Search This Blog

Friday, January 16, 2015

Gold slips from 12-week high as oil, copper tumble

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Gold struggled on Wednesday to hold near a 12-week high as a rout in commodities such as oil and copper took a toll on the metal, offsetting safe-haven bids arising from global growth concerns.

Oil added to losses on Wednesday to trade near its lowest since 2009, while copper dropped to 5-1/2 year lows.

Spot gold fell 0.3 percent to $1,227.50 an ounce by 0339 GMT, after marking a 12-week high of $1,243.60 on Tuesday.

"We are giving back some of the gains because of the overall unwinding of positions in commodities," said a precious metals trader in Sydney, adding that gold also faced technical resistance at around $1,244.

"Gold might push higher, given equities have been volatile, but it will be hard work.In the short term we might squeeze lower to $1,220 before we head back up." Asian equities dipped on worries over global economic growth.

On Tuesday the World Bank lowered its global growth forecasts for 2015 and next year due to disappointing prospects in the euro zone, Japan and some major emerging economies.

Typically, lower equities and a slowdown in the global economy would have lifted the price of safe-haven gold, but bullion traders found it hard to ignore the sharp sell-offs in oil and copper on Wednesday.

Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange tumbled as much as 8.7 percent, while Shanghai copper fell 5 percent, the maximum it is allowed to fall in one day, because of the global economic concerns and a wave of stop-loss orders.

Adding to the pressure on bullion was strength in the dollar, which makes gold more expensive for holders of other currencies and also dulls its appeal as a hedge.

The greenback scaled a nine-year peak against the euro on Wednesday as bolder stimulus from the European Central Bank seemed imminent. [USD/] In the physical bullion markets, buyers turned cautious after gold failed to hold on to the previous session's highs.

Premiums in top consumer China fell to around $3 an ounce over the global benchmark from $4-$5 in the previous session. Among other precious metals, silver slipped 1 percent after gaining nearly 3 percent on Tuesday. Palladium and platinum also declined.

yahoo.com

No comments:

Post a Comment