Home

 
India Bullion iPhone Application
  Quick Links
Currency Futures Trading

MCX Strategy

Precious Metals Trading

IBCRR

Forex Brokers

Technicals

Precious Metals Trading

Economic Data

Commodity Futures Trading

Fixes

Live Forex Charts

Charts

World Gold Prices

Reports

Forex COMEX India

Contact Us

Chat

Bullion Trading Bullion Converter
 

$ Price :

 
 

Rupee :

 
 

Price in RS :

 
 
Specification
  More Links
Forex NCDEX India

Contracts

Live Gold Prices

Price Quotes

Gold Bullion Trading

Research

Forex MCX India

Partnerships

Gold Commodities

Holidays

Forex Currency Trading

Libor

Indian Currency

Advertisement

 
BLBG: Gold Heads for Second Monthly Gain in London, Buoyed by Dollar
 
Oct. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Gold, little changed in London today, headed for a second monthly advance as a decline in the dollar buoyed demand for the metal as a hedge against further weakness in the U.S. currency.

The Dollar Index, a gauge of the greenback’s performance against six currencies, is on course for a fourth monthly drop, the worst performance since 2004. The U.S. economy expanded for the first time in more than a year in the third quarter, the Commerce Department said yesterday.

“Confirmation the U.S. economy had exited its worst contraction in 70 years gave equities and commodities a boost, sending the dollar and safe-haven currency trades south,” James Moore, an analyst at TheBullionDesk.com in London, said today in a note.

Gold for immediate delivery fell $1.93, or 0.2 percent, to $1,045.07 an ounce at 11:09 a.m. in London, for a monthly advance of 3.7 percent. The metal reached a record $1,070.80 on Oct. 14 and has gained 19 percent this year. Gold for December delivery lost 0.1 percent to $1,045.60 on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Comex division.

The metal climbed to $1,044.50 an ounce in the morning “fixing” in London, used by some mining companies to sell production, from $1,040.50 at yesterday’s afternoon fixing.

Thirteen of 23 traders, investors and analysts surveyed by Bloomberg, or 57 percent, said bullion would fall next week. Seven forecast higher prices and three were neutral.

Tudor Investment

“I have never been a gold bug,” Paul Tudor Jones of Tudor Investment Corp. told investors in an Oct. 15 letter, a copy of which was obtained by Bloomberg News. “It is just an asset that, like everything else in life, has its time and place. And now is that time.”

Tudor Investment manages about $11.6 billion out of Greenwich, Connecticut. Fund manager John Paulson increased his bets on gold this year, while David Einhorn told clients of his Greenlight Capital Inc. hedge fund in January he was buying gold for the first time.

Gold holdings in the SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest exchange- traded fund backed by the precious metal, were unchanged yesterday at 1,104.43 metric tons, according to figures on the company’s Web site today.

Harmony Gold Mining Ltd., Africa’s third-largest producer of the metal, beat its own output guidance, raising production 5.6 percent during the fiscal first quarter. Output climbed to 373,431 ounces in the three months through September, from 353,752 ounces in the previous quarter, the Johannesburg-based company said today.

Silver Holdings

Among other precious metals for immediate delivery in London, silver dropped 0.6 percent to $16.59 an ounce.

Holdings in the iShares Silver Trust, the biggest exchange- traded fund backed by the metal, increased 131.43 tons to 8,744 tons as of Oct. 29, according to figures on the company’s Web site.

Platinum fell 0.6 percent to $1,327.50 an ounce and palladium was down 0.5 percent at $327 an ounce.

ING Groep NV raised its 2010 forecasts for gold, silver, platinum and palladium. Gold will average $1,025 an ounce next year, compared with a previous estimate of $925, the bank said in a report. The silver estimate rose to $15 from $13.50, platinum to $1,400 from $1,300, and palladium to $280 from $250.

To contact the reporters on this story: Stuart Wallace in London at swallace6@bloomberg.net.

Source