NEW YORK |   (Reuters) - Gold ended flat on Tuesday and showed little reaction to  U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's comments acknowledging a  slowdown in the economy but offering no suggestion on further monetary  stimulus to support growth.Gold has gained 5 percent in  the past three weeks, boosted by disappointing U.S. economic indicators  including Friday's weak jobs data. Investors have been trying to gauge  whether the U.S. Federal Reserve will embark on a new round of  government bond buying, or quantitative easing.
"Everybody was looking for some concrete proposal but his speech is pretty vague  right now. That's one of the reasons why the gold market was looking  tired and the equities came off," said Bruce Dunn, vice president of  trading at bullion dealer Auramet.
Spot gold inched up 64 cents to $1,543.69 an ounce at 3:51 p.m. EDT (1951 GMT), off the session high of $1,550.
U.S. gold futures for August delivery settled down $3.20 at $1,544 an ounce, ranging from $1,537.20 to $1,549.90.
COMEX gold futures volume was slightly above 100,000 lots, almost half its  30-day average. Volume has been lackluster since last week.
Silver was up 0.7 percent at $36.98 an ounce.
"U.S. economic growth so far this year looks to have been somewhat slower  than expected," Bernanke said in remarks prepared for delivery at a  banking conference in Atlanta.
"A number of indicators also suggest some loss in momentum in labor markets in recent weeks," he added.
Analysts said soft U.S. economic data led some to expect the Fed might extend  quantitative easing. The second round of quantitative easing, dubbed  QE2, in which the central bank has bought $600 billion of government  bonds to stimulate economic growth, is to expire by the end of June.
Gold would probably rise further if the Fed continues its easy monetary  policy, but two top Fed officials on Tuesday were less inclined to use a third round of QE to boost the economy.
OPTIONS VOLATILITY EASES
Gold options trading has been quiet, with some investors selling  at-the-money straddles and producers buying puts to hedge against  downside risk, said COMEX gold option trader Jonathan Jossen.
A straddle allows an investor to bet on market volatility by purchasing a call and a put option at the same time, profiting when the market veers too far from a set price.
The  CBOE gold volatility index .GVX, a gauge of bullion investor anxiety,  dropped more than 2 percent, its third session of decline.
Wall Street fell for a fifth day on Tuesday after Bernanke's comment, .N but a weaker dollar supported gold.
The U.S. currency slumped when an official at China's foreign exchange  regulator said Beijing should guard against risks from excessive  holdings of dollar-denominated assets.
Investors expect the European Central Bank will be quicker to raise interest  rates than the Federal Reserve, so the euro has risen nearly 10 percent  on the dollar this year.
Precious  metals consultancy GFMS meanwhile predicted gold, silver, platinum and  palladium prices would retain upside potential in 2011, with negative  real interest rates remaining the principal driver.
Platinum was up 1.3 percent at $1,828 an ounce. Palladium gained 2.9 percent to  $806.47, with traders reporting buying of the metal for exchange-traded  funds.
Prices at 3:53 p.m. EDT (1953 GMT)
(Additional reporting by Jan Harvey in London; Editing by David Gregorio and Jim Marshall)
Source: http://www.reuters.com
 
No comments:
Post a Comment