000 last week, the Labor Department said today in Washington. That topped the 564,000 median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.
ETF Record
Holdings of bullion in the SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest exchange-traded fund backed by the metal, increased 1.53 metric tons to 1,063.36 tons as of yesterday, data on the company’s Web site showed. Gold held in ETF Securities Ltd.’s exchange-traded commodities added 3,283 ounces to a record 7.99 million ounces yesterday, according to its Web site.
“A good deal” of gold’s move higher “is technical, with models likely to be chasing the break of a recent tight range,” Sydney-based Greg Gibbs, a Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc strategist, said today in a note. “The ability of gold to continue to rise perhaps tells us that investors are far from calm about the longer-term global economic outlook and the policy response to it.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Nicholas Larkin in London at nlarkin1@bloomberg.net; Halia Pavliva in New York at hpavliva@bloomberg.net. Last Updated: September 3, 2009 14:07 EDT