29 December 2011, 2:50 p.m.
By Gary Wulf, contributing to Kitco News
http://www.kitco.com/
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(Kitco News) -- U.S. precious
metals futures registered multi-month lows Thursday, pressured by
declining interest from speculators who have increasingly chosen to
cash out their gold/silver investments or place reserves in more
traditional sectors, such as a strengthening U.S. equities market.
Comex February gold futures declined for a ninth straight
session Thursday, briefly dipping to levels last seen in July, prior
to closing with losses of $21.50 at $1542.60 per ounce. March Comex
silver hit a 3-month low early in the session, but eventually closed
near the highs with net gains of 15.6 cents at $27.39 per ounce.
Spot gold futures have plunged nearly 4% during the past two trading sessions, accelerating a steady 6-week decline.
"We are in the funny week for gold…this week always brings out
odd behavior and gold is usually the star of the show," said Country
Hedging analyst Sterling Smith.
Some noted investors, such as leading hedge fund managers and
billionaire George Soros, are reported to have been actively selling
off their gold holdings recently, and the U.S. Mint’s sales of
American Eagle gold bullion coins also dropped to a nearly 3 1/2 year
low in November, reflective of slumping physical demand. The Mint also
announced Thursday that with sufficient gold and silver on hand to
meet anticipated coin demand, it will not allocate sales to dealers in
early 2012, as has been the case for several years, due to
unprecedented demand and a lack of bullion supply.
Dennis Gartman, economist and author of the Suffolk,
Virginia-based Gartman Letter, warned that the on-going selloff in
gold futures has likely not yet reached an end.
"We fear...that there is still a great deal more liquidation to be
effected, and that worse lies yet ahead," he said Thursday. "It does
indeed seem reasonable that there is enough impetus to drive the spot
price of gold to -- and perhaps even below -- $1500/oz before the late
longs are taken out, and the hedge funds are liquidated."
The U.S. dollar weakened slightly Thursday, adding 1 cent per
ounce to gains in spot silver, while cutting declines in spot gold by
60 cents, according to the widely-watched Kitco Gold Index.
Weakness in the value of the dollar index Thursday may have
been drawn from news that initial claims for state unemployment
benefits increased by 15,000, to a seasonally adjusted 381,000 persons
last week, surpassing expectations.
London gold was last fixed at $1531 Thursday, down $40 from the LBMA's PM fix of Wednesday.
Technically, February gold futures prices ended near the
mid-range of Thursday's $39.90 trading range, penetrating initial and
secondary chart resistance at the $1543.30 and $1550 levels. March
silver futures traded in a huge $1.33 range on the session, and
successfully closed above intitial resistance at the $27.16 per ounce
level.
January Nymex copper last traded up 0.8 cent to $3.3695
Tuesday. Februray crude oil futures last traded with gains of 18 cents
to $99.54 per barrel, despite the release of recent government and
industry reports which showed that crude oil and gasoline inventories
are, surprisingly, each rising. Much of the support for crude markets
was attributed to Iranian threats to shut down shipping through the
strategically important Strait of Hormuz, if Western nations impose
additional sanctions on that nation in response to Iran's alleged
attempts to develop a nuclear weapons arsenal.
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