NEW YORK (TheStreet ) - Gold prices were reversing earlier losses Friday as the stock market shook off two European debt downgrades and a stronger U.S. dollar.
Gold for December delivery was losing $4.80 at $1,691.10 an ounce at
the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The gold price
has traded as high as $1,702.70 and as low as $1,672.60 an ounce while
the spot price was down $6, according to Kitco's gold index.
Silver prices were shedding 54 cents at $31.34 an ounce while the U.S. dollar index was up 0.53% at $79.55.
U.S. markets are open for only a half day Friday and light volume
coupled with a higher stock market were magnifying the volatility in
gold.
"We could see $1,650 support and now $1,725 resistance," says
George Gero, senior vice president at RBC Capital Markets.
Despite longer and more substantial lending from the
International Monetary Fund, Europe still can't find a credible solution
to its debt crisis. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French
President Sarkozy promise to discuss changes to the European Union
treaty in a summit December 9th. Any sort of grand action, including
more firepower from the European Central Bank or Eurobonds, would
require changes.
The two leaders still disagree on fundamental issues
like the ECB lending unlimited amounts to countries.
"The Eurozone is looking worse than the U.S." say Ross Norman,
CEO of SharpsPixley, "a firmer U.S. dollar, weak euro has taken a little
bit of a shine off of gold.' Norman notes, however, that speculative
long positions on the Comex are growing, which he says means traders are
rebuilding positions after the big washout in September when prices
tanked 10% in weeks.
There is "doubt about policy makers' ability to come to a
consensus and come up with a proposal that the populous will accept,"
which he argues will continue to be positive for gold despite short term
volatility.
Italy was able to raise 10 billion euro over 6 months at an
auction earlier today but had to pay almost double what it did at its
last auction. There weren't that many buyers, pointing to investors'
reluctance to lend money to the country.
Underpinning gold's volatility has also been a slew of central
bank buying. According to the IMF, Russia, Belarus, Colombia, Kazakhstan
and Mexico bought 25.8 tons of gold in October. Conversely, German cut
4.7tons of gold from its reserve to mint coins. Tajikistan also cut 0.4
tons.
"These central banks, including China and Russia, hold huge U.S.
dollar and other fx reserves. Even a small shift to gold will have a
major effect on its price," says Mark O'Byrne, executive director of
GoldCcre, a bullion dealer. "Despite the increase in central bank gold
reserves, their central banks still only hold some 5% of their reserves
in gold." The theory goes that if central banks increase their
percentage holdings of gold even slightly they would have to buy a
significant amount of gold to reach that target. "Even a small portfolio
reserve allocation into gold would create a very large increase in
demand for gold."
Gold mining stocks were mixed Friday. Barrick Gold(ABX_) was adding 0.58% to $48.24 while Newmont Mining(NEM_) was rising 0.39% at $64.46.
Other gold stocks, Goldcorp(GG_) and Randgold Resources(GOLD_) were trading modestly lower at $48.21 and $104.84, respectively.
>To contact the writer of this article, click here: Alix Steel.